Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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I wonder why they have the suspects in custody. | |
Maybe there's more that you're looking for. | ||
In public office occasionally do terrible things. | ||
From time to time, we enter into a period where people in public office very frequently do lots of terrible things. | ||
What turns them around? | ||
What stops them from doing terrible things? | ||
What makes them correct course and start doing the right thing instead? | ||
One thing that sometimes works is shame and embarrassment. | ||
Being confronted with the wrongness of what they are doing, feeling shame or embarrassment, or at least the possibility of public rebuke and the awkwardness of being unable to explain their actions in a way that satisfies anyone. | ||
Sometimes you can't turn public officials around, but sometimes you can. | ||
Sometimes that sort of thing can cause public officials who are otherwise behaving in ways that are weak and wrong to find their spine and to change their minds. | ||
And that is why it may be important for our country as a whole and for the history of the American Republic that the first full day of Donald Trump's second presidential term was like this today for Republicans in Washington. | ||
unidentified
|
Senator Scott, what do you make of President Trump's party? | |
I haven't seen all of it. | ||
First off, so many people were fairly posthumous. | ||
What about those who assaulted police officers and then were pardoned by the president? | ||
I haven't seen any. | ||
I haven't gone into the detail. | ||
But there are those pardons that exist. | ||
I have to read it. | ||
I haven't seen any. | ||
I haven't gone into the detail. | ||
unidentified
|
I have to read it. | |
Very embarrassing for Senator Rick Scott today. | ||
unidentified
|
Historic in a lot of ways. | |
The sense of elation on the part of the January 6th inmates who have been freed and the family members who have been holding vigil for them for over 900 days. | ||
The implications for our democracy and exactly what you outline in your intro there. | ||
Just the prospects for the Trump presidency in terms of a squad of at least, you know, 11 or 1200 people who are willing to go to the mat for this man. | ||
My father, who was also in the January 6th insurrection, told me yesterday night he'd be willing to die for Donald Trump. | ||
Their feelings of commitment to Donald Trump, the man, and his cause have only strengthened and increased in the intervening years, and they are fired up. | ||
They see this as a massive vindication of their cause and their belief in someone who is really talked about in savior terms. | ||
It's been just very eye-opening. | ||
Eye-opening. | ||
And HB1, I know the program very well. | ||
I use the program. | ||
Maitre D's, wine experts, even waiters, high-quality waiters. | ||
You've got to get the best people. | ||
Now, then you go into people like Larry, and he needs engineers, and Masa needs, and this gentleman needs engineers like nobody's ever needed engineers, right? | ||
So we have slightly different questions, but these were all taken within the last month. | ||
And there's real uniformity here. | ||
That's what I really think you see. | ||
You see real uniformity. | ||
Deported all immigrants who are here illegally. | ||
55% of the New York Times. | ||
Marquette, 64%. | ||
CBS News, 57%. | ||
ABC News, with a slightly different question, 56%. | ||
So what you're seeing essentially here is a very clear indication that a majority of Americans, in fact when they're asked this blunt question, which I believe gets at the underlying feelings, do in fact want to deport all immigrants who are here illegally. | ||
There's no arguing with these different numbers because they're all essentially the same across four different pollsters. | ||
So if they say "Yes, today-ish," How has that changed over time? | ||
Yeah, this is where I think you get very interesting. | ||
And so we'll take a look at that ABC News question in particular, because you can really see that there's been a massive shift from when Trump was first getting into office eight years ago, right? | ||
Deport all undocumented immigrants. | ||
You go back to 2015. I'm going to come to your side of the screen. | ||
It was 42 percent. | ||
Hello. | ||
Go to 2016. It was 36 percent. | ||
Look at where we are now. | ||
This was taken at the end of last year. | ||
56%. | ||
This is 20 points higher than it was just before Trump got into office the first time. | ||
So, feelings towards immigration in this country, feelings towards undocumented immigrants and deporting all of them have become considerably more hawkish. | ||
And I think that gives Donald Trump much more leverage to go with the American people and sort of have these hawkish, some might say harsh... | ||
Different rhetoric and also issue-based sort of going after immigrants who are here illegally. | ||
And so I think the American people are going to give Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt to do what he wants to do, at least if you believe these blunt questions, including this one. | ||
unidentified
|
How about immigration levels? | |
Yeah, okay. | ||
So this sort of goes in line with that, right? | ||
Which is, again, trying to get at the underlying feelings. | ||
Want immigration levels decreased. | ||
This includes legal and illegal immigration. | ||
Look at this. | ||
Last year. | ||
55%. | ||
That is the highest level since the 9-11 aftermath. | ||
unidentified
|
You go back just to 2020. And this, again, legal and illegal. | |
People want less people coming into the country. | ||
Exactly. | ||
They want less people coming into the country. | ||
Look at that. | ||
That's a 14-point rise from 2023. You go back to 2016 when Donald Trump again was running for president the first time. | ||
It was 38%. | ||
That's a 17-point rise. | ||
So the bottom line is more folks want people who are here illegally deported and they're... | ||
Overall feelings towards immigration have become considerably more hawkish since Donald Trump was first getting the office, Kate. | ||
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. | ||
The reason I got a free shot at all these networks lying about the people. | ||
The people have had a belly full of it. | ||
