Speaker | Time | Text |
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with Justice Jackson and with the dissent in this case, which is that it is a big blow to our ability to enforce our rights because our rights, our constitutional rights, our other legal rights are, of course, only as good as our ability to enforce them. | ||
And what this decision does is it throws up lots of additional roadblocks and obstacles to the remedy, right? | ||
Because when your constitutional rights are violated, this is going to make it much harder for individuals other than those who go to court and are themselves plaintiffs to have their rights adjudicated and restored. | ||
And so I do think this is a big blow. | ||
And it's another example of this Supreme Court that's been largely stacked by Donald Trump appointees ceding their constitutional responsibilities and duties to the executive when under Article III, they're the ones that should be standing up and making sure that we can enforce our rights. | ||
We've had a big week. | ||
You know, we've had a big week. | ||
We've had a lot of victories this week. | ||
NATO was a tremendous victory. | ||
The war was a tremendous victory. | ||
Look, we were talking about this for 30 years, about Iran being nuclear. | ||
And all I said is it will not be nuclear and it's not going to be nuclear. | ||
And, you know, I want to give credit to a lot of people, most importantly to our great military. | ||
Boy, they put out that fire. | ||
Once that happened, once those bombs got dropped, that war was over. | ||
That war was over. | ||
But I just want to compliment them and credible the general and all of his generals. | ||
Pete Hegseth was great. | ||
They were all. | ||
And now I want to compliment Pam. | ||
A lot of genius went into this. | ||
You know, people, if you don't say it exactly right, if the Supreme Court doesn't get it because it's incorrectly spoken about, and that happens. | ||
A lot of cases are lost because they don't say the right words. | ||
But I want to correct you. | ||
She's going to go down as a great Attorney General. | ||
I may change my mind about that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe someday I'll have call and say, I was only kidding. | ||
She's going to go down as a great attorney general. | ||
This was a tremendous win. | ||
And we've had tremendous wins, but this was a tremendous win today. | ||
So I just want to congratulate you and Todd and your whole staff. | ||
Very brilliant people. | ||
And we can't forget John Sauer. | ||
unidentified
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That's right. | |
Who is with, there's a medical emergency within his family, so he's taken care of that. | ||
And we said absolutely. | ||
So I just want to thank everybody very much. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
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It's totally understandable to not know the extent of the damage yet, given what we did. | |
But it's extraordinary the misinformation, the conflict, and just the lack of information out there. | ||
When you go into that room, which is the secret room that they have over in the visitor center, when you go in that room, best someone can tell, and I'm not sure they really know what the truth is or what the extent of the damage that was done to this program is. | ||
But, you know, for two weeks he telegraphed, oh, we're going to get you. | ||
We're going to bob you. | ||
That gave them plenty of time to move whatever they needed to move. | ||
And I think there's some evidence that there was movement. | ||
And so I don't think you know, but to just cavalierly say this is what happened, he doesn't know what happened. | ||
This is all publicity. | ||
And he's like a salesman who's selling things that don't actually exist. | ||
And at some point, it's got to come home to roost. | ||
And this is important enough an issue for the American public and for Congress in particular to be told the truth as best they know. | ||
And I think the president keeps spreading misinformation that right now, the only AGs in this country that are fighting to protect the Constitution, the rule of law, public health, and our residents is Democratic AGs. | ||
Republican AGs are nowhere to be found. | ||
And in the context of birthright citizenship, we see this as not only fighting for the rule of law, but also for babies and unborn babies in families and children. | ||
And as it stands, as we sit here on this Zoom with you, right now, the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship still stand. | ||
And we now have to go back to the district court at the direction of the Supreme Court to ask the judge to reissue the previous nationwide injunction that he issued before, as did other district courts, not just the judge in Massachusetts, but other district courts that have sided with us because they understand the importance of having nationwide relief here, | ||
because if a baby, as you said at the beginning, is born in New Hampshire and then suddenly comes to Massachusetts and isn't a citizen, that makes no sense. | ||
It's not practical and it's just ridiculous. | ||
And so I would just stress that right now, I actually see us as still winning. | ||
We just have to go back to court at the lower level to be able to continue the fight. | ||
And everyone should ask themselves in any state where they don't have a democratic AG, what is their attorney general doing to protect their rights and to protect our constitution? | ||
But when you have a system that doesn't allow the most obvious violations of constitutional legal rights to be remedied on a nationwide basis when they're violated, then you expose people for very long periods of time to being stripped of their constitutional or other legal rights. | ||
And so that's why I think this was a blow to protecting our rights. | ||
And we now have two branches of government. | ||
We have the Article III courts in the form of the Supreme Court anyway. | ||
And now the Congress, where you have majority Republicans who are ceding their power also to a president who wants to be king. | ||
I mean, just today, Republicans all but one voted against the War Powers Resolution. | ||
The War Powers Resolution was a very simple idea founded in the Constitution that says you can't go to war without congressional authorization. | ||
