Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
You're an oncologist, obviously, incredibly respected. | |
You believe that it is likely, just for those just tuning in, you believe it is likely if this prostate cancer has spread to the bone that he could have had it. | ||
unidentified
|
For up to a decade, but certainly it's likely, would it be fair to say, it's likely to have had this for at least several years. | |
Oh, more than several years. | ||
unidentified
|
You don't get prostate cancer. | |
I just want to stop you. | ||
So this is not speculation. | ||
If you have prostate cancer that is spread to the bone, then he's most certainly, you are saying, had it when he was president of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
He did not develop it in the last 100, 200 days. | ||
He had it while he was president. | ||
He probably had it at the start of his... | ||
Yes, I don't think there's any disagreement about that. | ||
It's given to everybody, but it's given just about... | ||
And it takes a long time to get to that situation. | ||
Now, I think, you know, to get to a stage nine... | ||
I think that if you take a look, it's the same doctor that said that Joe was cognitively fine. | ||
There was nothing wrong with him. | ||
Well, he said, if it's the same doctor, he said there was nothing wrong there. | ||
And that's being proven to be a sad situation. | ||
And the auto pen is becoming a very big deal. | ||
You know, the auto pen is becoming a big deal because it seems like that maybe was the president who ever operated the auto pen. | ||
But when they say that that was not good, they also, you know, you have to look and you have to say that the test was not so good either. | ||
In other words, there are things going on that the public wasn't informed, and I think somebody's going to have to speak to his doctor. | ||
If it's the same, or even if it's two separate doctors, why wasn't the cognitive ability, why wasn't that discussed? | ||
And I think the doctor said he's just fine. | ||
Of the, I assume, the Navy doctors that took care of him at the White House. | ||
They ought to seize every record right now. | ||
This has to be a formal inquiry. | ||
A formal inquiry. | ||
About exactly what in the hell went on in this White House. | ||
We would bang it every day. | ||
Remember I told you it was an illegitimate regime? | ||
You heard that every now and again? | ||
You heard that elections have consequences and stolen elections have catastrophic consequences? | ||
Remember that? | ||
Look at the catastrophic consequences we're dealing with. | ||
Andy Harris is going to be here in a moment. | ||
We've got a structural, massive problem right now that President Trump and his team are trying to dig us out of with the help of folks over in the House. | ||
Look at the world such impressive. | ||
President Trump's on the phone with Putin even as we speak, I think, to try to sort this mess out in Ukraine. | ||
These are not random. | ||
It's all inextricably linked, and it's all inextricably linked back to a stolen election with a total fraud. | ||
And the Predatorian Guard protected it the entire way. | ||
His incompetence, his dementia, his beginning Alzheimer's, his cancer. | ||
And they had the gall to try to run him again. | ||
And guess what they're going to do this month? | ||
Oh, they got cancer. | ||
Kamala Harris is your president for the next four years. | ||
She couldn't win on her own. | ||
No, David Oxfair, we're not going to mute this. | ||
We're not going to step down. | ||
We're going to ratchet it up. | ||
We need and demand a formal investigation. | ||
Go to Walter Reed and seize the records right now. | ||
Go to the White House physician's office down there on the first floor. | ||
Seize the record so they can't, you know, lose them. | ||
Like they somehow find out they lose everything. | ||
We've got to put the hammer down on this. | ||
For the good, if we're ever to be a constitutional republic again, it's got to start here. | ||
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
Pray for our enemies. | ||
unidentified
|
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 lie? | ||
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. Vance. | ||
Tuesday, 20 May, Year of the Lord 2025. | ||
Thanks for sticking around for the second hour of our late afternoon, early evening edition of the War Room. | ||
The president brought it up today when he was on Capitol Hill for an historic visit on the budget. | ||
He got off on this, too, because you can tell it's bugging him and it should bug him. | ||
We've invited Dr. Jeff Coiler in. | ||
Doctor, just walk through the basics. | ||
This is your area of specialty. | ||
Walk through the basics. | ||
Exactly what has been revealed. | ||
Before we talk about a cover-up and, you know, who knew what when, just what has been revealed about the condition of Joe Biden? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
I want to wish President Biden well. | ||
We all want that. | ||
But let's talk about the facts as they're telling us and not telling us. | ||
I went through my own prostate cancer experience. | ||
I'm a surgeon here in Kansas. | ||
And three years ago, I had prostate cancer. | ||
And I started hearing some of the same things that you're hearing now in the news media, and many of which are dated ideas and things that are so out of sync on this. | ||
When I look at this, it is really shocking to me that the person who is at the time was the most important person on the planet as president of the United States, he was getting shoddy medical care. | ||
So let's walk through the data. | ||
I actually went back and looked at all of President Trump's medical records, President Biden's medical records that they released, and even President Obama's. | ||
