Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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And we realized we were just inches away from victory, and that's when we decided to give up. | |
Join us, and thousands of American patriots, for the summer convention that all are invited to. | ||
You're gonna hear how we're going to win in 2024. | ||
With the biggest speakers in the movement, featuring President Donald J. Trump, Charlie Kirk, Donald Trump Jr., Vivek Ramaswamy, Governor Kristi Noem, Dr. Ben Carson, Tulsi Gabbard, Steve Bannon, Candace Owens, Laura Trump, Senator Rick Scott, Kimberly Guilfoyle, Congressman Matt Gaetz, Ben Johnson, Jack Posobiec, Lise Eldon, Congressman Eli Crane, Brendan Tatum, and more. | ||
June 14th through 16th. | ||
2024 is our final battle. | ||
Saturday, June 8, Year of the Lord 2024. | ||
like never before. | ||
unidentified
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Join us for the People's Convention. | |
This is a new ball game, everybody. | ||
You send a message. | ||
We play to win. | ||
Register now at tpaction.com slash peoples. | ||
Saturday 8 June, Eurovillor 2024. | ||
Thank you for the second hour. | ||
For those of you in the audience that are asking for a plan, we're going to get Bill | ||
McGinley in here for a second. | ||
We've got to set the predicate for it. | ||
Remember, everything is framed by history, and particularly the interpretation of history, because they use that against MAGA. | ||
They said right there, we're not isolationists. | ||
We're anything but isolationists. | ||
Most of this audience is veterans or people that have children that are in the military, have either served, parents served, etc. | ||
We're not isolationists. | ||
At all. | ||
We're not isolationists at all. | ||
So it's in fact the exact opposite. | ||
We're America first. | ||
As importantly, and this gets lost in the interpretation a lot, we're American citizens first. | ||
We're American citizens first. | ||
American citizens come first, not last. | ||
That's the situation we've got today. | ||
Times of London, and Harnwell, if I can get Ben in as part of the second hour. | ||
Times of London has a brutal story about Zelensky and the people around him. | ||
Particularly this Chief of Staff. | ||
And this is coming from the Times of London. | ||
It ain't from Breitbart. | ||
It's not from Revolver over with... | ||
Darren Beatty and the crew. | ||
Couple things. | ||
That's Charlie Kirk's. | ||
We're going to have a big showing this coming week in Detroit. | ||
If you liked what you saw at the Dream City Church, you're going to love this. | ||
We can put it up. | ||
You go to, what, TPUSA. | ||
Just put in War Room. | ||
You get a 25% discount. | ||
We're going to have a big show for us up there in the Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio region. | ||
President Trump, they're going to have 75 speakers. | ||
But more importantly, we're going to have workshops. | ||
I think we're trying to get a workshop for Trump Force 47 to explain it to everybody, to talk to everybody about it, because that's the big new initiative. | ||
We're creating an army of volunteers. | ||
A couple other things. | ||
People of Love. | ||
So, number one, we launched on Friday. | ||
I didn't think I could spend time on it. | ||
I'll probably do it Monday morning on John Fredericks. | ||
We launched in Memphis, adding to our vast radio network under John Fredericks. | ||
AM down and dirty 7.30. | ||
Down and dirty 7.30. | ||
AM 7.30. | ||
And I'm so proud Home Title Locker worked because you got Graceland that, remember, Graceland almost got, they went all the way to auction because somebody had gotten into their title. | ||
Of Graceland. | ||
They got in the title and had the biggest scam going. | ||
They were gonna basically liquidate Graceland. | ||
Take the great Elvis Presley's mansion away. | ||
You don't think with cyber and artificial intelligence, you don't think it can happen to you? | ||
Uh, yeah. | ||
Just go to hometidalock.com and check it out, okay? | ||
Also, our sponsor for the weekend show is always Birch Gold. | ||
We did not get Phillip Patrick. | ||
That's how busy they are. | ||
Birchgold.com, End of the Dollar Empire. | ||
Remember, all the content in the War Room is free. | ||
The five-part series, The End of the Dollar Empire. | ||
I've been working on it now for a couple years. | ||
The fifth installment's out. | ||
We've had debt. | ||
We've had getting off the gold standard under Nixon. | ||
We've had populism and populist economics. | ||
All of it. | ||
The debt trap. | ||
Now we've got the central bank digital currency. | ||
Why the BRICS nations are buying gold at record rates. | ||
The Global South. | ||
Who they think are going to be the negotiating partners here on the peace treaty in Ukraine. | ||
They don't think this western peace thing in Switzerland is going to work. | ||
They think it's going to be the global south. | ||
India and Brazil. | ||
Find out why they're buying, along with the CCP, gold at record rates. | ||
We explained all to you. | ||
And digital currencies versus fiat money. | ||
Birchgold.com. | ||
Last thing is the people have loved Orca. | ||
What does the apex predator know that you don't? | ||
You got that story in the Daily Mail? | ||
Apex Orca went after the Great White Shark. | ||
What did he eat? | ||
First off, Orca versus Great White, Orca wins. | ||
Okay? | ||
What did Orca get as a snack afterwards? | ||
Didn't eat the whole shark. | ||
Didn't want to stuck it with the belly or anything like that. | ||
That's where he's got the license plates and all that garbage. | ||
Because sharks just open it up and just take it all in. | ||
What did he do? | ||
He went for the liver. | ||
Why did he go for the liver? | ||
He ate the liver. | ||
That's all he ate. | ||
Why did he eat the liver? | ||
Because the greatest concentration of nutrients is in the liver. | ||
Grass-fed beef levers. | ||
That's for humans. | ||
Go check it out now. | ||
Sacred Human Health. | ||
SacredHumanHealth.com. | ||
Don't take it from me. | ||
Just like Warpath Coffee. | ||
Go to the site and look at what your partners in the war room are saying. | ||
What's the posse saying? | ||
Your compadres. | ||
4,000 five-star reviews over 4,000. | ||
Over 4,000 five-star reviews over at Warpath Coffee and hundreds Coming in on grass-fed beef livers every day and what they say, man, I get an energy jolt. | ||
So check it out. | ||
Don't take it from me, take it from your colleagues. | ||
We got so much going on. | ||
Andrew McCabe, just to finish up my rant there, they're so nervous. | ||
And here's why they're nervous. | ||
unidentified
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They see They see what you see. | |
They understand there's a tectonic plate shift. | ||
I challenged CNN outside the federal courthouse the other day. | ||
Sarah Murray's there, a great reporter. | ||
As great as you can get at CNN, because it's CNN. | ||
