Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
This is what you're fighting for. | ||
I mean, every day you're out there. | ||
What they're doing is blowing people off. | ||
If you continue to look the other way and shut up, then the oppressors, the authoritarians, get total control and total power. | ||
Because this is just like in Arizona. | ||
This is just like in Georgia. | ||
It's another element that backs them into a corner and shows their lies and misrepresentations. | ||
This is why this audience is going to have to get engaged. | ||
As we've told you, this is the fight. | ||
unidentified
|
All this nonsense, all this spin, they can't handle the truth. | |
War Room Battleground. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | |
The Biden administration plans to phase out coal mining as part of its agenda to stop using fossil fuels. | ||
As Edward Lawrence explains, the people who work at these plants are pushing back. | ||
Delivering coal for Christmas may no longer be an option for Santa, while at COP28 in Dubai, Special Climate Envoy John Kerry announcing the United States' commitment to phasing out existing coal plants and not building new ones. | ||
In a statement, he writes, the first step is to stop making the problem worse, stop building new unabated coal power plants. | ||
Later, the Biden administration pledged another $3 billion to the Green Climate Fund to help transition off of coal and other fossil fuels. | ||
Around the world, there are those who seek to slow or stop our progress. | ||
Leaders who deny climate science, delay climate action, and spread misinformation. | ||
In the face of their resistance, and in the context of this moment, We must do more. | ||
unidentified
|
The U.S. | |
is urging other countries, including China and India, to make similar commitments. | ||
Both refused to sign the anti-coal pledge. | ||
China is the world's largest coal producer, reportedly producing about 13 million tons per day. | ||
The Biden administration's new pledge now raising concerns among coal miners who say it's a threat to their livelihood, with tens of thousands in the industry already out of work. | ||
Power all these new charging stations and things that are going to be necessary for that much more strain on our grid, and that's the coal industry. | ||
And the Department of Energy says that as of October, roughly 20% of the nation's electricity comes from coal. | ||
Why is finding a job the most difficult thing in the world? | ||
It's harder than school. | ||
It's harder than anything I've ever done. | ||
I just graduated college. | ||
Can't find a job anywhere. | ||
Everyone says I need experience, but how do I get experience if nobody hires you without experience, like, or they want to give you the experience? | ||
Like, sorry that I don't have enough experience. | ||
I was busy getting a degree that you require. | ||
Was that not enough still? | ||
Is my degree that I studied for for four years not enough? | ||
I'm so... I'm so confused. | ||
I lost my job on March 7th, 2024. | ||
I loved my job. | ||
I was a marketing director for a restaurant group, a very successful one. | ||
Five restaurants in LA that went down to one restaurant in Los Angeles in a matter of months. | ||
It's May 7th, 2024, and I still don't have a job. | ||
But why, Gailey? | ||
Why? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You tell me. | ||
I'm a pretty well-connected person, I would say. | ||
I think I like- I'm likable. | ||
On a good day. | ||
And I'm freaking out. | ||
And so I'm like, you know what? | ||
Let's just make a little video series so that we can look back on it one day and laugh. | ||
And also maybe some people can relate to this. | ||
I've applied to about 150 jobs between October to now, and I'm- Guys, people are really underestimating how hard the job search is in 2024. | ||
Hundreds of applications, hundreds of rejections, being ghosted by recruiters, getting to the final round, and then being rejected. | ||
The job search in 2024 is absolutely brutal. | ||
All that work and what did it give me? | ||
Good evening and welcome to War Room Battleground. | ||
My name is Jane Zirkle, filling in for political prisoner Steve Bannon. | ||
Kamala Harris wants to run and hide from the destruction she's caused our country over the past four years. | ||
But tonight, we're going to have a little accountability session. | ||
I want to bring in my first guest, Gary Rabine. | ||
Gary is the CEO and founder of the Rabine Group. | ||
Gary, the economy is in shambles. | ||
We just got the July jobs report. | ||
Unemployment is up to a staggering 4.3%. | ||
That is the highest since October of 2021, right after the pandemic. | ||
The stock market is in chaos. | ||
International markets are in chaos. | ||
How did we get here? | ||
unidentified
|
So, Jane, I mean, it's not that difficult to figure out. | |
I'm in small businesses. | ||
We have 15 small to mid-sized businesses that serve the big, you know, big businesses in the country. | ||
So we're Main Street serving Wall Street, basically. | ||
And Wall Street's saying, hey, we're cutting back. | ||
We're not spending as much money. | ||
And we pay parking lots across the country. | ||
We do other facility services businesses. | ||
And, you know, they were booming in the Trump administration. | ||
They cut back a bit through this Biden administration. | ||
But with Kamala, looking at the potential of a Kamala presidency, Wall Street is really panicking right now that that could be an option. | ||
It could happen. | ||
So we're seeing major cutbacks. | ||
Our customers are saying, you know, we're taking back some of the work we were telling you by the end of the year we're going to do. | ||
And we're not sure if it's coming back anytime soon. | ||
If Trump wins, I think it'll be a different story. | ||
But with Kamala, they're going to be tightening the belts because they don't know what's coming. | ||
And Kamala's America is much like, in my opinion, Pritzker's Illinois. | ||
