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May 12, 2023 - The Charlie Kirk Show
34:48
The Third World Comes To America; America Becomes Third World? with Savanah Hernandez and Randy Clark
Transcriber: nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v2, sat-12l-sm, and large-v3-turbo
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Time Text
Historic Day at the Border 00:15:42
I'm Alex Marlowe, editor-in-chief of Breitbart News.
And in this episode of the Charlie Kirk Show, we speak to Savannah Hernandez from the border live from El Paso, Texas.
Randy Clark, who is part of our Cartel Chronicles team at Breitbart News, gives expert analysis of the opening of the U.S.'s southern border.
He has over 30 years of Border Patrol experience.
I think the producers were describing him as based but factual.
I think that's exactly right.
Really valuable stuff, plus some more news updates for you from me.
Everyone, buckle up, because here we go.
Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk.
Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.
I want to thank Charlie.
He's an incredible guy.
His spirit, his love of this country, he's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point USA.
We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country.
That's why we are here.
Brought to you by the Loan Experts I Trust, Andrew and Todd at Sierra Pacific Mortgage at andrewandTodd.com.
Okay, well, we got a lot to get to in the news.
And let's play this clip I was meaning to play.
Anyway, cut 134 Alejandro Mayorkas from his press conference just now.
Let's go.
What's the rough cost to American taxpayers since the roughly 4 million people have come into this country illegally since January of 2021 as those people show up at community hospitals as they enter the school system, as they get other government help?
Do you have a taxpayer cost?
Let me turn that question around a little bit because I'm going to turn it around to match the question that an international partner asked of me.
And the question that the international partner asked of me is, what is the economic cost of your broken immigration system?
Since there are businesses around this country that are desperate for workers.
Yeah, so this is all about economic migration and he wants to import people because the businesses are desperate.
Well, you know who's not desperate?
You who's not desperate is the American people who are having their wages undercut, seeing their rents go up, seeing their cost of living go up, seeing all sorts of drugs and crime being imported into their communities, all because Alejandro Mayorkas wants to use his power at the Department of Homeland Security to try to take care of people who are not Americans.
That is not his mandate.
I'm all for taking care of un-Americans, non-Americans, in your free time with your extra dollars that you get to keep, what few dollars Joe Biden lets you keep.
I give to charity every year and I always give some amount to international charities to try to feed people and help people who are the least among us globally.
I understand that that is a noble pursuit.
Everyone should do that.
That is not the role of the U.S. government and that is not the mandate of the Department of Homeland Security to try to make it easier for people to economically migrate in order to undercut American working and middle class and lower classes and at the benefit of the globalist establishment that wants to see America's borders broken down and wants to see their stocks maybe go up a little bit because they could save a little bit on the wages they pay their workforce.
That is why we have such a big gap between the rich and the poor, something that was such a common refrain from the Democrats over the last 20 or 30 years.
They stopped talking about that a little bit.
Why?
Why?
Because they're the ones who create it with these types of policies.
He completely blows through the cost of the American taxpayers.
We have to fund this system.
$15 billion, whatever it would cost, get the border wall up, and it would save us so much money.
And yet we had to shut down the government specifically because, in whatever it was, 10 years or so ago, specifically because Trump won a $5 billion for border wall.
This guy is a true ideologue.
And I don't think everyone in the Biden administration is as ideological as my workers.
I think he is particularly driven by a vision that America is not a good place and it would benefit from importing as many people from around the world as humanly possible.
I think that's on full display there.
Americans are not even a consideration.
What is owed to the migrants, the economic migrants, is his priority.
And he's not going to unlearn this.
There's no amount of tough questioning that's going to get through to him.
This is not a political issue for him.
This is an ideological issue.
It's a dogma.
Cut 135, please.
Go.
We sought to end Title 42, the Public Health Authority, earlier.
We sought to roll out our immigration enforcement authorities under Title VIII of the United States Code earlier.
We were enjoined from doing so by a court.
We promulgated a law to achieve a policy and operational outcome.
And the outcome that we seek to achieve through this regulation is to incentivize people to take the lawful pathways and disincentivize them to place their lives in the hands of ruthless smugglers.
But their lives are in the hands of ruthless smugglers.
That's the whole system that's been designed.
And the Democrats have been okay with this since as long as we can remember.
