Speaker | Time | Text |
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Just uh effective immediately, the FDA will be notifying physicians that the use of said well, let's see how we say that. | ||
Acetim menefin, acetaminophen. | ||
Is that okay? | ||
Which is basically commonly known as Tylenol during pregnancy can be associated with a very increased risk of autism. | ||
So taking Tylenol is uh not good. | ||
All right, I'll say it, it's not good. | ||
But with Tylenol, don't take it. | ||
Don't take it. | ||
Comfortable, it won't be as easy, maybe, but don't take it. | ||
If you're pregnant, don't take Tylenol, and don't give it to the baby after the baby is born. | ||
Is Tylenol safe for kids and pregnant women? | ||
Because pregnant women are already so anxious, so worried, so overwhelmed, so confused. | ||
Yes, Stephanie, good evening. | ||
Um it is safe. | ||
And here's why. | ||
And this is what uh you didn't hear any of these studies um get talked about today at uh in the Oval Office for reasons I I'm not sure why. | ||
But there was a large study published in Sweden, looked over 25 years at 2.5 million kids. | ||
And Stephanie critically what it did is it accounted for the risk factors we know cause autism and and are a strong predictor of autism, maternal age, eternal age, environmental risk factors like air pollution, uh and and looked at that that body of risks and and family genetics. | ||
And it said, okay, we're gonna we're gonna control for it so it's not impacting the study, and we're gonna look at siblings. | ||
One sibling that was exposed to Tylenol in utero, and another sibling not exposed, and then see is Tylenol accounting for any increased risk of autism. | ||
What did that study find? | ||
Gold standard research, 25 years, 2.5 million kids, no association. | ||
You don't hear that being talked about by the FDA commissioner, the president or the HHS secretary, because it flies in the face of the narrative they're trying to create. | ||
And by the way, uh Ann Thompson brought this up, the FDA press release. | ||
You know what they said at the bottom of their own press release? | ||
There is no causality in the data that they're citing, and that more evidence needs to be proven to show causality to to fit the hypothesis they're putting out there that there is a link, because they know that there's strong evidence to the contrary, which is why this is irresponsible. | ||
I don't see it. | ||
I don't I think it has I think it's very bad. | ||
They're pumping uh looks like a pumping into a horse. | ||
You have a little child, a little fragile child, and you get a uh vat of 80 different vaccines, I guess, eighty different blends, and they pump it in. | ||
Uh so ideally a woman won't take Tylenol. | ||
And uh on the vaccines, uh it would be good instead of one visit where they pump the baby loaded up with stuff, uh you'll do it over a period of four times or five times. | ||
I was I mean, I've been so into this issue for so many years just because I couldn't understand how how a thing like this could happen. | ||
Suddenly vaccine schedules has become front and center. | ||
And it's it it's entirely fair that parents are confused and they're scared. | ||
It is a lot of shots when you have a little baby and young toddlers. | ||
A hundred percent. | ||
And and so you know, the MMR vaccine, um, you know, to try to um I'll do my best to try to understand maybe his mindset, but uh you know, last week we went away from the combination shot for uh four vaccines in one MMR plus varicella. | ||
Um again, for very weak evidence, so really wasn't a need to do it. | ||
Um he was trying to suggest that maybe you can spread it out over the course of a decade, uh, the MMR shots, which you know, like no point in doing that. | ||
There's actually a risk in doing that, Stephanie. | ||
We want our kids vaccinated as quickly as possible because we don't want breakthrough infection. | ||
So think about the case of Florida. | ||
If we if we're spreading out vaccines over the course of a decade, which is what he was saying, there's no there's no risk, there's no benefit to doing that. | ||
What's the risk in a place like say Florida that is encouraging people to not get vaccinated? | ||
The risk is you're gonna have a bunch of kids partially vaccinated against something highly contagious like measles, and they will bring it home or they will be impacted themselves, or they'll bring it home to somebody that's high risk causing a problem. | ||
And so there is no scientific reason to do what he's doing. | ||
It's just creating a greater problem here when it comes to decreased uptake and confusing the public. | ||
Because this at minimum, this is confusing the public, given that the platform they have. | ||
Experience is not what Trump is looking for in a U.S. attorney. | ||
What he's looking for is fealty and um absolute in in I was gotta add it myself there. | ||
Sorry, Steph. | ||
Absolute fealty and loyalty to the president's agenda of revenge. | ||
He it has chosen specific people that he has decided are terrible for quote unquote the country, but really what they are are people that have kicked him off. | ||
People in the case of Letitia James, the New York attorney general, who successfully was able to convict him on numerous counts of business fraud, and that got under his skin like nothing else in his hometown of New York to be accused and also found guilty of it, | ||
that he wants he wants that person to pay for it just as he wants Jim Comey to pay for allowing a investigation to proceed that was appropriate and predicated to discover whether or not Trump campaign operatives and their interactions with Russian operatives was a danger to the country's national security at the time. | ||
So this next one is about you personally. | ||
Um how are you holding up under all this pressure? | ||
Um are you getting time to do some thinking? | ||
Uh are you getting enough sleep at night? | ||
Uh again, I've been there uh and it is so very, very hard. | ||
And your many fans, and I am one of them. | ||
Uh we do have worries. | ||
unidentified
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Washington uh displaces Manhattan as the hub of a new disunited nations. | |
Tell us what you mean. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I think you know, Trump actually loves going into the Lion's Den to Davos to the UN and lecturing the globalists about how they're all wrong. | ||
But more broadly, this administration just I think doesn't have much interest in the United Nations. | ||
They, you know, they they're the joke over there right now is that it's Siberia on the East River, because that's where they sent Mike Waltz after he got booted from the National running the National Security Council. | ||
But the the Trump style and the Trump philosophy is bilateral. | ||
And so they're doing these deals, which and there are these sort of odd, very ad hoc deals, one with Rwanda and the Republic of Congo, one with Azerbaijan and Armenia, where they're shaking hands behind the resolute desk with Trump, which are sort of entries in his Nobel Peace Prize campaign that are happening in Washington. | ||
And then the real business of international relations, which is these kind of trade investment deals are all being done bilaterally in Washington. | ||
I think Trump and the administration are just aren't that interested in these multilateral institutions, and in fact are interested in whether it's NATO, whether it's the African CDC, these multilateral institutions all over the world are really interested in reducing their power and turning as much as they can into these kind of one-to-one country-to-country deals with the U.S., where the US can get something out of it very specific. | ||
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
Pray for our enemies. | ||
Because we're going medieval on these people. | ||
Here's the time I got a free shot on 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've tried 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 line? | ||
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. | ||
It's Tuesday, 23 September in the year of our Lord 2025. | ||
We momentarily are going to go to the uh United Nations. | ||
The President of the United States is about to take the uh is about to take the podium and make his address to the United Nations. | ||
Um all of it running a little bit late, but that'll be fine. | ||
