Speaker | Time | Text |
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This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
unidentified
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Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. | |
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
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Mega Media. | |
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
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Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bann. | ||
It's Friday, 31 January, year of our Lord, 2025. | ||
You're in the late afternoon, early evening edition of The War Room. | ||
We're going to go to the White House, our White House correspondent, Natalie Winters. | ||
Natalie, I want to talk to you about this purge at the FBI. Senior leadership, also the field offices, hit like a thunderbolt this afternoon on days of thunder. | ||
Kash Patel had a good day yesterday, but they were all over him. | ||
They haven't had, I don't think the committees voted, maybe, I don't think the committees voted, and certainly they haven't voted on the floor. | ||
Schumer today is bragging about how the resistance is forming. | ||
I mean, what's the White House thinking? | ||
Why would President Trump authorize Emil Bovey to go start purging the FBI before the, is this, is this show that's... | ||
I mean, it's the exact opposite of how most political figures in this town would operate. | ||
Well, setting aside the firing of the attorneys, this is something that was originally sourced, I believe, from the Associated Press, in addition to, I think, some people speaking anonymously to Politico. | ||
So it wasn't necessarily a broad declaration that came out, but this, of course, is coming on the heels of an FBI personnel shakeup happening just a few days ago. | ||
But from what we're learning about it, I do think it does, frankly, reek of confidence coming from the White House. | ||
I think a lot of the campaign promises, not necessarily of retribution, I know. | ||
We aren't allowed to use that word, certainly not, on the White House lawn. | ||
But if you really understand who is affected by this move, it's people who have weaponized the justice system, the FBI, not just against President Trump, but against his most fervent supporters. | ||
To that point, it's senior managers in some of the FBI's largest field offices, in addition to various departments within FBI headquarters, including national security, criminal cyber response and services, science and technology, information and technology and human resource branches. science and technology, information and technology and human resource branches. | ||
But, Steve, I will say I was reading through the legacy media's kind of coverage of this, which, by the way, it's interesting. | ||
This topic did not come up in today's press briefing. | ||
I've heard really no murmurs or rumors about this until it broke, what, about an hour ago. | ||
But they're already quoting whether it's the FBI Agents Association, a bunch of lawyers. | ||
I'd posit it's probably whistleblower attorney Mark Zaid of double impeachment fame. | ||
But talking about how they're going to fight this, which I really think harkens back to a lot of sort of the architect, the blueprint of the resistance pushback. | ||
One of the, I think, offenses that they really wanted to mount was the idea, not just through the paradigm of Schedule F, but the mass firing that they view as being unjustified. | ||
In this case, I think the FBI. I guess the white whale, right? | ||
You can't come for the FBI, especially if you look at it through the lens of the independent executive theory. | ||
But I think right now what you're about to witness go down in terms of this purge at the FBI is essentially the first showdown between, I think, elements of the resistance movement, the sort of rebranded, now that Trump is back, lawfare branch and brigade against the White House, against President Trump. | ||
So we'll definitely be following it closely, but things are just starting to pop up. | ||
Now, they got rid of Jack Smith's team the other day. | ||
Today, just announced right before he came on, the J6 prosecutors over at the U.S. Attorney's Office in D.C., Matthew Graves' crowd, which are the worst. | ||
They've fired all of these folks, too, correct? | ||
Just happened a few minutes ago. | ||
If we have the picture, if we want to put it up on screen, but the letter being sent around to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, D.C., but all the January 6th federal prosecutors have basically been ordered to leave. | ||
It's in the Appendix A, though that's not... | ||
On the screen right now, it's the names of the people who were involved with that. | ||
So they, I think you said you're going to have Mike Davis on, he'll break it down. | ||
But this was just breaking about 20 minutes ago on top of the FBI stuff. | ||
And it's funny, I've already started sort of tracking the way that the mainstream media is starting to cover it. | ||
You're already starting to see, you guessed it, the R word, retribution kind of come out in a lot of the copy. | ||
The idea that this is now what President Trump promised. | ||
And they're already going to, I think, a testament to this show, CRA. Jeff Clark, how we've been ahead of the narrative. | ||
They're sort of, I think, hunkering down and really drilling down on the idea that the DOJ is independent. | ||
And, of course, FBI being under their purview that President Trump, for extra reasons beyond just the idea that they, of course, detest anything he does, doesn't have the authority to do what he's doing, especially when it comes to the DOJ. Natalie Winters, as she normally does, just hit the nail right on the head. | ||
That's the buried lead in the signal. | ||
Back to the unitary theory of the executive. | ||
He's the chief executive of the U.S. government. | ||
He's the commander-in-chief of the military and the uniformed services. | ||