And under President Obama and President Trump, They all mentioned, they did, they all mentioned an exam for a genitourinary exam, which was normal, and they also showed their PSA. | ||
When you go back and you look at the Biden reports, A, there's no lab report on his PSA, and B, they don't report on his genitourinary tract system, which is a common tract system, particularly for elderly men. | ||
In America, there's actually a number of studies that are done that looked at men between the ages of 70 and 79. And they looked at the cadavers of them. | ||
And when you do those, about a third of all men have prostate cancer when they're in their 70s. | ||
That's one out of three. | ||
And, you know, this year... | ||
There will be about 335,000 Americans diagnosed with prostate cancer. | ||
About 35,000 will die. | ||
Very rarely do you get what's called a synchronous diagnosis, where you're diagnosed with prostate cancer as well as the bone metastasis at the time. | ||
In order for that to happen, it's had to have been there. | ||
For years. | ||
In many ways, it could be a decade. | ||
In many ways, it could be a short period of time. | ||
Slow down. | ||
Slow down, because I'm not a doctor, and I don't play one here in the show. | ||
Just hit rewind on that again. | ||
Give me that one more time, so I understand it. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
So, when you have prostate cancer, for starters, about one out of three men in their 70s have prostate cancer. | ||
One out of three. | ||
Okay? | ||
Now, not all of them are sick enough that it's causing problems. | ||
But that's the number. | ||
And so when you go and you look at this, you can see, you know, we really need to look after the most important person on the planet. | ||
And we got to make sure that they have the best medical care. | ||
And I went back and reviewed President Obama's and President Trump's reports from their doctors. | ||
And A, they always showed what the PSA was, which was all a very low, normal number. | ||
And B, they said... | ||
They completed a gentle urinary exam, which is how you would find a nodule on the prostate. | ||
When you look at all of Biden reports, none of those are reported. | ||
And that is a common thing that we would do with every patient. | ||
So what is the two things you're saying? | ||
After that, you said the two things are happening. | ||
We continue on? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So it is very rare for you to be diagnosed with prostate cancer. | ||
And a metastasis, where it has spread to the bone, is highly unusual to do that, maybe 5% of the time. | ||
And usually when you see that, it is somebody who has been outside of the medical system for a decade or so, and they present with bone pain or something like that. | ||
So to me, it is outrageous that the President of the United States, which one out of three men in his age group have prostate cancer, That they don't do a simple physical exam and they don't report the lapse on it. | ||
But how can any competent doctor, if Walter Reed or the White House medical are doing it for Obama standard, doing it for Trump standard on a yearly, on an annual physical, how do they, it sounds like one of the basic check blocks you've got to do, particularly if you're over 70 and this guy's over 80. How is that not done? | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe there were some confusing guidelines years ago. | |
So in 2008, there was a guideline that said, no, you don't have to check people over 70 because they'll probably die of something else on that. | ||
Then they repeated that report in 2012. | ||
In 2018, under the Trump administration, they found out, like, hold it, we're getting all of these people presenting with prostate cancer that's spread to the bone. | ||
So they changed the recommendations when all of these people were shifted and having, you know, higher problems. | ||
And so the standard of care, particularly for the president of the United States, should be that he gets a PSA every single year. | ||
What is, correct me if I'm wrong, I mean, I don't remember the media. | ||
This is all presented to the public, and you have guys all over Trump all the time about, oh, he's overweight, and he misreports his weight. | ||
How was this missed? | ||
I don't remember anything at the time, and we cover the Biden illegitimate regime, White House, pretty closely. | ||
I don't remember anybody coming out and saying, hey, he didn't have a PSA, and he didn't have a genital urinary tract inspection or report. | ||
I don't remember anybody saying that. | ||
How could that be missed by the mainstream medical media that follows these things? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, I have to ask the same question there. | |
I mean, they were actually doing very obscure lab tests, like they report his homocysteine level, which is related to your vitamin status, his B12 status, things like that. | ||
They were testing for those things, but not for something that happens in one out of three men over the age of seven. | ||
The other thing that is interesting is they've reported to us the Gleason score on it, and they said it was a Gleason score of 9. Now, he really needs modern-day medical care. | ||
If you go and look at the studies, several years ago, there was a major study done that says that the Gleason score, if another pathologist goes and looks at it, 51% of the time, That Gleason score is wrong. | ||
So it's a coin flip of whether that Gleason score was correct or incorrect. | ||
In the modern world now, what we do, what I had when I had my prostate cancer, is they will do a genomic test on the biopsy sample, and then if he has surgery, then on his whole prostate. | ||