In Pritzker's, Illinois, where I ran for governor against Pritzker a couple of years ago, you know, Pritzker is shutting down the cleanest coal plants in the country. | ||
One north of Springfield, Illinois, is like one of the cleanest burning coal plants in the world. | ||
And this son of a gun is shutting it down, right? | ||
So that we can bring in dirtier coal from other states and countries to burn in Illinois. | ||
This is craziness. | ||
And small business, as well as Wall Street, sees this craziness. | ||
And there's outrage over Pritzker working with the CCP on this new manufacturing factory. | ||
He's taking a page from Whitmer, who installed her own CCP factory that develops EV battery parts. | ||
Talk to me about what's going on there. | ||
What is he trying to do in giving them tax credits? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so while Pritzker is chasing business out of the state of Illinois, and I'm telling you, our businesses, some have moved already, and many will move in the future. | |
And I gotta tell you, taxes are the highest in the country. | ||
Property taxes are the highest now. | ||
Fuel taxes are the second highest, right? | ||
Pritzker's taxes here are the highest in the country when you look at the cumulative of all taxes. | ||
At the same time, the taxes that he is taxing is going to this company Goshen, | ||
where we're talking $8 billion when it comes to federal and state subsidies to this | ||
company. | ||
This company that, as many probably know, if you look them up, they thrive off of forced labor | ||
in their country of China, okay? | ||
And yet we're gonna give them $8 billion in subsidies. | ||
This is craziness. | ||
There's better ways to do business than this, of course. | ||
But this is, again, I believe that Pritzker's Illinois is much like Kamala's America in the future | ||
if somehow this woman wins. | ||
Now, you and I met at a Turning Point USA event. | ||
You have been a proud supporter of Turning Point from the very beginning. | ||
Talk to me about what's your reaction when you see all these young people that we saw during the opening express how they can't get a job, how they can't afford to survive in Joe Biden's America. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you know, smart, smart young people that are ready for the, you know, the workforce right now are having a hard time finding work because, you know, so many, so many companies are cutting back right now. | |
And when you think about the millions of illegal aliens coming and flying in our country, all right, that are causing more stress to the workforce than we've ever seen before. | ||
I mean, I look at the inner city of Chicago, where we've got tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands right now that are flooding in from across the border. | ||
I mean, think of what that does to inner-city jobs. | ||
And then when you look at kids coming out of college, same thing, right? | ||
I mean, if businesses are cutting back because they have this huge question of whether or not we have an economy, when you have a Green New Deal vice president now as a candidate for president, I mean, this is a scary time. | ||
If this person wins, we're in big trouble. | ||
Yeah, talk to me more about Chicago, because the DNC is being held there, of course, in a few weeks. | ||
And that city highlights two very unfortunate issues for the Democrats, which is urban crime and, of course, illegal immigration. | ||
What is the state of Chicago going into the DNC? | ||
unidentified
|
So right now they're shipping these illegal aliens out of the city as much as possible to suburban areas where they have some buildings available and things like that. | |
We're hearing a lot about that. | ||
They're trying to clean up the city and they'll probably, you know, actually They'll probably actually prosecute criminals over the coming days here while they weren't in the past. | ||
They're trying to clean up the city as fast as possible, just like they did in San Francisco a few months back when the leader of China was coming to town. | ||
These are things that these Marxist cities do to get ready to make it look like a place where there's sanity. | ||
But I've got to tell you, I've got together a few small and mid-sized business leaders in the state of Illinois. | ||
On August 18th, we've got a rally for Trump, and we think it's going to be anywhere from 15,000 to 30,000 people showing up to rally for Trump, while we have Charlie Kirk and General Flynn and many others showing up to speak there. | ||
Think about that. | ||
Trump won't even be there, and yet we're going to have somewhere between 15,000 and 20,000 to 30,000 people that will show up for this event. | ||
I mean, that shows you that even in Illinois, where the DNC will be going on the next day, you've got a lot of people up in arms. | ||
And the labor force is much in the business world. | ||
Wow, and if we could get that graphic up there promoting the event, and we'll be sure to promote it on all our social media accounts. | ||
What's the sentiment of the people on the ground? | ||
Do you see a lot of independents or even Democrats coming out in support of President Trump now with the disgusting job that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have done over the past four years? | ||
unidentified
|
We do. | |
I mean I'm saying again from the black community of Chicago and the south side and the west west west side of Chicago we're seeing many people in the black community up in arms. | ||
I mean they're their job. | ||
The opportunity for jobs is so low right now as as again we've got you know tens of thousands of illegal aliens moving into town that | ||
they're taking jobs that are that are that are being you know their their | ||
lives are being supported by our tax dollars when you know the people of our state and of the city are getting no | ||
support from this this state and the city of Chicago. So they're up in arms. | ||
