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It's the clash of the titans Oh Bill Gates is clearly panicking, like a nerd whose graphing calculator was stolen, accusing the world's richest man of killing the world's poorest children. | ||
By allegedly gutting USAID's vital programs like vaccines and emergency food aid. | ||
Then Gates announced plans to donate nearly his entire $200 billion fortune by 2045 to help the world's poorest. | ||
Likely still gambling on UN Agenda 2030 when humanity is enslaved by technocrats like himself and his lies won't matter. | ||
No word yet from India, Africa, and Pakistan on Gates' devastation. | ||
He implies that he's done nothing wrong. | ||
Well, you can even pull up AP and Reuters, that the majority of polio cases in the world now are caused by him. | ||
They even admit it's his foundation from his vaccine. | ||
He's also got criticized a month ago for saying India is a kind of laboratory to try things out. | ||
India's an example of a country where, oh, there's plenty of things that are... | ||
Difficult there. | ||
The health, nutrition, education is improving. | ||
And they're stable enough and generating their own government revenue enough that it's very likely that 20 years from now, people will be dramatically better off. | ||
And it's kind of a laboratory to try things that then, once you prove them out in India, you can take to other places. | ||
And of course, he's been sued and many of his projects kicked out. | ||
Of India, a laboratory to try things. | ||
So he's saying the kids there and others are guinea pigs. | ||
However, we are learning more about Gates' deep ties to Jeffrey Epstein, and maybe that is why the depopulationist freak is having a panic attack. | ||
Boris Nikolik, a Harvard-trained immunologist and former Gates Foundation advisor, transitioned from pioneering stem cell and gene editing research to co-founding biotech ventures like Biomatics Capital, which funneled $120 million to CRISPR-focused Adidas medicine. | ||
Backed by Bill Gates and other elites, rounded up, in part, by Jeffrey Epstein. | ||
Nikolic's work, only to be tainted by the sick fantasies of the eugenist duo fascinated with biohacking and transhumanism. | ||
Oddly enough, Jeffrey Epstein named Nikolic the backup executor to his $577 million estate. | ||
You see... | ||
Epstein had, or has, a maniacal goal to seed the entire human race with his DNA, aligning with known reports about Epstein's interest in eugenics and transhumanism. | ||
Such as his discussions about creating a super race with his DNA as reported by the New York Times in 2019. | ||
Epstein also expressed a desire to use his New Mexico ranch as a base to impregnate women with his sperm to create a super race. | ||
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I woke up in a laboratory there one night. | |
Wow. | ||
These are the things I haven't wanted to talk about because it's frightening. | ||
But there were scientists there, you know, and I woke up one night in a laboratory, paralysed and naked on a table. | ||
These people were doing something else and they don't want anyone knowing about it. | ||
And I came back from there. | ||
I was not OK. | ||
I had severe panic attacks. | ||
I was hospitalised 10 times with panic attacks. | ||
And I'd been a very, very healthy, happy girl before I was taken there. | ||
They did something to me and I want to know what they did. | ||
And that's why I won't stop until I know. | ||
This was further explored by elite trafficker Peter Nygaard as the elites went buck wild on humanity. | ||
Bill Gates shouldn't donate his money. | ||
It should be ripped away from him. | ||
He should be hit with a class-action lawsuit by the polio vaccine victims in the poorest countries on Earth, the farmers neighboring his 275,000 acres of GMO cross-pollinization. | ||
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The same way we lost our independence in energy is the same way we will lose our independence in food if we continue in this direction. | |
So it's a business. | ||
and when you eat this food you start getting sick and what happens you go to big pharma for your drugs for your insulin and the rest of them and what are you doing you are putting money in the pocket of the same people who are sponsoring GMO so it's a circle of And every victim of Gates' interest in the COVID-19 vaccine genocide. | ||
John Bound reporting for InfoWars. | ||
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InfoWars. | |
It's Monday, May 12th, in the year of our Lord, 2025. | ||
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing. | ||
I think it's time to get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
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Okay, three, two, one, let's jam. | |
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, for coming to you this week. | ||
It is Monday morning. | ||
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We got an interesting story to start off with. | |
I may just let Alex take it over. | ||
The cocaine train. | ||
The cocaine train broke yesterday. | ||
With Macron, Starmer, and German leader MERS caught red-handed. | ||
Like a couple of teenagers smoking pot in the garage. | ||
They're in a train on the way back from Ukraine when a camera crew surprises them. | ||
And if you look on the table there, people are saying that there appears to be a baggie of cocaine and a little cocaine spoon that they very carefully hide. | ||
There's MERS hiding the spoon. | ||
Macron takes the trash. | ||
And they sit there looking completely guilty. | ||
Where are their mothers? | ||
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Where are their mothers? | |
So what exactly is going on here? | ||
What exactly is this that has taken over X over the last little while? | ||
We're going to get a lot of stories today. | ||
We got... | ||
Major updates when it comes to Israel and the Middle East. | ||
Donald Trump is leaving today on his first international trip. | ||
During his second administration, he'll be going to the Middle East for a rather wide-ranging tour. | ||
And just on the cusp of this, he has made some major unilateral decisions in complete opposition to the desires of Israel. | ||
And there's a lot of controversy and... | ||
Conflicts sprouting out because of that. | ||
So I do want to talk about that. | ||
We've got a new China deal with the U.S. about the tariffs that we'll get into. | ||
Lots of videos, but let's talk about the cocaine train, shall we? | ||
Let's start with that. | ||
And we'll just go to clip number one here. | ||
This is Alex Jones breaking this down. | ||
The cocaine train with Macron, Starmer, and MERS. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Something incredible happened today. | ||
Macron, Starmer, and MERS were doing a train tour of Ukraine trying to drum up support to keep the war going. | ||
And the press gets invited into their train car, and suddenly they look around and start moving things quickly, furtively trying to hide them. | ||
And when you zoom in, it looks like a little cocaine spoon, a little paper of cocaine. | ||
And all of them look like they're lit up. | ||
Like Christmas trees. | ||
But regardless of what you think happened there, whether they were hiding cocaine or something else, maybe just cleaning some trash up real quickly, it's the media, the corporate media response that's really revealing. | ||
I just reposted the video four or five hours ago. | ||
It's already got like 8 million views. | ||
And I noticed that Brock came in and said, hey, this has been fact-checked. | ||
This isn't even a real video, which they admit is a real video. | ||
Their same interpretation isn't actually. | ||
But Grop just says, and usually Grop's pretty good, oh no, it's fake. | ||
Reuters says the video's fake. | ||
No, they're saying our interpretation is wrong. | ||
Now, think about this. | ||
This is Reuters that got caught getting hundreds of millions of dollars from the Biden administration to target Elon Musk, his company, his family, for destruction in the last four years. | ||
And then it also got Pentagon money for widespread... | ||
Deception operations. | ||
And then Reuters report on itself on that. | ||
So we don't mean that when we say that. | ||
This is the ultimate gaslighting, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Then you have Zelensky, who's just been with them, the famous cocaine aficionado. | ||
And all the videos of him just tweaking out of his mind. | ||
It looks more like meth to me. | ||
So there's been studies out about Congress that upwards of half of them are on serious drugs. | ||
It's even worse in Europe. | ||
We need what Trump's called for. | ||
Mandatory drug testing of any major elected official. | ||
I mean, they want us to do it, to be a taxi driver or whatever, to be an FBI agent. | ||
We have serious, serious, serious drug addiction going on, not just in our government, but in others. | ||
It's well known that Biden was being shot up with methamphetamine. | ||
So was Robert F. Kennedy's uncle, JFK. | ||
So this is something that... | ||
It comes down to the establishment corporate media telling us that we are not supposed to be able to question or have our own interpretation of something, and that if they tell us two men can have a baby and there's no X and Y chromosomes and that men can be in women's sports because they're really women, that we're supposed to just believe these lies. | ||
Reuters is in no position to say what was on that table. | ||
It's objective. | ||
It's for everybody to look at and make their own decision. | ||
And that's what broadcasts like mine are. | ||
It's punditry, it's analysis, it's opinion, and it's journalists that we have on that have broken major stories. | ||
And then the public watches us and does their own research and decides, are we a credible source that tries to tell the truth? | ||
Was Alex Jones right? | ||
Am I tomorrow's news today? | ||
And the answer is, overall, we're the most accurate media. | ||
Operations of the world versus corporate media that's been caught over and over again lying on purpose about everything under the sun from COVID to the Hunter Biden laptop to WMDs in Iraq. | ||
And then Reuters, known MI6, that's sort of the clearinghouse for disinformation, PR campaigns, and attacks on Trump, myself, Elon Musk, Eric Carlson, everybody else, has the nerve to come in like their god and wave their magic, disgusting wand. | ||
But it doesn't matter when they come in and fact check it. | ||
That makes even more people say, oh, okay, it must be cocaine. | ||
Regardless, I challenge Tiara Starmer and MERS and Macron to take a drug test. | ||
I challenge them to go into an independent lab with a review and take a drug test. | ||
They do it for Olympic athletes, but not for these politicians. | ||
I think we should pass laws to do it. | ||
If you just look at them, folks, if there wasn't even cocaine on the table, I'd say they look like they're on a serious stimulant. | ||
Well, that's my report on this important issue. | ||
The good news is the whole world's turning against them. | ||
Trump's close to a peace deal. | ||
And humanity stands on the side of peace and justice. | ||
And against those on the wrong side of history, the coalition of the willing, as they've been calling themselves, and against their attempts to bring us into total World War III and a potential nuclear Armageddon. | ||
So there you go. | ||
From Alex Jones, you can share that at RealAlexJones. | ||
It's Coke. | ||
I mean, it's pretty brazen. | ||
And I mean, of course, the fact that they're returning from Zelensky's headquarters is just another angle of this. | ||
Maybe puts the Hunter Biden situation in a bit more context. | ||
And of course, you know, this is pretty well known. | ||
And whether it's a legal drug or an illegal drug, you know, Congress has a pharmacy on site. | ||
Where they can get secret deliveries of all sorts of pharmaceutical grade amphetamines and whatever else they need at the time. | ||
And I think it just, it goes to show what a farce this all is. | ||
That there's literally a couple of cracked out homos sitting at the top of the government just taking orders. | ||
And living like they're college students. | ||
Like, I'm having trouble picturing exactly how this goes down. | ||
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I brought the cocaine, Macron. | |
Oh, good. | ||
Put the tea on the table. | ||
Get it down, and then the cameras come in, and they all get all jittery. | ||
It's just pathetic. | ||
I mean, we're just run by... | ||
Losers and morons. | ||
Let's listen in on this. | ||
So I think clip 5 and 6 are the same, right? | ||
I think 6 is a little bit better quality. | ||
Let's go to clip number 6 here. | ||
Cocaine train. | ||
Let's hear what they have to say, shall we? | ||
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It's a long walk. | |
We've been back in Poland. | ||
It threw my bathroom, huh? | ||
Literally. | ||
We came through Germany. | ||
Yeah, they're just having so much fun. | ||
You can see a little... | ||
You're back in about 10 seconds. | ||
Watch as Merz grabs the spoon. | ||
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Watch Merz's, uh, "Fave." Hey, hey, hey, hey. | |
Hey, hey. | ||
Watch. | ||
Mm. | ||
Ooh, whoops. | ||
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Have you ever seen anybody look worse as vicious? | |
This is that tuck right there. | ||
They really needed to get rid of the bags that quick. | ||
Oh, quick little snatch. | ||
Quick little snatch up. | ||
I mean, I swear to God. | ||
I mean, it would almost be funny if it's like literally these are like middle schoolers in the garage and mom comes in and they're all like, whoops. | ||
We're just sitting here smiling. | ||
And they do look like, they literally look like middle schoolers. | ||
They're wearing like ill-fitting hoodies. | ||
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Zip-ups. | |
And just giggling. | ||
We're doing war. | ||
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We're talking about war. | |
I mean, I'm telling you. | ||
I'm telling you. | ||
It used to always shock me how good moms were at ferreting out guilt. | ||
I don't know if you ever tried to get away with anything in high school. | ||
I tried. | ||
I certainly tried. | ||
But there's always, especially when it comes to drugs, you walk in your house, You know, after a late night with your friends, expecting everybody to sleep, but uh-oh, mom's awake. | ||
She's like, oh, hey, where you been? | ||
You're like, good. | ||
I mean, friend's house. | ||
And she's like, what's in your pocket? | ||
You're like, oh, crap. | ||
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Like, that is the image. | |
That is what we're witnessing here, except it's the, you know, the leaders of the free world, except it's the leaders of France, Germany, and England all, yeah, literally looking like guilty. | ||
High schoolers getting caught with drugs. | ||
A bit of an issue. | ||
Bit of an issue. | ||
But hey, why just have one source of blackmail when you can have many? | ||
I mean, sure, you want these guys on tape committing insane and degrading sex acts. | ||
That's a great thing to hold over their head. | ||
But getting them addicted to drugs, that's just good business practice if you're a globalist controller. | ||
Of course you're going to pick the drugged out weirdos. | ||
Again, it's the attempt to cover this up. | ||
Yeah, good try, boys. | ||
Yeah, maybe we'll take your calls on this. | ||
People saying it's a fake thing. | ||
We have multiple angles of this. | ||
Like, people are saying it's a fake video. | ||
We have multiple angles of this. | ||
I think clip number seven is the same video, but from a different angle. | ||
And then we have like three or four angles from this because there are a lot of cameras in it all filming at the same time. | ||
So there's the different angle where you can see it even better. | ||
Oh, real smooth, Macron. | ||
Yeah, no one saw that. | ||
I mean, my God. | ||
And you just have to wonder if they're this brazen about it. | ||
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Honestly, just like knowing these three, I'm actually surprised that they weren't just like sticking it up their butts. | |
Who knows what was going on right before this? | ||
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The fact that it was going up their nose rather than up their ass. | |
Crazy. | ||
Hey, it was early in the day. | ||
It was early in the day. | ||
They had plenty of time for all that. | ||
I mean, they got caught. | ||
They got caught. | ||
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That's... | |
The be-all and all of this story, they got absolutely busted. | ||
And it just makes you wonder, like, okay, if they're this brazen about it, if they're just doing it in the train car with the media right next door, never in a million years expecting that they might pop over for a visit, you know, who around them knows about this? | ||
In other words, some people can be addicted to drugs and... | ||
They sort of manage it so well that even their closest friends and family don't know what's going on. | ||
These guys, it seems like, don't even care about trying to hide it. | ||
So it just sort of, you know, lends a better understanding of just how corrupt this whole scheme is that I guarantee you everybody around them is like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, they're coked out all the time, for sure. | ||
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100%. | |
It's obvious. | ||
And, you know, it's not the first time this type of thing has happened. | ||
And there's a lot of video of world leaders doing things that inspire speculation about this topic. | ||
We can go to the video I just put in called It's All of Them. | ||
Here's Jacinda Arden, or whatever her name was, is the former New Zealand Prime Minister, who always kind of looked like a Cracked out whore, but here she is just getting her nose right before going on TV. | ||
Let's watch clip 23. Sweet mustache. | ||
Yeah, totally normal. | ||
Totally normal. | ||
No, she's doing baseball signs. | ||
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She's telling the person on second to steal third. | |
Or she's a co-cat. | ||
One of those. | ||
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Great, who wants to kick off? | |
Yeah. | ||
They're so energetic. | ||
So energetic, these politicians. | ||
It's not the first time that President Macron has been caught practicing a little bit of sleight of hand. | ||
Let's go now to clip number eight. | ||
