| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
| Pray for our enemies because we're going medieval on these people. | ||
| You're going to not get 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're trying to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. | ||
| It's going to happen. | ||
| And where do people like that go to share the big lie? | ||
| MAGA media. | ||
| I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
| Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | ||
| If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
| Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
| We didn't want to see young girls in towns across the UK raped by Pakistani gangs. | ||
|
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And that just gives you a snapshot as to what happens when you start importing young men from deeply medieval misogynistic cultures. | |
| And there are people who are voting for this and justifying that we're not going to have this. | ||
| You're leaving the European Convention on Human Rights. | ||
|
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There's a reason that communism is an intellectual pursuit. | |
| Just like transgender ideology, you know, you've got to persuade yourself it's both for a man to become a woman. | ||
| That's not common sense. | ||
|
unidentified
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I can't do this anymore. | |
| And there is a group of people who are benefiting from the state of Britain at the moment. | ||
|
unidentified
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But what is clear is we are living through a watershed moment. | |
| What we essentially have of this unprecedented inundation from cultures which frankly really struggle to assimilate with our own. | ||
| We didn't want any of that stuff. | ||
|
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If we don't have families who have a larger number of children, this country will not survive. | |
| Friday, 5 December in the year of our Lord, 2025. | ||
| Now, I'm probably not going to be able to get to it in depth this morning. | ||
| And so tomorrow I'm going to have a team of our best geopolitical thinkers and national security strategists. | ||
| We'll have them on to talk about the 26 or 27 page overview of the national strategy, the national security strategy of the United States under President Trump put out by the White House early this morning. | ||
| The headline in Daily Mail, the first take they took on it was that President Trump kind of tells Europe, we're in a civilizational crisis. | ||
| You're definitely at the tip of the spear of that crisis. | ||
| And we're kind of not so sure who's actually going to be in charge of Western Christendom in maybe 30 years. | ||
| And I keep saying all the time, this is one of the reasons that England and France and other places in Western Europe have a tough time selling 30-year bonds. | ||
| There's a big question like who's going to be in charge. | ||
| It's a civilizational crisis. | ||
| Now, into the middle of this, a former British prime minister steps in with a new show, Liz Truss. | ||
| Liz, the first question I've got for you, Prime Minister, thank you for joining us. | ||
| We had Raw Egg Nationalists on yesterday. | ||
| We had other people talking about it. | ||
| We had Ryan Grimm talking about the efforts to demonetize Breitbart and other American conservative sites under the Starmer government in England. | ||
| It seems to me about the rules in the United Kingdom that what I just saw on your clip about your new show would be defined as hate speech in the United Kingdom and you'll be yanked off the air immediately. | ||
| But what say you? | ||
| Well, I'm broadcasting in America as well, so they won't be able to close me down. | ||
| We've got multiple sites across multiple different countries. | ||
| But you're right, free speech is under huge threat in the UK. | ||
| We've had people jailed for posting on X. We've had people arrested at their own homes. | ||
| And the reason they're doing this is they want to cover up what is happening in our country. | ||
| And it's why I'm starting my new show, because I was so angry and frustrated by the mainstream media, the way they talked about my premiership, the way they covered up the grooming gangs, the way they have covered up the existential crisis that our country now faces. | ||
| You'd think there was nothing going on if you watched the BBC. | ||
| But people in Britain know we are in very, very serious trouble. | ||
| I want to go back. | ||
| We're going to talk about the current situation in a second, but I want to go back to the beginning. | ||
| The American Revolution. | ||
| We're starting the 250th year. | ||
| This coming year is the 250 signed the Declaration of Independence. | ||
| We've already had the 250th anniversary of Lexington and Concord and Bunker Hill, the battles. | ||
| One of the big fights, if you go back and study American history in the revolutionary era, one of the big debates was that a lot of the colonists, because remember, one-third of the colonists were Tories all the way through the fight, and one-third were in the middle. | ||
| Only about one-third were patriots during that part of the revolution and the war for independence. | ||
| But one of the things that kept coming up was our rights as Englishmen. | ||
| They were quite afraid that if they broke off from England and formed some new entity, they wouldn't have the rights of Englishmen. | ||
| Now, you don't have a written constitution, but basically when you say the rights of Englishmen, you've always been believers in free speech. | ||
| What has happened over the last 20, 30, 40 years that England almost has become a police state when it comes to free speech, ma'am? | ||
| Well, if you go right back to the Anglo-Saxon times, we had the right to bear arms. | ||
| Free men in England had the right to bear arms. | ||
| We invented that. | ||
| We invented free speech in 1695. | ||
| We had the Bill of Rights 1689. | ||
| So we do have these freedoms written into our law. | ||
| The problem is that, particularly over the last 30 years, since the advent of Tony Blair, new laws have been passed that have limited those freedoms. | ||