They definitely are in a different place than they were four years ago in | ||
my opinion. And if they if they can't steal the vote they might even win. And Trump might even win in Illinois if we | ||
can control the steal the votes here which you know good luck with that. | ||
Right. Well we have a promo for your event coming up. | ||
Let's take a look. | ||
unidentified
|
Get ready, McHenry County, Illinois, Wisconsin, and the whole Midwest. | |
We got an event coming up on August 18th, the day before the Democratic convention that's going to blow your mind. | ||
This is bigger than the DNC it will ever be. | ||
We're expecting an amazing, amazing group of people. | ||
We think 15 to 20,000 people would be likely. | ||
We've got Charlie Kirk coming. | ||
We've got General Flynn, Roger Stone. | ||
I mean, we got Mike Lindell wants to be there, so he's coming. | ||
We got Kimberly Fletcher from Moms for America. | ||
Steve Moore, one of the greatest economists in our country's history, in my opinion. | ||
We've got Jaco Boyens. | ||
Jaco is an amazing advocate in the war against human trafficking. | ||
Just the band we got playing is worth the price of the ticket. | ||
Thompson Square. | ||
Check them out. | ||
You know three, four, five, six of their songs. | ||
So join us at McHenry County Fairgrounds. | ||
On Sunday, August 18th, the day before the Democratic Convention. | ||
And one more thing, we're going to have a few surprises. | ||
The speakers I have are amazing speakers. | ||
Scan the QR code on the screen or go to paradingfortrump.com. | ||
That's paradingfortrump.com. | ||
And buy your tickets now. | ||
They're going to go fast. | ||
That's McHenry County Fairgrounds. | ||
Be there. | ||
Join us. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Well, that looks absolutely fantastic. | ||
Gary, while I still have you, I want to ask you, how has the rapes shaped up with the insertion of Mala Harris across the Rust Belt? | ||
We know that when Joe Biden was in, there was quite large polling margins. | ||
Now those margins have tightened. | ||
So where do you think this is headed? | ||
And what's the fight ahead, in your opinion? | ||
unidentified
|
No, right now I think the media is on a pretty good job. | |
The left wing media is on a pretty good job painting her as this, you know, this black woman that really deserves a shot. | ||
But I'm confident that as she speaks more and more, she's going to be looked upon as the Marxist communist that she is, the person that Really has never led anything in her life. | ||
So I hope she talks a lot and she's interviewed a lot and maybe she even debates Trump, right? | ||
If she does those things, I believe that she's going to fall like a rock because you can't hide stupid, in my opinion. | ||
100%. | ||
Well, Gary, you are an entrepreneur that supports other entrepreneurs. | ||
Where can the people go and follow you and support you on your mission to do good in the world and be a pro-business leader? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so I'm Gary Rabin at LinkedIn. | |
I'm also a Ditch Digger CEO. | ||
I've got a podcast called Ditch Digger CEO, where basically we mentor entrepreneurs. | ||
We tell the stories of top 1% entrepreneurs that start with nothing like I did. | ||
And in this great American dream that we're part of, we can actually become top 1% in our industry. | ||
And so I've got about 110 stories that are amazing stories for entrepreneurs and Ditch Digger CEO. | ||
So I mean, that's where you find me the most. | ||
Otherwise, I'm running businesses with my family and my leaders. | ||
We're having a blast, paving parking lots across America. | ||
So thank you so much. | ||
I appreciate it, you know, being on today, Jane. | ||
Wonderful. | ||
Thank you so much, Gary. | ||
Get ahead of the Kamala crash. | ||
Go to birchgold.com slash Bannon to get your free kit on gold IRAs. | ||
Mike Lindell, what do you got for us? | ||
I need my Mike Lindell minute. | ||
Well, first of all, I'm going to be in Chicago, our Frank's Beach, our whole crew's going there for the DNC convention. | ||
So we'll be there all week for that. | ||
And then where Rampasi makes it possible that I can get out of town and head out and do that because you're supporting my employees. | ||
And I'm an employee-owned company that's the most attacked ever. | ||
So what we're doing, we're doing for the War Room Posse today, the best special of the year. | ||
You're getting our newest product, which is our MyPillow Mattress Topper, the most affordable mattress topper ever. | ||
And we're going to give you a free set of sheets with $100 off, free set of MyPillow sheets and Free shipping on your entire order. | ||
So you can go to MyPillow.com, go there, and whatever you want today, get everything free for free shipping. | ||
Anything you pick. | ||
There's the MyPillow Mattress Topper Special just in time for college. | ||
Get everybody set up. | ||
Every mattress in your house, you need to get those covered. | ||
And then you have the 80% off Overstock sale, that's a War Room exclusive, but now we've added free shipping. | ||
You guys, free shipping on your entire order. | ||
The employee pricing sale for all the MyPillows that we manufacture every day, we've sold over 83 million. | ||
Get them for every room in the house. | ||
The dish towels, everything we've left on sale, but the free exclusive War Room shipping, and then make sure you call my operators. | ||
They're standing by. | ||
They love talking to everyone at the War Room Posse. | ||
Remember, this is a win-win-win. | ||
You're covering the MyPillow and their employee-owned company. | ||
You're covering the War Room Posse, the War Room Show, which I promised Steve we would break records, and you guys are gonna break records with this free shipping. | ||
And then also, it helps you get the best sleep in history. | ||
The best sleep of your life. | ||
We all need great sleep right now. | ||