And yet all but one Republican senator abdicated their responsibility and essentially said, we're going to give that power to Donald Trump alone. | ||
So this is a very dangerous moment for our democracy and protection of our rights. | ||
unidentified
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You know, it's funny. | |
I've heard over the years calls to abolish ICE, but I also wonder if we should just abolish Congress if your colleagues are not going to do their jobs. | ||
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
Pray for our enemies because we're going medieval on these people. | ||
Here's not 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? | ||
MAGA Media. | ||
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | ||
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | ||
Thank you. | ||
It's Saturday, 28 June, Year of our Lord, 2025. | ||
Thank you for joining us this morning on our favorite show of the week, the Saturday morning show. | ||
It is the kickoff in a little while of the big, beautiful bill. | ||
Was it Votorama? | ||
All of it from the Senate. | ||
Of course, we're going to dial in guys in the House, too, that are already saying there's some massive changes going on. | ||
This is a work in progress, and we will be up streaming it on where there's debate, et cetera, streaming it on all of our platforms, even after the show all weekend and where it needs to be. | ||
We'll actually come in and jump back in. | ||
And of course, Rav will be covering it also throughout the weekend. | ||
This is going to be monumental. | ||
Don't see how they're going to get to the President's desk on July 4th, but he changed yesterday, I think it was in the Oval or the briefing where he says, well, the 4th is nice if we can do it. | ||
And then he reversed that later, I think, on True Social and said it's got to be done by the 4th. | ||
So anyway, so much is going on there. | ||
You saw the meltdown. | ||
We could have played this. | ||
I hope your heads are blowing up. | ||
I'm not even sure we put the nastiest stuff up there because it was full meltdown last night by the mainstream media, the fake news of Donald Trump's Supreme Court basically backing President Trump on stopping this or trying to stop this judicial insurrection. | ||
And it's only going to get nastier. | ||
I tell folks that now we've got to get ready to grind this through because it's going to be a grind. | ||
And you're going to see both the legislative part making the sausage this weekend. | ||
And I want to give everybody a heads up. | ||
It's not going to be pretty, and you are not going to agree with everything. | ||
You're going to agree with a lot. | ||
There's some you're not going to agree with. | ||
People are going to get angry. | ||
It's called a process. | ||
And we're going to show it to you, hopefully, in Living Color through streaming and commentary, et cetera. | ||
So I think it's going to start sometime this afternoon. | ||
And on the show today, we've got a show of a bunch of issues we want to cover and some just great stuff from around the world and here in the United States. | ||
However, we will be taking, if we can get it and work it out, because it's going to be tough to get people on Zoom today, taking calls from hopefully some senators and some people in the House as people work through in Capitol Hill. | ||
Okay, I got a very special, we're going to kick this show off in a very special way, talking about the big, beautiful bill in the Senate and everything that you guys have been fighting for in the Senate. | ||
We've got a very special ad. | ||
Let's go ahead and play this, and I want to bring in the person of honor today to kick off the war room. | ||
Let's go ahead and let it rip. | ||
It's garbage day in Kentucky. | ||
And thanks to Mitch McConnell, things have gotten dirty. | ||
The bluegrass state is sick and tired of cleaning up career politicians' messes. | ||
I'm Nate Morris, a Trump America first conservative, and I'm here to take out the trash. | ||
I'm a ninth generation Kentuckian, born to a single mom on food stamps, raised in a union household. | ||
I'm the product of bluegrass grit. | ||
I borrowed 10 grand to start a business, created thousands of jobs, and took it public, valued at $2 billion as one of the biggest trash companies in America. | ||
So I know a little bit about garbage. | ||
And Mitch McConnell, he's trash Trump. | ||
unidentified
|
And for over 40 years, he's been dumping on us. | |
Amnesty for millions of illegals. | ||
Rhino judges in courtrooms across America joining Democrats on gun control. | ||
Billions spent on Ukraine and other foreign wars. | ||
And trillions more on Biden's massive spending bill. | ||
All while becoming one of the richest senators in Washington. | ||
And now he's calling it quits and thinks he can stick us with one of his puppets instead. | ||
unidentified
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My mentor, Leader Mitch McConnell, I'm with him because his legacy is big. | |
Senator Mitch McConnell, and it's been a great privilege and honor to know him, and I'm proud to call him a friend. | ||
I'm proud to call him a mentor. | ||
He'll betray President Trump and sell us out. | ||
Not on my watch. | ||
We've let the garbage pile up in Washington, D.C. for far too long. | ||
I'm running for Senate to help President Trump clean up the mess. | ||
I'm not a politician, and I've never run for office. | ||
And I will never stop fighting for the place that made me the man I am today. | ||
I'm Nate Morris. | ||
Let's dump career politicians and take out the trash in Washington. | ||
I love that spot so much, the great Andy Sarabian and team. | ||
I just love that spot. | ||
I've seen him now probably 100 times. | ||
Nate Morris joins us. | ||
Nate, I wanted to kick off big, beautiful Bill weekend. | ||
You know, we were talking about maybe doing this Monday. | ||
I said, no, we got to do this on Saturday because we're going to be doing nonstop coverage on streaming platforms of everything people are about to see. | ||
First off, we're going to call you through the break for the next. | ||
I want to get into all your background and history and that. | ||
But that is as bad as In Your Face introduction, you know, kickoff to a campaign. | ||
Tell me about Mitch McConnell. | ||
How has Mitch McConnell kept such a grip on Kentucky politics for so long? | ||
