| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
|
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
| I mean, that seems like an optimistic take on reality, but I don't know. | ||
| I mean, I think mostly people like to smash their enemies more than they care about the principle of free speech. | ||
| Like, I think that's all. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, I mean, I think that'll last 10 years. | |
| And we have the president suggesting he's going to declare Antifa, whatever that really is, as a terrorist group, something he actually can't do if it's in the United States. | ||
| Take this all together here. | ||
| This seems like it is a systemic, a planned crackdown, and one that seems to be very, very dangerous. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| In our political vernacular, there's a term that gets bandied about to describe repression, which is McCarthyism. | ||
| And I think it's worth comparing the repression that happened in the late 1940s and the 1950s to what's happening now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
In the 1950s, over the course of a decade, 10,000 people lost their jobs. | |
| Here, in the course of a week, it seems as if, according to reporting, more than a thousand people lost their jobs. | ||
| It took years for the McCarthyites to bring Hollywood to heel. | ||
| Here, it seems like it happened in an absolute flash. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And it's because the state is at the center of the repression, not some drunken senator on a rage, on a rampage, and some other up-and-coming ambitious politicians exploiting an issue. | |
| And if you know, I think about Project 2025 and how that provided a roadmap to remaking the kind of the mechanics, the plumbing of the federal government in order to achieve all sorts of long-standing conservative goals, but also to engage in a form of culture war. | ||
| And when we look at what's happened, not just to the entertainment industry, not just the threats that have been, and actual punishments that's been inflicted on media, you look at what's happened to the university and the fact that the president of Texas AM was just fired this week over a controversy where a professor was fired. | ||
| You look at the fact that there is a federal monitor now installed at Columbia University and that there are all these other threats being wielded against other institutions. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And you add that to the way in which the state as this font of knowledge has been reshaped in order to present only good news that the leader likes. | |
| And you take that together as an aggregate impression of where we're at in merely the first couple months of this administration. | ||
| And you think about the years ahead of us and you compare that to what happened during the McCarthy era, you'd say we've survived a decade of McCarthyism in a very, very short period of time and there's a lot of runway left. | ||
| Steve Bannon called, talked about you calling to tone down the rhetoric saying that the following, saying Spencer Cox is a national embarrassment in a time where we need action. | ||
|
unidentified
|
He tells us to sing kumbaya and hold hands with Antifa. | |
| This is not a time for triochie pontificating. | ||
|
unidentified
|
This is a time to declare Antifa a domestic terrorist organization and have the FBI go kick down some doors. | |
| What's your response to Steve Bannon? | ||
| Well, again, Mr. Bannon is angry and rightfully so. | ||
| And I'm not saying we have to just sing kumbaya and hold hands. | ||
| What I'm saying is we actually should disagree. | ||
| I think Charlie represented that better than anyone. | ||
| Charlie said some very inflammatory things. | ||
| And in some corners of the web all people have angry. | ||
| We're focused, dude. | ||
| And guess what? | ||
| The president came out and said he's going to designate Antifa terrorist organization. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
| And we have from Ken Klippenstein this scoop inside the FBI about immediately designating these transgender militias, violent extremists, nihilistic, violent extremists, NVEs, to get into it quickly. | ||
| And this is the culmination of a lot of things. | ||
| And Cox is up to his neck in this and should be and must be. | ||
| And trust me, Cox, we are driving this, that you and your wife are part of being investigated because what you have done in Utah and what you have done, just like Abbott, you gutless Republicans are not going to be able to sit there and push these programs and then, oh, let's just tone it down. | ||
| Let's de-escalate. | ||
| We ain't de-escalating nothing. | ||
| You ain't seen nothing yet. | ||
| We have not yet begun to fight. | ||
| I want to go back to the beginning of that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And Ben Smith over at Semaphore, he's right. | |
| We like smashing our enemies more than some esoteric discussion of the First Amendment because you know what, Buckley and Will and all you guys, you discussed the First Amendment forever. | ||
| And then when they shut down MAGA and they shut down Trump, you said nothing and you did nothing. | ||
| So now President Trump and the MAGA movement's in power and hey, it's going to be what it's going to be. | ||
| And guess what? | ||
| Capitalists are making decisions. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It was the affiliates, the two biggest affiliate groups that came and said, hey, we don't want this guy anymore. | |
| We got to have the local auto ad and the local orkin guy and the florist and the tile company. | ||
| That's how we make our money is on these local ads. | ||
| And guess what? | ||
|
unidentified
|
It ain't selling. | |
| And we're not going to put it up there. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Particularly the vitro. | |
| We knew Jimmy Kimmel now said, I was coming back next day and really ripped MAGA's face off. | ||
| Would do it, dude. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You do it. | |
| Go do it on some YouTube channel. | ||
| And I don't think we've been hard enough. | ||
| And CBS, the Ellison should, his son just bought it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Instead of trying to go buy CNN and all this, because I do think, because we're antitrust guys, it's a little too much consolidation of power. | |
| And I don't love the TikTok deal. | ||
| We'll talk about that maybe this afternoon. | ||
|
unidentified
|
As you know, I'm not a fan of TikTok because of the Chinese Communist Party and the algorithm. | |
| But I want to go back to what the Blowhard then said, I think from The Atlantic. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I think his name's Ford from The Atlantic. | |
| McCarthy, and McCarthy is a book that you must read. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And Ann Coulter says it's the second most important book in Back of the Bible. | |
