Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
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Lay down your arms! | |
You will not run me off of my common! | ||
Damn you! | ||
We'll have you all! | ||
Italian, fix your bayonets! | ||
Shoulder arms! | ||
Charge your bayonets! | ||
Give way, men! | ||
Quit the field! | ||
Give way and quit the field! | ||
Quit the field! | ||
Fire! Fire! | ||
Get back! | ||
Get those men back in the ranks! | ||
Get back in the ranks! | ||
Make it back in the ranks! | ||
Get control of your men! | ||
Damn you, private, back in rags! | ||
Damn you, get back in rags! | ||
Back in rags! | ||
Back in rags! | ||
It's a rags! | ||
What are you doing? | ||
Sergeant, control these men! | ||
Get those men back! | ||
That was the other one. | ||
Steady, man, get back in rags! | ||
Private, do not fire! | ||
Suck a fire! | ||
Private, get stuck in rags! | ||
Go, go, go, go! | ||
Samuel! Play a rally! | ||
Yeah, let's try it! | ||
Let's try it! | ||
Retard to rags! | ||
Get those men back! | ||
Come forward, come forward, come forward. | ||
Right there, come forward. | ||
I had to tip to the National Park Service and everyone else. | ||
Everyone associated. | ||
This is just an incredible recreation this morning. | ||
That was this morning. | ||
A recreation. | ||
And I've seen a ton of films, a ton of documentaries. | ||
That was not too shabby. | ||
I'm not sure that's not too unlike how it happened. | ||
It was kind of a melee. | ||
unidentified
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Right? A brawl. | |
Another brawl at Concord Bridge of the Foot, which I think happened right around this time. | ||
And there should be something, and we're going to try to get it live if we can get it. | ||
The reenaction has been great, you know, and I think it would have been best if we had a bigger participation by the Trump government. | ||
This is perfect for President Trump and perfect for the Vice President or others. | ||
This is why we need the great Monica Crowley in and doing her magic. | ||
A lot more to go here. | ||
I happen to think this is the... | ||
In the top two or three most important, because this showed the British that we were prepared in the cussedness and toughness of particularly a lot of these veterans of the French and Indian Wars, which were not, which Washington came from and others, | ||
were not prepared just to lay down and roll over on this thing. | ||
That this thing was going to be a fight. | ||
Not only did we control the countryside kind of politically, with only 20% or 30% of the people, but that we... | ||
We were prepared to throw down on this and that these Americans were quite different. | ||
Franklin, during the debates for the Declaration of Independence, said that when they made the case that we're Englishmen, he said, no, we're Americans. | ||
We've created something quite different here. | ||
A lot of that came, maybe I'll get Raheem back on Monday and talk about the cockpit in Whitehall when Franklin went. | ||
Franklin at the time was a defender. | ||
Of maybe trying to stick this, hold together. | ||
And after he got literally torn apart and abused in this kind of forum for hours, he came out of there a changed man. | ||
He said, I don't think this is going to work. | ||
So intense political debates. | ||
If you take away anything from today's commemoration here on War Room, this fight is continual. | ||
You are... | ||
Those patriots. | ||
You are the committees of correspondence. | ||
You are those folks of the Sons of Liberty. | ||
You are the ones that put it all on the line. | ||
You changed American history as much as they did in 1775 or in the 73 and 74, the run-up in 2021 and sticking to Trump and saying, hey, we've got to right the wrong or the stolen election. | ||
It would have been so easy for you to go about your lives. | ||
You know, it's too hard. | ||
Trump was great. | ||
Trump is a leader, and they stole it from him. | ||
If they steal it from Trump, they can do it to anybody. | ||
If they can send Trump back to Mar-a-Lago, right, as a stolen election, essentially by himself, with all the Republican, all the elected officials, basically abandoning him. | ||
And Fox News abandoning him. | ||
People have drafted off him forever. | ||
All the hosts at Fox News abandoning him. | ||
Yes. I hate to bring up... | ||
You know, the Vichy Fox, the collaborationist. | ||
A lot of those same voices whining about their taxes going to get increased. | ||
Well, guess what? | ||
Your taxes are going to get increased. | ||
Wine all you want. | ||
Weren't there in the fight. | ||
I got the black notebook. | ||
I got the names. | ||
Who's with us and who against us. | ||
And I know them all. | ||
Because this audience was with us. | ||
You were it. | ||
You had Trump's back. | ||
There's a direct lineage from that revolutionary time down through every patriot's grave directly to you. | ||
You hold the key here. | ||
If you don't quit, we win. | ||
If you quit, we don't win. | ||
And Lexington and Concord today started a journey that at least in its first phase went eight years. | ||
And hey, guess what? | ||