Because I don't think you have a better state full of patriots than the great state of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, sir. | ||
Well, Steve, you're exactly right. | ||
The fact that Mitch McConnell has been able to hold power for generations is absolutely absurd. | ||
And Steve, you know this from your work. | ||
Mitch McConnell's been obsessed with two things his entire career. | ||
That's money and power. | ||
And he's forgotten the people of Kentucky. | ||
You know, one of the things when I was looking at this seat, Steve, and thinking about when my wife and I were thinking if we were going to jump in the race, is people would say this is Mitch McConnell's seat. | ||
This is his seat. | ||
And I thought that was absolutely ludicrous. | ||
This is a seat that belongs to the people. | ||
And Mitch McConnell has continued to sell out Trump. | ||
He's continued to sabotage Trump's agenda. | ||
And we know he's been on every side of every issue. | ||
And it's all been about him maintaining power for a very, very long time. | ||
I mean, if you remember, the one issue that he was most animated about was getting more money into politics. | ||
That's all he cared about his entire career. | ||
And I think people in Kentucky have had enough. | ||
They want a clean break. | ||
They want an outsider. | ||
And they want someone that's going to be completely different than Mitch and someone who's going to usher in a true MAGA perspective and MAGA leadership in the Bluegrass State. | ||
Nate, hang on with us. | ||
We're going to hold you through the break. | ||
I want to drill down on this because, as you know, from the huge fight we had over Ukraine, what is it, a year, year and a half ago, that really he stepped down from leader right after that. | ||
We've been battling with Mitch McConnell for a long time. | ||
And you, sir, are the cavalry has finally arrived. | ||
And it's arrived on the big, beautiful bill weekend. | ||
Nothing could be more ironic. | ||
Nate Morris is going to stick around. | ||
He's announced he's running in the Republican primary for the Senate seat of Mitch McConnell, of which Mitch McConnell does believe it's his seat, and he can deem whoever he wants. | ||
So Nate's going to hang around, and we've got a lot going on. | ||
PAC show this morning. | ||
Like I said, we're going to do everything to make sure people see everything about how the Big Beautiful bill comes together this weekend. | ||
Short break. | ||
Nate Morris on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
American Park. | |
I got American Baby. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Man. | ||
You see, I knew we were going to start this weekend. | ||
It's going to be very tough. | ||
It's going to be, you know, it's going to be a big fight and some stuff you're not going to like, some stuff you're going to absolutely love. | ||
We're going to watch the sausages be made. | ||
But right there, not just in the chats, but the engine room, the various engine rooms we have are blowing my phone up already with the ad. | ||
Warroom cadre force multipliers activated, ready to take out the trash meeting, just on and on, most powerful ad. | ||
So I've got to ask you, and this is what I'd like about the cut of your jibber, Nate. | ||
Most opening ads introduce somebody who's got the beautiful music and the wife, and it's all American flags flying and all this kind of stuff. | ||
And yours is very different. | ||
You're just taking a total shot, even some of the symbolism in there, you're taking a total shot right at Mitch McConnell, and you're not holding back. | ||
Is that how this campaign is? | ||
Because, you know, McConnell's been around for a long time because they play very dirty up there, right? | ||
This is not for the uninitiated. | ||
So tell me, first of all, about even the ad starting off like this, so aggressive up in Mitch McConnell's grill and kind of sending a notice to his acolytes that, hey, you want to bring it? | ||
You bring it. | ||
So walk me through the logic. | ||
You've got a great team. | ||
I know a lot of these guys, but walk me through your logic for this. | ||
Look, Steve, there's only one way to handle Mitch McConnell, and that's absolute brute force. | ||
Mitch McConnell's been the nastiest politician that America has seen in the modern era. | ||
I mean, he would relish the fact that he would destroy his enemies. | ||
He brags about this stuff in Washington, D.C. And let me tell you, he's met his match because we are going to run over him over and over again with that garbage truck and take out the trash finally of his record and his legacy and his cronies, his minions. | ||
They are going crazy. | ||
They don't know what to say, Steve, because you know what? | ||
No one has had the spine and the courage to actually take it to them and litigate their record properly here in Kentucky. | ||
But we're going to do it. | ||
And Steve, I know you're probably a fan of the Sopranos. | ||
You know, I come out of the garbage business. | ||
This is the roughest, nastiest business you can be in. | ||
And I'm going to relish this fight. | ||
I love it. | ||
I'm so excited because it's finally time that we get somebody who's America first who's going to stand with Trump and who's going to finally take out the trash of Mitch McConnell and all the remnants that are left over that are hanging around the hoop, trying to make a dollar off the government or trying to enrich themselves. | ||
We're going to take it to them like they've never seen in the history of Kentucky politics and in the history of American politics. | ||
Man, that's such a breath of fresh air. | ||
Tell the audience about yourself. | ||
Let's go back to the beginning because I'm going to ask you, I'm going to get to the point. | ||
It's like, why in the hell are you doing this, right? | ||
Go back to the beginning. | ||
Tell us about your background and how you got to this point or how you got to the point of making the decision to basically take a huge change in your life and get into politics for your state and for your country. | ||
But go ahead and walk me through it. | ||
Well, Steve, first off, I don't need this job. | ||
And I know you've been around politics a very long time. | ||
Most of these guys that get into politics, they need the job. | ||
They need the money. | ||