We'll take the speech in its entirety. | ||
Uh then we've got uh an incredible lineup of guests, including Alex Jones on some breaking news uh about Alex and about the deep state, and also uh Jim Hoft uh about the twenty twenty election, which is gonna make you uh quite happy, folks. | ||
Um, and we've got a lot in between what people are doing post Charlie Kirk to make sure that we continue and finish the work of Charlie Kirk. | ||
My producers are going to are going to, he's coming to the state right now. | ||
President is is coming up. | ||
Let's go to the United Nations and President Trump. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Very much appreciated. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
And I don't mind making this speech without a teleprompter, because the teleprompter is not working. | ||
I feel very happy to be up here with you, nevertheless, and that way you speak more from the heart. | ||
I can only say that whoever's operating this teleprompter is in big trouble. | ||
Hello, madam, first lady. | ||
Thank you very much for being here. | ||
And Madam President, Mr. Secretary General, First Lady of the United States, distinguished delegates, ambassadors, and world leaders. | ||
Six years have passed since I last stood in this Grand Hall and addressed a world that was prosperous and at peace in my first term. | ||
Since that day, the guns of war have shattered the peace I forged on two continents. | ||
An era of calm and stability gave way to one of the great crises of our time. | ||
And here in the United States, four years of weakness, lawlessness, and radicalism under the last administration, delivered our nation into a repeated set of disasters. | ||
One year ago, our country was in deep trouble, but today, just eight months into my administration. | ||
We are the hottest country anywhere in the world, and there is no other country even close. | ||
America is blessed with the strongest economy, the strongest borders, the strongest military, the strongest friendships, and the strongest spirit of any nation on the face of the earth. | ||
This is indeed the golden age of America. | ||
We are rapidly reversing the economic calamity of we inherited from the previous administration, including Ruin's price increases and record-setting inflation. | ||
Inflation like we've never had before. | ||
Under my leadership, energy costs are down, gasoline prices are down, grocery prices are down, mortgage rates are down, and inflation has been defeated. | ||
The only thing that's up is the stock market, which just hit a record high. | ||
In fact, it hit a record high 48 times in the last short period of time. | ||
Growth is surging, manufacturing is booming. | ||
The stock market, as I said, is doing better than it's ever done. | ||
And all of you in this room benefit by that. | ||
Almost everybody. | ||
And importantly, workers' wages are rising at the fastest pace in more than 60 years. | ||
And that's what it's all about, isn't it? | ||
In four years of President Biden, we had less than one trillion dollars of new investment into the United States. | ||
In just eight months since I took office, we have secured commitments and money already paid for 17 trillion dollars. | ||
Think of it, four years less than a trillion, eight months, much more than 17 trillion dollars, is being invested in the United States, and it's now pouring in from all parts of the world. | ||
We've implemented the largest tax cuts in American history and the largest regulation cuts in American history, making this once and again the best country on earth to do business. | ||
And many of the people in this room are investing in America, and it's turned out to be an awfully good investment during this eight-month period. | ||
In my first term, I built the greatest economy in the history of the world. | ||
We had the best economy ever, history of the world, and I'm doing the same thing again, but this time it's actually much bigger and even better. | ||
The numbers far surpassed my record setting first term. | ||
On our southern border, we have successfully repelled a colossal invasion. | ||
And for the last four months, and that's four months in a row. | ||
The number of illegal aliens admitted and entering our country has been zero. | ||
Hard to believe. | ||
Because if you look back just a year ago, it was millions and millions of people pouring in from all over the world, from prisons, from mental institutions, drug dealers. | ||
All over the world they came. | ||
They just poured into our country with the ridiculous open border policy of the Biden administration. | ||
Our message is very simple. | ||
If you come illegally into the United States, you're going to jail, or you're going back to where you came from, or perhaps even further than that. | ||
you know what that means i want to thank the country of el salvador for the successful and professional job they've done in receiving and jailing so many criminals that entered our country And it was under the previous administration that the number became record setting. | ||
And they're all being taken out. | ||
We have no choice. | ||
And other countries have no choice because other countries are in the exact same situation with immigration. | ||
It's destroying your country. | ||
And you have to do something about it. | ||
On the world stage, America is respected again like it has never been respected before. | ||
You think about two years ago, three years ago, four years ago, or one year ago, we were a laughing stock all over the world. | ||
At the NATO summit in June, virtually all NATO members formally committed to increased defense spending at my request, from 2% to 5% of GDP, making our alliance far stronger and more powerful than it was ever before. | ||
In May, I traveled to the Middle East to visit my friends and rebuild our partnerships in the Gulf and those valued relationships with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, and other countries are now, I believe, closer than ever before. | ||
My administration has negotiated one historic trade deal after another, including with the United Kingdom, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, and many, many others. | ||
Likewise, in a period of just seven months, I have ended seven unendable wars. | ||
They said they were unendable. | ||
You're never going to get them solved. | ||
Some were going for 31 years, two of them. | ||
31, think of it, 31 years. | ||
One was 36 years, one was 28 years. | ||
I ended seven wars. | ||
And in all cases, they were raging with countless thousands of people being killed. | ||
This includes Cambodia and Thailand, Kosovo and Serbia, the Congo and Rwanda, a vicious violent war that was. | ||
Pakistan and India, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, and Armenia and Azerbaijan. | ||
It included all of them. | ||
No president or prime minister and for that matter no other country has ever done anything close to that and I did it in just seven months. | ||
It's never happened before. | ||
There's never been anything like that. | ||
I'm very honored to have done it. | ||
It's too bad that I had to do these things instead of the United Nations doing them. | ||
And sadly, in all cases, the United Nations did not even try to help in any of them. | ||
I ended seven wars, dealt with the leaders of each and every one of these countries, and never even received a phone call from the United Nations offering to help in finalizing the deal. | ||
All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle. | ||
If the first lady wasn't in great shape, she would have fallen. | ||
But she's in great shape. | ||
We're both in good shape. | ||
We both stood. | ||
And then a teleprompter that didn't work. | ||
This is these are the two things I got from the United Nations: a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
And by the way, it's working now. | ||
Just went off. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I think I should just do it the other way. | ||
It's easier. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I didn't think of it at the time because I was too busy working to save millions of lives. | ||
That is the saving and stopping of these wars. | ||
But later I realized that the United Nations wasn't there for us. | ||
They weren't there. | ||
I thought of it really after the fact, not during, not during these negotiations, which were not easy. | ||