And it's those genomic tests that really guide you as to how aggressive this is, and it's the genomic test that tells you, Here's what the best treatment is for the president. | ||
So what is that? | ||
You're saying even in this aspect, it doesn't look like he was getting modern medical treatment? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm worried about that. | |
I hope they did send it off. | ||
However, it usually takes about two or three weeks to get the decipher test back. | ||
It's done at a central lab, and it has some longer processes. | ||
So that usually takes a couple of weeks in order to do that. | ||
And, you know, we hope that they're actually doing those tests. | ||
They should have also done, they've also probably done a PSMA MRI scan, which is where they would have seen his bony metastasis, wherever they were, and releasing the report of where those were. | ||
Would be appropriate for this. | ||
Let me ask you, his doctor, I think it's O 'Connor, the doctor's a homeopath, correct? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know his history, unfortunately. | |
I think he's a homeopath. | ||
Let's assume for purposes of discussion, maybe he's not, but I think he's a homeopath. | ||
Would that mean anything versus a more traditional medical doctor? | ||
I know a lot of people use homeopaths, but would that do anything about these screenings or tests or what their philosophy is? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, you would think that he would have access to all of the best care and the basic standards. | |
Testing for prostate cancer is an incredibly common thing. | ||
You know, and doing that on the person that's the President of the United States, that would be absolutely common. | ||
Now, there is actually another question there that nobody's talking about is, okay, maybe this is malpractice or bad treatment, or maybe they actually knew that he had prostate cancer. | ||
Sometimes... | ||
People with prostate cancer, older people, they will do what's called watchful waiting. | ||
And they will test them every year or something like that. | ||
And I've even seen patients, you know, where they have actually gone and treated them with ADT rather than surgery just to slow it down because they thought that their life would only be... | ||
Three or four more years or something like that. | ||
And going through a major medical procedure or radiation would be too much. | ||
We don't know what we don't know about this. | ||
This could either be... | ||
Are there physical, given the state it was in, is there physical attributes to this that Biden and Jill Biden, Dr. Jill Biden... | ||
Should have noticed, even if they skipped the test or didn't have the test or didn't want to have the test? | ||
Are there certain things physically that you just can't get away from? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
So a couple of things would happen. | ||
You can't pee unless it takes a hard time to get it started or the flow is very low on that or you stop early. | ||
The other thing that's really common... | ||
...is that you wake up several times a night in order to go to the bathroom. | ||
And if you go and you look at Biden's last report, he reports that they had to do a sleep study on him and he couldn't sleep through the night because he had sleep apnea. | ||
So they put in an airway for him in order to help him sleep at night. | ||
But he could also have been getting up several times at night to go to the bathroom. | ||
And when you do that... | ||
It means your prostate is enlarged and it's impinging on the flow afterwards. | ||
So this is something, you know, that is very common in seniors and, you know, it's something that his doctor should have noted. | ||
What do you think ought to be done now? | ||
Besides his treatment, his treatment's a personal thing, etc. | ||
But you clearly have a, and you've heard the herd tape. | ||
Where hers is like acting like an intern or a resident at a hospital for the elderly helping him through. | ||
What is your recommendation that has to be done here to make sure that we get to the bottom of what people knew and when they knew it? | ||
Because we can't let this happen again to someone who's got the nuclear codes. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, there's one other aspect of this, which is... | |
They're recommending to the patient that he have ADT. | ||
And if you go and you look at the literature, there's a German study that says that 62% of people who get ADT have more neurocognitive effects. | ||
I hope that he was getting ADT to cover up this. | ||
I don't know that. | ||
But if he does get ADT, it has a high probability, 62%. | ||
Of having more neurocognitive effects on him. | ||
And so, you know, as we're looking forward, as we're piecing this together here, we don't know what has been covered up and the interlinking things here, but I'm very concerned about them. | ||
Do you think there has to be a formal inquiry? | ||
unidentified
|
I think this was the President of the United States, and I think definitely Congress needs to say, why didn't you test the president for cancer? | |
Why didn't you test and tell us about his cognitive decline? | ||
When you see these things happening, people lose faith in the medical system. | ||
If the person that is the most visible person in the country, if they're not getting good medical care on that, Something's wrong. | ||
But this is the point. | ||
Given everything that came out of the pandemic and all the questioning we have about public health officials and everything to do with masking and Fauci and all the lies and misrepresentation, this, I think, is not as big a hit as that, but it's a pretty big hit on the medical profession. | ||