Here's Macron, and of course he's talking about how we all have to make sacrifices, economic sacrifices. | ||
I don't know what about. | ||
I mean, this is either because, you know, we have to make sacrifices to send billions of dollars to Ukraine to fund that war, slash buy Coke, or... | ||
You know, the sacrifices you have to make to import tens of millions of Africans to your country to destroy it that way. | ||
I mean, in some way, they need you to sacrifice for your own destruction. | ||
But while he's saying this, he's wearing a probably $10,000 to $30,000 watch. | ||
And observe, observe how he takes the watch off underneath the table. | ||
Again, these are just... | ||
Weasel people. | ||
Like, we're just being run by deceptive little drugged out weasel people. | ||
Let's go to clip number eight. | ||
So there you see the watch. | ||
On his wrist in the beginning of the conversation. | ||
It's off the wrist in the second part of the conversation. | ||
Here the watch is on. | ||
The hands go onto the table. | ||
Just don't pay attention to me. | ||
I'm just piddling under here. | ||
No need to look down. | ||
Keep watching my face while I talk. | ||
And no watch. | ||
And the watch is gone. | ||
We all have to make sacrifices. | ||
Oh crap, I'm wearing a watch equal to a year's salary for most Frenchmen. | ||
That makes me look like a hypocrite. | ||
Better do a little bit of slide a hand here underneath the table. | ||
Is this going to be an issue? | ||
Is this going to be a scandal? | ||
Or is this going to be completely swept under the rug? | ||
If you're actually wondering that, you don't know how things are constructed in this world. | ||
This is going to go nowhere. | ||
There are a couple things to consider about this. | ||
One of them is that if the thing people say about the media was true, that they just love scandal, they're just going for clicks, they just are publishing anything that gets attention... | ||
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Wait, is this real? | |
Oh my god, that is weirdly convincing. | ||
Is that Tyrone Biggums? | ||
And Hunter Biden there in the background. | ||
Yeah, they're all hanging out together. | ||
If it was true that the media just ran with whatever scandal because they're destroying the trust in our society because they just spread the most scandalous gossip, then this would be on every front page. | ||
It would be a major story. | ||
They could make weeks out of this. | ||
They could have these guys scrambling and having to give press conferences trying to explain what was going on. | ||
But no, they're just not going to cover it. | ||
They're not going to cover it because there's something that supersedes their desire for clicks and attention and profit, and it's their desire to uphold the system that relies on these puppets in power who are just evil. | ||
I mean, they're just evil, selfish scum, and the people pulling their strings know that, and so they keep them on the leash knowing that they're... | ||
Able to be destroyed at a moment's notice by revealing these things. | ||
Whether it's the cocaine or what they do with kids or anything else. | ||
So what do you think? | ||
What do you think is going on here? | ||
And what do you think should be done about this? | ||
I just, you know, it's just the fact that I don't know, man. | ||
It's just... | ||
Yeah, I don't know, man. | ||
These people are just drugged-out weirdos, every single one of them, and it's no wonder that their countries are collapsing underneath them. | ||
It's no wonder that all three of these countries have had to institute... | ||
Okay, Macron condemns cocaine-trained conspiracy spread by Russia? | ||
Oh, Russia is spreading this, are they? | ||
Holy, holy. | ||
That is wild. | ||
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Now we know it's real. | |
I think I'm going to need this article printed out, please, gentlemen, because I got to read what the cover up here. | ||
Spread by Russia. | ||
Man, oh man, you thought Russia was good when they were, you know, planting Donald Trump in office. | ||
You had no idea that they were planting cocaine. | ||
On the table right in front of Emmanuel Macron just before Norwegian television stormed the train car. | ||
My God, they're even more dangerous than we thought. | ||
These Russians and these crazy stories they tell about how you can see on video them hiding cocaine in a cocaine spoon right in front of everybody. | ||
I can't believe Russia just tricked all of our eyes right there when we saw it in first-person view. | ||
With our own eyes, it was Russia. | ||
Of course it was. | ||
My God. | ||
I mean, yeah, like Matt said, and now we know it's true. | ||
Now we know it's true. | ||
When it's that level of ridiculous lie, I don't know, maybe that's a lesson for the high schoolers out there. | ||
Have you tried blaming the pipe your parents found on Russia? | ||
Have you tried that one yet? | ||
It turns out it's a great excuse for anything. | ||
Get busted at school. | ||
Get busted after a party. | ||
Just blame it on Russia. | ||
Take a page from the books of the most powerful people in the world and just claim Russia made your parents think that they caught you with cocaine. | ||
That's just incredible. | ||
It really is not credible. | ||
Their excuses are incredible. | ||
So we'll move on now. | ||
We'll get into some other stuff. | ||
That's who we're talking about. | ||
This is who's running the world, apparently. | ||
Yeah, what is there even to say about this? | ||
I don't even know. | ||
I mean, there you have it. | ||
It's just right there, undeniable, on video. | ||
Look at it for yourself. | ||
The top executives, the presidents, chancellors, prime ministers of UK. | ||
Germany and France just got caught, like a couple of high schoolers, doing cocaine. | ||
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Were they using rolled-up euros or 10-pound notes? | |
No, they had a little spoon. | ||
They had a little spoon. | ||
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No partisanship. | |
They're classy. | ||
Don't get me wrong. | ||
They do coke like high-class hookers, because that's what they are. | ||
That's exactly what they are. | ||
There you go. | ||
In case you were wondering why the world is going the way that it is, it's because we're run by a bunch of drugged-out perverts. | ||
And that's the headline. | ||
Wouldn't catch me doing that. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. | ||
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We'll be right back, folks. | |
Macron condemned cocaine train conspiracy spread by Russia. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I should read this along with the story that I have for you a little bit later. | ||
Maybe we'll save it. | ||
But basically, the EU is already suing some of its constituent members for not enforcing the disinformation acts that they recently passed. | ||
You know, the sweeping censorship bills designed to Silence, true stories about what's actually going on. | ||
So I just feel like these two sort of go hand in hand. | ||
You've got both the EU cracking down on member states, demanding that they censor disinformation while calling video evidence of a thing happening Russian disinformation and saying that it's... | ||
It's dangerous. | ||
It's dangerous to talk about this. | ||
The French presidency has ridiculed false claims promoted on pro-Russian social media channels that President Macron snorted cocaine with Friedrich Merz, the Chancellor of Germany, aboard the train that took them and steer Karma to Kiev over the weekend. | ||
The fake news is being spread by France's enemies, both abroad and at home. | ||
We must remain vigilant against manipulation, the LSA. | ||
Palace posted on X after images were shared online of Macron picking up a used tissue from a table where he was sitting with the Prime Minister and MERS. | ||
According to accounts that circulate conspiracy theories, Macron was trying to hide a crumpled bag of cocaine while MERS was handling a white cocaine spoon when cameramen were allowed to enter the train's conference saloon. | ||
Okay, so they're calling... | ||
It could very well be a bag of... | ||
They're saying that's a used tissue. | ||
So what's the cocaine spoon? | ||
What is that actually? | ||
That's not a cocaine spoon? | ||
What is it then? | ||
Is it a tie clip? | ||
Well, none of them are wearing ties. | ||
Is it a hair clip? | ||
Well, none of them are women. | ||
So what is it exactly? | ||
Haven't come up with a lie for that yet, have you? | ||
No, the bag of cocaine is definitely a tissue, which is why Macron so sneakily hides it right there. | ||
Again, what does conspiracy theory mean anymore? | ||
What does it mean? | ||
We show a video. | ||
We look at the video. | ||
We say, here's what's happening in this video. | ||
And they cry, Russian conspiracy theory. | ||
People fall for this, too. | ||
That's the craziest thing. | ||
The LSA shared images mocking the Russian conspiracy. | ||
High-definition video of the scene made clear that Macron was actually just removing a crumpled tissue and the alleged cocaine spoon was a plastic coffee stirrer. | ||
Okay, for their coffee. | ||
That was just a plastic coffee stirrer an inch long for their coffee. | ||
Okay. | ||
Then why did he hide it like that? | ||
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Okay. | |
Yeah, great. | ||
Great. | ||
When European unity becomes inconvenient, disinformation goes so far as to make a simple tissue look like drugs. | ||
A simple tissue. | ||
A simple innocent tissue. | ||
The three leaders are traveling through Ukraine from Poland on the night train to meet President Zelensky and Donald Tusk. | ||
The Polish prime minister on Saturday morning in Kiev, they challenged the Russians to declare a 30-day ceasefire by Monday, which President Putin rejected. | ||
The Russian foreign ministry boosted the cocaine story on Sunday when Maria Zarkova, the spokeswoman, posted on Telegram that a Frenchman, an Englishman and a German had been spotted with cocaine paraphernalia on a train. | ||
The fate of Europe is being decided by utterly drug-dependent individuals, she wrote. | ||
It's as if the Almighty himself is living in the country. | ||
Putrid spectacle. | ||
Yeah, that could be like the slogan of the EU. | ||
The European Union, a putrid spectacle. | ||
Repeating a long-standing Kremlin claim, she called Zelensky an unstable cocaine addict and claimed that a Western diplomat had told her the drug use was normal among European leaders. | ||
I mean, yeah, it is. | ||
It absolutely is. | ||
Such claims are... | ||
A staple of the false news circulated on social media by Kremlin-backed accounts. | ||
One French-language pro-Russian account commented, Coke is going to take decisions on the Third World War. | ||
This month, France said the GRU, Russian's military intelligence service, had stepped up a social media and cyber-offensive. | ||
It's been waging against the Macron administration since 2017. | ||
It infiltrates French digital networks with two aims, collecting intelligence for the benefit of the Kremlin and destabilizing our society by creating distrust. | ||
The French ministry said. | ||
I mean, come on. | ||
I mean, come on. | ||
Macron has been personally targeted with online campaigns initiated or fanned by Russia, according to the French. | ||
These promote false rumors that he's a homosexual, that his wife Brigette was born a man, and that he's part of a corrupt worldwide cabal backed by George Soros, the financier. | ||
What? | ||
You're telling me the former Rothschild banker is part of some sort of cabal? | ||
Never. | ||
Never. | ||
The account that spread the claims about cocaine use have now claimed that the LSA has ordered the news media to shut it down as a story. | ||
That's literally what you're reporting right here. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
The accounts that spread this claim about cocaine use have now claimed the LSA has ordered the news media to shut it down as a story? | ||
Okay, but you're saying that after an entire article where you quote the LSA trying to shut this down as a story by claiming it's Russian disinformation. | ||
Yeah, I think we get what's going on. | ||
I think we understand it. | ||
That's incredible. | ||
That really is something else. | ||
unidentified
|
Alright. | |
After that brief little sojourn on the cocaine train, we'll get into it now. | ||
We'll begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch. | ||
unidentified
|
*Pewds* | |
Alright, here it is, folks. | ||
The daily dispatch for Monday, the 12th of May, 2025. | ||
Trump is Middle East bound for his first major international trip of his second term. | ||
Here's what to watch for. | ||
President Donald Trump spoke to reporters in front of the White House on Thursday. | ||
Well, this is not part of the story. | ||
President Donald Trump embarks Monday on the first major international trip of his second term, an opportunity to shore up relations with a trio of key Middle Eastern allies and prove his might as a dealmaker on the world stage. | ||
Arriving in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Tuesday with stops in Dohar, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates later this week, the trip echoes Trump's first international foray in 2017. | ||
Now, eight years later, President Trump will return to reemphasize his continued vision for a proud, prosperous, and successful Middle East where the United States and Middle East Eastern nations are in a cooperative relationship and where extremism is defeated in place of commerce and cultural exchanges. | ||
Press Secretary Caroline Levitt told reporters casting the trip is a historic return to the Middle East. | ||
But much has changed in the global and economic world order since Trump's first term first term sojourn. | ||
The president has dramatically reimagined and reshaped the U.S.'s role in the world in his first months in office in the Russia, Ukraine and Israel Hamas wars have upended stability in Europe and the Middle East. | ||
Still, the trip offers Trump a chance to notch a few economic wins, revel in the prompt and circumstance of presidential visits and highlight deepening partnerships. | ||
unidentified
|
Chips. | |
And we'll get into what exactly has happened over the last few days because It's all massive, and I have some interesting theories to present to you about why this change has occurred all of a sudden and with such rapidity. | ||
But we'll get back to that later. | ||
Meanwhile, Putin proposes talks with Zelensky in Istanbul to end the war in Ukraine. | ||
Russian President Vladimir Putin has proposed direct talks with Ukraine in Istanbul this week. | ||
President Putin made the suggestion on Sunday and said he would talk directly with Turkish President Erdogan about facilitating the discussions. | ||
We are proposing that Kiev resume direct negotiations without any preconditions, Putin said from the Kremlin on Sunday. | ||
We offer the Kiev authorities to resume negotiations already on Thursday in Istanbul. | ||
Our proposal, as they say, is on the table, Putin continued. | ||
The decision is now up to the Ukraine authorities and their curators, who are guided, it seems, by their personal political ambitions and not by the interest of their peoples. | ||
And also, in large part, by the drugs racking their brains. | ||
They say, think of the hundreds of thousands of lives that will be saved as this never-ending bloodbath hopefully comes to an end, that President Trump said on Truth Social. | ||
Again, Ukraine has no legitimate reason to ignore this offer. | ||
Putin has no pressing reason to make this offer. | ||
Russia is winning. | ||
Russia will continue to win. | ||
There is nothing in the offing to suggest that any sort of reversal will occur anytime soon. | ||
So they hold all the cards. | ||
They have the upper hand. | ||
Here they are offering to negotiate to end the conflict. | ||
And it's only because of the suicidal nature of the West that they haven't accepted it. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
We will see. | ||
Putin is continuing to demand Ukraine relinquish its ambitions to join NATO, adopt a stance of neutrality towards Russia, and also recognize Russian territorial acquisitions in the east and south of the country since 2014. | ||
Russia is not, however, opposed to Ukraine's membership of the European Union. | ||
U.S. and China have agreed to slash tariffs by 115% for 90 days. | ||
In May 2025, officials from the U.S. and China reached a deal in Geneva to roll back most tariffs on an initial 90-day period, aiming to reduce trade tensions. | ||
The tariff rollback followed months of escalating duties imposed by Trump, which raised U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods to 145%, provoking retaliatory levies from China. | ||
Both sides have agreed to reduce their tariff rates by 115 percentage points, lowering U.S. tariffs from 145% to just 30%, and China's from 125% to 10%, while establishing a mechanism for ongoing trade talks. | ||
Following the announcement, stock markets surged globally, with U.S. futures raising over 2%, Hong Kong's gaining nearly 3%, and Chinese officials calling the agreement substantial, if temporary. | ||
The deal de-escalated the trade war, reducing economic disruption and market uncertainty, though analysts warn significant uncertainty remains about longer-term outcomes. | ||
But that is a major achievement, as we've been hearing about these sort of start-stop negotiations for a while, and they finally achieved a thing or two. | ||
So, again, showing the art of the deal in full operation. | ||
Donald Trump, meanwhile, says he will sign an executive order to slash prices of prescription drugs in the U.S. by an absolutely massive amount. | ||
President Trump announced plans to issue this executive order on Monday morning in Washington, D.C., aimed at significantly lowering prescription drug costs in the United States. | ||
The order revives Trump's first term effort to tie Medicare drug prices to the lowest global prices using a most favored nation policy that previously faced legal challenges. | ||
The policy aims to reduce costs for drugs administered in doctors'offices such as cancer infusions by matching prices paid by other wealthy countries. | ||
Trump claimed the order could slash prescription drug and pharmaceutical prices by 30 percent. | ||
to 80%, calling it, quote, one of the most consequential executive orders in U.S. history. | ||
The order may face strong pharmaceutical industry opposition with concerns about limiting patient access and reducing innovation, while supporters cite potential large health care cost savings. | ||