That being the case, what is the purpose of the United Nations? | ||
The UN has such tremendous potential. | ||
I've always said it. | ||
It has such tremendous, tremendous potential. | ||
But it's not even coming close to living up to that potential for the most part, at least for now, all they seem to do is write a really strongly worded letter, and then never follow that letter up. | ||
It's empty words and empty words don't solve war. | ||
The only thing that solves war and wars is action. | ||
Now, after ending all of these wars and also earlier negotiating the Abraham Accords, which is a very big thing for which our country received no credit, never receives credit. | ||
Everyone says that I should get the Nobel Peace Prize for each one of these achievements. | ||
But for me, the real prize will be the sons and daughters who live to grow up with the mothers and fathers because millions of people are no longer being killed in endless and unglorious wars. | ||
What I care about is not winning prizes, it's saving lives. | ||
We saved millions and millions of lives with the seven wars. | ||
And we have others that we're working on, and you know that. | ||
Many years ago, a very successful real estate developer in New York, known as Donald J. Trump. | ||
I bid on the renovation and rebuilding of this very United Nations complex. | ||
I remember it so well. | ||
I said at the time that I would do it for $500 million, rebuilding everything. | ||
I used to talk about I'm going to give you Marlboro floors. | ||
They're going to give you Taraza. | ||
I'm going to give you the best of everything. | ||
You're going to have mahogany walls, they're going to give you plastic. | ||
But they decided to go in another direction, which was much more expensive at the time, and which actually produced a far inferior product. | ||
And I realized that they did not know what they were doing when it came to construction and that their building concepts were so wrong, and the product that they were proposing to build was so bad and so costly. | ||
It was going to cost them a fortune. | ||
And I said, and wait till you see the overruns. | ||
Well, I turned out to be right. | ||
They had massive cost overruns and spent between two and four billion dollars on the building and did not even get the marble floors that I promised them. | ||
You walk on to Raza. | ||
Do you notice that? | ||
As far as I'm concerned, frankly, looking at the building and getting stuck on the escalator. | ||
They still haven't finished the job. | ||
They still haven't finished. | ||
That was years ago. | ||
The project was so corrupt that Congress actually asked me to testify Before them on the tremendous waste of money because it turned out that they had no idea what it was, but they knew it was anywhere between two and four billion dollars as opposed to 500 million with a guarantee. | ||
But they had no idea, and I said it cost much more than five billion dollars. | ||
Unfortunately, many things in the United Nations are happening just like that, but on an even much bigger scale, much, much bigger. | ||
Very sad to see whether the UN can manage to play a productive role. | ||
I've come here today to offer the hand of American leadership and friendship to any nation in this assembly that is willing to join us in forging a safer, more prosperous world, and it's a world that we'll be much happier with. | ||
A dramatically better future is within our reach, but to get there, we must reject the failed approaches of the past and work together to confront some of the greatest threats in history. | ||
There is no more serious danger to our planet today than the most powerful and destructive weapons ever devised by man, of which the United States, as you know, has many. | ||
Just as I did in my first term, I've made containing these threats a top priority, starting with a nation of Iran. | ||
My position is very simple. | ||
Can never be allowed to possess the most dangerous weapon. | ||
That's why, shortly after taking office, I sent the so-called supreme leader a letter making a generous offer. | ||
I extended a pledge of full cooperation in exchange for a suspension of Iran's nuclear program. | ||
The regime's answer was to continue their constant threats to their neighbors and U.S. interests throughout the region, and some great countries that are right nearby. | ||
Today, many of Iran's former military commanders, in fact, I can say almost all of them are no longer with us. | ||
They're dead. | ||
And three months ago, in Operation Midnight Hammer, seven American B-2 bombers dropped the 14, 30,000 pound each bombs on Iran's key nuclear facilities, totally obliterating everything. | ||
No other country on earth could have done what we did. | ||
No other country has the equipment to do what we did. | ||
We have the greatest weapons on earth. | ||
We hate to use them. | ||
But we did something that for 22 years people wanted to do. | ||
With Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity demolished, I immediately brokered an end to the 12-day war, as it's called between Israel and Iran, with both sides agreeing to fight. | ||
Fight no longer. | ||
As everyone knows, I have also been deeply engaged in seeking a ceasefire in Gaza. | ||
Have to get that done, have to get it done. | ||
Unfortunately, Hamas has repeatedly rejected reasonable offers to make peace. | ||
unidentified
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Can we? | |
Now, as if to encourage continued conflict. | ||
Some of this body is seeking to unilaterally recognize a Palestinian state. | ||
The rewards would be too great for Hamas terrorists for their atrocities. | ||
This would be a reward for these horrible atrocities, including October 7th, even while they refused to release the hostages or accept a ceasefire. | ||
Instead of giving to Hamas and giving so much, because they've taken so much, they have taken so much. | ||
This could have been solved so long ago. | ||
But instead of giving in to Hamas's ransom demands, those who want peace should be united with one message. | ||
Release the hostages now. | ||
Just release the hostages now. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
As we have got to come together, and we will come together, gonna get it done. | ||
We have to stop the war in Gaza immediately. | ||
We have to stop it. | ||
We have to get it done. | ||
We have to negotiate. | ||
Immediately have to negotiate peace. | ||
We got to get the hostages back. | ||
We want all 20 back. | ||
We don't want two and four. | ||
As you know, I got along with Steve Whitkoff and others that helped us, Marco Rubio. | ||
We we got most of them back. | ||
We were involved in all of them. | ||
But I always said the last 20 are going to be the hardest, and that's exactly what happened. | ||
We have to get them back now. | ||
We don't want to get back two and then another two and then one and then three. | ||
Have this process. | ||
No, we want them all back, and we want the actually 38 dead bodies back, too. | ||
Those parents came to me and they want them back, and they want them back very quickly and very badly. | ||
As though they were alive, they want them. | ||
They want them every bit as much as if their son or daughter were alive. | ||
I've also been working relentlessly stopping the killing in Ukraine. | ||
I thought that would be of the seven wars that I stopped. | ||
I thought that would be the easiest because of my relationship with President Putin, which had always been a good one. | ||
I thought that was going to be the easiest one. | ||
But you know, in war, you never know what's going to happen. | ||
There are always lots of surprises, both good and bad. | ||
Everyone thought Russia would win this war in three days. | ||
But it didn't work out that way. | ||
It was supposed to be just a quick little skirmish. | ||
It's not making Russia look good. | ||
It's making them look bad. | ||
No matter what happens from here on out. | ||
This was something that should have taken a matter of days, certainly less than a week, and they've been fighting for three and a half years, and killing anywhere from five to seven thousand young soldiers mostly, | ||
mostly soldiers, on both sides, every single week, from five to seven thousand dead young people, and some in cities, much smaller numbers, where rockets are shot, where drones are dropped. | ||
This war would never have started if I were president. | ||
This was a war that should have never happened. | ||