There were some pretty cloudy days at Morristown and Valley Forge. | ||
A couple of pretty cold winters when not a lot of sunshine patriots punched out. | ||
There's a pretty thin thread that tied this together. | ||
It's one of the reasons that people like Hamilton and Aaron Burr, who later, you know... | ||
He was accused of trying to break off Texas and other places to form an empire with Mexico, who knows? | ||
But a very controversial, but was vice president of the United States. | ||
Burr and Hamilton always held a grudge against those they didn't think were there in the darkest days and fighting with, they were on the staff or associated with the staff of Washington, General Washington, during those dark days. | ||
And there was a lot of animosity internal. | ||
You think Trump world and around President Trump's got some animosity every now and again will pop its head up? | ||
That's nothing. | ||
This is a child's play compared to the revolutionary generation. | ||
But down through every patriot's grave to you, to modern time itself, down to the present day, it's you. | ||
Why do we commemorate? | ||
Why does War Room go out of its way to do all this? | ||
Because you have to understand the unbroken chain. | ||
That connects you to our revolutionary generation and what it meant and what they fought for and why that idea was a revolutionary idea in mankind's history. | ||
And why it would happen on a little village green with a handful of people. | ||
And what happened at a bridge a couple hours later. | ||
Why is important and why that's resonated down through the ages. | ||
To you. | ||
To the current time. | ||
To you. | ||
And just like them, if they had quit, if they had just given up and said it's too hard, it's too big an empire, these institutions are too big, we just can't do it. | ||
And we fought for years and years and years and we can't do it. | ||
We just can't overcome it. | ||
Let's accommodate it. | ||
Let's cut a deal. | ||
Let's make a deal. | ||
Let's do that. | ||
Julie Kelly, in the middle of the night, the Supreme Court just basically said, we're going to take a pause. | ||
You're not going to be able to use John Adams. | ||
What, Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport the illegal aliens that have invaded our country. | ||
Ma'am, how big a deal is this? | ||
unidentified
|
It's just another head-scratcher from the Supreme Court, which the Supreme Court has admitted. | |
District Court judges and appellate court judges have admitted that the President's exercise of the Alien Enemies Act... | ||
is a political branch, under the political branch purview, that it does not involve the court. | ||
They've all admitted that it is not subject to judicial review. | ||
So what are we doing here? | ||
He has determined that these illegal Venezuelans who are tied to Trenderagua, which has been designated a foreign terror organization by the president, by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. | ||
unidentified
|
We know that they are. | |
We know that this gang is dangerous. | ||
They include murderers, drug traffickers, human traffickers, and the president wants to get these people out of our country. | ||
But you have the courts rushing to their defense, including the Supreme Court and what they did at 1 o'clock this morning, and this is a separate case. | ||
This is not the case that we've been following in Washington in Judge Fosberg's courtroom. | ||
This is another venue. | ||
The ACLU is filing these lawsuits all over the country. | ||
So this is in the northern district of Texas. | ||
So here's the trick. | ||
Here's what the ACLU does. | ||
They file a lawsuit on behalf of two or three anonymous illegal Venezuelans. | ||
Today they are going to be deported under the Alien Enemy Act, which the president signed March 14th, went into effect March 15th. | ||
He signed the 14th, went into effect the 15th. | ||
They started removing these individuals right away. | ||
This is what resulted in the first lawsuit for Judge Foster. | ||
But now they're doing this all over. | ||
So they filed the initial lawsuit under anonymous illegal Venezuelans, and then they seek to turn that into a class-wide temporary restraining order, covering anyone in that certain jurisdiction who would be covered by We're subject to deportation under the Alien Enemies Act, | ||
which, again, the courts have said over the past month is not subject to judicial review because the president has determined that this group is a foreign terror organization and represents an invasion by a hostile regime, | ||
which TDA is supported by the Maduro regime. | ||
This is completely and solely under Nonetheless, the Supreme Court swoops in this morning and protests this certain group, and you will note, | ||
and I've been posting all morning on Acts Julie underscore Kelly, too, calling it a putative class, meaning, and this is the judge in Texas, denied the temporary restraining order and the request to turn a couple of these unnamed illegals into a class-action lawsuit. | ||
He denied that. | ||
So now the Supreme Court loops in. | ||
It's at the appellate court level now. | ||