And you look at these two puppets that are in the race for Mitch McConnell, Andy Barr and Daniel Cameron, they need this job. | ||
And I don't know what they would be doing if they weren't running for office because they probably can't get a job in the private sector. | ||
They can't make money. | ||
So this is what they do. | ||
I've been very fortunate to live the American dream. | ||
I'm proud that I'm a ninth generation Kentuckian. | ||
My family descends from Appalachia and Morgan County, which is the county right next to where J.D. Vance's family's from. | ||
And I'm very proud of those fighting roots that we have in Appalachia. | ||
Our people fight, Steve. | ||
We've been fighting since we came over the Cumberland Gap. | ||
We've been fighting to keep the government off our back. | ||
We've been fighting for a better life for generations. | ||
And that's one thing Kentuckians know how to do. | ||
We know how to fight better than anybody. | ||
And I grew up pretty tough, single mother. | ||
My mom was on food stamps. | ||
My dad left when I was very, very young. | ||
And, you know, I had the great fortune of being able to get help from my grandparents. | ||
My granddad ran a local union, the United Auto workers. | ||
And 19 of my family members worked in an auto plant. | ||
So when things like NAFTA happened and people started outsourcing jobs in the middle of the country, it was people like my family that felt it, that saw their jobs go to Mexico and saw their jobs go to China. | ||
And these are the things from a very young age that have animated me about the American working class because we know for far too long, Steve, the elites have sold us out. | ||
And I still remember as a very young man watching Pat Buchanan, his famous culture war speech in 1992. | ||
And it resonated with me. | ||
I was only 11 years old, but I remember hearing that and saying, he's talking to me. | ||
He is talking to my family. | ||
And he's talking to people that are struggling like the people around me. | ||
And guess what? | ||
A lot of those things that Pat Buchanan talked about, we see them still today that we're fighting with here in America, that we don't have a border. | ||
We've had career politicians like Mitch McConnell sell us out over and over again and let all these illegals in and let all these people that hate our country into our country, which is absolutely crazy. | ||
And so, look, I saw this as an opportunity, Steve. | ||
I got a call from my buddy JD Vance. | ||
I've known JD for a long time. | ||
And he said, you know, you should really think about stepping up and maybe running for Mitch McConnell's open Senate seat when it comes open. | ||
And I said, you know, that's really interesting. | ||
I hadn't really thought about that. | ||
I had been very successful as an entrepreneur. | ||
I started a company with $10,000 on a credit card, grew that business to about $2 billion when I took it public to the New York Stock Exchange. | ||
And I did it in the garbage business. | ||
And Steve, very few people know this, but the biggest garbage man in the world is Bill Gates. | ||
Bill Gates is the largest holder of garbage stocks in the world. | ||
And when you're working to disrupt the garbage industry, you're working to disrupt Bill Gates. | ||
And that was quite a challenge as a young entrepreneur. | ||
I was in my late 20s when I started the business. | ||
I had no money. | ||
I had debt. | ||
But we were very, very successful and took some of the biggest contracts in the world away from brands like Waste Management and Republic Services. | ||
And I'm very, very proud of that and help employ small businesses around the country to get into the garbage game. | ||
And these kind of lessons, I think JD saw and said, hey, you know, you're not a career politician. | ||
You're an entrepreneur. | ||
You don't need the job. | ||
And you're 100% with Trump. | ||
This is, we need your leadership to come into government and to shape things up and to bring that same kind of entrepreneurial spirit that can hold these rhinos, can hold the swamp accountable, and finally bring real change in Washington and speak for America first. | ||
And most importantly, speak for the American working class because I've lived it. | ||
You know, this is absolutely, when you look at the Commonwealth of Kentucky, you look at the great people come out there and the Patriots who said born fighting and, you know, the folks that are serving in the military. | ||
And you look at Mitch McConnell and what he's pushed, it's like two things. | ||
Is the Kentucky political establishment prepared to accept you? | ||
Or are you just going to say, heck with it? | ||
I'm just going to have to kick down the door because that's built in the image and likeness of Mitch McConnell, sir. | ||
Well, Steve, it's very interesting you say that. | ||
So that ad ran early yesterday morning. | ||
It started out on Breitbart.com. | ||
Breitbart was very kind to make that their lead story yesterday. | ||
And yesterday afternoon, I get a call from the Republican Party of Kentucky, and they said, we're going to be sending you a letter about the upcoming Lincoln Day dinner, statewide Lincoln Day dinner that's going to be held in a few weeks. | ||
And we want you to read that letter and understand what the chairman's trying to communicate. | ||
Now, they sent me this letter because obviously they're going to invite me because I'm a candidate for a statewide office, is running for the United States Senate. | ||
So I get this letter, Steve, and it says, do not speak ill of anyone who's not in the race who's a member of the Kentucky Republican Party. | ||
Now, Steve, you know what that means. | ||
They're saying you cannot talk bad about Mitch McConnell if you come to this event. | ||
And I said, you know what? | ||
I said, look, the whole reason why I would even go to this dinner is to make this about Mitch McConnell, because guess what, Steve? | ||
This whole race is about Mitch McConnell. | ||
And these two puppets that are in the race are saying, well, you know, McConnell's not on the ballot. | ||
Absolutely, he's on the ballot. | ||
Because if one of his puppets gets in this seat, we're going to get 40 more years of Mitch. | ||
And I could not believe that, number one, Steve, you don't, why would you paper something like that and admit your weakness and send that to me? | ||
And second of all, why do you continue to not allow people to tell the truth? | ||
