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May 26, 2025 - Bannon's War Room
01:19:41
Episode 4514: WarRoom Memorial Day Special 2025 Cont.
Participants
Main voices
d
donald j trump
15:31
j
jd vance
06:50
p
pete hegseth
05:35
s
steve bannon
06:17
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Speaker Time Text
steve bannon
We are awaiting the President.
The President is on the grounds of Arlington National Cemetery.
Momentarily, he will come to the Tomb of the Unknown.
There's some activity of people getting in place.
The President will then lay a wreath in commemoration of all of the fallen in all the wars as commemorated in.
by the tune with the unknown soldier, known but to God, is what the inscription says.
unidentified
One, one, one, one, one.
Left turn.
Present.
Present.
One, one.
One, one.
procrastinate
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I'm going to make a little bit more I'm going to make a little bit more Right shoulder, air!
Right shoulder, air!
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Portstaw announce Potatobourne Taddy
I I Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Advance the colors.
Forward march.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
This truth is marching on.
I would see him in the watch fires of the heart that surf in camps.
They have built in him an alternate the evening tunes and dance.
I complete his righteous sentencing, but till the prayer he danced, This day is marching on.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
This truth is marching on.
I will be the last night.
In the beauty of the lilies, Christ was born across the sea.
With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me.
As he died to make men holy, let us live to make men free, while God is free.
While God is marching on.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
This truth is marching on.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
This truth is marching on.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
This truth is marching on.
Amen.
to this marching line.
Amen.
Thank you.
Amen.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, please stand for the arrival of the official party and remain standing for the invocation and the national anthem.
The final anthem is a very important part of the party and the national anthem.
Ladies and gentlemen, The 45th and the 47th President of the United States, Donald J. Trump, accompanied by the Vice President, the Secretary of Defense, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
class.
Ladies and gentlemen, Chaplain Colonel James D. Key, Command Chaplain, Joint Task Force National Capital Region and the U.S. Army Military District of Washington.
Let us pray.
Dear God, as we gather here on Memorial Day at Arlington National Cemetery, we pause to remember and honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice in service to our great nation.
Today our hearts overflow with Deep appreciation for the men and women who selflessly place themselves in harm's way to safeguard the freedoms we hold so dear.
Their courage, both seen and unseen, have shaped the fabric of our nation's history.
With each step they took, they paved the way for a future defined by liberty and opportunity.
And so, dear God, if you will allow us On this day, allow our heart to be full of gratitude, a gratitude that will echo through the heavens a chorus of adoration that spans generations.
Grant us the wisdom to not only recognize their commitment to service, but give us the capacity to live lives worthy of their efforts.
And finally, dear God, may we find a certain level of Please remain standing and
join the United States Marine Band and Staff Sergeant Hannah Davis in the singing of our national anthem.
Oh say can you see by the dawn's early light what so proudly re-hailed at the twilight's last
gleaming, whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight o'er the ramparts they watched were so gallantly streaming?
And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air, gave proof through the night that a flag was still there.
Oh say does that star-spangled banner yet wave o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Please be seated.
Ladies and gentlemen, General Dan Kane.
And most importantly, Gold Star families, welcome.
Welcome to this most hallowed ground on this most special day.
We gather here today under thankfully non-rainy skies that stretch over a free nation and among these beautiful white marble headstones in this special place that represents brave men and women who gave us the gift of a perfect example.
The gift of selfless sacrifice for something greater than themselves.
Since the founding of our great nation, over one million of our sons, daughters, fathers, mothers, husbands, wives, brothers, and sisters have donned the cloth of our nation and never come home.
Every one of them believed That defending our great nation when duty calls is a righteous and worthy cause.
And they were right.
It is.
Their perfect example brings us back to places etched in our warfighter memories.
Places with names like Valley Forge, Gettysburg, Normandy, Inchon, Coast, and Fallujah.
of the many places we've never heard of, on and under the sea, on land, and in the air, where incredible acts of valor and sacrifice were followed by a knock on a door.