What is your profession? | ||
I mean, when you talk to your fellow surgeons and other doctors, are people outraged that this stuff is happening? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, absolutely. | |
I've spoken to many of the doctors, the prostate cancer, both surgeons and oncologists, about this, and they can't believe that the president presented with a metastatic, you know, prostate cancer. | ||
That's not something that happens in 2025. | ||
So, you know, people are outraged, and they should be with this. | ||
You know, I hope this isn't the same care that other people are getting. | ||
You know, if you even remember, the President's Secretary of Defense, President Biden's Secretary of Defense, came down with prostate cancer and didn't tell anybody when he had a complication and went back into Walter Reed. | ||
And they tried to cover that up, you know, with it as well. | ||
So, you know, there's a very disturbing pattern that's happening here. | ||
Doctor, are you on social media? | ||
Can people follow you? | ||
Because we're going to continue to update this story. | ||
There's a lot, I can tell you, that's going on in Capitol Hill right now and other places about getting to the bottom of this. | ||
There's a very high priority for the current resident of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. | ||
Are you on social media? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure, sure. | |
You can find us at Dr. Jeff Collier on X. Let's say, Grace and Mo, let's make sure we get that up in the chats. | ||
Doctor, thank you very much. | ||
I look forward to getting more updates from you on this. | ||
unidentified
|
Great. | |
Hey, Steve, you know, actually, I just thought we'll try to post, I'm going to try to post all of the reports from President Biden and President Trump, and maybe one of President Obama's medical reports, and you can see for yourself. | ||
That'd be terrific. | ||
And where is that? | ||
That's going to be posted. | ||
Can you give the X handle again so people know? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Dr. Jeff Collier, and that's spelled C-O-L-Y-E-R. | ||
Dr. Collier, thank you very much. | ||
Collier. | ||
unidentified
|
Great. | |
Great to see you again, Steve. | ||
It'll be up sometime this evening to get the reports up, and then you can look at them. | ||
Pretty shocking. | ||
More shocking today, up on Capitol Hill, Mark Green, and we were in a commercial break when the Republicans went to the sticks. | ||
They had other, you know, Jordan and other committee chairmen speak. | ||
We kind of only got the tail end of Mark Green, but the beginning of his was pretty blockbuster. | ||
Let's go ahead and play Mark Green. | ||
We're going to bring in Chris Russo for Texans for Strong Borders. | ||
unidentified
|
Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, and Alejandro Mayorkas' reckless disregard for the rule of law created an historic border crisis. | |
Under the Biden and Harris administration, 13 million inadmissible aliens poured into our country, overwhelming Border Patrol and CBP officers, wasting billions of taxpayer dollars and, of course, throwing many of our communities into chaos. | ||
Illegal gang activity, influx of fentanyl. | ||
You've heard us talk about it before. | ||
I saw an article the other day from one of you guys. | ||
60% decrease in the murder rate in one city where ICE had removed the gang members. | ||
After four years, the American people were sick of it. | ||
They're tired of it. | ||
And of course, they gave Republicans the trifecta because we put them first. | ||
As of April... | ||
Southwest border encounters were down over 90%, and that's down from the lowest point in the previous administration. | ||
And that lowest point happened not because of anything that the Biden administration had done. | ||
That lowest point happened because of what Texas did with Operation Lone Star. | ||
But even from that point, it's down 90% in April. | ||
the best numbers we've had ever in the history of this country, and that's because of the actions of this president, who delivered on his promise to secure the border and enforce our Okay, Chris Russo joins us. | ||
Texans for Strong Borders. | ||
They mentioned Operation Lone Star there. | ||
The shocking number was 13 million. | ||
Now, this is official. | ||
This is Mark Green, the head of the Homeland Security Committee of the House. | ||
He's the chairman. | ||
13 million. | ||
He gives a kudos to Operation Lone Star. | ||
Was that a successful operation? | ||
We covered it pretty closely. | ||
I don't remember it that way, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
It's good to be with you, Steve. | |
In my opinion, Operation Lone Star... | ||
And those numbers started to dip when the Biden administration started funneling inadmissible aliens through ports of entry, through things like the CHNV program and other humanitarian parole schemes and the CBP-1 app. | ||
And so what I would say... | ||
The other thing is that the Biden administration, and I believe Todd Benzman at the Center for Immigration Studies reported on this, entered into negotiations with the government of Mexico in order to stem the flow during an election year so that the Biden administration would look better. | ||
So as far as the effectiveness of Operation Lone Star, it's hard to parse out which had more effect, but I really don't think that it was as effective as a lot of people are claiming. | ||
So, given what President Trump has kind of temporarily sealed the border with action, they're now going to build the wall. | ||
You have ICE, you know, waiting for the $170 billion to do the mass deportations. | ||