You know, in business, Steve, I know you've been so successful in business and you've done so many things entrepreneurly. | ||
In business, you know, the bucks speak and the facts speak. | ||
But in politics, you're not allowed supposedly to say what you want to say. | ||
And look, the reason why I'm in this race is because I want to tell the truth finally about Mitch. | ||
I want to tell the truth about his record. | ||
I want to take it to the people and show this is why we've been sold out by somebody like Mitch McConnell. | ||
And his cronies are continuing to cover for this guy and to prop him up. | ||
And then I find out later, Steve, I make a couple of phone calls and our state party is going to give him a lifetime achievement award. | ||
A lifetime achievement award, Steve. | ||
Can you believe that? | ||
After everything he's done to our president, you know, Steve, I know you've seen the numbers. | ||
Trump carried this state by almost 30 points. | ||
30 points. | ||
And they want to give Mitch McConnell an award? | ||
I mean, that's just absolutely ludicrous. | ||
And you know what, Steve, we're going to have a lot of fun with it. | ||
We're going to have a lot of fun with it because we're going to tell the truth. | ||
And I think these guys are going to melt down. | ||
And it's going to be so much fun to watch. | ||
Oh, they're already melting down. | ||
And Nate, can I just hold you briefly through the break? | ||
Because short commercial break, I want to talk about, I want to go back in time to when Mitch McConnell finally tossed in as leader and what led up to that and what the facts were of that. | ||
Because two things are going on at the same time. | ||
I think it's very important to tie together to let people, particularly people throughout the world, the show's got a, the Saturday show's got a big global audience also. | ||
And I want to make sure everybody fully understands exactly the courage of Nate Morris to go in and do this because this is hard work. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
I want to thank Birch Gold. | ||
You saw the story yesterday in the Financial Times of London that the United States government's going to have a tough time selling long-term bonds, the 20s and 30s, because of some questions about are we taking on too much debt? | ||
We're going to work that through this weekend and all next week. | ||
Go to birchgold.com. | ||
The end of the dollar empire. | ||
We started this four years ago. | ||
Why was that? | ||
Because we wanted to make sure that you understood how currency, fiat currency, is directly tied to gold as a hedge. | ||
Birchgold.com slash bannon. | ||
End of the dollar empire. | ||
All the installments are free, now taught in college courses, but totally accessible to you. | ||
Check it out. | ||
Short break. | ||
Nate Morris on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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Here's your host, Stephen K. Mann. | |
You remember at the end of this very hectic week, early in the week, we had Senator Eric Schmidt on from the Great State of Missouri, one of the best guys in the Senate, one of the best guys we got there. | ||
And we were reminiscing about we had played his entire speech on Ukraine. | ||
If you remember when we were streaming all those speeches, you know, we did it like we were going to do this weekend on the Ukraine fight and the Langford bill. | ||
Remember that? | ||
That was the beginning of the end, or that actually was the end of Mitch as Speaker. | ||
And I just want people, because I talk about this a lot, but I want to put it in the context of this race of Nate Morris, is that Langford was just the front man, right? | ||
He was supposed to be the conservative Christian going to be the front man for Mitch McConnell's bill that in hindsight, if you look at it, would have totally codified the destruction of the sovereignty of this nation, full stop, by Republicans, at the hands of Republicans. | ||
President Trump, remember, stepped in there as then just the 45th President of the United States and a candidate and helped stop it, and the media went nuts. | ||
The first 90 days of President Trump's second term proved every lie that they tried to sell us on that Lankford bill. | ||
And clearly, remember, you're going to have 2 million more illegals here before anything kicked in. | ||
All of it was a lie. | ||
All of it was a lie. | ||
And at the same time, he was killing our sovereignty here and opening up the borders. | ||
He was this huge, massive bill for Ukraine, of which Schmidt and Hawley and Mike Lee and all the great American First Patriots got up there and just eviscerated it. | ||
That's what Nate Morris represents, is a complete sea change from that. | ||
The globalist attitude that has snuck into the Republican Party, taken over the Republican Party decades ago, and it's the reason the country is in the shape it's in because these types of Republicans were controlled opposition. | ||
Mitch was actually worse. | ||
He was one of the drivers of it. | ||
And it's one of the reasons since I first came to politics with Andrew Breitbart back in 2000, what, 2009, 2010, the first thing we're doing, we've been fighting Mitch McConnell the entire time. | ||
Nate, are you ready? | ||
I mean, are you ready for a full throwdown? | ||
Because I would tell you, starting your campaign with not doing a Hallmark card, but starting your campaign with a shot right across his bow is that means it's going to be a war. | ||
unidentified
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Are you ready for that, sir? | |
Absolutely, Steve. | ||
Look, I grew up in union politics. | ||
That's an organized street fight, knife fight in a ditch. | ||
That's the way I grew up. | ||
And we're going to do whatever it takes to bring transparency and to showcase the change that needs to happen. | ||
And we are going to litigate Mitch McConnell's record and legacy like never before because enough is enough. | ||
And you know what? | ||
No one's had the courage, Steve, to do it. | ||
And what really makes me sick, Steve, is you've got two of these puppets right now in the race. | ||
You've got Andy Barr. | ||
And Steve, this guy's just a sad, pathetic, balding rhino. | ||
You know, people have told me he's trying to use Rogane. | ||
I think that's going to his brain. | ||