So again, this is something that... | ||
I would think everybody would be in favor of, especially Trump's enemies. | ||
But we'll see how sincere their desire for lower drug costs actually is, or whether they're willing to abandon their principles to defeat Trump because of the particular derangement they have. | ||
Again, 80% slash is absolutely massive, and Trump is signing that executive order, as he's had to do everything through executive order. | ||
Controlling interest in Congress and the Senate, in the first 100 days of Trump's administration, he signed only five new laws into action. | ||
So, really just pathetic display by Congress and the Senate who are betraying us with their inaction. | ||
Meanwhile, and finally, food security experts warn Gaza is at critical risk of famine if Israel does not end its blockade. | ||
This warning follows a 19-month military-Israeli campaign and a 10-week blockade restricting food, medicine, and shelter into Gaza. | ||
Nearly 500,000 Palestinians are experiencing starvation-level hunger, with an additional 1 million facing food insecurity that requires immediate humanitarian assistance. | ||
Chris Newton of the International Crisis Group said the lack of famine declaration doesn't mean people aren't already starving, emphasizing urgent aid needs. | ||
If blockades and military operations do not ease, Food security experts warn that Gaza is likely to experience full-scale famine in the near future. | ||
And that is one of the things that Trump is helping to counteract by sending more food and aid supplies to the besieged enclave. | ||
We got a lot of news in that regard. | ||
That we'll get to again. | ||
That's your Daily Dispatch brought to you, of course, by the Alex Jones... | ||
I'm sorry, the... | ||
AlexJonesStore.com. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com is where you go. | ||
To support us, go to TheAlexJonesStore.com slash Harrison to let them know who sent you. | ||
I think we'll start with reading a little, a bit of a diatribe that I put out over the weekend because I was just trying to encapsulate in one post sort of the series of events that have occurred over the last couple weeks that we've been reporting on piecemeal. | ||
And exposing the reality behind because it's been fairly obvious since the beginning. | ||
And I need to do some work today on going back. | ||
There's so many times, I'm sure if you watch this show every day and have for a while, I don't need to tell you. | ||
And it's really just for my own, you know, satisfaction. | ||
I gotta go back. | ||
I gotta be able to go back and find these clips because I just sort of mentioned things offhand and I don't know where the hell I said it or what episode, what day of the week it was. | ||
So I gotta go. | ||
I gotta go and grab the transcripts because I kept seeing people sort of talk about like, oh, now Signalgate, now we understand Signalgate more. | ||
Now, you know, it's clear that what was happening was Pete Hegseth being forced out. | ||
It's like, that was obvious the day that it broke. | ||
The day that it broke, we talked about that. | ||
And it was obvious from then on, you know, what's happening here? | ||
And I explained it. | ||
On, you know, the day it happened or the day after it happened, the reason why Signal Gate was happening, how it fell in line with a bunch of other things that were going on, like Pete Hegseth having all of his America First anti-interventionalist aides and assistants being forced out by these fake claims of leaks that nobody could provide evidence for. | ||
But I wanted to lay it out in a singular, ill-formatted paragraph. | ||
So let me just give you a breakdown of what's happened and what's happening between Israel and America recently. | ||
So Israel bombed the crap out of everybody around them for years, which eliminated Iran's proxies, but pissed off everyone in the world. | ||
So now they have this brief window of opportunity to take out Iran. | ||
And if they don't, well, the backlash is going to be massive. | ||
But they can't actually defeat Iran without American troops on the ground. | ||
So they're frantically trying to get Trump to launch a war with Netanyahu visiting D.C. and three three times in three months with nothing to show for it. | ||
But a bombing campaign against the Houthis, despite being seemingly surrounded by militant Zionists, Trump's team has mostly pursued diplomatic solutions, even talking to Iran against the explicit wishes of Israel. | ||
A rift formed between pro interventionalists like Mike Waltz and anti interventionalists like Pete Hegseth. | ||
Hegseth then started facing immense media pressure with his top-analyst Then Walt added the editor of leftist magazine The Atlantic to a signal chat where the Yemen war was being discussed. | ||
After the chats were leaked, Hegseth got the brunt of the blowback for some reason, but he refused to resign over it. | ||
And so a second signal gate scandal was launched to accuse him of sharing classified information with his wife. | ||
Waltz, meanwhile, appointed a former member of Israel's Ministry of Defense to oversee Iran and Israel policy on the National Security Council. | ||
Eventually, Waltz was forced to resign after he was discovered coordinating with Netanyahu to push a pro-war agenda in secret and against the orders of Trump. | ||
Then in the last few days, Trump has cut off communications with Netanyahu, dropped the requirement for Saudi Arabia to normalize relations with Israel, canceled Hegseth's trip to Israel, and even announced that the U.S. may be recognizing a Palestinian state. | ||
Suddenly, it's been announced that multiple gigantic advanced nuclear production facilities have not only been discovered in Iran, but are known to be using material only used in nuclear weaponry, not energy production. | ||
And Trump leaves. | ||
For the Mideast on Monday today. | ||
Hoo boy. | ||
Hoo boy, indeed. | ||
So, every one of these things could be elaborated on endlessly. | ||
Every single point I just made deserves hours of explanation as to how it got this way and what exactly the pieces moving on the board were. | ||
As Daniel McAdams notes, On a comment under this, Goldberg, the editor of The Atlantic, is not just a leftist journalist, but he's a former IDF prison guard who admitted to torturing Palestinian prisoners. | ||
That is absolutely key to your narrative. | ||
He is not an opponent to the neocon warmongers. | ||
He is one of them. | ||
Now, if Watson put me on the call, he says. | ||
And again, every single aspect of this story has an infinite level of detail behind it and coordination and manipulation. | ||
And I'm, of course, very worried about Trump's trip to the Mideast. | ||
Although the good news is that with all of this coming out and with the year and a half of exposure of regular people to the reality of Israel and its behavior and its control of the United States, I mean, it's outrageous and people are waking up to it now. | ||
And so it would be in the best interest of Israel and the Jewish people as a whole. | ||
To protect Trump with everything they've got. | ||
Because if something happens to Donald Trump when he's in the Middle East or anywhere in the near future, it doesn't matter what the details are. | ||
It doesn't matter who's being blamed for it. | ||
Everybody's going to blame Israel. | ||
Everybody's going to blame Israel. | ||
I mean, they're the obvious suspect, right? | ||
So it's up to them. | ||
It's up to them. | ||
They should be doing everything they possibly can to be keeping Trump alive, knowing That if something happens to him, God forbid, it's all going to come down on them. | ||
Even if it's not them. | ||
Even if it's not them, they're going to get the blame for it. | ||
Because everybody sees how desperate they are to start World War III. | ||
How, I mean, they literally gave Trump a golden pager. | ||
And we're like, remember, it's like the pagers that we blew up from Hezbollah. | ||
Here, keep it in your office as a reminder of what we're capable of. | ||
It's like, oh gee, put a horse head in my bed next time. | ||
It'll be more subtle. | ||
And even, you know, career politicians are getting into this. | ||
Let's go to clip number 12 here. | ||
This is Matt Gaetz. | ||
He's on a comedy podcast by this guy Mateo. | ||
That's why, and you know, it's just one of these podcasts between two ferns where they bring people on and try to make them uncomfortable. | ||
So there's like a dude sitting with a ski mask next to him and it looks very weird because this is Zoomer comedy. | ||
Just fair warning. | ||
Let's go down to clip number 12. Here's Matt Gates on the Israel lobby. | ||
unidentified
|
If I want to get in the government, do I have to support Israel? | |
You know, the Israel lobby has an incredible power over the decisions that government makes. | ||
And what we've seen is on the left or on the right, if you question the policies of the Israeli government legitimately. | ||
People will accuse you of anti-Semitism. | ||
And that is weird and wrong and kind of unlike anything else we see anywhere else. | ||
Now, there are legitimate expressions of concern regarding the anti-Semitism that we see on college campuses. | ||
But I got to tell you, no one's asked me the question that directly. | ||
The truth is, if you oppose the U.S.-Israel relationship, you face tremendous headwinds to get into government. | ||
unidentified
|
Not just appointed government, but elected government as well. | |
Dude, it's moving. | ||
What is? | ||
The thing that it's true. | ||
Tremendous headwinds from getting into office. | ||
But of course it doesn't stop once you're in office, right? | ||
I mean, just ask Thomas Massey about the headwinds he faces, about the threats that he faces to his continued representation of his constituency. | ||
In fact, Israel itself and Israeli officials are now openly bragging about the fact that they essentially have veto power over American foreign policy. | ||
Here's a woman explaining one of their latest braggadocious claims. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Israel just admitted that they control America. | |
Don't believe me? | ||
So, if you know, Trump said he's basically done with Israel and all the wars that they're creating and their refusal at a ceasefire. | ||
And now he is making a deal with Saudi Arabia that's going to help us with our relationships with Saudi Arabia and securing oil for the American people. | ||
Well, Israel is beyond ticks. | ||
They are not part of this deal. | ||
There was nothing that America brought to the table to include Israel in receiving oil. | ||
I mean, why should they? | ||
And Israel said that this was the straw that broke the camel's back. | ||
Now they're saying that if America does not include them in on this deal or if they aren't happy with the deal that they might get included in on, well, they will prevent it from going through in the Senate. | ||
The Senate, that is the American Senate. | ||
The Senate selected by the American people who are supposed to represent the American people, not represent a foreign entity. | ||
And they just came up with a new updated definition of what anti-Semitism is, saying that if you say America is run by Israel, you are being anti-Semitic. | ||
But what about when Israel itself comes out and says they are running America? | ||
Now is it still being anti-Semitic? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes it is. | ||
You didn't expect there to be some consistency in these claims, did you? | ||
Yeah, we'll get back into this more on the other side. | ||
But first, we're going to go to a very powerful clip about illegals in our government. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
Second hour of the American Journal is on. | ||
I'm going to go to a video now of a former Border Patrol agent talking about testifying to Congress and realizing... | ||
The people in our Congress are illegal aliens. | ||
Oh, I hear Trump is live right now? | ||
All right, we'll have to hold off on this then. | ||
Let's go to Trump Live because I want to hear what he has to say. | ||
And he's been fantastic, so I want to just thank Steve. | ||
But they're going to be releasing E-Done in about two hours from now, or sometime today, let's say. | ||
And again, they thought he was dead just a short while ago. | ||
His parents are so happy. | ||
So this is the last remaining American hostage in Gaza. | ||
They've negotiated for a release. | ||
The only American citizen is captured and held hostage by Hamas since October 7, 2023. | ||
And he's coming home to his parents, which is really great news. | ||
I mean, to me, it's big news. | ||
They thought he was dead. | ||
So, that's that. | ||
So, we'll be heading there, and we'll be seeing three primary countries. | ||
You know all about that. | ||
Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar. | ||
On Thursday's meeting with Russia and Ukraine is very important. | ||
I was very insistent that that meeting take place. | ||
I think good things can come out of that meeting. | ||
Stop the bloodshed of the horrible... | ||
It's a bloodbath. | ||
But 5,000 more. | ||
It's really much more. | ||
I'm trying to be conservative. | ||
More than 5,000 soldiers. | ||
Russian. | ||
They're not American soldiers. | ||
They're from Russia. | ||
They're from Ukraine. | ||
But they're people. | ||
They're human souls. | ||
And they're being killed at levels that we haven't seen since the Second World War. | ||
And it's every week. | ||
A lot of drone fighting. | ||
It's a whole new form of warfare. | ||
And it's violent and vicious. | ||
And so... | ||
That's it. | ||
I'd like to go back to China just for a second. | ||
They're very heavy on the fentanyl. | ||
We're charging them, as you know, 20% for the fact that they send fentanyl into our country. | ||
And they've agreed that they're going to stop that. | ||
And, you know, they'll be rewarded by not having to pay, you know, hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs. | ||
So the fentanyl should stop. | ||
It comes from China. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
And it comes through our southern border, comes through our northern border too, comes through Canada, and comes through our southern border, much more through the southern border. | ||
So that's a very important subject to me, because everybody in this room has lost friends or people that have family members that have died of fentanyl. | ||
So there's a big incentive for China to stop, and I take them at their word. | ||
They're going to work on that. | ||
I think very hard. | ||
And one thing, when they work on something, they get it done. | ||
So now I'm about to depart on a historic visit. | ||
Some of you are going with us to, as I said, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and United Arab Emirates. | ||
Before I do, I'll sign one of the most consequential executive orders in our country's history. | ||
I don't think there's ever been anything signed like this. | ||
Certainly not with respect to health care. | ||
Nothing even close. | ||
I'm delighted. | ||
To be joined on this occasion by Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is doing a really good job, I have to tell you that. | ||
CMS administrator, a friend of mine, Dr. Mehmet Oz, who is an amazing guy, you know, who's telling Bobby before Oz... | ||
Had a very successful show, but it hurt his reputation. | ||
Because when you're in show business, it hurts your reputation a little bit. | ||
It's good for you, but in terms of professionalism and being a doctor, it sort of hurts your reputation. | ||
This guy went to the best schools, was the best, I mean, top, top, top of the line. | ||
Then he did a television show, became a success. | ||
Made a lot of money, all that stuff, but it sort of... | ||
And you know who I compare that to? | ||
I hate to say this, but a special woman, Janine Pirro. | ||
She was the toughest, smartest DA maybe in our countries, in our cities and states. | ||
This is Trump giving a live press conference with RFK Jr. there and the leaders of Health and Human Services, Jay Buffer Chaya, next to him. | ||
We're going to return to this live broadcast ahead of his Middle East trip on the other side. | ||
Stay with us, folks. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Trump will be heading to the Middle East later today, but he's currently live giving a press conference with HHS, RFK Jr., Jay Bhattaracharya, having to do with the executive order to slash prescription drugs by up to 80%. | ||
But of course, in Trumpian fashion, he's talking about all sorts of accomplishments while he's up there, including the rescuer, the negotiated release of the last remaining American hostage in Gaza. | ||
That negotiation concluded yesterday, and he will be returning to his family soon. | ||
We'll talk about that a little bit later. | ||
But let's go back to Trump live from the White House ahead of his Middle East trip. | ||
District attorneys in the history of New York, highly respected, very tough, went after the drug dealers at a level that you don't see today anymore. | ||
And hopefully she's going to be, she's given up a tremendous, she's leaving the number one show on, Cable television, one of the number one shows on television, period. | ||
The Five, but they've got great people left behind, but she was a big part of it. | ||
And so I equate it to that. | ||
Janine Pirro is unbelievable. | ||
FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty McCary, with a reputation that's second to none, and the job he's doing already has been fantastic. | ||
Thank you, Marty. | ||
And Director of National Institute of Health, Jay Bhattacharya. | ||
Who has been, as you know from Stanford, so highly regarded and have all been working with us very hard on this. | ||
And the question they would ask, being a little bit new to the government aspect of it, is why hasn't somebody fight the drug price situation, meaning equalization? | ||
There's a term. | ||
It's called equalization. | ||
Nobody wants to mention that term. | ||
And I'm not knocking the drug companies. | ||
I'm really more knocking the countries than the drug companies. | ||
They're forced to do things. | ||
But the drug lobby is the strongest lobby in this country, they say. | ||
The drug lobby. | ||
It's between that and lawyers. | ||
And they have a lot of power. | ||
But starting today, the United States will no longer subsidize the health care of foreign countries, which is what we were doing. | ||
We were subsidizing others' health care. | ||
Countries where they paid a small fraction for the same drug. | ||