I know you don't like hearing that. | ||
I know you try to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
And where do people like that go to share the big line? | ||
unidentified
|
MAGA Media. | |
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
|
Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, we've got tremendous feedback here, gentlemen. | ||
Let's take care of it. | ||
We're going to go to the committee room over at the Budget Committee. | ||
Chuck Schumer has promised to light up our own Russ vote in the second round of OMB. Of course, OMB is the partner with Doge, with Elon Musk. | ||
We're going to go to that. | ||
We have a lot there. | ||
We're going to recut. | ||
The H-1B. We kind of blew it. | ||
President Trump steps up to the microphone and says, hey, look, I hear both sides. | ||
Both sides being Elon Musk on one, the war room on the other, the populist versus the techno-feudalist. | ||
And then he goes on to have a talk about H-1B visas. | ||
But there's exploding information and news out there that's being suppressed. | ||
But some person you can't suppress is Laura Loomer. | ||
Laura joins us by phone. | ||
Laura, you've got an exploding story. | ||
About the suppression of information about the murder of a police officer or Border Patrol by a H-1B visa person that's here staying over. | ||
What do you got for us? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, thanks for having me on this morning, Steve. | |
So on Monday, the same time as President Trump's inauguration, ironically, there was a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Vermont who was murdered. | ||
And there's reports that Homeland Security had been monitoring three individuals, and when the Border Patrol agent approached these individuals in a car, he was shot in the neck and died almost immediately. | ||
And the suspect involved, who is also now dead, is a German national who was in the United States illegally on an expired H-1B visa. | ||
And upon investigating this individual... | ||
He's an employee at big tech firms. | ||
And so this is an H-1B visa individual who is now an illegal alien because he overstayed his visa. | ||
And according to his LinkedIn, which has now been deleted because there appears to be an entire cover-up of his online history, it says that he was a software developer intern at Jane Street. | ||
Which is the same company that was involved with Sam Bakeman Freed. | ||
He was a quantitative trader at Tower Research Capital for three years. | ||
And he was also a quantitative technologist at Radix Trading. | ||
And so we were just lectured four weeks ago, exactly four weeks ago, by the big tech giants that H-1B visas are good. | ||
We need to replace them. | ||
They're the best and the brightest. | ||
And these are jobs that Americans can't fill. | ||
And now an H-1B visa overstay, an illegal alien who abused the H-1B visa system sponsored by Big Tech, has murdered an innocent U.S. Border Patrol officer who also happened to be a military veteran who provided security at the Pentagon the day of the 9-11 terrorist attacks. | ||
Okay, so I want to go back here because there's amazing information in this. | ||
Number one, for Stuart Stevens and all the people always over the war room and Laura Loomer and Steve Bannon, this is a white, German national. | ||
H-1B. He shouldn't be in the country. | ||
Go back through his resume. | ||
This is the tell. | ||
This guy doesn't have better training or better degrees or anything. | ||
He's a traitor. | ||
Go back and walk through his resume. | ||
This is outrageous. | ||
This entire program, and Mr. President, I realize that you say, hey, you understand both sides. | ||
I think the information you're getting from the other side are lies. | ||
They're lying to you. | ||
There is not one. | ||
The H-1B holder in this nation are the millions that are here that are better trained, have better educational credentials for the billet that they're holding. | ||
And look at this. | ||
The scam artists come here. | ||
They stayed at the company for a while. | ||
And then he's a traitor. | ||
Walk me through this resume of a guy who just killed a Border Patrol cop in cold blood, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, as I said before, it says that he was an undergraduate research assistant at the University of Waterloo, and so he spent time in Canada, even though he was a German national. | |
And then it says that he was living in New York for a while as a software developer for Jane Street Tech Company. | ||
It says he designed and wrote a web app using OCAM to visualize Jane Street's all-purpose data format. | ||
And then it says that he was living in New York for three years and three months, working as a quantitative trader for Tower Research Capital. | ||
And then for almost two years, he was living in Chicago, Illinois, another place that is swarming with a bunch of illegal immigrants, working as a quantitative technologist. | ||
So, pretty technical jobs here, but of course... | ||
When you are working in tech and you are a foreigner, you have to be sponsored by these companies. | ||
Laura, those are Grundoon jobs. | ||
They're technical jobs. | ||
You can throw a stick and hit tens of thousands of Americans who can do those jobs. | ||
Not onesies, twosies. | ||
Tens of thousands. | ||
That's a normal course of business. | ||
You walk these places. | ||
Yeah, I understand. | ||
The H-1B visas are for technical jobs. | ||
It's a total scam. | ||
It needs to be shut down immediately. | ||
Every one of the holders here, before they murder more cops, need to be deported immediately, immediately, and take their families with them. | ||
You need to put Americans in those jobs immediately. | ||
Laura Loomer, why is this being suppressed? | ||
I talked to a bunch of mainstream media today. | ||
They go, we've not heard of this. | ||
We haven't heard of the murder. | ||
We haven't heard, in AP, I think the Associated Press had it up with just visa holder. | ||
Nobody wants to mention it's the H-1B, ma'am. | ||
Why is that? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, they don't want to mention it's H-1B because look at the way that all of the big tech billionaires reacted. | |
They attacked journalists. | ||
They demonetized journalists. | ||
They completely shut down the Twitter accounts of every journalist that was speaking about this issue four weeks ago. | ||