He absolutely had a meltdown yesterday during this press conference in Washington, D.C. He doesn't know what to do. | ||
This is a career politician. | ||
Andy's never had a job, a real job. | ||
He's been sucking at the government teeth for years. | ||
And he thinks it's his time. | ||
He's a typical establishment rhino that thinks, hey, I've been in Congress for over a decade. | ||
You owe it to me. | ||
And this guy's a lawyer, too. | ||
Both these guys are lawyers. | ||
Steve, we don't need more lawyers in Washington, D.C. I tell people all the time, we're full. | ||
We have plenty. | ||
And they've screwed everything up for this country. | ||
I continue to create more problems. | ||
And you know what's really sad about Andy, Steve, and you saw this in the clip. | ||
At 50 plus years old, Steve, Andy Barr said Mitch McConnell was his mentor. | ||
Now, first of all, I don't know what grown man at 50 years old has a mentor. | ||
At that point in life, you're mentoring others. | ||
You're helping other people. | ||
This guy gets on live TV 10 months ago and says Mitch McConnell's his mentor. | ||
And that tells you everything you need to know about how he would be as a senator. | ||
I mean, he's lauding Mitch McConnell 10 months ago. | ||
This is a guy who's continued to support red flag laws. | ||
This is a guy who was against ending birthright citizenship. | ||
This is a guy that stood up, you know, for the gang of eight, you know, a decade ago. | ||
This is the same guy that was blaming President Trump for January 6th. | ||
And this guy wants to come into Washington right now and claim these MAGA. | ||
It's just absolutely unbelievable. | ||
He is nothing more than one of Mitch's boys that continue to do his dirty work. | ||
And again, I think that the people of Kentucky, this is exactly what they don't want. | ||
I think the other guy, Steve, that's in the race, Daniel Cameron, this is a guy who's not even from Kentucky. | ||
You know, no one knew anything about this guy, where he came from, who he was. | ||
You know, he was just pushed on us a couple years ago by Mitch and his cronies. | ||
You know, Mitch McConnell plucks him. | ||
You know, this is a guy from Texas, was rotting the pine at the University of Louisville playing football, couldn't get on the field. | ||
You know, certainly not a very good athlete. | ||
And Mitch McConnell says, I'm going to give this kid a scholarship. | ||
I'm going to make him a McConnell Scholar. | ||
This is the program they have at the University of Louisville. | ||
Makes him an intern. | ||
The first thing that this guy does is he supports comprehensive immigration reform and working for Mitch and helps Mitch push that into Congress, which is absolutely crazy. | ||
Then this guy becomes Mitch's general counsel. | ||
And you know, Steve, that when you're general counsel, you sign off on everything that Mitch does. | ||
And then Mitch says, look, it's time for this guy to become attorney general. | ||
So they clear the path for him to become attorney general. | ||
Terry Carmack, Mitch McConnell's chief of staff, runs his campaign for attorney general. | ||
And then they say, we're going to try to make him governor. | ||
And Terry Carmack runs his campaign for governor and gets absolutely demolished, loses by six points in Kentucky with a Trump endorsement. | ||
How do you do that? | ||
How does that even happen? | ||
And this is a guy. | ||
He's just, again, another one of Mitch's boys that continued to push his agenda. | ||
You know, he would probably sign a leaf if it blowed onto his desk, if it was from Mitch. | ||
You know, he has no idea what's going on. | ||
Not a very smart person, I don't think. | ||
And, you know, he's just been manipulated by Mitch and his cronies to do his dirty work. | ||
And this is what we have right now in this race. | ||
This is what we have. | ||
And so I want to say that this has to be a clean break. | ||
We need an outsider. | ||
We need someone who's not a career politician. | ||
And we need someone that's actually met a payroll and created jobs, I believe, and someone who understands the working class of our country. | ||
Wow. | ||
I've already informed Grace and Mo that we want the TV rights to the Lincoln Day. | ||
We're going to get the TV rights to the Lincoln Day dinner. | ||
Because, wow, brother, literally, we could do this for all two hours. | ||
What I'm going to do is I'm going to play the ad in the second hour and get the conversation going back again on this. | ||
Nate, I know you're going to do Matt Ball's, the great Matt Ball over at Breitbart. | ||
You're going to do his radio show, the Breitbart News Saturday Show, of which I'm the former host on. | ||
Matt's got it today. | ||
Where do people go to find out more about you? | ||
Where do they go to social media? | ||
Where do they go to your campaign site? | ||
Because I can already tell you the chat's blown up, the phone's blown up. | ||
So folks are going to want to know more about this, sir. | ||
Well, Steve, my website is natemorris.com. | ||
And I want to say to everyone, you know, I'm going to be making an investment in this race as an outsider. | ||
I have to do that to fight the swamp and to fight all the lobbyists and the people that are coming at me. | ||
But I need your help. | ||
I need everybody to chip in and be part of this campaign. | ||
I want you to make an investment. | ||
And finally, as President Trump would say, getting the stench of Mitch out of Kentucky. | ||
We've got to do it. | ||
So I need your help. | ||
Please go to natemorris.com, make a contribution. | ||
I'm also on X at Nate Morris. | ||
And let's engage in some conversation. | ||
Give me a follow. | ||
I need your help all over the country to make this happen and to finally get rid of this stench of Mitch that we've had for far too long. | ||
Remember, Steve, this guy's been in Congress before the internet was created. | ||
I mean, think about that for a minute. | ||
1985. | ||
It is time. | ||
It is time to finally rid the country of the stench of Mitch. | ||
Nate Morris, look forward to having you back. | ||
Good luck over there at Breitbart with Matt Bull. | ||
By the way, 10 o'clock. | ||
I think we're going to work it out. | ||
Charlie Kirk's going to be there for a rally at 10 a.m. | ||
Eastern Daylight Time on Monday. | ||