Every time America does not step up and enforce our own borders, it sends a signal to the cartels, the most brutal criminal organizations imaginable, some of the worst in the world, to refine their pipelines to smuggle human beings into our country.
And then when they get here, then they will be paying the cartels money for as long as the cartels demand it.
That is how they fund this business.
And along the way, they're going to be sexually assaulted if they're women, invariably.
They're going to be asked to smuggle things like drugs, for example.
A lot of these drugs will kill Americans.
People aren't just wandering up to the border.
There is a network of criminals that make it possible.
And there's as many as 700,000 right now who are waiting to get in when Title 42 ends at the end of the night.
He is subordinating American citizens to the world community, the international community.
So I think if there's one person who should be impeached in this administration, it's Majorkis.
He's number one.
And he's the biggest threat because he controls arguably the most important thing.
And he's so locked in on it.
He's locked in.
He's not going anywhere from this viewpoint.
There's no dissuading him of this.
There's no amount of flood that's going to dissuade him.
The only thing where he could really mess up here is if things get too out of control, and they very well might, then the Biden administration might need to step up some enforcement efforts.
But the chain here is not going to be good.
We're going to see people come in.
They're going to get notices to appear in court.
They're not going to get deported.
And they're going to get fanned out around the country.
And those communities are going to have to absorb them.
And they shouldn't have to.
They shouldn't have to.
No other sane country, who's to say we're sane.
No other sane country treats themselves this way.
And we're on the brink of something really big, perhaps historic.
It already is historic.
I mean, we saw record levels of illegal immigration last year and record numbers the year before.
It is such a broken record on this.
Those of you who listen to my radio show on Breitbart News or cover our coverage of Breitbart, what's frustrating is that there's so few new ways to present these facts.
This is why we're going to hear from Savannah in a little bit, who's at the border, Randy Clark from my team, our Carteau Chronicles team at Breitbart, who's also at the border.
Bill Melugin at Fox has great reporting on this.
There's other people who are out there.
So many people are now pointing cameras.
But where is that getting us?
We've got the most ideological guy in the administration basically keeping the border open.
And it's going to be like the beginning of the Kentucky Derby where they open up the green gates and all of a sudden all the horses just start steaming in.
That's what's going to start happening at midnight tonight.
That's what we're going to see.
It's going to be game on if it already wasn't game on.
We're seeing 10,000 people enter a month anyway.
So this is a potentially one of the most historic days in the history of the country.
I don't tend to tease things that dramatically.
I try to be more staid when I can.
But this is really an unbelievable thing that we're watching a guy do his best to keep the border open.
And then whenever he gets called on it, what does he do?
He acts like it's Congress's fault.
It's the Congress who really should have done something.
He could do some stuff today.
And Joe Biden, he can encourage his boss to do stuff today, restore those northern tribal agreements, restore remain in Mexico, finish the dang wall.
All of these would make America a safer place and a better place for rank and file Americans, American voters, and the American citizens.
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Savannah Hernandez is on with me, TPUSA Frontlines Reporter Extraordinaire from the border.
Savannah, great to meet you.
Where are you right now exactly?
I am currently in El Paso, Texas, on the American side of the border.
And what you are seeing behind me is the wall that is, again, protecting us from all of the illegal crosswords from water to Mexico.
Okay, so you're right there.
I'm seeing some border barrier behind you.
Is that one of the ones with the big gaps within the barrier where people can just kind of funnel through right there?
Those border gaps you see all the time.
So there aren't really border gaps in this area, but what I want people to understand about the way that this is set up is that the wall in El Paso is basically set up at the edge of the city, but there is a bunch of federal land on the other side.
So those migrants are still very easily to cross over from Mexico into the United States.
And then once they're in the United States, they're getting processed.
We just can't see it as easily because it's on the other side of this wall that Border Patrol will not allow us to go past.
So El Paso is getting overwhelmed.
All their shelters, they're calling it one of the biggest humanitarian crises that we've ever seen.
What are you seeing on a humanitarian level?
Because the footage has just been unbelievable in terms of trash, in terms of people coming up that are just clearly just worn down, filthy.
They've been through hell trying to get here because they think they can get in and stay here.
This seems to be a narrative the left is missing.
Absolutely.
When I got here on Tuesday, that's exactly what the scene was.