ACLU goes crying to the Supreme Court, and now there is a temporary hold on deporting these Alien Enemies Act subjects out of northern Texas until the Supreme Court decides what to do from here. | ||
Unbelievable. Where do they go, Julie, right now? | ||
Over the weekend, I realize it's Holy Saturday, the commemoration of the 250th at Lexington Concord, and tomorrow is Easter Sunday. | ||
He is risen, so people are spending time with family. | ||
But where do they go to get up to this? | ||
Because on Monday, folks, and they did it, they dropped it at 1 a.m. in the morning. | ||
Just saying, Julie, where do they go today to get up to speed? | ||
Maybe the off hours for everything that's going on on your Twitter account. | ||
unidentified
|
So, I'm a Julie underscore Kelly, too. | |
I'm going to try to write something up for my subtext, sort of explain this, what's happening, the ACLU's tactics. | ||
But furthermore, just to underscore, this is such an encroachment of the judicial branch, including the Supreme Court, on what is solely the president's authority to determine an invasion, protect the American people from these illegals, and get them out of our country. | ||
This is the biggest threat to liberty right now in our sovereignty. | ||
Julie Kelly, thank you. | ||
Thank you for stepping out and taking time away today from the family to do this. | ||
Julie Kelly, always there for us. | ||
Always there for you. | ||
Folks, that was kind of a bombshell last night. | ||
unidentified
|
And we'll get it on until Monday. | |
Philip Patrick next. | ||
I got another Englishman here. | ||
We're going to find about gold, what's happening in the world markets, and... | ||
Through his eyes, the American Revolution. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Back on the 250th anniversary of the shot heard round the world at Lexington Common and then the stand of the patriots at Concord Bridge. | ||
unidentified
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We'll continue to warm in just a moment. | |
We do the town repair. | ||
The townsmen cry, hurrah boys, here comes a grenadier | ||
Here come the Grenadiers, me boys, who know no doubts or fears. | ||
Sing ta-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra for the British Grenadiers. | ||
Then let us fill a bumper and drink our health to those who carry caps and pouches and wear the lupid clothes. | ||
May they and their commanders live happy all their years. | ||
Sing a "tow-row-row" and a "row-row-row-row" for the British Grenadines | ||
So, Philip Patrick of our sponsor, Birch Gold, joins us. | ||
Philip, thanks so much. | ||
I want to talk to you about some updates on gold, but I've got to ask you. | ||
You were raised in England, correct? | ||
I believe London? | ||
Correct, yes. | ||
London, England. | ||
And where did you go before university? | ||
Where did you go? | ||
You went to prep school or high school, as we would call it. | ||
I think you call it public school over there, but they're private kind of prep schools to prepare people for college, correct? | ||
Yeah, I went to a school called University College School in London. | ||
By the way, okay, audience, that means our own Philip Patrick is quite awfully awfully. | ||
That's a very prominent one. | ||
So how is it taught? | ||
We're here last night. | ||
We had Patrick O'Donnell on last night, and today we're going through and doing Lexington and Concord, one of the most important events in world history. | ||
How is the American Revolution taught in British schools? | ||
A little bit different to how it's taught here, I think. | ||
Really taught as part of British Empire history, focuses more on the causes like taxation, colonial unrest, more so than political breakdown and sort of a heroic revolution. | ||
So we're looking at it from the British perspective more so than the American, for sure. | ||
It was, was it not, because you had, people don't realize until you see it through the eyes of the British. | ||
This was hotly contested in Commons for a year. | ||
I mean, this was a, was an event because at the time you have India with Clive, so you had the beginning really of the major part of the empire. | ||
And the North American part's kind of in revolt. | ||
The India part's going on. | ||
But it was hugely contested. | ||
I tell people, the way to look at it is kind of the British Vietnam. | ||
I mean, it overwhelms debate. | ||
It's constantly debated. | ||
You have some of the most prominent... | ||
It wasn't that the whole parliament or even the British people were against the colonists. | ||
Many of them were arguing the case. | ||
I think it was Edmund Burke and others. | ||
We argued the thing of you've got to reach an accommodation or we have to think of another way. | ||
It was kind of the crown through a series of foreign ministers or the people that had the portfolio for the empire that kind of mismanaged this thing and I think always lost sight of the fact that The toughness of the colonists were really because they were essentially Englishmen with other countries in there, | ||
but they had this attitude of freedom and their rights. | ||