That's what we pay many, many times more for. | ||
And we'll no longer tolerate profiteering and price gouging from Big Pharma. | ||
But again, it was really the countries that forced Big Pharma to do things that, frankly, I'm not sure they really felt comfortable doing. | ||
But they've gotten away with it, these countries. | ||
European Union has been brutal. | ||
Brutal. | ||
And the drug companies actually told me stories. | ||
It was just brutal how they forced them. | ||
Companies, Apple, Google, Meta, they're suing all of our companies. | ||
They have judges that are European Union-centric, and they get rewarded $15 billion, $17 billion, $20 billion, and they use that to run their operation. | ||
It's not going to happen any longer, that I can tell you. | ||
What's been happening is we've been subsidizing other countries throughout the world, not just in Europe, throughout the world. | ||
European Union was the most difficult, from what I understand. | ||
I mean, I'll tell you a story. | ||
A friend of mine who's a businessman, very, very, very top guy. | ||
Most of you would have heard of him. | ||
A highly neurotic, brilliant businessman, seriously overweight, and he takes the fat shot drug. | ||
And he called me up, and he said, President, he used to call me Donald, now he calls me President, so that's nice respect, but he's a rough guy, smart guy. | ||
Very successful, very rich. | ||
I wouldn't even know how we would know this, because he's got comments. | ||
President, could I ask you a question? | ||
I'm in London, and I just paid for this damn fat drug I take. | ||
I said, it's not working. | ||
He said... | ||
I just paid $88. | ||
And in New York, I pay $1,300. | ||
What the hell is going on? | ||
He said, so I checked. | ||
And it's the same box made in the same plant by the same company. | ||
It's the identical pill that I buy in New York. | ||
And here I'm paying $88 in London. | ||
In New York, I'm paying $1,300. | ||
Now, this is a great businessman, but he's not familiar with this crazy situation that we have. | ||
But he was stunned. | ||
But it was just one of those stories. | ||
And I brought it up with the drug companies, represented by somebody who's very, very smart. | ||
Good person, too. | ||
And we argued about it for about a half hour. | ||
And then finally, he just said, because they can't justify it. | ||
He just said, look, you got me. | ||
You got me. | ||
I can no longer justify. | ||
They've been justifying this crap for years. | ||
They said, oh, it's research and development. | ||
Well, I said, well, research and development, other countries should pay research and development, too. | ||
It's for their benefit. | ||
It was just one of those things. | ||
And the other countries would set a price, and they'd meet the price, and they'd say, if you don't meet the price, you can't sell it in our country. | ||
I said, well, then you walk away, and they'll call you back, and they'll sell it in the country. | ||
But now they'll have to do that. | ||
So for the first time in many years, we'll slash the cost of prescription drugs, and we will bring fairness to America. | ||
Drug prices will come down by much more, really, if you think, 59. If you think of a drug that is sometimes 10 times more expensive, it's much more than the 59 percent. | ||
It depends on the way you want to analyze it, but in one way you could analyze it that way. | ||
But between 59 and 80, and I guess even 90 percent. | ||
When I worked so hard in the first term, and if I got prices down, remember I was the only one to ever get prices down for a full year, but I'd get them down like 2%, and I thought it was like a big deal. | ||
Well, we're getting them down 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, but actually more than that if you think about it mathematically. | ||
And a farmer has to say, we're sorry, but we'll... | ||
Not be able to do this any longer to these countries that have been so tough. | ||
They've been very tough. | ||
Nasty. | ||
It's trade. | ||
It's trade. | ||
And pharma is also very powerful. | ||
And the Democrats have protected pharma. | ||
The Democrats, this is the Democrats have protected pharma. | ||
These are the Democrats. | ||
And by the way, I just called the Speaker of the House. | ||
And I just called the leader. | ||
Our leader in the Senate, John Thune, Mike Johnson, spoke to both of them. | ||
I said, when you score, you're going to have to score two things. | ||
You're going to have to, number one, score that hundreds of billions of dollars of tariff money is coming in. | ||
But even bigger than that, you're going to have to score that your cost for Medicaid and Medicare and just basically pharmaceuticals and drugs is going down at a level that nobody has ever... | ||
Seen before. | ||
It'll pay for the Golden Dome. | ||
I see the Golden Dome is there, see? | ||
That'll easily pay for the Golden Dome. | ||
And we'll have a lot of money left over. | ||
We need the Golden Dome, by the way, in this world. | ||
Although this world's a lot safer today than it was a week ago. | ||
And a lot safer than it was six months ago. | ||
We had people that had no clue what they were doing. | ||
So, today Americans spend... | ||
70% more for prescription drugs than we spent in the year 2000. | ||
Think of that. | ||
Our country has the highest drug prices anywhere in the world by sometimes a factor of 5, 6, 7, 8 times. | ||
It's not like they're slightly higher. | ||
6, 7, 8 times. | ||
There are even cases of 10 times higher. | ||
So that you go 10 times more expensive for the same drug, that's big numbers. | ||
Even though the United States is home to only 4% of the world's population, pharmaceutical companies make more than two-thirds of their profits in America. | ||
So think of that. | ||
With 4% of the population, the pharmaceutical companies make most of their money, most of their profits from America. | ||
That's not a good thing. | ||
Now, I think, by the way, pharmaceutical, I have great respect for these companies and for the people that run them. | ||
I really do. | ||
And I think they did one of the greatest jobs in history for their company, convincing people for many years that this was a fair system. | ||
Nobody really understood why, but I figured it out. | ||
For years, pharmaceutical and drug companies have said that research and development costs were what they are. | ||
And for no reason whatsoever, they had to be borne by America alone. | ||
Not anymore, they don't. | ||
This means American patients were effectively subsidizing socialist healthcare systems in Germany, in all parts of the European Union. | ||
They were the toughest of all. | ||
They were nasty. | ||
And I see that. | ||
I see that with trade, too. | ||
European Union is, in many ways, nastier than China. | ||
Okay? | ||
And we've just started with them. | ||
Oh, they'll come down a lot. | ||
You watch. | ||
We have all the cards. | ||
They treated us very unfairly. | ||
They sell us 13 million cards. | ||
We sell them none. | ||
They sell us their agricultural products. | ||
We sell them virtually none. | ||
The trade deficit here. | ||
But again, what he's talking about is this. | ||
Executive order he signed to lower prescription drug prices between 30 and 80 percent through sweeping policy changes. | ||
Saying on Truth Social what he's repeating here, that the pharmaceutical drug companies would say for years it was research and development costs borne by the suckers of America alone. | ||
Campaign contributions can do wonders, but not with me and not with the Republican Party. | ||
So again, is this an opportunity for an olive branch to the left who's constantly bitching about the state of health care? | ||
In America, it turns out you don't need to socialize it. | ||
You need to just have a fair playing field. | ||
And Trump is taking his nationalistic ideology and applying it to drug companies and pharmaceuticals, saying this is unfair for America, so we're not going to stand for it, and is actively doing the thing that Democrats promise to do over and over every four years for decades. | ||
Trump is actually doing it, saying drug prices to be cut by 59% plus gasoline energy grossly. | ||
Grocery and all other costs down. | ||
No inflation. | ||
Love, Donald J. Trump. | ||
So again, you know, I'm sure they'll find something to bitch about and complain about here, but it just goes to show you that effective nationalistic policies benefiting the American people is the solution to the corruption in corporations, the manipulation by foreign countries. | ||
This is not a matter of capitalism being bad. | ||
It's a matter of the American government being manipulated and controlled by corporate interests through bribery and campaign contributions, which Trump is immune from. | ||
Which is why we've supported him the entire time, and everybody else should probably get on board at this point, proving that he's achieving your policies more than your champions like Bernie Sanders. | ||
So, stop complaining. | ||
Get on board. | ||
And let's actually rescue the United States rather than tear it down from the inside like the despicable communists you truly are. | ||
Let's go back to Trump live talking about these drug prices and whatever else comes to his mind at the moment. | ||
$40 in the United Kingdom, which is where this gentleman told me he paid a small amount for his shot. | ||
But think of that. | ||
So $40. | ||
Versus $500 here. | ||
That's not even better. | ||
Much worse examples. | ||
And the weight loss drug, Ozempic, cost ten times more in the United States than in the rest of the developed world. | ||
Ten times more. | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
Why? | ||
What did we do? | ||
Suckers. | ||
But we never had a president that had the courage to do this. | ||
And nobody knew the system like I do. | ||
I mean, I've gotten to know this system so well. | ||
And I don't think it's fair that it benefits Obamacare. | ||
Obamacare is a failure. | ||
It's not a good health care. | ||
It works. | ||
I made it work. | ||
I had an obligation to make it work. | ||
Or an obligation to let it die. | ||
I chose that we had to make it work. | ||
I had to make it as good as possible. | ||
And I had a choice. | ||
I could have let it fail. | ||
Or make it as good as possible. | ||
As good as possible means it was still not very good, but it survived. | ||
And we did the right thing. | ||
But this makes everything work. | ||
And I don't want to have a bad form of health care work because of the fact I was able to cut drug prices by 80 or 90 percent. | ||
So we're going to maybe come up with something. | ||
I think this gives the Republicans a chance to actually do a health care that's much better than Obamacare. | ||
And for less money, which you guys would work on that along with Congress. | ||
But I do want to say that Democrats could have done this a long time ago. | ||
They have fought like hell for the drug companies. | ||
And they knew they were doing the wrong thing. | ||
And it's going to be very hard. | ||
I was just telling the leader and the speaker that it's going to be very hard for the Democrats to vote against the one big beautiful deal. | ||
The greatest tax cuts in history, greatest everything. | ||
But now you have the big drug prices because that's going to be included. | ||
It makes that whole situation different from a scoring standpoint. | ||
I just told them. | ||
I called them up about this. | ||
I said, I'm going to do something that's going to be very monumental. | ||
And you're going to be scoring. | ||
You better tell your people that this is going to score really well. | ||
And then add hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs to your list also. | ||
But as big as the tariffs are, this is something that really hits quickly. | ||
Five years ago, I signed an executive order to confront this disaster, but only confront it in a minor way. | ||
It was a good confrontation, but never to this extent. | ||
It took people a little while to understand a very complicated system. | ||
But Joe Biden, without any knowledge of what he was doing, terminated the policy and then pretended to negotiate under a new system. | ||
And then you take a look, five out of the ten drugs that he negotiated are now over 200% more expensive in America than the rest of the world and far more expensive than when he even got involved. | ||
Much more expensive than when he got involved. | ||
Joe Biden's plan was a... | ||
As you know, because you wrote about it, you don't say it very loudly, but it was a very big failure, was his whole presidency. | ||
First, I'm directing the U.S. trade representatives and Department of Commerce to begin investigations into foreign nations that extort drug companies by blocking their products unless they accept bottom line and very low dollar amounts for their product, unfairly shifting the cost burden onto American patients. | ||
And we'll be taking a look at that very strongly. | ||
The biggest thing we're going to do is we're going to tell those countries, like those represented by the European Union, that, you know, that game is up. | ||
Sorry. | ||
And if they want to get cute, then they don't have to sell cars into the United States anymore. | ||
It's a very big subject. | ||
And they won't get cute. | ||
Because I'll defend the drug companies from that standpoint. | ||
They were given a price by... | ||
The European Union and other countries. | ||
This is what you do. | ||
This is what we're going to pay. | ||
We're not going to pay anymore. | ||
Let America pay the difference, because it was a big shortfall. | ||
Let America pay it. | ||
And that's what we did. | ||
But we're not doing it anymore. | ||
Next, my administration will secure what we're calling most favored nations drug pricing. | ||
The principle is simple. | ||
Whatever the lowest price paid for a drug in other developed countries, that is the price that... | ||
Americans will pay. | ||
We're using the term "other developed countries" because there are some countries that need some additional help, and that's fine. | ||
I think that's very good. | ||
Some prescription drug and pharmaceutical prices will be reduced almost immediately by 50% to 80% to 90%. | ||
Big Pharma will either abide by this principle voluntarily or will use the power of the federal government to ensure that we are paying the same price as other countries. | ||
To accelerate these price restrictions and reductions, my administration will also cut out the middlemen. | ||
We're going to totally cut out the famous middlemen. | ||
Nobody knows who they are. | ||
Middlemen. | ||
I've been hearing the term for 25 years. | ||
Middlemen. | ||
I don't know who they are, but they're rich. | ||
That I can tell you. | ||
We're going to cut out the middlemen and facilitate the direct sale of drugs at the most favored nation price directly to the American citizen. | ||
So we're cutting out, Bobby, the middleman. | ||
It's so important, right? | ||
They've got to do that. | ||
They're worse than the drug companies. | ||
They don't even make a product, and they make a fortune. | ||
It's very smart business people that I can tell you. | ||
If companies make no significant progress toward most favored nation pricing, which we will insist that they do. | ||
So I think I'm wasting time talking about it. | ||
We're going to insist upon it. | ||
And we'll insist and we're going to help the drug companies with the other nations because those other nations do a lot of trading with us. | ||
They need our trade just like China needed us very badly. | ||
They need us just as badly. | ||
We will do whatever we have to with trade just like We did some great things with trade with India and Pakistan. | ||
Really helped the situation. | ||
Very heated situation. | ||
Could have lost millions of people. | ||
More than millions. | ||
I mean, many millions of people. | ||
And they want to do business with America. | ||
But we never used our powers that way. | ||
We never knew how. | ||
We never had people that knew how to do that. | ||
We'll also open up America's market to safe and legal imports of affordable drugs from other countries, putting dramatic downward pressure on prices. | ||
And if necessary, we'll investigate the drug companies and we'll, in particular, investigate the countries that are doing this and we will add it on to the price that we charge them for doing business in America. | ||
In other words, we'll add it on to tariffs. | ||
If they don't do what is right, which is everybody should equalize. | ||
Everybody should, say, pay the same price. | ||
And special interests may not like this very much, but the American people will. | ||
I mean, I am doing this for the American people. | ||
I'm doing this against the most powerful lobby in the world, probably the drug lobby, drug and pharmaceutical lobby. | ||
But it's one of the most important orders, I think, that's ever been signed, certainly with regard to health care or health. | ||
In the history of our country, and it's an honor to be a part of it. | ||
And I'd like to ask Robert F. Kennedy to say a few words, please. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Okay, so if we can pause the stream there, we'll go back to RFK Jr. | ||
But I just want to emphasize, reemphasize what Trump just said. | ||
One of the biggest executive orders in history, especially when it comes to healthcare, calling the pharmaceutical lobby the biggest lobby in the world, which when you take their media... | ||
I don't think that you're going to get a lot of argument to that, considering the fact that organizations like CNN, even Fox News, get a majority of their funding from these pharmaceutical companies and then turn around and sell you the pharmaceutical interventions or demand that they be made illegal for you to avoid these interventions. | ||
We'll sort of get into some more healthcare concerns later as we're seeing a massive and unprecedented spike in things like childhood death as well as the continued perpetual creation of spike proteins following the COVID vaccine, meaning that it is in fact a gene-altering injection. | ||
There's still a lot of health that we're going to get to in today's program, but I think, again, just highlighting this as a... | ||
Absolute positive for the American people of every race, color, creed, political inclination. | ||
Everybody understands that the American healthcare system is broken in a certain way, in multiple ways. | ||
Now, the left thinks the right thing to do is murder insurance CEOs as if that's had an effect whatsoever. | ||
It has and everything's only gotten worse and those... | ||
