| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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North Korea's Submarine Threat
00:03:42
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|
| But what would you do? | |
| We just pick one case. | |
| North Korea, they have put a satellite into space. | |
| We don't know what's in it. | |
| Do you have any ideas? | |
| Well, I would first of all call a special session of the entire Congress to discuss Roe v. Wade. | |
| I'd do that in the first minute. | |
| And then regarding North Korea, North Korea several weeks ago launched a submarine-launched ballistic missile. | |
| which means they launched a missile from a submarine that could carry a nuclear weapon, which means that submarine could travel across the Pacific, park off the coast, and launch an EMP strike, and we would not have any time to react. | |
| What did our government do several weeks ago? | |
| A strongly worded protest. | |
| What would I do? | |
| You people do this even twitch. | |
| And you better kiss Pyongyang goodbye. | |
| We will preemptively move first, and we're not fooling this time because an EMP is a first-strike weapon. | |
| There's no coming back. | |
| The Japanese hit us on December 7, 1941, and we did the job in 44 months, but it cost several hundred thousand lives. | |
| So my message to North Korea would be, we're not going to do strongly worded protests. | |
| And I almost guarantee you. | |
| Look what happened with Ronald Reagan when Gaddafi and Libya, and remember they murdered American servicemen in Rome, and Reagan put a couple bombs literally in the courtyard at Gaddafi's palace. | |
| Did he mess with us again? | |
| Well, he did Lockerbie the following year, but the message was clear. | |
| You're dealing with a bully? | |
| You send the message. | |
| Don't even think about it. | |
| And there's the paradox of life. | |
| You make it clear you're not going to tolerate something. | |
| There's no violence. | |
| It's when you abjectly submit upon your knees. | |
| You're about to be beheaded. | |
| One of our guests said he would shoot the satellite out. | |
| Oh, I would say, yeah, I would preemptively take that satellite out and say, that's it. | |
| Dr. Prock. | |
| Dr. Pry, and you have to remember who's saying this right now of what, objectively, what we would be doing militarily. | |
| Okay. | |
| We're sitting next to a man with a doctor from Purdue who specialized in military history. | |
| And this is the man who's given us these answers. | |
| Well, when Korea launched a missile starting in 09, they start their testing of intermediate range ballistic. | |
| It was obvious they were going to do the launch a couple weeks in advance. | |
| There's complexities involving liquid fuel rockets that is pretty easy to detect. | |
| We dispatched an Aegis-class cruiser with capability to shoot it down, but then the President ordered that they were not to turn on their high-game radar to track this launch because it might provoke them. | |
| We should have been turning on the high-gain radar and said, okay, we'll respect your territorial space, but about 30 seconds after you launch, it will be all over international waters, and it's a hazard to the entire world. | |
| We're going to blow it apart. | |
| And the next time you start to set one up, we'll blow it apart on the ground inside your territory. | |
| You got the message? | |
| I can't get across forcefully enough. | |
| EMP is a game ender. | |
| We get hit, there's no coming back. | |
| 90% of Americans will die. | |
|
Paid Nuclear Power
00:00:34
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|
| We can't tolerate rogue states like North Korea or zealots in Iran screaming at us every other week. | |
| They're going to nuke us. | |
| They're going to bathe us in radiation. | |
| North Korea and Iran put out propaganda films showing Washington disintegrating under a nuclear blast. | |
| I take that seriously. | |
| And we give them large sums of nuclear power. | |
| And we give them a couple hundred billion dollars of, yeah, okay. | |
| Now you'll be our, we paid $400 million to let five people go. | |
| And oh, but it wasn't a bribe. | |