This is why this whole thing kicks off this weekend with going to an arsenal to get the weapons before the colonists, you know, got to get the weapons and the gunpowder because these folks are going to put up a fight, right? | ||
Absolutely correct. | ||
Yeah, I agree vehemently. | ||
In the UK, we look at it very differently to how you do in the US. | ||
But you're correct. | ||
It took a certain type of person, a certain strength, a desire for freedom to make that move and, you know, create essentially the United States. | ||
But like I said, it's brushed over at school in the UK. | ||
There's certainly not the focus that you have on it here for obvious reasons. | ||
No, it's quite fun. | ||
What is going on? | ||
People all day long are texting me. | ||
They love the material you guys put out. | ||
We've put out together. | ||
They're now very focused. | ||
I've talked about the Rio reset and what's going to happen with the bricks. | ||
We've got a couple of minutes here. | ||
Just give people a snapshot. | ||
They're blown away every day by kind of these movements in gold that are not traditional. | ||
These are people who have owned gold for a long time. | ||
Just give us a couple of minutes of where you think we really are. | ||
You know, what you said earlier, I think, was important. | ||
It's not the price that's so important, but it's the fundamentals driving gold. | ||
And it's almost everything at the moment. | ||
So what are we seeing? | ||
We're seeing confidence in the U.S. dollar cracking. | ||
The dollar's lost 9 percent of its value since January. | ||
And this is despite rising Treasury yields, which is a major red flag, right? | ||
It's a signal that confidence in the U.S. dollar is waning. | ||
Investors right now fleeing U.S. assets. | ||
Despite higher returns, because ultimately, short term, there's a loss of faith in US and economic, political stability. | ||
What we're seeing at the moment is a textbook case of risk premium repricing. | ||
We're seeing rising yields, falling currency, and the markets now are demanding compensation for perceived chaos. | ||
And that's the exact kind of environment in which gold thrives, right? | ||
The Fed in a very tough situation, right? | ||
If Treasury demand falters, which it is, the Fed may be forced into a position where they have to buy debt to stabilize markets as they have done. | ||
On many occasions, essentially monetizing unpayable debt. | ||
So we're in a very tough situation. | ||
We have twin deficits now exploding, both trade and budget. | ||
Right? The idea is we can go through short-term pain. | ||
And if ultimately we can reshore jobs, it'll be worth it. | ||
But timing and execution is going to be very important. | ||
If fiscal chaos follows, it's going to destabilize the dollar further. | ||
So there is a fight happening now. | ||
You mentioned Rio. | ||
The BRICS are fighting for their share as well. | ||
And all of this bodes well for gold, which is why we're seeing prices go through the roof. | ||
I want to talk, you spent a couple minutes, we've got about five minutes left, because people see this rapid rise, and they say, gosh, when Ben and these guys start talking about it, I don't know, it was $1,100, $1,200, or below $1,500, it's $3,300. | ||
There's days, two days in the past week, this week and last week, I think gold popped over $100 each day, which just doesn't happen. | ||
And I do have people come to me and go, is it so high priced? | ||
And I said, you can't think of it that way. | ||
This is a hedge long-term. | ||
This is a store of value long-term. | ||
You do this. | ||
Gold is not a speculative thing. | ||
It doesn't move like a stock, although it's outperformed the S&P 500 over the last 25 years. | ||
What do you say to people that say, hey, I like what I hear, I like what I read, but the price is so high. | ||
Should I get involved now? | ||
Should I wait? | ||
I mean, what do you tell your clients? | ||
So there's a few things. | ||
The first is the one that you sort of touched on, and that is that gold is a reflection of currency, right? | ||
And gold's price can go as far as currency goes down is the first thing. | ||
Secondly, we're dealing in a climate at the moment where everything is high. | ||
Yes, we've seen some downside in the markets this year, but we've seen downside from the highest point in history from a price to earning. | ||
So the ability to buy low and sell high, it's tough in this climate, right? | ||
We've printed huge amounts of money. | ||
We've created bubbles everywhere. | ||
So the question then becomes, what's more conducive for the climate in front of us? | ||
And I think that's where precious metals have a very, very big advantage. | ||
But people have to understand, this is all going to be... | ||
Boiled down to our currency fight, right? | ||
Because like I said, gold prices are a reflection of currency. | ||
Jim Rickards, and I've mentioned this before, he's been calling for gold at over $10,000 an ounce for a long time now. | ||
His view is we're going to ultimately see hyperinflation here in the United States. | ||