I want to say two things. | ||
Well, I have to say, when I was stranded in Atlanta, I ended up on a friend of mine's couch, and she had my pillow sheets, and it really was the best night's sleep in the whole wide world. | ||
So, Mike Lindell, you make wonderful sheets. | ||
Thank you so much for all you do. | ||
We're looking forward to your DNC coverage. | ||
Joe Allen. | ||
Joe Allen, you're up. | ||
Tell us about what's going on with job replacement. | ||
We know that we can't have a conversation about job replacement without talking about the future and what AI holds for us. | ||
So what's the latest on that front? | ||
You know, Jane, I see it kind of as, at the present moment, an incursion of illegal and legal immigrants who are taking jobs in America, coupled with outsourcing. | ||
This is the most immediate issue that we face. | ||
Increasingly, as artificial intelligence becomes more and more sophisticated, and it at least is perceived to be useful, you're going to see more and more jobs that are at least augmented, if not replaced entirely by AI. | ||
At the moment, it's mostly just projections. | ||
AI really is not only new in the technical sense that large language models have only just arrived at the moment where they can communicate or speak, so to speak, in a convincing way, so as to replace jobs of copywriters, to replace jobs of customer service agents, so on and so forth. | ||
But it's also new in the sense that it's not really been adopted widely. | ||
When you look at the most aggressive projections, though, one classic projection, for instance, from Goldman Sachs, that 300 million jobs would be replaced by just the current wave of AI across the world, and other projections that some 30, I'm sorry, some 73 million might be replaced in the U.S., It's pretty clear that these corporations and the various analysts working for them foresee a world in which human beings are completely disposable, in which universal basic income will be the primary subsistence, not only for blue-collar workers, but increasingly for white-collar workers. | ||
Now, these are just projections, so they only tell us what the analysts At least those analysts paid by these companies believe. | ||
They also tell us what these companies want us to believe. | ||
But it's really important to remember that you don't have to have artificial intelligence systems that are actually superior to human beings to see jobs get wiped out. | ||
All you have to have is an industry in which the major companies and the smaller companies trying to keep up with them believe that these systems are in fact superior to human workers and therefore are willing to take the risk to replace the jobs. | ||
Just to give you a quick idea of the landscape of what sorts of jobs are on the chopping block according to these people's projections and their intentions. | ||
You have everything from drivers, because autonomous vehicles, while being a kind of promise always on the horizon, autonomous vehicles are, in fact, becoming more and more effective. | ||
This is driven largely by companies like Google, largely by companies like Tesla. | ||
You also have the prospect of a number of manufacturing jobs, which have already been hacked by automation, increasingly being replaced by more and more sophisticated robotic systems. | ||
What a lot of people didn't expect, though, and what you do see a push for, is the replacement or augmentation of white-collar jobs, so that doctors would be maybe not entirely replaced, but largely replaced by artificial intelligence systems that were able to actually diagnose disease. | ||
You already have AI systems that perform many of the more sophisticated surgeries on, say, spines or on brains. | ||
You also have the prospect of Accountants, teachers, middle managers, lawyers—the sorts of white-collar jobs that many people anticipated to be secure for the next decade-plus. | ||
It appears, anyway, that whether or not they're replaced entirely Any employee working in these fields is going to be expected to at least deploy artificial intelligence in order to be more efficient. | ||
Again, that doesn't mean these are going to be better workers. | ||
It simply means that the value system of these companies is shifting in the direction of AI as, at the very least, a kind of necessary augmentation for any prospective hire. | ||
You saw in our cold open there, there were dozens of examples. | ||
These are just a few of them. | ||
They're all over TikTok of young people saying how they've applied to 300 plus jobs. | ||
I never hear anything back. | ||
I can't get a job. | ||
I have two degrees. | ||
I don't know what I'm doing wrong. | ||
What would you warn people who are entering the workplace about certain industries that maybe they should stay away from that in the next 10 years are really going to be wiped out because of AI? | ||
You know, one example that comes directly to mind, you have that old statement that people oftentimes mockingly used for people who are concerned about their job prospects in the future. | ||
Learn to code. | ||
If you learn to code, your job will always be safe. | ||
I would say that if you are an excellent coder, if you plan on getting a PhD in computer science, that's something you want to pursue. | ||
But if you think that you're going to be able to get a job as a kind of low-level coder, I think that that's actually on the chopping block, because that's one of the areas that large language models actually excel in. You may be able to get a job as a kind | ||
of AI babysitter, so that you're babysitting systems that are writing the code. But as far | ||
as actually being a coder, I think that it's quite likely that the low-level jobs are | ||
definitely going to go away or at least be contracted dramatically. So I think that for me, and this | ||
is largely a value statement, I think that what young people need to do is ensure that | ||
they have a kind of redundancy, so that if you want to be a writer or if you want to be an | ||