Sarah Murray's right there, and I said, hey, Sarah. | ||
Harry Enten. | ||
Right? | ||
Harry Enten. | ||
Let's get your... And they didn't do it, so I'm challenging now Kaitlyn Collins. | ||
Caitlyn Collins used to be the daily caller over at Tucker Carlson's shop. | ||
Caitlyn Collins, I think she's from the University of Alabama also. | ||
Caitlyn Collins, remember your roots. | ||
Just have Harry Anton on. | ||
We ought to have Anderson Cooper or Caitlyn. | ||
Just bring Harry Anton on. | ||
And let Harry Enten go through the crosstabs and ask him, do it Monday, ask him on Monday, that'll be the 10th of June in the year of 2024, for Harry Enten to make the call of that day and he will say it'll be a landslide. | ||
And that includes Minnesota and the Commonwealth of Virginia. | ||
Boom, 350 electoral votes. | ||
We pick up five or six Senate seats, we hold the House and pick up a couple or three seats. | ||
Full spectrum dominance. | ||
And why is that? | ||
From Wildwood, New Jersey, to South Bronx, to the Bodega Run up in Harlem, to the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte, to Beverly Hills last night had a massive turnout, to Dream City, to everybody. | ||
50 Cent. | ||
When you have 50 Cent, Amber Rose, David Sachs, Dr. Phil, Russell Brand, are you kidding me? | ||
It's because we're two-thirds of the nation, or 75% of the nation, and they can't stop it. | ||
Why is Andrew McKay, Mr. Tough Guy, Mr. FBI Tough Guy, why is he wetting himself on national TV? | ||
He's damn scared, because he understands the end is near. | ||
So brother, you and all the other people, these are torturous conversations we're having. | ||
Don't torture yourself. | ||
Don't torture yourself. | ||
Get your passport, get the hell out of the country, because hey, we're coming, we're gonna grab the long arm of the law. | ||
Gonna grab you back, bro. | ||
Totally constitutional. | ||
And inside the rule of law, which what you didn't do in trying to destroy this republic, you're gonna get a taste of American justice. | ||
American justice. | ||
By the rule of law, based on English common law. | ||
And guess what, bro, you ain't gonna like it one bit. | ||
Your crimes and your treason, Comey, all of you. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Go to the ends of the earth. | ||
We will hunt you down and bring you back and you will stand accountable before the American people. | ||
And this is the party that fought what you guys wanted on the Pfizer requirements. | ||
All the lawlessness you've done to aspiring Americans, what you've done with the big tech oligarchs and the tech feudalism. | ||
We're not prepared to give this republic up, and we're not going to give it up. | ||
We're certainly not going to give it up without a fight. | ||
And that's what you've got right now. | ||
And hey, note to self, ruling class, and the sociopathic overlords that run this country, and the credential class that kiss their ass and take their pay, right? | ||
And the proletariat that they've destroyed underneath it. | ||
We're freeing the proletariat. | ||
We're going to free the working class in this country. | ||
Not going to be controlled by you. | ||
Not going to be controlled by your propaganda. | ||
Not going to be controlled by any of it. | ||
They're going to get liberty and they're going to get freedom. | ||
And the party that delivers that to them governs for a hundred years. | ||
And you can see it. | ||
I preached this for years and you see it coming right now. | ||
Don't take it from me. | ||
Take it from Amber Rose. | ||
Bill McGinley. | ||
So how are we going to do it? | ||
First off, Rave reviews on your thing yesterday, the folks in Palatine. | ||
We had a couple hundred there in the burning afternoon heat. | ||
I want to thank everybody. | ||
It was just an amazing, amazing event. | ||
The feedback I got about the show in many aspects, and two, they're very important for you. | ||
Number one, they absolutely loved the first part. | ||
They have never really heard that. | ||
It's not DNC and it's not Biden campaign. | ||
It's not RNC and Trump campaign versus just DNC and Biden. | ||
Trump and RNC versus DNC and Biden. | ||
Because that we win. | ||
I mean, that's nothing. | ||
It's the $2 billion around it by the billionaires and actually listening at the entities and what they're doing and where they're doing it. | ||
The other is that from the precinct strategy to getting people involved, so many people came up and said, hey, volunteering, getting involved changed my life for the better. | ||
I got engaged with people that I didn't know all over the country who have similar likes. | ||
I've gotten so many friends. | ||
We now hang out. | ||
It's changed their lives and the action of being a county supervisor, being on a school board and seeing it, not talking about it, not just sitting on the sofa, bitching and moaning about it, but actually get engaged and see what we're up against. | ||
And that's what the RNC is preaching now, right? | ||
To Trump force 47 and swamp the vote. | ||
But I want to start Let's hit rewind and go back to your opening thesis yesterday about what we're really up against, the $2 billion of billionaires' money. | ||
Let me say this, let me level set on this. | ||
The Biden campaign did not hide this. | ||
Back in March, there was a Washington Post article where they talked about the campaign structure and what their strategy was going to be for 2024. | ||
Of outside groups. | ||
Of outside groups. | ||
And let me read you a direct quote from this article. | ||
I'll even give you the title so you can look it up. | ||
Inside Biden's hidden campaign, the president is gambling on using Democrat and outside groups will work better than a big centralized effort. | ||
Repeat that again. | ||
Give me that. | ||
I love it so much. | ||
Give it inside Biden's hidden campaign. | ||
The president is gambling that using Democrat and outside groups will work better than a big centralized effort. | ||
And here is a quote. | ||
Quote, instead Biden is essentially outsourcing much of his campaign to the DNC and party organizations in the 50 states and DC. | ||
With outside groups, Biden insiders believe the total effort could spend as much as $2 billion by November 2024. | ||
End quote. | ||
Just repeat the last part of that. | ||
So the $2 billion is by an article in the Washington Post that the Biden campaign worked on, right? | ||
And it's quoted in. | ||
Yeah. | ||
What they did is they, you know, at the time they had a very small campaign effort with little, small number of staffers. | ||
They set up the joint fundraising effort with the DNC and the state parties so that the billionaires could write almost a million dollar check to fund the organization. | ||
It all goes back into the DNC. | ||
But they also blessed certain outside groups, including Future Forward and others, that they are outsourcing to allow them to go out and do some of the things that would be more expensive to finance with hard dollars. | ||