It is in those families left to carry on whose loss forever lives on, in their hearts and in their memories, but also in the sustaining pride of being an American Gold Star family.
that we find incredible courage and strength.
Families with last names like Sather, Duthman, Gilbert, Brown, Barber, Henderson, Zembiek, Jones, Wheeler, Kent, and so many others like Horton.
It's in the lives of the fallen and their families that were left by a standard to live by – a charge for us all to keep, a charge to carry the torch forward with duty, courage, and love of country.
Their legacy is entrusted to us – the living.
It is our responsibility to carry that weight and to live in a way worthy of their sacrifice and to never forget what they did for us.
General George Patton once said it best on a day like today that such men lived.
I know I sure do.
Mr. President, Mr. Vice President, Mr. Secretary, ladies and gentlemen, thank you for being here on this Memorial Day to honor those we lost in the service of our nation and their families who carry on so bravely.
May we never forget our fallen and their families.
May we never forget our deployed forces and their families.
And it is now my sincere honor and privilege to introduce the 29th Secretary of Defense, a combat veteran himself who's knelt before battlefield crosses, who's seen up close the courage and sacrifice we're here to honor today, and who never ever forgets that the gifts given here are in defense of our great nation.
Ladies and gentlemen, the Honorable Pete Hegseth.
Raksa.
pete hegseth
Roxanne, President Trump, Vice President Vance, Chairman Cain, Gold Star families.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us today to remember our fallen warriors.
We gather here to honor our very best, gone in their youth.
To properly do so, we understand who they are and what they fought for.
It is our simple duty to them.
You know, throughout time, civilizations have honored the powerful, the well-connected, and the well-born.
Emperors and kings have built magnificent shrines to their own royal greatness.
Yet in America, with our great experiment in self-government, it is fitting that the most honored and closely guarded tomb in the land is that of an anonymous soldier of an unknown rank.
When the first unknown soldier was selected for burial in 1921, he laid in state at the Capitol Road.
Throngs of Americans paid their respects.
When the tomb was dedicated on November 11th, Veterans Day, the unknown received the Medal of Honor.
It's a uniquely American tradition that we honor anonymous sacrifice above worldly greatness.
While we don't know the unknown's identity, race, or creed, we know his story.
It's the story of every soldier, every warrior.
It's a simple story, as old as war.
A young man with hopes and dreams and loves, who's called by his country, leaves behind his hometown, his parents, his siblings, his sweetheart.
All that he knows.
To go fight a war that he may or may not understand.
He's called to go through hell and back.
To sleep in a trench.
To eat out of a tin cup or on the hood of a Humvee.
To pray as bullets and bombs thunder around him.
To fear for the bullet or the mortar or the IED or the RPG with his name on it.
He does it willingly.
And stoically, because he loves his country, his brothers in arms, and his family.
This is the story of the unknown.
The story of the fallen soldier who we have gathered today to honor.
It is the story of the American warrior.
He answered the call, fought, and died for this republic.
The ultimate sacrifice of a free people.
You see, the American soldier fights not because he hates What's in front of him, but because he loves what's behind him.
We honor his selfish sacrifice, his courage, his duty, and his love.
As Jesus taught his disciples, greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
This love is a gift given freely, and yet this gift comes with responsibility to those living.
We owe a duty to those who have fallen in war.
They have paid a debt we can never repay.
And for that, we owe gratitude and remembrance.
We owe at least this, to remember their sacrifice and honor their memory year after year, salute after salute, ceremony after ceremony, parade after parade, prayer after prayer, that by our remembrance, We keep lit the eternal flame of their heroic deeds in defense of our nation.
And we owe eternal vigilance.
Eternal vigilance, the price of freedom.
These men died for something.
The hope of a free, secure, and peaceful republic.
That is our inheritance, and we must steward it and hand it down to our kids and our grandkids.
We must live worthy of it.
These men dreamt of a future in which their children would not fear of attack.
No enemy could threaten their peace.
No war could require them to take up arms.
The duty we owe these men is peace, which only can be achieved through strength.
And because we strive for peace, we must prepare for war.
That's the job of the chairman and I and so many others at the Defense Department each and every day.