| That is Blacklisted by History by M. Stanton Evans, one of Buckley's, I think, the editor of the National Read for decades and decades and decades. | ||
| Blacklisted by history about the true story of McCarthy and couple that with getting Andrew Breitbart's righteous indignation, which goes through the whole frame, not just Andrew's journey, but the whole thing about the Frankfurt School, Herbert Marcuse, the Marxism, because not communism, the economic system failed. | ||
| The CCP guys in Beijing ain't communist, trust me. | ||
| They got a form of state capitalism. | ||
| The Russians were not communist. | ||
| They're Marxist. | ||
| They're against the basic tenets of the Judeo-Christian West, of the foundational elements that have allowed us to rise to greatness. | ||
| They hate that. | ||
| And you see critical theory, critical race theory, and then what, queer theory or critical queer theory, whatever they call it. | ||
| This is the descent into hell. | ||
| That's Dante's Inferno. | ||
| You know how right McCarthy was, and they hate him. | ||
| You know how right he was? | ||
|
unidentified
|
I think it was in 1950. | |
| He stood up and gave a, I believe it's a six-hour speech in the Senate. | ||
| It's summarized in a book. | ||
| I think it's called Retreat from History. | ||
| Retreat from Victory. | ||
| And I will make sure that I make this, because I think it's public domain now, but I'll make sure that people can see it. | ||
| He stands up for six hours. | ||
| And he has one target. | ||
| He knew Olinski before Olinski. | ||
| McCarthy had one target. | ||
|
unidentified
|
No, he was not a drunk. | |
| He'd have been a tail gunner for the Marine. | ||
| And he did have a drinking problem later. | ||
| But this time, McCarthy stood up for six hours in the United States Senate. | ||
| And he took on the most prominent person in the country and the biggest globalist. | ||
| And it hurts me as a Virginian to say this because he is revered and I revered him. | ||
| You were raised by people like Robert Egli and General Marshall. | ||
| Okay? | ||
| General Marshall, George Marshall. | ||
| He takes Marshall is bigger than Eisenhower. | ||
| Marshall is bigger than Truman. | ||
| Marshall is because he's the architect of victory. | ||
| And he eviscerates this guy for six hours. | ||
| And he gets all about who lost China. | ||
| 1949, we essentially turned the country over to Mao and these bandits that didn't lift a finger to fight the Japanese. | ||
| In fact, they fought the nationalists the entire time. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And because of Edgar Snow and some neo-Marxists that went over there and wrote these glowing biographies about these agrarian populists, right? | |
| These agrarian reformers, right? | ||
| They took this murderous dictatorship was already in the making. | ||
| And oh, this is so fantastic. | ||
| We turned the country over to them in 1949. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The Chinese Communist Party, they know this because in 1989, what, 50 years later, when they collapsed again, because the Chinese people, Lao Baijing, had a belly full of it again. | |
| Guess who bailed them out? | ||
| Bush sent Skrokoff over, and we gave, we, the United States government, you, with all the blood that we had given in the Pacific, everything of all those islands of Tarawa and Pelelu and Saipan and all of it, and all the dead over in the air raids over Japan, all the naval vessels from Pearl Harbor all the way through. | ||
| Coral Sea added all up. | ||
| We gave China, which was the Imperial Japan, the whole fight was about China. | ||
| And we gave it to the communists. | ||
| We, your government, gave it to the communists. | ||
| And McCarthy called him out for six hours. | ||
| He went through chapter and verse why we didn't go to Berlin, why he held up Montgomery and Patton from going to Berlin when we're like 50 miles away. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That has never been explained. | |
| Why did we stop? | ||
| Why did we let the Red Army go? | ||
| Why did we arm Stalin? | ||
| They were our allies. | ||
| The Russian people were the great allies. | ||
| They gave in their blood to defeat the Vermont. | ||
|
unidentified
|
But why did we keep arming Stalin after 1943 when it was obvious he was going to crush him? | |
| The State Department and FDR's administration were rife, not just with communists. | ||
| I'm talking KGB informants, KGB officers, and people like I.F. Stone and Alger Hiss that lied and covered up by the same people on Morning Joe today. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The exact same people lied to the American people. | |
| And McCarthy stood up in the Senate and he called out Marshall. | ||
| He had the guts and the balls to take on a guy that was essentially a God in the United States. | ||
|
unidentified
|
If you had a secular God, it was General Marshall. | |
| And he took him on and he field-stripped him. | ||
| He field-stripped him. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Of how could we spend all this money and all this blood and win the greatest tragedy in world history? | |
| How can we be the victors? | ||
| And you have the Russians have taken Germany. | ||
| They've taken the Iron Curtain. | ||
| You've got all Eastern Europe are captive nations. | ||
| And now we just toss the keys to another great ally, the Chinese people, Lao Beijing. | ||
| We tossed the keys to the communists who, by the way, went about murdering them, as they can, and then invading Korea, right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
And there we had to defend our great allies in South Korea or in the Korea Peninsula at that time. | |
| He took them on and he field stripped it. | ||
| You know how he field stripped him? | ||
| How did we start the show this morning? | ||
| We started the show with Brian Harrison down in the great state of Texas. | ||
| And last night when Daily Mail put that lead story up, I put up, I just got it. | ||
| My team helped me put it up. | ||
| Boom. | ||
| Scalp. | ||
| Scalp. | ||
| It's been called my Breitbart. | ||
| It's a scalp. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You got it, baby. | |
| You took it. | ||
| 90 days after McCarthy went into the Senate and gave that speech, 90 days. | ||
|
unidentified
|
General George Catlett Marshall resigned and retired from public life because of had to spend more time with his family. | |
| 90 days and never gave a retort. | ||
| So when you see the George Clooney thing, Murrow Ederall Murrow, that's all afterwards. | ||
| That's all afterwards. | ||
| The main event is he took down the globalist who knows what side he's working on. | ||
| And if you read all the biographies, and I've read them all in McCarthy, I think there's nine or ten big ones. | ||