It shows you what leadership is, what bad leadership can do to a country. | ||
Look what happened to the United States, and look where we are right now in just a short period of time. | ||
The only question now is how many more lives will be needlessly lost on both sides. | ||
China and India are the primary funders of the ongoing war by continuing to purchase Russian oil. | ||
But inexcusably, even NATO countries have not cut off much Russian energy and Russian energy products. | ||
Which, as you know, I found out about two weeks ago, and I wasn't happy. | ||
Think of it. | ||
They're funding the war against themselves. | ||
Who the hell ever heard of that one? | ||
In the event that Russia is not ready to make a deal to end the war, then the United States is fully prepared to impose a very strong round of powerful tariffs, which would stop the bloodshed, I believe, very quickly. | ||
But for those tariffs to be effective, European nations, all of you are gathered here right now, would have to join us in adopting the exact same measures. | ||
I mean, you're much closer to the city. | ||
We have an ocean in between. | ||
You're right there. | ||
And Europe has to step it up. | ||
They can't be doing what they're doing. | ||
They're buying oil and gas from Russia while they're fighting Russia. | ||
It's embarrassing to them. | ||
And it was very embarrassing to them when I found out about it, I can tell you that. | ||
They have to immediately cease all energy purchases from Russia. | ||
Otherwise, we're all wasting a lot of time. | ||
So I'm ready to discuss this. | ||
We're going to discuss it today with the European nations, all gathered here. | ||
I'm sure they're thrilled to hear me speak about it, but that's the way it is. | ||
I like to speak my mind and speak the truth. | ||
As we seek to reduce the threat of dangerous weapons today, I'm also calling on every nation to join us in ending the development of biological weapons once and for all. | ||
And biological is terrible, and nuclear is even beyond, and we include nuclear in that. | ||
We want to have a cessation of the development of nuclear weapons. | ||
We know and I know, and I get to view it all the time, sir. | ||
Would you like to see? | ||
And I look at weapons that are so powerful that we just can't ever use them. | ||
If we ever use them, the world literally might come to an end. | ||
There would be no United Nations to be talking about. | ||
There would be no nothing. | ||
Just a few years ago, reckless experiments overseas gave us a devastating global pandemic. | ||
Yet, despite that worldwide catastrophe, many countries are continuing extremely risky research into bioweapons and man-made pathogens. | ||
This is unbelievably dangerous. | ||
To prevent potential disasters, I'm announcing today that my administration will lead an international effort to enforce biological weapons convention, which is going to be meeting with the top leaders of the world by pioneering an AI verification system that everyone can trust. | ||
Hopefully the UN can play a constructive role, and it will also go be one of the early projects under AI. | ||
Let's see how good it is, because a lot of people are saying it could be one of the great things ever, but it also can be dangerous, but it could be put to tremendous use and tremendous good, and this would be an example of that. | ||
Not only is the UN not solving the problems it should too often, it's actually creating new problems for us to solve. | ||
The best example is the number one political issue of our time, the crisis of uncontrolled migration. | ||
It's uncontrolled. | ||
Your countries are being ruined. | ||
The United Nations is funding an assault on Western countries and their borders. | ||
In 2024, the UN budgeted 372 million dollars in cash assistance to support an estimated 624,000 migrants journeying into the United States. | ||
Think of that. | ||
The UN is supporting people that are illegally coming into the United States, and then we have to get them out. | ||
The UN also provided food, shelter, transportation, and debit cards to illegal aliens. | ||
Can you believe that? | ||
On the way to infiltrate our southern border. | ||
Millions of people came through that southern border. | ||
Just a year ago, millions and millions of people were pouring in, 25 million altogether over the four years of the incompetent Biden administration. | ||
And now we have it stopped, totally stopped. | ||
In fact, they're not even coming anymore because they know they can't get through. | ||
But what took place is totally unacceptable. | ||
The UN is supposed to stop invasions, not create them and not finance them. | ||
In the United States, we reject the idea that mass numbers of people from foreign lands can be permitted to travel halfway around the world, trample our borders, violate our sovereignty, cause unmitigated crime, and deplete our social safety net. | ||
We have reasserted that America belongs to the American people, and I encourage all countries to take their own stand in defense of their citizens as well. | ||
you have to do that because i see it i'm not mentioning names i see it and i can call every single one of them out You're destroying your countries. | ||
They're being destroyed. | ||
Europe is in serious trouble. | ||
They've been invaded by a force of illegal aliens like nobody's ever seen before. | ||
Illegal aliens are pouring into Europe. | ||
Nobody is ever, and nobody's doing anything to change it to get them out. | ||
It's not sustainable. | ||
And because they choose to be politically correct, they're doing just absolutely nothing about it. | ||
And I have to say, I look at London, where you have a terrible mayor, terrible, terrible mayor. | ||
And it's been so changed, so changed. | ||
Now they want to go to Sharia law. | ||
But you're in a different country. | ||
You can't do that. | ||
Both the immigration and their suicidal energy ideas will be the death of Western Europe if something is not done immediately. | ||
They cannot, this cannot be sustained. | ||
What makes the world so beautiful is that each country is unique. | ||
But to stay this way, every sovereign nation must have the right to control their own borders. | ||
You have the right to control your borders, as we do now, and to limit the sheer numbers of migrants entering their countries and paid for by the people of that nation that were there and that built that particular nation at the time. | ||
They put their blood, sweat, tears, money into that country, and now they're being ruined. | ||
Proud nations must be allowed to protect their communities and prevent their societies from being overwhelmed by people they have never seen before with different customs, religions, with different everything, where migrants have violated laws, lodge false asylum claims or claimed refugee status for illegitimate reasons. | ||
They should, in many cases, be immediately sent home. | ||
And while we will always have a big heart for places and people that are struggling and truly compassionate, answers will be given. | ||
We have to solve the problem, and we have to solve it in their countries, not create new problems in our countries. | ||
And we are very helpful to a lot of countries that are just not able to send their people anymore. | ||
They used to send them to us in caravans of 25,000, 30,000 people each, these massive caravans of people pouring into our country, totally unchecked and unvetted, but not anymore. | ||
According to the Council of Europe in 2024, almost 50% of inmates in German prisons were foreign nationals or migrants. | ||
In Austria, the number was 53% of the people in prisons were from places that weren't from where they are now. | ||
In Greece, the number was 54%, and in Switzerland, beautiful Switzerland, 72% of the people in prisons are from outside of Switzerland. | ||
When your prisons are filled with so-called asylum seekers who repay kindness, and that's what they did. | ||
They repaid kindness with crime. | ||
It's time to end the failed experiment of open borders. | ||
You have to end it now. | ||
See, I can tell you. | ||
I'm really good at this stuff. | ||
Your countries are going to hell. | ||
In America, we've taken bold action to swiftly shut down uncontrolled migration. | ||
Once we started detaining and deporting everyone who crossed the border and removing illegal aliens from the United States, they simply stopped coming. | ||
They're not coming anymore. | ||