Where do we stand, and particularly Texas? | ||
What's always shocked me is that Abbott and the business community down there have always been very soft on the border. | ||
Like, it wasn't a big deal for them to seal it. | ||
Where do we stand right now? | ||
unidentified
|
So right now in the Texas legislature, the deadline for House bills... | |
Passed last Thursday, and basically all of our priority legislation at Texans for Strong Borders died with that deadline. | ||
But there are still Senate bills alive, and there are three of them in particular that I want to highlight for you, that if passed, and they are in danger of not passing, but if passed would be a huge win for securing the border and protecting American workers. | ||
The biggest one of those is going to be Senate Bill 8, which is a 287G program. | ||
And for your listeners who aren't familiar, the ICE 287G program is a delegation of immigration authority from the federal government, from ICE, to local law enforcement. | ||
And so what this bill would do as written... | ||
Hang on for a second. | ||
What we're going to do is take a break. | ||
I want to come back, give you plenty of runway on this. | ||
Because the great state of Texas, something ain't right down there. | ||
Trump won by 14 points because of the grassroots and the MAGA grassroots and, you know, on these deportations. | ||
Everybody's got to go home. | ||
Texas has got to be sorted out. | ||
Too important a state. | ||
People have done too much work down there. | ||
We're going to get to the bottom of it with Chris Russo, Texans for Strong Borders. | ||
We're going to take a short break. | ||
I think, you know, folks, now more than ever, Need to know about gold as an alternative, as a hedge? | ||
Best way to do it as a starter, take your phone out, text BANNN at 989898. | ||
You get to Birch Gold. | ||
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We also have the great, we followed... | ||
The situation with the dollars of prime reserve currency in Rio in July, on July 6th, I think it is, is going to be the Rio meeting to do a Rio reset to start to break away, have the BRICS nations break away from the dollar. | ||
Check it out. | ||
birchgold.com slash band at the end of the dollar empire the seventh free installment war room here's your host stephen k man *Dramatic music* Okay, well, I've got her. | ||
I want to get her in here. | ||
Catherine O 'Neill from Mary Worth Farms. | ||
And the great state of Wyoming, Georgia, is why we're talking about Texas. | ||
And every now and again, she gives Texas stink eye. | ||
You grow them steers better up there in that beautiful grass of Wyoming, more so than the historical home of the Longhorns down in Texas. | ||
Why is that, ma 'am? | ||
unidentified
|
So we don't get as much rain up in Wyoming. | |
So the grass grows a lot slower, and so it's therefore more nutrient-dense. | ||
So we actually ship grass, alfalfa, to Texas. | ||
There's a farm next door to us that ships alfalfa down to Texas and Arizona. | ||
Hold it. | ||
You get less rain in Wyoming of the part you're at Meriwether Farms? | ||
Is that than they do in Texas? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, in some parts, absolutely. | |
It's a pretty dry state up here. | ||
Wow. | ||
And so you guys actually ship—what do you ship down to Texas for folks? | ||
unidentified
|
Alfalfa. | |
We grow alfalfa up here in Wyoming, and it's shipped down south and all around the country. | ||
I mean, I have a friend that's an alfalfa broker, and that's what he does. | ||
He ships western alfalfa all around the country. | ||
Alfalfa grown in the West. | ||
Tell me about the beef. | ||
You've seen the White House. | ||
Catherine was in the State Department. | ||
She was at the White House during the campaign. | ||
I think she's the only person who's been double-hatted in 16 and 20. The business is on fire. | ||
People are so complimentary. | ||
They talk to me about the beef that you grow and all the special you got. | ||
What do you got for us today? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, absolutely, Steve. | |
I've talked about these before, but these are our single-serve beef sticks. | ||
We have an original flavor. | ||
This is a jalapeno, an original flavor. | ||
These are amazing. | ||
I'm actually headed to the gym after this, and I'm going to eat one of these before I hit the gym. | ||
It's nine grams of protein, all natural, no weirdness, you know, no weird preservatives. | ||
unidentified
|
And so we're offering 20% off today. | |
War Room 20 promo code. | ||
For all-natural beef sticks. | ||
And, you know, as you know, these things fly off the shelves, so you better order now to get them. | ||
War Room 20 is the promo code to get 20% off these all-natural beef sticks. | ||
By the way, they're amazing. | ||
For our audience that may not know, that may not, you know, drive the highways and go to the gas stations, what's a beef stick? | ||
unidentified
|
So you've probably heard of a Slim Jim or the company Jack Links, which makes them. | |
So it's just a cured, smoked stick of beef. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
So you see here, and it's shelf-stable, and so it can last up to 90 days in the fridge. | ||
So it's just a great way to get a burst of protein throughout the day. | ||
On the go, I mean, like I said, I'm headed to the gym, so it's great for active people. | ||
It's great for kids running around if you want a healthy snack on the go. | ||
Because a lot of these other beef sticks have weird preservatives and additives in them, and ours is extremely clean. | ||
And as you know, all of our beef, we don't add any hormones or antibiotics or mRNA, so it's a really clean product. | ||