And so they're using the dark money network to really perform some of these basic campaign functions, and it's a specific strategy according to the Washington Post and the strategy that they leaked. | ||
And remember, this is after years of investment, because they have a basic framework and infrastructure that's out there that just needs to be reactivated by fresh money and new operators, right? | ||
That's right. | ||
And so when you look at the historical spending patterns of a lot of these outside groups, don't think of these dollars as one and done. | ||
Think of these dollars as going into communities, investing in training, identifying volunteers, identifying voters, building the database, so that when an issue comes up, they can easily activate that, refresh it, and operationalize it. | ||
Very few, we're going to go to break, but you're obviously going to hang around for the rest of the morning. | ||
Very few of our billionaires that give money think like that. | ||
They just don't. | ||
On occasion, but most of the groups up there bootstrap it. | ||
They just do. | ||
They bootstrap it. | ||
Ours are all, I don't want to say star, but they give money to campaigns, they want to have association with whoever the guy is, they want to get to meet him, and they put most of that money in 30-second spots. | ||
And when we come back, you know, there's been a couple of books that have been written on this. | ||
One is called The Blueprint, which focuses on Colorado. | ||
That's famous. | ||
That book's about 10 years old? | ||
That's right. | ||
And it was a book... | ||
Take a second, this is so important. | ||
Yeah, the Blueprint is one of the books. | ||
The other one is called The Argument by Matt Bayh, which was written a year before that | ||
was about Democracy Alliance and kind of the history of the Democratic donor community | ||
and what they thought after the 2004 election when they thought they had won it, but in | ||
fact lost it. | ||
Remember, in 2004 at about 5 o'clock in the afternoon, the consultant for... | ||
Bob Schrum turned to John Kerry in the mansion, at Theresa Hines' mansion, and said, Mr. President-elect, we got this. | ||
So they thought, and it was Ohio, it was basically southern Ohio, with under 100,000 votes, that flipped that, later that night, that we knew. | ||
But they thought they had it, and they were shocked. | ||
The blueprint's so important, we'll talk about this when we get back. | ||
Those folks in Colorado, how do you take a red state, how do you take a red state and first turn it purple but then turn it blue and then turn it hard blue? | ||
Right? | ||
How do you do that to a red state? | ||
And I'll tell you, just to preview our next segment, you spend it efficiently and you don't think of the dollars as spending, you think of the dollars as investments. | ||
long-term investment. | ||
This is what we don't have on the right. | ||
We'll get into all this. | ||
Bill McGinley from the RNC is outside counsel to the RNC. | ||
Also the question I got is how we're going to stop this deal. | ||
I know you guys are working on a ton of stuff. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
unidentified
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Back in the warm in just a moment. | |
People were shocked with your, you know, endorsement of Donald Trump. | ||
I mean, you're all about women's rights issues. | ||
I mean, what was the reason for the big change? | ||
Is Donald Trump not for women's rights issues? | ||
I mean, I guess a lot of people were asking. | ||
He's trying to make America great again. | ||
That's for women, too, right? | ||
That's true. | ||
I mean... Okay. | ||
Well, there you go. | ||
I know. | ||
Does him getting convicted, like, change the way you view him? | ||
Nope. | ||
Not at all. | ||
I mean, do you think it'll help his chances, like, getting, like, re-elected? | ||
Or, like, you'll hurt him? | ||
I think it helps him more. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
I think people see the injustice and what happened and they want to vote for him more than ever. | ||
I know. | ||
unidentified
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I wanted to ask you, so it seems like a lot of celebrities are kind of like voting for Trump now. | |
I mean, why do you think people are kind of like changing their way of like... I think we're just, we just did our research and we're just, you know, we're not brainwashed anymore by the left. | ||
I can say that about myself. | ||
All these years I've been brainwashed and I'm not anymore. | ||
That is one of the most powerful pieces that have come out in this entire campaign on both sides. | ||
Because right there you're hearing it from America. | ||
We've just done our own research and we're not brainwashed anymore. | ||
This revolt is happening. | ||
They can't stop it. | ||
It's now self-organizing. | ||
It's spreading everywhere. | ||
It is, this is what we've worked on for so many years, and people are grabbing it. | ||
Amber Rose right there, and that was a, that was a, those type of things, they got that little person running around, you know, Ben Berquam does that on occasions, which I'm not thrilled with, but hey, it happens. | ||
Ben's fantastic, but I don't like when you try to jump people and get in their grills too much. | ||
Right there, that girl got blown up, the reporter, blown up. | ||
And look at the sequence of events. | ||
He doesn't like women. | ||
How can he vote for him? | ||
He wants to make America great again. | ||
Isn't that great? | ||
Isn't that great for everybody? | ||
Well, he's a convicted felon. | ||
He's a convicted felon. | ||
It doesn't matter to me. | ||
It makes him stronger, right? | ||
Then finally at the end, the reporter goes, why are so many celebrities voting for Trump now? | ||
We've just done our own research, and we're not buying the propaganda. | ||
Do you understand that the ruling elites in this country, that shakes them to the core, the marrow in their bones? | ||
They control the entire apparatus, the entire apparatus. | ||
All of it. | ||
The universities, high culture, low culture, the media, television, print, all of it, all of it, not even close, boom, there was, you know, everything's false on 2020, everything's false about the pandemic, everything, it's all lies, nothing happened to the school boards, nothing happened here, nothing. | ||
Debbie, Zelensky's great. | ||
We're fighting for democracy, right? | ||
On a guy that's not even elected. | ||
Over and over and over. | ||
There's nothing on the southern border. | ||
These people can come in here and claim asylum and not go for 10 years. | ||
Everything you're told's a lie. | ||
Oh, the economy's great. | ||
We're spending trillions of dollars and burying you every day and now the way we finance it short term is include inflation. | ||
Everything is a lie. | ||
And right there, Amber Rose, I'm gonna give you a scoop on Amber Rose. | ||