On behalf of those who've given so much, we will never be complacent.
We owe these men nothing less.
Our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.
So on this Memorial Day, in honor of the unknown soldiers and the known, let us rededicate ourselves to God and country.
To our great republic 249 years on, we stand on the shoulders of great men and on the shoulders of those great men in those graves, and may we live worthy of it.
Thank you.
God bless our warriors, and may God bless our fallen.
And amen.
Amen.
unidentified
Amen.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, the United States Marine Band with the United States Navy Band Sea Chanters will now perform This land is your land And Thank
you.
Thank you.
This land was made for you and me.
This land is your land.
This land is my land.
From California to the New York Island.
From the redwood forest to the cold stream waters.
This land was made for you and me.
I rolled and rambled and I followed my footsteps to the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts.
And all around me a voice was sounding.
This land was made for you and me.
When the sun came shining and I was shining and the wheat fields waiting and the dust clouds rolling as the fog was lifting our voice was singing this land was made for you and me.
was made for you and me.
This land is your land.
This land is my land.
From California to the New York Island, from the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters, this land was made for you and me.
Nobody living can ever stop me as I go walking that freedom highway.
Nobody living can make me turn back.
This land was made for you and me.
This land is your land.
This land is my land.
From California to the New York Island, from the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters, this land was made for you and me.
You and me.
You and me.
Ladies and gentlemen, Vice President J.D. Vance.
jd vance
Well, thank you, everyone.
Thank you to that incredible choir and band.
And thanks to General Kane and Secretary Hegseth for your powerful words.
Thank you, most importantly, for everything that you do for our nation's warfighters.
For those who have given their lives to this country, we remember you today.
And certainly to our Gold Star families who are so thrilled and so grateful to have you with us in attendance.
This is a sacred place, an eternal resting spot for our nation's sons and daughters.
We gather in solemn commemoration of their sacrifice.
And the sacrifice made by all those who gave up their lives in service to our beloved country.
In 1915, President Woodrow Wilson laid the cornerstone of the memorial amphitheater we gather in today.
Buried within it was a copper box, which contained mementos of profound significance to the amphitheater's designers and to our entire country.
There were four things: an American flag, A Bible, a copy of our Declaration of Independence, and a copy of the U.S. Constitution.
In the objects they chose to dedicate to posterity, those Americans remind us of the values we hold timeless and dear as a nation and as a people.
But those values didn't spring from any stonework or time capsule.
They were lived out day after day by the people buried in this hallowed cemetery.
Each life honored here in Arlington was once full of the ordinary moments and quiet dreams, of early sunrises, of good days and bad days, of celebrations and disappointments.
They stood not apart from us, but among us, ordinary men and women who chose to shoulder an impossible burden.
But the real tragedy of the loss is not in a single moment of suffering, as our Gold Star families know well, but in all the future moments, they and their families lost.
Every moment between Their sacrifice on the battlefield and what would have been a natural death.
Because we know they sacrifice not just their physical life.
They sacrifice the moments that make that life worthwhile.
They sacrifice the child's embrace.
They sacrifice walking their daughter down the aisle.
Of seeing their husband or wife after a big promotion of sharing a meal with the family at Thanksgiving.
For my fellow Americans, especially those watching on television, consider the sum of all the moments that make a good life.
And now appreciate that countless strangers, people most of you never met, they gave up those moments in their own life so that we could enjoy them in ours.
And that is what Memorial Day is all about.
I once heard a Marine Corps colonel that I served with, he said this in 2005, not long after a very tough deployment to Iraq.
He said this about his fallen men, that they were the best looking, they were the kindest, they were the smartest, they were the most devoted.
They were the very best of us.
To them, we owe everything.
And today, in the peace they bequeathed us, We honor them.
As the Book of Wisdom tells us, but the righteous one, though he die early, shall be at rest.
For the age that is honorable comes not with the passing of time, nor can it be measured in terms of years.
They laid down their lives for Americans they would never meet, for generations yet unborn, for a nation that would not exist.
Absent their incredible courage.
