Speaker | Time | Text |
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Let's talk about this. | ||
The Republicans have been very hesitant. | ||
You've had judges, you've had appellate courts, they're now getting involved. | ||
Now, this Wednesday, they just announced they have a weaponization committee. | ||
They're bringing in Peter's lawyer, or one of Peter's lawyers, excuse me, Rudy's lawyer, my lawyer, Gene Hamilton from the AFPI to kick off weaponization. | ||
Don't the people on Capitol Hill have to do more? | ||
Particularly with your father. | ||
There's so much going on. | ||
They're sending letters. | ||
They're sending sharply worded letters. | ||
But don't we need an organization, the weaponization of judiciary to say, bang, here are the subpoenas. | ||
The vast criminal conspiracy against President Trump is very obvious. | ||
Yeah, and as evidenced by, and also the correlation to that is the actual evidence of Biden family wrongdoing is insurmountable. | ||
I mean, when you look at what I went through, when you look at what, I did 50 hours combined testimony for treason. | ||
50 hours. | ||
Punishable by death. | ||
Hunter Biden has two, three hours. | ||
They go in there, they let them out. | ||
A couple of Republicans are in there looking for their soundbite for Twitter, but not actually allowing the people to do it the right way and actually get to a result. | ||
I didn't make billions. | ||
I don't have China invested in me. | ||
I don't have Russia invested in me. | ||
I don't have Ukraine invested in me for no-show jobs in a business I know nothing about in a language I don't speak. | ||
That doesn't just happen unless they're buying people. | ||
China doesn't have a DEI program for crackhead money managers. | ||
You gotta give it to the crackheads too, Steve, because, you know, they are underrepresented. | ||
No, they have geniuses doing it, not morons. | ||
It's so flagrant, and yet they continue to do this. | ||
So would my father? | ||
700 years behind bars for what? | ||
Peace and mean tweets? | ||
I mean, you know, I don't know. | ||
unidentified
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Seems a little harsh. | |
And they're serious about the 700 years. | ||
Oh yeah, no, 100 for all. | ||
They're serious about 96 indictments that if anything sticks, and that's what perhaps was the point that we drove home today, is like, hey, we all understand it's nonsense. | ||
We all understand it's a game. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
There's a consequence, and we felt that consequence when you roll through that Right. | ||
And they're serious about doing this. | ||
They're serious. | ||
They are serious about doing this. | ||
It is not a joke as wrong as it is, as wrong as people understand it to be. | ||
So I don't think the Republicans are doing almost anything. | ||
We're going to fund the DOJ. | ||
We're going to make sure they do this. | ||
We're going to give Jack Smith all... Jack Smith has been proven already right now. | ||
That the FBI was tampering with evidence for the Mar-a-Lago raid. | ||
And yet he's on two cases, not disqualified from any. | ||
Our guys, no, we must fund him. | ||
So you're going to fund a corrupt guy that, let's just say, didn't exactly have a stellar record on corruption prior to this, which is the reason they brought him in. | ||
Like, we've seen this before. | ||
You know, it's not like, hey, there's a bunch of cases and seven of them are perfect, clean, and, you know, something's wrong. | ||
Yes. | ||
They brought in the most corrupt individual with no track record, no prior history prosecuting | ||
this, but the person who would go to whatever lengths possible. | ||
It's no different than bringing in Andrew Weitzman with Mueller. | ||
That was the guy, had a crappy track record, terrible ethics, already caught up in a bunch, | ||
but you knew he would do whatever it was to win, whether it was legal or not, whether | ||
it was moral or not, whether it was underlined in the Constitution or not. | ||
None of it made a difference because they get to that result. | ||
And the result, again, as you pull through those gates, is very, very real. | ||
And this is what they want to do with President Trump. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
It takes a federal judge. | ||
The Judiciary Committee should have been on this. | ||
It takes a federal judge to say, no, Jack Smith, I'm putting you on trial in late June. | ||
I've had it. | ||
We need transparency. | ||
I know you understand this. | ||
It takes an appellate court in the state of Georgia to say, stop this Fonny Willis thing. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
We're going to do it. | ||
It takes a Supreme Court nine to nothing. | ||
to take this ridiculous thing in Denver where they took the J6, their entire thing on insurrection, | ||
they just took the J6 committee and put it in there. It's not close calls. And the most egregious, | ||
and this is where I'm going to get, because you're a New York City guy, the most egregious | ||
is what's happening in New York City. We're four weeks into this, and we follow it closely here, | ||
so we can distill it and give it to people close, because it's such a waste of time to do it. | ||
But they have not brought up yet in court what exactly the crime is. | ||
President Trump's four weeks in. | ||
But just think of the premise of that living in America. | ||
You know, we live in a republic under a democracy. | ||
So you're in court on a trial. | ||
We have not yet told you the crime that you're guilty of. | ||
But we're going to play it out and see what it is. | ||
That almost like, well, we'll come up with something. | ||
Let's see where the testimony leads. | ||
And then we'll we'll make up the crime and then try to back in our closing statements. | ||
And that's not how our system works. | ||
I'm not a lawyer, and I don't need to know that, just like I didn't need to know that the Wuhan lab leak happened from a Wuhan lab, right? | ||
You don't have to be a genius to see what's going on anymore. | ||
It's not like these people are covering it up well. | ||
Right. | ||
And there's nuance. | ||
It's so flagrant, and that's what's scary. | ||
You think it's so flagrant, they don't care. | ||
You're saying it's scary because they don't care. | ||
They say, we got the power. | ||
But it's scary as it relates to how they're going to cheat. | ||
You know, hey, if you're a reasonable guy, you look at Joe Biden, you know, he'd get lost on this stage. | ||
He'd forget who he's talking to right now. | ||
It would be, and yet you'd be like, They can only cheat so much to get this guy over the line because no one will believe it. | ||
And people not believing it, which most don't already right now, would be a disaster for the democracy that they're always talking about, right? | ||
They don't care. | ||
It's about power. | ||
It's about money. | ||
It's about setting an example. | ||
Part of this is also making sure that there is never another Trump, someone who doesn't come from the swamp. | ||
unidentified
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Because they're going to send a signal that if you do this, it's not worth it. | |
Enjoy your life. | ||
You've made billions of dollars. | ||
Go enjoy that. | ||
Sit on the beach. | ||
You can donate to a couple of people. | ||