And he is the chief magistrate and chief law enforcement officer of the United States government. | ||
That would not be the attorney general. | ||
And he's proving it today. | ||
Natalie, they had the press briefing all day long. | ||
It's been about this horrific crash, this horrific accident. | ||
At Reagan National Airport, and it's very confusing what's going on. | ||
But what's more confusing is that the Army this afternoon, just a little while ago, said they are not going to release the name of the female pilot because at the family's request, that's pretty extraordinary. | ||
Do you have any updates on that or any word around the White House about this? | ||
No. | ||
At the press briefing, there were only a few questions having to do with the tragic crash. | ||
I believe it was Peter Doocy asked a string of questions. | ||
Most of the press briefing today really focused on the tariffs that you had alluded to. | ||
Mexico, China, the 25 percent, I guess 10 percent for China. | ||
Of course, Canada as well. | ||
And I think it was sort of an interesting framing. | ||
A lot of the questions weren't necessarily talking about, as you could probably guess, how wonderful and how good for the American consumer and American workers that these tariffs are, but sort of trying to get ahead. | ||
Of the president asking if there would be lag times and if there are any concessions that these countries could potentially make to try to either drop them or just eliminate them completely. | ||
I guess the press corps has not read the art of the deal. | ||
They know you certainly don't negotiate from the press podium. | ||
But I will say today was the first time that there was a question from someone sitting in the new media seat. | ||
It was a member of the Ruthless podcast. | ||
And starting off hot, he asked a question, basically haranguing the mainstream media, saying that they've already been sort of lying about all things immigration. | ||
And it was kind of funny to watch the faces of the legacy media in that room. | ||
They did not like that that question was being asked. | ||
And I was talking to even some foreign reporters today who were saying that they've never seen the press briefing, at least since the last four years, this busy, this packed. | ||
They said they used to be able to come two minutes before these briefings would start and there would be just rows of empty seats They could sit anywhere. | ||
One correspondent from Italy remarked to me, he's like, probably for the next four years I won't even have the opportunity or chance to sit down and ask a question. | ||
Hey, Natalie, hang on for one second. | ||
I've got Mike Davis on the phone. | ||
I want to get Mike in here. | ||
unidentified
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Sure. | |
Mike, you predicted this. | ||
Today it happened. | ||
President Trump pulled the trigger on the purge of the FBI, senior executives in Maine FBI and also in 20 field offices. | ||
But also, just moments ago, the U.S. Attorney's Office, Matthew Graves, in Washington, D.C., all the J-6 prosecutors, the other day they got rid of Jack Smith's team. | ||
Today they move in the J-6 prosecutors. | ||
You've been on this for years now, sir. | ||
Give us your observations. | ||
unidentified
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It is a very good day because President Trump's Justice Department is actually delivering justice. | |
Emil Boves, the acting deputy attorney general, is one of President Trump's former lawyers. | ||
So he has experienced this lawfare for several years now, and so he knows who the bad actors are, and he's been ready to go since day one to get rid of these bad actors from the Trump Justice Department, these people who politicized and weaponized. | ||
Intel agencies and law enforcement are now, they were the hunters, as we talk about a lot, Steve, and now they are the hunters. | ||
And they are unemployed today, and I hope that they're prosecuted very soon. | ||
Mike, in the way this city operates, it's the lawyers in the big law firms, more than the lobbyists, more than even the... | ||
The sociopathic overlords, tech, all those people are players and funny things, but this is a town of lawyers, and it's run by lawyers, run by the big power law firms in town, run by individual lawyers. | ||
Is that community shocked? | ||
I mean, something like this has never happened, right, where someone's walking to the FBI and said, hey, so tell me just the reaction of how this city is run. | ||
By the lawyers in the legal community. | ||
What are they thinking right now? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I don't know what these Democrat lawyers and other operatives in D.C. are thinking, but there is a new sheriff in town, and that new sheriff is Ed Martin in the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office. | |
Another new sheriff is Emil Boe, the acting number two, and when Pam gets confirmed as the Attorney General... | ||
She will take over that Justice Department and continue to do what Ed Martin and Emil both have started. | ||
And they are going to make sure that there is accountability for this unprecedented republic-ending lawfare that we've talked about on your show, Steve, since the Mar-a-Lago raid for nearly three years. | ||
And we're going to restore justice to the Justice Department, including the FBI, when Cash to Tell is confirmed. | ||
And we are going to have... | ||
The Justice Department, including the FBI, focused on real crimes like our southern border and the resulting rapes and murders and kidnappings and robberies from the violent Venezuelan gangs. | ||
And we're not going to be focused on political crimes. | ||
We're going to end this weaponization of our law enforcement once and for all. | ||
And the people who perpetuated this are going to be held accountable. | ||
Mike, the War Room Posse have been calling 202-224-3121 to talk to their senators about these confirmations. | ||