| They give a little tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny piece of him taking down Marshall. | ||
| He took him down and the guy didn't even defend himself because there was no defense of it. | ||
| You've been betrayed by this government for decade after decade after decade. | ||
| These globalists and these Marxists that have been in business with these global Marxists for decades and decades and decades, you're seeing the manifestation of it now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And these public schools, the public schools and private schools ought to be designated as terrorist organizations too, a way they are molding these children into unhappy, unfulfilled, and oftentimes murderous to themselves, the suicide race through the roof, depressed, angry, lashing out. | |
| That just doesn't happen. | ||
| These little kids go in with the bright eyes and all that, and look what they're turning out. | ||
| Look what's in the Reddit channels. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Look what you saw in Utah. | |
| No. | ||
| There can be no half measures here. | ||
| If you want a half measure, get away from me. | ||
| There's plenty of people who want half measures, and there's plenty of people that want to unify and sink Kumbaya. | ||
| God bless you. | ||
| Go do it. | ||
| We ain't going to do it. | ||
| We'll unify after we win. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And we'll unify on our terms. | |
| Short break. | ||
| Back in a moment. | ||
| In America's home. | ||
| His voice family. | ||
| Are you on Getter yet? | ||
| No. | ||
| What are you waiting for? | ||
| It's free. | ||
| It's uncensored. | ||
| And it's where all the biggest voices in conservative media are speaking out. | ||
| Download the Getter app right now. | ||
| It's totally free. | ||
| It's where I put up exclusively all of my content 24 hours a day. | ||
| You want to know what Steve Bannon's thinking? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Go to Getter. | |
| That's right. | ||
| You can follow all of your favorites. | ||
| Steve Bannon, Charlie Cook, Jack the Soviet, and so many more. | ||
| Download the Getter app now. | ||
| Sign up for free and be part of the new family. | ||
| Well, I said we're at war, so I'm going to bring in Wayne Allen Root right now. | ||
| Wayne, you know, look, my rant, you know what chapter and verse. | ||
| You were Obama's, and I don't want to go there today, but you were Obama's classmate at Columbia, classmate broadly defined. | ||
| Tell me about it. | ||
| Tell me about this moment we're in. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And particularly, one of the reasons I saw up on Getter, you had a great rant about Utah, a state you love, and what's happened there under Cox. | |
| So give me your thoughts on everything I just talked about. | ||
| Well, first of all, everything you just talked about is on the money, man. | ||
| You are over the target, my friend. | ||
| No wonder you take flack because you are on the target. | ||
| My dad, by the way, you mentioned World War II and Saipan and Iwo Jima. | ||
| My dad fought at Okinawa, which was probably minute by minute, inch by inch, the worst battle, the bloodiest battle in the history of warfare, perhaps. | ||
| Probably worse than the Battle of Bulge, worse than Normandy. | ||
| My dad was behind enemy lines, a radio operator, and then won all kinds of medals. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I always, he was my hero. | |
| I always loved my dad. | ||
| And I saw the pictures of war and I learned how horrible it really is. | ||
| But listen, at Columbia. | ||
| Hang on. | ||
| What would your dad, those guys at Okinawa, those guys at Saipan, those guys in the 8th Air Force over Germany bombing the Nazis back into the Stone Age, those guys that hit the beaches of Normandy and were Patton's Third Army and got held up 50 miles from Berlin because they had to let the Red Left Communists take it, had to let the Soviets had to let Stalin run the deal. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What would he say about the state of this nation today, sir? | |
| Well, he's rolling over in his grave. | ||
| That's what he would say. | ||
| He couldn't believe, I'm sure he would say that he fought for this nation, for capitalism, for freedom. | ||
| And we've got what we had under Obama and we've got what we had under Biden, the censorship and the silencing and the banning and the declaring of conservatives as domestic terrorists, even though you and I both know, Steve, that no conservative has any interest in ever killing, murdering, assassinating someone we disagree with. | ||
| It's not both sides. | ||
| That's the biggest lie ever told. | ||
| I was honored, Steve, to help lead the vigil for Charlie Kirk on Thursday night in Las Vegas. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We had a prayer vigil and hundreds of people showed up, all of them crying and broken and lonely and feeling just abandoned. | |
| And I gave them a pep talk and I said then on Thursday night, stop with the kumbaya, stop with the unity. | ||
| There's no both sides here. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We don't want to kill our enemy. | |
| We don't want to murder. | ||
| We don't want to assassinate. | ||
| We don't want to silence. | ||
| We don't want to censor. | ||
| We don't do those things. | ||
| Only the left does it. | ||
| But what we do want to do is kick their ass in an election. | ||
| What we do want to do is make sure they never are near the levers of power ever again because they are communists. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They are traitors to this country. | |
| They hate us and they want to kill us. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And you cannot unify with people that want to kill you. | |
| You cannot unify. | ||
| But hang on. | ||
| But hang on. | ||
| I got it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I got it. | |
| But it's not just about elections. | ||
| I mean, Abbott and Texas and Cox and Cox won re-election. | ||
| It's what you do with the power when you have it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right now, we've just spent decades being tapped along by these rhino-Republicans that just want to go along to get along and basically surrender after we win. | |
| That must stop. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That is why President Trump is one of the greatest leaders this country's ever had. | |
| And we have to back him up because there's people around him that want to slow it down too. | ||
| And that's why the Charlie Kirk situation is so outrageous and their behavior, the less behavior to the memory of Charlie Kirk and to his family and his children are so outrageous that this is why you can't compromise with these people, Wayne. | ||
| Right. | ||
| You can never compromise. | ||