artist, I would recommend not learning how to use ChatGPT or learning how to use DALI 3, I would recommend going through all of the kinds of, you know, hard-won skill learning processes that enabled art to exist to begin with. | ||
because I think that the taste for human creations is only going to increase the more we enter | ||
a kind of bland, artificial, kind of AI-saturated world. | ||
As far as blue-collar jobs go, robots are becoming way more sophisticated | ||
than I ever imagined they would be, especially in the last three, four years, | ||
largely enabled by AI modeling. | ||
But if you are a blue-collar worker, I think that your job is going to be well secure | ||
for the next decade, two decades, perhaps the rest of our lives, | ||
in anything from plumbing, mechanics, to construction, so on and so forth. | ||
Anything that requires the use of your hands and to some extent the use of your mind in order to accomplish the sorts of economic tasks that people are always going to need. | ||
The one thing that you do need to do, though, is figure out how to get a government in place that is going to protect those jobs from illegal immigration or legal immigration, because that is always going to be a threat to Native American workers. | ||
It's always going to be a way to slash wages and to degrade the negotiating power of Native workers. | ||
In the white collar industries, I really don't know. | ||
It really is going to make a difference as to how many of these companies are willing to risk. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Laying off or firing human employees, and it's going to also in the long term, it's going to be a matter of which ones of these companies actually succeed, those who adopted AI or not. | ||
But I encourage all young people, learn to be a great human worker before they convince you to become a good cyborg employee. | ||
Joe, you've been publishing on your sub stack, where can people get the stack and where can the people follow you? | ||
Every Monday, you've got a column. | ||
Every Thursday, you've got a podcast at joebot.xyz. | ||
So head to joebot.xyz. | ||
You will find more entertainment at the end of time than you ever thought possible. | ||
Armageddon can be fun. | ||
Awesome. | ||
Thank you so much, Joe. | ||
Protect yourself from big tech and government overreach. | ||
Go silent. | ||
Visit slnt.com slash Bannon to save 15% plus free shipping. | ||
All right, coming up, we have a stacked It's part two of War Room Battleground. | ||
Liz Harrington is dropping some bombshells on Georgia election integrity. | ||
And we are going to the home state of Aunt Becky. | ||
That's right. | ||
We are going to the great state of Nebraska. | ||
GOP Chairman Eric Underwood joins us all next. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
You're in the War Room. | ||
unidentified
|
♪♪ ♪♪ | |
♪♪ Government gangsters are the group of individuals, | ||
career bureaucrats, who have been installed by what we call the deep state into every agency and department | ||
in the United States government. | ||
Had Donald Trump not won in 2016, he would not have exposed the flank of the Deep State and their weapon of choice, the two-tier system of justice. | ||
From Russiagate, to Hunter Biden's laptop, to Joe Biden's classified documents case, to January 6th, to the 51 Intel letter, and everything in between. | ||
We would never have learned that. | ||
These people are dangerous and vindictive, learning from their mistakes and perfecting ways to hide their corruption. | ||
unidentified
|
It is finally time for a straightforward assessment of the state of our nation. | |
Welcome back to War Room Battleground. | ||
My name is Jane Zirkle, filling in for political prisoner Steve Bannon. | ||
I am now joined by Liz Harrington, who is dropping bombshells left and right on various government gangsters. | ||
Liz, before I get into your new piece on warroom.org, talk to me about the Sun Belt polling. | ||
Where do we stand right now in this race? | ||
Polls have been tightening as revealed in this new CBS study. | ||
Explain to our viewers what's going on. | ||
Well, thanks for having me, Jane. | ||
I think the most important thing for our audience to remember here is the most important thing to the regime is the lie and selling the lie. | ||
So it was so imperative for them to replace Joe Biden because there was no way they could sell once again. | ||
They already tried to sell him getting 81 million votes. | ||
No one believes that. | ||
They certainly couldn't sell the idea of Joe Biden getting 100 million votes in 2024. | ||
So he was never going to be the nominee. | ||
That's why they had to get rid of him. | ||
And magically, after President Trump is crushing Joe Biden in the polls, actually, I think much higher than the public polling was. | ||
They released the polling. | ||
It was like only up of three to five points. | ||
I think it was actually up double digits. | ||
But magically, when Joe Biden gets out of the race, we have this narrative, the polls are tightening, because they need to sell the lie that Kamala Harris can beat Donald J. Trump. | ||
Because the truth is, she can't beat him either. | ||
President Trump is the leader of the biggest political movement in American history. | ||
And he's only gotten stronger after everything they've thrown after him. | ||
And after they tried to kill him, I mean, he's almost unbeatable at this point. | ||
There's nobody that they could really put up. | ||
But they have to have the narrative that this race is tightening and that it's close. | ||
And what are they trotting out here? | ||
The Sun Belt. | ||
What states? | ||
Arizona and Georgia. | ||
Well, that's ground zero of the stolen election in 2020. | ||
Those are two places between Fulton County and Maricopa County, many others in between. | ||
I mean, the whole states are very corrupt. | ||
But those are states that they can cheat, they think they can cheat, and steal once again. | ||