many of the people online in the independent media who found themselves talking about the abuse of the H1B visa system by big tech and the way that H1B visa holders are abusing the system and contribute to a large amount of the illegal aliens who are now in our country, they found themselves completely suppressed. | ||
And so now it seems like the mainstream media is bowing down to the big tech billionaires out of fear or maybe they've received orders by big tech. | ||
It seems like big tech has this delusion that they are now the media and they're going to completely replace all forms of media and silence or punish any journalist that reports a story that either is critical of the big tech executives or critical of an issue that they are in support of. | ||
Laura, where can people go to get your podcast, the nights it's on, your social media networks? | ||
I know you're being suppressed, but you've got a lot of fans in the war room. | ||
Where do people go to get your material? | ||
unidentified
|
So they can go to lauralumer.substack.com and that's where they can subscribe. | |
You can also follow me on X, but I am still being heavily suppressed by Elon Musk for speaking out about the H-1B visas. | ||
And that's where people can subscribe to me as my sub stack. | ||
And then also my show is on Rumble, rumble.com slash lauralumer every Tuesday and Thursday at 8.30 p.m. | ||
Eastern. | ||
But hopefully President Trump addresses this issue soon because... | ||
You know, the MAGA base cannot coexist with the technocrats that are now taking over the White House. | ||
Yesterday we saw all the technocrats having a press conference with President Trump announcing a $500 billion initiative, and he was asked about these H-1B visas and said he supports the issue. | ||
We need to have a stronger response other than, oh, I support both sides of the issue. | ||
There needs to be a crackdown. | ||
An innocent Border Patrol agent has been murdered by an H-1B visa worker imported by the big tech oligarch the day of President Trump's inauguration. | ||
So it's kind of symbolic, given the fact that they were all front row at the inauguration. | ||
We gotta bounce. | ||
We gotta bounce. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Laura Loomer. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Back in a moment. | ||
on with Julie Kelly next. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | |
Okay, welcome back. | ||
Do we have Julie Kelly? | ||
Is she up? | ||
I'm going to get to Julie in a second. | ||
The 900 Days, it's called. | ||
The 900 Days is also the Siege of Leningrad, just to put a historical analogy on it. | ||
In World War II, the 900 days, and you have these people coming forward saying they support the man and the cause, the man and his cause, that's President Trump. | ||
You saw in the cold over from CNN, look at that massive shift. | ||
You know how that massive shift came about? | ||
You, this audience, Oscar Blue Ramirez, heroes like that, Ben Burquam, reporting every day from Darien Gap, Todd Bensman, hammering every day. | ||
We've done it for four years, almost five years now. | ||
Every day. | ||
Hammering on what's happening on the country. | ||
Fearless reporting by people who went down and put themselves in harm's way. | ||
The number of reporters we had down, and then other independent journalists, hammering every day, hammering every day, so the American people could finally see, because mainstream media didn't want to cover it. | ||
They go down, they got the crying babies and how bad it is. | ||
They put up deportation porn, which doesn't help anything. | ||
It only crushes the families eventually. | ||
Because all illegal aliens are going to leave the country. | ||
Also, folks, we call them illegal aliens on this show. | ||
I've been adamant about this. | ||
I do international TV and they melt down. | ||
I said, it's a term of art here. | ||
It's a term of law. | ||
It's a term here in the United States. | ||
And they just, they go apoplectic. | ||
President Trump signed an executive order, one of many, on the days of thunder. | ||
Guess what? | ||
They're not called migrants. | ||
They're illegal aliens. | ||
And we refer to them as illegal alien invaders. | ||
Julie Kelly, the 900 days, there's still tons of controversy. | ||
Where do we stand? | ||
They're trying to slow walk this. | ||
They're in full meltdown. | ||
This is all the media is covering, right, is this very issue. | ||
Tell me what's going on here. | ||
Where do we stand on the morning of guest day three, now since President Trump so heroically moved on Monday afternoon, ma'am? | ||
So it appears that they are still releasing people from the D.C. Gulag. | ||
As I explained yesterday, the D.C. Gulag is sort of the holding pen for defendants who are going to trial in Washington, awaiting sentencing, arraignment, some on pretrial detention. | ||
So it's really a mix of defendants there versus the ones who are released at federal prisons across the country who've already been convicted and were serving out their sentences. | ||
But my sources are telling me, Steve, that the judges in Washington are responsible for slow walking the release of the defendants in the D.C. courthouse. | ||
And I will tell you why. | ||
This is the life's work of these judges for the past four years. | ||
They not only take this professionally seriously, but personally. | ||
These are judges who have expressed open contempt for Donald Trump in their courtrooms, in their court filings. | ||
They consider January 6th an act of domestic terrorism. | ||
And they gleefully helped the government secure this 100% conviction rate before jury trials in Washington. | ||
Imagine your life's work for four years unraveling before your very eyes at the hand of the man who you despise. | ||
So they are holding on to this as long as possible. | ||
I'm collecting a... | ||
A list of names of those judges. | ||
But I know that at least one, Royce Lamberth, one of our favorites, the Reagan appointee, he apparently slow walked the release of a woman named Rachel Powell, who was serving out a 57-month federal prison sentence for obstruction of an official proceeding, which, as you know, was overturned by the Supreme Court. | ||
She was transferred to Washington on January 4th. | ||
