Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can just play a game. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
Oh, my God. my God. | ||
Oh, my God. my God. | ||
Oh, my God. my God. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Oh, my God. my God. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
and People don't realize what they have. | ||
And then nowadays, I am so upset that the things we did and the things we fought for and the boys that died for it, it's all gone down the drain. | ||
Our country's gone to hell in a handbasket. | ||
We haven't got the country we had when I was raised. | ||
Not at all. | ||
Nobody will have the fun I have. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity I have. | ||
It's just not the same. | ||
Jesus is the way and the life and the King of Israel. | ||
We just leave with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around you. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
The future is so bleak. | ||
unidentified
|
But... | |
That has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
|
God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, richest person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
unidentified
|
Who is they, though? | |
We can't tell you who they is, can we? | ||
There is no future if we do nothing now. | ||
There is nothing to lose. | ||
People that are scrambling, trying to protect their ever-shrinking share of what they have are foolish. | ||
It's all going. | ||
It's all going away. | ||
This country is being ripped apart and raped and looted. | ||
We're being slowly poisoned and, in some cases, quickly murdered and assassinated. | ||
And we're killing ourselves every day, inadvertently, with the kinds of things that we eat and breathe and drink and see. | ||
People have got to start to radically begin to obey their conscience and tell the truth and do the right thing. | ||
People have got to start to get courageous. | ||
And this is the time for everybody to turn and look to God and to pray and to ask for strength and to ask for wisdom to get through this time and to transform and sanctify this country. | ||
And the alternative is that there will be no country. | ||
Is it really only as big as low gas prices? | ||
Is it really only so big as bringing inflation and gas prices and the corporate tax rate back down? | ||
It's not about waiting for someone to come in and change the policy and make it better. | ||
It's a personal decision that we all have to make to become soldiers of Christ. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden, looming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malkin? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Griper Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and, of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement, who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
America is a nation of believers, dreamers, and strivers that is being led by a group of censors, critics, and cynics. | ||
These interests have rigged our political and economic system for their exclusive benefit. | ||
unidentified
|
Believe me, it's for their benefit. | |
My message is that things have to change, and they have to change regularly. | ||
Right now. | ||
My soul and exclusive mission is to go to work for you. | ||
It's time to deliver a victory for the American people. | ||
We don't win anymore, but we are going to start winning again. | ||
So to every parent who dreams for their child and every child who dreams for their future. | ||
I say these words to you tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
I am with you, I will fight for you, and I will win for you. | |
Saying to me is like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
|
I am with you. | |
A new droiper war. | ||
Nigga this war. | ||
Nigga this war. | ||
I'm chucking bodies on the floor. | ||
I'm with it all. | ||
I chuck to my demons and I see the writings on the wall. | ||
Niggas is dying when it's so weird. | ||
I get excited for them cops. | ||
And no one ain't crying when he gone. | ||
unidentified
|
Cause brody was fighting for the cause. | |
I do a shit for my brothers. | ||
I do a shit for each other. | ||
I do a shit for my brothers. | ||
I do a shit for my brothers. | ||
I do a shit for each other. | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world! | ||
My soldiers push forward! | ||
My soldiers scream out! | ||
My soldiers reach! | ||
I can't see a damn thing if they walk. | ||
I can't see a damn thing if they walk. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They like Steve. | ||
They can't see me. | ||
They won't beat me. | ||
I'm in that guinea. | ||
You can't go back to the past. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what people always say, isn't it? | |
They say, can we really go back? | ||
And the answer is whether you're conservative or liberal, right when you're left with, And the answer is no. | ||
unidentified
|
We're never going back. | |
It's gone. | ||
It's gone. | ||
unidentified
|
All of that is gone. | |
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die. | ||
unidentified
|
on earth. | |
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | ||
Come on. | ||
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
And we want people that can burn really more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in real life. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
It's the only way. | ||
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny. | ||
Then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
We have to want it more than we can. | ||
We have to want it more than we can. | ||
We have to want it more than we can. | ||
In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire American. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the All In podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this. | ||
And I will not encourage my followers to turn out in November to vote for this or campaign for this. | ||
It is not an unreasonable demand to say that we will not vote for a candidate that promises to import more legal immigrants. | ||
And it is not unreasonable because for the first time in 20 years, it is the majority opinion that there are too many legal immigrants coming into the country. | ||
Ask yourself this. | ||