But if you get in the game, if you try to take on this system, the depths of the gravity of the swamp, you're in trouble. | ||
And that's from both sides. | ||
Here's where I say your father is not just the greatest patriot of modern times. | ||
He ranks with General Washington and Lincoln. | ||
Here's why. | ||
When they steal the election and he goes back to Mar-a-Lago. | ||
We were doing it live that day. | ||
We had Boris at the at the tarmac when it left. | ||
President Trump goes back. | ||
Every incentive was just to, you know, the New York Times reported. | ||
Everybody came to him. | ||
Just accept it. | ||
Take a big book deal. | ||
Buy some more golf courses. | ||
Enjoy your family. | ||
It's over. | ||
He consciously Came back. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Because he understood that you obviously can't let it be stolen or the country's finished as a republic. | ||
But he also knew in front of him everything that would happen. | ||
He knew they would come after him to destroy his reputation. | ||
He knew they would try to bankrupt him. | ||
He knew they would try to put him in prison. | ||
He knew, right, that if they have to they will try to kill him. | ||
He knew he made a decision consciously understanding all that Hey, we need to save this country just like the... It's even more heroic than what he did in 16. | ||
Well, in 16, but he knew it then too. | ||
I wrote about it in my book. | ||
I think we've discussed it before. | ||
It says we're going down the elevator right before he sort of did the, you know, the infamous escalator ride down to give his announcement speech. | ||
He looked me in the eyes and he says, and now we find out who our real friends are. | ||
Which meant two things, right? | ||
A, he knew what was going to happen. | ||
He knew that all of a sudden every celebrity that you used to have lunch with or whatever it was... Or come up to the town to hang out. | ||
They'd be gone. | ||
But more important than that, to your point, I think, is he knew it was going to happen and he did it anyway. | ||
Amen. | ||
So it wasn't like he was naive and was like, oh, he woke up. | ||
I can't believe this happened. | ||
I had no idea. | ||
He knew exactly what would happen and he did it anyway. | ||
And so he's been very consistent about that. | ||
We have to fight to save the republic because it is on the table. | ||
It is at risk. | ||
This is the point about why the Republican Party, they talk about unity. | ||
The only thing we should be focused on now as a party, since all the spending has been a disaster, the board has been a disaster, you must start these committees. | ||
The Judiciary Committee must start a vast criminal conspiracy. | ||
I mean, from Andrew Weissman, we want all the text messages, we want all the meetings, the MSNBC folks, everybody at DOJ, Lisa Monaco, she's one of the driving forces of this, the White House counsels, who in the White House, where are the meetings in the Oval Office, all the way from- Oh, and Matt Colangelo. | ||
Colangelo's perfect. | ||
Biden's number three at Biden's DOJ. | ||
After the New York DA, both the prior as well as Alvin Bragg, the one who's doing it himself, decided not to pursue this case that we're watching for the last two weeks. | ||
And Pomeranz, who hates your dad. | ||
He's not allowed to be called as a witness even though he wrote a book about it in the first time when they turned it down. | ||
So Matthew Colangelo, the number three guy in Biden's DOJ, moves to New York after everyone said we're not going forward with it, including the very man who then went forward with it. | ||
And we're to believe that this isn't coming from on high? | ||
I mean, are we that stupid at this? | ||
I mean, there is no such thing as coincidence, period. | ||
And there is certainly no such thing as this much coincidence. | ||
Colangelo gives the opening argument. | ||
I mean, they're so brazen. | ||
He's the architect, but also the guys up there are kind of dim bulbs. | ||
So he's got to sit there secunded from DOJ. | ||
He's the number three guy. | ||
He's got to actually make the opening argument. | ||
Again, you're right. | ||
None of them are all that impressive, but it doesn't matter. | ||
In a jury pool that's 95-5, you know, meaning just that you have an applicant pool, and then, you know, you get a certain number of people that you reject. | ||
If they see someone that could be even remotely conservative, they make sure they throw him off. | ||
So you have a 100% stacked jury. | ||
You just can't win those odds, right, when you're the 5%. | ||
So you have no chance of getting someone who could possibly be the voice of reason. | ||
And by the way, even if you win over that jury, even if they think you're right, The social consequence of being the person to release Trump. | ||
You could never go to your kid's school again. | ||
You couldn't go to dinner. | ||
You wouldn't be accepted in polite society. | ||
Let's talk about that. | ||
Nobody wants to talk about that. | ||
The press will ride you like Seabiscuit. | ||
To get a hung jury, the one or two that would have to hold out, right, would be so tormented immediately on social media. | ||
On purpose, by the way. | ||
Not because they weren't right. | ||
But on purpose, because it's not about finding out the truth. | ||
It's not about getting to an equitable result. | ||
It's about persecuting your political enemies. | ||
Nothing more, nothing less. | ||
Is this going to destroy New York City as a financial capital? | ||
I still have friends in New York that are business guys, and they're like, wait a minute. | ||
Honestly, the one that's worse is not this. | ||
It's the Letitia James AG case. | ||
The alleged victim in that, you know, we have to pay about a half a billion dollar fine for paying back a bank on time and with interest, when the bank, the alleged victim, is a witness for us saying, no, we weren't paid back in full. | ||
They weren't even late for a single payment. | ||
Like, we wanted to do more business, not less. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
You know, Deutsche Bank, right? | ||
Minor, like, what, trillion dollar business, right? | ||
Deutsche Bank, no, no, you're a victim. | ||
You didn't do your own due diligence. | ||
No, no, we did our own due diligence. | ||
You have to. | ||
After 2008, after Sarbanes-Oxley, after all of these rules, of course we did our due diligence. | ||
If we didn't, we'd have a class action lawsuit that would be hundreds of billions, not half | ||
They have the fiduciary. | ||
Every company, you guys give your assessment, you give your projections, you give your analysis of what it's worth. | ||
The fiduciary responsibility is on the lender. | ||
They go through with their own consultants, own advisors. | ||
They have a fiduciary responsibility. | ||
They didn't breach their fiduciary responsibility. | ||
They did it. | ||
All that's there, right? | ||
And the net present, if the net present value of what the judge is arguing is, they theoretically lost money. | ||
Well, the judge didn't understand either. | ||
The problem is they also wouldn't let it go into the commercial division, which handles business. | ||
So they put it in front of this, like, you know, star-struck judge who is a Trump hater, can't stand him, but loves the TV cameras. | ||
It's sort of like a Fauci version, but, you know, a judicial version of Anthony Fauci. | ||