Ready for it? | ||
I'm gonna give you a scoop. | ||
She did not graduate from Harvard. | ||
She's not part of the credential class. | ||
That's the power of what's happening. | ||
She's got ten times more native intelligence than what you see at Harvard, and she hasn't bought the propaganda. | ||
That ought to be engraved in everybody's mind right now. | ||
We've just done our own research. | ||
That is from 1773. | ||
That's the committees on correspondence right there. | ||
We've just done our own research. | ||
That gets back, that's directly in an unbroken chain back to the revolutionary generation. | ||
And that's what they can't stop. | ||
And the way they're going to try to stop it is two billion dollars of more propaganda and more to grind us out. | ||
Let's go through it. | ||
Bill McGinley. | ||
Yeah, I also just want to go back and quote something else from that Washington Post article in March, just to talk about how they're blessing the outside groups to basically operationalize them for their campaign efforts. | ||
It says, quote, in an effort to extend their coalition, Biden advisors have given their blessing, as they did in 2020, to several independent super PAC efforts, including Future Forward, In an apparent effort to set up funding streams for advertising campaigns, Priorities USA, another outside group, is preparing a digital effort to support the president's reelection." | ||
So they're not hiding it. | ||
They've gone out and they've blessed it. | ||
They're giving them a mandate. | ||
It's a single. | ||
Yeah, they're giving them a mandate. | ||
Yeah, and that's fine. | ||
But, you know, Steve, really what we need to do is we need to turn back the clock a little bit. | ||
And as I said, there's been some great reporting on this, including books. | ||
One, The Blueprint. | ||
The other one, The Argument by Matt Bayh. | ||
And in 2008 out in Denver at the National Convention, there was a transcript that was released. | ||
The Blueprint does quote from the transcript. | ||
And Rob Stein, who was the founder of Democracy Alliance, really kind of laid out the rationale for why a lot of these progressive billionaires would be willing to invest so much money into this sort of infrastructure. | ||
And Rob Stein, according to the transcript, said, quote, in order to bring about progressive change, you need progressive control of government. | ||
In order to get progressive control of government and sustain it, you need an infrastructure. | ||
You need organizations to support them. | ||
Political organization and movement organizations. | ||
The reason it is so important to control government is because the government is the source of enormous power. | ||
One president in this country, when he or she takes office, appoints, he says 2 million and then he corrects himself, appoints 5,000 people to run a bureaucracy, non-military, non-postal service of 2 million people who hire 10 million outside outsource contractors, a workforce of 12 million people that spends 3 trillion dollars a year. | ||
So they're looking at this saying, I can spend a billion dollars, two billion dollars, and I can control three trillion dollars of budget every year. | ||
Three trillion dollars is all the discretionary. | ||
That's after the transfer payments. | ||
It gets to seven. | ||
But right there, hang on a second. | ||
We're going to reread that. | ||
I want to make sure we get all the links out there. | ||
This is so powerful. | ||
They nail it. | ||
What we talk about all the time. | ||
On our counter is taking apart the administrative state. | ||
What they're saying is, it's not 5,000. | ||
I think it's really 3,000. | ||
Political appointees. | ||
Political appointees immediately. | ||
Another 1,000 have to be Senate-confirmed. | ||
We always get hung up on. | ||
In other words, you're a political appointee. | ||
You started day one. | ||
Hour one. | ||
Hour one. | ||
I mean, you were with us the whole time. | ||
But I'm saying, boom, as soon as the hand comes off the Bible, that's the 3,000. | ||
But he's the first guy to nail it. | ||
It's not just the... Take the military. | ||
That's about two and a half million. | ||
You've got about two million The guys in the administrative state. | ||
But there's 18 million contractors overall, but about 8 million of the contractors are IT guys, etc. | ||
Right. | ||
They're 10 million, they do it just to get them off the balance sheet. | ||
Right. | ||
It's a 12 million that controls 3 trillion dollars. | ||
That's the administrative state. | ||
McCabe that's wetting himself is part of the deep state. | ||
That's the kind of Praetorian Guard rogue element of this. | ||
But that is what Project 2025, everything is set to deconstruct. | ||
the administrative state. And you have a great article today, I'll get up | ||
later, I think on Yahoo News about the five Supreme Court cases that are coming now for decisions | ||
between the now and the end of June all deal with the | ||
administrative state because at the judiciary we finally got you know Gorsuch and other | ||
people in there but you've got to do it this way too. But these people | ||
understand raw power. | ||
To get progressive change, to turn the United States into a progressive | ||
government, a progressive country, you've got to take control of the | ||
government. But power comes from return on investment. | ||
They're willing to invest the money to build that infrastructure that gets them | ||
into power to control the government. | ||
That quote is actually in the book, The Blueprint. | ||
And so I encourage you to look at it. | ||
From Matt Buys, the argument. | ||
After 2004, when President Bush is re-elected, they're very surprised by it. | ||
As you said, Kerry's advisors start calling him Mr. President until all the final reserves come in. | ||
They become despondent and ask, what happened? | ||
And so what Matt Bayh describes is kind of, in his book, is kind of the process that they go through. | ||
It's kind of a grieving process. | ||
So it's a good failure or bad failure. | ||
And he calls it basically the stages of grief after an electoral defeat. | ||
Right? | ||
First stage is denial. | ||
It's not our fault. | ||
We're right. | ||
Everyone else is wrong. | ||
The second stage is acknowledgement. | ||
Okay, something here's got to change. | ||
The third stage is the frantic search for the thing. | ||
Right? | ||
We have to find the thing that will save us. | ||
And so, basically, anybody who loses an election kind of goes through those three stages. | ||
And I thought that Matt Bayh did a very good job of distilling those down. | ||
The reason we didn't go through those stages is we didn't lose in 2020. | ||
It was stolen. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's a sine qua non of everything we do. | ||
So they ask, what can we do to correct this? | ||
Right? | ||
In order to become more competitive. | ||
And so, Matt Bayh describes kind of, you know, the process that they're going through and the ideas that they're hashing around. | ||