If not Donald Trump, if not now, then when? | ||
So they may say mass deportations. | ||
They may say illegal immigration. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
And Americans need to get used to saying that. | ||
Native Americans never get what they ask for because they're always telling themselves and negotiating with themselves. | ||
Telling us it's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
No more. | ||
Not since he announced his reelection campaign in November 2022 have I told anybody to vote for Trump. | ||
When pushed for details on the policy, clearly. | ||
They're repeating the same script as every other Republican, and they show that they're really not serious about mass deportations. | ||
For that reason, I actually don't believe that illegal immigration will fall to historic lows. | ||
And this is your America First policy. | ||
We need the people. | ||
We need limitless green cards. | ||
And by the way, once they come in, you can't deport them. | ||
So people, when confronted with this reality, first they said it was a throwaway remark. | ||
They said he didn't really mean it. | ||
Well, he's doubled down on it many times. | ||
He doubled down on it in June, August, last week. | ||
Now they say, well, so what? | ||
Even if he means it, he said it last time. | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
Last time he was against H-1B visas. | ||
Like, you thought you were going to tap the screen? | ||
unidentified
|
To pressure Trump, except one problem. | |
Elon owns the platform. | ||
But now the check marks are being removed, which means people are being de-amplified. | ||
And it's being manipulated. | ||
unidentified
|
They're manipulating the conversation. | |
And Elon retweeted today, or reposted, Trump saying in June, staple the green cards to the diplomas. | ||
And that's a reminder, hey, this is what we got. | ||
This is the deal. | ||
I put in 277. I bought the platform for you. | ||
I made Trump win, and now Trump's gonna deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your checkmark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you to—I'm sorry, Mr. Quentis. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groy for War II. Some | |
of them may look back and ask themselves whether they've made the right choice, whether they've made the most of the opportunities they've been given. | ||
Together, we have the same mission. | ||
Over the course of your life, you will find that things are not always fair. | ||
You will find that things happen to you that you do not deserve and that are not always warranted. | ||
But you have to put Your head down and fight, fight, fight. | ||
Never, ever, ever give up. | ||
Don't give in. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous you fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts. | ||
Are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked Our Creator four times. | ||
Because in America, we don't worship government. | ||
We worship God. | ||
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure that began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble Beginnings. | ||
The next generation of American leaders. | ||
Never, ever give up. | ||
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, The more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
America is better when people put their faith into action. | ||
Pray to God and follow His teachings. | ||
Today, each of you begins a new chapter as well. | ||
When your story goes from here, it will be defined by your vision, your perseverance, and your grit. | ||
You will build a future where we have the courage to chase our dreams no matter what the cynics and the doubters have to say. | ||
You will have the confidence to speak the hopes in your hearts. | ||
And to express the love that stirs your souls. | ||
As long as you have pride in your beliefs, courage in your convictions, and faith in God, then you will not fail. | ||
As long as America remains true to its values, loyal to its citizens, and devoted to its creator, then our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. | |
May God bless the United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you so much, everybody. | |
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian? | ||
Yes. | ||
Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
The Washington establishment and the financial and media corporations that fund it exist for only one reason, to protect and enrich itself. | ||
The establishment has trillions of dollars at stake in this election. | ||
For those who control the levers of power in Washington and for the global special interest, they partner with these people that don't have your good in mind. | ||
Our campaign represents a true existential threat. | ||
Like they haven't seen before. | ||
This is not simply another four-year election. | ||
This is a crossroads in the history of our civilization that will determine whether or not we, the people, reclaim control over our government. | ||
The political establishment that is trying to stop us is the same group responsible for our disastrous trade deals, massive illegal immigration. | ||
And economic and foreign policies that have bled our country dry. | ||
The political establishment has brought about the destruction of our factories and our jobs as they flee to Mexico, China, and other countries all around the world. | ||
It's a global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth, and put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities. | ||
This is a struggle for the survival of our nation, and this will be our last chance to This election will determine whether we're a free nation or whether we have only the illusion of democracy, but are in fact controlled by a small handful of global special interests rigging the system, and our system is rigged. | ||
This is reality. | ||
You know it, they know it, I know it, and pretty much the whole world knows it. | ||
The thing that said, take a look at what happened. | ||
unidentified
|
These are people who work hard, but no longer have a voice. | |
I am your voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
unidentified
|
They've been put on notice. | |
If you fuck around with us, if you do something bad to us, we are going to do things to you that have never been done before. | ||