Exact executives they were charging instead got a bonus so they could afford security to protect themselves from the psychotic communists trying to hunt them down. | ||
Our attempt to find a solution to this is to work with the pharmaceutical companies to force them to lower their prices while maintaining their ability to produce high-quality drugs and other medical interventions that keep us on the forefront of healthcare the world over. | ||
A real solution, a real positive move in taking back control of healthcare here in America, of lessening the power and influence of the pharmaceutical lobby, and of lowering drug prices across the board for Americans by simply insisting that pharmaceutical companies treat Americans like they treat everybody else. | ||
Nationalism for the win. | ||
Trump's doing it for all of us. | ||
unidentified
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All right, we'll be back. | |
How are you doing? | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I still have lots of cover and a lot of videos to show you, but... | ||
We're sort of surprised by this press conference that Trump is giving with RFK Jr. and Jay Bhattacharya, the heads of HHS. | ||
RFK Jr. is, well, he just, but we paused it for you. | ||
So we'll go to RFK Jr. here, get his statements about, again, this executive order that they've worked with Trump to issue to slash prescription prices by up to 80%. | ||
By simply insisting that we pay the same price that other countries pay and we just not be suckers. | ||
We just don't want to be suckers anymore. | ||
And it's just a fact of capitalism. | ||
People will charge what they can get for their product. | ||
Now when you add in insurance companies and you keep all of the prices hidden that they often do, I mean that, I believe... | ||
It was something Trump either did or was talking about doing. | ||
I'm not sure where it stands as of now, but one of the easiest things that the administration could do to lower costs or stop people from paying exorbitant amounts for necessary health care is to simply force the hospitals to publish the prices. | ||
So often, it's all hidden. | ||
Your insurance company pays it out, and you never see that they're charging you. | ||
$30 for a tablet of aspirin or whatever, they can charge you. | ||
If you don't notice it, and you don't know how much you're paying, and you don't know what you're paying for, it's easy for them to screw you over. | ||
By forcing them to publish the prices, you force them to justify the prices, which they can't do oftentimes, meaning they'll have to lower the prices. | ||
But this method he's using here is obviously going to be successful because... | ||
It's just not fair the way that they charge Americans compared to everybody else. | ||
So again, if you're going to buy a car and everything tells you that the car costs $30,000 and the guy's like, we can't negotiate on price, here's the set price, $30,000, but then you find out that somebody else is buying that same car for $20,000, you're going to negotiate. | ||
You're going to demand that your price be lowered. | ||
If you don't know, if you have no idea and think that that's the price that you should be paying, then that's what you're going to pay. | ||
In other words, They're going to try to make you pay as much as they can, and it's really up to you to negotiate it downward. | ||
Our country has been run by people who just weren't interested in negotiating it downward, who didn't care, who were in bed with the pharmaceutical companies and did their bidding. | ||
So for the last very long time, pharmaceutical companies have been able to rake us over the coals and charge really extortionary rates for... | ||
Simple procedures or generic drugs. | ||
And Trump is now reversing that. | ||
Here's RFK Jr. talking about how this will affect the overall landscape of American health. | ||
This is an extraordinary day. | ||
This is an issue that, you know, I grew up in the Democratic Party and every major Democratic leader for 20 years has been making this promise to the American people. | ||
This was the fulcrum of Bernie Sanders. | ||
Runs for presidency, that he was going to eliminate this discrepancy between Europe and the United States. | ||
But as it turns out, none of them were doing it. | ||
It's one of these promises that politicians make to their constituents, knowing that they'll never have to do it. | ||
And the reason they'll never have to do it is because they know that Congress is controlled in so many ways by the pharmaceutical industry. | ||
There's at least one pharmaceutical lobbyist for every congressman, every senator on Capitol Hill, and every member of the Supreme Court. | ||
I some estimates three. | ||
Pharmaceutical companies, the industry itself spends three times what the next largest lobbyist spends on lobbying. | ||
So this was an issue that people talked about, but nobody wanted to do anything. | ||
Because it was radioactive. | ||
They knew you couldn't get it by Congress. | ||
We now have a president who is a man of his word, who has the courage. | ||
President Trump was taking money from the pharmaceutical industry, too. | ||
I think they gave you $100 million. | ||
But he can't be bought, unlike most of the politicians in this country. | ||
And he is standing here for the American people. | ||
I don't know what, you know, there's writers like Elizabeth Warren or Robert Reich who are saying that President Trump is on this side of the oligarchs. | ||
There has never been a president more willing to stand up to the oligarchs than President Donald Trump. | ||
And I'm very, very proud of you, Mr. President, for your courage. | ||
I'll say, because I don't want to be crude, your intestinal fortitude. | ||
Your stiff spine and your willingness to stand up for the American people. | ||
We have 4.2% of the world's population. | ||
Our country represents 75% of the revenues for pharmaceutical companies. | ||
We spend in our country $1,126 per capita on drugs. | ||
In Britain, they spend about $240. | ||
They spend one-fifth of what we do. | ||
And this is true across Europe. | ||
And the drug companies, Europeans, if you ask them, it made no sense what they are saying. | ||
America has to pay for this innovation or it's not going to happen. | ||
What President Trump is saying to our European partners is you've got to raise the amount that you're paying for those drugs and pay for your share of the innovation. | ||
That the United States is no longer subsidizing that. | ||
If the Europeans raise the price of their drugs by just 20%, that is $10 trillion that can be spent on innovation. | ||
And the health of all people all across the globe is going to increase because we're going to have better products. | ||
So I'm just so grateful to be here today. | ||
I never thought that this would happen in my lifetime. | ||
I have a couple of kids who are Democrats, are big Bernie Sanders fans. | ||
And when I told them that this was going to happen, they had tears in their eyes. | ||
Because they thought, this is never going to happen in our lifetime. | ||
And we finally have a president who's willing to stand up for the American people. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And Dr. Oz. | ||
So there was RFK Jr. giving his statements. | ||
Here's Dr. Oz. | ||
This is the most powerful executive order on pharmacy pricing and healthcare ever in the history of our nation. | ||
And it's only happening because we have a president with the fortitude, the guts to stand up to the withering criticism and lobbying that's going to occur. | ||
As soon as folks hear about the executive order. | ||
So on behalf of the child in Philadelphia who's got an autoimmune disease with $1,000 a month drug or the older woman in Los Angeles who's on a blood thinner who can't afford her co-pay, I want to thank President Trump. | ||
God bless you for having the guts to take on this industry. | ||
Thank you, sir. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
So let's talk about the details a little bit. | ||
And this is primarily about equalization, as President Trump said. | ||
It's about fairness. | ||
Think of NATO as a metaphor. | ||
When President Trump said, you've got to pay a little more so it makes sense for all of us, they came up. | ||
And the European countries contributed. | ||
The same thing we believe will happen in this situation. | ||
Most people who have thought about this process agree that it is patently unfair to tolerate the numbers that Secretary Kennedy and President Trump have reflected to you. | ||
On this chart to my left is a list of the ten drugs that were negotiated in the IRA. | ||
Again, this is the bill, the law, that regulates a negotiation process. | ||
This is the best price that was able to be obtained by the Biden administration. | ||
And if you look at these numbers, they actually reflect how much on top of the most favored nation price was being paid by the United States. | ||
So the closest to me, Bob, you can point to the Jardines, the closest one, 289%, the one that's closest to you. | ||
That means that we are paying in America. | ||
Four times more than that drug costs in other countries. | ||
Again, 100% is the baseline. | ||
It's 289% above that baseline. | ||
It goes all the way down to when we're paying 50% more than any other country. | ||
That's the range. | ||
As was pointed out by President Trump, half the time we're paying three times more than it's paid in other countries. | ||
It doesn't make any sense for the system. | ||
That stated, President Trump has over and over again indicated, and Secretary Kennedy has reflected as well, we want innovation. | ||
We want our technology partners doing the best they can to make the best solutions for drugs to cure as many people in America and around the world as possible. | ||
By getting our allies to pay a bit more, as they should be, and they should have for many years been doing, we'll course correct a problem that's gotten out of hand. | ||
And by doing that in a thoughtful, effective way, we're going to be able to get the pharmaceutical industry whole. | ||
Those jobs will still be here, will still be productive, will still be curing cancer and a slew of other ailments that plague humanity. | ||
So, over the next 30 days... | ||
The four of us up here, together with people standing in the back of this room, we're doing a lot of the heavy lifting, are going to be approaching pharmaceutical companies to talk specifically about what we want the most favored nation price to be based on the best data we have. | ||
We're looking forward to a thoughtful interaction with these corporate leaders, many of whom we've spoken to and in quiet will agree the system is not right the way it is. | ||
They're patriotic Americans. | ||
They want what's right. | ||
But the fact that in my lifetime, as Secretary Kennedy said, for the first time, We have a thoughtful and aggressive approach, thanks to President Trump, on taking on these special interests. | ||
I should give all Americans confidence that this is an administration that stands for fairness and should chill the waters for those who believe they can push us away from our North Star, which is to take care of the American people. | ||
Mr. President, God bless you. | ||
Jay, you want to go next? | ||
So that was Dr. Oz. | ||
Here is Dr. Jay Patarachaya. | ||
I teach economics at Stanford as well as health policy. | ||
And one thing that's really, really simple in economics is that when you have a persistent price difference for the same product between two countries, there is something deeply wrong. | ||
And what President Trump has done is a historic measure that should have been done a long time ago. | ||
What we're going to do is make sure that those prices... | ||
Become much closer to equal, like a competitive market you'd expect. | ||
Right now what's happening is the American people are subsidizing in large fraction the research and development efforts for drug companies around the world by the higher prices that we pay. | ||
With this new order, Europe will share the burden of that. | ||
And in fact, you may think of it as somehow it's going after drug companies. | ||
Actually, it's helping drug companies. | ||
Because what we're also going to do with this order, what President Trump has done with this order, is he's said to European governments, look, if you are taking advantage of the drug companies by forcing them to charge very, very low prices, we're going to defend American drug companies in Europe. | ||
At the same time... | ||
We're standing up for the American consumer who's been paying far too high prices for far too long. | ||
I can go back decades to point to congressional reports after government report after government report of tremendously high drug prices, much higher than the rest of the world. | ||
And nothing has been done about it until this moment. | ||
And I'm really, really proud, President Trump, that you've done this. | ||
I'm really proud to be included in this. | ||
I'm looking forward to the work ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
So there you go. | ||
Those are some statements. | ||
We can go ahead and pull it down now. | ||
If the crew wouldn't mind keeping an eye on it, I believe Trump is going to go to questions after this. | ||
I would like to see the question and answer session once that starts happening. | ||
But what occurs to me while we're listening to this is it's the same as just about all of the problems that we face in America. | ||
They're not intractable. | ||
They're not unsolvable. | ||
They're not a necessary component of the modern age that we just have to learn to deal with. | ||
They all persist entirely because nobody's trying to stop them. | ||
Nobody's negotiating on our behalf. | ||
Nobody is looking out for our interests. | ||
And so we get screwed over time and time and time again. | ||
And Trump is a figure so rare in American culture that is like willing to sort of, it's kind of hard to explain, but typically if someone's going to be And these words are negative. | ||
I don't even mean them in negative ways. | ||
Like devious and clever and even manipulative. | ||
Like our culture and our society is not set up to, you know, for those people to benefit everybody with their particular skills, right? | ||
Deviousness as a skill is almost exclusively exercised for the benefit of the person doing it, right? | ||
In this culture, if you're going to be devious, you're going to be, you know, Machiavellian like that, really the only way you can be that way is by screwing everybody over and helping yourself. | ||
Our society is totally empty of people who can be devious and Machiavellian for the benefit of everybody, and that's what Trump is. | ||
Trump's the type of person that will take $100 million of pharmaceutical money and then not do what they want. | ||
And I bet they feel a little bit screwed over. | ||
I bet they feel like that was a devious move by Trump. | ||
But it was devious for us. | ||
It was because these people are devious and you need to meet them on that ground and out-deviousness them, right? | ||
In a lot of ways. | ||
But I was just thinking about it and going over even just the successes of the last few days, even, or even the last few weeks. | ||
Like, he's lowering the prices on pharmaceutical products. | ||
He helped to bring an end to the India-Pakistan conflict with extreme rapidity and very little, you know, active intervention, simple discussions, diplomatically fixing things. | ||
It was either RFK or Dr. Raj just there mentioned related what's going on to NATO and saying, you know, NATO is not paying its fair share until Trump steps up and says you better pay your fair share. | ||
And then they do. | ||
And all this is intertwined, right? | ||
Because these NATO countries that have socialized health care. | ||
Can only afford that because we cover their costs for defense. | ||
If they were forced to fund their own defense, they wouldn't have quite the excess funds to be a socialist hugbox for all of them. | ||
So whether it's like NATO or the trade imbalances with the UK, the decision that was just made there, the successful negotiations with China that just occurred, releasing the hostages. | ||
From Gaza, it's like shutting down the border and lowering illegal border crossings from 10,000 a day to 6 or whatever it ends up being. | ||
All of these things were imminently solvable, imminently fixable, easy, in fact, to correct. | ||
Nobody tried. | ||
Nobody wanted to. | ||
Nobody felt like it. | ||
It wasn't beneficial for them. | ||
They couldn't figure out how they were going to benefit from it, so they just didn't do it. | ||
They didn't bother it. | ||
They don't care that it hurts you. | ||
It'd be for your benefit that these things be done. | ||
It didn't benefit them, so they didn't do it. | ||
They didn't bother it. | ||
It benefited them more to sell out our country and to take the bribes from the pharmaceutical companies and to destroy our ability to take care of ourselves. | ||
That filled their pocketbooks, so that's what they did. | ||
Finally, we have somebody in office who doesn't care about filling his pocketbooks, that doesn't want to be devious for his own ends. | ||
He wants to trick these devious people into helping America and to force these people. | ||
To help America, these corporations, these institutions. | ||
So it's like everything Trump is doing is very simple and could have been done a long time ago. | ||
And it should really expose to you how deliberate the crackdown has or how deliberate the collapse has been of American society that the people in power could have at any moment stood up and done this. | ||
Nobody felt like doing it until Trump. | ||
And then he has massive... | ||
You know, unending success in these things. | ||
And again, maybe the border is the most obvious example. | ||
How many times did they talk about, oh, it's because the Congress didn't pass a bill. | ||
It's because all these other things. | ||
It's a crisis. | ||
We can't stop them. | ||
We have to make room for them. | ||
And it's like, well, it turns out Trump gets into office, says shut the border, and the border gets shut. | ||
And it was as simple as that. | ||
And it always was as simple as that. | ||
So you really have to think about that. | ||
Let that sink in. | ||
Understand that this is all deliberate. | ||
It's all on purpose. | ||
It's all by design. | ||
And it just took somebody like Trump, and I'm not sure if there's anybody else like Trump, so it took Trump himself to step up and force America's interests to be upheld by these supposedly American corporations. | ||
And again, it's really an across-the-board type of thing. | ||