January 4th, to face resentencing after her obstruction conviction was dropped. | ||
January 6th, of course, the weather shut down. | ||
Royce Lamberth delayed her sentencing until last week. | ||
And then after news of the pardons, never called her in. | ||
She's been sitting in the gulag for weeks now. | ||
She's a 40-some-odd-year-old woman who has children and grandchildren. | ||
So he was slow walking her release yesterday because, of course, he probably was going to try to sentence her to another 57 months. | ||
At any rate, those are the sort of individuals who were in the gulag, and these are the same judges who've thrown the book at these defendants, now doing whatever they can to delay their freedom until the very last minute. | ||
Look, the J6, obviously, President Trump is very dear to his heart. | ||
It's also central to our mission. | ||
Because it gets back to the Fed's direction. | ||
It gets back to the stolen 2020 election. | ||
And we're not going to let it go. | ||
There's so much more going on in Russ's vote. | ||
If my crack staff here can let me know when Russ's vote. | ||
Russ's vote. | ||
Schumer promised to light up Russ's vote today at the Budget Committee. | ||
So we're going into that. | ||
There's also stuff on tariffs, economy, the Ukraine war. | ||
Zelensky's asked for 200... | ||
What did I tell you here? | ||
Did I tell you, folks? | ||
200,000. | ||
200,000. | ||
Combat troops as a security force permanently in Ukraine to keep the peace. | ||
200,000. | ||
200,000. | ||
That would mean at least 50,000 Americans. | ||
Europe doesn't have 200,000 combat troops. | ||
And he did that at Davos. | ||
We're going to go to Davos at the top of the hour with Hanover bin Laden. | ||
Can we name names? | ||
This is very important. | ||
Because this gets to... | ||
Julie, you've done such great work. | ||
And the reason we've been promoting this and platforming this... | ||
When Julie was shut off everywhere for years and years and years and years, it's deeper even than the J6 guys. | ||
The J6 guys are symbolic, symbolic of a corruption in our system that goes all the way back to taking out Richard Nixon. | ||
Richard Nixon was a coup, and it wasn't the Washington Post. | ||
is all that Woodward and Bernstein stuff and the FBI leak, that was important, but that was small to a Judge Sirica in the House legal staffs and the Senate legal staffs working in junction with a corrupt DOJ. | ||
This is the beginning of taking out the chief magistrate part of the president so that the deep state can then form and hermetically seal off It all started in Nixon. | ||
And it's manifested itself here. | ||
It's in high relief. | ||
And it's worse under Trump because it was an entire system. | ||
This has to be a massive criminal investigation. | ||
Let me say it right here on the 22nd of January in the year of our Lord, 2025. And remember, what's said on the war room and what the war room... | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
Are we frozen up here? | ||
So we'll continue to look at what's happening today at the D.C. Gulag. | ||
I think everyone has basically been released as of now, but there still should be some sort of inquiry. | ||
I know that there were members of Congress who were there yesterday looking into what was happening. | ||
They should investigate. | ||
Because this was not apparently the jail officials. | ||
This was them waiting for judges to grant these motions to dismiss or vacate sentencing hearings, etc., waiting for the judges to grant those. | ||
And that apparently led to this delay. | ||
So the same House members can start to look at exactly what was happening the last few days and hold those judges accountable. | ||
Every single one has been involved in this vengeful, reckless prosecution of J6ers. | ||
And this is the perfect starting point to figuring out and holding them at least publicly accountable for what they've done. | ||
Let's name names. | ||
I want the top five judges. | ||
The judges are going to be under a criminal investigation. | ||
This cancer has spread throughout the entire system. | ||
These federal judges think they're impervious. | ||
You're not impervious. | ||
You can be impeached. | ||
And one way you can be impeached is be subject to a criminal investigation that shows you committed crimes. | ||
We are going to impeach these judges. | ||
They cannot be allowed to sit on the bench and do what they do. | ||
So we're going to follow the process, guys. | ||
We're going to follow the process. | ||
We're going to follow the rule of law. | ||
We're going to do this, and we're going to adjudicate this fairly. | ||
But give me your top five draft picks here on the judges. | ||
Well, the top judge has to be former Chief Judge Beryl Howell. | ||
Of course, her reign of terror ended in 2023. She had a seven-year appointment as chief judge. | ||
She oversaw the Robert Mueller investigation, signing off on every subpoena that he wanted. | ||
She then moved to overseeing the investigation, the grand jury proceedings in both the classified documents case and the J6 case against the president. | ||
She is the one who signed off on the piercing of privilege between Donald Trump and his attorney, Evan Corcoran, forcing his attorney to turn over records related to the classified documents case. | ||
She also signed off on the subpoena to Twitter after Elon Musk bought it after Jack Smith sought this search warrant to get Donald Trump's Twitter data. | ||
Not only did she sign off on the search warrant and subpoena, she signed off on a nondisclosure order preventing Twitter from... | ||
Notifying their client, Mr. Trump, at the time, that the government was going to obtain his Twitter data. | ||
Early in 2021, here's the most egregious what she did. | ||
She established a special set of rules for J6ers. | ||
Who could be held under pretrial detention and who wouldn't be? | ||
This is unprecedented. | ||
You don't establish pretrial detention, meaning denying their release awaiting trial, for an entire group of defendants who you don't even know who they're going to be. | ||
She established that in early 2021, and that is what the judges followed. | ||
Amit Mehta. | ||
Who oversaw the criminal prosecution of the Oath Keepers and other individuals. | ||
He allowing the government to claim that obstruction of an official proceeding should result in a terrorism enhancement at sentencing. | ||