If gold's at $10,000 an ounce, we could see a loaf of bread at $400. | ||
But that mindset seems crazy today. | ||
But anyone that understands... | ||
Currency understands that it's a real possibility. | ||
Central banks around the world now are looking for a flight to safety. | ||
And when currency is up in the air, there is nothing safer than gold. | ||
Also, in the legislature, besides the trade war and enjoying the economic war against the Chinese Communist Party, | ||
The inability of the political class to look to, if we don't get to the basics, and that is the first order of magnitude that we have to do is we have to dramatically close these budget deficits so the Treasury just doesn't have more government securities they have to sell to finance this madness. | ||
That is something the world's capital markets are looking at, the world's central banks are looking at. | ||
Are they not, sir? | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Congress is going to add another $5.8 trillion in deficits. | ||
And this is with debt. | ||
Already over 100% of GDP, it's unsustainable, and foreign investors know it. | ||
So they are watching very, very closely what's happening. | ||
And if we continue down this path, they will continue to flee from the dollar. | ||
And President Trump will have no chance at that point. | ||
If interest payments on the debt are 50% of revenue, there's no coming back from that. | ||
Look at any nation in history that has been in that position. | ||
There is no coming back. | ||
So closing the deficit, curving the spending is the number one priority. | ||
I'll take a recession. | ||
I'll take inflation if we can get a handle on the longer term problems. | ||
How do people get to you and work with you and your team? | ||
What's the best and easiest path? | ||
Yeah, of course. | ||
Very simple, birchgold.com forward slash Bannon, birchgold.com forward slash Bannon. | ||
That'll get them access to the end of the dollar empire reports, the investment kits, how and why to buy gold under a Trump administration. | ||
So birchgold.com forward slash Bannon, or it's Bannon to 989898. | ||
Right before we go, we've got about a minute. | ||
The Rio reset. | ||
How big a deal is that the BRICS happen to be coming together in under 90 days and to a huge meeting down in Brazil to think through alternatives? | ||
Do you think that reset is going to be something significant? | ||
Massive. It is massive. | ||
The BRICS are gathering steam. | ||
They're getting new members day on day on day. | ||
We need to watch that. | ||
We've got to keep a close eye on it. | ||
Rio Reset is big news. | ||
I'm excited to go there, hopefully, and report on behalf of the War Room and just get up-to-date news. | ||
But we will be watching the developments there very closely at Birch Gold Group because it's going to have a big effect on everybody here in the United States. | ||
Okay, we're going to do a run-up to that, and Philip Patrick and his team will be there representing the War Room and doing breaking news. | ||
Philip Patrick lives in L.A., always drawing the tough duty, going to Rio for the Rio reset. | ||
Philip Patrick, thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Look forward to seeing you on here next week. | ||
Birchgold.com slash Bannon. | ||
The American Revolution through British eyes. | ||
It is fascinating, fascinating, fascinating how it's taught over there. | ||
It's kind of their Vietnam. | ||
You know, George III was broken after that. | ||
He was not the stablest guy in the world, but losing this empire, losing this part of his empire, shattered him. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Lexington and Concord, 250. | ||
next in the war room | ||
unidentified
|
music | |
Okay, welcome back to The War Room. | ||
That's Emerson's poem, The Concord Hymn, written, I believe, on the 50th anniversary of the event in Lexington and Concord, then put to music. | ||
And, of course, shortly thereafter, the run-up to the Civil War, the great event. | ||
This is why we say, President Trump now, that you are the direct descendants of that revolutionary spirit, and President Trump is the leader of this movement, to get our sovereignty back and the freedoms of the American people against the globalists. | ||
The globalists today who are mocking President Trump around the country is no king day or no king day. | ||
These are the same people that are now making a huge deal over a trafficker, human trafficker. | ||
And a bad guy, and a criminal who was sent out of this country, came here illegally, and was sent out of this country, and they're all loving up on it. | ||
That's what the Democrats want to love up. | ||
They're exposing themselves every day. | ||
More importantly, these people, this is about mass deportations. | ||
We have 10 million illegal alien invaders here on Biden's watch. | ||
I'm not talking about the people who came before. | ||
Let's just deal with the people who came on Biden's watch. | ||
Because that's enough to deal with right now, 10 million. | ||
We know the other day we walked through with Todd Bensman. | ||
We walked through with Eric Prince. | ||