One of them is called, you know, how are we going to invest donor money? | ||
One of them is called the marketplace of ideas. | ||
He describes it as kind of a lean, minimalist organization that would hold meetings where political entrepreneurs could pitch donors on their ideas. | ||
The other one's kind of the more traditional philanthropist model, which is donors pool their resources, create central fund to donate to progressive groups, but ultimately he says they settled on a hybrid approach, which is really how Democracy Alliance comes about. | ||
And so, you know, in the beginning they start, you know, looking at their, at their, the holes in their capabilities. | ||
They look at the Republican model at the time and they say, where are we deficient? | ||
So they start funding groups, you know, such as Catalyst, which becomes their data hub. | ||
They start funding Media Matters to really kind of scrutinize conservative media and Republican politicians. | ||
America Votes, remember that name from yesterday, which is really sort of the central hub of where they try to coordinate their get-out-the-vote efforts so there's not redundancy, it's more efficient. | ||
And then Center for American Progress, which is supposed to be the policy idea engine. | ||
And so they keep going through this and they begin to do it. | ||
Eventually what happens is they get surprised again in 16 when Trump wins. | ||
Then they go through another conversion where, what do we do now? | ||
Because they were surprised. | ||
And they come up with something called a resistance. | ||
But they do get eight years of Obama. | ||
They get eight years of Obama. | ||
They get eight years of Obama. | ||
And by the way, for all the facade down front about the most progressive, the central thing | ||
they get is the greatest concentration of wealth in American history came during that | ||
time because the financial crisis of 2008, Obama is the first to admit it. | ||
I think Susskind's book, Confidence Men, shows it. | ||
You had Geithner, you had Bernanke, you had all the Wall Street guys basically leveraged | ||
up the Federal Reserve, went from $880 billion, $4.5 trillion. | ||
All that money, liquidity, went into the system to prop up assets and stocks. | ||
You never got a bailout. | ||
They did. | ||
So their eight years of Obama, now they get a progressive guy in the foreground. | ||
That's when they really took control of the country because that was the greatest concentration of wealth to the 1% in the history of the nation. | ||
So it was a big win for them already. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Then Trump upends the, this audience upends the alibi. | ||
Through volunteers, I might add. | ||
Through volunteers. | ||
You know, you were there. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But that was right to the sound of the gun. | ||
So we had a man, a message, a plane. | ||
Right? | ||
That was about it. | ||
Short break, hang on. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Brother McGinley's on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
In a moment in the world Here's your host stephen k van | |
Oh Oh | ||
Okay, um... Our sponsor, Birch Gold, always want to thank them. | ||
And now, more than ever... | ||
You need to, this is why we give you the capital markets and all that. | ||
You go to talk to about the tax deferred instruments. | ||
We give you the macro, they give you the micro. | ||
But one thing to look at is the disparity between the decline in purchase power of your dollar, which is down 20% under the Biden regime. | ||
You want to know why your life sucks. | ||
You want to know why you're depending on that credit card more than ever. | ||
A credit card that's at 25% to 29% APR. | ||
The way you can't meet your monthly expenses. | ||
You have to gap it with a credit card that then buries you alive in credit card debt. | ||
The highest expense debt you could possibly get. | ||
Well, it's because of the way that the ruling elite have the finances in this country. | ||
And we're going to set all that right. | ||
But in the interim, go check birchgold.com and talk to Philip Patrick. | ||
Remember, all of our sponsors, one of the commitments, you get access to top management. | ||
Also, Jim Rickards now is a contributor here. | ||
Strategic and talented. | ||
People love his geopolitics, national security, capital markets, all of it. | ||
He's not a gold bug. | ||
But he wrote a follow-on to Ron Paul's The Case for Gold back in the 80s with Reagan, and Reagan didn't go to a gold standard, kind of turned those guys upside down because they thought he was. | ||
He wrote a book called The New Case for Gold, and he's not a gold bug. | ||
But you get it free if you go to RickardsWarRoom.com and sign up for Strategic Intelligence. | ||
Go check it out today. | ||
Jim Rickards, fabulous. | ||
And Jim's going to join us early next week. | ||
Bill McGinley, the floor is yours, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Great. | |
Before I begin and continue with this storytelling, I want to remind everybody that volunteers are the difference in this election. | ||
And that everybody listening should be going to TrumpForce47.com to register as a volunteer. | ||
And make sure that you check Poll Watcher because we need the volunteers who can actually be in the polling place and during the counting process to be our eyes and ears. | ||
I also want you to go to protectthevote.com. | ||
That is a place where we are focusing on the presidential battleground states for poll watching. | ||
And if you are in one of those states, I want you to sign up there. | ||
Remember, only the party and candidates, depending upon state law, are allowed to credential people to be in the polling places. | ||
So it's critically important that you register with the party, get the training, Understand what the rules of the road are. | ||
Make sure that you exercise good judgment. | ||
You're polite, you're firm, but you watch. | ||
And then I want you to go to SwampTheVote.com. | ||
SwampTheVote.com is a place where you can figure out what the best method is for you to cast your ballot. | ||
Those are the three action items we're asking you to do today. | ||
President Trump, too big to rig. | ||
That's the last one. | ||
Mo and Grace, if you guys can get it up. | ||
Trump Force 47, that's the Army of the Awakened. | ||
Go there now. | ||
You've got all kinds of different things you can do. | ||
Sign up. | ||
You've got protectthevote.com if you're specifically interested in a battleground state for putting your shoulder to the wheel as either a poll worker, poll watcher, or maybe election official. | ||
election official, which you're going to be around the green table arguing about every | ||
ballot because we're going to contest everything that's not chain of custody certifiable by | ||
an American citizen. | ||