We're getting a lot of credit, but they're not coming anymore. | ||
This was a humanitarian act for all involved because on the trips up, thousands of people a week were dying. | ||
Women were being raped. | ||
Nobody's ever seen anything like it. | ||
Raped, horribly beaten, raped. | ||
On the trip up, the journey up, it was a long, it was a long walk. | ||
It was a long, arduous journey, indeed. | ||
And it was also a historic victory against human trafficking throughout the region. | ||
What we did was a victory, and we saved so many lives of people that wouldn't make the journey. | ||
That journey was loaded up with death. | ||
Loaded up with death. | ||
Dead bodies all along, all along the roads of jungles to get up. | ||
They go through jungles, they go through areas so hot you couldn't breathe. | ||
They were dying of suffocation, areas so hot that you couldn't breathe. | ||
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Dead bodies all over. | |
By them not coming, we're saving tremendous numbers of lives. | ||
My people have done a fantastic job in doing what they did, and the American public agrees with it. | ||
I mean, I was very proud to see this morning have the highest poll numbers they've ever had. | ||
Part of it is because of what we've done on the border. | ||
I guess the other part is what we've done on the economy. | ||
Joe Biden's policies empowered murderous gangs, human smugglers, child traffickers, drug cartels, and prisoners, prisoners from all over the world. | ||
The previous administration also lost nearly 300,000 children. | ||
Think of that. | ||
They lost More than 300,000 children, little children, who were trafficked into the United States on the Biden watch, many of whom have been raped, exploited, and abused, and sold. | ||
Sold. | ||
Nobody talks about that. | ||
The fake news doesn't write about it. | ||
With many others, young children who are missing or dead. | ||
And we found a lot of these children and we're sending them back, and we've been sending them back to their parents. | ||
They said, nobody knows who they are. | ||
They said, where do you come from? | ||
And they'll give us a country and we'll find out and we'll figure it out and we'll bring them back to their homes. | ||
And the mother and father rush to the door and their tears in their eyes. | ||
They can't believe that they're seeing their son or daughter, their little son or daughter again. | ||
We've done almost 30,000 of them so far. | ||
Any system that results in the mass trafficking of children is inherently evil. | ||
Yet that is exactly what the globalist migration agenda has done, and it's what it's all about. | ||
In America, those days, as you know, are over. | ||
The Trump administration is working, and we are continuing to work to track down the villains that are causing this problem, and also, as I said, to get back the 30,000. | ||
We've already returned. | ||
Now I think we're going to have another. | ||
We're going to find a lot. | ||
You're not going to find all of them. | ||
300, more than 300,000. | ||
They're lost or they're dead. | ||
They're lost or they're dead because of the animals that did this. | ||
To protect our citizens, I've also designated multiple savage drug cartels as forest. | ||
And you see this, and you see it happening right before your eyes. | ||
Let's put it this way, people don't like taking big loads of drugs in boats anymore. | ||
There aren't too many boats that are traveling on the seas by Venezuela. | ||
They tend not to want to travel very quickly anymore. | ||
And we virtually stopped drugs coming into our country by sea. | ||
We call them the water drugs. | ||
They kill hundreds of thousands of people. | ||
I've also designated multiple savage drug cartels as far as foreign terrorist organizations, along with two bloodthirsty transnational gangs, probably the worst gangs anywhere in the world: MS-13 and Tren de Aragua. | ||
Trend de Iraguas from Venezuela, by the way. | ||
Such organizations torture, maim, mutilate, and murder with impunity. | ||
They're the enemies of all humanity. | ||
For this reason, we've recently begun using the supreme power of the United States military to destroy Venezuelan terrorists and trafficking networks led by Nicholas Maduro to every terrorist thug smuggling poisonous drugs into the United States of America. | ||
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Please be warned that we will blow you out of existence. | |
That's what we're doing. | ||
We have no choice. | ||
Can't let it happen. | ||
They're destroying, I believe we lost 300,000 people last year to drugs, 300,000. | ||
Fentanyl and other drugs. | ||
Each boat that we sink carries drugs that would kill more than 25,000 Americans. | ||
We will not let that happen. | ||
Energy is another area where the United States is now thriving like never before. | ||
We're getting rid of the falsely named renewables. | ||
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By the way, they're a joke. | |
They don't work. | ||
They're too expensive. | ||
They're not strong enough to fire up the plants that you need to make your country great. | ||
The wind doesn't blow. | ||
Those big windmills are so pathetic and so bad, so expensive to operate. | ||
And they have to be rebuilt all the time. | ||
And they start to rust and rot. | ||
Most expensive energy ever conceived. | ||
And it's actually energy. | ||
You're supposed to make money with energy, not lose money. | ||
You lose money, the governments have to subsidize, you can't put them out without massive subsidies. | ||
And most of them are built in China, and I give China a lot of credit. | ||
They build them, but they have very few wind farms. | ||
So why is it that they build them and they send them all over the world, but they barely use them? | ||
You know what they use? | ||
Coal? | ||
They use gas, they use Almost anything, but they don't like wind. | ||
But they sure as hell like selling the windmills. | ||
Europe, on the other hand, is a long way to go with many countries being on the brink of destruction because of the green energy agenda. | ||
And I give a lot of credit to Germany. | ||
Germany was being led down a very sick path, both on immigration, by the way, and on energy. | ||
They were going green and they were going bankrupt. | ||
And the new leadership, new leadership came in and they went back to where they were with fossil fuel and with nuclear, which is good. | ||
It's now safe. | ||
You can do it properly. | ||
But they went back to where they were and they opened up a lot of different plants, energy plants, energy producing plants, and they're doing well. | ||
I give Germany a lot of credit for that. | ||
They've said this is a disaster what's happening. | ||
They were going all green. | ||
All green is all bankrupt. | ||
That's what it represents. | ||
And it's not politically correct. | ||
I'll be very badly criticized for saying it, but I'm here to tell the truth. | ||
I don't care. | ||
It doesn't matter to me. | ||
I'm in New York City. | ||
I'm feeling a lot safer. | ||
Crime. | ||
We're getting crime down. | ||
And by the way, speaking of crime, Washington DC. | ||
Washington, DC was the crime capital of America. | ||
Now it's a totally, after 12 days, it's a totally safe city. | ||
Everyone's going out to dinner. | ||
They're going out to restaurants. | ||
Your wife can walk down the middle of the street with or without you, nothing's gonna happen. | ||
My people have done a fantastic job, and yes, I called in the National Guard, and the National Guard took care of business, and they weren't politically correct, but they took care of business. | ||
We got 1700 career criminals out, brought them back to where they came from, the countries where they came from, or put them in jails. | ||
Washington, DC is now a totally safe city again, and I welcome you to come. | ||
In fact, we'll have dinner together at a local restaurant, and we'll be able to walk. | ||
We don't have to go by an armor plated vehicle. | ||
We'll walk right over there from the White House. | ||
They've given up their powerful edge, a lot of the countries that we're talking about, and oil and gas, such as essentially closing the great North Sea oil. | ||
Oh, the North Sea, I know it so well. | ||
Aberdeen was the oil capital of Europe, and there's tremendous oil that hasn't been found in the North Sea. | ||
Tremendous oil. | ||