| The Human Rights Act that gave the same rights to illegal immigrants as British citizens. | ||
| The Climate Change Act, which limited what we could do in terms of using our own energy, the Equality Act, which put DEI into law in Britain. | ||
| And Blair also abolished the role of the Lord Chancellor. | ||
| So judges used to be appointed by the Lord Chancellor and the Prime Minister. | ||
| They now appoint themselves. | ||
| So what's happened is huge amounts of power that used to sit in Parliament has been passed over to unelected bureaucrats, unelected judges, unelected police chiefs. | ||
| And these people have been captured by the woke ideology. | ||
| They've been captured by the transgender activists, by the Islamists in some cases, by the eco-zealots. | ||
| And I learnt about this as a government minister. | ||
| I fought that battle for 10 years. | ||
| And ultimately, as Prime Minister, what happened to me was those people had so much power, they were able to take me down. | ||
| So what has happened is the whole basis of ancient British liberties has been completely undermined by legal change in Britain and by the capture of our institutions. | ||
| And the only way we're going to fix that is by capturing them back. | ||
| You know, it's one thing for Alex Jones or Steve Bannon or Tucker Carlson or something like that talk about the deep state and, you know, Mike Benz, we got to go after the deep state or Natalie Winners. | ||
| We do a lot of stuff in the deep state here. | ||
| It's another thing for a prime minister of England, of the United Kingdom, to say that. | ||
| Talk to me about, you continue to go back and reference that. | ||
| What do you mean about the deep state? | ||
| What's your definition of it? | ||
| And specifically, how did they come after you? | ||
| Was it just not mismanagement on your part? | ||
| Or do you actually make the case that the Deep State targeted you and that's why they wanted to get you out of there so quickly, ma'am? | ||
| The Deep State targeted me. | ||
| So if you look at what the Bank of England did in 2022, they announced the sale of £40 billion worth of government guilt the night before we put our budget forward. | ||
| That was deliberately queering the market. | ||
| And then afterwards, when things started to go wrong, They admitted that two-thirds of all of the market movements had been their failure to regulate the pension industry. | ||
| They admitted that in a report they put out in 2024, but none of the mainstream media reported on it. | ||
| So what I found was I found underhand dealings, off-the-record briefings, and silence on the part of the mainstream media. | ||
| And I knew the media was biased, but what I didn't understand until I experienced it myself is the extent to which they are just prepared to suppress the narrative that they don't want to hear. | ||
| And you talked about yourself and others in the US, but I think the person who understands it most is President Trump. | ||
| Because when he went through what he went through in the 2016 period and he saw people undermine him from within his own administration, that is the experience many elected leaders now have in Western countries. | ||
| It's not just America and Britain, although I think Britain has the deepest deep state. | ||
| It is pretty common tactic of the left now to take over the judiciary, to take over the bureaucracy, and to not prosecute their arguments through the ballot box, but to undermine, to use lawfare, to de-bank, and essentially try and cancel their opposition. | ||
| Is the deep state in England centered around MI5 or MI6 or is it centered around the central bank, the famous central bank? | ||
| I'd say the most powerful institution is the central bank and the treasury. | ||
| And they are 100% signed up to the Davos globalist agenda. | ||
| They work hand in hand with organisations like the World Bank, the IMF. | ||
| Look at Mark Carney. | ||
| He is a classic. | ||
| He was at the World Economic Forum. | ||
| He was the governor of the Bank of England. | ||
| He was the governor of the Bank of Canada. | ||
| He's now the Prime Minister of Canada. | ||
| These are the types of people who operate in a network. | ||
| They've all got a similar worldview. | ||
| They believe in Keynesian economics. | ||
| They believe in DEI. | ||
| They believe in climate change. | ||
| They believe in global governance. | ||
| They don't believe in nation states. | ||
| They want to be part of a global elite that controls what happens. | ||
| Well, the Bank of England does have some sort of regulation by Parliament, and then you've got the Crown. | ||
| Does the Crown have any, if it's not MI5 and MI6, does the Crown have any involvement here? | ||
| Because the Crown does have say-so and I guess the sub-cabinet level appointees about who actually gets appointed into the government? | ||
| The Prime Minister does have say-so, but what has happened is the rules have been so gerrymandered and essentially Parliament, which is sovereign in Britain, that's the basis of the British Constitution, has passed those powers over to unelected bodies. | ||
| And these unelected bodies, particularly the Bank of England, through its sheer economic power, is able to control the narrative in the mainstream media. | ||
| That is what is going on. | ||
| So the only way to fight this is for Parliament to take back all the power it's given away. | ||
| And I see similar tendencies in the US administration. | ||
| All these powers have been given to government agencies that didn't exist before. | ||
| That has denuded the president of some executive power, but also Congress of power as well. | ||
| So, you think of the fight we've had here in the years in the wilderness with the Project 2025 and CRA and all these great MAGA institutions that came up, the five or six MAGA think tanks, had this theory of the case of the unified theory of the executive or really the implementation of the full Article II powers of the president, which are now just announced, I think, yesterday, another test at the Supreme Court about his ability to hire and fire anybody he wants, | ||
| to cut budgets that the appropriations bill is only a ceiling. | ||