And then swamp the vote, which is President Trump's baby, which is the best way to vote. | ||
Bank your vote early because then people don't have to spend money and opportunity costs | ||
chasing your vote and you can come in and help chase ballots. | ||
Right. | ||
So let's go back to the history. | ||
So in 2020 Bloomberg ran an article where they analyzed everything that was spent about | ||
the dark money that was spent in the election. | ||
For Biden, they tracked $145 million. | ||
That was only because that's, I think, what was registered with the FEC as an IE. | ||
For Trump, it was $28.4 million. | ||
The Democrats spent about $326 million. | ||
Republicans, $148 million. | ||
And the real numbers are much higher on their side. | ||
The real numbers are much higher than this. | ||
So according to Open Secrets, if you look at the campaign fundraising totals for the Trump campaign in 2020, Open Secrets calculated it to be just over $770 million, and outside groups just over $313 million. | ||
For the Biden campaign, the fundraising that Open Secrets had is $1,044,000,000 total raised for them. | ||
And for outside groups, $580,000,000. | ||
So let's go ahead and put up the graphic, and what this graphic is... By the way, for those on the Vast podcast audience and the Vast radio network, including our new station in Memphis, this is why you have to go get our email, the command brief every day. | ||
We put in all the charts, all the videos, all links to all the stories and the sponsors. | ||
You get it there. | ||
So if you're just hearing this through your ears, you need to see with your eyes, and that's the way to go do it. | ||
Continue on. | ||
And so the list that you're seeing on screen is a representative sample. | ||
And basically what these are some of the major Democratic groups from 2020 based on the 990 IRS returns that they filed and are publicly available. | ||
And this is a list that we looked at for transfers between national organizations. | ||
And remember I said President Trump raised about $770 million. | ||
So the total amount transferred just between this list of organizations alone was $691 | ||
million. | ||
So it matched everything President Trump raised. | ||
Pretty much matched his fundraising. | ||
And that was just the money that was flowing back and forth between the groups. | ||
And that's why, you know, New Venture Fund. | ||
And $700 million. | ||
I mean, it's almost a billion dollars. | ||
That's right. | ||
Amazing. | ||
And New Venture Fund was the one I believe, or was it 1631? | ||
One of them was the one that even the New York Times was like, wow, this is an eye-popping amount. | ||
They raised almost $1 billion. | ||
That was New Ventures. | ||
It was New Venture Fund, yeah. | ||
And so they ran an article on that that looked at it. | ||
But one of the things that really interested me was if you look at these national organizations and tried to figure out what they were doing... Denver, if we can put that chart back up for a second. | ||
Just keep it... do a split screen with... | ||
Brother McGinley, if you have to, but otherwise put it up. | ||
I want everybody to watch this as Bill talks. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so one of the things that we did when we went back and analyzed the 1990s was looking for state-based groups in the battlegrounds to figure out how much money they were pumping down into which organizations. | ||
How much lead on targets. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so some of it included the Zuckbox groups, right? | ||
You know, so that in many states aren't allowed to do that anymore. | ||
Yeah, but hang on, but they're backdoored. | ||
We talked about this yesterday. | ||
They're backdoored at all. | ||
You should consider the Zuckbox. | ||
They're still going to be there. | ||
It's just going to find a different vehicle. | ||
So in Georgia in 2020, according to the 990 returns, received $64 million. | ||
Good God. | ||
Arizona, $23 million. | ||
$23 million. Pennsylvania $47 million. Michigan $52 million. | ||
Wisconsin, $29 million. | ||
dollars. Wisconsin, 29 million dollars. In North Carolina, 22 million dollars. And | ||
these were being fed into groups that were on the ground Some of them were universities that may have gone to research grants. | ||
But it's a staggering amount of money when you look at how the campaigns spent their money in the states. | ||
They matched, if not exceeded, most of the money that was spent. | ||
These outside groups? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Yeah, no, this is why you had the thing on the voter rolls in the mail-in ballots, the universities, the ballot harvesting at the universities. | ||
This is real money. | ||
That adds up right there to what, a couple hundred million dollars, almost a quarter of a billion dollars, just in the back of the envelope, just on battleground states. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Over and above what the campaigns and everything else is spending, this is that incremental money. | ||
And folks, remember, they only won it by like 50,000 votes, you know, 40 or 50,000 in Pennsylvania. | ||
You got Michigan and Wisconsin, of course, obviously, you know, Georgia, 10,000 votes, same in Arizona. | ||
But this is the reason. | ||
Yeah, I mean this is basically an alternate ecosystem outside of the party committee and candidate structure that the Democrats have really built, financed and trained. | ||
And that's why I refer to it, you know, it's not spending in the state, it's investments. | ||
What they're doing is they're investing in the infrastructure, they're investing in the volunteers, the leaders, the managers, the data people, the political operatives, the communication folks, who are actually going to be able to go out there and micro-target the micro-targeting They haven't hid this. | ||
Some of the people who have talked about it, they use terms like spread the vote. | ||
That they're very sophisticated about it. | ||
What they do is they talk to the voters and they help them figure out what is the best method to cast your ballot. | ||
And it's been very effective for him. | ||
And if you look at what happened in 22, you begin to see the results of all these investments. | ||
Elections that they should have lost on a large margin for any number of political reasons | ||
it reversed, but they had the infrastructure where they could operationalize everybody | ||
to take care of the key districts. | ||
Now, I don't want people to think that this is overwhelming. | ||
Once again, they're not. | ||
But hang on one second. | ||
Two things. | ||
Number one, real quickly, it's an ecosystem. | ||
It's not just one time spending to go spend on commercial. | ||
That's right. | ||
It's an integrated ecosystem like in nature. | ||
Yeah, and they all have specific tasks. | ||
You know, some run ads, some run digital ads, some of them do these, you know, what are supposed to be local newspaper reporting, which is really attack ads on Republicans. | ||