And as long as they have this narrative that the polling is tightening, they think that they can get away with it. | ||
But I don't think they're going to be able to because it's just going to be so overwhelming, the American people are not going to believe it. | ||
You have a new piece available at warroom.org talking about Raffensperger and Kemp. | ||
Explain to our audience what's going on down in Georgia. | ||
There was a huge moment, Jane, in the rally in Atlanta that President Trump held on Saturday. | ||
Huge crowd. | ||
He called out not only Ravensburger and Kent, but before he called them out, he praised members of the state election board who've been really heroic, particularly Dr. Janice Johnston. | ||
who've been working on these complaints, been looking at the facts. | ||
The Secretary of State's office has been trying to cover up the fraud in 2020. | ||
There are these amazing complaints that documents exactly how Fulton County did not have the votes they claim they did and that the election was fraudulent. | ||
And they've tried to sweep this under the rug. | ||
And yet Dr. Janice Johnston, Janelle King, Rick Jeffers, these members are not giving up on this. | ||
And there's a big election board meeting on Tuesday where they have an opportunity to continue the investigation. | ||
And this is important because they've tried to sweep this under the rug. | ||
And we have to correct the problems that have been uncovered in Georgia or else it's going to happen again. | ||
And they got a standing ovation, these members of the state election board, when President Trump honored them at the rally. | ||
So this is a huge moment ahead of the Tuesday board meeting. | ||
There's going to be a lot of attention on that and we will keep you posted. | ||
But in particular, another great thing that President Trump did was he called out Brian Kemp, the governor, and Brad Raffensperger, the corrupt Secretary of State there. | ||
And he just was honest and flat out said, they want 2020 to happen again. | ||
They want Georgia to be stolen again. | ||
They don't want President Trump to win fair and square. | ||
They're not being team players. | ||
They're not unifying the party. | ||
And it was an incredible moment, and the crowd absolutely loved it because they know just how corrupt Kemp and Raffensperger are, who are so keenly aware with the details of the corruption in the hand count audit and the second machine count where they had to insert thousands of fraudulent ballots to try to make the results match. | ||
They never matched because they never had the votes. | ||
They know the details, and yet they've done nothing about it. | ||
And they're going to let it happen again. | ||
President Trump was so clear about that. | ||
And so there's more and more pressure. | ||
If they're not going to do anything, the state election board can lead the way. | ||
And we can absolutely get something in place, continue to put the pressure on to try to fix Hit rewind for a second. | ||
as President Trump said, this is a key state. Without Georgia, there's nothing. We cannot get | ||
across the finish line in 2024. Hit rewind for a second. | ||
How, after four years of fighting for election integrity in Georgia, are we still at the point | ||
where President Trump himself has to be the one calling this out? It's such a great question. | ||
And sadly, it's because there are so few who are willing to do the right thing when they see the truth. | ||
And instead, they just try to cover it up. | ||
I mean, case in point, look at Brad Raffensperger's general counsel, Charlene McGowan, who took over this investigation, SCB 2023-025. | ||
Which this complaint shows exactly that the election should have never been certified and it was so corrupt. | ||
Yet she gets up there and says it's inconclusive whether over 3,000 duplicate ballots were counted. | ||
She knows that they were counted. | ||
She didn't want to admit that they were. | ||
So they tried to cover it up because all you have to do is check the cast vote record. | ||
And they refused to do that. | ||
And now there's evidence coming up on this big meeting on Tuesday. | ||
That the duplicates that were counted were intentionally and fraudulently inserted. | ||
And it's obvious that they were. | ||
It's always been. | ||
Because the reason to commit the fraud was to change the outcome. | ||
You wouldn't do it otherwise. | ||
You wouldn't need to. | ||
So the people know, why are we still here? | ||
It's because there's been too few without courage to hold anyone accountable. | ||
And they've still been in charge. | ||
I mean, Raffensperger himself claimed in the 2022 primary to get over the 50% threshold he needed to avoid a runoff. | ||
He was polling at 36% at best. | ||
There's no way he had enough votes to avoid a runoff. | ||
And yet, magically, here he is two years later. | ||
He's still in this role. | ||
They're still covering up the fraud. | ||
They've done nothing to try to prevent it from happening again. | ||
And we need to back up Dr. Janice Johnston, these other members of the state election board, to at least push something, get some sort of accountability, or it will happen again. | ||
What is your recommendation to the war room posse on the ground in Georgia to fight for free and fair elections? | ||
They need to show up. | ||
I think they need to go to these meetings. | ||
They need to be paying attention to them, giving support. | ||
To the few people who do have courage. | ||
They also, I think, can not just sign up to become poll managers, but also get involved about how to get reconciliation. | ||
So a key thing that the state election board did, which is just common sense, and President Trump gave a shout out to this rule on Saturday as well, is that The poll managers, three of them, have to count the ballots to make sure the totals match with what the machine said they counted every day of voting. | ||