| And particularly as commander-in-chief, this huge fight with Judge Bosberg Bosberg and others about his powers as commander-in-chief to actually stop an invasion and send the invaders home. | ||
| You're making, you're saying the prime minister in England's got the same exact problem, but do you have enough executive power in England to reverse what Parliament's done and the bureaucracy has done to take it away? | ||
| Well, because we have a unified parliament and executive, essentially, if you elect 350 MPs who are prepared to do what it takes, who are prepared to take on these unelected institutions, who are prepared to put the Bank of England back under elected representative control, yes, you can do it. | ||
| But what I know from my experience is those people will have to walk through fire because they'll be accused of abolishing democracy, abolishing independence of our institutions, undermining the rule of law. | ||
| You know, everything will be thrown at people who try and do that. | ||
| But it is exactly the same thing that's happened: the Prime Minister, who was able to exercise that power with the backup of a parliamentary majority, is no longer able to do it until we overturn all of those laws and also until we replace the people who are head of those institutions. | ||
| One of the most important things you said, Steve, was about the power to hire and fire. | ||
| Currently, the British Prime Minister does not have the power to hire and fire the people that run the key government departments. | ||
| The Treasury, the Bank of England, the Home Office doesn't have that power. | ||
| The Prime Minister needs to take that power back. | ||
| And, you know, we started losing that power in 1854. | ||
| So it's going to be a long fight back. | ||
| Let me take a short commercial break. | ||
| The 56th Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Great Britain, is with us. | ||
| We're going to talk about her new show. | ||
| She's going after the deep state, as President Trump is doing here every day. | ||
| Short commercial break. | ||
| Philip Patrick's also going to join us. | ||
| Birch Gold. | ||
| Financial markets are turbulent, particularly in things like crypto. | ||
| Understand why gold has been a hedge for 5,000 years of mankind's recorded history. | ||
| Take your phone out and text Bannon, B-A-N-N-O-N, at 989898. | ||
| Get the ultimate guide for investing in gold and precious metals. | ||
| Don't forget silver. | ||
| It's on a tear in the age of Trump. | ||
| Totally free, no obligation. | ||
| Short break. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Kill America's Voice family. | |
| Are you on Getter yet? | ||
|
unidentified
|
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? | ||
| Go to get her. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
| You can follow all of your favorites. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Steve Bannon, Charlie Clark, Jack the Soviet, and so many more. | |
| Download the Getter app now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sign up for free and be part of the new pick. | |
| Okay, the 56th Prime Minister of the United Kingdom joins us, Liz Truss. | ||
| Before I get to the show, is this what Nigel Farage is basically pitching? | ||
| That's why it's called the Reform Party. | ||
| And they're kind of on fire now. | ||
| I think if you look at reform, if you look at the polling of both the Tory Party and Labour combined, it doesn't reach where the Reform Party would be. | ||
| And I think somebody projected out the other day they'd have 300 and some seats in Parliament if the election was held today. | ||
| Is this one of the pitches of Niger? | ||
| I know it's about mass migration and all these issues with the Islamists and all these issues with what's happening with really the financial collapse of England. | ||
| But is part of his pitch that you've got to make these basic reforms or you're not going to have a country anymore? | ||
| Well, he certainly is talking about mass migration and Britain's economic decline. | ||
| I don't think he has gone as far as what I've just said needs to happen in terms of replacing the senior levels of the bureaucracy and repealing all of the laws that have been passed essentially since Tony Blair was in power particularly. | ||
| But also some of them were passed in the 1980s that started limiting free speech. | ||
| So we need a huge overhaul. | ||
| And there's still a debate going on in Britain. | ||
| The next election is not likely to be until 2029 about exactly how far we need to go. | ||
| Because I've been there, I know how deep the problem is. | ||
| And what I'm saying to Nigel and anybody else who may become the next British Prime Minister, unless you get rid of these laws, unless you restore executive power in Britain, nothing will change. | ||
| If the same civil servants are there, if it's the same structure in the judiciary, we will continue with the same failed policies because people like Starmer and Rachel Reeves are on autopilot. | ||
| They're not even controlling what's going on. | ||
| And Kier Starmer is now the most unpopular Prime Minister in British history. | ||
| He's probably more unpopular than King John. | ||
| And we know what happened that he was forced to sign the Magna Carta after his disastrous leadership of Britain. | ||
| This is a very, very serious crisis we're in. | ||
| And of course, Nigel Farage and Reform are benefiting from the sense of depression and crisis in the country. | ||
| Are you still trying to work with the Tories to get them on track? | ||
| Because it seems like it's a pretty pale, you know, they're not painting with bold colours, as Conservatives say. | ||
| It's a pretty pale right now. | ||
| They're basically failing to admit that in government, and I was included in this, we did not reverse the Blair wreckage of our constitution, of our immigration system, of our human rights law. | ||
| We didn't reverse that wreckage, and actually things got worse. | ||
| And now we're in the end game. | ||
| I call it the dark Blair period, but we're in the end game of this where we have problems with grooming gangs, we've got problems with illegal migration, the economy is in free fall, the average Brit is now poorer than the average person in Mississippi, which is the poorest US state. | ||