Of course, this was before the Supreme Court overturned it. | ||
He's also handling civil lawsuits against the president. | ||
Tim Kelly, my favorite. | ||
Who oversaw the really abusive criminal prosecution seditious conspiracy of the Proud Boys. | ||
Both Amit Mehta and Tim Kelly allowing DOJ to use seditious conspiracy against non-violent men who organized a political demonstration in the nation's capital. | ||
This is a statute customarily reserved for real terrorists like the first world trade bomber. | ||
Nonetheless, they use that terrorism statute against non-violent members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers. | ||
Of course, Royce Lamberth, who has been, I think, one of the most vindictive judges, has called out Donald Trump personally. | ||
And then after he was elected, denounced President Trump's plans for pardons. | ||
He has been particularly Petty and vindictive. | ||
And I'm trying to think of some of my favorites. | ||
unidentified
|
I know I'm leaving a few out, but I think that's a good place to start. | |
Give us your social media. | ||
We've got to bounce. | ||
You've got to bounce. | ||
What's your social media? | ||
Where do we go to get you? | ||
Julie underscore Kelly, too, on Twitter. | ||
Declassified with Julie Kelly at Substack and Real Clear Investigations. | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
You're a superstar. | ||
Talk to you soon. | ||
Your freedom because of Julie Kelly. | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
Short break. | ||
unidentified
|
Great. | |
Laura Logan on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | |
Okay. | ||
The days of thunder, and this is like rolling thunder, the bombing and the bombing campaign in the Vietnam War. | ||
President Trump's hitting them on all fronts, economic, geopolitical, the border, calling the army. | ||
It's been magnificent. | ||
One of the reasons it's been magnificent is that we've had four years. | ||
This is where Project 2025, and I put that under the rubric of all those groups. | ||
America First Priorities, the great Russ Vote and the team at Center for Renewing America. | ||
Russ is now getting grilled by the Democrats in the Budget Committee. | ||
We'll cut into that. | ||
We'll dip in and out as we follow these confirmation hearings. | ||
This is his second day. | ||
He has to go to two committees, second day. | ||
The committees will vote, and then he'll go to the floor. | ||
Thune is fighting the Democrats, slow-walking. | ||
Remember we told you that you've got the executive orders, then you have the legislation. | ||
There was a meeting this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the House to talk about the one, reconciliations versus two. | ||
I put up on Getter, and I'll say it over and over again. | ||
If you do one reconciliation bill, you're going to have a big, nasty summer omnibus. | ||
That's going to be a disaster, and, you know, they're going to put a gun to everybody's head to have a bunch of tax cuts in there, I think. | ||
Not the populist tax cuts of Social Security for the working class and on overtime and things like that. | ||
So we're going to get into this. | ||
We're fighting. | ||
We are really arguing for two reconciliations. | ||
Do one or two. | ||
Get the border. | ||
Get energy. | ||
Get those done and get them done quickly. | ||
Because one omnibus bill is going to be, hey, write it down now, 22 January. | ||
I've said it for now two months. | ||
It's going to be a disaster. | ||
They're doing one reconciliation bill because they want to go back to the omnibus. | ||
Let's just be honest. | ||
Let's talk to each other like adults. | ||
But there's so much going on. | ||
President Trump really has been magnificent. | ||
One of the reasons we've had four years to do this, four years to get ready, these different groups working on executive orders. | ||
That's why these executive orders are tight. | ||
They're meaningful. | ||
And they've got Office of Legal Counsel backup. | ||
So he's coming hard in every different aspect of it. | ||
The J6 is magnificent, what he's done. | ||
But you see on the J6, you've got Loomer, you've got Julie Kelly, and you've got the great Laura Logan joins us. | ||
Tell me about Jeremy Brown. | ||
Why is this guy so important? | ||
A couple of guys there, they're released, the judge is so slow walking, and then they want to either throw him back in jail. | ||
Or guys like Brown don't think they want to release at all. | ||
Why is he so important? | ||
I thought he was a revered veteran, ma'am. | ||
Well, he is a revered veteran, decorated war hero, who was a Green Beret, and he spent many years serving this country in special operations. | ||
And Jeremy Brown, you know, is an interesting case because... | ||
In December, before January 6th ever took place, he had just joined the Oath Keepers. | ||
You know, he wanted to maintain the oath that he made when he put on that uniform. | ||
And he had been there for like two weeks, and two JTTF agents show up at his door, and they want to talk to him. | ||
Basically, they want him to snitch on the Oath Keepers. | ||
And Jeremy Brown is not a snitch, right? | ||
And also, he's a guy, he worked with JTTF all over the world when he was deployed. | ||
He knows how this is done. | ||
He knows when you're working. | ||
Right. | ||
And he says to them, I'm going to record this with your permission. | ||
They say, OK. What they didn't expect was that he would release that recording. | ||
And why is that so significant, Steve? | ||
Because that recording is evidence of the setup of how Homeland Security and JTTF and other elements of the administration were already working to set up people like Stuart Rhodes from the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys and others. | ||
Trying to get their fellow Americans to snitch on them. | ||
And we still don't have the full picture on how many snitches actually there were that day who weren't just observing, but were at times orchestrating the violence, inciting the violence, pushing people to go ahead and so on. | ||
And what Jeremy Brown did was what really made them upset because he took that evidence of a setup. | ||
And he made it public. | ||
And then lo and behold, this guy went to the Capitol, who was never accused of violence, who never went inside the building. | ||