| Listen, I learned that at Mount Vernon High School. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I grew up in Mount Vernon, New York. | |
| I went to on the Bronx borderline, went to one of the most dangerous inner city high schools, Steve, in the United States of America, where people walked around with guns and knives. | ||
| And I was a little skinny, pale Jewish kid with braces and glasses and acne. | ||
| And I got beat up every day and chased home from school and they stole my lunch money and they stole my lunch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And every day I tried to sing Kumbaya and Unify and it never worked. | |
| The more you sang Kumbaya and got on your knees, the more they beat you up, taunted you and laughed at you. | ||
| Until finally I learned how to fight and I learned how to lift weights and I learned how to street fight one summer, came back from that summer a different person. | ||
| And the first three guys that picked on me, bullies, I beat the crap out of them and knocked two of them out and knocked their teeth out. | ||
| And guess what happened after that, Steve? | ||
| Nobody ever bullied me again. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I became friends with the bullies. | |
| They wanted to be my buddy. | ||
| And I became the star of the school and got elected vice president of my class and made three sports teams. | ||
| Everything changed when I got the attitude and the understanding that you can never bow to your enemies and you can never kiss their, you know what, you can never kiss their ring. | ||
| You can never get on your knees. | ||
| You have to earn their respect and fight them. | ||
| And when you fight them and you win, they suddenly become your buddy. | ||
| Everything changes. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And from that point on, my life changed. | |
| I never looked back, never got to fight the rest of my life. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Nobody ever tried me the rest of my life. | |
| That's the lesson I learned on the mean streets of New York. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And that's why I have the same kind of attitude as Donald J. Trump. | |
| Because in New York, when you walk those streets, if you don't have confidence and you don't have a swagger and you're not willing to fight, you don't meet their eye. | ||
| When they look at you, if you don't eye them back, you're going to get your ass kicked or whipped or much worse, you're going to die. | ||
| And I learned that. | ||
| I almost died twice in Mount Vernon High School, by the way, at the hands of a guy with a machete. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So I learned how to fight, Steve, but I didn't come on to talk about Mount Vernon High School. | |
| I came out to talk about Columbia University, where I was Obama's classmate. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, but forget Obama. | |
| He was never there. | ||
|
unidentified
|
No one saw him. | |
| He's the Manchurian candidate. | ||
| More important story that relates to today, exact relation to today, is that I was in class at Columbia University when Reagan was shot. | ||
| And my class was the biggest political science class at Columbia in a theater in the round with giant high ceilings where it echoed. | ||
| And a kid smashed through the doors and came in and 300 students turned around and looked at the guy who smashed through the door, wondering what's going on. | ||
| And the guy yelled, they just shot Reagan. | ||
| They just assassinated Reagan. | ||
| That's the words he used. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I guess he thought Reagan was dead. | |
| He'd gotten a report that Reagan was dead or was just hopeful thinking. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And he said, they've assassinated Reagan. | |
| They've shot Reagan. | ||
| Reagan was my hero. | ||
| I loved Reagan. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I thought of him as my father, right? | |
| I loved him. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I heard this, and I was in shock, and I was ready to cry. | |
| And I just couldn't believe what I was hearing. | ||
| And the entire class's reaction was, what, Steve? | ||
| They all stood up and gave a standing ovation and screamed, yeah, Reagan's dead. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I witnessed it with my own eyes. | |
| 45 years ago, nothing has changed. | ||
| Liberals hate us. | ||
| They want to kill us and they celebrate our death. | ||
| Nothing changed between Ronald Reagan in 1982 and Charlie Kirk in 2025. | ||
| They're the same people. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They're the grandkids of the people that cheered in my classroom because a great conservative patriot hero they thought was assassinated and they loved it. | |
| Nothing has changed. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Talk to me about one thing has changed is that Utah used to be one of the most rock rib conservative states in the country. | |
| You had this piece out the other day that talked about Cox and you have an intimate knowledge of what he's done. | ||
| And I mean, it's shocking. | ||
| And to me, he should be part of this investigation for how he's forced SEL, social-emotional learning, and other of these woke ideologies into the school system. | ||
| And remember, he had the Zoom call nationwide, had it in Utah, which got played up nationwide. | ||
| He wanted to talk about his pronouns and how it was fine to be transgender, and they were there to be nurturing and loving, sir. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's a different kind of republicanism in Utah. | |
| Let me tell you about Utah. | ||
| I live in Las Vegas, Nevada. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's my hometown. | |
| But my second home is in Park City, Utah. | ||
| We spend a lot of time there. | ||
| I love it. | ||
| We always say it's God's country. | ||
| God keeps a summer home in Park City, Utah. | ||
| It's the most beautiful place, I think, in the whole world. | ||
| It's my happy place. | ||
|
unidentified
|
But even though Utah is a very red Republican state, it's not my kind of Republican. | |
| It's more like in the old days when I was a kid growing up, the Javits Rockefeller Republican. | ||
| Now it's the Mitt Romney type of Republican. | ||
| Spencer Cox is a Mitt Romney Rhino Republican. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And even though they're very fiscally conservative, the state has no problems with budget. | |
| The state is good with taxes. | ||
| The state is good with spending, deficits, great on all those things. | ||
| Fiscally conservative, but socially liberal and woke. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And they've allowed this infiltration in their state of communists and these transgender and queer organizations. | |