I understand Trump is taking questions now, so let's go to that for probably the remainder of this hour. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you for taking questions. | |
Two quick ones for you. | ||
Starting on trade. | ||
If a longer-term deal is not reached with China at the end of these 90 days, can the American people expect those tariffs to go back up to 145%? | ||
No, but they would go up substantially higher. | ||
You know, at 145, you're really decoupling because nobody's going to buy. | ||
But they can go, they got... | ||
Very high because of additional tariffs. | ||
I applied during the course because of fentanyl and other things. | ||
But no, but they'd go substantially higher. | ||
I think you will have a deal, however. | ||
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Anything in exchange for that $400 million luxury jumbo jet? | |
And how can the American people be so sure that they will not in the future? | ||
Well, I think what happens with the plane is that, you know, we're very disappointed that it's taking Boeing so long to build a new Air Force One. | ||
You know, we have an Air Force One that's 40 years old. | ||
And if you take a look at that compared to the new plane of the equivalent, you know, stature at the time, it's not even the same ballgame. | ||
You look at some of the... | ||
Arab countries and the planes they have parked alongside of the United States of America plane. | ||
It's like from a different planet. | ||
And it's close to 40 years old. | ||
It might be more than 40 years old now. | ||
And when I first came in, I signed an order to get it built. | ||
I took it over from the Obama administration. | ||
They had originally agreed. | ||
I got the price down much lower. | ||
And then... | ||
When the election didn't exactly work out the way that it should have, a lot of work was not done on the plane because a lot of people didn't know they made change orders that were so stupid, so ridiculous. | ||
And it ended up being a total mess, a real mess. | ||
And when I came back, I said, by the way, what's going on with the Boeings that are coming in? | ||
Well, sir, they're way behind. | ||
And they are. | ||
They're way behind. | ||
They were way behind. | ||
Another mess that I inherited from Biden. | ||
And it's going to be a while before we get them. | ||
And I think Qatar, who has really, we've helped them a lot over the years in terms of security and safety. | ||
I think, and very, very nicely, and I have a lot of respect for the leadership and for the leader, Qatar. | ||
And I think they knew about it because they buy Boeings. | ||
They buy a lot of Boeings. | ||
And they knew about it. | ||
And they said, we would like to do something. | ||
If we can get a 747 as a contribution to our Defense Department to use during a couple of years while they're building the other ones, I think that was a very nice gesture. | ||
Now, I could be a stupid person and say, "Oh, no, we don't want a free plane. | ||
We give free things. | ||
We'll take one, too." And it helps us out. | ||
Because, again, we're talking about we have 40-year-old aircraft. | ||
The money we spend, the maintenance we spend on those planes to keep them tippy-top is astronomical. | ||
You wouldn't even believe it. | ||
So I think it's a great gesture from Qatar. | ||
I appreciate it very much. | ||
I would never be one to turn down that kind of an offer. | ||
I mean, I could be a stupid person and say, no, we don't want a free, very expensive airplane. | ||
But I thought it was a great gesture. | ||
And I think it was a gesture because of the fact that we have helped and continue to. | ||
We will continue to. | ||
All of those countries, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and others, we keep them safe. | ||
If it wasn't for us, they probably wouldn't exist right now. | ||
And I think this was just a gesture of good faith. | ||
And I don't get it. | ||
Someday it'll be like Ronald Reagan. | ||
They decommission them. | ||
You know, they get to a certain age, they decommission them. | ||
It'll go to my library. | ||
They're talking about going to my library in years out. | ||
But I thought it was a great gesture. | ||
And it's something that was done by Ronald Reagan. | ||
They actually decommissioned the plane and he put it in his library and it actually has made the library, I think a Boeing 707, it's actually made the library more successful. | ||
So it was good. | ||
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Do you plan to use the plane? | |
After you leave office? | ||
No, I don't, no. | ||
It would go directly to the library after I leave office. | ||
I wouldn't be using it, no. | ||
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President, on the hostage, you said that the release of the American hostage, Adam Alexander, is a step in good faith to end this war. | |
Do you expect any progress, perhaps, announcement on ceasefire during your trip to the Middle East? | ||
We hope that we're going to have other hostages released, too, as you know. | ||
When I met with the hostages three weeks ago that were there for quite a while, you remember the ten people that came in, mostly young people. | ||
One or two were a little bit older. | ||
They were explaining the trials and tribulations. | ||
I mean, they went through hell. | ||
And I said, how many are there? | ||
They said 59. I said, that's a lot. | ||
I didn't realize, because we got a lot out. | ||
You know, we got a lot of hostages out, I think you will acknowledge. | ||
They said 59. But then they said, they followed that up by saying 59 of which 24 are living, the rest are dead. | ||
But the people whose son, mostly son, I think one daughter in this case, but mostly sons are there or husbands are there. | ||
Those people want the dead bodies as much as they want the live body. | ||
I was, I have a mother that calls me, but came up to me when I first met her and she said, sir, please, please get my son out. | ||
He's dead, but they have his body. | ||
And I asked her about that, and it's as though he were alive. | ||
The level of wanting that body back is the same. | ||
It couldn't be anymore, as though he were alive. | ||
So, you know, getting the bodies back is very important. | ||
It could be a thing having to do with a religion. | ||
I was amazed at the level of importance. | ||
It's the same as if the son or husband or whatever was alive. | ||
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So they said 59. In fact, they came out. | |
So this is Trump, again, taking questions about all sorts of topics that we'll get into on the other side. | ||
We'll talk about his Middle East trip. | ||
He'll leave later today, arriving tomorrow. | ||
Just any time you see Trump answer questions like this, it's so different. | ||
It's like the first time in my life that a president is a human being and just talks like a normal person and doesn't just read off talking points like Biden literally had his talking points pre-prepared. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
Third hour has begun. | ||
We've got a lot, a lot to talk about today. | ||
Not a lot of time to jam it in since we spent so long listening to that Trump press conference. | ||
But I think it was worth it and good because, as always, our goal here is not to preach to the choir. | ||
Our goal is, and has always been, to bring more people into awareness about just how corrupt this system is. | ||
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Deliberate. | |
So many of the things that they do that seem like, oh my gosh, how could they have known? | ||
How could they have intended this? | ||
And it's like you look at it and it becomes so, the more you learn, the more obvious it becomes that whether it's immigration or the forever wars or the completely insane prices of medicine, all of these things that come under the purview of, you know, Governmental intervention. | ||
They've all been ignored because they've wanted to ignore them. | ||
And this has been allowed to persist because they've wanted to allow it to persist. | ||
I want to go to a video now. | ||
A call for help from a European who is facing jail time for his speech. | ||
This coming on the back of this story from Infowars. | ||
EU Commission sues five member states over censorship law noncompliance. | ||
So they are ramping up censorship in the EU. | ||
And this young man may be one of its victims. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
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I'm making this video because it's my last chance. | |
As this Friday, they may send me to prison for years. | ||
They're trying to destroy me. | ||
But with your help, we will destroy them. | ||
My name is Dries van Langenhoven, and I'm a nationalist and conservative activist. | ||
You may have seen some of our actions against mass migration, woke degeneracy, and our victories against Antifa. | ||
Here in our headquarters in Brussels, the heart of Europe, we even built our own recording studio and our own boxing club where we strengthen the European youth. | ||
This headquarters is also the place where activists from all over Europe cooperate and which was recently used to launch the first re-migration summit. | ||
Even though the Brussels regime has been attacking this project from the start, our movement became the biggest in the country, taking the youth by storm, becoming bigger on social media than political parties. | ||
We were on our way to stem the tide of mass migration from the heart of the European Union. | ||
I even got elected as an independent identitarian member of parliament. | ||
Because of our success, the Brussels regime intensified the attacks and hired a "journalist" to hack the account of a minor who was active in our movement. | ||
Although this "journalist" didn't find anything illegal, he went on national television showing supposed "racist" memes he found. | ||
These memes We're abused by the regime as an excuse to go all out and launch an attack the likes of which this country had never seen. | ||
20 of our members had their houses raided, some were thrown out of banks and universities, others lost their jobs, and they even put me on a no-fly list. | ||
To hurt my family as well, the police took all of my private info they got from the raids, including years of my private messages and pictures, and leaked them to the hostile media who have been using it against us ever since. | ||
When I started talking on social media about this terror that the regime was inflicting upon us, it got even worse. | ||
The judge ordered another house raid on my family and had armed police drag me out of bed and lock me up in jail. | ||
The judge then blackmailed me, only releasing me on two conditions. | ||
One, that I signed a gag order prohibiting me from talking about their attacks on us. | ||
And two, That I would make a visit to the Holocaust Museum as some sort of a humiliation ritual. | ||
This is our reality in Europe. | ||
The corrupt Brussels justice system is infested with judges who hate freedom of speech. | ||
The judge presiding over my case, who is supposed to be impartial, even said on her own social media that I am a disgusting fascist. | ||
After a show trial, the judge decided that memes shared in a private group chat were hate speech and sentenced me to one year effective in jail and banned me from politics for 10 years. | ||
On top of that, I received huge fines that added up to my huge legal costs amount to over 300,000 euros. | ||
This is a death sentence for our movement. | ||
Because without your support, these headquarters will have to be sold off. | ||
This is hand in glove with everything else the EU is doing to very deliberately destroy even the semblance of democracy in that continent. | ||
Absolutely brutal censorship. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the final hour of today's broadcast of the American Journal. | ||
Please do share this link. | ||
Share the X post. | ||
You can follow me on X at Harrison H. Smith. | ||
And I just retweeted the video that we showed you. | ||
From Dries van Lengerhove. | ||
I'm sure I'm mispronouncing that, but I'm doing my best here. | ||
So you can share that and support him. | ||
And I was just thinking about the layers of control that the EU has. | ||
Now, a story at Infowars. | ||
EU Commission sues five member states over censorship law noncompliance. | ||
So they are ramping up. | ||
Censorship in the EU to really intolerable levels. | ||
Poland, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, and the Czech Republic face EU court over Digital Services Act enforcement gaps. | ||
The DSA, the Digital Services Act, is the newly inaugurated online censorship law. | ||
They say the DSA is EU's key regulations, often criticized for centralizing the bloc's power in the digital sphere at the expense of free speech and tech companies' business interests, but also it appears the sovereignty of member states. | ||
Among the May infringement package covering various areas regulated by the EU is the section dedicated to the digital economy. | ||
It's here that the Commission announced legal action against Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Poland, Portugal, and Spain. | ||
So it's like, okay, if you want to talk about, if you want to disagree with the government of Europe about anything really, but things like immigration especially, they can frame as racist even though it doesn't have to be. | ||
You're not even allowed to talk about it. | ||
You're hardly allowed to express these ideas without doing it in a encoded or, you know, very soft-handed way. | ||
You can hardly even talk about it. | ||
And if you can't talk about it, how are you going to form a group to actually, you know, progress these ideas? | ||
Well, if you do, if you are able to form a group, well, they'll probably shut you down like they're doing with Drew, or I'm sorry, Dries Van Lengenhove, where they'll... | ||
You know, claim that what you're doing is dangerous because you have a group of people doing it, and they'll shut you down that way, throw you in jail for violating the censorship laws. | ||
If you're still able to form a group and actually run for office and get elected, then they'll claim that you're domestic terrorists like they're doing with AFD right now in order to crush their ability to express the will of their constituents in German or EU Parliament. | ||
If you're still able to achieve success, if you're still able to get elected, then they'll just use parliamentary tricks to exclude you from power by forming coalitions with every other group against yours in order to create a coalition government excluding just your group. | ||
And even if through all of that you still manage to run a presidential candidate that supports your views, they'll just cancel the election. | ||
Like they did in Slovenia. | ||
If you're still able to get somebody elected through all of this, right? | ||
You're able to circumvent the censorship to actually talk about these problems and then circumvent the crushing totalitarianism to actually form a group to try to solve these problems. | ||
If you're still able to form a political group and avoid being called domestic terrorists. | ||
If you're able to fight through the parliamentary system and actually get representation. | ||
If you're able to finally elect somebody that actually does implement Like in Hungary, then they'll use all sorts of other leverage to get you to minimize your activity or to somehow handicap the program that you're trying to run. | ||
It's at every layer they have intervention. | ||
And at every layer, it is a nearly impossible task to actually achieve what they keep telling us that we have to go to war with Russia to save democracy. | ||
At every level, they have Massive strictures and extreme laws to prevent democratic opposition to the will of the power elite. | ||
And it shows how hard they have to work to tamp down on the ever-growing, ever-bubbling-up sentiments of the European citizens that what's going on is wrong, it's not representative. | ||
It's actually in complete contradiction to the desires of everybody on the ground, and it only serves the benefit of the very few at the top who are openly disdainful of the people below them. | ||
Also, they are apparently all addicted to coke and doing it in public. | ||
So, Europe. | ||
Europe these days not doing so well and destroying themselves to try to prevent... | ||
Just the common sense solutions that we're seeing on display from people like Donald Trump, showing that no matter what, no matter what you're talking about, if it's immigration, if it's the war, if it's the industrial collapse and the collapse of manufacturing that's happening across the continent or the insane and baseless restrictions on food production or blotting out the sun, | ||
like all of these massive existential World-ending crises are just a decision away from being solved. | ||
Just have the right person who actually cares about this issue in the right office, and none of this is even a remote problem anymore. | ||
So it really is frustrating, isn't it? | ||
Isn't it frustrating? | ||
And on that note, there's other massive successes that Trump is having. | ||
Anheuser-Busch just announced they're investing $300 million to boost manufacturing careers in veteran employment. | ||
Anheuser-Busch is planning to spend $300 million in its facilities across the United States. | ||
It's a move the beer maker said will bolster manufacturing jobs across the United States while also supporting veterans who are pursuing manufacturing careers. | ||
This, of course, you would expect to have happened a long time ago considering the fact that Anheuser-Busch, the... | ||
Basically, beer monopoly that owns Budweiser, Bud Light, Bush Light, Michelob Ultra, and practically every other nationwide brand of beer tends to rely a lot on Americana imagery in their marketing. | ||
They always celebrate the American character of Anheuser-Busch, and yet it took Donald Trump twisting their arm to get them to actually invest in this country. | ||
Because, again, they know... | ||
What they need to say to convince people to look the other way as they screw us over. | ||
Because they're devious and it's all on purpose. | ||
So that's a massive success. | ||
In other regards, Trump is seemingly frustrated at the lack of action to fulfill his orders. | ||
Trump has now ordered the DHS to hire 20,000 more ICE agents for deportation efforts. | ||
President Donald Trump has called for DHS to bring on 20,000 more immigration and custom enforcement officers in order to carry out deportations, which would be a large expansion of ICE if it comes to fruition. | ||