It's 1.6 million have final deportation orders. | ||
And then there's another 2 million that basically these phony temporary status are burning off. | ||
So you get 3.5 million, let's say, 3.6. | ||
That could go over the next couple of years as you get the funding because now we're told we need $170 billion of infrastructure and other. | ||
Funding to do this, or the House saying $90 billion, Senate saying $170 billion. | ||
But this is a direct strike at American sovereignty, right? | ||
Back to the revolution. | ||
Are you going to allow $10 million? | ||
Would those folks that stood at Lexington Common and stood at Concord Bridge, if you were to tell them that, hey, on the 250th anniversary of this, a quarter of a millennium, | ||
From now, that the country, the United States of America that came from your efforts here, that we would have 10 million illegal alien evaders in the country, in a minority of the country, | ||
was not just fine with that, was fighting with it to make sure that they never were forced out of the country. | ||
They would go, no, that's insanity, that won't happen. | ||
But it is happening, and that's the current fight for liberty and freedom. | ||
We're either a country or we're not. | ||
We either have our sovereignty or we don't. | ||
We either have our territorial integrity or we don't. | ||
It's very simple. | ||
These are not up for debate. | ||
You either got it or you don't have it. | ||
If you don't have it, you're something else. | ||
You're what the globalists want. | ||
You're Paul Ryan's, America's an idea. | ||
No, dude, it ain't an idea. | ||
Do you think those guys... | ||
And led by Margaret Kemper Gage, who gave the information to Dr. Warren, who gave the information to the Sons of Liberty, who gave the information to Paul Revere and Dawes and Prescott. | ||
They could do the ride, the midnight ride, to inform the militias in Lexington and in Concourse so people could be out to meet the British. | ||
We've played the Grenadier song. | ||
What did Wellington call his troops? | ||
The scum of the earth. | ||
But absolutely tough, hard-bitten as you could possibly get. | ||
Just like the Royal Navy. | ||
They used to always call the sailors the scum of the earth, but they were the best. | ||
They were the toughest. | ||
Stick-to-itiveness. | ||
That's who they were up against. | ||
What are we up against today? | ||
On Monday, we get so much. | ||
And it's good, hey, that it's all coming together. | ||
You live in a blessing. | ||
You are blessed to live in this time. | ||
Divine providence and God's wisdoms put you here and now. | ||
And put you as a member of this war room posse. | ||
So you have a responsibility now. | ||
You have a duty. | ||
You have a dharma. | ||
Okay, as the Hindus say. | ||
You've been awakened. | ||
You cannot turn away from it. | ||
You can't turn away from your destiny. | ||
Just like the revolutionary generation. | ||
If we don't quit, we win. | ||
Theirs was, and that's why Washington retreated all the time, to keep the army intact. | ||
An army in being eventually would defeat the British. | ||
That's why he continued to retreat, to retreat, to retreat. | ||
We'll do all this when we go through this summer. | ||
Once again, the 4th of July. | ||
Remember, an expeditionary force landed on, wait for it, July 3rd. | ||
I think they knew they were going to get into a gunfight, okay? | ||
Think these brothers knew that it was coming down and coming down hard. | ||
Think about what they came down with us with all the going to jail, you're going to take a deep platform, take your credit cards and debank and everything like that. | ||
Hey, they were just as tough back then and just as vicious. | ||
This is not a garden party. | ||
It wasn't a garden party back then. | ||
What are we commemorating today? | ||
A gunfight. | ||
That's what we're commemorating, a gunfight. | ||
Just like O.K. Corral, just like Tasia Gill's going to join us in a second. | ||
We're commemorating a gunfight. | ||
Not a lot of highfalutin rhetoric. | ||
Come and take it. | ||
You're commemorating a gunfight of Solomon Brown and Colonel Parker and the militia. | ||
A lot of French and Indian War veterans that knew something about how to get on with it, right? | ||
Again, some grenadiers, an expedition force. | ||
Guys have been all over the place. | ||
Pretty tough, pretty tough nuts. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Let's get it on. | ||
Then later, Concord Bridge, the colonists could have fled, could have run. | ||
They didn't run. | ||
They dug in and said, no, don't think you're going to cross this. | ||
You're not. | ||
So we're going to throw down right here. | ||
That's your commemorating day, a gunfight. | ||
Remember that. | ||
That they dug in and threw every patriot's grave down to the current time to you. | ||
We don't need gunfights because we can beat them politically in information warfare and we are beating them. | ||
That's where they're losing their minds. | ||
They're losing their minds. | ||
David Brooks, total meltdown. | ||
Karl Rove, total meltdown. | ||
They're losing their minds. | ||