| And even worse than that, in my opinion, is their very pro-illegal immigration because the Mormon church has NGOs that make billions of dollars, just like the Catholic Church, bringing illegals in. | ||
| That's their business. | ||
| That's how they make money, Steve. | ||
| The church is happy if you add another 10,000 people this year or 10,000 this week because that's 10,000 new people who put money in the collection plate. | ||
| But guess who pays for it when they're all on welfare and food stamps and go to public school at 20,000 a year each and they all have five kids and they and they hate America? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Guess who pays for that? | |
| The American taxpayer, not the Mormon church, not the Catholic Church, not a Jewish temple. | ||
| All these religions love bringing in illegal aliens because they get more money in the collection plate and they don't have to pay for it because the taxpayer pays the welfare, the food stamps, and all the money required to bring them in. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So the Mormon church, just like the Catholic Church, just like Jewish organizations, they get paid by the government billions for bringing illegals in. | |
| Then they convert them to their church or their temple or whatever it may be. | ||
| And it's even more money for them. | ||
| And if you have 12 kids, they're happy because those 12 kids will grow up Mormon or Catholic or Jewish and put money in the collection plate. | ||
| But they don't have to pay the bill. | ||
| So Utah has become a state filled with immigrants, mostly illegal immigrants, but also legal immigrants. | ||
| And the church loves it. | ||
| And the GOP there is tied in with the Mormon church. | ||
| They love it. | ||
| They're woke. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They love transgenders. | |
| They love gays. | ||
| Salt Lake City has become liberal, woke, filled with homeless people, filled with drugs, filled with murder. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Salt Lake is like every other city in America, run by Democrats, because it is run by a Democrat mayor, by the way. | |
| Salt Lake is like Chicago or New York, except it's a little better. | ||
| It's the Mormon, conservative version of Chicago or New York. | ||
| But they let this infiltration happen. | ||
| And now you have, what is it, transgender, queer, armed Marxist resistance groups in Utah that may have, it looks like, coordinated on the death of our great Charlie Kirk. | ||
| So it all leads to bad stuff, Steve. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
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Wayne, hang on. | |
| I'm holding you to the break. | ||
| Wayne Allen Root is with us on a Friday morning. | ||
| Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
| Okay, welcome back. | ||
| I want to do this. | ||
| Is why I tell you guys to go to Getter, where I put all my stuff up, because I love Getter because I know how to use it. | ||
|
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It's so simple, and it'll be simple for you, too. | |
| So there's a story yesterday. | ||
| It was up on PBS, but it was just a link to an associated press story. | ||
| The story was about they had, and it's more of the conflicting things like, I don't believe the narrative we've been told at all. | ||
|
unidentified
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I don't believe the text message. | |
| I just don't believe it. | ||
| But it talked about now instead of the guy being suicidal, the shooter was afraid the cops are going to kill him. | ||
| Remember, first they tell him he's suicidal, or he told his dad, I'll never turn myself in. | ||
| I'll kill myself first. | ||
| Now, the Associated Press is reporting that he was really, he was feared being shot by the cops. | ||
| And that's why he turned himself in. | ||
| He didn't want an FBI raid or a police raid on his parents' house or his apartment because he was afraid they would take no prisoners. | ||
| Now, that's not what I highlighted. | ||
| The buried lead in this, they talk about halfway through the story that Utah Valley University had their first day of school, I guess, yesterday. | ||
| They took the week off and let the university get more organized about this. | ||
|
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And so they came back yesterday. | |
| And so when he cut to the story in the middle of it and talked about the kids coming back the first day, they had what we call, as we teach you here, the buried lead. | ||
| And the buried lead is really, I think, the takeaway from the story. | ||
| And they're talking about kids coming back the first day. | ||
| And I'm quoting from the story at Utah Valley University. | ||
|
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Quote, care stations offering stuffed animals, candy, and connections to counseling dotted the campus, end quote. | |
| And I said, this is the type of infantilism that destroyed the shooter, his furry boyfriend, as men and led to Charlie's murder. | ||
| So Wayne Allen Root, before I let you go, they come back to campus and they have, they're given grown men and women because, hey, I realize they're 18 and 19 years old, but you're a man or a woman by then. | ||
| This nation in the West, out west, were built by 18 and 19 year olds. | ||
| You think the women that had kids back in those days? | ||
|
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The average age, I think, of the armed forces is like 22 years old. | |
| You look at those kids that hit the beach in Saipan and Tarawa and Pelelu and Normandy. | ||
| You're talking 17, 18, 19-year-old kids. | ||
| You have grown-ass men, and you're given a stuffed animal to. | ||
| It's the system that's destroying them. | ||
| It's the system that's destroying them. | ||
| Anybody at that university that came up with that idea to give them stuffed animals and candy should be fired immediately. | ||
| This is what we have to hit the blowtorch on. | ||
| This is destroying our nation, a nation built by 17 and 18-year-olds that's sacrificed in all of our wars, not just that, in the development of this country. | ||
|
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This is an outrage. | |
| This is what is destroying the country. | ||
| And whoever did it at Utah Valley University, understand when Charlie Kirk was murdered in cold blood, it's that mentality that got us there. | ||
| Wayne Allen Root. | ||
| Well, and how about the opening salvo of that very story that you just reported? | ||
| Just how about the fact that a guy is willing to murder Charlie Kirk, a wonderful, wonderful human being, a patriot and a man of faith in God and a great Christian and a father, two beautiful little children, a husband. | ||
|
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He's willing to destroy his life and blow out his carotid artery, let him bleed to death in front of us. | |