He was doing security for a VIP who was basically, there was a woman who was speaking and her mother was attending the rally. | ||
She was an elderly lady. | ||
She needed someone to look after her. | ||
So that's what Jeremy Brown did. | ||
He looked after an old lady. | ||
Okay. | ||
And he didn't, he was, he didn't get. | ||
Into anything with anyone. | ||
They came after him on misdemeanor charges, raided his house, which is now a familiar pattern with January 6th defendants, which is a violation of their constitutional rights because you come storming into the house without just cause. | ||
This is the legal search and seizure. | ||
And they use those two misdemeanors to do a search and turn up weapons that quite and, you know, claims of classified documents that. | ||
We're obviously planted. | ||
I say obviously planted because, number one, they resisted doing forensic evidence, you know, testing. | ||
And when they were forced to, they found that there was no DNA on these grenades and things that matched Jeremy Brown or any of the carpet fibers from his house or trailer or pets and so on and so on. | ||
And also, you know, Steve, you know this, right? | ||
Having been a military man. | ||
When the United States government... | ||
Deals in with weapons and soldiers. | ||
You have to be accountable even for the shell casings of the bullets that you fire. | ||
You remove something, you know, they know who took it, and you are responsible for checking it back in. | ||
These grenades were traced back to a facility that I can't say, but... | ||
Where there was no record of them ever having been stolen. | ||
If Jeremy Brown had stolen them and had them in his possession, the government would have had a record of that. | ||
Not only that, they had been used in parts of the world, they had been taken out and checked back in, you know, for use in parts of the world where Jeremy had never served. | ||
He had no connection to the so-called evidence. | ||
The classified documents turned out to be templates. | ||
So, basically, this is something that happened to another January 6th defendant, Ben Martin, Benjamin Martin, okay, where they... | ||
He used misdemeanor charges as a pretext to do a search and seizure and then looked for something to pin on you. | ||
And Jeremy Brown, actually, you can listen to that recording. | ||
It's on whoisjeremybrown.com. | ||
He also wrote a letter that he read for the American people on the very first Day of the January 6th Select Committee charade. | ||
And if you can find that online, it's one of the most moving things that you will ever listen to. | ||
To hear Jeremy Brown talking about, you know, what was really required of all of us in that moment of how they stood for the Republic and stood for the Constitution and those principles and how this charade that was being presented to the people was an abject lie. | ||
And at the end, you know, he uses something, Steve. | ||
He cites his prison number. | ||
And for anyone who's had anything to do with the military, if you ever did CS training, if you went through, you know, the Q courses, the Green Beret, you know, that is something that we, as the United States, teach our soldiers to give those, you know, to give that message and that number to people so they know how to find you. | ||
It's really a cry for help, you know, for everyone in the community who understands what that means. | ||
There is a saying in the United States military that there's no man left behind. | ||
But Jeremy Brown has been left behind. | ||
And when I went and interviewed him in prison, you know, he said to me, I said, you could be here for a long time, Jeremy. | ||
And he said, I'll be here for as long as the American people leave me here. | ||
Well, President Donald Trump promised Jeremy Brown's mother, Lisa, that when he met her, he said, I will get your son out of jail. | ||
And thanks to Donald Trump, the J6 misdemeanor charges have been dismissed because all these years in jail, and Jeremy's never actually gone to trial on that. | ||
But the weapons charges that came out of the search and seizure from the January 6th charges is what is keeping him in the D.C. gulag right now. | ||
It's what's keeping him behind bars. | ||
And it is a travesty. | ||
Are you saying, hang on. | ||
Are you saying they did this? | ||
You're saying you have evidence to show that they planted this on him because he wouldn't work for them to be a rat, to basically get inside, to infiltrate these groups like they had in Detroit with the Gretchen Whitmer fiasco, that they want to get informants. | ||
And for him not to be an informant, they went to him two weeks after his involvement. | ||
By him saying, I'm not going to do that, I'm not a rat, you're saying that they then... | ||
Use the pretext of misdemeanor charges to plant evidence that would then lead to multiple felonies and keep him in prison, no matter what President Trump tried to do? | ||
Well, Jeremy has no doubt that that's what happened, right? | ||
He has absolutely no doubt because he'd never seen those grenades before. | ||
This is the guy, Steve, who was a weapons sergeant as a Green Beret. | ||
Do you think a weapons sergeant is going to leave loaded grenades lying around a trailer? | ||
I mean, it's ridiculous, seriously. | ||
And they knew they could get away with it because Biden was in office and the Republicans, you know, senior Republican leaders like Mitch McConnell had joined the chorus of insurrectionists. | ||
Insurrection. | ||
This is the worst day in, you know, American history and so on. | ||
So they knew they could get away with it. | ||
I mean, can you tell me, can you see another logical reason? | ||
Why are you raiding the homes of people who are facing nonviolent misdemeanor charges? | ||
Why did every judge deny the January 6th defendants a First Amendment defense when they were exercising their First Amendment rights? | ||
What about, you know, the Fourth Amendment says you're supposed to be protected. | ||
from this kind of thing. | ||
You can't just come into somebody's home without You know, a proper warrant. | ||
These were illegal search warrants from the very beginning. | ||
You know, there's not a single January 6th defendant that has had a fair trial. | ||