That is a basic fundamental 101 reconciliation for elections that should be done everywhere because We know there's evidence that the machines undercounted systematically the Election Day votes. | ||
Who votes on Election Day? | ||
Remember, these were votes for President Trump in 2020, and they continue to do this. | ||
We've seen evidence of it. | ||
In successive elections. | ||
So this reconciliation, this is what we need to fight for. | ||
So another thing that I think we can organize and do is make sure that the number of voters match the number of votes. | ||
Make sure that they can't fudge the numbers in early voting when the results don't go their way. | ||
That's what they did in 2020. | ||
We need people to organize and make sure we count the number of people who go into vote on election day, not just observe Liz Harrington, excellent work. | ||
because a lot of it you're not going to be able to tell with the cheating when it's done behind closed doors. | ||
However, we can at least keep them beholden to a number so they can't act as if there were way more voters | ||
than they claim to have in places like Fulton County. | ||
Liz Harrington, excellent work. | ||
Where can the people follow you? | ||
I'm on X and Truth Social at Real Liz USA and go to warroom.org. | ||
Go to my author page. | ||
You can read all about Georgia. | ||
I have a huge piece from a month or so back, how Georgia was stolen. | ||
And I keep following up on this story just because it's so important. | ||
It's a case study of really what's happened everywhere. | ||
And if we're going to get our elections back, we have to do it. | ||
And that's how we're going to get our country back. | ||
Awesome. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Eric Underwood, the GOP chairman from the great state of Nebraska, joins me now. | ||
Eric, we just heard what's going on in Georgia regarding election integrity. | ||
Tell us about what's happening in Nebraska. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, thank you for having me on. | |
This is a great opportunity to just connect to the the war room posse as it is. | ||
But, you know, what this really is, is grassroots are becoming more engaged across the nation and across the states. | ||
And so in each state, you've got all these different election integrity challenges that that we start to try to put our efforts into. | ||
But we don't know where to start and we don't know where the fruition goes to. | ||
And that's why I want to make it key that we we put a focus What we did through the state party last year was set up our legislative plan that included a work on a photo voter ID, as well as eliminating ballot boxes, getting rid of Zuckerberg dollars. | ||
We made this part of our goal, but we brought in hundreds of people to approve this sort of legislative plan. | ||
The reason that people wanted to be a part of that was because they saw stability happening in their state parties. | ||
They saw stability happening in their county parties, and they wanted to become a part of it. | ||
What happens in an election cycle next is that people have to now get into an active mode versus activism. | ||
We can sit here all day long on our phones and on our snapchats and we can do all of that activity about explaining the problems, but we have to go to work on the problems. | ||
And what organizes that, what assembles that, is usually the state parties and the county parties. | ||
And I really want to encourage your audience, our audience, that when you see a state party that's been fighting for the people, that's when you need to come and become engaged. | ||
So, in Nebraska, we have a congressional district that is a very highly targeted congressional district, but we have challenges in other communities as well. | ||
In Lancaster, where our state offices are at, we have ballot boxes that are out there that are being approved. | ||
Now, is that being approved by a legislative body? | ||
No. | ||
It's being approved by county commissioners. | ||
And see, this is why local races and local activity is so much more important than just being out there and fighting against federal. | ||
We need to have from the grassroots, we need to support President Trump so at the very highest part of the ticket, we've got somebody that we know that is going to lead this nation. | ||
But you have to become active at your local races. | ||
So when we passed a photo voter ID that was supported by 65.45% of Nebraskans in 2022, we really felt like that we had taken care of the three components that were a part of what we call election accountability and voter verification. | ||
Those two things. | ||
It's not just election integrity. | ||
We want to make sure that it's one vote, one count. | ||
And we want to make sure that that voter verification are citizens of Nebraska, voting one time that are handing the ballot to an election official. | ||
But you know, unfortunately, that's not quite how the bill got written. | ||
That's not quite how the statute's been been defined. | ||
And now you're still here sitting here fighting this slight compromise. | ||
And the question is, why do we continue to compromise? | ||
Why do as as legislators or senators or leaders, what is the the challenge with fulfilling something that we know is true and right and the correct way to basically legislate? | ||
The compromise comes because of the fear of losing an election. | ||
This is what's happening just as much as you're heard in Georgia, just as much as what you're seeing in Nebraska. | ||
When we come to the truth and the right Actions when it comes to legislation, whether it's taxes or pornography in school systems or roads and bridges. | ||
It's a concern over whether we're going to lose an election that we compromise our principles, compromise our values. | ||
So what entity then provides the support network for the people? | ||
And that's why I want to really encourage the War Room Posse, connect to your county parties, be engaged there and make your voices heard there. | ||