In an order signed by the president, Trump said, quote, no later than 60 days after the date of this proclamation, the Secretary of Homeland Security shall supplement existing enforcement and removal operations by deputizing and contracting with state and local law enforcement officers. | ||
Former federal officers, officers and personnel within other federal agencies and other individuals to increase the enforcement and removal operations force of the Department of Homeland Security by no less than 20,000 officers in order to conduct an intensive campaign to remove illegal aliens who have failed to depart voluntarily. | ||
According to the New York Times, a number of ICE agents focused on deportation efforts is around 6,000 officers. | ||
This move would more than double the section of ICE that works for deportations with deportations. | ||
The president also signaled that he would like local law enforcement to be deputized in the immigration enforcement efforts. | ||
And of course, the ability for us to deport illegal aliens is massively hamstrung by local governments, sanctuary cities, local law enforcement, refusing to cooperate, going out of their way to circumvent Deportation orders from ICE going so far as the recently arrested judge actually hiding an illegal alien and helping him to avoid capture by ICE agents who stood outside the courtroom waiting for the proceedings to end so they could snap him up | ||
and the judge instead allowed him out a secret back door to avoid being captured. | ||
I mean, again, think about how outrageous these actions are and how... | ||
Dedicated these people are to flooding our country with illegal aliens that shouldn't be here in the first place. | ||
And probably shouldn't even be here even if they went through the legal process. | ||
Because they're drains on the system and much more likely to be criminals. | ||
I don't know why he doesn't just call up the militia. | ||
I think he'd get a lot more than 20,000 agents. | ||
If you just put out a call saying, are you a young man who's having trouble finding a job? | ||
Do you need six months of solid work and high-quality training? | ||
I think people would volunteer just for the bare minimum. | ||
People would probably volunteer and not be paid anything. | ||
I think if you told a bunch of disillusioned young men, hey, we'll pay for your room and board for six months. | ||
Come help us take out the illegal immigrants. | ||
I bet you'd get a million people signing up. | ||
I think that'd be a major positive effect, but 20,000 new agents is at least a move in the right direction. | ||
Now in terms of the illegal immigration situation, there's going to be a major Supreme Court decision on this later this month, later this week in fact. | ||
Birthright citizenship debate erupts at Supreme Court arguments. | ||
The Supreme Court will hear an emergency appeal on May 15th regarding President Trump's executive order that limits birthright citizenship for children born to non-citizen parents in the United States. | ||
Trump signed the order on the 20th of January 2025, first day in office to block federal agencies from recognizing citizenship for children of non-citizens, temporarily present parents promoting, prompting legal challenges, and nationwide injunctions blocking enforcement. | ||
Multiple federal courts, including the Reagan-nominated judge in Seattle, calling the order blatantly unconstitutional, have blocked the policy, which has heightened the fear among immigrant families like Venezuelan TPS holders who are exposed. | ||
But again, this is just a scam. | ||
It is a complete fraud. | ||
It is... | ||
This was never a law that was passed. | ||
There's nothing unconstitutional about reversing this. | ||
This was making law from the bench. | ||
It was the Supreme Court just deciding sort of unilaterally that this is how the amendment should be interpreted to be birthright citizenship. | ||
When in reality, the 14th Amendment was signed at the same time as the 13th Amendment. | ||
13th Amendment, of course, making slavery illegal. | ||
And in conjunction with that, they wanted the children of slaves to be citizens. | ||
So they had the 14th Amendment. | ||
This was never about bringing in 10 million pregnant Venezuelans to get citizenship by the back door by dropping a baby on this side of the border. | ||
That was never the intention. | ||
That's ridiculous, obviously. | ||
But we've just been playing along with this delusion the entire time and Trump is finally attempting to reverse it. | ||
I think now we'll go to the video I was going to play earlier because it shows the... | ||
Downstream effects of this birthright citizenship hogwash. | ||
We'll go to clip number 10. This again is the Border Patrol agent who was testifying in front of Congress only to realize some of the people he was testifying to themselves are birthright citizenship babies. | ||
They're anchor babies in Congress making decisions about our country. | ||
Let's go to clip 10 now. | ||
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Why aren't we not doing this? | |
Why? | ||
And I'll give you one example to why we're not. | ||
Because our government is inundated with traitors. | ||
And we are also inundated with people that are illegal aliens inside of our government. | ||
I'll give you a perfect example. | ||
I wrote about this in a book. | ||
I've talked about this. | ||
I went and testified in Congress, which I'll never do again, because it's a complete waste of my time. | ||
It was on child sex trafficking. | ||
And I was an expert witness. | ||
I gave my testimony, and then I opened myself up to questions. | ||
And a congresswoman by the name of Delia Ramirez from Illinois sits in front. | ||
She's on a dais. | ||
They have them sit up there, and you can't talk. | ||
You have to hit a button to talk, and if it's not green, you can't talk. | ||
And they get five minutes. | ||
She spent four minutes over five minutes just slandering me. | ||
I'm a white nationalist. | ||
I'm a bigot. | ||
Xenophobe, racist, blah, blah, blah. | ||
I shouldn't be there because I don't have any expertise on the border in child sex trafficking. | ||
And then I'm sitting there and I can't talk. | ||
She pulls up an ex-post. | ||
It's not my ex-post, but she makes it as this, my ex-post with a noose in it. | ||
You know, making the noose connection between a white man and a noose. | ||
He's a racist and wants to kill people that are not white. | ||
Then she gets very emotional, and I get very interested because I did this for a living. | ||
I'm sitting there watching someone get very emotional, and I'm thinking to myself, okay, let's listen carefully what she's going to say because she's going to start to make mistakes. | ||
Because when people get emotional, their words come out faster than their brain is able to stop it. | ||
Like, okay, I want to go there, but I can't go there. | ||
She doesn't. | ||
She goes there. | ||
And what does she say? | ||
She begins to talk about women being raped on the border. | ||
And she says, I don't ever want to have to discuss this horrible thing again because my mother was raped on the border crossing from Guatemala into America when she was pregnant with me. | ||
The sitting Congressman Ramirez just admitted that she's an illegal alien. | ||
Her mother came into America illegally and had a baby. | ||
You can talk to me about birthright citizenship all you want. | ||
That's a lie. | ||
She's an illegal alien. | ||
And I'm looking at the dais. | ||
I'm looking at all the pasty white guys in the Republicans that are morons. | ||
Morons. | ||
They have no idea. | ||
What are they doing there? | ||
They don't even know what the hell they're talking. | ||
They don't even know what the... | ||
Questions to ask. | ||
Then I'm looking at the Democrats, and I'm looking back and forth going, is anyone going to say it out loud? | ||
Is anyone going to say that we have Ms. Ramirez is the illegal alien from Guatemala? | ||
We have illegal aliens in Guatemala, from Guatemala, chastising a patriotic Border Patrol veteran that's telling you about child sex trafficking and being lectured by a legal alien. | ||
Living in the Twilight Zone. | ||
I do research for my book because I talk about a whole chapter on me doing the congressional testimony. | ||
Dalia Ramirez is married to an illegal alien. | ||
She's married to a criminal. | ||
Her family members, the majority, are all illegal aliens. | ||
I did a cursory search through DHS. | ||
I can't find her, that she's a naturalized citizen. | ||
She never naturalized. | ||
Thus, she's an illegal alien. | ||
This is happening throughout our government. | ||
Again, just insane. | ||
I mean, all of this stuff is insane. | ||
All of this stuff about immigration and birthright citizenship and our representation in Congress being foreigners, the judges being foreigners and leftist activists, career-long leftist activists just put in judge robes to veto the American president's orders. | ||
I mean... | ||
All of this is deliberate madness, as far as I can tell. | ||
I'm going to go to clip 18 now. | ||
This is Ryan Mata talking about this true scale of what went on under Biden, putting the numbers that we hear in terms that are maybe a little bit more understandable, taking it out of the 10,000 deaths as a statistic realm, and trying to emphasize just how monumentally evil The Biden administration really was. | ||
And let me just say before I go to this clip, I don't even get it. | ||
I don't even get what the, so this woman is a anchor baby. | ||
This guy goes up to testify about sex trafficking at the southern border, about the abuse that some of the illegal aliens themselves come under from the cartels and sex trafficking rings. | ||
And here's this woman saying, I don't want to talk about this because my mother was raped on the border when she was crossing over. | ||
And it's like, You should be the one who wants to talk about this the most. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
It's like, well, I've been the victim of this, so how dare you bring it up? | ||
It's like, what is that supposed to mean? | ||
Again, the only word I can use is insane because it's not logical. | ||
It doesn't make sense. | ||
It's not like they're just super passionate about this. | ||
It's like actually completely inverted and bizarre and backwards and wrong. | ||
It's inexplicable as far as I can tell. | ||
I cannot come up with a reasonable explanation for why a woman that knows personally her family members were subject of abuse at the border would not then want to talk about stopping abuse at the southern border except that it's just beneficial for her to downplay this because she wants more immigrants in. | ||
So she's just willing to allow people to get raped, willing to allow women to get trafficked because the benefit she gets is more voters. | ||
More congressional seats, more benefits, more USAID money stolen and sent to, you know, immigrant institutions that will funnel money back to her. | ||
It's just like, it's just evil. | ||
It's just straight up evil. | ||
It makes no sense. | ||
It is insane. | ||
Here's Ryan Matta breaking down the true scale scope and horror of the sex trafficking, child trafficking operation the Biden administration ran for four years straight. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
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So we have 350,000 missing children over a four-year period that's 1,460 days. | |
And if you throw that spreadsheet up on the screen, your audience can see the math on this. | ||
So if you divide 350,000 by 1,460, that gives us an average of 240 children per day. | ||
So every day during the Biden administration, our government delivered 240 children into this network of adults who were undocumented illegal immigrants who just invaded our country, and they did no DNA testing to make sure that that child belonged to that adult. | ||
In Biden's last month of office, you can see that number 179 on the bottom left-hand screen. | ||
That 179 is because on that last sheet I showed you, the data sheet was 5,131 children. | ||
Divide that by 30 days. | ||
That gives us an average of 179 children. | ||
So even Biden's last month in office, our government was delivering 179 children to this network of pedophiles. | ||
So now if you look at the top number in the orange that says 21,570, that's how many migrant children have hit their expiration date. | ||
It's not an expiration date since the Trump administration has taken office. | ||
So because we did not go out guns blazing and kicking in doors and raiding all of the homes to grab all these children and save these children, roughly 21,575 children have hit their expiration date. | ||
As of April 20th, 2025. | ||
Total, if you go based off of that 36-month expiration date statistic, out of the 350,000 children, 109,075 children have hit their expiration date. | ||
And let's say I'm even wrong, Kim. | ||
Let's say I'm completely wrong on this. | ||
If I'm 99% wrong, that means that as a Trump administration taking office, 162 migrant children have been raped to death. | ||
If I'm 99% wrong. | ||
Are you okay? | ||
So put it this way. | ||
You tell me how many more days you want to give Pam Bondi, Kash Patel, and RFK, and I'll give you an estimate of how many children are going to be raped to death. | ||
Brutal. | ||
Absolutely brutal. | ||
So again, just breaking it down even farther. | ||
I mean, 240 a day is obviously 10 an hour. | ||
That's every six minutes. | ||
So I've talked about it before. | ||
It's almost like we should have a... | ||
Ticker at the bottom of the screen or a chime every six minutes. | ||
Ding! | ||
Every six minutes, 24 hours a day for four years straight, a new child was given over to somebody and never seen again. | ||
Never seen again. | ||
They deliberately stopped doing DNA tests to allow this to go on. | ||
They deliberately created an entire system. | ||
To allow this to go on. | ||
You would think that the first time it happened where they gave a child to a person, said we're going to do a wellness check in a month, the next month they go and the person's not there, they're not answering their phone call, they gave you no warning, they were leaving, the house is empty, and you don't know where the kid is. | ||
The first time that happened, they should have shut the whole thing down. | ||
So this isn't working. | ||
We're handing kids over and then they're disappearing. | ||
That's unacceptable. | ||
Just one month, one kid missing. | ||
The whole thing should have been stopped. | ||
They allowed it to go on for four years straight. | ||
240 children a day handed over to somebody. | ||
Somebody has been. | ||
At least they did. | ||
We don't know where they are now or if they're even alive. | ||
And it was all on purpose. | ||
It was all by design. | ||
Evil scum. | ||
I want to play a video from a friend of the show, Imani, Damon Imani. | ||
And look, I wish, I really do wish that I could sit here and say, The whole two-party system is a scam because it obviously is in parts, right? | ||
Obviously, this is a strategy. | ||
Divide the people, have them constantly have to pick one side or the other. | ||
Neither side represents anybody perfectly, and it's a control mechanism that's extremely effective in keeping people feeling like they're engaged and a part of the system when in reality there's predetermined outcomes. | ||
I get why people say, and I agree to a certain extent, that the two-party system is fraudulent, but... | ||
There's something else happening, but there's something happening underneath where the population really is being split between people who are retarded and people who aren't. | ||
I don't know how else, but people who are just patently dishonest and wrong and stupid and those who just want things to be normal and good. | ||
And this falls on political lines. | ||
It really does. | ||
And I'll go to a couple examples here, but here's just one of them from Damon Amani. | ||
Showing the just flagrant hypocrisy of the left who don't really care about anything but are eager to leap on potential sources for outrage to try to achieve political ends. | ||
And they're very good at feigning this outrage. | ||
They're very good at feigning that they care about these things when they just don't. | ||
And it's completely obvious. | ||
Here's Damon Amani's very hilarious edit. | ||
Inserting himself in the view. | ||
Him tweeting out an AI-created image and the White House official account of him posing as the Pope is disrespectful, it is frankly disgusting, and it is outrageous. | ||
And so all of those devout Catholics that voted for Donald Trump, I think you need to ask yourself some questions and I think you need to ask the White House and Donald Trump some questions because Trump, Mr. President, it's his holiness. | ||
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The pope, not his oiliness, the dope. | |
And you're a sanctimonious joke. | ||
But look, the bigger picture is right here in my pocket, and I will pull it out. | ||
This is Rihanna dressed as a pope. | ||
Olympics 2024, marking Jesus Christ's last meal. | ||
Over here, camera, over here. | ||
Don't run, don't run, because Trump only posted a meme. | ||
But these are actual photos. | ||
And I don't see that same energy of yours, Anna, when it comes to Hollywood actually mocking God. | ||
This is Madonna on the cross as Jesus Christ. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Especially the Olympics thing. | ||
I mean, this is the thing. | ||
Trump posts a silly meme image, obviously AI doctored, of him in a pope outfit saying, I'm going to be the pope. | ||
Silly. | ||
Whatever. | ||
Nobody cares, right? | ||
They pretend to care. | ||
Meanwhile, they'll put on a full-fledged recreation of the Last Supper with gigantic, fat, transgender people with a transgender child in their teeth. | ||
Like, they are actually mocking and making a grotesque spectacle of your religious beliefs. | ||
But if you poke fun at the Pope, they act outraged. | ||
I mean, just understand how vapid and hypocritical these people are. | ||
And again, that's just the hypocrisy angle of it. | ||
There's also the retardation angle of it. | ||
There's also the reliance on stupid people not thinking through what's actually being said or being done. | ||
And I was trying to think of other examples of this. | ||
There are a lot, and I'm sure they'll come to me later. | ||
The left will deploy these phrases as if they are like one shot total. | ||
They totally shatter the entire paradigm of the right wing view and it just sort of becomes a catchphrase and they deploy it and then they smile smugly and they get 10,000 likes on their comment and they never stop to think about whether what they're saying makes any sense at all. | ||