| But he contacts the police to say, I'll turn myself in if you don't hurt me. | ||
|
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I want it to be peaceful. | |
| Maybe he should have thought about Charlie being peaceful before he destroyed his life and his children's life where they'll never see him again. | ||
| And it extends, Steve, beyond the college campus to the rest of these liberals' lousy lives. | ||
| Because look at Hollywood today. | ||
| Nobody shed a tear for Charlie Kirk dying that day. | ||
| No one shed a tear for his life being blown away. | ||
| They cheered it, but now they're hysterical over Jimmy Kimmel being suspended. | ||
| If they had one eighth the heart for Charlie Kirk as they had for Jimmy Kimmel, everything in America would be okay in American politics. | ||
| But this says it all. | ||
| That dichotomy explains it all. | ||
| They hate you. | ||
| They want to see us dead. | ||
| They hate capitalism. | ||
| They want to see us enslaved. | ||
| They want to silence you. | ||
| They want to destroy your life, but they, if one person loses their job on TV, Republicans are bad. | ||
| The orange man is the fascist. | ||
| He's the dictator. | ||
|
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This is absurd. | |
| Jimmy Kimmel was destroyed by capitalism. | ||
| No one wants to watch his show anymore. | ||
| His ratings are in the garbage pail because he turned off 60% of his audience. | ||
|
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That's who used to watch Jay Leto and Johnny Carson. | |
| Conservative men and women, at least 60% of the audience, they're gone. | ||
| Late night is dying. | ||
| That's capitalism. | ||
| ABC wanted to get rid of Jimmy. | ||
|
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His contract was up. | |
| They were looking for an excuse. | ||
| This was the excuse. | ||
| Had nothing to do with Badman Orange, Donald J. Trump, or Charlie Kirk. | ||
| But it did have to do with saying something terrible and thoughtless about Charlie Kirk. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| The affiliates got rid of him. | ||
| Wayne Allen Root, your coordinates. | ||
| Where do we get the show? | ||
|
unidentified
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Where do we get the podcast? | |
| Where do we get your social media, sir? | ||
| Rootforamerica.com, like Tree Root, Root4America.com. | ||
| It's what I do all day, Steve. | ||
| I root for this country 24 hours a day, seven days a week. | ||
|
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All my shows, TV, radio, podcasts. | |
| And of course, my most important show follows your war room Saturday mornings right here on RAV, Real America's Voice, every Saturday, noon Eastern, 9 a.m. Pacific, America's top 10 countdown with yours truly, Wayne Allen Root. | ||
| Root4America.com. | ||
| God bless you, Steve, for all you do. | ||
| We need you badly. | ||
|
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It's a great way to catch up. | |
| Noon to one, every week, every Saturday on Real America's Voice. | ||
| Wayne, thank you so much. | ||
| Appreciate you. | ||
| God bless. | ||
|
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We were supposed to make announcements today. | |
| Let's say this. | ||
| We're going to be doing wall-to-wall coverage of the celebration of life of Charlie Kirk. | ||
| And I think we'll have two aspects of it. | ||
| There'll be a big and celebratory religious service. | ||
|
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There'll also be a part after that's a celebration of light with many people that knew Charlie Kirk, including the President of the United States, I think also the Vice President and many members of the cabinet, etc. | |
| So we're going to give details. | ||
| Hopefully have the, if not the run of show, at least have the breakdown. | ||
| But just assume that we intend right now, if we can pull it off, to start broadcasting at 10 a.m. on Sunday, 10 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time, 10 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. | ||
| So Eastern Time on Sunday, be 7 o'clock at the venue. | ||
| The Real America's Voice team, Parker Sig, our man in charge, and of course, Harry and the entire team. | ||
| We're taking over one of the spaces there and building it out to make sure that we have a studio. | ||
| And we're going to have everybody, I'll be tomorrow and Saturday talking about the entire team, the entire Real America's Voice team. | ||
| Those of those that can't get out there, we're going to dial them in on Zoom and make sure they're part of it. | ||
| So it's going to be a date. | ||
| I think we're going to go all the way through right now. | ||
|
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Studio 6B is going to also have a wrap-up broadcast. | |
| We'll get all the times for you. | ||
| Make sure on Sunday, a very, very, very special event of the celebration of life of Charlie Kirk. | ||
| And we're just honored that the Turning Point people gave us access to make sure that we can do this. | ||
|
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And it's kind of a whole of network approach to this. | |
| I'll be anchoring, but we're going to have everybody out there as co-hosts, co-anchors. | ||
| So we're really looking forward to it. | ||
| More details this afternoon and more details following that. | ||
|
unidentified
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Also, things are happening. | |
| I can tell you that to get to the bottom of the deconstruction, the administrative state, the destruction of the deep state, and part of this investigation is going to be that. | ||
|
unidentified
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And you saw this. | |
| I want to make sure everybody reads the Ken Klippenstein piece. | ||
| We're going to try to get Ken on, if not this afternoon, then tomorrow to talk about this. | ||
|
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And that is this designation of these transgender groups to narcissistic or nihilistic, violent extremists. | |
| I think that's a story right there. | ||
| Very, very important. | ||
|
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It's already started over the FBI. | |
| They're being investigated right now. | ||
| You've got to get to the bottom of this entire thing. | ||
|
unidentified
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I'm glad Comer's doing these hearings next week, but you must get to the bottom of what's going on here. | |
| And right now, I do not believe the official narrative, but I'm open to believe this, but we just need to see videos and things beyond the text messages, which I just don't. | ||
| And I don't know how you unwind the text messages. | ||