And he's out there for the cameras, and he's trying—it's a show. | ||
But they didn't want someone who could actually understand the finances. | ||
I mean, I remember my, you know, my depositions of this, not included in, you know, I did a day. | ||
There was, I think, 13 lawyers from the DA, and they didn't understand the basic stuff. | ||
We talk about a golf course. | ||
They say, well, you know, but, you know, based on this, you do X number of rounds a year, which I can, how can it be worth a billion dollars? | ||
Like, well, it's 800 acres in downtown Miami. | ||
What if we turn it into a condominium, like development, like, right. | ||
Oh, next question, next question. | ||
They had no understanding. | ||
No commercial understanding. | ||
I don't even know how they, like, such, almost imbecilic. | ||
And maybe it's on purpose, but like you can't imagine, like, you have a witness in there that knows a little bit about these things and they, it's like, oh, that was four hours of questioning. | ||
They're like, oh, they just thought it was a home run. | ||
Like, you know, well, it's not just a golf course, it's a land bank. | ||
Yeah. | ||
How do you value that? | ||
What about the hotel component of that? | ||
Or Mar-a-Lago. | ||
Or Mar-a-Lago, yeah, $18 million I can go and sell. | ||
Even the judge, during my testimony, in that case, I'm on the stand, and the judge is like, well, you know, $18 million. | ||
I understand, that's an insane home for most people, anywhere in the world, anywhere in life, it's hard to almost fathom. | ||
Except if you understand Palm Beach. | ||
And then you can go, Mar-a-Lago's almost 20 acres, the lot next to it is about a half an acre, and it's on the market for $50. | ||
With a teardown. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
You know, so I took him through. | ||
Here's a picture of the end, and the judge goes, oh my god. | ||
Like, even he was like, but it didn't matter. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
So he knew I was right. | ||
He knew it was ridiculous, but it didn't matter. | ||
Mar-a-Lago's worth $18 million. | ||
I called my dad when they said that the first time. | ||
I called him, I go, hey, I want $10. | ||
He goes, what? | ||
No, if Mar-a-Lago's worth $18, I want $10. | ||
I'll come up with the money. | ||
I may not have it right now, but I will in about 17 seconds. | ||
Get me ten of those, because that would be my get-rich-quick scheme. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
Talk to us about the rest of the summer. | ||
Where are you going to be spending your time? | ||
We've got the convention, this trial, they're talking about Cohen maybe next week. | ||
This thing could wrap up in the next two or three weeks. | ||
Where do we go from here on the campaign? | ||
Your father's in New Jersey today, I think it's fantastic. | ||
Yeah, I think it's great. | ||
His thing is, hey, I'm looking at Minnesota, I'm looking at Jersey, I'm looking at Virginia. | ||
I want to add to this. | ||
Well, because he understands also it's not just about winning the presidency. | ||
We've also got to win those congressional seats. | ||
We've got to win dog catcher. | ||
We've got to win school boards. | ||
We've got to get people involved across the board. | ||
It's actually far less about the presidency. | ||
As the son, as someone who's been targeted, as someone who's vocal, I don't know that I want to win the presidency if we lose the House and we lose the Senate and we lose this and we lose state legislature. | ||
You know, I'll get another 50 hours of testimony where they're trying to put me in jail for treason again. | ||
Whether I did anything or not is almost irrelevant. | ||
We have to get involved. | ||
We need people out there. | ||
We have to understand what is at risk. | ||
Everything is on the table. | ||
The Democrats are saying it. | ||
It's not like they're pretending anymore. | ||
You know, they're saying all the things that they will do, and if they can do the things that they're doing to Donald Trump, if they're willing to pursue that, who won't they pursue? | ||
Who can't they destroy if they can destroy what was arguably one of the most powerful men in the world? | ||
That's the point. | ||
They're laying that message out. | ||
And that's a powerful, but also a strong individual. | ||
Think of what it takes. | ||
Oh, correct, yeah. | ||
You saw Peter today. | ||
He's a tough nut, right? | ||
This is what they're trying to do, trying to break these people. | ||
If they can try to break President Trump as strong as he is, Think about it. | ||
I also tell people all the time that we have to start taking the burden off his shoulders. | ||
One man can't do it all. | ||
This is why I'm all in the House every day. | ||
We need to step up. | ||
We need investigations. | ||
You can't, oh, we're going to wait until Trump comes back in 2025. | ||
We're going to wait on the border. | ||
We're going to wait on Ukraine. | ||
We're going to wait on, you know, he's got the huge taxes. | ||
We're going to wait on cutting spending. | ||
It just makes him trying to get his tax cuts back in even harder. | ||
Everybody's sitting here, we're just waiting for Trump. | ||
People need to step up and start taking the burden off his shoulders. | ||
One man cannot possibly do it all when the whole system is coming at him. | ||
Yeah, listen, you're 100% right. | ||
Do I think any of that will happen? | ||
Not even a little bit. | ||
unidentified
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You think because you've seen it before you just think it's... | |
I've been watching, hey, there's so much of it, right? | ||
I remember, again, it's easiest to relate to the ones that are personal to me, but I | ||
remember, you know, I committed treason, I'm an agent of Russia, they want to throw me | ||
in jail for life and or the death penalty, and you know, you have the Lindsey Graham's | ||
of the world, they'll get on Sean Hannity and they'll say, we must, we must subpoena | ||
I'm like, well, you're the head of the Judiciary Committee. | ||
You literally have the power to do that, but they take advantage of the naivete of the people who care but may not understand the process, may not understand the rules. | ||
I'm like, you literally have the power to do that, and you're complaining about no one actually doing it, so it appears to your audience Or a donor, or whoever it may be. | ||
The donors couldn't care less, I guess, about Trump. | ||
They're paying for other things. | ||
But it appears to the layperson who's not involved on a daily basis, like, oh, this guy's fighting for me. | ||
It's like, no, they're not. | ||
And so that's just one example of 435 of them in Congress, right? | ||
They do that. | ||
They're going there for a quick soundbite, and then they don't follow up. | ||
How many guys do we hear rallying how bad big tech is? | ||
But then they sign the bill. | ||
FISA is so terrible. | ||
Sign the bill. | ||
Expand Pfizer. | ||
We have a bunch of feckless weaklings on our side because it's easy to be a weakling in D.C. | ||
You can be conservative in D.C. | ||
as long as you fold when it matters, Steve. | ||
As long as you give the enemy what they want when it matters. | ||
You can be like 90% conservative. | ||
Sure, you can vote on this, but like, hey, this is a big one. | ||
OK, we'll fold. | ||
We'll give you everything you want. | ||
It's all performative. | ||