| So it really is a terrible disaster zone. | ||
| But the reason I'm starting this show, Steve, is what I understand from being in politics is politics is often downstream of the media. | ||
| And we have a huge problem with the media in Britain. | ||
| The BBC is biased. | ||
| I'm delighted that President Trump is suing them because they deserve everything they're getting. | ||
| And the public, whilst they realize that things are bad, they don't necessarily understand why that is and how it's come to be. | ||
| So my show is going to be not just talking about what's going on on free speech, what's going on with grooming gangs, what's happening on mass migration. | ||
| It's also going to be explaining why that happened and who's responsible. | ||
| Because if people think it's just about replacing the individual in number 10, they do not understand how deep this crisis is. | ||
| So the structural issues you have to go after and have to expose and awaken the British public to, as you talk about those in the specificity, won't a lot of this be called hate speech by the regulators in the United Kingdom and they're going to try to shut you down? | ||
| Well, they might try and shut me down, but we know, I mean, X is now the biggest platform in the UK, and they're not going to shut Elon Musk down. | ||
| And we've had in recent days the U.S. Under Secretary over at the UK warning against using the Online Safety Act. | ||
| So we have the protection of our friends in America and your freedom of speech to be able to reach the British public and tell them what is actually going on. | ||
| Prime Minister, where do people get to show social media? | ||
| I understand you're having a couple events in both New York and D.C. next week. | ||
| Where do people go to get all the information about all this? | ||
| I understand you have very ambitious plans on taking over. | ||
| I think the old hangar. | ||
| You've got to be ambitious, though, Steve. | ||
| And the MAGA movement is such an inspiration to us because, you know, there were many occasions when it looked like it was all over, but people kept fighting and we have to fight. | ||
| And this is an existential battle for our country. | ||
| So I'm prepared to do whatever it takes. | ||
| There are a lot of people in Britain who are prepared to do whatever it takes. | ||
| Our voices have been muffled. | ||
| People have been silenced. | ||
| We're not going to allow that to happen. | ||
| And platforms like X are very important. | ||
| So my show will be on X. It'll be on YouTube. | ||
| It will be on Rumble. | ||
| I'm also working with John Solomon and Just the News. | ||
| So it will be available on lots of audio channels as well. | ||
| And people can follow me on at TrustLiz on X to find out exactly when it's happening. | ||
| Prime Minister, the 56th Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Liz Truss, great, looking forward to it. | ||
| We'll push your content out. | ||
| Great fight. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| And another comrade in ours. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| You need to come over and do some free speech in Britain as well, Steve. | ||
| If I can get in the country, I think I will. | ||
| I'll take you up. | ||
| I'll take you up on it. | ||
| Thank you, ma'am. | ||
| Liz Truss. | ||
| Looking forward to putting the show out. | ||
| She's got a lot of followers here in the U.S. and she's going after the deep state. | ||
| Nigel Farage, our guy, continued a hammering. | ||
| And of course, Nigel, that's huge lead. | ||
| In fact, Raheem did this amazing piece, this documentary of the conference they just had. | ||
| Raheem's been a little under the weather, so we're going to get Raheem up here and go through that. | ||
| Hopefully, next week when Raheem's back on his feet. | ||
| We got John Solomon, John Fredericks in Indianapolis. | ||
| John, you're getting ready for the turning point rally. | ||
| I think the vote in the House, the third reading is today. | ||
| Get us up to speed. | ||
| This is massively important. | ||
| Huge win at the Supreme Court last night in Texas. | ||
| But we had Dave Bossi on here, Solomon on here, Brian Harrison on here, Attorney General Paxson. | ||
| This is the fight we got to win. | ||
| We got to win these redistricting wars. | ||
| We've got to win them now, sir. | ||
| Well, we're getting closer than we were yesterday in the lower chamber, in the House. | ||
| First thing they needed to do was get a quorum of 67. | ||
| The Democrats stayed in the hallway, hoping that a couple of Republicans wouldn't make it or couldn't make it or wouldn't show up. | ||
| And then if there was no quorum, they needed 67 out of the 70 Republicans. | ||
| The thing is dead. | ||
| But there is a quorum. | ||
| 69 were there. | ||
| So the Democrats in the House can basically go home. | ||
| They have nothing to do. | ||
| The vote is going to come a little bit later on after the rally at noon. | ||
| Turning point action leading that. | ||
| Governor Mike Braun, Lieutenant Governor, will be there. | ||
| Micah Beckwith, uh, Liz Brown, others. | ||
| So, here's where we are in the state senate. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Uh, yesterday we said we needed 25 votes because we thought that Micah Beckwith would break the tie. | ||
| Today, we find find out we're going to need 26 because if it's 25-25, the Democrats don't show up and vote, they walk out. | ||
| That means it's 25 to something, and they can uh, Micah Beckwith, the lieutenant governor, can only break a 25-25 tie. | ||
| Anything other than that, if it's 25-24, doesn't matter. | ||
| They need 26 votes in order to get this passed. | ||
| So, here's where we are right now: they need 26 votes right now. | ||
| Uh, the powers to be, they have told me the state senators who are counting whip votes say they have 22 solid votes. | ||
| 22. | ||
| They need four. | ||
| It is a little over 50-50. | ||
| Obviously, the White House now putting tremendous pressure on some of these wayward state senators, you call them rhinos or whatever you want to call them, threatening primaries. | ||
| They're going to get primaried. | ||