| I just don't believe that a guy with this little education and being a gamer was as articulate, would write in perfect paragraphs with ellipses as I often do and whole paragraphs and had things like you can't negotiate with evil, things like this, and wrote a Shakespeare sonnet to, I don't know, the gay boyfriend who thinks he's a girl, but also he thinks he's a furry. | ||
| And then on top of this, we got released that the shooter, the alleged shooter, believes he was into furry porn. | ||
| This stuff is so dark, you don't even know how to get your head around it. | ||
| It's so dark and so twisted and so weird. | ||
| And you know where it comes from? | ||
| The same people at that university that are into infantilism of these, they're grown men. | ||
| Look, are they 25 years old or 30 years old? | ||
| No, and I realize childhood's extended. | ||
| But man, when you're 18 years old, you know, you were hitting the beach in Okinawa. | ||
| You were at Saipan. | ||
| You were at Pearl Harbor. | ||
| You're building the American West. | ||
| You're enough, is you're a grown-ass man that you don't need a stuffed animal. | ||
| You don't need a stuffed toy. | ||
| Women too. | ||
| And women, hey, if you look at the pioneers and out west, you can't even believe you sit there and go, how did women have the babies with nothing? | ||
| Every day you have to create warmth, a home, food, meals, all of it. | ||
| It's just the women, what the women in our country have done. | ||
|
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And hey, a lot of these kids at the time are 16, 17, and 18 years old going throughout the American West. | |
| Look at that story. | ||
| Look at the story of the pioneers and the settlers. | ||
| And out West, the whole thing, from Mayflower all the way. | ||
| It is a breathtaking human achievement, unparalleled in what was developed from it with the hero and bravery. | ||
| And now you're giving people that same age a stuffed toy and some candy. | ||
| Yes, they have to work through the grief. | ||
| They have to work through the understanding. | ||
| They have to work through the shock. | ||
| It's all that. | ||
| But that's part of becoming an adult. | ||
| That's a process to work through it. | ||
| To work through it. | ||
| And you're going to give them a stuffed toy. | ||
| They ain't working through it. | ||
| That's sending them back. | ||
| That is sending them back to the cradle. | ||
| That's sending them back to the bassinet. | ||
| They don't need a stuffed toy. | ||
| What they need is the ability to stand on their own two feet and deal with it and work through it themselves. | ||
| Also, I might add, I haven't had a chance to say, I'll do it later. | ||
| I saw this artificial intelligence, these artificial intelligence things, like bringing Charlie back in his words with this. | ||
| And it was a couple of big evangelical churches. | ||
| Charlie Kirk was a man in a place and time in the United States of America in the 21st century. | ||
| And what he did is incalculable for changing the direction of this country. | ||
| And in that, Charlie Kirk communicated. | ||
| That's the reason he did it. | ||
| And he was open. | ||
|
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He was humble. | |
| It's one of the reasons he changed so many minds and brought so many young people in in that formation stage and say, hey, I'll listen to this. | ||
| If you go and use a computer and that's what you're using in an algorithm to go pick words and let people think that that is Charlie from beyond the grave, no, you are summoning the demon. | ||
| You are summoning the demon. | ||
| And preachers that did that do not understand what artificial intelligence is and what human intelligence and human spirit and the soul of Charlie Kirk. | ||
| I would argue that Charlie Kirk is a modern-day Christian saint. | ||
|
unidentified
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Flat out. | |
| Right? | ||
| Flat out. | ||
| I think you can make the argument very compelling. | ||
| Not just American hero and patriot, but a modern-day Christian saint and a martyr to his faith. | ||
| But please, please, please, please, please do not. | ||
| Don't smear his legacy. | ||
| Don't smear what Charlie Kirk was and what he stood for and what he gave his life for bravely by doing artificial intelligence. | ||
|
unidentified
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It's Charlie from beyond the grave talking to you. | |
| No, sir. | ||
| No, sir. | ||
| Charlie Kirk does not need that. | ||
| The memory of Charlie Kirk does not need that. | ||
| Charlie Kirk can live forever in our hearts and can live forever in the history of this country if we finish what he started. | ||
| short break here's your host steven k band oh hey um I guess I didn't get my lead in. | ||
|
unidentified
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Just jumped up on us. | |
| Mike Lindell is going to join us here in a moment. | ||
| Want to thank, by the way, we started the show with Brian Harrison, and I want to thank this big fight we're having down in Texas. | ||
| And it's going to get even gnarlier because now you got to get into the institutions that are not being solved. | ||
| The Patriot Mobile, the folks down there, Glenn Sturry and the team, they do so much on the political side and they give so much of their profits to organizations that you guys support, right? | ||
| Your value support. | ||
|
unidentified
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So stop giving your money to people who hate you. | |
| You know that whole pitch. | ||
| But the one thing maybe you don't know is what a great service it actually is. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Call their customer service day 972Patriot. | |
| That's 972 Patriot. | ||
| Tell them Steve Bannis sent you get a first month free if you do the switch today. | ||
| So check it out. | ||
| Best phone service around by the best people. | ||
| And when you call 972 Patriot, you're going to be talking to a citizen of these United States. | ||
| Mike Lindell, thank you for joining us, sir. | ||
| You've been under so much pressure by the FBI. | ||
|
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We saw on Arctic Frost, your name is prominent because of what you did in the trying to get the stolen election reversed. | |
| Charlie Kirk in every aspect of the turning point team was also targeted as shown in the effort. | ||
| And Charlie was such a big, prominent voice, particularly in the Arizona and what happened in Arizona back then. | ||
| It was amazing. | ||
| What do you got for us today? | ||
| We've been on fire this morning. | ||
| So folks are looking for a sale, a special deal on a Friday. | ||
| What do you got for us? | ||
| Yeah, and you guys in that Arctic Frost, my pillow was the company targeted in both of our banks when we all got deep. | ||
| But I'm telling you today, we're actually having it started out. | ||