And we're going to try to pick it up and start the show with the live stream, maybe even chat with Charlie, who follows us here in Real America's Voice. | ||
And Nate, good luck. | ||
Have a great weekend. | ||
Nate, look forward to seeing you on Monday. | ||
Thank you, Steve. | ||
It's so great to be with you. | ||
Thank you, brother. | ||
How's that? | ||
Is that a double shave espresso? | ||
So in the engine room, North Carolina Division brings up, hey, going after a guy's hairline, this brother is playing for keeps. | ||
And I might add, in all of the back and forth with Tel Aviv Levin, I never mentioned hairlines once. | ||
Became a meme, kind of, but I never mentioned hairline. | ||
Hey, just saying, never mentioned hairlines once. | ||
I just want to make sure everybody knows that. | ||
But Nate Morris, man, that's a throwdown right there. | ||
Incredible. | ||
So I'm going to play this again. | ||
And I thought it was very appropriate to start the weekend off just to remind ourselves of what we've got to clean up here. | ||
The Big Beautiful Bill is going to be throughout the weekend. | ||
We're going to jump in and Brayson Moe are going to figure out how we're going to live stream the votes and all the discussion and debates. | ||
I'll be in and out. | ||
A major, I got Taj Gill here. | ||
And Taj, you've got a couple things. | ||
One is on the bill that I want to get to in a second. | ||
I tell you, let's start on the bill. | ||
You've got a specific thing from the gun owners of America. | ||
You're quite upset about something. | ||
And folks, I just want to say this. | ||
There are going to be folks upset about so much stuff in this. | ||
The parliamentarians pulling out and stuff's back in, and that's where we're going to try to get a handle on exactly what's being voted on. | ||
But what is the situation with the gun owners of America, sir? | ||
Yeah, it starts out with the Hearing Protection Act. | ||
The sound suppressors or silencers are on the National Firearms Act of 1934, and they've been restricted ever since. | ||
So you have to go through this crazy background check more than when buying a firearm. | ||
And then you have to pay a $200 tax stamp. | ||
It's a federal tax stamp when you buy a sound suppressor or a short-barreled rifle. | ||
So the House of Representatives passed the Hearing Protection Act, and they put that into the Big Beautiful bill. | ||
And then the Senate put the short act, which takes short-barreled rifles and short-barreled shotguns off the NFA registry. | ||
And you don't have to pay the tax on suppressors, short-barreled shotguns, or short-barreled rifles. | ||
That's what these two bills, they're baked into the Big Beautiful bill. | ||
And they're both taxes. | ||
So they should go through under the Byrd rule because they're a tax. | ||
And the Bird Rule, if it is budget reconciliation, it can go through without getting stripped out. | ||
Well, the Senate parliamentarian, she's unelected. | ||
She's Obama era. | ||
She is the swamp. | ||
She is the deep state. | ||
She does not represent Trump's constituents. | ||
She stripped that out along with all kinds of other stuff, the Medicare, everything else that people are pissed off about. | ||
But I wanted to bring up about the firearm stuff. | ||
She stripped that out, which is illegal because it should be part of budget reconciliation because it's a $200 tax stamp every time you buy these things. | ||
And it violates the Second Amendment because it puts you on a permanent gun registry when you buy a sound suppressor. | ||
So Trump's DOJ just ruled that sound suppressors are firearms, so they should be protected under the Second Amendment. | ||
So all this stuff got stripped out. | ||
And then you know this, John Theon, he hasn't overruled her. | ||
She needs to be overruled or she needs to be fired because we live in a constitutional republic. | ||
We, the people, are the constituents. | ||
We vote in our representatives, the House of Representatives and the Senators to represent us. | ||
And then they vote. | ||
So how do I understand how this lady, this Obama-era lady can override all of Congress? | ||
She overrode the House of Representatives and she overrode our Senate and nobody's doing anything about it. | ||
JD Vance can step in and override her and get the final vote on this. | ||
But now they're trying to rewrite these things and water them down. | ||
But this lady needs to be removed. | ||
She is part of the deep state. | ||
She is part of the swamp. | ||
Okay, hang on for a second. | ||
unidentified
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We're going to hold. | |
I got Kurt Mills. | ||
You got a major article, major penny piece. | ||
I want to make sure we push that out. | ||
We should clip that. | ||
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I take it right before my Warpath coffee in the morning. | ||
FieldofGreens.com. | ||
Real organic superfood. | ||
I'll talk more about it when we turn short break. | ||
We rejoice with the Lord War. | ||
Let's take down the CCP. | ||
unidentified
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Here's your host, Stephen K. Matt. | |
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Make sure this is not the processed stuff you see advertised non-stop on the other cable news shows or news networks, particularly Fox News. | ||
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Taj Gill and Kurt Mills are going to join us for pretty panic. | ||
Both French. | ||
Our good buddy down in Tarrant County done such a great job in Tarrant County. | ||
And Tarrant County, part with Dan and all these others are the railhead of turning around Texas and making sure Texas, President Trump won by 14 points. | ||
He's under onslaught this morning. | ||
He's either criticized for taking on radical Islam or is an anti-Semite, all of it. | ||
We're going to try to get Bo up here this morning. | ||
So Taj Gill, Dan Caldwell, and people are going to understand, the reason Dan Caldwell is not in the Pentagon is because of his thinking, and he's got an article out on the Washington Post this morning, an analysis piece, that's, I think, pretty dead spot on. | ||
But I wanted to get a practitioner like you, a warrior like you, that has been in the region for, I don't know, 16, 18 deployments, and have buddies that are still associated with it. | ||
And then I got Kirk Mills who's going to come in and kind of frame it for us. | ||