Because they can't defeat you. | ||
And certainly Trump is in every sphere. | ||
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. | ||
He is just running the tables in each one. | ||
And now they hide behind the courts. | ||
I don't believe you have judicial review, Supreme Court, over the president as commander-in-chief. | ||
And I guess we're just going to have to get this. | ||
We're going to have to fight this one out, too. | ||
I'm kind of stunned. | ||
He's commander-in-chief. | ||
This gets back to the unitary executive theory or as the engine room informs me all the time. | ||
Article 2, Steve, of the Constitution. | ||
Tej Gill, you've been in a couple, three gunfights. | ||
Today's a big day for you, Lexington and Concord. | ||
Is it not, sir? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Today is a big day. | ||
And it's Easter weekend. | ||
Big day for the followers of Jesus. | ||
Holy Saturday. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Holy Saturday. | ||
Tomorrow he is risen. | ||
Talk to me about why tomorrow, the great way to wake up... | ||
Well, we make the best coffee, Steve. | ||
The people have spoken. | ||
You can look on our website. | ||
We have 8,788 reviews. | ||
I'd say almost all of them five-star. | ||
You can dig in there and maybe find a couple of one-stars, two-stars, but those usually are from people that receive their order later, don't receive their order at all because they got lost in the mail or something like that. | ||
People love this coffee. | ||
It's because we roast it on a perforated drum. | ||
By doing that, we don't burn it. | ||
90% of the coffee industry that burn their coffee, burnt coffee is actually the standard in the coffee industry. | ||
It's bitter and it's acidic. | ||
That's why they serve it with milk, sugar, and cream. | ||
Ours, you can drink it straight black. | ||
It is literally the best coffee. | ||
You just have to go in there and read the reviews. | ||
The reviews are awesome. | ||
I'm reading one right now. | ||
Best coffee ever. | ||
Thanks, War Room. | ||
You know, here's a good one. | ||
Rock on, Frogman. | ||
Keep going on, Bannon. | ||
Task and purpose. | ||
Be a man among men. | ||
Drink it black. | ||
unidentified
|
It's funny. | |
And this guy says, I've stopped using sugar. | ||
Woohoo. You know, like, people love this coffee. | ||
We've got reviews going back to 2021 on our website. | ||
And only about 13% of the people leave reviews, but we've got a massive amount of reviews compared to most. | ||
And this is on our website. | ||
Usually if you find this many reviews, it's on Amazon. | ||
But this is actually people that buy from our website. | ||
So that's huge, having this many reviews on our website. | ||
And this guy said, I tried the Frogman Espresso. | ||
It's strong but not bitter. | ||
I still put a little cream in mine because it tastes better that way. | ||
But you could drink it black because it's so smooth. | ||
And smooth espresso is unusual. | ||
You know, we're unconventional. | ||
I came from the SEAL teams. | ||
I came from an unconventional warfare unit. | ||
I was a special operator, and I brought that to the coffee industry. | ||
This is unconventional coffee. | ||
That's why it's smooth. | ||
We cut all the acidity out of our coffee, and it's not bitter. | ||
You can drink it straight black. | ||
Love this coffee. | ||
It really is the best coffee. | ||
The people have spoken. | ||
All you have to do is look at the reviews. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
And this weekend for Easter, we're doing a huge sale for the War Room Posse. | ||
We're doing 30% off. | ||
And we only run those sales like this two, three times a year. | ||
So we do it Easter. | ||
Then, of course, on Black Friday, we have a big sale and probably Fourth of July. | ||
unidentified
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But that's it. | |
The rest of the time, it's 15, 20% off. | ||
Wow. Tej, thank you for joining us. | ||
Holy Saturday and the 250th anniversary of the Shot Heard Around the World. | ||
I want to thank you and thank you for all the work. | ||
I get so many... | ||
Every time I go someplace, people say we love the coffee and I love the inspiration. | ||
We've had enough Navy brew burned on a Mestex or in your situational foxhole and now you've done it right. | ||
The champagne of coffee. | ||
Tej Gill, thank you, sir, so much. | ||
Is it Diane Taz? | ||
What a voice. | ||
Terraz, what a voice. | ||
Go online and get her albums. | ||
Just magnificent. | ||
It's sung with the original music and the original tempo and the original scores of Americana and Americana music in that beautiful voice with very little accompaniment. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
We're going to return in just a moment. | ||
unidentified
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Our fleet shall speak in thunder to England, France, and Spain. | |
Nations o'er the ocean spread shall tremble and obey. | ||
The prince who rules by freedom's laws in North America. | ||
king. | ||