And I was with the Prime Minister, I respect it and like a lot, and I said, You're sitting with the greatest asset. | ||
They essentially closed it by making it so highly taxed that no developer, no oil company can go there. | ||
They have tremendous oil left, and more importantly, they have tremendous oil that hasn't even been found yet. | ||
And what a tremendous asset for the United Kingdom. | ||
And I hope the Prime Minister is listening because I told it to him. | ||
Three days in a row, that's all he heard. | ||
North Sea oil, North Sea, because I want to see them do well. | ||
I want to stop seeing them ruining that beautiful Scottish and English countryside with windmills and massive solar panels that go seven miles by seven miles, taking away farmland. | ||
But we're not letting this happen in America. | ||
In 1982, the executive director of the United Nations Environmental Program predicted that by the year 2000, climate change would cause a global catastrophe. | ||
He said that it will be irreversible, as any nuclear holocaust would be. | ||
This is what they said at the United Nations. | ||
What happened? | ||
Here we are. | ||
Another UN official stated in 1989 that within a decade entire nations could be wiped off the map by global warming. | ||
Not happening. | ||
If you look back years ago in the 1920s and the 1930s, they said global cooling will kill the world. | ||
We have to do something. | ||
Then they said global warming will kill the world. | ||
But then it started getting cooler. | ||
So now they could just call it climate change because that way they can't miss. | ||
It's climate change. | ||
Because if it goes higher or lower, whatever the hell happens, this climate change. | ||
It's the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world, in my opinion. | ||
Climate change, no matter what happens, you're involved in that. | ||
No more global warming, no more global cooling, all of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong. | ||
They were made by stupid people that have cost their countries fortunes, and given those same countries no chance for success. | ||
If you don't get away from this green scam, your country is going to fail. | ||
And I'm really good at predicting things, you know. | ||
They actually said during the campaign, they had a hat. | ||
The best-selling hat. | ||
Trump was right about everything. | ||
And I don't say that in a braggadocious way, but it's true. | ||
I've been right about everything. | ||
And I'm telling you that if you don't get away from the green energy scam, your country is going to fail. | ||
And if you don't stop people that you've never seen before that you have nothing in common with, your country is going to fail. | ||
I'm the president of the United States, but I worry about Europe. | ||
I love Europe. | ||
I love the people of Europe, and I hate to see it being devastated by energy and immigration. | ||
This double-tailed monster destroys everything in its wake, and they cannot let that happen any longer. | ||
You're doing it because you want to be nice. | ||
You want to be politically correct, and you're destroying your heritage. | ||
They must take control strongly and immediately of the unmitigated immigration disaster and the fake energy catastrophe before it's too late. | ||
The carbon footprint is a hoax. | ||
Made up by people with evil intentions, and they're heading down a path of total destruction. | ||
You know the carbon footprint. | ||
It was a big, big thing a few years ago. | ||
I remember hearing about the carbon footprint, and then President Obama would get into Air Force One, a massive Boeing 747, and not a new one, an old one with old engines that spew everything into the atmosphere. | ||
Then he'd get in and he'd fly from Washington to Hawaii to play a round of golf. | ||
And then he'd get back onto that big beautiful plane, and it'd fly back and it'd talk about again global warming and the carbon footprint. | ||
It's a con job. | ||
At extreme cost and expense, Europe reduced its own carbon footprint by 37%. | ||
Think of that. | ||
Congratulations, Europe. | ||
Great job. | ||
You cost yourself a lot of jobs, a lot of factories closed, but you reduce the carbon footprint by 37%. | ||
However, for all of that sacrifice and much more, it's been totally wiped out, and then some by a global increase of 54%. | ||
Much of it coming from China and other countries that are thriving around China, which now produces more CO2 than all the other developed nations in the world. | ||
So all of these countries are working so hard on the carbon footprint, which is nonsense, by the way. | ||
It's nonsense. | ||
You know, it's interesting. | ||
In the United States, we have still radicalized environmentalists, and they want the factories to stop, everything should stop, no more cows. | ||
We don't want cows anymore. | ||
I guess they want to kill all the cows. | ||
They want to do things that are just unbelievable, and you have it too. | ||
But you know, we have a border strong, and we have a shape, and that shape doesn't just go straight up. | ||
That shape is amorphous when it comes to the atmosphere. | ||
And if we had the most clean air, and I think we do, we have very clean air, we have the cleanest air we've had in many, many years. | ||
But the problem is that other countries, like China, which has air that's a little bit rough, it blows. | ||
And no matter what you're doing down here, the air up here tends to get very dirty because it comes in from other countries where their air isn't so clean. | ||
And the environmentalists refuse to acknowledge that. | ||
Same thing with garbage. | ||
In Asia, they dump much of their garbage right into the ocean, and over about a one-week and two week journey, it flows right past Los Angeles. | ||
You've seen it, massive amounts of garbage, almost too much to do anything about, flowing past Los Angeles, past San Francisco, and then somebody would get in trouble because he dropped a cigarette on the beach. | ||
The whole thing is crazy. | ||
The primary effect of these brutal green energy policies has not been to help the environment, but to redistribute manufacturing and industrial activity from developed countries that follow the insane rules that are put down to polluting countries that break the rules and are making a fortune. | ||
They're making a fortune. | ||
European electricity bills are now four to five times more expensive than those in China, and two to three times higher than the United States, and our bills are coming way down. | ||
You probably see that our uh gasoline prices are way down. | ||
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We have an expression drill baby drill and that's what we're doing. | |
It's going to be much lower in a year from now. | ||
They've come way down over the last year. | ||
As a result of every air conditioner is like very Very uncommon to see one in some of these countries. | ||
Electric costs are so high. | ||
So while the US is approximately 1,300 heat related deaths annually, it's a lot of people. | ||
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Europe loses more than 175,000 people to heat this year. | |
What is that all about this? | ||
That's not the Europe that I love. | ||
All in the name of the global warming hoax. | ||
The entire globalist concept of asking successful industrialized nations towards the same agenda, and radically disrupt their entire societies must be rejected completely and totally And it must be immediate. | ||
That's why in America I withdrew from the fake Paris Climate Accord, where by the way, America was paying so much more than every country. | ||
Others weren't paying. | ||
China didn't have to pay until 2030. | ||
Russia was given an old standard that was easy to meet, the 1990 standard. | ||
For the United States, we're supposed to pay like a trillion dollars. | ||
And uh I said this is another scam. | ||
The fact is the United States has been taken advantage of by the world for many, many years, but not any longer, as you probably noticed. | ||
I unleashed massive energy production and signed historic executive orders to hunt for oil, but we don't have to do much hunting because we of any nation anywhere, oil and gas in the world. | ||
And if you add coal, we have the most of any nation in the world. | ||
Clean, I call it clean, beautiful coal. | ||
You can do things today with coal that you couldn't have done ten years ago, fifteen years. | ||