On Monday, my great producer here, I want to poll, I want to get Molly Ball's great cover in Time Magazine that had that magnificent artwork of everything about how, after they stole it, They all had to come and take credit for stealing it. | ||
Remember? | ||
And you had the labor unions, had the how they work together. | ||
This whole thing was a big part of it. | ||
Yes. | ||
And guys was taking credit. | ||
This is what we did. | ||
This is because they're trying to also show their donors, hey, this worked. | ||
It got rid of Trump. | ||
Right. | ||
So it's they're proud of it. | ||
It's one of the things they're so out front is that the Republicans in the donor class of Republican Party have not had and have not answered it. | ||
It's like it's not interesting. | ||
They still want to hang out with Tim Scott or they want to hang out with Marco Rubio or they want to hang out with Nikki Haley. | ||
Hey, we're going to give you money and the consultants will take it because they get 20% off the top of the media buy. | ||
Some are making big money, but a lot of this goes on target when you look at the left. | ||
And the right is very different. | ||
The consulting class is getting rich. | ||
Now, there's maybe some guys like David Brock at that level that are living like kings, but continue on. | ||
This is amazing. | ||
And this is why I want to emphasize once again, you, the volunteer, are the most powerful force in politics. | ||
Because we've countered this with an energized, patriotic American that will volunteer and you don't have the cost of having to pay. | ||
Right. | ||
We'll not only commit to cast your own ballot, but we'll go out and get 10 other people, friends, family, neighbors, like-minded individuals, to make sure that they cast their ballot according to the method that is most convenient for them. | ||
Early voting, election day, but we really want to emphasize early vote because as we discussed yesterday it helps us save money because in the beginning we're looking at a large swath of voters that we need to turn out to the polls and as you early vote that begins to shrink and we can harness our resources and begin to focus on the holdouts and get them to the polls so we can have a victory in November. | ||
We've got about two minutes. | ||
We're going to get you back on next week. | ||
We have to because there's more about this. | ||
To tee his up for next week, your theory of the case, because this guy was with us in 2016. | ||
He was one of the lawyers that we were ready to go on hair trigger into Wisconsin, into Michigan, into Pennsylvania to challenge if the Hillary Clinton people are challenged, but they were so stunned By the blow that we had given them, they never really regrouped, right? | ||
So you guys are ready to go. | ||
You can't be, you can't like think it up, but that was a problem in 2020. | ||
You can't like say, well who we got? | ||
It just doesn't work like that. | ||
You got to be on the trigger and ready to go. | ||
Now you're saying our first line of defense, you're fighting legal, and we'll get into that next week in Segal, Chada, and the folks in Subobota at the local levels. | ||
Number one, you're saying our first line of defense here is complete transparency. | ||
That's going to come from a volunteer. | ||
The lawyer's hammering it now, but a volunteer army that's in the room, already trained, and will not, it will be relentless not being pushed out like they were in Philadelphia behind the cage. | ||
That's right. | ||
You're going to be trained in advance to say, and have lawyers ready to come and say, no way, we're going to the judge right now. | ||
Volunteers and volunteer lawyers in the battleground states. | ||
We need both. | ||
Go to ProtectTheVote.com and sign up if you are in a battleground state. | ||
If you want to volunteer for the campaign, we will find a job for you because you are the most powerful force in politics. | ||
TrumpForce47.com. | ||
And go to SwampTheVote.com and figure out the most convenient way to vote for you and vote early. | ||
Bank the vote. | ||
I realize some of the people are going to sit there and say, duh, duh, duh. | ||
But hey, the president's made a decision. | ||
Everybody's unified now. | ||
This is the way it's going to be. | ||
And President Trump is. | ||
And he says, I want paper ballots. | ||
I want game day voting. | ||
I want to count them up that night like France. | ||
He understands, as we all do, we're not there yet. | ||
It's the biggest efforts that people had. | ||
You're not. | ||
So you got to go. | ||
You got to go with this. | ||
Go to Swamp to Vote and check it out. | ||
TrumpForce47.com. | ||
Protect the vote, alloneword.com, if you're in a battleground state, particularly if you're a lawyer, and then swamp the vote. | ||
President Trump's mantra, too big to rig. | ||
I think Charlie Kirk gave him that. | ||
Thanks. | ||
We're going to have you back on next week. | ||
You got it. | ||
We got to. | ||
I think we may do a weekly tutorial on this. | ||
People's heads are blown up about the Arabella and these groups. | ||
Those books. | ||
They thought this through. | ||
Colorado was their lab. | ||
They thought it through and that's one of the most progressive states around. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
We'll be back here to wrap up the weekend on War Room. | ||
Tell you what's going on. | ||
Hello, I'm Steve Stern, CEO of FlagShirt.com, a third-generation, veteran-owned small business. | ||
I believe that the American way of life is for all of us. | ||
I'm asking you today to visit FlagShirt.com. | ||
Help keep the American dream alive. | ||
Be a flag waver. | ||
Carry a nation's heritage. | ||
Use coupon code ACTION10 for 10% off site-wide and buy a flag shirt today. | ||
Action, action, action. | ||
Ben Harner was going to join me on Monday. | ||
Again, we're going much deeper in this. | ||
But Ben, I know you had a couple thoughts. | ||
Thanks for sticking around. | ||
A couple thoughts about the D-Day commemoration in Zielinski. | ||
Tommy Tuberville is going nuts about this. | ||
We're trying to get Senator Tuberville on the Monday show. | ||
Your thoughts, sir? | ||
Well, it was absolutely inappropriate, of course it was absolutely inappropriate for Vladimir Zelensky to be there on D-Day. | ||
He had absolutely nothing to do with the D-Day landings, and it was clearly just a pretext in order to try to browbeat the NATO member states. | ||
on into coughing up more support, which of course they are doing. | ||
You have the Eastern European countries that are becoming ever more insistent that America | ||
comes in and protects them and their interests. | ||
The Baltic countries, Poland and what have you. | ||
So the opposition, the outrage that that Zelensky must have his way even in, you know, he's | ||
been muscling his way in Steve right across the world to various legislatures, various | ||
cultural phenomena like the Oscars and what have you. | ||