Grace Chung's had a bill blaster. | ||
Article 3, you have your download. | ||
People have been on top of this nonstop. | ||
Does this jeopardize, you think, President Trump taking this bold action? | ||
Do you believe this jeopardizes particularly cash? | ||
The committee hasn't voted yet and certainly hasn't gone to the floor. | ||
Schumer and those guys, I'm sure, are going to be a meltdown. | ||
With certain establishment Republicans, your thoughts? | ||
unidentified
|
It shouldn't. | |
It should let these people in D.C. know that President Trump... | ||
And his Justice Department team are not messing around this time. | ||
President Trump learned his lesson from the first term, and that is he's not going to pick bad personnel, including wimps in the Justice Department, who turned the other cheek the last time after a crossfire hurricane, after the Russian collusion hoax. | ||
No good deed goes unpunished, right? | ||
And so the Democrats saw our weakness the last time, and that's why they ran this unprecedented Republican in lawfare against Trump. | ||
His top aides like Hugh Bannon and Peter Devaro, who went to prison, his supporters on January 6th, parents, Christians, were not putting up with this BS this time. | ||
And you have savages in the Justice Department like Amal Bove, the acting number two, along with Ed Martin, the interim U.S. attorney, and D.C., and what a difference. | ||
Four years in the White House and four years of reflection has made for President Trump. | ||
He is ready to govern on day one, and he is delivering on the mandate he received from the American voters to end the weaponization of law enforcement and intel agencies. | ||
And he's bringing much-needed accountability, and a hell of a lot more is coming. | ||
So to these lawfare Democrats, buckle up, boys. | ||
It's coming. | ||
Mike Davis, Article 3, you've been such a massive, massive part of this. | ||
Where do people go, sir? | ||
unidentified
|
Article3project.org. | |
Article3project.org. | ||
You can donate there. | ||
You can follow us on social media. | ||
The most important thing you can do is go light up your home state senators, take action on Tass Patel, on Tulsi Gabbard, on RFK Jr. We need to get the president's team over the line. | ||
We don't pick... | ||
Senator Stavs, and they shouldn't pick the presidents so long as they are qualified. | ||
These great Americans are certainly qualified, as we saw at their confirmation hearings, and we will destroy the political careers of Senate Republicans who tried to obstruct President Trump's agenda by obstructing his cabinet picks like they tried to do last time. | ||
We are not messing around this time. | ||
Talk about a savage. | ||
That would be our own Mike Davis. | ||
Mike, social media, where do people get you on Twitter? | ||
People should know, late at night, on a Friday night, it might come in a little hot under Mike Davis' name. | ||
Where do people go for entertainment? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it's going to get hot tonight. | |
I'm down in Florida talking to a bunch of conservative lawyers, getting them fired up tonight. | ||
So it's at Article 3 Project, at Article 3 Project, or my personal is MRD. D-M-I-A. M-R-D-D-M-I-A. Sign up for it. | ||
It's quite illuminating and entertaining. | ||
Thank you, sir. | ||
Say hi to all the conservative lawyers down there tonight on your talk. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Bennett. | |
Natalie, let's go back to the confirmations. | ||
How bold was this? | ||
Given the controversy yesterday, particularly the targeting of Kash Patel and the targeting for what they call retribution, what does this tell us about the White House? | ||
What does this tell us about the confidence of President Trump and his team, ma'am? | ||
Well, look, like I said, this purge in particular is being sourced primarily through the media. | ||
I believe it was the Associated Press that first broke it. | ||
I'm talking independent of the D.C. Attorney's Office. | ||
But I think there's two ways to look at it. | ||
One is maybe through the paradigm of confidence coming out of the White House. | ||
Obviously, they've been standing by Kash Patel. | ||
He had a strong showing. | ||
But if anything, my take on it, you know, I think we were talking yesterday about the concept of kind of taking the bait, right? | ||
I think they're trying to show the stakes of what, you know, Kash Patel, who they've smeared as an agent of retribution to the point where, you know, you have senators making bingo cards because you know what their lines of attack are going to be against them. | ||
And someone like Kash Patel. | ||
I think it's a bit of a different angle of attack because, Because, Steve, I think if we learned anything from the Hegseth confirmation process, the more that the mainstream media attacked him, the more that I think it gave, frankly, | ||
our audience the MAGA grassroots to sort of make the case to these squishy rhino senators that they have to vote to confirm Hegseth, to confirm whoever that pick may be, certainly if the mainstream our audience the MAGA grassroots to sort of make the case to these squishy So I think this is certainly an evolving story in terms of how to perceive of it. | ||
But I think Ed Martin, certain people over at the DOJ, I think they are really, even prior to Pam Bondi, I think that they are representing what President Trump talked about on the campaign trail. | ||
And for anyone who's wavering... | ||
But if they were going to follow through, I think it's a good sign. | ||
Ed Martin, an old friend, Phyllis Schlafly, ran the Schlafly Institute, was very close to her, just a fantastic guy, been on the show a lot, friend of the show. | ||
Officers used to be right around the corner here in the boardroom right across from the Supreme Court. | ||
Just couldn't pick a better pick because he is a very, very focused guy. | ||
Natalie, last but not least, another story. | ||