| MAGA Inks got over a billion dollars. | ||
| They're not going to be shy about it, but we need four votes. | ||
| This thing is going to get strung out. | ||
| As I told you yesterday until Friday, the first reading is going to be Monday. | ||
| It's going to go on from there. | ||
| They have to have three readings. | ||
| So, we expect that the final vote is going to be on Friday. | ||
| And we're going to be here through the week because the bottom line is we need to hold the two we just got, and then we need four. | ||
| And if we can get to 26, this thing is going to pass based on what SCOTUS did with Texas. | ||
| There's not going to be a legal challenge. | ||
| And if there is, it isn't going to matter. | ||
| We're going to pick up these two seats and make it 9-0. | ||
| But we're down four. | ||
| We need to get four Republicans to vote to save America, Steve. | ||
| Rally today. | ||
| I think we were trying to pick it up. | ||
| It was live streaming. | ||
| We're going to try to pick it up here on our side channel. | ||
| Real America's Voice, the Charlie Kirk Show, is going to start. | ||
| I'm sure Charlie Kirk will be there live. | ||
| You're there for the week. | ||
| Where do people go for your social media and everything about the John Frederick show? | ||
| You've got the bus, and you're staying there until we get a win. | ||
| I like that. | ||
| Where do people go, John Fredericks? | ||
| You can't leave until you get the W, okay? | ||
| You just can't do it. | ||
| That's what everybody else does, right? | ||
| They leave in the third quarter because you're losing. | ||
| Okay, we're losing, right? | ||
| But we got a quarter of football to play. | ||
| Somebody's got to make a play, and we're going to stay here throughout putting pressure on these state senators. | ||
| And if they vote no, and this costs, this costs us the House. | ||
| We lose by one or two votes, and we don't have the House, and they impeach Trump. | ||
| This is going to be on these rhinos, Republicans in the Indiana State Senate. | ||
| I'm all over this. | ||
| We're getting updates every hour. | ||
| I'm dialed into everybody at JF Radio Show, at JF Radio Show. | ||
| Steve, lace them up and lace them tight, and let's get in the game. | ||
| John Fredericks live in Indianapolis, Indiana, where the fight for redistricting is today and throughout the week. | ||
| John, thank you so much. | ||
| Look forward to checking back with you. | ||
| Short break. | ||
| Thank you for having me, Steve. | ||
|
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That is | |
| great and I think the building is great. | ||
| We've made a lot of improvements over the last six months. | ||
| Taking Kennedy Center was in very bad shape. | ||
| Now it's getting to be really good. | ||
| And in six months, it's going to be incredible. | ||
| The improvements we've made. | ||
|
unidentified
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First time for the U.S. to host since the 90s. | |
| You ready for it? | ||
| I'm ready for it, and they're ready for it. | ||
| And Johnny, you know, has done a fantastic job with FIFA. | ||
| And we're looking to have, you know, we have already set records with ticket sales. | ||
| I don't think there's ever been anything like it in any sport. | ||
| And so I want to congratulate you. | ||
| I don't even have to wait. | ||
| Major records have been set. | ||
|
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How are you? | |
| Good. | ||
| Nice to see you. | ||
|
unidentified
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Today is not football, American football. | |
| It's soccer. | ||
| It's a big event. | ||
| That's right. | ||
| A big day. | ||
| It's just a big day, and it's a great sport. | ||
| And it really is coming to America. | ||
| And nobody ever thought a thing like this could happen. | ||
| And I'm very happy to say that we've already set the all-time record on ticket sales long before the first ball is kicked. | ||
|
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100%. | |
| You've had some concerns about crime in American cities, some of the cities that will be hosting. | ||
| Have they remedied that for you? | ||
| Or are you still considering maybe asking FIFA to move some of those cities? | ||
| No, I don't want to do that, but I will tell you: if they do have a problem, by the time we get there, we'll take care of that problem. | ||
| We can solve that problem. | ||
| I've proven that in DC and everywhere else we went, so we'll take care of that very easily. | ||
| So if they have a problem, hopefully they'll let us know that and we will solve any problem. | ||
| Okay, thank you. | ||
| Congratulations. | ||
|
unidentified
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Thank you, Christian. | |
| America will be hosting the World Cup. | ||
| Yeah, so obviously a lot of people are going to be able to do it. | ||
| Johnny, you're not set every record on the Mexican president. | ||
| He's been the Prime Minister and the leading World Cup game. | ||
| Not only that, I got to see a man named Pele Clay. | ||
| He tells you I worked on it. | ||
| He was in Cosmos. | ||
| I remember that one time ago when it was quite a bit of a trend. | ||
| Maybe I'll read the news and the neighbors right there that if there are issues and they want to keep our community wine. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Thank you so much. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| So you hear the excitement from the president. | ||
| You talk about the financial aspect of this. | ||
| He said upwards of $40 billion to be pumped into the American economy. | ||
| The president has said they've already sold six to seven million tickets for the games. | ||
| And we've also heard them come up with something called this FIFA task to bring people to America with Marco Rubio essentially saying that if you're on the FIFA path, if you find tickets to the games if you want in the United States, you'll get an expedited meeting at an embassy. | ||
| It's not a guarantee that you're going to get a visa, but you'll move to the front of the line. | ||
| So, President Trump sees this as a financial boom. | ||
| He wants people to come into the country. | ||