Uh... | ||
But to muzzle his way into the solemnity of the D-Day celebrations was an absolute outrage. | ||
And Senator Turnbull is absolutely right to be on that. | ||
Real quickly, why did Sunak leave to go back and do an interview? | ||
How can possibly a British Prime Minister leave early? | ||
Give me 30 seconds on that. | ||
Well, two thirds of the country are against that because he had an interview to give on the election campaign. | ||
I think it just basically is an illustration, Steve, of how out of touch this man is. | ||
Confirms everything we've been saying about him on the wall for him. | ||
But he's distant, out of touch, no real connection with the people. | ||
And any, Steve, any politician of any quality would have said this is not appropriate. | ||
That internal, sort of, reasoning capacity doesn't seem to exist in his brain. | ||
And it shows from all the things that he's been doing and saying. | ||
Yeah. | ||
As we cover for the next month and a half, particularly the sacrifice of Montgomery's army made in their task and purpose, just horrific. | ||
How British farmers would think that? | ||
Ben, real quickly, social media, you're going to be up all weekend, your stuff's great, you get the highest engagement levels ever. | ||
Where do people go? | ||
Thanks, Steve. | ||
Getter, at Harnwell, which is simply my surname, Harnwell. | ||
And I do have some pretty good posts at the top of my feed right now, waiting for the posse's perusal. | ||
Thanks, Steve. | ||
You're going to give me your reviews? | ||
Just put the post up. | ||
You don't have to give me your reviews. | ||
Your engagement shirt is like, God, Ben Harnwell. | ||
Love you, brother. | ||
Talk to you later. | ||
By the way, big story. | ||
Catherine Dole at NBC. | ||
Massive story. | ||
She spent a couple of months with us looking behind the scenes of the War Room. | ||
Story's up on NBC. | ||
It's already viral. | ||
Grace and Mo will continue to push that. | ||
Make sure you read it. | ||
Share it. | ||
You're a force multiplier. | ||
All weekend. | ||
What time is Real America's Voice coverage of the rally? | ||
Is when? | ||
So their coverage starts at 2 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time, 11 a.m. | ||
Pacific Standard Time. | ||
These are daylight times. | ||
The rally starts at 3 p.m. | ||
Eastern and 12 noon out in Las Vegas. | ||
Okay, and you and Grace are going to be streaming it also with commentary. | ||
Starting as soon as the coverage starts at 2 p.m. | ||
Eastern. | ||
And Brian Glenn, our new get from Right Side Broadcasting, is going to be doing it. | ||
Correct. | ||
Now what about Charlie's, by the way, it's Eastern Daylight, Pacific Daylight. | ||
I've got to teach the staff this all the time. | ||
unidentified
|
And I usually put daylight time in my text, that's why. | |
You're good, you're good. | ||
Tara Dahl, Charlie Kirk's Women's Conference. | ||
So Turning Point USA is doing the Young Women's Leadership Summit this weekend in San Antonio, and Real America's Voice is down there. | ||
Tara Dahl is covering it for Real America's Voice, so Grace and I will be streaming Coming in and out of that. | ||
I'll be jumping in and out of that. | ||
Also, Charlie, remember, go to TPSA for Detroit. | ||
Where do they go? | ||
TPAction.com, promo code War Room for 25% off. | ||
And it is next Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. | ||
And the War Room team will be there to include the both of us. | ||
Yeah, and we're going to live broadcast all of it. | ||
And we want to see everybody. | ||
Yesterday we stayed, I don't think, an hour and a half, two hours afterwards to meet and greet everybody, talk to you, get to know you. | ||
It's fantastic. | ||
This is why we love doing the things live. | ||
We get to know you because you're, as Bill McGinley just said, we can't raise the money so it's got to be you. | ||
They got the billionaires. | ||
They got the foreign billionaires. | ||
They got control of the country. | ||
You're taking it back. | ||
It's going to be your volunteers. | ||
Social media, you're kind of on fire now, particularly on Twitter. | ||
You can find me on Twitter and Getter at Maureen underscore Bannon and also on Instagram at Real Maureen Bannon and I come in hot usually on Twitter and Instagram. | ||
Yeah, I noticed. | ||
The hot take Maureen Bannon. | ||
Mo Bannon hot takes. | ||
Not as hot as Grace. | ||
Queen of the Trolls. | ||
That's a whole different level. | ||
That's a whole different level of madness. | ||
So, all weekend, Mo and Grace and the rest of the team will be up on Getter, Twitter, all of it will be live-streaming. | ||
Just wait for the command post. | ||
Remember, we're a military information warfare organization, not a show. | ||
We'll be up all weekend with things. | ||
Want to have your input, all of it. | ||
Mike Lindell, from the Great White North, up there somewhere, fishing near the Arctic. | ||
Give me a deal, brother. | ||
unidentified
|
We got great deals going on, Steve. | |
It's free. | ||
We're giving the free multi-use MyPillow, the one I'm using right now up here in Canada, and with the USA Revival roll and go cover, free with any purchase. | ||
You guys go to the website, though. | ||
The war room specials are there. | ||
Go down and click on Steve there. | ||
You'll see a picture of Steve. | ||
You get the four pack towel sets and the new six piece towel sets. | ||
All the new colors that are coming in. | ||
They're going out as fast as they're coming in. | ||
$25 for the War Room Posse. | ||
You guys have all been getting the premium eye pillows for $25 for the King and Queen. | ||
That's been keeping the factory going. | ||
I'm taking a little break there. | ||
That's what keeps them Keeps our manufacturing going. | ||
And if you go down a little further on the website, you guys, you're going to see that I kept the MyPillow mattress toppers on sale, exclusive for the War Room Posse. | ||
You guys all took advantage of it. | ||
Save up to 50% there with free shipping. | ||
So you can't beat that. | ||
And then, Steve, up here in Canada, I'll tell you, I talked to the locals and they're all counting on Donald Trump getting in power. | ||
And not just saving our country, but they're looking forward to saving theirs, too. | ||
About that. | ||
We've contacted Time Magazine about a typo. | ||
They had this magnificent photo of President Trump on their cover, but they had a typo. | ||
If he wins, it's when he wins, Time Magazine. | ||
When he wins. | ||
A typo. | ||
When he wins. | ||
We've contacted. | ||
President Trump loves this photo, by the way, you should know. | ||
It's magnificent. | ||
Black and white. | ||
Power, power photo. | ||
When he wins, not if. | ||
What is this if stuff? | ||
Mo Bannon, thank you very much. | ||
Mike Lindell, get back to fishing. | ||
We're going to be up all weekend in the War Room. | ||
Make sure you go to Getter or Rumble. | ||
All of our chats. | ||
See you Monday morning at 10 a.m. |