So I have a little standing order in the White House. | ||
Never use the word coal, only use the words clean, beautiful coal. | ||
Sounds much better, doesn't it? | ||
But we stand ready to provide any country with abundant affordable energy supplies if you need them, when most of you do. | ||
We're proudly exporting energy all over the world. | ||
We're now the largest exporter. | ||
In the United States, we want trade and robust commerce with all nations, everybody. | ||
We want to help nations. | ||
We're going to help nations, but it must also be fair and reciprocal. | ||
The challenge with trade is much the same with climate. | ||
The countries that followed the rules and all their factories have been plundered. | ||
It's really it's uh really sad to watch. | ||
They've been broken. | ||
They've been broken by countries that broke the rules. | ||
That's why the United States is now applying tariffs to other countries, and much as these tariffs were for many years applied to us, uncontrollably applied to us. | ||
We've used tariffs as a defense mechanism under the Trump administration, including my first term where hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs were taken in. | ||
And by the way, we had the lowest inflation, and now we have very low inflation. | ||
The only thing different Is that we have hundreds of billions of dollars flowing into our country. | ||
But this is how we will ensure that the system works for everyone and is sustainable into the future. | ||
We're also using tariffs to defend our sovereignty and security throughout the world, including against nations that have taken advantage of former U.S. administrations for decades, including the most corrupt, incompetent administration in history, the sleepy Joe Biden administration. | ||
Brazil now faces major tariffs in response to its unprecedented efforts to interfere in the rights and freedoms of our American citizens and others with censorship, repression, weaponization, judicial corruption, and targeting of political critics in the United States. | ||
I have a little problem saying this because I must tell you, I was walking in and the leader of Brazil was walking out. | ||
We saw him and I saw him, he saw me, and we embraced. | ||
And then I'm saying, can you believe I'm going to be saying this in just two minutes? | ||
laughter But we actually agreed that we would meet next week. | ||
We didn't have much time to talk, like about 20 seconds. | ||
They were in retrospect. | ||
I'm glad I waited because this thing didn't work out too well. | ||
But we did talk. | ||
We had a good talk, and we agreed to meet next week, if that's of interest. | ||
But he seemed like a very nice man, actually. | ||
We he liked me, I liked him. | ||
But if you uh and I only do business with people I like. | ||
I don't when I don't like them. | ||
When I don't like them, I don't like them. | ||
But uh we had at least for about 39 seconds, we had excellent chemistry. | ||
It's a good sign. | ||
But also in the past, Brazil, can you believe this, unfairly tariffed our nation, but now because of our tariffs, we are hitting them back, and we're hitting them back very hard. | ||
As president, I will always defend our national sovereignty and the rights of American citizens. | ||
So uh I'm very sorry to say this that Brazil is doing poorly and will continue to do poorly. | ||
They can only do well when they're working with us. | ||
Without us, they will fail, just as others have failed. | ||
It's true. | ||
Next year, the United States will celebrate the 250th anniversary of our glorious independence, a testament to enduring power and American freedom and spirit. | ||
We will also be proudly hosting the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and shortly thereafter the 2028 Olympics, which is going to be very exciting. | ||
I hope you all come. | ||
I hope that countless people from all over the globe will take part of these greats, these will be great celebrations of liberty and human achievement, and that together we all can rejoice in the miracles of history that began in July 4th, 1776, when we founded the light to all nations, and it's something really that is an amazing thing came out of that date. | ||
It's called the United States of America. | ||
In honor of this momentous anniversary, I hope that all countries who find inspiration in our example will join us in renewing our commitment, values, and those values really that we hold so dear together. | ||
Let us defend free speech and free expression, let us protect religious liberty, including for the most persecuted religion on the planet today. | ||
It's called Christianity. | ||
And let us safeguard our sovereignty and cherish qualities that have made each of our nation so special, incredible, and extraordinary. | ||
In closing, I just want to repeat that immigration and the high cost of so-called green renewable energy is destroying a large part of the free world and a large part of our planet. | ||
Countries that cherish freedom are fading fast because of their policies on these two subjects. | ||
You need strong borders and traditional energy sources if you are going to be great again. | ||
Whether you have come from north or south, east or west, near or far, every leader in this beautiful hall today represents a rich culture, a noble history and a proud heritage that makes Each nation majestic and unique, unlike anything else in human history or any other place on the face of the earth. | ||
From London to Lima, from Rome to Athens, from Paris to Seoul, from Cairo to Tokyo, and Amsterdam to right here in New York City. | ||
We stand on the shoulders of the leaders and legends, generals and giants, heroes and titans who won and built our beloved nations, all of our nations, with their own courage, strength, spirit, and skill. | ||
Our ancestors climbed to mountains, conquered oceans, crossed deserts, and trekked over wide open plains. | ||
They charged into thunderous battles, plunged into grave dangers, and they were soldiers and farmers and workers and warriors and explorers and patriots. | ||
They built towns into cities, tribes into kingdoms, ideas into industries and small islands into mighty empires. | ||
You're a part of all of that. | ||
They were champions for their people who never gave up and who never ever gave in. | ||
Their values defined our national identities. | ||
Their visions forged our magnificent destiny. | ||
Everybody in this room is a part of it in your own way. | ||
Each of us inherits the deeds and the myths, the triumphs, the legacies of our own heroes and founders who so bravely showed us the way. | ||
Our ancestors gave everything for homelands that they defended with pride, with sweat, with blood, with life and with death. | ||
Now the righteous task of protecting the nations that they built belongs to each and every one of us. | ||
So together let us uphold our sacred duty to our people and to our citizens. | ||
Let us protect their borders, ensure their safety, preserve their cultures, treasure, and traditions, and fight, fight, fight for their precious dreams and their cherished freedoms. | ||
And in friendship and really a beautiful vision. | ||
Let us all work together to build a bright, beautiful planet, a planet that we all share, a planet of peace and a world that is richer, better, and more beautiful than ever before. | ||
That can happen. | ||
It will happen. | ||
It will happen, and I hope it can happen and start right now, right at this moment. | ||
We'll turn it around. | ||
We're going to make our countries better, safer, more beautiful. | ||
We're going to take care of our people. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
It's been an honor. | ||
God bless the nations of the world. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
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Thank you. | |
thank you on behalf of the assembly i wish to thank the president of the united states Okay. | ||
Let's say that was not a wildly enthusiastic applause after her announcement. | ||
No applause. | ||
President States, I don't think I've ever seen a harder throwdown in my life with the work of the United Nations. | ||
President Trump really went in. | ||
And if you look at it over the last three days, uh, the fiery speech he gave at Charlie Kirk's memorial service, or the remarks he gave at Charlie Kirk's Memorial Service yesterday in the Roosevelt Room with really an off the chain uh full frontal attack on big pharma. | ||