That is how it works in D.C., and so we need fighters. | ||
And your father knows leverage. | ||
He needs leverage. | ||
Can you guys hang? | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Can you guys hang for a few minutes on the other side? | ||
Okay, take a short commercial break here. | ||
Make sure Birch Gold, Phillip Patrick's coming on at the bottom of the hour. | ||
We've got Phillip Patrick here. | ||
We're going to walk through all the end of the dollar empire, the fifth installment, the central bank digital currency. | ||
Find out why the BRICS nations, their central banks, are buying gold at record rates. | ||
And of course, our Federal Reserve, besides monetizing the debt, is doing nothing more than coming up with a central bank digital currency. | ||
All through it, five free installments, including why Richard Nixon got off the gold standard. | ||
Installment number four. | ||
Philip Patrick at the bottom of the hour. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Sergio Gore. | ||
Don Jr. | ||
unidentified
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with us in the war room. | |
Okay, welcome back to the War Room. | ||
The book is The New MAGA Deal. | ||
It's by Dr. Peter Navarro. | ||
It brings in all the best thinking about what MAGA stands for, what President Trump's policies are. | ||
It couldn't be a better weapon for you in this season to get in people's faces and say, hey, look, I don't hear your nonsense. | ||
This is Trump's policies. | ||
He talks about them all the time. | ||
at the rallies but the liberal media will not pay attention to it. Quite frankly some | ||
of the conservative media also. This is the weapon you need. | ||
NewMAGADeal.com is where you go. Serge, I want to thank you so much for helping pull | ||
that book together. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, we couldn't have done it without you. | |
Well winning team publisher, you got Kerry Lake, you got MTG. | ||
unidentified
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Jeanine Pirro. | |
Jeanine, no hard course. | ||
Charlie Girt. | ||
Charlie Girt. | ||
No, but you know what, we started it because those people could not get published elsewhere. | ||
I mean, my original book was with a big four print house, and it was a bestseller, and then it was like they came back to us. | ||
Well, it turned out basically we're subsidizing bestsellers from conservative, or subsidizing guys who will never earn out, some liberal crap that no one's actually reading. | ||
And I'm looking at the difference in the deals. | ||
I sold X number of times whatever Andrew Cuomo did, but he's getting $5 million deals. | ||
I'm like, I'm not paying for his five. | ||
So we started a publishing house to basically publish my next book. | ||
And whether it was, you know, some of the other people in Congress that we know. | ||
You know, again, not all the right figures. | ||
They're in Congress. | ||
They'd get a book deal and they'd get it pulled. | ||
Peter gets a book deal pulled from him. | ||
Yes. | ||
So we want to make sure that we have an outlet. | ||
We got to build our own. | ||
They always say we got to do that. | ||
So we actually have done that. | ||
unidentified
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And I think it's also important to note, publishers tend to be liberal, right? | |
And it's very easy to sabotage someone's book. | ||
Just look at Kristi Noem and what they did to her. | ||
And so, you know, so much of it you rely on other people. | ||
It's very easy to... You also did the coolest book of last year, which was the book of all the letters. | ||
The letters to Trump. | ||
It was amazing how people revered this guy until you guys came in the elevator and went down the escalator. | ||
Know who your friends are. | ||
Thank you very much for doing this. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
By the way, people don't realize the pain you're in in doing this. | ||
That's all good. | ||
You just had operation, but you have not slowed down at all. | ||
Well, too much is at stake. | ||
When you're talking about the Republic, right, it's not like, eh, it's a deal or money. | ||
There's too much at stake. | ||
We've got to keep fighting. | ||
Like father, like son. | ||
I gotta tell you, your father has shown more, I think, to the American people in the last couple of months as they stole his business or tried to with this Moscow show trial, all these different indictments, this fiasco of a man of energy and his action, having to sit in that dingy courtroom and listen to this crap all day long, and then to gag him so he can't even talk about it, why these other guys are up there on podcasts every night ripping on him, making money. | ||
It has shown, I think it's shown the character The depth of character and the depth of courage and fight. | ||
Because courage is what it's about. | ||
We're going to win this thing so big. | ||
100%. | ||
And then it's going to be our time to drive it, right? | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
You're the viceroy. | ||
Now you had a commitment. | ||
You're the viceroy. | ||
I don't want anything. | ||
I just want to be there to block the scumbags, because there's a lot of them. | ||
But now we know who they are, and we've got to make sure they don't get anywhere near power. | ||
You're going to have Johnny McAtee on speed dial, right? | ||
There's a lot of guys we're going to have on speed dial. | ||
But yeah, that's an important one. | ||
And that's what we didn't know the first time. | ||
Had we known that, had we had that kind of insider knowledge, the accomplishments were incredible. | ||
They would have been 10x. | ||
They were pretty incredible. | ||
But I tell you, they tried to steal his first term. | ||
They stole his second victory. | ||
They ain't going to steal the third one. | ||
And the second term is going to be, they're going to understand that this guy's coming with savvy and knowledge. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Thank you guys. | ||
Thank you for doing that today. | ||
It's our pleasure. | ||
And our audience just loves it. | ||
The new MAGA deal. | ||
It's by winning team publishing Sergio Gore, Don Jr. | ||
Now we've got, can we go and play the song? | ||
Can we go and play the song and then we'll get the artists up? | ||
Thanks guys. | ||
You never know. | ||
This is why I love Rav's studio on West Palm Beach. | ||
You never know who's going to drop by. | ||
Let's go and play the song. | ||
This is Mama. | ||
From a, uh, from a MAGA artist. | ||
I'm gonna have her up right after the song. | ||
unidentified
|
play it. | |
I'm the one who wipes the tears they cry. | ||
I'm bible reading, Jesus preaching, on the in and outside. | ||
But God help you if you ever cross the line. | ||
Back off my babies, you can't replace me. | ||
Don't go thinking you know better. | ||
I'll do the praying, I'll do the raising. | ||
I'll decide what's best because I'm on. | ||
Because I'm on. | ||
Everybody's got their cheap twosies. | ||
Bye! | ||
Strangers, teachers, even the government. | ||
But you're crazy is my gasoline Just try me and you'll find out what I mean | ||
Back off my babies, you can't replace me Don't go thinking you know better | ||
I'll do the praying, I'll do the raising I'll decide what's best because I'm | ||
Mama I'm the keeper and protector | ||
I'm the front line, the defender. | ||