But I wanted to ask you first, as you read this and you saw what happened in the 12-day war, and remember, it's a 12-day war because of President Trump. | ||
And you still got these guys trying to extend it, trying to, you know, still talking about regime change, all that nonsense, not going to happen. | ||
President Trump obliterated whatever program they had, it's obliterated. | ||
Move on. | ||
He's now talking about a potential deal or maybe not a deal, but it's time to move on. | ||
This piece, though, because immediately they go to, oh, the casualties had, well, the casualty had because of the Iraq war and getting up there and turning Iraq over, one-third of it over to the Persians. | ||
But you could tell last week, they're holding our troops hostage. | ||
I'm talking about the neocons saying, oh, we got these troops. | ||
You got to send in more troops. | ||
You got to send it to protect them. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
You're holding using American soldiers and sailors and airmen as human shields, and it's got to stop. | ||
Taj Gil, as a practitioner, spend some time in that neighborhood. | ||
Your thoughts? | ||
Yeah, I definitely think we should draw down at least a good portion of the troops over there. | ||
I don't think we should be isolationists and take everything out of the Middle East, but we have 40,000 troops over there, you know, three aircraft carrier groups, tons of ships and bombers. | ||
We have everything over there. | ||
And then we use, we launched all our stuff stateside from the submarines. | ||
So basically we could have attacked, we did attack Iran remotely. | ||
We didn't even use the assets over there. | ||
A lot of them are just there for deterrence and for deployed so we can get stuff done faster. | ||
But I personally don't think we need 40,000 troops over there scattered all over the Middle East. | ||
But it's part of the bigger, the war machine, right? | ||
The military industrial complex. | ||
We saw this during the Iraq war. | ||
All the bases I worked on, they all had big signs that KBR. | ||
KBR was a big support company. | ||
They did all the logistics for the bases. | ||
And guess who had their fingers in that? | ||
Dick Cheney, right? | ||
Everything goes back to our politicians just getting obscenely filthy rich off these wars and off the military. | ||
And like you said, our troops are there as human shields. | ||
They're there for deterrence. | ||
And most of the time, they don't get used. | ||
So why are they there? | ||
There's a lot of, they should be on our southern border and northern border protecting America, right? | ||
And Trump's got it down to zero last month, but that's where they should be. | ||
If they're going to be sitting somewhere for deterrence, let's have them protecting America. | ||
I'm not saying pull them all out, but we don't need 40,000 troops just sitting there. | ||
That's my opinion on this. | ||
And like I said, I think. | ||
And then the Gulf states, they didn't want us launching from their countries or using their airspace to conduct these attacks on Iran because they don't want to get drug into it. | ||
So let's draw down a good portion of it, not all of it, because we don't want to be isolationists. | ||
And then let's bring them back here and use them for something better, like protecting the homeland, right? | ||
We have fentanyl coming in still. | ||
We have all this. | ||
We need the troops here protecting our borders. | ||
Well, if you got to do a strike, if you do a strike, let's do a couple of strikes. | ||
Let's interdict some fentanyl down in, let's take a couple of cartels out in northern Mexico. | ||
I'd rather have troops doing interdiction down there than this thing. | ||
And they've used these human shields. | ||
And you saw immediately the callousness of the Israel first crowd, the Tel Aviv, Levin, and that crowd immediately go, oh, we got to protect the troops. | ||
They're not interesting to protect the troops. | ||
They're using the troops as human shields. | ||
It's not acceptable. | ||
Another thing is, Steve. | ||
It's not acceptable. | ||
We've got to think this. | ||
Yeah, go ahead, sir. | ||
Speaking about the cartels, the precursors for fentanyl come from China on ships. | ||
We should just torpedo those ships and sink them in the sea. | ||
Hundreds of thousands of Americans are dead because of that. | ||
We should bomb the labs in Mexico and torpedo the ships at sea. | ||
A higher probability of protecting Americans versus 30 tomahawks to whatever the cosplay nuclear program is. | ||
And President Trump had to take care of it, and he did it definitively. | ||
Boom. | ||
One and done. | ||
It's over. | ||
The 12-day war is over. | ||
I don't want to hear any more about it. | ||
It's over. | ||
He did exactly the right thing. | ||
But if you talk about a better use of 30 tomahawks, let's put 30 tomahawks in these Chinese vessels coming over, dropping basically the underpinning and the precursors for fentanyl. | ||
One tomahawk per cargo ship, right? | ||
By the way, in the Navy, you come up, you raise up, you give them a warning, crew can get off, put the white flag up. | ||
If you keep moving, you're going to get a tomahawk, okay? | ||
You give me 30 tomahawks to clean up fentanyl versus the thing that the Israeli Air Force should have taken care of because it was above ground. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
We got to start talking like adults and dealing with problems like adults. | ||
This thing with Caldwell and the Middle East is the reason they turfed him out of the Pentagon. | ||
That's the reason because he actually had a logical program to come back for hemispheric defense. | ||
You ever heard of hemispheric defense? | ||
Well, that's Donald Trump's national security policy. | ||
Pentagon doesn't want to hear about it. | ||
Certain foreign governments don't want to hear about it because we're going to keep an expeditionary force to go throughout the world and do what we have to do like President Trump did is drop the hammer when the hammer's got to be dropped. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
I got Taj Gil. | ||
I got Kurt Mills. | ||
We're going to talk a little bit about my favorite coffee warpath in just a moment. | ||
A second hour is going to be as lit, I promise you, as the first. | ||
Short commercial break. |