When you walk the streets of downtown El Paso, you would see piles of trash boxes of opened, uneaten food that were attracting a lot of animals.
There were unused clothing on the ground.
The streets reek of urine, and there are human feces just scattered throughout downtown.
So it is not a clean environment at all.
Now, very interesting thing that happened yesterday morning, you know, what, one day ahead of the expiration of Title 42, the city of El Paso actually brought in environmental services and they went and they cleaned up those streets that we have seen thousands of migrants sleeping on over the past couple of weeks.
And I was actually speaking to a local officer who shared with me that this was very similar to what happened when Joe Biden came to El Paso back in January to check out the border crisis.
The city cleaned up the streets, the migrants were transferred to shelters, and it looked like there was really no crisis at all.
So the officers saying that mirrored the same cleanup operation.
And then add to that, the church volunteers where this cleanup was happening were sharing that this was the first time since the migrants arrived two weeks ago that the city has really come and done a full sweep like that.
Wow.
So one thing that's noteworthy here, and this is a big change from perhaps what we saw a little bit more in 2015, 2016, when this migrant surges were front and center in the news, is that there's now, even where there is wall, the enforcement is so lax.
And now with Title 42 coming off, there's such a high confidence level that you'll get one of these notices to appear NTAs and people will be able to just get released into the country to do as they please for a few years until their hearing comes up.
It seems like a lot of people want to get at least vaguely processed.
We're barely processing them, but at least, hey, I'm here.
Give me my notes to appear.
And then I'm in.
Is that what you're seeing?
Absolutely.
So when I got here on Tuesday, this entire processing operation was going on where Border Patrol was going up to migrants and they were checking to see if they had notice to appear papers.
And they said, hey, you need to go get processed, go turn yourself in, go get your documentation.
So that way you can be, you know, brought into a shelter and that way we can give you food.
Now, I have spoken to a couple of these migrants that have gotten their documentation.
One migrant already previously deported four times.
Another woman I spoke to yesterday from Ecuador, her notice to appear date isn't until April of 2027.
By the way, her husband is currently in Juarez and he is waiting for Title 42 to expire because he did get deported as well.
So again, when they get those notice to appear papers, they can legally stay in the U.S. until that court date.
And we are seeing dates two to five years out.
So this essentially is a gigantic massive, you know, catch and release protocol.
By the way, Border Patrol being very protective over the airspace here.
We were able to fly our drone yesterday and we saw hundreds of groups of migrants coming in from Juarez.
Today, Border Patrol only allowed us to fly drones from the hour of 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
That is the only time they're allowing media to fly drones today.
Well, at least it lets you fly them for a little bit.
It's the, have you spoken to any of the officers?
Because whenever I'm down there and I speak to the people on the ground, they find this incredibly demoralizing, what they're asked to do by our bureaucrats in Washington.
Absolutely.
You know, I have covered the border crisis from Arizona all throughout Texas, and I've spoken to Border Patrol who have told me, I feel like I'm basically an Uber for the illegal immigrants.
A lot of the people coming over are extremely entitled and they won't even walk all the way, you know, to the processing facility.
They will wait for Border Patrol to come pick them up in their vehicles because they don't want to walk anymore.
They're demanding food.
They're demanding services.
Border Patrol completely overwhelmed.
They don't feel supported by the current administration in office.
And then on top of that, you know, they're not even allowed to enforce any laws or do their jobs, essentially.
NAD and Cellular Health Benefits 00:02:28
Yeah, their jobs now, I guess, is to just be some sort of a chauffeur or paper pusher, which was never the point.
It was about enforcing laws.
There's plenty on the books, despite Title 42 expiring.
Sad stuff.
Savannah Hernandez, wonderful reporting.
TPUSA Frontlines.
Don't miss her.
Don't miss frontlines.
I'm Alex Marlowe.
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Secure Our Southern Border 00:15:48
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We have a great guest on the line, Randy Clark, who's part of one of the most important things we do at Breitbart, which is our Cartel Chronicles division, where we track both sides of the border.
We report in both English and Spanish.
We're trying to reach people outside of necessarily the conservative media bubble.
Of course, we love reaching the conservative media bubble too, no disrespect.
But it is something that we do where we're trying to get the word out, not just about the lax enforcement at our border and the effects for Americans, but also the humanitarian issues that really we are importing here from all around the world.