I'm the comfort and the fighter. | ||
Like a mama bear in the wild A little pretty, pretty deadly | ||
Ain't looking for a fight, but I'm ready I'm the grit and the grit | ||
So don't get in my way Back off my baby | ||
I'll do the raising. | ||
replace me don't go thinking you know better I'll do the praying I'll do the | ||
raising I'll decide what's best because I'm mama you | ||
Kim Walker Smith now joins us, the artist. | ||
Kim, what inspired you? | ||
That song's amazing, kind of a new mantra for a movement. | ||
What inspired you? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I just wanted to write an anthem for moms because, like so many mothers, I just kind of got pushed to my limit and was just kind of feeling really frustrated and feeling like I wanted to say something. | |
I wanted to put my voice out there. | ||
And I know that there's a lot of other moms like me who were also kind of looking to get their voice out there. | ||
After being pushed to my limits and the things that I'm having to put up with as a mother trying to raise young children this day and age and how I cannot let my guard down for one moment. | ||
And I was driving around in my car one day and this song just came to me. | ||
I pulled out my phone and started singing it into my phone to record the chorus of the song. | ||
And then I took it to a couple other songwriting mamas who helped me finish it up. | ||
So that's where it came from. | ||
Talk to me. | ||
When you say, I don't feel like I can let my guard down and other women feel the same way because of my children. | ||
What do you mean by that? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, you know, here's a great example. | ||
I had an experience. | ||
I was at a store with my children. | ||
This is back when we lived in California. | ||
We live in Montana now, and I got into a line at a register. | ||
I didn't look down the line to see who was at the register, but my kids were running around and talking and chatting, and we get down by the register, and my kids were just suddenly silent. | ||
And I knew something wasn't quite right, and I looked at them, and I just followed their gaze. | ||
And I saw that the guy at the register is a bearded person at the register wearing a lot of makeup and a dress. | ||
And my kids were really confused. | ||
They didn't know what they were looking at. | ||
And they started to ask, you know, what is that? | ||
What am I looking at? | ||
And I stopped him and said, we're going to talk about this when we get outside. | ||
But this person seemed to see I mean, it doesn't matter where we are. | ||
and acted like they were about to, you know, say something to my kids and I | ||
stepped in between him and my kids and told him if he said another word that I | ||
would be coming over that counter. And I think the look on my face told him that | ||
I was serious and he didn't. He didn't say another word after that. And this is | ||
the thing where, I mean, it doesn't matter where we are. It's not just schools. | ||
It's out at the grocery store. | ||
It's bulletin boards out on the roads. | ||
It's, it's on every, you know, the cartoons. | ||
It's just everywhere. | ||
And so as a parent, I just feel like everyone is trying to shove their mindsets, their opinions, their whatever it is on my children. | ||
And it, it's, it is not their right. | ||
It is not their place. | ||
And I just wanted to make a statement as a mom to say, I'm done with this and to stir up other moms to say like, we're fighting back and these are our kids. | ||
And we're the ones who will, Be the front line and decide what they're taught and what they're told. | ||
Kim, where can people go get the song right now? | ||
Where can they find out more about your touring? | ||
We've got to bounce, but I want people to get access to you, hopefully have you back in the next couple of weeks. | ||
Where do they get the song? | ||
Where do they find out more about you? | ||
Where do they see about your tour? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, this song is on all of the streaming platforms. | |
It's everywhere you listen to music. | ||
You can find me on all the social media platforms. | ||
It says Kim Walker Smith, and you can find out more about me at my website at kimwalkersmith.com. | ||
And Steve, I just gotta say one more thing. | ||
I gotta say hi to my mom because she is a huge fan of you. | ||
She watches you every day, and this is probably the biggest treat for her to see her daughter on your show. | ||
So hi, mom, and happy Mother's Day. | ||
We can say happy Mother's Day to your mom. | ||
We can tell she's a woman of discernment. | ||
She's part of the War Room Posse. | ||
Kim Walker-Smith, you're a great artist. | ||
Honored to have you as one of the top artists in the MAGA movement. | ||
We're going to push this song out hard. | ||
Happy Mother's Day, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you so much. | |
And congratulations on your new anthem. | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Fantastic. | ||
It is Mother's Day tomorrow. | ||
I want to thank Don Jr. | ||
not just for going down to see Dr. Peter Navarro and Sergio Gorin. | ||
Sergio, by the way, is the head of Winning Team Publishing. | ||
Sergio's a guy that's been involved with Michelle Bachmann in politics. | ||
We've known Sergio for over a decade. | ||
One of the best guys out there. | ||
Very close advisor to President Trump and the head of Winning Team Publishing. | ||
We've pushed a lot of the books out there from Winning Team. | ||
It's just fantastic. | ||
Make sure you go to newmagadeal.com. | ||
This is how you support Peter Navarro. | ||
Really want to thank Don. | ||
Don Jr. | ||
just had knee surgery. | ||
I mean, this guy's in a lot of pain. | ||
Come in here and stand up for 45 minutes and actually go down there without crutches. | ||
Shows you the caliber of the guy he is. | ||
Okay, Phillip Patrick. | ||
is going to join us next. | ||
We're going to get into some capital markets so we can talk all about it and make sure to break it down and make sure that you guys fully understand what's happening, not just in the world's economy, what's happening in the capital markets in times of turbulence, how you actually got to start thinking through, hey, maybe I need a hedge for this madness. | ||
Bidenomics, the best hedge, that would be precious metals. | ||
Philip Patrick from Birchgold up next. | ||
unidentified
|
You can't replace me don't go thinking you know better Here's your host Stephen K. Vance | |
War Room. | ||
Okay, we're very lucky to have Philip Patrick Philip Patrick and these guys at Birchgold are so swamped during the week. | ||
Why are they swamped? | ||
It's folks like yourself. | ||
And this is what, look, when we get sponsors, two things. | ||
What the sponsor is either the product or service has to dovetail totally with the kind of news and what we decide to cover, you know, every day. | ||
So we just don't want somebody coming in and just, you know, hawking goods here. | ||
Obviously gold and a hedge against the madness, the fiscal madness of your legislatures and the executive branch and of course the monetary madness of the Federal Reserve and the Treasury are central topics we talk about every day. | ||
Why? | ||