I think this is another one of those things. | ||
I imagine you're going to start seeing this phrase, this term, this Argument repeated over and over despite the fact that it is completely nonsensical, totally ridiculous. | ||
Joe Ellis at JoeEllisReallyOnXLeftist posted this image of a transgender person saying, it's interesting to hear how we're too strong for sports but too weak for the military. | ||
Whoa, whoa! | ||
How am I supposed to defeat this argument? | ||
Oh my god, my hypocrisy is exposed! | ||
And it's like, alright. | ||
You're not too weak for the military. | ||
The military has no obligation to take in insane people who have a crippling mental illness. | ||
First of all. | ||
First off. | ||
Second of all, as George Alexopoulos points out, a man has unfair advantage in women's sports because he's a man competing against women. | ||
On the battlefield, he has no unfair advantage because he's facing men. | ||
Hope this helps. | ||
Right? | ||
Two completely different topics. | ||
Completely separate topics. | ||
Having transgenderism in common, but completely different. | ||
Nobody's saying get transgender people out of the military because it's unfair they're too strong. | ||
That's very stupid. | ||
That's never been the argument. | ||
That is the argument for why they shouldn't be in sports. | ||
So yes, letting men compete against women and steal all their glory and win all of their medals and take all of their scholarships is wrong and bad and not good. | ||
Having mentally ill people In your armed forces that massively disrupt the cohesion of your military and risk people's lives because of that is a bad thing. | ||
These are two totally separate arguments that are not reliant on one another and there is no hypocrisy between them. | ||
There is no double standard or cognitive dissonance that exists there. | ||
One is wrong. | ||
The other is wrong. | ||
They're both wrong. | ||
Men competing in women's sports is wrong. | ||
Transgender, mentally ill men in the military requiring surgery and extra care and just having a crippling mental illness. | ||
That's also wrong. | ||
I don't know what's so hard about this. | ||
So here they are. | ||
These are the two strategies of the Democrats. | ||
Lie outrageously. | ||
Or depend upon the stupidity of your illiterate masses. | ||
And that's how they've succeeded this entire time, and it's very annoying and frustrating and stupid and wrong. | ||
Okay, moving on. | ||
Moving on now. | ||
This is a pretty big deal, I think, personally. | ||
Antifa, circulating guide to destroy domestic infrastructure. | ||
Antifa militants are circulating a guide that describes how to destroy domestic infrastructure by creating incendiary devices. | ||
Journalist Andy Ngo drew attention to this guide in a post on Twitter. | ||
Antifa accounts are sharing a guide on how to make incendiary devices that will burn cables using infrastructure like on train tracks. | ||
Antifa and anarchist extremists believe that domestic terrorist attacks must be used to destabilize and destroy the state. | ||
Ngo's post included a photo of an Antifa account. | ||
Called Anarchist Federation News that was circulating the guide. | ||
Since Trump's return to the White House, it has become clear that leftists increasingly view direct action, including violence, vandalism, and sabotage, as the best means of offering resistance, in quotes. | ||
Pointing to things like Luigi Mangione and, of course, the sort of... | ||
Infinite number of assassination attempts that we've witnessed. | ||
After all, in late January, a male-to-female transgender attempted to murder Treasury Secretary Scott Besant and burned down the Heritage Foundation, who published Project 2025. | ||
After his arrest, Ryan Michael English said Mangione had been his main inspiration for the attempt. | ||
I'm telling you folks, just because the left politically and in the establishment is crumbling and collapsing and flailing and failing, that doesn't mean that their underlings aren't being increasingly radicalized and simply moving away from legitimate political And that's obvious. | ||
And this is another case in which Trump should just unleash the power of the United States government against these people. | ||
I mean, the Antifa issue should get the immigration issue treatment. | ||
The way that we went from 10,000 people crossing the border a day to five or six. | ||
Well, we've got 10,000 Antifa psychopath communist agitators out there organizing and orchestrating and creating the conditions for total collapse in this country. | ||
They should all be rounded up. | ||
They should all be rounded up. | ||
They should be arrested. | ||
They're domestic terrorists. | ||
Round them up. | ||
They're cowards. | ||
They're scum. | ||
They'll turn on each other. | ||
They'll fall apart. | ||
All it takes is A modicum of pressure against them that they have not faced and still do not face whatsoever. | ||
So why not? | ||
Why are we allowing a million strong contingent of psychotic black-clad communist ninjas to publish sabotage material in the open? | ||
They don't even get kicked off the internet for it. | ||
I mean, this is... | ||
Not necessary. | ||
We don't have to put up with this at all. | ||
And in that same line, in the same category as that, are the fabricated, fake, sponsored, paid-for protests that are breaking out. | ||
Let's go to clip number three here. | ||
This was shared in a Brunswick Facebook group, and I believe it is a food delivery person. | ||
We got a little bit curious as to why he was being asked to deliver so much food to an airport where he witnessed some things he had some questions about. | ||
And I think it goes to explain some of the bizarre nature of the protests that we've seen since Trump was inaugurated again. | ||
Let's go to clip number three. | ||
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I just delivered 27 sandwiches, four pizzas, spaghetti, all kinds of shit. | |
Because these tour buses just brought people in to get on this plane. | ||
These two tour buses from Maine just brought these people in to get on this plane, okay? | ||
So I went in the Brunswick Executive Airport to drop this off. | ||
I'm like, and I happened to see the pilot in there. | ||
I go, "Where are you taking these people?" They said, "Philadelphia." I go, Huh. | ||
Two tour buses of people getting flown down to Philadelphia. | ||
It's a little weird. | ||
So I looked, I just googled Philadelphia protests today, May 10th. | ||
Sure enough, protests going on in Philadelphia today. | ||
So these are all the paid protesters headed to Philly right now. | ||
Soros funded mother... | ||
So are funded mother protesters. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Yeah, we had to censor that one a little bit. | ||
But I understand his anger. | ||
So you got two tour buses filled with people, a private jet being chartered out of the Brunswick airport to fly to Philadelphia and then fly back because they want to participate in a protest. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, I... | ||
I have trouble justifying this as a protest. | ||
A protest is supposed to be ground-up sort of thing. | ||
Pro-Palestinian protesters marched through University City Friday night. | ||
Where were they from, though? | ||
Are they local? | ||
Was this a legitimate ground-up, groundswell, grassroots operation? | ||
Passionate Americans speaking out against what's happening in their city? | ||
Or was this a... | ||
Well-organized operation carried out with immense funds and immense coordination likely between the authorities there in Philadelphia and whoever is running the protesters for cash operation flying them in a private jet and giving them rides to the to and from the protest place and then they'll cover their you know bail if they get arrested and I'm sure they have agreements with the Authorities there, | ||
as we've seen and we've laid out, we've gotten their internal documents before, and whether it's Baltimore in 2014 or Philadelphia in 2025, I guarantee you the people carrying this out have contacts with people in the state or local government who are telling them exactly how far they can go, exactly where they can go, exactly where they should avoid, how they should act in order to avoid legal repercussions, and all of this being done fairly openly because... | ||
Nobody's actually trying to figure this out or go after these people, so they have no need to hide their activities. | ||
And they're able to be discovered by just random food deliverers noticing something strange going on. | ||
So it's only going to get worse. | ||
It's only going to ramp up as we move into the summer. | ||
But there's legal absurdities going on as well. | ||
Washington Democrat lawmakers use unprecedented abuse of power to shut down debate. | ||
And pass a bill to gut parental rights. | ||
Tensions flared Monday as Democrats in the Washington State House of Representatives passed engrossed substitute Senate Bill 5181. | ||
Legislation Republicans say guts parental rights initiative 2081 just one year after it was enacted with broad legislative support and widespread public backing. | ||
House Republicans expressed outrage over what they called an unprecedented abuse of power, accusing Democrats of using a newly adopted rule to shut down debate and silence minority voices twice within 90 minutes during the bill's passage. | ||
We'll go to a video of this happening now. | ||
Clip number 15. This is Washington House Democrats voting to halt Republicans' ability to debate changes that would gut initiative 2081, the parental rights bill. | ||
A couple things to consider about this. | ||
One, they are... | ||
Deliberately destroying the actual function of our government and the ability of people to have a say in the laws that are passed, a flagrant violation of our Constitution and the spirit of our laws. | ||
But also the fact that the reason they're doing this is for parental rights. | ||
It's because that's how strongly they feel that it's imperative for their success into the future that they be able to... | ||
Literally take your kids from you for disagreeing with them. | ||
What they did here was absolutely unprecedented. | ||
You'll hear the guy in this video say it. | ||
That in the 132 year history of this legislative body, this type of crushing of debate has never been implemented. | ||
This has never been done. | ||
They have never so... | ||
Flagrantly abused their power and shut down conversation, silenced debate, and imposed unpopular laws on an unwilling populace. | ||
This is the future if we let it, if we let them get away with it. | ||
Let's go to clip number 15 now. | ||
unidentified
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Number from the 15th District, Representative Defoe. | |
Thank you, Madam Speaker. | ||
This bill sidelines. | ||
Hundreds of thousands of parents from across Washington State. | ||
This bill silences hundreds of thousands of parents across Washington State. | ||
This chamber has existed for over 130 years, but for the first time in its history a few moments ago, debate was silenced. | ||
Debate was censored. | ||
Please speak to the policy. | ||
Please proceed. | ||
This bill led to the censorship of representatives of the people of Washington State who strongly supported the initiative and who opposed this bill. | ||
On a debate about an emergency clause, taking that out, an amendment that would have taken out the emergency clause and would have allowed, finally, the people of Washington State to vote on a referendum undoing this bill was not accepted. | ||
And can now not be considered by the people of Washington State. | ||
Madam Speaker, the legislature passed this bill rather than let it go to the people. | ||
The people continue to be obstructed by this chamber by not voting on... | ||
Please do not impugn members. | ||
Parents from Washington State! | ||
Thank you! | ||
So there you go. | ||
Yeah, just using these, you know, again, parliamentary tricks to get this done. | ||
The controversy centers on a procedural rule change implemented by House Democrats earlier this session, eliminating a 132-year-old provision dating back to 1893. | ||
That rule had required two-thirds supermajority to cut off debate on bills or amendments. | ||
Under the new rule, a simple majority is now enough to end discussion, granting the majority party significantly more control over floor proceedings. | ||
Republicans argue Democrats use this new authority to suppress debate on amendments tied to high-profile parental rights bill, including one that would have removed the emergency clause, effectively blocking any potential public referendum. | ||
The debate on the amendment was about whether the people's voices matter, Corey said. | ||
White House Democrats have made it crystal clear they don't trust or value the will of the people. | ||
Well, not when it goes against them. | ||
Let's go now to clip number nine. | ||
This is Glenn Beck responding to what's happening in Washington state. | ||
And very seriously telling parents, get the hell out while you still can. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
If you're living in Washington state, may I just say, get the hell out now. | ||
The entire state? | ||
The entire state. | ||
Get out of the state. | ||
Wow. | ||
And I'm dead serious on that. | ||
You're living in a state that has gone absolutely insane. | ||
First of all, we talked about this before, and nobody's really talking about this. | ||
The medical thing that they just passed in Washington State. | ||
And they passed it and the governor has signed it. | ||
And basically it says, if there's a medical emergency, we can do whatever we want to you. | ||
Now remember, this is the state that was talking about building little internment camps for people who wouldn't get vaccinated last time. | ||
They were talking about that. | ||
If you think that they won't do that, you're out of your mind. | ||
You're crazy. | ||
And so it says if the governor decides that there's a medical emergency, a statewide emergency, that the state, based on, I love this one, based on scientific experts, they will dictate what happens to every individual. | ||
What you have to get, if scientific experts tell you you have to take this, you will be forced to take that. | ||
I'm not having my kids in that state. | ||
I'm not living in that state. | ||
Are you living in that state? | ||
Well, how about this? | ||
How about parents in Washington State can flee their state, but only if they dedicate themselves to not letting that happen in whatever state they move to. | ||
You cannot let them get their foot in the door like this, like the leftist trying to literally take your children away. | ||
Cannot be allowed to, you know, incrementally institute these little policies. | ||
Well, we'll just, how about instead of a supermajority, it's just the majority? | ||
And how about we lower debate time? | ||
And all of a sudden you find that with the stroke of a pen on the whim of the governor, they can declare an emergency, which means you don't have the right to anything anymore. | ||
Life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, all that's gone. | ||
The rights over your children, completely gone. | ||
don't even write to know about it, about what they're doing to your children. | ||
And if you oppose what they're doing to your children, that in and of itself is an excuse to take them away from you. | ||
So, while I'm almost always against the idea of just running away in the face of tyranny, in this case, I actually wouldn't blame people. | ||
They don't want their children taken away from them arbitrarily on the whim of a despotic government. | ||
So, I'm willing to allow it. | ||
Just let's make sure it doesn't happen anywhere else. | ||
Let's not bring This mentality with us. | ||
And we've got about two minutes left in the show, and I'll have to hold some of this stuff over for tomorrow. | ||
But apparently the hostage has now officially been released. | ||
The last remaining American living hostage held by Hamas has been released, Eden Alexander, causing a lot of people to ask how America was able to achieve this when Israel has seemed so incapable of bringing hostages back. | ||
But the reality is... | ||
They never wanted the hostages back. | ||
The hostages were always a great excuse to do what the government of Israel really wanted, which is to destroy Gaza and replace its populace with Israelis. | ||
So the hostages were never, that was never an attempt. | ||
And this has been known for months, maybe a year at this point, over and over again. | ||
It's been proven that when given the option to negotiate for hostages or do something to bring hostages home, Israel rejects that offer and instead chooses to... | ||
Bomb the hell out of everyone, including a lot of the hostages who have died as a consequence of the Israeli bombing campaign. | ||
Just as a brief run-through, Trump is on his way to the Middle East for his first international trip of his second term. | ||
As Ground News reports, disagreements on Iran-Gaza straining Trump-Netanyahu relationship, which was never good in the first place, and we've been telling you that the entire time. | ||
Trump lifted arm restrictions for Israel, supported Gaza operations, yet criticized the new offensive as counterproductive, and halted U.S. military campaigns against Houthis, surprising Netanyahu. | ||
Eden Alexander has been released, as Hamas announced, the agreement they came to with the Trump administration. | ||
Witkoff, Steve Witkoff, the head negotiator in all these issues, said to tell hostage families Israel is pointlessly extending the Gaza deal, a Gaza war, while U.S. is urging a deal. | ||
So, special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, recently told families of Gaza hostages that he disagrees with Israel's approach to the war in Gaza. | ||
Believes reaching a new ceasefire and hostage deal is the correct step to take, because that might actually get the hostages back. | ||
But, he says, quote, Israel is not ready to end the war. | ||
Quote, Israel is prolonging the war, even though we do not see whether future progress can be made, said Witkoff. | ||
As if you needed to know that. | ||
U.S. and Iran completed a fourth round of nuclear talks. | ||
Again, outside of the purview and control of Israel, pissing them off farther, Israel believes Trump lacks Senate report for Saudi nuclear deal without Israeli involvement, saying that they control our government, and now Trump is actually talking about recognizing a Palestinian state. | ||
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