Let's start there with you, Randy.
Randy, thanks for being here.
Let me ask you on a broader context.
When you look at the way we're treating our border now, where we treat it like it doesn't make a difference, what are the downstream effects for human beings who are now compelled to try to make the journey into America thinking they can get in?
What do they have in store for them?
Who are they dealing with?
And who's getting rich off of this process?
Well, right now, this is a much different demographic than we've seen come into the United States traditionally in years past.
And that includes even last year, because what we're seeing camped out on the banks of the Rio Grande and in the larger cities around San Diego and Tucson on the Mexican side is really the poorest of the poor.
They're living in shanty towns that they've constructed with tarps and materials that they find.
And you see the effects of that when you hear how it's pinching New York.
These folks don't have any support systems.
They don't have relatives, friends.
They don't have anybody to go to to begin a process of trying to normalize life in the United States, which I think we can all admit that with inflation and cost of living and rent in multiple areas of the country, it's not cheap to live in the United States.
Well, imagine trying to do that as a brand new person in a new culturally different place with no support structure.
These folks are going to be public charges.
So what they're going to face is what many are facing in El Paso.
The more than 2,000 we've seen, in fact, I visited a week ago that are camped out on the streets of El Paso because they have no funds to leave.
They're basically trapped.
And until a municipality or the federal government pays their way somewhere else where they're not wanted, really, even in the sanctuary cities of New York and Chicago, they've got no place to go.
So this is going to be a rough ride for them, too.
It seems like it's just game on for the cartels.
It's game on for the people in the fentanyl business.
It's game on for the people in the human smuggling business.
I mean, this is Christmas Eve for them, is it not?
Well, it is in a number of ways.
You know, it's hard to get blood out of a turnip.
So for those that don't have a support structure, they might be, you know, forced to indentured servitude or some mechanism of pain later.
But that's not really what the cartel is into on a large scale.
Where the cartel is going to really make their money is those that are going to be most susceptible to return under Title VIII.
That might be folks from Mexico and the Northern Triangle that may face some level of return.
But for the rest, the cartel is just having a holiday knowing that every single law enforcement from the Texas Department of Ohio Patrol, state troopers in other states, and the border patrol are going to be relegated to trying to stop this mad rush of migrants over the border and then to provide the humanitarian care because they're not all in the best of health.
They've been living for months in rudimentary camps without health care.
They're of all ages and they have the same ailments you'd find in a cross-section of population in the United States, diabetes and other serious health ailments.
Yeah, exactly.
And the point that they're public charges is a big deal is that there shouldn't the standard be, Randy, unless we're absolutely desperate that people coming in are immediately going to be contributors to the system.
Why are we encouraging people to come in who are immediately going to go in the public doll when we've got a massive debt and deficit that we're debating on right now?
We're debating about the size of the debt in Washington right now.
In the meantime, we're going to import all these people who are going to cost us a fortune.
Well, so the intent of Congress in our immigration laws, in fact, if you've heard the mention of expedited removal, that came from the 1996 Act.
And that 1996 act, it stiffened penalties for illegal entry, including the public charge measure.
And the public charge measure says if you're going to get sponsored into the United States, that sponsor is vouching that you are not going to become a public charge.
Well, this administration, like many of the other immigration laws, they're ignoring that.
They know these people have no funds to come in.
They know they're removable just based on the fact that they're a public charge.
So they're entirely skirting the intent of Congress.
And that bill was passed in 1996 when Bill Clinton was still the president.
These folks have done a complete 180.
Randy, you've over three decades of law enforcement experience at the border.
First, tell us a little bit about that and tell us the experience of what you think the men and women on the ground are going through right now and their families.
My heart always breaks for their families because they're being put into harm's way.
They're getting taken out of the home.
They're not getting paid extra for this stuff.
And all of this is entirely unnecessary.
Give me some of the humanitarian element from the law enforcement side.
Well, so I've spoken to some Border Patrol agents today, and they're 10 hours away from probably one of the biggest immigration catastrophes that we've seen.
There isn't a Border Patrol agent living or dead that has witnessed what is happening right now.
Some of the busiest traffic we've had on this border is under this, the busiest, is under this administration.
These agents are stressed out, but they're not only stressed out because of the level of work that is required of them, but they know that they're failing in their mission because they cannot get out there to stop the folks that might actually cause us harm.