It's the first time a working class audience, a middle class audience, without going to a business channel and I will respectfully submit I think we do a much better job Then CNBC and Fox Business Bloomberg, which is quite technical, a lot of the times, as it should be, because really more for traders, I think probably does as good a job, maybe even a little better than us. | ||
But for a standard business channel or even the Wall Street Journal Financial Times, I think we do a pretty good job. | ||
And that's why Birch Gold is so central, because you understand in this about financial markets, about capital markets, and this concept of having a hedge against times of instability. | ||
And we're in a turbulent... You think we're in turbulence? | ||
Look at yesterday's show. | ||
Look at the show up until now. | ||
Of course you're in times of turbulence. | ||
You know that's one of the reasons you're part of the War Room Posse, because you're here to fight to save your country. | ||
And for our international audience, they see the same thing. | ||
They're part of the sovereignty movement. | ||
Throughout Europe and throughout Australia, India, Japan, everywhere, Latin America. | ||
Phillip Patrick joins us now. | ||
Phillip, really want to thank you for coming on board. | ||
I know you guys are jammed during the week. | ||
We love having you here on the weekends. | ||
A couple of things came up. | ||
Articles this week in Zero Hedge. | ||
One is about no matter which way the Fed moves, right, no matter if they cut or they increase, It's kind of chaotic now, and they don't really have a good maneuver of what they've done. | ||
Also, Barry Sternlich. | ||
And Sternlich is one of the biggest real estate guys in the country. | ||
He's no fan of the war room. | ||
He's not MAGA. | ||
He hates Trump. | ||
But he came out in an interview, I think it was with The Economist. | ||
He's sitting there saying, look, You can't hide from this commercial real estate market anymore. | ||
And he predicted two midsize banks a week would start folding if something wasn't done immediately. | ||
And he's saying there's a crisis in particularly in big cities. | ||
With commercial real estate, you can't hide anymore that these massive occupancy problems and that, you know, what Biden and these guys are doing to prop these banks up. | ||
And David Sachs, I know, has been talking about this, that eventually market conditions are going to cause and that we risk actually having a collapse like we have with Silicon Valley Bank and others. | ||
Let's start with the Fed first, and then we'll go and talk about the banking system. | ||
Yeah, they're sort of tied in as well. | ||
But the Fed are in a very tough position at the moment because no matter which way they turn, there's going to be problems in the economy. | ||
So we look at the inflation fight. | ||
Fed at the end of last year was suggesting Hey, we're going to lower interest rates as many as three times. | ||
Obviously, since October of last year, we've seen inflation continually rising, which has put their ability to drop rates. | ||
They just can't rationalize it with a dual mandate. | ||
You know, instead, if they want to combat the inflation problem, they've got to start raising interest rates, right? | ||
That would be the plan. | ||
That's what the Fed should do to try and get a handle on inflation. | ||
But the problem is they can't really do that either, because every time they raise rates, something in the economy breaks, right? | ||
We're talking about bank failures. | ||
Look at last year. | ||
The Fed were raising rates. | ||
getting a handle on inflation, suddenly we saw Signature and SVB fail on the back of higher | ||
rates of interest. Same this year, we saw, and it was swept under the carpet, the first bank failure | ||
of the year in the form of Republic First, again, struggling in a climate with higher interest rates. | ||
So the Fed are in a very tough position. They raise rates, they risk destabilizing the banking | ||
sector, they lower rates, they risk letting inflation run rampant. | ||
So at this point, they're in a position where I think they're going to do nothing and hope for the best. | ||
Now, we know that hope isn't a plan, but it's the best that Powell has at the moment. | ||
And the Fed are just backed into a corner with very little in terms of tools. | ||
But they're backed into a corner. | ||
Because of their own decisions. | ||
And this goes back when you first came on in early December and said, hey, I've been doing this a long time. | ||
You and Scott Bessing came on in the first couple of days in early December and said, I've been doing this a long time. | ||
I've never seen Treasury and Fed try to work together. | ||
And obviously, it's trying to push a political agenda to re-elect Biden. | ||
Was that their mistake here? | ||
Was too quickly stopping the fight on inflation because they thought that was going to hurt his political chances. | ||
They weren't purely political to try to back this regime and try to make sure that they had enough liquidity and lower interest rates that they juiced this system for the mid-summer, late summer of 24 to lead into Labor Day and they have a better propped up economy and say, hey, what's your beef? | ||
Vote for Biden, sir. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that was clearly the plan. | ||
Like I said, the suggestion at the end of last year that they were going to lower interest rates when inflation at the time was 50% above their target. | ||
by the way, almost 100% above their target today. | ||
But, you know, they're now backed into a corner. | ||
That was the plan, that was the hope, but the realities of biodynamics are hitting us today. | ||
And I don't think the Fed can ultimately do that any longer with inflation going rampant. | ||
But they've made miscalculations from the beginning. | ||
Remember when we were told that inflation was transitory, the Fed were late to react. | ||
So I think they have a big part to play. | ||
But let's not forget, it's the federal government, too, right? | ||
Pushing through massive, wasteful spending packages that are making the job even harder. | ||
But if you ask this Fed political, the answer is absolutely yes. | ||
Otherwise, they would have acted quicker. | ||
And maybe got a better handle on inflation it is out of control at the moment. | ||
Talk to me about the wasteful spending. | ||
We've talked about this. | ||
This is the Green New Deal. | ||
$1.6 trillion. | ||
They can't even figure out, it's so bogus to begin with, but they can't even figure out legitimate programs. | ||
So they're just throwing cash out right now to essentially buy votes. | ||
It's the reverse of the student debt situation where they're just unconstitutionally canceling debt and making working class people pay for these deadbeats that are revolting, these Marxists that are revolting on college campuses, sir. | ||
Yeah, it's absolutely spot on. | ||
You know, he tricked us into 1.6 trillion dollars in loans, grants, and tax credits to fund a Green New Deal. | ||
By the way, about 25% of that money hasn't been spent yet, right? | ||
So they secured the spending, but they don't even know what to do with it, right? | ||
And it's, I think, in on itself very telling. | ||
Now, we've got a problem at the moment in that You know, Biden understands that unless he wins re-election, this money isn't going to be spent. | ||
So if you look at this administration now, they are frantically racking up and trying to spend this money without really any design. | ||