Now we know their families in particular have given so much.
And in particular, I want to speak to the Gold Star families, to the families who have lost a son, a daughter, a husband or a wife, to every child here who misses your dad or your mom.
Know that your loved one to us is a hero.
And though we cannot know your pain, please know that I speak for the entire nation when I say, That we are grateful to them and to you for a debt none of us can possibly repay.
Now, all of us will honor the fallen and their families in our own way.
But allow me to suggest two ways of honoring their sacrifice, two ways that I try to honor their sacrifice every day.
First, we ought to commit ourselves and expect from our leaders to treat the lives of our troops as the most The very best way to honor the fallen is to only ask the next generation to make the ultimate sacrifice when
they absolutely must.
We must be cautious in sending our people to war.
The second, The second way that I try to honor the fallen is to commit ourselves to being worthy of their sacrifice.
If you're a husband, be the best husband you can be.
If you're a mom, be the best mom that you can be.
If you're a citizen, be the very best citizen that you can be.
Because together, let us build a better country, a more perfect union, and strive to be the kind of nation Worthy of the sacrifice of the people that we honor today.
On this Memorial Day, let us remember that we have been given a great gift, often by people none of us ever met.
Let us cherish that gift and make ourselves worthy of it.
May God bless those who gave that gift and may he bless the country they sacrificed for.
unidentified
Thank you.
jd vance
And now, without further ado, let me please introduce your president, the people's president, the president who knows what these men and women, what they sacrifice for, and who honors them every single day in the job that he does,
unidentified
President Trump.
donald j trump
Thank you very much.
unidentified
Thank you.
donald j trump
Thank you very much.
unidentified
Very special place and a very special day.
donald j trump
Thank you to Vice President Vance, doing a terrific job.
Thanks also to a man who has devoted his life to service members and veterans, Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, who's doing really well.
He went through a lot, didn't he?
But he's doing really well.
He's a tough cookie.
That's what we want is a tough cookie.
And we're grateful to be joined as well by Chairman Cain, terrific military person, members of the Cabinet, members of Congress, members of the United States Armed Forces, veterans, and many other distinguished guests.
We gather today to honor the incredible service members who rest in glory in this cemetery and burial grounds around the world and in a thousand lonely places known only to God.
In every hour of peril, in every moment of crisis, American warriors have left behind the blessings of home and family to answer their nation's call.
They've offered all that they had within them.
And given their last breaths to each and every one of us that we might live safe and breathe free.
This morning we pay tribute to their immortal deeds.
We share in the sorrow of their beloved families.
And as one nation, we give thanks for the ultimate gift they have so selflessly given to all of us.
These warriors, and that's what they are, great, great warriors, picked up their mantle of duty and service, knowing that to live for others meant always that they might die for others.
They knew that.
They asked nothing for it.
they gave everything and we owe them everything and much much more each of the service members who have Made the supreme sacrifice for our nation has also left an unfillable void and an unbreakable silence in the lives of all who love them.
For the families of the fallen, you feel the absence of your heroes every day and family.
These are great families.
These are wonderful families.
In the familiar laugh no longer heard, the empty space at Sunday dinner.
Or the want of a hug or a pat on the back that will never come again.
Every Gold Star family fights a battle long after the victory is won, and today we lift you up and we hold you high.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for giving America the brightest light in your lives.
It's what you've done.
We will never, ever forget our fallen heroes, and we will never forget our debt to you.
This Memorial Day is especially significant as we commemorate 250 years since the first American patriots fell in the field of battle.
Two and a half centuries ago, at Lexington Green, Concord Bridge, Bunker Hill, brave minute men and humble farm boys became the first to give their lives for a nation that did not yet have a name.
With their deaths, men like John Brown, 23, Samuel Hadley, 28, and Abner Hosmer, 21, ignited the flame of liberty that now lights the inspires everybody and the entire world.
Those young men could never have known what their sacrifice would mean to us, but we certainly know.
What we owe to them.
Their valor gave us the freest, greatest, and most noble republic ever to exist on the face of the earth.
A republic that I am fixing after a long and hard four years.