And that's a really weighing factor for a law enforcement officer.
We had just in the last 72 hours, 7,600 people get away that we don't know who they are.
And we saw what 19 people who were intent on causing harm to the United States can do.
Who are these 7,000 gotaways in just three days?
So imagine what we're looking at since the start of this administration, which is well over a million people went somewhere into the United States with no vetting, whom we have no idea what their intent for coming here was.
So this is one of the things that's so frustrating for me, particularly someone who comes from California, where illegal immigration was always just built into the fabric of the state and the culture and the economy by the time I was a sentient being.
And it feels like we have no sense of exactly how many illegal aliens are here, that we were told there's like 11 million, but that number has never gone up in 30 years.
It's that exact number.
But yet, every year, for every person we catch and we're aware of them, there's all these people who make no real connection with the U.S. government.
We don't know where they are.
They're not being tracked.
And if they are being tracked, we don't know how long they're going to be here or if they're showing up for their court dates.
Do you have any sense of exactly how many illegal aliens there are at this point?
Well, it should be easier to determine now because what you're speaking of, you know, in the 1980s when there were the last large influx, a million point eight, a million point six rather migrants entered.
Most of those were from Mexico.
We got the seasonal terminology because many of them came over, worked in the agricultural industry, and then they went back after a season, made home repairs, took supplies home, and then they did it all over again.
And a lot of those were multiple entries because we didn't have biographic data at the time, the ability to take biometric data.
So we don't know if someone was caught five times, 10 times, or 20.
We know now who's coming, and we also know that these folks predominantly will never return to their home country.
The folks that this administration are releasing into the streets, the Venezuelans, the Cubans, the Haitians, the Nicaraguans, they're not going back to their home country.
They have no intention.
So we should have an easier way of knowing how many we've let in during this administration.
For the others that are from Mexico that go back and forth, that's a little bit harder, but I can tell you the same thing.
I've heard that 11, 12 million number tossed around for decades, and it never changes, like you say.
So I don't think anybody cares to count.
That's right.
Randy Clark is with me from Breitbart's Cartel Chronicles.
He is a veteran of border law enforcement.
Randy, I want to ask about Alejandro Mayorkas' claims.
He's got a couple of crucial ones.
First of all, that the border is secure.
I want you to evaluate that.
And then I want you to evaluate where he says that if there are problems, it's basically on Congress.
Who do you think bears the brunt of the blame?
And let's start with, is the border actually secure?
No, I think anybody that has watched some level of media and been on the ground in and around or border residents, whether they're Democrats, Republicans, or Independents, they're going to tell you right now, the border's not secure.
I think when you see the chief of the Border Patrol get in front of Congress and he's under oath, he's going to tell you the border does not meet the definition of under operational control.
He knows that.
So does every rank and file border patrol agent.
And their hair stands up every time they hear, you know, Alejandro Majorca say the border is secure or the border is closed.
He did that during the Haitian migrant crisis in Del Rio when there were 20,000, mostly Haitian migrants camped out on U.S. soil in Del Rio, and the agency could do nothing about it because they were overwhelmed.
Well, we're going to see that again.
But I try to be as respectful as I can to somebody based upon, you know, they're another human being.
But at one point, you just have to call out absolute fabrication of the truth.
He talks about creating legal pathways.
Well, they're not creating legal pathways.
What they're doing is they are using surreptitious legal loopholes to let folks in who have not qualified for relief.
They're not letting these 100,000 he spoke about from December to now come in because they actually went before an asylum judge or an asylum officer, presented a good quality case and were granted asylum.
No, that's not happening.
They're taking general biographic data and they're trying to relieve the stress at the rivers and in the deserts of Arizona and in California and they're trying to get them in in the dead of night.
That's not a legal pathway.
It has no real standard compared to what the law requires to be actually granted relief under our asylum laws, which we know roughly eight out of 10 will not qualify.
So I think to believe what's happening, you have to be totally unaware.
Yeah, so Randy, so tonight Title 42 comes off.
There's going to be a big surge.
Is there a chance that it gets so crazy that perhaps the Biden administration is compelled to shut it down?
And let's look at it from another angle.
Perhaps even the cartels feel like this could be, if this gets too out of control, their business model could get upended.
Is there a chance it just gets too chaotic and you might see something unexpected like either of those scenarios?