You can't get a fair trial or an impartial jury in Washington, D.C. Donald Trump stood before the American people and said, I can't get a fair trial in D.C. Well, what chance do you think his supporters have? | ||
Especially when you're talking about January 6th, which is obviously a setup to cover a stolen election and to prevent The people on the floor of the house from doing what they wanted to do, which was to send the contested results back to the states and give them a chance to take a closer look. | ||
unidentified
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You know, as you know very well, Steve, that's what they achieved. | |
So, Laura, where does it stand right now? | ||
What is his disposition right now? | ||
Right at this moment, where's Jeremy Brown, and what can this audience do to support you in trying to get him out? | ||
Jeremy Brown right now is incarcerated in the D.C. Gulag. | ||
He was told yesterday that he was being released. | ||
He was handed over to U.S. Marshals. | ||
And then they said, no, you are not being released. | ||
And they took him back. | ||
To the jail. | ||
So he is sitting there waiting. | ||
I mean, these are felony charges. | ||
So they can just be dismissed in this other case. | ||
unidentified
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Hold it. | |
Hang on. | ||
But hang on. | ||
Hang on. | ||
Slow down. | ||
President Trump's the commander. | ||
He's chief manager. | ||
Commander in chief. | ||
He gave a pardon to this guy to be released. | ||
Did he not? | ||
Yes. | ||
He did. | ||
He said, you know, and this is what's happening, Steve. | ||
There are a bunch of January 6th defendants. | ||
But hang on. | ||
Hang on. | ||
But hang on. | ||
I'm confused. | ||
President Trump is the chief magistrate, the commander-in-chief, and the chief executive of the U.S. government. | ||
He signed a release as a guy, pardon. | ||
The guys in my cell block, because there was a big January 6th guy around the police officer, Setnick, was in the cell across from me. | ||
They went in the middle of the night and let him out. | ||
He's one of the most controversial guys of all. | ||
They let these guys out on President Trump's written instructions as a pardon. | ||
Why is Jeremy Brown still being held when President Trump has given him a pardon, ma'am? | ||
Because they are using this other case to hold on to Jeremy Brown. | ||
And what we are seeing is judges... | ||
And Bureau of Prisons and other people, these same DCT judges, wherever they can, they are stepping in to try to prevent people from being released. | ||
They're trying to force people like Stuart Rhodes and others whose sentences were commuted. | ||
They're trying to force them to be on supervised release and probation with conditions. | ||
I mean, what you're looking at, Steve, is the first real test case of President Trump's authority. | ||
They're doing what they did last time around. | ||
They're looking for any bureaucratic loophole or legal... | ||
Laura, hang on for a second because we're getting down to what they're trying to do here on the administrative and deep state. | ||
Can you hang for a second? | ||
I know you're busy. | ||
I want to take a commercial break. | ||
Russ Vogt is taking some incoming... | ||
From Bernie Sanders and some of the other senators. | ||
But Russ is giving as good as he gets. | ||
In fact, better than he gets. | ||
But we're going to jump into that too. | ||
Russ vote in front of the Budget Committee today. | ||
Laura Logan is our guest. | ||
Laura hits the nail right on the head. | ||
The administrative and deep state. | ||
Trump's just a guy passing through her. | ||
They are the most anti-democratic forces in the world outside the Chinese Communist Party, which they kind of learned from. | ||
Because they're infected with neo-Marxism. | ||
And it's all got to be... | ||
We got to get it out. | ||
Got to dig it out. | ||
Root and branch. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Laura Logan, Norbin Laden from Davos. | ||
Russ Vogt in a committee hearing in the Senate. | ||
All next in the War Room. | ||
And to turn that into policy, to implement that. | ||
And so to the extent that he has run on having lower prescription drugs, that's a priority of the administration. | ||
Well, thank you. | ||
All right. | ||
The president in the past, I don't know about recently, has indicated that he would maybe do what President Biden did, stand up to big pharma. | ||
We are paying now, in some cases, 10 times more, as you know, the same exact drug that other countries are paying. | ||
Are you going to advise the president? | ||
To take on Big Pharma and do what he promised to do, and that is have Americans not pay a nickel more than other countries for prescription drugs. | ||
Will you advise him to do that? | ||
Senator, the President has not made an announcement since he's been in office, but he certainly ran on this issue. | ||
There was a speech with regard to making sure that we were getting the same types of arrangements that... | ||
The other countries were, given the amount that we're investing in it. | ||
But he also, Senator, wants to do it in a careful way so that we are not ruining the phenomena and the industry that allows us to have life-saving disease halting drugs. | ||
We want innovation. | ||
But will you maintain what we fought very hard to, to do what every other country does, have Medicare negotiate prescription drug prices with the industry? | ||
No, Senator, I'm not here to get in front of the President on any of his policies other than to say that this has been a priority for him, and I think your question reflects that it's been a priority of his. | ||
I've overextended my time. | ||
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Senator Sanders. | |
Senator Cornyn. | ||
Mr. Vogt, thank you for your willingness to serve. | ||
They're going after Russ and they're trying to chop block him on various policies. | ||
They can't get Russ Vogt. | ||
He's chapter and verse. | ||
Birch Gold, we're going to go through turbulence, folks. | ||
You can already tell by the pushback of the administrative deep state on trying to implement President Trump's policies, and they're magnificent. | ||
You know, he got rid of all the diversity. | ||
He's laid off all the people. | ||
He's forced the government bureaucrats to come back to work. | ||
He's going to fire them if they don't. | ||