That was a hard four years we went through.
unidentified
Thank you.
donald j trump
Who would let that happen?
People pouring through our borders unchecked.
People doing things that are indescribable and not for today to discuss.
But the republic that is now doing so very well, we're doing so very well right now, considering the circumstances, and we'll do record-setting better with time.
We will do better than we've ever done as a nation, better than ever before.
I promise you that.
unidentified
Thank you.
donald j trump
In every generation since, at Trenton and Yorktown, at Vicksburg and Shiloh, and in faraway places with names like Chateau, Terere, Anzio, Iwo Jima, Quezon, Kandahar, really just a few chosen names, and these are names that have become so important on the altar of freedom.
They plunged into the crucible of battle, stormed into the fires of hell, charged into the valley of death, and rose into the arms of angels.
The sacrifice that they made was not merely for a single battle, a long-ago victory or a fleeting triumph, decades or centuries past.
Their sacrifice was for today, tomorrow, and every morning thereafter.
Every child that lives in peace, every home that is filled with joy and love, every day the Republic stands is only possible because of those who did what had to be done when duty called, and the cost was everything to them and to their families.
Our debt to them is eternal, and it does not diminish with time.
It only grows and grows and grows with each passing year.
The greatest monument to their courage is not carved in marble or cast in bronze.
It's all around us, an American nation, 325 million strong, which will soon be greater than it has ever been before.
It will be.
And so today we uphold the memory of our heroes as people have done since ancient times by telling their stories and exalting their names.
Senior Master Sergeant Elroy Harworth was a young, beautiful man from Earhart, Minnesota, when he enlisted in the Air Force and was sent to Vietnam.
Fifty-nine years ago this very week, Elroy and his crewmates climbed into the dark skies over Da Nang on a classified mission known as Operation Carolina Moon.
Their aim was to blow up a key enemy bridge, and while other crews had tried and failed, they were determined to try and get it done in face of extreme danger, and they knew how bad it was.
As their C-130 closed in on its target and Elroy jockeyed his 5,000 pounds of explosives into position, the aircraft came under.
Unbelievably intense fire.
They'd never seen anything like it.
Try as they might, they were hit as the plane swung low and they went down deep in enemy territory.
Elroy was just 24 years old when he gave his life for America, leaving behind a beautiful young wife who was seven months pregnant.
That meant Elroy would never know the joy of meeting his son Troy or seeing him grow.
And he would never have the pride to watch his son follow in his father's footsteps and serve two decades in the U.S. Army.
Sergeant First Class Troy Harworth is with us today, joined by his wife, Sonia, and their son, John.
The grandson, Elroy, never got to hold.
Thank you, Troy, and thank you, John.
And above all, thank you, Elroy.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Please stand up.
unidentified
Thank you.
donald j trump
Wherever you may be.
Thank you very much.
Great family.
Corporal Ryan McGee of Fredericksburg, Virginia, knew from the time he saw the towers fall on 9-11 that he wanted to be an Army Ranger.
He was an American guy, all-American.
He was a tough guy.
He was the top of everything.
In high school, he was captain of the football team and was voted friendliest and most charming by his peers.
Ryan joined the Army soon after graduation, and after three tours in Afghanistan, he deployed to Iraq.
He and his unit were tasked with hunting down a weapon facilitator.
And a suicide bomber cell near Baghdad, a vicious, vicious cell, killing many, many people.
16 years ago this month, they engaged the enemy in a firefight, and Ryan was mortally wounded.
He gave his life at 21 years old, and today he rests until the end of time in the famed Section 60 here at Arlington, where we have buried our honored dead from the war on terror.
We are joined today by Ryan's mom, Sherry.
Sherry, all of America shares in your grief.
And more importantly, we share in your pride and your wonderful son.
And thank you so much for being here, Sherry.
unidentified
Thank you, Sherry.
donald j trump
Thank you very much.
unidentified
On behalf of everyone.
donald j trump
This crowd is so big, she's hard to find.
Once I saw her, she really stands out.
Thank you, Sherry, very much.