Thank you for being with us today for a special day, Holy Saturday, and also the 250th anniversary, commemoration of the shot heard around the world, Lexington and Concord. | ||
We're going to be doing a lot of this, hopefully every couple of days, in the 250th anniversary. | ||
Bunker Hill is 60 days away. | ||
Dr. Joseph Warren, who was so critical to tip off the, as one part of the Sons of Liberty to tip off, Paul Revere. | ||
To get rolling, let's alert people down at the makeshift armory at Concord. | ||
Because what do they want? | ||
They want your guns and they want your ammo, your powder. | ||
Let that be a lesson to you folks. | ||
The Second Amendment just didn't come out of nowhere. | ||
Just wasn't dreamed up. | ||
Mike Lindell, thank you for joining us. | ||
You're one of the original patriots of the Second American Revolution. | ||
They're trying to break you, whether in federal court or bankruptcy or all of it. | ||
Sell us some sheets today. | ||
Let's make sure we're liquid over at MyPillow, sir. | ||
Absolutely. And thank you, guys. | ||
You guys have been a blessing to MyPillow and my company. | ||
And what we're going to do today, everybody, we have the pillows we have for you guys, the MyPillow 2.0. | ||
With the covers, we have the Patriot covers. | ||
Now we've got... | ||
All the religious, the Christian covers. | ||
$9.98 for both the pillow and your choice of the covers. | ||
With God, all things are possible. | ||
All the stories from the Bible, I encourage you all this weekend to get in, at least read the four Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. | ||
But $9.98, promo code WARROOM. | ||
Go to the website, you guys, and scroll down till you see Steve. | ||
Click on it. | ||
We've ran all the specials at the same time for this weekend. | ||
You get the sheets, remember, $25, any size. | ||
Any color, the hard-to-find ones, the Split Kings, the California Kings Kings, $25 a set. | ||
These were that line that was earmarked for the box stores. | ||
You get them with no middlemen. | ||
And with my pillow, my employees, we appreciate, too. | ||
The pillows we put on sale, they make them. | ||
This is what we make 100% me in the USA. | ||
Just like my crosses, everybody. | ||
The most requested product ever. | ||
A War Room exclusive. | ||
You get them now. | ||
For 30% off, so call 800-873-1062. | ||
I still have USA moms and dads working from home right now waiting for your call this weekend. | ||
And I encourage you all to stay proactive in prayer, get in the word every day, and our prayers can line up perfect for God's will and God's timing this coming year. | ||
Because everyone always says to me, Steve, you know, my prayers aren't getting answered. | ||
It might not be God's timing or God's will, everybody. | ||
Stay in the Word. | ||
You can be proactive in prayer, and this year will be amazing. | ||
The greatest revival in history for our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. | ||
Mike Lindell, thank you so much. | ||
MyPillow.com, promo code WARM. | ||
Go to the most powerful promo code over at MyPillow. | ||
Thank you, sir. | ||
Have a happy Easter tomorrow. | ||
at the conclusion of Holy Saturday. | ||
A world event wasn't an event that just happened in the backwaters of a colony, right? | ||
Although I guess Lexington and Concord weren't actually backwaters. | ||
Nice, thriving villages and towns in the greater Boston. | ||
Boston and Philadelphia at that time, two most important cities. | ||
New York was on the rise, but hadn't gotten there. | ||
They were the two most important cities in North America and two of the most important cities actually in the entire empire. | ||
Starting to rival, as Philadelphia eventually did. | ||
Not London, but the second-tier cities in England. | ||
But the lineage and the heritage, particularly the cussedness and the fight and the termination, that's down to the present time to you. | ||
And we've got a lot of fights. | ||
Supreme Court, last night in the middle of the night, 1 o'clock in the morning. | ||
I mean, come on, guys. | ||
If you're going to issue it, you know, issue it during daylight hours. | ||
It sounds like you're ashamed of it. | ||
Dead of night. | ||
And this is going to be another part of this fight about are we a sovereign nation? | ||
Do the citizens actually rule? | ||
What is it to be an American citizen? | ||
What's the value of that citizenship? | ||
Remember, our movement is America first and American citizens first. | ||
The whole weight of the entire world, the entire system, the entire apparatus rests on your shoulders. | ||
And you think you would get, like, an attaboy or maybe some preferred treatment? | ||
No, you get the shaft on everything. | ||
So we're going to leave you. | ||
I really want to thank and applaud the commemoration. | ||
We're going to show you the footage of Lexington Common, and we're going to go out with traditional music. | ||
But we're going to segue as we go out to the right stuff. | ||
Because the folks at Lexington and Concord had it. | ||
Okay. Stephen K. Bannon in the war room. | ||
We're going to be back 10 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time on Monday morning. |