I think on the Daily Mail, putting a shot across your bow. | ||
Any comments or observations? | ||
They're already targeting our Natalie, ma'am. | ||
I mean, it's truly getting absurd. | ||
I don't really want to make this my brand, but I've been here for, what, like three days? | ||
I think Mediaite put out another story today. | ||
The New York Post put out another story. | ||
Now Kennedy of Fox wrote an entire op-ed for the Daily Mail saying that I dress like a hostess at Hooters while at the White House, which I would... | ||
I don't think I'd get very far in the Hooters' corporate pipeline with what I'm wearing right now. | ||
But all jokes aside, I mean, frankly, it's offensive, Steve. | ||
Really annoying. | ||
At 23, I've broken more stories than most of these people. | ||
I'm old enough to remember when the Daily Mail was copying the stories that I broke from the Hunter Biden hard drive or about the origins of COVID. Sometimes crediting me, but sometimes not. | ||
But if Kennedy really had such, as she says in the piece, maternal instinct and concern, then pick up the phone and call me and have a conversation. | ||
Don't try to roast me or be rude to me in the national press. | ||
It really reeks of jealousy and it's just gross. | ||
I guess it's women being women, but I'm over it. | ||
Let's focus on the news and let's deport a bunch of illegals. | ||
Our University of Chicago grad, she's worked with us since I think 17 or 18 as an intern. | ||
By the way, you have broken more stories, and I mean deep investigations, across a wide range of verticals than that entire crowd combined. | ||
That's the amazing thing. | ||
Then virtually all the White House press corps, the mainstream media, and the Daily Mail combined. | ||
And I will back her academic record, her academic achievement, and her practical experience. | ||
In the world of hardball journalism, that's what we have her at the White House. | ||
Natalie Winters. | ||
Steve, these people work off teleprompters. | ||
We don't use teleprompters, alright? | ||
I'll debate them. | ||
Let's see them off teleprompters. | ||
Natalie G. Winters on all social media platforms. | ||
Thank you for having me. | ||
And what a wonderful week for our audience. | ||
How cool to be here. | ||
And they're not going to scare me away. | ||
I'm not going to dress like a hostess at Hooters, but I will be back. | ||
You shall return. | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
|
Great week. | |
Man, what do you say? | ||
Women being women? | ||
I don't know, catty. | ||
President Trump, action. | ||
Days of thunder. | ||
Here's what I like. | ||
Just when you think you've seen so much, there's more and more and more and more in all types of different verticals. | ||
It's been pretty extraordinary. | ||
Today on the economic side of one of these tariffs, this is monumental. | ||
Now, it may be a negotiating ploy. | ||
It may be... | ||
A lot of things. | ||
What we know is that President Trump is trying to change the basic economic model of the country. | ||
What he's signaling to people is that we're going to return to become a manufacturing powerhouse. | ||
And we're going to do that two ways. | ||
Number one, we're going to offer you the opportunity to move your plant and your capital equipment here and hire American citizens. | ||
Make your products here. | ||
Sell them here. | ||
You won't face tariffs, right? | ||
There will be no charge for getting through the golden door into the best market in the world. | ||
But if you don't do that, there's going to be substantial tariffs. | ||
And we are going to protect certain industries, right? | ||
Certain industries with these tariffs. | ||
That's why he's doing it across the board. | ||
Two, one, not just external revenue, because, you know, Philip Pachter and I disagree a little bit about this, but to build a manufacturing base. | ||
And manufacturing-based means high-value-added jobs, high-value-added manufacturing jobs. | ||
And there's so much that comes off that. | ||
So it's pretty extraordinary. | ||
I want to also go to something I touched about. | ||
I couldn't get to Philip Patrick for the third part of this. | ||
He talked about tariffs, talked about the BRICS. President Trump is very, very focused on the U.S. dollar. | ||
He's very focused on the dollar as the prime reserve currency. | ||
It was abused by the elites in this country. | ||
Why the BRICS, as we've talked and kind of trained you all in thinking about this, the BRICS nations did kind of combine together on this topic because the Biden administration, the Biden regime, the inflation you had was destroying the purchasing power of the dollar. | ||
So the nations, particularly in the Middle East, In South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, that have these resources, they're selling these resources, selling these commodities, oil, natural gas, rubber, tin, you pick it. | ||
And essentially having a 20% discount or 20% devaluation later. | ||
And they're saying, hey, we can't do this. | ||
As I've said many times, they have just as many smart people from Harvard Business School using the HP-12C, the Hewlett-Packard-12C calculator. | ||
That can do net present value and discounted cash flow. | ||
They have them. | ||
These are smart people. | ||
And they see a monetary system being abused by the sociopathic overlords of easy money on Wall Street. | ||
And President Trump and Scott Besson have made a thing that they want to return the dollar. | ||
It's going to stay as a prime reserve currency, but they're going to defend it as a prime reserve currency. | ||
We're not going to let the dollar be destroyed. | ||
In fact, I think they've read and taken to heart the end of the dollar empire, and they understand if we're going to do that, that's a massive national debate and a decision that goes and takes years. | ||
And maybe we have that debate, but for right now, we got what we got, and we're going to defend it. | ||
And President Trump put a shot across around the BRICS nations. | ||