And then you go to uh and then you go to um today at the United Nations, just out just out and out, um, you know, right up in the grill. | ||
Of course, there's a few sidebars to Lula and other things like that, but that's the that's the noise, not the signal. | ||
Let's go. | ||
We've got uh we've got uh uh Alex Jones, we got some breaking news, but Alex first. | ||
Um I gotta ask your assessment and uh in observations as the president leaves if we get any footage from more of the president. | ||
Let's also put it up there. | ||
Alex Jones, your thoughts about the president and the United Nations, sir. | ||
Well, you texted me this morning, we were talking about the broadcast, and you said we are now on offense. | ||
And when I was watching the whole speech, sitting here waiting, I it the first half was powerful. | ||
The second half was an epic relaunch of the West, a repudiation of the globalist, transhumanist depopulation, agenda 2030 collapse program. | ||
This was a total indictment of the great reset, the climate change fraud, the globalists, the UN, but also the answer to it and re launching the renaissance, relaunching the revival of a pro-human future that flies in the face of the globalist. | ||
And and so it's it's not enough to oppose the globalist program. | ||
He is he is actually executing on everything it takes with with industry and and and military and and culture and and getting us to not have a broken will be demoralized. | ||
This Trump is ten times better than the one we had in the first administration, battle hardened, survived multiple assassination attempts through hell, uh literally a a a spiritual leveling up. | ||
I mean, you can see it, you can feel it, the churches are full of people. | ||
Uh you know, the the Kirk murder, the left celebrating it. | ||
We are accelerating now into offense, and you can feel it and you can see it, and it is so exciting, and you can see the demoralization of the Hakeem Jeffries uh here in the U.S., the Democrat leader, the uh UN people, the the unelected dictatorial EU commission, they are in fear. | ||
They are as white as sheets. | ||
And Akeem Jeffrey said, anybody's supporting Trump. | ||
We're gonna put you in prison. | ||
Well, we already know that. | ||
We we know it's do or die, and so is Trump. | ||
And that's why they're removing these U.S. attorneys and others that are deep state operatives, and we are now on the offense. | ||
But now the real battle starts. | ||
Everything else was a prelude, a buildup. | ||
Now the big one is beginning right now, and I'm getting chills, Steve Bannon. | ||
Uh Alex, uh, first of all, I know you got a show to do, but I'd like to hold you. | ||
I got all the time you need, but I know you got a lot to cover. | ||
I can't believe I'm yeah. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
I because I want to get into details about uh about some news about you and about going on offense. | ||
But I'd like to ask you to walk the audience through the arc of just the last three days. | ||
We had really the um the the sacred and the secular merged together at Charlie Kirk's uh memorial service for President Trump's kind of fiery remarks. | ||
Um, you know, the best, I think, uh best launch of a broad awakening of Christian nationalism than yesterday, he goes right in, and now Bobby Kennedy's Bobby Kennedy and taking on Big Pharma and says, hey, this is going to be the signature. | ||
What he's saying, he's not gonna let the corporatists uh take your body and destroy you, right? | ||
You're in charge, not they're in charge. | ||
And they in the United Nations, from the Global Compact on Immigration to Climate Change, every big initiative. | ||
And this is why I loved about it. | ||
It's not that's the UN General Assembly. | ||
He's talking about the engine room in Geneva, where uh where WHO, where World Health is, UNESCO, all the all the cultural institutions of the UN where all the money goes to spread their madness throughout the world controlled by the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
Trump takes it right on. | ||
Walk me through the arc of these three days, which I think are three of the best days of Trump's presidency, first term or second. | ||
Steve, I've been on there 31 years, and I can tell everybody right now, I've never seen three days like this. | ||
My spirit is so strong, I can intellectually see it as well. | ||
But on Sunday, we said to the terrorists, the literal demonic Democrat Party celebrating death, that we understand it's a spiritual war. | ||
I've watched these people, all of them for years, know most of them. | ||
Rubio, you could see was lit up like an evangelist. | ||
It was real. | ||
It wasn't just paying lip service to Christians and Catholics. | ||
Uh Erica Kirk, everyone was on fire. | ||
Uh, Elon and Trump coming back together, all of it was so real, and that was putting the devil and the Democrats on notice that we know it's a spiritual battle, and your intimidation isn't gonna work. | ||
He Trump shoots up ten points to all time high. | ||
And that's that's the main reason that happened. | ||
People get it. | ||
Then they address big pharma and the Bill Gates globalist arm that's weaponized so much of our medical systems, and he goes in even har more hardcore than Kennedy and says, No, it's the multiple shots, which the studies show, the M MMR, uh Measles Most Rebella, the uh hepatitis. | ||
Then he goes in on the Tylenol. | ||
They knew when they approved it, it attacks your brain, attacks your liver. | ||
It is it works really great because it's super powerful, but it literally stops development in the fetus, including in the brain. | ||
That was known 35 years ago. | ||
So finally, and he said, when when reporters are like, well, the you know, there's these studies by being, and he goes, Listen, that's the establishment. | ||
We all know we were one in 50,000, now we're one in 33, one in 13 in California, same thing in South Korea. | ||
It's over. | ||
We're done. | ||
We're getting off the death cult. | ||
So he put the whole Fauci Gates New World Order death cult on notice. | ||
Then he goes to the UN and says, your climate change is a fraud, it's creating serfdom. | ||
The UN is running invasions to bring down the West with replacement migration, which is an official UN plan from 2000 in in official stated policy. | ||
That's the whole Soros operation and Mayorcus and the rest of it. | ||
And then he moves into we have to come together, we have to be optimistic, we have to build a pro-human future. | ||
Uh, he then exposes all the carbon taxes as being a fraud, and and just absolutely deliberate in in, I mean, the first part of a speech was good. | ||
The second half literally was all true. | ||
And and I was sitting there while watching it, knowing the next thing he'd say, and you could tell he went twice as long as he was supposed to, because he was just ignoring the teleprompter, and we got real Trump. | ||
And I can tell by the speech he wrote that one. | ||
But it was it's it's just it's so, and I can't wait to see what he does this afternoon. | ||
I mean, this this Trump, this Trump is incredible. | ||
Thank you, God, for this man. | ||
I am so proud that we all supported him and defended him. | ||
Nothing's perfect, but this is night and day to all the black pilled people that bitch and complain and armchair quarterback, they have no idea that if he fails to stabilize the dollar, secure the border, and stop these wars, and there's a global collapse, we are talking World War Z level destruction. | ||
We better all get behind this man right now, Steve Bannon. | ||
Alex Jones, uh, magnificent. | ||
Hang with me. | ||
Uh, I do think Charlie Kirk's assassination execution has unleashed something in the president. | ||
It's extraordinary. | ||
Maybe about time on earth. | ||
I'm telling you, absolutely extraordinary. | ||
And you're 100% correct. | ||
He went twice as long. | ||
Because the second part of that, that pivot was absolutely Alex nailed it. | ||
He put him on notice. | ||
This is like Christ going into the uh into the temple, putting them on notice. | ||
I know who you are, and I know what you've done, and it's evil and it's wrong, and I'm stopping it. | ||
The president of the United States throws down as hard as you can possibly throw down. | ||
Oh, and by the way, after last night he went in and signed the uh EO on Antifa's a terrorist organization. |