Clean eating. | ||
One more time, where do they go, Catherine, to see all your products, but particularly this today, since you got a special? | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
So, meriwetherfarms.com, and you'll see these all-natural beef sticks right on the homepage, and you use the promo code WARROOM20 to get 20% off your first order of beef sticks. | ||
Thank you, ma 'am. | ||
Appreciate you. | ||
Keep fighting. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks so much, Steve. | |
A true MAGA fighter, now an entrepreneur. | ||
Love it. | ||
Like Tasia Gill. | ||
Like Comstock. | ||
These people are fantastic. | ||
Start these companies and grow them. | ||
Hire people. | ||
Chris Russo. | ||
Go back. | ||
I want to explain what this thing is. | ||
It sounds technical, but it's very important that people understand. | ||
This is how, in other words, for us to be able to start to deport people en masse to really get it done. | ||
In Texas, people should understand. | ||
Texas and Arizona. | ||
You got them all over the country. | ||
13 million. | ||
That's according to Mark Green. | ||
I was always at 10, but Mark Green says 13 on Biden's watch. | ||
It's 13. A big, big, big bulk of these are down in the great state of Texas and places like Colony and these other areas. | ||
So what does this do about getting law enforcement and interior law enforcement working together? | ||
unidentified
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So the 287G program under ICE basically allows local law enforcement to sign up and sign an agreement with ICE to act as a force multiplier, whether in their jail system or in a task force model, which is they can run immigration checks in the course of their everyday police work. | |
And so we don't have enough ICE agents right now to fully deliver on mass deportations. | ||
Requiring these agencies to enter into these types of agreements would be extremely helpful. | ||
And that's the aim of Senate Bill 8, which is a bill that passed the Texas Senate and... | ||
probably needs to be amended to make it stronger. | ||
So right now, it would only require sheriffs in counties over 100,000 population to enter into an agreement with ICE. | ||
And that would exclude a lot of the hotspots that we had on the border. | ||
Think places like Maverick County with Eagle Pass, Valverde County with Del Rio, et cetera. | ||
And a lot of the outlying counties around our major metros. | ||
And so what we're trying to do is get this bill amended when it hits the floor of the Texas House to where the final product will be something that will really help the Trump administration with mass deportations in the state of Texas. | ||
Do you need to have this codified in legislation? | ||
I mean, can't the governor or the lieutenant governor, can't you just kind of put an equivalent of an executive order and have all the local law enforcement work with federal officials to make sure you get this? | ||
Do you have to go through the whole process of actually having a bill or law? | ||
unidentified
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I'm not certain that the governor actually could do that via executive order, but certainly where we are, we're right at the cusp of passing this into law. | |
And the biggest problem has been the funding. | ||
So the sheriffs have been... | ||
Pretty widely supportive, at least in Republican jurisdictions, of this legislation. | ||
You know, the Texas Sheriff's Association is in favor of it. | ||
But they're always worried about the amount of money that's going to be spent here. | ||
And so there's a grant program in the bill. | ||
We're hopeful that that would defray some of the costs. | ||
But hold on, they're not worried about money. | ||
unidentified
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Hang on, hang on. | |
We have these House guys on all the time. | ||
The Texas House and Senate are not concerned about money they're spending on other boondoggles. | ||
This is essential to the safety, territorial integrity. | ||
I mean, why is there even a group called Texans for Strong Borders? | ||
You would assume that every Texan is for a strong border, particularly Republicans. | ||
Why do you even have to have a group? | ||
What is wrong with the establishment down there? | ||
unidentified
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Well, like you highlighted at the beginning of the segment, there is a major business and agricultural lobby that is dependent on cheap foreign labor. | |
Especially behind the scenes, but sometimes even openly. | ||
They will lobby against legislation to, for example, institute mandatory e-verify. | ||
There are people who will lobby behind the scenes against stuff like this 287G bill. | ||
There's another bill that we're trying to push to eliminate in-state tuition for illegal aliens, which we have in Texas and have had since 2001. | ||
And there are all kinds of lobbies that have come out from the universities, but even business lobbies that have come out against repealing in-state tuition for illegal aliens. | ||
And so my group exists to be the counterbalance for the grassroots to try and get these policies across the finish line despite all of that. | ||
Overwhelming opposition from the lobbies that are normally pretty friendly to Republicans. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Where do we stand with everything else? | ||
I mean, is Texas, if the, when the big beautiful bills passed and the $170 billion or $90 billion and the logistics are set up, are they going to have the political stomach down in Texas? | ||
Not federal officials, but Texans. | ||