We've talked so much about they're trying to, you know, you've got India. | ||
Doing a deal with Saudi Arabia, and they're taking the 40-year output deal, and they're paying in rupee, and somebody's covering the hedge and taking this currency risk. | ||
He's telling them right there, if you start a system away from the U.S. dollar, we'll essentially consider that an act of economic war. | ||
That's what he said, economic war. | ||
Boom, put it to it. | ||
And if you do that, you're going to get 100% tariff. | ||
Of getting anything to the United States, i.e. | ||
you're not going to be selling goods to the United States of America. | ||
Now, if you don't sell goods, that's fine. | ||
But he is defending America first. | ||
He's defending the nation that is the United States of America. | ||
He's defending the American citizen. | ||
He is defending the American worker of every race, color, creed, ethnicity. | ||
When did you see that? | ||
When was the last time you saw that? | ||
Of Democrat and Republican administrations. | ||
When's the last time you saw that? | ||
When? | ||
I'll tell you when. | ||
Never. | ||
It's Trump. | ||
For all his imperfections. | ||
I want to talk in the next segment about Doge. | ||
As you know, I'm Doge's biggest supporter. | ||
It's got to work. | ||
We have to have them working with Office of Management and Budget to make sure we can find where these cuts are. | ||
You saw the firestorm in the last couple of days where President Trump's just saying, hey, I just want a momentary, I just want to find out where the money, where the $3 trillion of cash is in the system, I just want to see where it is. | ||
And you saw, it's everywhere. | ||
From Meals on Wheels to Head Start, it's everywhere. | ||
Medicaid has nothing to do but race or ethnicity. | ||
I don't know, 75% of the working class white. | ||
Babies in this country are born using Medicaid, Idaho, all across the board. | ||
That talks about the economic model we have in the country. | ||
Are the corporations paying people enough money? | ||
What do they have to when they're flooded with foreign labor at every aspect? | ||
From technology workers to mid-level managers and administrators. | ||
And if the money's not there, if the salary's not there, somebody's got to pick this stuff up, and you're seeing that's where that $3 trillion is going through the system, just in trying to find where the money was, a full meltdown. | ||
So what is going to happen when you have to make cuts and try to balance the budget? | ||
unidentified
|
A firestorm like you've never, ever, ever, ever seen before. | |
That's where Doge comes in. | ||
Short break. | ||
unidentified
|
Go on, raise the flag. | |
We're back. | ||
War Room. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | ||
. you Okay. | ||
So Elon put out a tweet, I think overnight early this morning, saying they're on the path and they're looking at how they cut $1 trillion out of the $2 trillion deficit. | ||
And remember, this is so important to get inflation out of the system, all of it. | ||
It has to happen. | ||
The model we have at $2 trillion a year is not sustainable. | ||
But he had a thing, he called it fiscal year. | ||
The fiscal year is not the same as calendar year. | ||
The fiscal year ends, as this audience knows, because we had lots of fights around that time. | ||
September 30th, a new fiscal year starts October 1st. | ||
So fiscal year 26 actually starts in 25. It starts in the last quarter of this calendar year. | ||
It's the first quarter of the fiscal year. | ||
So we're in... | ||
We're in fiscal year 25 right now, and we don't have a budget. | ||
We don't have appropriation. | ||
We have a thing called a continued resolution. | ||
We're continuing on last year's spending and just kind of kicking the can down the road. | ||
That's what I keep warning about, that that is all going to come to conclusion around the 15th of March when the government runs out of money again. | ||
And there's no appetite, particularly no appetite among the war room posse to have just to kick the can down the road to have a one-year CR. Susan Collins has already raised the flag. | ||
We want independent appropriations bills that people can see because we want to know where the money's going, right? | ||
So you have these reconciliations. | ||
Just set those off to the side for a second because we have to take care of business first, and that would be the budget, the appropriations. | ||
This is 25. And Doge puts out that 26, I'm going to cut a trillion dollars, but yo, bro, I got that. | ||
But that's year two of the cycle we're talking about up to the midterm. | ||
We must focus now and here. | ||
And what we can't do because it's redonkulous, we cannot pass a spending bill or keep a CR that has a $2 trillion deficit that by definition, by your definition, has a trillion dollars of wasting or has a trillion dollars of inefficiency or has a trillion dollars of programs that we feel we don't need right now. | ||
We don't essentially need because we have to get the spending down. | ||
And you have bought into that. | ||
Thank God. | ||
And I give you a hat tip for that. | ||
And President Trump certainly bought into it. | ||
So we have to do that now. | ||
Your team has to do that now. | ||
It doesn't have to be perfect to the fifth decimal place because guess what? | ||
Putting on a Doge report doesn't make it happen. | ||
You, in fact, have no power. | ||
Zero. | ||
You have influence in this regard. | ||
You're a consultant to OMB, which is good. | ||
You're... | ||
Part of what you took over the U.S. digital service to give you access to make sure you can make changes and rewire, do all that. | ||
Those are all great. | ||
But spending bills and revenue bills come out of the House. | ||
This has to be codified. | ||
Even executive actions have certain limits to it. | ||
And this is why President Trump got frustrated the other day. | ||