Senior Chief Petty Officer Shannon Kent grew up in Pine Plains, New York, before enlisting in the Navy in 2003.
And she quickly became one of the rising stars.
She was an absolute winner.
As a linguist, translator, and cryptologic Technician.
Shannon worked alongside elite special force units like Delta Force and Navy SEALs to help them capture and kill terrorists.
She was among the first women ever to do it, and she did it better than anyone.
In January 2019, Shannon was on her fifth combat deployment, embedded with a team hunting ISIS terrorists through the streets of Syria.
When a suicide bomber detonated his weapon-killing senior chief Kent and three other wonderful, beautiful Americans, she left behind her husband Joe and their two sons, three-year-old Colt and 18-month-old baby Josh.
Today, Shannon rests in peace on these grounds alongside her comrades.
To her boys, Colt and Josh, who are here this morning, Now age 9 and 7, let me say your mom was a hero, and her love, her strength, and her spirit are always with us and always be with you.
She loved her boys.
To Joe, the boys, Shannon's parents, Mary and Steven, and her sister, Mariah, Shannon's name will, I just want to thank you, and thank you so much for being here in honor of your magnificent family member.
Stories like Shannon's, Ryan's, and Elroy's remind us of the real meaning of the day.
And I want to just say, please stand up wherever you may be.
The boys, I want to see those boys.
Where are you?
unidentified
Thank you.
Thank you.
donald j trump
They're good looking guys.
Thank you very much for being here.
All of you, thank you so much.
We should never forget, even for a moment, that freedom is a gift of the highest cost and peace is won at the most precious price.
These extraordinary American heroes and their immense and ultimate sacrifices they offer.
Only the faintest glimpse at the infinite grace we have received from all who laid down their lives for America over the past 250 years.
We're going to have a big, big celebration, as you know, 250 years.
In some ways I'm glad I missed that second term where it was because I Wouldn't be your president for that most important of all in addition we have the World Cup and we have a Can you imagine?
I missed that four years and now look what I have.
I have everything.
unidentified
Amazing the way things work out.
donald j trump
God did that.
I believe that too.
You know, I got the World Cup and I got I'd like to take credit.
But I got the Olympics.
I got the World Cup when I was president.
And I said, boy, it's too bad.
I won't be president then.
And look what happened.
I turned out that we're going to have a great time.
We're going to have a great celebration.
But most important of all is the 250th anniversary.
That blows everything away, including the World Cup and including the Olympics, as far as I'm concerned.
In any corner of the cemetery, at any resting place for our war dead, anywhere on earth, you'll find untold stories of equal heroism and heartbreak, unmatched patriotism and devotion and acts of selflessness and courage so enormous they defy comprehension.
Most people can't even imagine it.
Great poets have written that it's love which moves the sun and the stars, but here on the sacred soil, right where we are,
From Bunker Hill to Bastogne to Cantonese to Coral Sea, from Gettysburg to Guadalcanal and Concord to Kabul, America's best and America's bravest have fought, bled and died so that we could pick up the torch of liberty.
Raise it high, high, high, and carry it onward to places they could never have dreamed of before.
Today we honor their memory.
We remember their gallantry.
We just revere, in the highest sense, we just revere their incredible legacy.
We salute them in their eternal and everlasting glory, and we continue our relentless pursuit of America's destiny.
As we make our nation stronger, prouder, freer, and greater than ever before.
May God bless our fallen heroes.
May God bless our Gold Star families.
unidentified
And may God bless the United States of America.
donald j trump
Thank you very much, everybody.
unidentified
Great honor.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, please remain standing for the playing of Taps and the Benediction.
Amen.
Let us pray.
Dear God, as we prepare to leave this place, but not your presence, may we never forget the fallen, nor take for granted the liberties that they secured for us long ago.
Help us to continue to honor their lives through our words and actions, carrying their spirit forward with love and kindness.
And dear God, now, please, if you will, go in front of us to guide us.
Be behind us, Lord, to catch us.
And please, please, stay around us to sustain us.
Now, henceforth, and forevermore.
It is in your name we pray and all say together on this Memorial Day.