Lena with Abbott and all that Bush Hunter crowd to actually have the political will to get all the illegal aliens who came in on Biden's watch out of the state and back to their home countries. | ||
unidentified
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So my objective is to clear the runway of any excuse to not do the job. | |
And so... | ||
What we're trying to do is get maximum legislation passed, give the governor all the tools in the toolbox he could possibly need to where there is no excuse for not doing the job. | ||
And so what I would say is that it's very, very important that ICE be funded with all the resources. | ||
But making... | ||
All of the sheriff's departments around the state sign up and enter into an agreement with ICE to be a force multiplier is going to be vital. | ||
To mass deportation efforts. | ||
Trying to get an e-verify bill that's currently stuck in Representative Ken King's State Affairs Committee across the finish line is going to be vital to interior enforcement. | ||
Because we've seen in other states it's resulted in a huge drop in illegal labor. | ||
And so what I would say is that in the week that we have left to pass bills in the state of Texas, your listeners need to be on their state reps and their state senators and tell them, hey, we've got to pass. | ||
Senate Bill 8, this 287G bill. | ||
We've got to pass Senate Bill 324, the universally verified bill. | ||
And we've got to pass Senate Bill 1798, repealing... | ||
in-state tuition for illegal aliens. | ||
If we can get those three things, then we'll have a lot of ground that we've covered. | ||
Otherwise, we're going to be stuck in the same situation that we have been. | ||
And what I'm worried about is when the crossings start to creep up, are we going to be prepared? | ||
Yep. | ||
unidentified
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it. | |
Unbelievable. | ||
Where do people go? | ||
Do you have basically scripts they can read? | ||
Do you have things they can call? | ||
If you go to your site, do you have material they can actually get familiar with these different bills and then call and be more informed? | ||
unidentified
|
So you can go to our website, strongborders.org, and you can click on our 2025 legislative priorities. | |
And that has a list of our 10 legislative priorities for this session. | ||
And we have the bill numbers with each of those priorities that we're pursuing. | ||
And so you can see the Senate bills are going to be the ones that are still alive. | ||
You can also follow us on X at Strongboard. | ||
Okay, great. | ||
We'll check back in. | ||
They have a week. | ||
The Texas Assembly ends, what, this week or it ends in the middle of next week? | ||
unidentified
|
So the last day for the Texas House to pass Senate bills is on May the 27th. | |
Okay, so it's in, I guess it's next, what's next Tuesday? | ||
Wednesday? | ||
unidentified
|
Next Tuesday, that's right. | |
Tuesday, after Memorial Day weekend, taking it down to the wire. | ||
Chris Russo, thank you very much. | ||
One more time, where do people go? | ||
unidentified
|
Strongborders.org or on X at StrongBordersTX. | |
Thank you, sir. | ||
Appreciate you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
In Texas, you're still paying for in-state tuition for illegal aliens. | ||
Suck on that for a second. | ||
How does that make you feel? | ||
All the hard work you've done. | ||
They've got to get a bill to get the sheriffs, the resources, and the bandwidth to work together. | ||
I mean, this is mind-boggling. | ||
You got to do it, but it's mind-boggling. | ||
It's still being fought. | ||
Still being fought. | ||
The E-Verify. | ||
E-Verify would drop it dramatically. | ||
They hate E-Verify. | ||
Hate it. | ||
That's because it goes in automatically and shows who the illegal aliens are. | ||
Even that can be worked around. | ||
It's not perfect, but it's pretty damn good. | ||
I keep saying this is why I'd like to see more ICE raids, Kristi Noem, at businesses. | ||
And let's perp walk out a couple of CEOs and COOs. | ||
That know that they're hiring these people illegally. | ||
That's the magnet. | ||
If you want to stop, you got to stop it. | ||
You got to stop it. | ||
You give people fair warning. | ||
You can't do this. | ||
You know, on the legislation they put in after the meltdown of the stock market back in the early 2000s from the internet stocks, Sarbanes-Oxley, I think it is, they put Sarbanes-Oxley in. | ||
The CFO and the CEO now got to sign off on the financials under criminal penalty. | ||
Because back in the early days of the Internet, there were people putting up stuff that just wasn't even close to being true. | ||
And a lot of these companies were just air and they collapsed. | ||
And pension funds and folks' retirement savings got zeroed out and people outraged. | ||
So you had a lot of legislation. | ||
Maybe some of it was over legislation. | ||
But one of the key parts was it put CFOs and CEOs on the hook. | ||
I think for civil and criminal penalties, and things got sorted out. | ||
I've always said on this, they got to do that. | ||
The same thing for the illegal alien hiring. | ||
And you get three shots. | ||
First time, okay, you get a little penalty. | ||
You get, hey, you can't do that again. | ||
Second time, you get some penalty. | ||
But third time, yo, maybe you got some criminal activity here because you're basically enticing criminals who are illegal aliens to come in and work and take American jobs. | ||
And they say, oh, well, Steve, people don't want those jobs. | ||
Well, hey, let's get the wages right and we'll see. | ||
If that's the case, then people can work out appropriate programs to work with that. | ||
But right now it's just chaos. | ||
It's all stacked from the H-1Bs to this. | ||