| EHS says they're ready to first. | ||
| Transportation Secretary John Duffy says the FAA won't be ready for all the international travel clubs going to come in. | ||
| This starts next year in 2026. | ||
| It's going to follow America's 2008 birthday. | ||
| President Trump is excited about that, and he's willing to finalize on the 2010s. | ||
| with his administration just to make sure the United States is ready for it and he is on. | ||
| He's having a great time on the red carpet here. | ||
| Thank you, Dr. Tariq. | ||
| He's a great player. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Thank you so much for being here. | ||
| The pool is set up at the end, and they're going to gather. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Thank you so much. | ||
| Obviously, you're being a big participant in all the ... | ||
| The President is here. | ||
| She's doing a very good job. | ||
| She's a good woman. | ||
| Very, very passionate job. | ||
| It's amazing. | ||
| And, as I said, everything has to be helping us. | ||
| So, and Canada, or health leaders, we have a record of tickets. | ||
| It's already here, long before the first ball is kicked. | ||
| And we're going to do more of this. | ||
| That award is supposed to be kind of on behalf of sports fans all around the globe going to somebody who is promoting world peace. | ||
| So we've already seen how many wars he's ended since he came into office. | ||
| And he says he's trying to end the big wars as he describes it. | ||
| Russia, Ukraine, of course, he says he's making progress on that front. | ||
| But yes, Harris, the anticipation is that he's in a good relationship with the president that he will be the recipient of that peace. | ||
| Has it happened yet? | ||
| No. | ||
| Will it happen? | ||
| So essentially, again, this is going to be. | ||
| 48 and 30 miles expanding from 32. | ||
| What's going to happen today is wrong. | ||
| There's a bunch of different Canada. | ||
| And then they should play Brawl. | ||
| And I don't know if they're going to find out who they match up with to start those first rounds next summer in 2026. | ||
| So that's why there's so much excitement. | ||
| Depending on which context you put in and how difficult your opponents are, that immediately will kind of find you up for success or a lack of success in the tournament. | ||
| So the teams, there's a massive amount of one press here. | ||
| I mean, you can't go left or right right now, but there's music here. | ||
| All yeah, yeah. | ||
| I forgot to have the cameras you can see. | ||
| There's media all around this is key for goals or countries all around the world playing these things. | ||
| We're going to try it. | ||
| I love President Trump. | ||
| Look how dynamic that is. | ||
| Taking every question from the international sports community. | ||
| As soon as we can get a better feed, we're going to go back to Kennedy Center at the FIFA drawing. | ||
| We're having a little problem right now. | ||
| Let's go to Philip Patrick. | ||
| Philip Patrick, Birch Gold, we just had the 56th prime minister of the United Kingdom, Great Britain, on the show. | ||
| She's launched a new show about the deep state. | ||
| She says point blank, it's not MI5, it's not MI6, it's not the Crown. | ||
| It's the Bank of England working in conjunction with the Party of Davos, with the International Monetary Fund, with the World Bank. | ||
| She implies the Federal Reserve. | ||
| What say you about that? | ||
| Is that the deep state of the world? | ||
| Is the central banks? | ||
| And why is gold a hedge to all the madness of the money printing of the central banks, sir? | ||
| I mean, look, the answer is absolutely yes. | ||
| Bank of England is a good example. | ||
| The European Central Bank is a good example. | ||
| And when she talks about them being the deep state, I think she means not so much in a conspiratorial sense, but more in a structural one. | ||
| Look at the ECB as an example. | ||
| This is an unelected institution that essentially dictates fiscal discipline, banking rules, and now even geopolitical posture for 27 nations. | ||
| In Europe, we see governments change consistently, but the ECB never does. | ||
| When a crisis hits, whether it's debt, energy, inflation, sanctions, the ECB will step in and tell elected governments what is allowed and what isn't. | ||
| That for me is real power, a bureaucracy that nobody voted for, steering the continent towards policies that voters never approved. | ||
| And today we're seeing central banks use that power far beyond interest rates, specifically again, the ECB, doing it through the financial system, not the ballot box. | ||
| Look at what they've done with Russia recently. | ||
| The ECB isn't just setting interest rates. | ||
| It's weaponizing regulation. | ||
| It's pushing sanctions. | ||
| It's redefining ordinary commerce with Russia as dual use, meaning military relevant. | ||
| They're implying sanctions now. | ||
| So once the financial system starts doing the geopolitical work that politicians won't do, you end up exactly in the situation that Europe's in now, treating business with Russia as a step towards war. | ||
| But I think central banks in general have stepped way beyond their mandate and they've huge political power now, which is very concerning given that they're unelected bodies or institutions. | ||
| Talk to me about, you know, they got this zero hedge and I put it up, has this conversation that was picked up among the European heads. | ||
| And they're talking about, you know, taking the 300 billion pounds or 300 billion dollars that they've already confiscated and using that to do as part of the peace deal to do the reconstruction, the reconstruction of the reconstruction of Ukraine. | ||
| They're also saying we don't believe the Americans are going to sell us out. | ||
| They're not going to support this. | ||
| Medviv, and then also Putin implied that if you take our assets, if you take those $300 billion and use them to do anything to fund the war in Ukraine, that in itself is an act of war and we're going to respond. | ||
| How big a deal is this? | ||
| And how also does this really point to gold as a hedge when you now have countries and transnational institutions like the ECB actually sitting there in the EU sitting there saying we're going to take a nation's assets and use it to fund a war against them? | ||