And this led to the OMB memo temporarily stopping it because our Constitution lays out The House of Representatives is kind of like the British Commons. | ||
All revenue, all taxes, all tariffs, duties, fees come from there. | ||
On a temporary basis, you can do it differently. | ||
That's why President Trump tonight is going to impose 25% tariffs. | ||
And there are laws, and Navarro's worked this all out, that you can do it. | ||
But the spending cuts eventually had to be codified in something called an appropriations bill. | ||
And that's where these CRs kind of kick the can down the road. | ||
To wit, we have to just get directionally, tell us where you're going. | ||
Tell us where this trillion dollars is. | ||
It doesn't have to be the fifth decimal place, but just tell us. | ||
Because I'll say this over and over and over again. | ||
Unless we can show the American people that the defense budget has been looked at, it just isn't. | ||
I'm a hawk. | ||
I'm not a dove. | ||
I'm a hawk. | ||
I believe in strong defense. | ||
I believe in peace through strength. | ||
I've dedicated part of my life to that. | ||
But it has to start there. | ||
It's not going to start in Social Security. | ||
It's not going to start in Medicare. | ||
If somebody tells you it's going to start in the entitlements, they're lying to you. | ||
Nothing can be done because the entitlements are not true. | ||
They're lying to you. | ||
They're lying to you. | ||
And the more lies and the can gets kicked down the road, we end up with $36 or $37 trillion of debt. | ||
And $2 trillion deficits. | ||
And things exploding in the interest rate, the 10-year bond out of control, and your credit card, and your mortgage, and your student loan, and your auto loan, and all of it getting out of control. | ||
We must stop the madness. | ||
And those people that are adults must bind together, regardless of your political philosophy and other things, and say, we've got to stop this madness. | ||
And we have to look at spending. | ||
Besant said the other day, we don't have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem. | ||
Well, okay, fine. | ||
And if the wealthy and the donors and the corporatists and the oligarchs and the apartheid state of Silicon Valley and the lords of easy money, if they will help us, because they run the town, let's be honest, the politicians don't make these independent decisions. | ||
It's not how it works. | ||
It's all the lobbyists. | ||
It's all in there. | ||
They're in there drafting these bills. | ||
You know, they're all legal documents. | ||
9,000 pages of a contract. | ||
You ever read one? | ||
It freezes your brain. | ||
It's so complicated. | ||
Because it's a contract. | ||
We have to stop kidding ourselves. | ||
This is the power of Doge. | ||
We've got the greatest engineering mind since Edison. | ||
They can do this. | ||
But we have to do it now. | ||
Not 26 and 25. At least know it. | ||
And particularly, we have to start with the defense budget. | ||
If we're going to pass in the defense budget, let's hear it now. | ||
Let's be adults and let's talk about it now. | ||
Okay, we're passing the defense budget. | ||
What does that leave us with? | ||
I don't know, discretionary spending of $500 billion? | ||
And let's have somebody step forward and we're going to stop Head Start. | ||
We're going to stop the Meals and Wheels. | ||
We're going to stop the after-school programs. | ||
We're going to stop the cancer research. | ||
We're going to stop the community hospitals. | ||
It's fine. | ||
We have the ability to stop it all and shut it all down. | ||
That is what a democratic process is about. | ||
That is what debate is about. | ||
That is what consensus is about. | ||
And right now we're not doing any of that. | ||
It just goes on and on and on. | ||
And now it's not your children, grandchildren. | ||
Before it was all that, oh, you've got to cut these deficits, the thing, because it's too much for our children. | ||
No, it's you. | ||
Inflation's not coming down until we get our hands on this. | ||
It's just not. | ||
You must get your hands on federal spending. | ||
And then you're going to have a... | ||
If you can't get the spending down, then you're going to have to raise the revenue. | ||
And this is why I say you've got to go to the wealthy and say, guys, if you don't put your lobbyists on it, if you don't put the... | ||
Because you're welfare queens. | ||
Everybody's underwritten on the back of the little guy. | ||
And it has to stop its madness. | ||
Jillian, Barbary, done with debt. | ||
Hey, this country needs to be done with debt. | ||
My God, it's a tough thing. | ||
But, and this is what happens when spending is out of control. | ||
You're trying to gap because you can't afford the money you make. | ||
With the cost of living, there's a gap. | ||
And that gap is now, you bridge the gap with a credit card. | ||
And then the credit card, it stops non-performing, you can't cancel it, and you put the notice in the desk. | ||
You can't do that. | ||
It doesn't go away. | ||
It's a cancer in your life that's metastasizing. | ||
You must address it. | ||
And there's one way to address it, let it go. | ||
Another way is to talk to Jillian Barbary and the Done With Debt team. | ||
Ma'am, the floor is yours. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, sir. | |
You said it. | ||
Time is the biggest enemy for you because you are putting those envelopes away and you're not answering the phone. | ||
I've been there. | ||
And so done with debt, what they'll do is they'll come in and put a strategy before you. | ||
You'll have your own team. | ||
Listen, this is an emotional thing, okay? | ||
Debt is big money on one side, not your side. | ||
And then it's an emotional thing on yours. | ||
On you. | ||
And I remember when I did actually have cancer, and they gave me Xanax. | ||
And I said, why would I need a Xanax? | ||
I'd never take one in my life. | ||
They said, it'll calm your mind if you start racing. | ||
And my mind started racing with my debt. | ||