And this just, I mean, this... | ||
200 government actions, including dozens and dozens and dozens of well-thought-through executive orders. | ||
He's flooded the zone. | ||
Flood the zone first on his nominees, flooded the zone on executive orders, flooded the zone on executive actions across the board. | ||
I think they're saying the CPB1 app had 175 million, because now we're getting our hands on the data. | ||
175 million applications. | ||
It's sick. | ||
It's sick what they did to this country. | ||
And I'm telling you, we're going to go back. | ||
This mass criminal, it has to be in a criminal investigation on this conspiracy. | ||
It has to be. | ||
And the judges are going to get rolled up in it. | ||
Judges, don't think you're impervious to this. | ||
You're held accountable by the ability to impeach you. | ||
And a criminal investigation, a vast criminal investigation would turn up, you know, behind the scenes, things like Sirica did in Watergate are crimes. | ||
So, let the chips fall with me. | ||
It's all going to be adjudicated in public. | ||
We need all the information out there. | ||
That's one of the big advocates under the lawyers, too, about declassification of all the assassination files, declassification. | ||
I think there's 5 million documents immediately you can declassify. | ||
Let the American people see the people that have the country of the most decent folks on Earth that have the best common sense are the American people. | ||
Can't go wrong depending on their judgment. | ||
And every time we get in trouble... | ||
Every time we get in trouble, it's holding information back from the people and letting these globalists wreak havoc. | ||
Birchgold.com. | ||
You want to talk about something they held back from you? | ||
The modern monetary theory. | ||
Understand how we got to this orgy of spending and nobody thought we'd ever have to pay for it where that was incorrect. | ||
Kind of a small miss. | ||
As we say on Wall Street, it's going to lead to a lot of pain and a lot of head-butting and a lot of gnashing of teeth and pulling of hair. | ||
As President Trump gets, I think the most important thing of all is to get sorted, not just the economic model of the country, but in addition, the financing. | ||
When I say economic model, he's talking about external revenue service. | ||
He looks at the United States as a premier market. | ||
You should pay a premium to get access to it, just like you get a premium, like a skybox, let's say, at a sporting event or an entertainment event. | ||
It's going to be a major revenue stream. | ||
He doesn't look at tariffs as just punitive. | ||
He doesn't look at putting a 25% tariff on a Mexican avocado. | ||
Much deeper than that. | ||
He thinks that we're going to go through all that today. | ||
Everything, I think, is breaking our way. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
A lot of fights behind the scenes, but that's okay. | ||
That's what this is all about. | ||
People have different ideas. | ||
You've got to argue those ideas and show evidence. | ||
One of the most important people, the reason she's so unique, besides her courage and her intrepid nature. | ||
Is the fact that she always gets to the heart of the matter. | ||
Lara Logan, it's not just Jeremy Brown. | ||
It's not just Stuart Rhodes. | ||
Yes, they are caught up in this as American citizens. | ||
The administrative and deep state have no intention of just tossing the keys to Donald Trump and Donald Trump's colleagues, do they, ma'am? | ||
Absolutely not. | ||
They're going to use every single thing they can to oppose and to undermine. | ||
I mean, remember, Steve, when we had a guy writing an editorial in the New York Times about how he was removing briefing papers from the president's desk and, you know, basically subverting the president? | ||
This is seditious behavior. | ||
And he was celebrated in the in the mainstream media for doing so and never held accountable. | ||
This is why accountability is so important. | ||
You know, I had a brief moment on Election Day where I spoke to President Trump and he said to me, what do you want to see from my administration? | ||
And I said accountability. | ||
And he said, you mean of them? | ||
I said, absolutely, 100%. | ||
This is what I don't think people really understand. | ||
Yes, fixing the border and fixing the economy is going to be massive. | ||
But the real mandate... | ||
That is behind President Donald Trump today is for accountability. | ||
If you fix the economy and you fix the border, but you don't fix the deep state, you don't get judges actually enforcing the law. | ||
You don't get the Justice Department and the FBI to understand that their days of using the justice system as a weapon against American citizens is over. | ||
You don't get the media to understand that there are consequences for constantly year after year reporting stories that are not true. | ||
When you let John Brennan go on your air and say that President Trump is a spy. | ||
And for Russia and Vladimir Putin is his handler. | ||
You don't get to do that when you know it's not true and you perpetuate this lie over and over again and just get away with it. | ||
Accountability, those are the real wins behind President Trump. | ||
Look at RFK Jr. It's not just about because people want to eat organic. | ||
It's because they want the food industry held accountable for poisoning American citizens. | ||
They don't want chemtrails in the air. | ||
They don't want any of this stuff. | ||
And you know what they don't want? | ||
When the president pardons someone, they don't want a county judge or a district judge or a federal judge saying, no, I'm going to do whatever I want. | ||
And remember the last judge who did this, right? | ||
Remember when the attorney general of the United States admitted that the Justice Department had illegally prosecuted General Michael Flynn and they were dropping the case. | ||
And what did the judge do? | ||
He refused and refused and refused to let it go because he was hell-bent on a political persecution. | ||
That had no places in law. | ||
Complete violation of the Constitution. | ||
The January 6th defendants have been denied their first, fourth, fifth, sixth, and eighth amendment rights. | ||
Who's going to protect the Constitution? | ||
I'm going to hold you through a short break, 90 seconds. |