| I mean, we know how absurd that is. | ||
| When Europe seizes Russia's assets, it hurts Moscow short term, but it's not as much as it hurts the long-term credibility of the West. | ||
| Every country is watching what's happening from Riyadh to New Delhi to Brasilia. | ||
| They all see the same message. | ||
| Your money isn't safe in the Western financial system. | ||
| And I think this is the single fastest way to undermine the US dollar's role as the global reserve currency. | ||
| You cannot run a reserve currency system on fear. | ||
| You just can't, right? | ||
| It's run on trust, predictability, the rule of law. | ||
| And the West is torching all three of those at the moment. | ||
| It's exactly why the BRICS keeps growing, why gold buying is at record highs, why de-dollarization is accelerating, no matter what the Treasury Department says. | ||
| And I think there's a bigger danger as well. | ||
| Look, after World War I, I think the world learned a very hard lesson. | ||
| Intertwined economies make conflict much harder. | ||
| Trade, shared financial systems, they act as a pressure valve, a stabilizing device, if you will. | ||
| But when those ties break down, when nations decouple, they build parallel financial system, I think that's when the probability of real conflict starts to rise. | ||
| And we're watching that, I think, happen in front of us. | ||
| It's the slow breakup of the global economic web that's kept peace in Europe and the world for the last 50 years. | ||
| Sanctions, seizures, weaponized finance, it all pushes the world towards blocks, not cooperation. | ||
| So I think these stories are not about Russia's assets or EU sanctions. | ||
| Quite frankly, neither of those are really our problem. | ||
| What it's about is the West accelerating the end of our own monetary dominance while setting the stage, I think, at the same time for the same geopolitical fracture that historically leads to war. | ||
| And that's exactly why gold is rallying. | ||
| Gold doesn't care which side is sanctioning or seizing. | ||
| It cares that geopolitical risk is leaking into the financial system. | ||
| When assets face seizure, global capital will flow into the only thing that cannot be frozen. | ||
| It's exactly why central banks have been setting records for gold buying for the last three and a half years and exactly why I think they're going to continue to do so. | ||
| Okay, our audio at the FIFA. | ||
| I know that Philip Patrick and these folks are very excited about the FIFA drawings. | ||
| As soon as the audio gets better, we'll go back to President Trump at the Kennedy Center. | ||
| We're going to keep it alive on the screen. | ||
| Before we let you go, I want people to get access to work with you and the team. | ||
| And particularly, you've decided to do a special. | ||
| I think it's for a signed off-on $5,000 purchase of gold. | ||
| You throw in an ounce of silver. | ||
| We talk about taking, you know, texting Bannon, B-A-N-N-O-N at 989898 and getting the ultimate guide for investing in gold and precious metals. | ||
| Can you give me a second? | ||
| Silver's on fire. | ||
| What's causing that? | ||
| Look, silver's on fire. | ||
| I think it's been massively undervalued for a long time. | ||
| Historical trading ratios have been off for a while. | ||
| Industrial demand for silver is growing very aggressively, historically used in electronics, but a lot of new applications, solar technology, electric cars, AI chips. | ||
| So demand globally for silver is increasing aggressively and supply has been shrinking for a while. | ||
| So silver is a really interesting longer-term growth play. | ||
| Gold, I think, is a monetary hedge and a preservation play. | ||
| So both work very well in tandem, both performing very, very well this year. | ||
| And like I said before, I think things set to continue. | ||
| Okay, that is that special goes till December 22nd, 22 December. | ||
| Philip, how do people get to you? | ||
| I know every time I went to, I had a, I was in an event yesterday afternoon. | ||
| Everybody's asking about Philip Patrick and the team at Birch Gold. | ||
| Some of these people have already signed up. | ||
| They love it. | ||
| How do the rest of the posse get access to you? | ||
| It's really simple. | ||
| It is birchgold.com forward slash Fannin. | ||
| Again, birchgold.com forward slash Fannin, or they can text Fannin to 989898. | ||
| As I say all the time, get the information, immerse yourself, learn, and then we'll be here to fill in any gaps and answer any questions. | ||
| Philip Patrick, thank you so much, particularly taking time away from an active trading day. | ||
| I know it's crazy over there. | ||
| Thank you, sir. | ||
| The team at Birch Gold. | ||
| Go check it out today. | ||
| Also, learn about silver. | ||
| Don't forget that. | ||
| Also, 401ks, I raise all the tax-deferred ways to do it. | ||
| Okay, it's the breaking news over at CDC. | ||
| Dr. Carl Jabolnowski joins us. | ||
| Dr. Carl, pretty big news today. | ||
| Explain what happened and why it's important. | ||
| Yeah, so yesterday it was the official stance of the CDC to recommend hepatitis B vaccine be given to absolutely every child born on the day of life within 24 hours of that cord being clamped and cut. | ||
| But yet only about one in 200 children who were born in the United States are born to a Hep B positive mother. | ||
| A few minutes ago, ACIP just voted that Hep B negative women, when their children are born, they not be automatically given the Hep B vaccine. | ||
| And that makes perfect sense logically. | ||
| You don't need the intervention if there is no risk from it. | ||
| But it was. | ||
| Hold it. | ||
| Why was it done? | ||
| Why was it done for so many years? | ||
| The vast majority, the vast majority of women are not Hep B positive. | ||
| Why did they do this? | ||
| Right. | ||
| There are some speculations as to why this was pushed so aggressively. | ||
| One thing is that hepatitis B is an adult disease. | ||
| You mainly get it from unprotected sex or shared intravenous needles. | ||