Well, you know, unfortunately, I think in what I've been seeing in the level of preparedness over the last several months, they couldn't shut it down if they wanted to.
They're making open-ended, you know, requests of the migrants to please don't come, that it is secure and not to listen to the cartels.
And hey, I don't recommend anybody try and cross into the border illegally.
Number one, it's dangerous.
These cartels don't care about people.
And, you know, you're just risking life.
So I don't recommend it, but these people have been camped out and they've been waiting for this date and they're going to come.
We're way too far down that road for this administration without some significant overnight response to get this stopped.
And I don't see the willpower.
1,500 National Guard or U.S. Army soldiers and Marines, when you split them up amongst the busiest sectors, it's laughable.
They're not going to do anything except provide a little bit of relief to Border Patrol agents, providing logistical supplies and some data entry.
You know, maybe manifest for transport buses, but they can't process.
They don't all know the languages that they're going to encounter.
So it's really not going to make a big deal.
Yeah, we'll have a big surge of data entry personnel to go down on the border.
Sad stuff.
Randy Clark, thank you for the terrific reporting.
Find him at Breitbart.com.
A couple of things I want to mention.
One thing that just came out: Turning Points having a big event, Turning Point Action Conference is going to feature Vivek Ramaswamy, Jack Posobic, Charlie, Bannon, Bongino, many more Gates.
Let's see, Bernie Marino, who's the leading candidate for Senate in Ohio, Josh Hawley.
It looks like it's going to be an all-star group.
And good for them for doing that.
July 15th and 16th in West Palm Beach.
You wouldn't want to be in West Palm Beach, great part of the world.
ActCon 2023 is what they're calling it.
Some breaking news that took place during the show that I want to share.
We learned that CNN did cut short the Trump Town Hall, which is very interesting because we know Trump was having his way with CNN.
We know that the audience was well in Trump's corner.
The Twitter crowd was going absolutely crazy, apoplectic, that CNN was platforming the bad orange man and letting him not just dunk on them, but also have a great time while he was doing it.
We all witnessed this play out, those who are following it online.
But we did learn, in fact, that CNN did cut it short, which is noteworthy because you can bet the ratings were through the roof.
I'm not sure how quickly they get ratings, if they get them in real time or not, but you can certainly bet that the ratings were the best CNN's had in a while and were definitely cutting into Fox's market share.
But it wasn't worth it for them.
They deemed it was not worth it to continue, which is noteworthy.
I will say there's one, what's the opposite of a silver lining?
Is it a brown lining?
I think I'm going to go with brown lining to this, which is that this could open the floodgates to the Republicans if there are debates.
And it's not to say there will be given how far ahead Trump is running in 2024.
But if there are debates, that the mainstream media will probably get them, which I'm vehemently opposed to, despite how well the CNN Town Hall went for Trump.
I think the Republicans should debate for their own audiences in the primary, and we go from there for the general.
But there's no way you should be giving places like CNN the chance to moderate debates amongst Republicans.
But now I think they're going to see this.
And I think all the Republicans, you can bet people like Vivek were just sitting there going, like, oh, I wish that was me.
I wish that was me getting a dunk on CNN like that.
And I think that that's going to be, that could be a bad outcome for Trump's dominant performance.
Another one I want to bring up: Alejandro Mayorkas is now on record that the investigation concluded that the whipping did not occur.
You guys remember Whipping Gate, where the fake story of how border agents were whipping migrants as they were coming across the Rio Grande.
Jeffrey Katzenberg's Political Pledge 00:00:49
We all knew that was false.
And even Alejandro Mayorkas, who is certainly willing to lie whenever it's politically expedient for him, even he had to acknowledge that that one is not true.
Last one for now, and maybe the scariest of them all, Hollywood producer Jeffrey Katzenberg has pledged all of the resources Biden will need to win in 2024.
Those of you who are students of history know that it was Jeffrey Katzenberg and it was David Geffen who handpicked Barack Obama, anointed him the leader of the Democrat Party over Hillary Clinton in the run-up to the 2008 election.
And look at the mess that created for this country.
So that is one not to turn your nose up at.
Thank you, Charlie Kirk.
Thanks, producer Andrew and everyone else.
I'm Alex Marlowe.
I'll see you tomorrow.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to CharlieKirk.com.
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