Amen and amen.
Amen.
Thank you.
Please remain standing for the singing of God Bless America, performed by the United States Marine Band and the United States Navy Band Sea Chanters.
Thank you.
Thank you.
God bless America, my home sweet home.
God bless America, land that I love.
Stand beside her and guide her through the night with the light from above.
From the mountains to the prairies to the oceans, my great fall.
God bless America, my home sweet home.
Ladies and gentlemen, please remain in place.
as the official party departs and the colors are retired.
*applause*
steve bannon
*music* The president is left the again we leave the amphitheater.
he will head to, um, I believe he's going over to, uh, his, uh, his residence, his property in Northern Virginia.
We're going to go back momentarily to, uh, Palm beach and, uh, Bo Davis and the team, they will take in for the rest of the day, the live coverage, the live coverage of the, The live coverage of the Memorial Day Parade and other events.
Patrick K. O'Donnell.
Incredibly moving ceremony by the President laying a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknown and then giving, as they said at Gettysburg, certain appropriate remarks.
Patrick K. O'Donnell.
unidentified
powerful and solemn remarks, Steve, you know, highlighting Steve, I've interviewed about 4,000 World War II veterans, and I never forget when I asked one of those veterans, who's a veteran of the Ranger Battalions in North Africa, Darby's Rangers, I said to him directly, are you the greatest generation?
And he said to me, Patrick, what about the men of the cause, the men of 1775, the boys of 76, and the men?
And, you know, that is what always stuck with me.
But today it was about honoring the fallen and remembering their sacrifices.
These men and women are forever young.
They will never grow old.
But their memories stay with us.
And what they did, the sacrifice that they made in their lives, you know, is sustaining the life that we live today.
It's so powerful.
And today, he brought forth the names of the fallen in the conflicts that they served in, as well as the Gold Star families, the importance of those Gold Star families.
And many of the Gold Star families were there today and recognized.
And the sacrifice that they make and the continual remembrance and the pain that they bear every day is, you know, I'm so proud that the president recognized them.
steve bannon
yeah the current uh joe kent his children from uh from his wife uh one gold star who was there in spirit but not in person uh which i'll close with is tina peters let's go to steve gruber steve uh you're about to wrap up coverage from the amputee they're the colors being retired right in front of you any closing observations brother gruber What a remarkable day, Steve.
unidentified
And to see the whole amphitheater come to its feet to applaud the two boys, seven and nine, whose mother gave her life to save this republic was a very stirring moment.
Donald Trump, masterful today in his comments, in his address to the crowd.
We're going to be walking and talking as they're pushing us out the door here, Steve.
But I think it was a very stirring and stunning address by the president.
And this crowd adores me, absolutely.
steve bannon
There's our closing shot on the Tomb of the Unknown.
Steve Gruber, can you give your social media?
You're going to be out and about today.
I really want to thank Real America's Voice.
We just concluded seven hours of coverage, four hours at the United States Military Academy at West Point.
First time on national television.
That ceremony has been shown from the beginning to the end and then today almost now approaching three hours of live coverage of the annual.
Steve, incredible work at West Point, incredible work under very trying circumstances at Arlington National as the crowd of participants, the Gold Star families and the veterans and active duty service members start to file out.
Steve, any closing thoughts and give your social media so people can keep up with you today.
unidentified
I'll say again, I feel privileged and blessed to be here today for the people that came before us, for the 420,000 that are buried here.
I'm grateful for being here today, Steve, to be honest with you.
I felt the same way at West Point, but this is more pointed, more emotional, I guess, on this Memorial Day 2025.
People can find me at Steve Rivers Show on Twitter, Facebook, Truth Social, Instagram.
Stick with us.
We've got a country to save.
A lot of work to do yet.
steve bannon
Country to save.
Couldn't put it better.
Steve Gruber, great work.
Thank you so much.
Live coverage from West Point and from Arlington National Assembly.
Patrick O'Donnell, I think, and this is where I'm really proud of, both the Denver operation, Parker and Rob Sig, the entire crew in Palm Beach.