Think about this. | ||
Chris Roos and these people have a thing, and this was recommended by Todd Benzman and so many people. | ||
Hey, you've got to get these guys on. | ||
You're in the closing days of the Texas legislature. | ||
And this Texas legislature is a disaster. | ||
They stacked up all these Democrat bills the other day. | ||
And right now you're coming down on Memorial Day weekend and they're around for one day after that. | ||
And you got, what, the E-Verify, the 287G to get the sheriffs to work with the ICE agents. | ||
And you're still paying in-state tuition? | ||
That's an affront to every citizen in Texas, hard-working citizen. | ||
It's outrageous. | ||
But look, this is the fight you're going to have. | ||
The established order in this country is again the citizens and again the republic. | ||
They want to grab with both hands and have you pay for it. | ||
Insult to injury. | ||
That's what I keep saying. | ||
It's not even a question of the quality of the company. | ||
Patriot Mobile and Glenn Story. | ||
If we didn't have Glenn Story and that team and these great patriots down in Tarrant County and Denton and all these places, who the hell knows where Texas would be? | ||
These people fought a long, tough fight against Soros. | ||
Soros put big dollars, hundreds of millions of dollars, hundreds of millions of dollars, turned Texas purple and then blue. | ||
Because as goes Texas, so goes the nation. | ||
That's just the way it is. | ||
And the Texans got a way they roll. | ||
They're very proud of their state. | ||
They got their own kind of individualism. | ||
We're Texans, right? | ||
But that's just the way it is. | ||
As Texas goes, so goes the nation. | ||
And they beat back Soros. | ||
They beat back Soros. | ||
Grassroots. | ||
The Bush Hunter didn't do it. | ||
Bush Hunter kind of rubbed up on them and partnered with them. | ||
This is fiasco down the Texas house right now. | ||
And I realize in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Nebraska, Colorado, Arizona, I can go around. | ||
The great patriots in the precinct strategy. | ||
It's been a fight. | ||
It's a struggle. | ||
It's always a fight. | ||
But in Texas, it's outrageous. | ||
In Texas, you deserve the victory. | ||
Trump won by 14 points. | ||
Hell, Ted Cruz won by 9. This was all, you know, it's going to be in play for Trump. | ||
Ted Cruz is going to get beaten. | ||
And Ted Cruz had a couple of closer races. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
Patriot Mobile 972 Patriot. | ||
It's not a question of the service. | ||
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And all the different aspects you can get. | ||
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Call right now. | ||
Talk to an American citizen at their call center. | ||
Go to patriotmobile.com slash band. | ||
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But just go. | ||
Go to the site. | ||
Talk to their customer rep. | ||
Find out all the different aspects. | ||
One of the reasons that they're doing so great down in Texas are fighting and winning these big battles. | ||
Although the established orders against you is because of patriots like the Patriot mobile crowd. | ||
Glenn's story is kind of a legendary figure. | ||
He's there all the time and he's down for a fight. | ||
He's pure MAGA. | ||
That down for a fight. | ||
And the team around him down there. | ||
It's very inspirational. | ||
Very inspirational. | ||
I realize you guys over the last couple days and this is what's going to come to a head. | ||
It's capital markets. | ||
Geopolitics. | ||
I mean, President Trump's trying to solve the Third World War. | ||
If you like this stuff, and we try to specialize this in the war room to make sure you, the backbone of the country, have just as sophisticated briefings as people on Capitol Hill or in the agencies, hell, over at the White House. | ||
A lot of the stuff we put up here is much better than the briefings. | ||
I get the presidential daily brief every day in my own brief. | ||
From the CIA on topics I want to talk about. | ||
I'll be blunt. | ||
I ain't missing it that much on quality of information. | ||
What you get here, we go our way to make sure you get a C-suite brief every day, like your chairman or CEO. | ||
Like I was trained to do at Harvard and really at the Pentagon, Harvard, Georgetown, and Goldman Sachs, to be able to brief senior people and get it to them quickly, concisely, so that they could make decisions. | ||
Because you've got to make decisions. | ||
We understand that. | ||
That's why we have guys like Jim Rickards on here as a contributor. | ||
And we offer up RickardsWarRoom.com, the own landing page just for you guys, and you get access to strategic intelligence. | ||
And if this is one of the things that excites you about this, it's a fantastic newsletter. | ||
It kind of reinforces and goes into more depth sometimes than we go into. | ||
And he throws in a free buck, Money GPT, which is artificial intelligence in currency. | ||
And Jim, I came to know Jim years ago when he wrote Currency Wars. | ||
This guy's been everywhere. | ||
A very, very important guy and very impressive guy. | ||
Last but not least, we need you at the ramparts. | ||
We don't need you worried about, you know, somebody taking your mortgage. | ||
This is a big deal. | ||
Because you've got AI, you've got cyber, now you've got rogue attorneys, accountants, I don't know, maybe a family member. | ||
I'm not in your personal business, but you know this. | ||
This happens all the time now. | ||
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Promo code STEVE to keep it simple. | ||
10 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time tomorrow morning. |