But the reality is it's just a huge mess, not just because it's wasteful. | ||
Right. | ||
But because it's ultimately just misguided. | ||
Right. | ||
To give you an example, somewhere in the Utah desert, a federal loan guarantee is financing an attempt to turn | ||
wind and solar energy into clean hydrogen fuel because of course hydrogen is so important to the | ||
economy. But this is how incentives work, right? | ||
Give me a federal loan guarantee and I will happily incinerate a stack of cash in the Utah desert. | ||
But what gets me so upset is that it's our money on the line, right? | ||
When did you last hear about somebody griping about the prices of hydrogen, right? | ||
It doesn't happen, yet we're paying more for food and gas to support the hydrogen industry. | ||
This is a case of bydenomics in action. | ||
You know, this is not the way that industrial revolutions happen. | ||
History has shown us time and time again, you cannot remake an economy from the top down. | ||
Mao tried it, right? | ||
History remembers it as the Great Leap Forward. | ||
Meanwhile, 45,000, 45 million, sorry, Chinese citizens starved to death. | ||
Stalin tried it, right? | ||
Ever hear of his five-year plan organizing a market from the capital? | ||
It leads to massive industrial projects like hydroelectric dams in the Siberian tundra. | ||
Meanwhile, people starve. | ||
Hang on. | ||
Holodor, the whole situation in Ukraine, which is kind of a mini-Holocaust, he starved the | ||
farmers there that were growing the wheat because he had to send the wheat because they | ||
took the peasants out of the field up in Mother Russia to put them in factories, which they | ||
weren't used to. | ||
They completely tried to restructure the entire economy of Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia, led to millions of deaths, just like with the Chinese Communist Party in the Great Leap Forward in the 1950s, sir. | ||
It's exactly, it's exactly right. | ||
And there are so many examples in history. | ||
It has never worked. | ||
It will never work. | ||
So what we have to ask ourselves, and you basically answered the question already, but what is this really about? | ||
What is the real agenda? | ||
And the only thing it is, is simply a monumental power grab. | ||
This is a money grab. | ||
And to what end? | ||
To buy votes? | ||
It's an absurdity, right? | ||
We can always expect extra spending in the run-up to an election, but this isn't extra | ||
spending, right? | ||
This is, you know, this year the White House has upgraded from pork barrel spending to | ||
a fiscal slaughterhouse churning out debt now at an industrial scale. | ||
The only good news, I think, is that it's not too late to stop it, right? | ||
With the right leadership, we can undo some of the damage that this administration has done, and I think that's why Trump's so... | ||
This is the whole reason we're in back of the motion to vacate, because Johnson had every opportunity to do it. | ||
I want to get to something before we go to break. | ||
Got about two minutes. | ||
Scott Besson was on this morning, one of the smartest guys around. | ||
He said, hey, look, the way they're financing this short term, and you said you and Philip Patrick talk about this all the time, one third of the debt's got to be refinanced. | ||
They're not going long. | ||
They're not doing tens because they don't want to push the price. | ||
They said, this is what banana republics do. | ||
This is what developing economies do. | ||
You've never seen an advanced economy do this. | ||
Talk to me about Treasury and Janet Yellen just putting out bills, 90-day bills, and rolling this debt over that we've got to refinance it every 90 days, sir. | ||
Well, it's unsustainable, right? | ||
We know that. | ||
This year alone, the interest payments on the debt are projected to be over a trillion dollars, the biggest line item in the federal budget, right? | ||
As old debt expires, new debt now gets wrapped in at higher interest rates, and that just ultimately compounds the issue. | ||
Ninety-day bills are more expensive than 10-year debt. | ||
So longer term, it compounds the problem until we get to the point of no return, | ||
and we're essentially there already. | ||
It's unsustainable, yet they're continuing down the same path. | ||
And we've said it before, and we'll say it again, this is essentially how every empire in history has collapsed. | ||
A move to expand, an increase in the money supply, a collapse of the money, and a collapse of the empire. | ||
And they know it, yet they're continuing down the same path, because maybe they feel we're at the point of no return now. | ||
By the way, Rogoff told us, he put out that article again a couple of weeks ago. | ||
He's written the book, the definitive kind of seminal work. | ||
The title is called, This Time It's Totally Different. | ||
And he goes back through every democracy, every republic, every dictatorship, no matter where you are, when the leaders of the country that control the money supply, when the leaders of the country that control the fiscal management, when debt goes above GDP, it really goes above, and they all say, oh, this time is different for this reason. | ||
It is 100% of the time been wrong, and that's where we're reaching the danger zone now in the United States of America. | ||
Only a revolt of MAGA can stop this. | ||
Only a return of Trump and putting some courage into the House of Representatives, because they actually have the power of the purse set up by the founding generation. | ||
OK, Philip Patrick is going to stick around. | ||
We're going to talk about Philip Patrick, about access to Philip Patrick and the team at Birchgold, because now more than ever, is when you guys need to really reach out and make contact. | ||
We're very proud of the macro economics we take you through, the capital markets analysis we take you to. | ||
But at some point in time, you got to talk about tax deferred instruments, tax free instruments, the instrumentality of how you get into precious metals. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Philip Patrick from Birchgold is going to join us on the other side. | ||
We will fight till they're all gone! | ||
unidentified
|
We rejoice when there's no more! | |
Let's take down the CCP! | ||
War Room Here's your host, Stephen K. Bamm. | ||
Okay, welcome back. | ||
I'm very proud of the work we've done with Birchgold and since their kindness in helping us put this together over the last three or four years, the end of the dollar empire. | ||
One of the things we're trying to do here is make sure that this working class and middle class audience that makes up the Warren Posse, you're informed as if you went to graduate school in economics, at least got a master's degree or an MBA. | ||
This is why the end of the dollar empire, it's five part series. | ||
Philip Patrick and the teams really helped me on this. | ||
The last one we just put out is the central bank digital currency. | ||
You find out why the BRICS nations, the Global South, the people who kind of control the resources, why their central banks are buying gold at record rates in 22, 23, and now starting off 24. | ||
And why our Fed, besides monetizing the debt, okay, and paying for this fiscal madness, We're also working on a digital currency. | ||