| But that population was not getting vaccinated. | ||
| They were not compliant to vaccination. | ||
| And so there was a 1991 New York Times article that actually said, you know, vaccinate the children because the adults won't get it. | ||
| There are some other reasons why such an aggressive vaccine would be pushed. | ||
| In my opinion, it's a slippery slope argument because when you're an advocate for your child, you know, right after childbirth is when you are dizzyingly exhausted. | ||
| But when you show up at your two-month vaccination or your two-month weld child checkup for the onslaught of many vaccines, you may be a little more likely to consent to them if your child had already received at least one vaccine prior. | ||
| But it is ultimately an enormous money maker. | ||
| You know, you can test for HEP B. | ||
| It's a point of care test. | ||
| For about $5 to $15, you can have your answer within 20 minutes at the bedside of a delivering mother. | ||
| There is no reason to blanket universal recommend a HEP B vaccine. | ||
| We're going to have you back on either tonight or tomorrow with me. | ||
| We have more time to develop this. | ||
| But the media is already blown up saying ACEP, which Dr. Malone now chairs, Bobby Kennedy, redid the entire panel, that you've put a bunch of radical anti-vax nutcases on there. | ||
| Give me a quick history of ASIP and counter that argument of what the mainstream media right now. | ||
| you got the you got the crazes of the anti-vax guys running the got the inmates running the asylum sir so the asip the a stands for advisory it's the advisory committee for immunization practices they don't have real power their recommendation goes to the director or acting director of the cdc which currently is is jim o'neal um but in you know in the past they have They have not looked. | ||
| In fact, this committee meetings on Hepatitis B is screaming that we have no evidence to support these drastic interventions that we're making. | ||
| And they didn't have it back then. | ||
| And by our current standards of evaluating evidence to recommendation, the HEP B birth vaccine would never have been approved. | ||
| And I think a lot of people are breathing a great sigh of relief that it is now no longer going to be recommended. | ||
| Dr. Carl, we got a bounce. | ||
| Give your social media. | ||
| We're going to get you on this afternoon or tomorrow to go through this. | ||
| It's pretty explosive. | ||
| Where do people go to keep up with you, sir? | ||
| Children'shealthdefense.org is the best place. | ||
| Love you guys. | ||
| Dr. Carl, look forward to seeing you again. | ||
| Thank you for coming to Breaking News. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Which makes sense, right? | ||
| This Hep B thing has been, I don't know, big pharma, raking in profits. | ||
| Far be it from me to say that. | ||
| Mike Lindell, I got to tell you, brother, you know, you're showing a little ankle in this run for governor. | ||
| As you know, being your close friend, I said, Mike, we got so much going on with the company. | ||
| They're trying to shut you down. | ||
| They're still trying to put you in prison. | ||
| Everything's going on. | ||
| We got the midterms. | ||
| But man, oh man, something's got to happen in Minnesota, dude. | ||
| I'm telling you, this is going to blow sky high, sir. | ||
| Yeah, the money, I just read something. | ||
| It might be as high as $2 billion now, you guys. | ||
| And then also it might go all the way up to go to the AG, by the way, the Attorney General Keith Ellison that is attacking me. | ||
| This morning, he put out another attack on my Lindell Recovery Network. | ||
| And probably because he knows we're getting everything's going to get exposed there. | ||
| It is, Steve, it's actually, I look at this as a big blessing that it's all getting uncovered because we knew in Minnesota that terrible things were going on for a long time. | ||
| And it's all coming to light. | ||
| And I think old Governor Waltzy, he's going to be in a lot of trouble himself. | ||
| It just keeps getting more and more. | ||
| And he's out there saying, you know, all is well, all is well, and putting everything on Donald Trump and somehow trying to twist this, talking about our economy. | ||
| And he actually said something, Steve. | ||
| He said, we don't want Mike Mendel when he heard I might run for governor. | ||
| He said, we don't want Mike Lindell and Donald Trump coming into our state and taking away our family values. | ||
| You can't make this up. | ||
| And we have, no, you really can't. | ||
| And he, my company got, I actually got stored more papers today in one of the machine companies, which is in the news of being corrupt. | ||
| And so they keep attacking me, but we keep, we've made it through. | ||
| And with the help of the war room policy, Steve, and you guys, I want to make sure I get in time here to put you guys, let you guys know about our Christmas specials. | ||
| This is a war room exclusive, you guys. | ||
| This is all of our five flagship products we put on sale for Christmas gifts at the same time. | ||
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| Our premium MyPillows, what made it sold over 80 million. | ||
| You guys, we put them, you save over 50% on the MyPillow premiums, king or queen size. | ||
| And then we have get yourself a Christmas gift, the My Pillow Mattress Topper. | ||
| We put that on sale as low as $149.98. | ||
| And we added this, you guys, I'm extending the free shipping, free shipping on anything you want to order. | ||
| Shipping prices are keeping our con, keeping things high priced out there. | ||
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| They raise shipping prices this time of year. | ||
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| And here's the one I want to mention is the five pack of bible pillows. | ||
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| Christmas extended guarantee to march 1st 2026. | ||
| Thank you, brother. | ||
| Okay, the Charlie Kirk show with Andrew Colvette live from the RAF studios today. | ||
| Also, they're going to be going to FIFA. | ||
| As soon as you get better audio, you'll hear the president of the United States. | ||
| We're back at 5 p.m. |