And that's really where I'm transitioning my role as the chairman. | ||
I'm going to spend more time at the Unicameral, not as a lobbyist, but as a representative of the people. | ||
That's what my job is. | ||
I've been very fortunate to take it to the national level with Turning Point Action and Steve Bannon and the RNC, even where it's at with Trump Force 47. | ||
We've had a great coming out of the convention was a great opportunity to connect nationally. | ||
But now it's time to get to work with the individuals that are going to have the impact on our local races and the impact on the legislation. | ||
And basically, just like she was talking about in Georgia going, are we going to have the will to do what is right? | ||
Big time, big time. | ||
Now I want to ask you, Eric, Nebraska joined 17 other states in this FEC complaint against the Kamala Harris campaign. | ||
Tell us about that and tell us what this lawsuit entails. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you know, there's three parts to when you think about something like that. | |
First and foremost, this is just another lane that a state party needs to be a part of. | ||
You have national impacts to the way the presidential race is going to unfold. | ||
And without the volume of people behind it, then then it's just going to go to nowhere. | ||
So the fact that you have 17 state parties, the second part that you need to understand there is that that happened within 24 to 48 hours of the relationships that the state parties are going to each other, the chairman and the National Committee man and committee woman going, did you hear about this? | ||
Have you got it? | ||
Who do I contact? | ||
How do I get signed up for it? | ||
There's a coalition of us, of the RNC members, the chairmen and the national committee men and committee women that's growing bigger and bigger, going, if we're going to have something impactful, we want to be able to have a turnaround. | ||
We're tired of being reactive. | ||
We're tired of being, you know, a week out of something. | ||
Even look at today. | ||
We feel like today's drop in the economy and what's happening on the stock markets are, well, we didn't see that coming. | ||
It's time for us to be proactive. | ||
I want to ask you about that because the July unemployment numbers are out. | ||
Unemployment's up to 4.3%. | ||
How has that affected Nebraskans? | ||
And because President Trump said in his RNC platform that his platform is dedicated to the forgotten men and women of America. | ||
Do you believe that describes Nebraskans under the Biden administration? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, this is going to start accelerating and a lot of it depends on the determination and the will of the individuals in each state there, but it's going to get worse and worse. | |
And these numbers that are represented from the federal, you know, that last report there was that there was going to be 175,000 jobs that were created and then only 115,000. | ||
There's just these random numbers. | ||
And they're done for one of two things. | ||
Either to create fear of, look, we're crashing and burning, or to create some sort of optimism that is not founded there. | ||
And the unemployment rate is an interesting number because after a while, individuals drop out of that equation. | ||
What's key to take a look at, and I encourage your War Room Posse to go look at, is what's called the workforce participation rate. | ||
You can go into your state's Google at workforce participation rate for each state and what you're going to find is a dramatic decline what's occurred since especially after COVID of individuals 16 and up that could be working that aren't. | ||
And see, these are the numbers that start to put together when you add payrolls, when you add the unemployment number and you add the workforce participation rate, you're wondering what's really going on. | ||
What's going on is that people are going to take their dollars and they're either going to provide just basic life expenses, such as taking care of your property taxes, your rent, food, the basic costs, and they're not going to go consume anything. | ||
Our economy is driven by individuals that want to consume something, whether it's food or buying a car or a house. | ||
When this slows down, this dramatically affects the economy. | ||
Nebraskans, for the most part, are very fiscally responsible individuals. | ||
They're very modest. | ||
I don't use the word moderate. | ||
They're modest individuals just trying to work hard, whether it's blue collar, white collar, plaid collar, scrub collar. | ||
We're just trying to work hard. | ||
But there comes a point where the numbers, the scales get tipped so out of your favor that just the basic household need of, you know, internet, electricity, heat, All of that's starting to go more than what you can afford with the job you have. | ||
So then people are starting to get two jobs. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Eric, we have about 30 seconds left. | ||
So tell us where the people can support you and the Nebraska GOP and how they can get involved in their local grassroots. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I appreciate the opportunity again today. | |
So my Twitter handle, my ex handle is at 2022NEBMaverick. | ||
At 2022NEBMaverick. | ||
And what you're going to see is I put on there my Chairman's Weekly Newsletter called Coffee with the Chairman. | ||
And that's going to give you an outline of what's happening in Nebraska. | ||
But it's an amplified 10,000 mile view of where the grassroots are moving forward. | ||
We want to move forward as a unified force. | ||
I can't say this enough. | ||
If grassroots want to make a difference, they're going to have to assemble. | ||
Assemble in your local parties, in your state parties, and move forth with the purpose. | ||
Show up, know the rules, and achieve an objective. | ||
Awesome. |