The one that stalled me before, and all these are free, stalled me before that is Nixon getting himself the gold standard, which I think will shock you. | ||
And of course, the one before that was the debt trap. | ||
We talk about the importance of currency, the currency in the economic life of a nation. | ||
They knew that right at the end of World War II. | ||
That's why Bretton Woods, the elite set up the US dollar to be the prime reserve currency. | ||
We're living with that today. | ||
There's a lot of benefits to that, but man, there are some real obligations. | ||
Our elites don't want to see those obligations out. | ||
One is not to be absolutely insane when it comes to fiscal and monetary management. | ||
Philip, I want to take this, the few minutes we got left, and really what I'm so proud | ||
is that you give access, like feedback I get from people on Birchgold, is you get tremendous | ||
access to people and actually understand what's going on. | ||
Our audience, we get them the macro. | ||
You guys help me do that. | ||
You come on now, hopefully every Saturday, because I know you're jammed during the week. | ||
But when people go to birchgold.com slash Bannon and they want to find out more, they | ||
want to get information, kids, they want to talk to you or one of your colleagues, walk | ||
us through what the process is. | ||
It's really simple. | ||
It starts with information. | ||
Birchgold.com forward slash Bannon. | ||
That's going to give them access not only to the five part series, the end of the dollar empire, that's really going to help to build broad economic knowledge, understand history, how we got to where we are today. | ||
As you mentioned, the most recent installment talking about the potential for central bank digital currencies. | ||
Outside of that, they also get access to a guide on how to purchase gold, why to purchase gold, how to invest in it. | ||
And more importantly, they'll have access, if their interest is piqued, to individuals like myself that are there to guide through, to explain how it applies to the individual, like you say, on a micro level. | ||
So, you know, we're all about information. | ||
It's key for us because we feel that when people are fully informed, that's how they can make good decisions. | ||
So birchgold.com forward slash ban and start with the information. | ||
And then we'll go one step at a time from there. | ||
But anyone that has retirement accounts, cash in the banks, losing in the realities of the Biden economy, precious metals in this climate are a very good solution. | ||
As you say always, they have been for thousands of years and they continue to be so. | ||
So just contact us and get informed and we'll take it from there. | ||
One thing is also because it's not just simply the price of gold, it's the spread between the dollar and the drop in purchasing power. | ||
And one thing we're trying to get people to do is understand purchasing power of the dollar and how that's being destroyed. | ||
And it's being destroyed on purpose. | ||
This is not... | ||
Some natural, this is not the second law of thermodynamics. | ||
This is not a natural property in the natural world. | ||
This is because the decisions by the elites in this country, particularly the Uniparty, which are their bag boys, right, of doing this. | ||
But the purchasing power of the dollar is going to get increasingly crushed. | ||
And you just look at the math of it. | ||
That's why even if you haven't been, oh, I'm not a gold bug, I don't know about gold. | ||
Now, more than ever, you need to immerse yourself and understand it. | ||
If you make a conscious decision not to do it, that's fine. | ||
But no longer can you just sit there and go, well, you know, I'm not that interested in it. | ||
I don't know much about it. | ||
That's why we do the end of the dollar empire with Birch Gold. | ||
That's why we make Philip Patrick and the team. | ||
But the key is the drop in the purchasing power of the dollar. | ||
That's what's stealing from people every day. | ||
Philip Patrick. | ||
It's exactly right. | ||
That's what we tell people every single day. | ||
Gold is not a get-rich-quick scheme, right? | ||
If you're not a multi-millionaire today, it's not going to make you that overnight. | ||
It is about preserving buying power. | ||
It is making sure that every dollar bill you protect with gold today, in 10, 15, 20 years' time, can do what it can today. | ||
That's the premise with gold. | ||
And with a federal government that is massively increasing the supply of dollars, that is Incentivizing nations around the world to distance from the dollar. | ||
So affecting demand whilst increasing supply. | ||
That only ends in one way. | ||
It's only ended one way throughout history. | ||
This time it will not be different. | ||
So gold is how one protects against it. | ||
And I encourage everyone, what you said I thought was brilliant. | ||
Learn it, understand it. | ||
And if it's not for you, it's not for you. | ||
But you have to get the information. | ||
Make sure you make a conscious decision, it's not from me. | ||
Don't do it just from ignorance. | ||
This is why we're so proud to partner. | ||
On the end of the Dollar Empire, it's all free, all five installments. | ||
Then Philip Patrick, what he puts up on Getter, what their information kits, they give us articles we put up in our daily emails. | ||
It's just absolutely incredible. | ||
One thing I want to leave the audience with, the world today has got about $350 trillion in debt when you add everything up. | ||
We are heading and hurtling towards the biggest margin call in the history of the world. | ||
And things will be different on the other side of that. | ||
Just remember. | ||
So now you have to arm yourself. | ||
Knowledge is power. | ||
Knowledge is power. | ||
And knowledge about money is right now ultimate power in the physical world that it manifests itself. | ||
Philip Patrick, where do people get to you on social media? | ||
at philip patrick on getter again at philip patrick on getter and for information on gold very simple birchgold.com forward slash bannon Thank you for having me as always, Steve. | ||
the Birch guys, make sure that Philip Patrick and the team are available. Use that. Tap into that | ||
resource. Another resource we're very proud at the War Room to be able to offer to the War Room | ||
Posse. Philip Patrick, thank you, and particularly thank you for taking time on a Saturday to do | ||
this. Really appreciate it. Thank you for having me as always, Steve. Thank you. | ||
Okay. Tons of good programming throughout the day on Real America's Voice. | ||
Of course, our president is going to be out and about. | ||
We'll be following him non-stop. | ||
Make sure you go to my Getter account. | ||
We'll be putting up great stuff on Getter all day. | ||
We're back here next week on Monday morning at 10 a.m. | ||
in the interim. | ||
Two things I'm very proud of also, in addition to our relationship with Birch Gold, is our coffee, Warpath Coffee. | ||
Get on the Warpath today! | ||
You go by going to warpath.coffee and go to War Room, you get your 15% discount. | ||
But look at the endorsements! | ||
From the audience. | ||
Look at the endorsements from people just like yourself. | ||
Also, sacredhumanhealth.com. | ||
Grass-fed beef livers. | ||
Boom! | ||
Get the energy. | ||
Energy jolt you get from grass-fed beef livers. | ||
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