It wasn't the cancer. | ||
So I started, I had to take it because I couldn't stop, you know, just thinking nonstop, anxiety, pressure, freaking out, not answering the phone. | ||
What Done With Debt will do, and I know that there are so many of you out there that are in this, and you feel like you're alone because you're not going to tell, you know, the kids. | ||
It's something you hide. | ||
And what Done With Debt did is there's no shame in being in this position. | ||
And some people, Stephen, are not out there buying Chanel purses and Ferraris. | ||
It's just like a monthly or day of... | ||
Today living, the expenses of having kids and the whole thing. | ||
So what done with that will do, they get in front of you and in front of the collectors and they know all of the nuances that the banking institutions and the credit card companies use. | ||
They know exactly what they are able to get for you, which could be pennies on the dollar. | ||
They can help cut interest rates. | ||
They can actually wipe some of your debt out completely. | ||
They are amazing. | ||
And the first step is calling them. | ||
We're going to donewithdebt.com because the more you ruminate, the more you sit, like you said, the worse it is because of penalties. | ||
They go up. | ||
They've got all the time in the world. | ||
They have a Rolodex. | ||
You're just a number. | ||
You're going to come up again. | ||
And guess what? | ||
You're going to owe more the next time you come up, right? | ||
So what Done With Debt will do is just... | ||
Take all of that away from you, get you on a plan. | ||
And in some cases, people actually end up with money in their pocket. | ||
And it's just an incredible resource to have that people don't really know because it's such a secretive and emotional thing being in that kind of debt. | ||
I don't know if it could be $15,000. | ||
It could be up to almost a million. | ||
They will help you. | ||
And they will give you a free consultation, too, which is wonderful. | ||
And what a show today. | ||
I've been watching you. | ||
It has been quite a show. | ||
So as Americans, our expenses have gone up, I think, 11 percent this past year. | ||
And so that's, you know, it's a real problem that a lot of Americans are facing right now. | ||
And I just want to say to you, you're not alone. | ||
And you have the help that you need. | ||
But you have to reach out. | ||
Because time is your enemy. | ||
The more you wait, the worse. | ||
These guys know how to negotiate with the companies to cut the face amount, to cap the interest. | ||
It's all kind of technicalities. | ||
This is why you need an expert. | ||
You're not going to be able to do it alone. | ||
You need an expert. | ||
That's Done With Debt. | ||
Where do they go right now, Jillian? | ||
I want people this weekend, make a commitment, get your hands around this, do not let it destroy your life, and don't, whatever you do, don't let it take you off the ramparts of the war room posse. | ||
So where do they go, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, exactly, sir. | |
They go to donewithdebt.com and just... | ||
Get a free consultation. | ||
It's almost like, for me, purging and talking to, I don't know, a therapist or something, because they're on your side. | ||
Remember, this is what they do for a living. | ||
They know things that you don't know as a consumer, as an American citizen. | ||
So they are going to help you and put you on that plan that you need. | ||
And you know what? | ||
For me, Steve, emotionally it was the biggest thing, because they'll stand in front of all those harassing calls and letters, and they're so good. | ||
Some of those letters look like they're from the government and you're freaking out. | ||
Exactly. | ||
They made you look like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
We've got to balance. | ||
One more time. | ||
Where do they go, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
|
Donewithdebt.com for your first free consultation. | |
They'll get you out of the problem you're in. | ||
So thank you for having me, as usual, on this very incredibly busy day. | ||
Wow. | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
More is happening. | ||
I think Ukraine's happening. | ||
Something in Venezuela's happening. | ||
Tonight, the White House is going to be dropping other bombs, right, of actions they're taking, executive orders, executive actions through the weekend. | ||
On Trump train 47, it's seven days a week. | ||
We'll be back here live tomorrow at 10 a.m. | ||
This show is going to be on fire tomorrow. | ||
Catherine O'Neill, you've worked in the White House for President Trump. | ||
You know how they grind. | ||
Tell me about it. | ||
Give me a minute or two about working for Trump in the White House. | ||
Yes, thanks, Steve. | ||
You know, I just got a call today, actually. | ||
For them lobbying me to come back in. | ||
But, you know, as you guys know, I'm the CEO of Meriwether Farms. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
Full stop. | ||
Full stop. | ||
For full disclosure, I've been pushing Catherine O'Neill, as all the young people in the war room, I think we have five or six going in, to go back in. | ||
We'll put her great husband to run the company. | ||
The company's on fire. | ||
But your country needs you. | ||
President Trump needs you. | ||
The staff needs you. | ||
Catherine, I have pushed this from day one. | ||
You've got to go back in the White House, man. | ||
Thanks, Steve. | ||
I appreciate your confidence in me. | ||
You know how much I love and respect and support President Trump and have been doing that since 2015. My family has been supporting him since then. | ||
As you remember, my late grandmother, Faith Whittlesey, Ambassador Faith Whittlesey, was one of the first senior members of the Reagan administration to publicly endorse President Trump in as early as 2015. So there's no question to my loyalty to him. | ||
And like I said, I got a call today. | ||