| This could be one of our biggest days of the year. | ||
| So let's break some records. | ||
| But I want to talk to you a little bit about the products themselves. | ||
| These are our towels. | ||
| We develop all our own products. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You know how towels you feel them in the store and they feel like lotiony and stuff and they don't dry you. | |
| Watch this. | ||
| You take a taking this water here. | ||
| Just soaks in. | ||
| It just soaks in. | ||
| It actually does what towels are made to do, dry you. | ||
| And so we solve his problem solution. | ||
| But the towels, they just came in this week. | ||
| And we have a limited quantity right now available. | ||
| And all the colors and size, you guys, they're on sale right now. | ||
| Hang on. | ||
| I want to make sure. | ||
| Did you just do the shamoo commercial? | ||
| Remember the shamoo guy? | ||
| You're not the shamoo guy. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I've still got Mike Lindell of my. | |
| Hang on, hang on. | ||
| I got my pillow. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I just thought I saw a pivot. | |
| I did. | ||
| Remember that shamu? | ||
| You know, that thing get sucked up every day. | ||
| I had no idea if it worked or not. | ||
| Yeah, I knew that guy. | ||
| Hang on. | ||
| Hang on. | ||
| If you know Mike Lindell, one thing he whines about all the time is when he goes to hotel towels. | ||
| He's very focused on towels. | ||
| Like President Trump's very focused on lighting. | ||
|
unidentified
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Mike Lindell is very focused on towels. | |
| What is your beef? | ||
| What's your beat? | ||
| What is your beef about just a basic standard towel? | ||
| Well, here's the towels, everybody. | ||
|
unidentified
|
When I grew up, towels dried you. | |
| They felt soft and they dried you. | ||
| And I'm going, and towels, all of a sudden, they changed. | ||
| And I noticed a change where it filmed, they feel like almost like lotiony, and the water would just beat. | ||
| They wouldn't absorb. | ||
| Well, I found out why it was, Steve. | ||
| In 2006, our government, they were deals called GATT. | ||
| They made deals with these other countries like Pakistan, India, China. | ||
| They imported all the towels with no duties or anything on them. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So it became a free-for-all in the market. | |
| And they started adding stuff like fabric softeners, lotions, and stuff to the towels. | ||
| So when you felt them in the box stores, oh, they feel all good, but you got them home and they didn't work. | ||
| So a few years ago, when I came out with towels, it actually worked. | ||
|
unidentified
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We went back to the basics. | |
| I met with many different towel manufacturers. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And these guys actually have a patent on them where they actually work it. | |
| So it's towels that towels that do what they're supposed to do. | ||
| So that's what every one of my products has a story behind it like that. | ||
| And towels became one of our biggest products. | ||
| As everybody knows, though, we were out of them for the last about three months. | ||
| So now we've got them on sale. | ||
| They're back in stock. | ||
| Normally $69.98, $39.98 with that promo code War Room. | ||
| And we're combining it with two other sales. | ||
| We have our premium MyPillows. | ||
| This is actually a special too. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The special for the War Room Pasta. | |
| You could call it the War Room Pillow. | ||
| These are Queens and Kings, $17.98 and $19.98, the lowest price in history for our premium pillow. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And then we're doing the Percale sheets. | |
| Everybody knows, you guys all know, we're closing them out. | ||
| We're our own bank here at MyPillow because we've been debanked so many times because of the attacks by our government. | ||
| Well, the Percale sheets, we're closing them out, $29.88, any size, any color. | ||
| So if you guys go to mypillow.com forward/slash war room, we made that site specially for you all. | ||
| Free shipping on the big ticket items, the beds, the mattress toppers, all 100% made here in the USA. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They actually, those are functioning. | |
| Your sleep cycles, you have REM and Delta sleep. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Your body needs good sleep too, just like your brain needs to recalibrate. | |
| That's where our mattresses, our mattress toppers come in. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And there's nothing like them. | |
| When I reverse engineer them, our mattress actually took about eight months to develop. | ||
| Mattress toppers took even longer than that. | ||
| So you guys get those on sale plus free shipping. | ||
| If you call 800-873-1062, you get someone right downstairs for me on the phone that's going to appreciate everything you're ordering, appreciate, and give you any other details you would want to know. | ||
| Steve, it gets forgotten too. | ||
| 60-day money-back guarantee and 10-year warranty on all my pillow products. | ||
| Promo code Warroom. | ||
| Perfect. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Most powerful promo code in the business. | |
| Mike Lindell, thank you, brother. | ||
| I'll see you this afternoon. | ||
| And yes, that is not Sham Wow. | ||
| Shamu, not Shamu. | ||
| It's not Sham Wow. | ||
| That's Mike Lindell's new towel. | ||
| It'll dry you. | ||
| Honored today at the end of this week, the first week without Charlie Kirk at the Charlie Kirk Show, the great Tucker Carlson. | ||
| We'll take it from here. | ||
| On Real America's Voice, we're going to toss the Tucker. | ||
| You've got Pozzo after that, Steve Gruber, Eric Bowling, then 5 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time, we'll be right back here in the studio chair. | ||
| Got a lot to go through this afternoon, folks, including talk about the logistics for the weekend, but much, much, much more. | ||
| Maybe even from Capitol Hill, some of the goings on the CR. | ||
| Read the Ray Dalio piece. | ||
| I want Ray Dalio saying, hey, look at these fiat currencies. | ||
| Maybe it's gold. | ||
| Don't take it from me. | ||
| Don't take it from Philip Patrick. | ||
| Look at Ray Dalio. | ||
| But become the smartest person in your neighborhood about capital markets. | ||
| Go to birchgold.com. | ||
| Promo code Banned the End of the Dollar Empire. | ||
| Read it, go through it. | ||
| Seven free installments. | ||
| We're working on installment eight and nine and also a physical copy of it. | ||
| More on that later. | ||
| Now, it's time for the Charlie Kirk show on Real America's Voice and the great Tucker Carlson. |