Of course, our magnificent team of the War Room in Washington, D.C. and on the road here.
Patrick O'Donnell, I think, and this is the power of doing both of them live from start to finish, they have to be taken as part of whole cloth.
President Trump gave remarks to the youngest officers that are going to these foreign battlefields saying, hey, I'm never going to commit you unless we're in this to win it, and we're going to use peace.
You've covered this your entire adult life.
Like you said, you've got 4,000 interviews of the greatest generation, of which I might say when I made my film The Last 600 Meters with Michael Packton, we screened it for the Force Marine Recon at Peleliu and Terawa.
This was a movie, as you know well, was about the first Fallujah, Najaf, and second Fallujah.
They said, hey, Stephen Michael.
Actually, these young people, the current generation is the greatest generation.
I said we were draftees and just clear-cut everything in front of us.
These young men got to go door-to-door.
You know that from the battles you were a combat historian in.
Give me some closing observations on an incredible weekend.
West Point and now Arlington National Cemetery, President Trump, not just addressing the nation, but addressing history in the world, sir.
unidentified
Speeches that President Trump gave, first at West Point, and then today these are two very powerful bookends that represent much.
And yet, Steve, as you said, you know, freedom isn't free.
That's the bottom line.
I've had the great honor and privilege of knowing many, many of the heroes of D-Day, the heroes of Bastogne, the heroes of the Pacific, but also the generation of today.
The Fallujah generation that I personally witnessed, men and women, specifically some men in the Marine Rifle Platoon, that I will never forget the valor and sacrifice that after losing many of their key men in combat, just go to the next house and continue on and then go from one deployment after another.
It's just tremendous sacrifice, which I then wrote.
We were one which is really, that was a great generation, just like the tradition, the next great generation, as I said in that book.
steve bannon
Patrick, where do people go to get your writings?
You've covered everything now from the Civil War, from the Revolutionary War to the Civil War, all the way through the Great Wars, Korea, Vietnam.
You've got an incredible book on Iraq.
It's just your work's amazing.
You've done so much where you don't get live interviews of the 4,000.
You go back and do archival research.
And folks, I can tell you, his books read like novels.
Where do people go to get all your work, Patrick O'Donnell?
unidentified
I wrote a powerful article on the man behind me on Breitbart.
It's called Finding Sergeant Frith and his lost story of Memorial Day.
But you can get me on at Combat Historian.
I'm Getter, as well as X. My books, The Unvanquish is the best-selling book.
You can get that at Barnes& Noble or order it on Amazon.
We Were One is the story of First Platoon 3-1 in Iraq, which was on multiple Commandants' reading lists.
All the books are out there, and they honor fallen heroes.
As well as the living heroes that are really true, you know, true stories of valor, that Americans have changed lives and changed the destiny, in many cases, of specific battles and campaigns.
steve bannon
Brother, thank you so much.
Appreciate you.
unidentified
It was an honor to be here, Steve.
Fantastic job, as always.
steve bannon
Patrick O'Donnell always joins us.
Okay, we're going to wrap our couch.
I want to thank Birch Gold.
Field of Greens has still got their sales, so make sure you go to fieldofgreens.com, get the 25% off.
Warpath Coffee, talk about deployments.
Tej had 16 deployments.
That's his youngest generation, I'm telling you.
These are all volunteers.
I want to thank all the coverage from Denver to Palm Beach, Robin Parker Sig, Al Wendell and his entire team in Denver, Cameron, the entire team in Washington, D.C., our nation's capital.
Pulled this off seven hours.
Just incredible coverage.
I want to go now.
There's a lot more going on today, and Real America's Voice is going to cover it live.
Look at that magnificent shot of the World War II.
Let's get that in there, guys.
Yeah, there we are.
Don't need my lovely facade.
That's amazing.
The World War II monument, which I absolutely love.
It's very controversial.
In Washington, if you haven't had a chance, the Vietnam Memorial, the Korean Memorial, the World War II right there, of course, the great World War I that we've covered for years is being built, all in Washington, D.C. Bo Davidson now will take you home.
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