To come back in. | ||
But, you know, I do have a two-year-old daughter who is my first priority. | ||
And as you know... | ||
Put her on... | ||
Hey, hang on. | ||
Put her on the hip. | ||
She's a tough kid. | ||
She's an O'Neill. | ||
Put her on the hip. | ||
Let's roll. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
It's a tough kid. | ||
I mean, she's tough. | ||
unidentified
|
You're a tough kid. | |
Work with me. | ||
I'm going to work you after the show. | ||
Okay, I'm making an announcement here. | ||
Catherine O'Neill. | ||
We're announcing a war. | ||
We're going to go back in and work for President Trump. | ||
President Trump needs you, man. | ||
These are days of thunder. | ||
We'll get your husband's Yellowstone. | ||
He's a cowboy. | ||
He'll run the company. | ||
Tell me about the company, quick. | ||
I'm going to work with you after the show and get you back on tomorrow morning. | ||
I love it. | ||
You're one of my favorites. | ||
You're a warrior. | ||
Tell me about the... | ||
What's the special you got for us today? | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yeah, so Steve, as you know, Meriwether Farms is the name of my company, meriwetherfarms.com. | ||
Today we're promoting our winter box, which I know a lot of the War Room Posse loves. | ||
Code word war room to receive 10% off. | ||
It's a great deal. | ||
Lots of really good cuts that you may not be familiar with, but we also provide recipes. | ||
We're also having a sale on our chuck roast box. | ||
So if you go to our site, you'll see everything. | ||
I do want to say, Steve, we are on the forefront of creating High-paying manufacturing jobs. | ||
I mean, we're not manufacturing anything. | ||
We're cutting meat, but it's still a high-skilled job. | ||
And we have 30 employees right now, and we plan to have 100 employees by 2027. So we are on the forefront of resuscitating the American manufacturing dominance. | ||
Ma'am, love you. | ||
You've been spectacular. | ||
We'll talk after the show tonight about your various options. | ||
We love Merriweather Farms. | ||
Everybody go. | ||
Check it out. | ||
Where else do they go? | ||
Give it to them again, Catherine. | ||
Yeah, merriweatherfarms.com. | ||
We're on Getter. | ||
We're on X or Twitter. | ||
And check us out. | ||
We always love to take care of the War Room Posse. | ||
You guys have really helped us get to where we are today. | ||
Ma'am. | ||
You're the best. | ||
You're great. | ||
Your kid's tough. | ||
Put her on the hip. | ||
Let's get her over to the White House. | ||
Get to work. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'll think about it. | ||
Just for you, Steve. | ||
I'm going to talk you into it. | ||
I'll call you later tonight. | ||
You're the best. | ||
Catherine was with us on the campaign at like 15. Catherine was with them. | ||
I was at Breitbart. | ||
Catherine was with us at 16 when I took it over. | ||
She was at the White House State Department. | ||
Back to the White House on the 2020 campaign, just all over, to help us fight the big steal. | ||
She's one of the best. | ||
The O'Neills. | ||
She's got a brother that's a genius. | ||
And also crazy, right? | ||
The O'Neills are brilliant. | ||
The father's brilliant. | ||
Man, they are out there. | ||
I love them. | ||
Meriwether Farms. | ||
Make sure you go check it out. | ||
Beef is unbelievable. | ||
What she's created is just incredible. | ||
And she is. | ||
She's obviously adding so much to the economy, this pagered economy. | ||
And great jobs. | ||
Mike Lindell. | ||
Got to end a Friday. | ||
We've got to run through the tape. | ||
People want to know where they can get across, where they can get some war room flannel sheets. | ||
We don't want no stinking satin sheets here. | ||
We're not elite globalists. | ||
We're populist nationalists in a pillow. | ||
In a towel, sir. | ||
That's right. | ||
You guys, it's the mega sale. | ||
Remember the crosses, you guys. | ||
They got the women's two that's reversible, like mine. | ||
I helped design them. | ||
100% sterling silver, made in the USA. You guys, check it out at the mega sale. | ||
The War Room Posse exclusive, 30% off. | ||
These are awesome crosses. | ||
Great, great for men and women, and I helped design them. | ||
They're absolutely the best. | ||
I've been wearing mine for over 20 years now. | ||
The My Towels, $29.98. | ||
Go to the website, MyPillow. | ||
Use promo code WARROOM. Your whole order ships for free. | ||
And there's 800-873-1062. | ||
And by the way, there we added the premium MyPillows. | ||
For $19.98, $24.98. | ||
We just added that today for the War Room Posse. | ||
That's the ones with the gusset. | ||
We've added the Giza cotton to it for that. | ||
And so you guys get it all 100% made in the USA and with free shipping, free shipping promo code WARROOM. Perfect. | ||
Mike Lindell, thank you here on a Friday. | ||
Appreciate you. | ||
We'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Thanks, Steve. | ||
MyPillow.com, promo code WARROOM. Check it out. | ||
You get all the special deals, all the free shipping, only in the War Room. | ||
I'm going to be up on Getter. | ||
We're actually going to stream tonight, I think on Rumble and Getter. | ||
I kind of blew this one, Grace. | ||
The interview I did with the New York Times. | ||
You don't want to miss this. | ||
Had a time to sit down with the New York Times. | ||
Do a pretty in-depth interview. | ||
I think you'll want to see it. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll figure out also the weekend how to play it. | |
There's so much action going to go on tonight from the White House. | ||
Globally, domestically, there's things happening. | ||
There's going to be things happening tomorrow and Sunday. | ||
Donald John Trump wrapping up the second week of the Days of Thunder. | ||
We're going to leave you with the right stuff. | ||
An American classic. | ||
In a classic American moment. | ||
See you tomorrow morning, 10 a.m. |