Don't sit yet. | ||
you like this. | ||
*music* | ||
unidentified
|
Socialists, globalists, Marxists, communists who are attacking our civilization have no idea of the sleeping giant they have awoken. | |
They cannot even begin to imagine the brave and righteous spirit they've unleashed in men and women. | ||
But they're going to find out the hard way. | ||
They will find out like never before. | ||
This nation belongs to you. | ||
Belongs to America. | ||
unidentified
|
It was patriots like you that built this country. | |
And it's patriots like you that are going to save our country. | ||
unidentified
|
To all of those who think that they can coerce and subjugate the citizens of this land, hear these words from me tonight. | |
The people of America will not surrender our borders. | ||
We will not surrender our culture. | ||
We will not surrender our faith. | ||
We will not surrender our values. | ||
We will not surrender our history. | ||
We will not surrender our liberty and above all. | ||
We are done with their distorted visions for America. | ||
It's time to start talking about greatness for our country again. | ||
We want our country to be great again. | ||
We want our country to be respected. | ||
unidentified
|
The time for action has come. | |
As long as we are led by politicians who will not put America first, then we can be assured The | ||
future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | ||
We all believe the same red blood of patriots. | ||
We all salute the same great American flag. | ||
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you winning, son? | |
Are you winning? | ||
I wish that you cocaine-yed me. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden, looming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greupel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and, of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
unidentified
|
Alexander the Great, Donald Trump, we're all cut from the same cloth, and that cloth is very, very large. | |
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
Tell yourself. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some real impressive deals. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go big or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman that looks like that has to have a special scent. | ||
It's the night. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
Oh, you look great. | ||
Come on. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm done with it. | ||
This is my son. | ||
Listen, are you begging him? | ||
Huh? | ||
Are you? | ||
No. | ||
You speak to me. | ||
I can't believe this. | ||
No. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
What are you, what? | ||
It's Donald. | ||
It's here. | ||
It's Donald. | ||
I'm not in my book. | ||
Everything's set for tonight, Mr. Trump. | ||
I wonder what Trump's game is this time. | ||
Trump's got a new day. | ||
Trump's got a new deal. | ||
What's your game, Donald? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
Trump. | ||
He says a new thing. | ||
Do you really? | ||
This way. | ||
What? | ||
Trump. | ||
Has a new game? | ||
What is it? | ||
What? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
My new game is Trump. | ||
The game. | ||
Trump. | ||
The game. | ||
This sounds like political presidential. | ||
You said, though, that if you did run for president, you believe you'd win. | ||
I like that. | ||
I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning. | ||
I don't know how your audience feels, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States whipped off. | ||
That's the guy on the spot, right? | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
Tattoo. | ||
That's right. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I believe that would have. | ||
Okay, kids, make it first. | ||
I've got a plan. | ||
Jimmy created a magazine. | ||
Mr. Trump, you can do it. | ||
Scabby. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
I'm personally lucky. | ||
Down the hall. | ||
Your mail modeling would be what it is today. | ||
Here you go. | ||
Donald. | ||
Yes! | ||
I think you'll like it. | ||
What is this about a fight before the title comes? | ||
Got to be listening, buddy. | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll see you next time. | |
We'll see you next time. | ||
Why wouldn't you dedicate yourself to public service? | ||
Because I think it's a very mean life. | ||
I would love and I would dedicate my life to this country, but I see it as being a mean life. | ||
And I also see it as somebody with strong views and somebody with the kind of views that are maybe a little bit unpopular, which may be right, but may be unpopular, wouldn't necessarily have a chance of getting elected against somebody with no great brain but a big smile. | ||
And that's a sad commentary for the political process. | ||
And if you have a minute, why don't we go? | ||
Talk about it somewhere only we know. | ||
This can be the end of everything. | ||
So why don't we go somewhere only we know? | ||
Somewhere only we know. | ||
I'm not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
unidentified
|
I want this sidebar by myself. | |
I'm doing drugs without a lot of help. | ||
My voice is nothing but a scream without fire. | ||
I stretch my hair, but my cup just goes up. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
That the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire Americans. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the All In podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this. | ||
And I will not encourage my followers to turn out in November to vote for this or campaign for this. | ||
It is not an unreasonable demand to say that we will not vote for a candidate that promises to import more legal immigrants. | ||
And it is not unreasonable because for the first time in 20 years, it is the majority opinion that there are too many legal immigrants coming into the country. | ||
Ask yourself this. | ||
If not Donald Trump, if not now, then when? | ||
So they may say mass deportations. | ||
They may say illegal immigration. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
And Americans need to get used to saying that. | ||
Native Americans never get what they ask for because they're always telling themselves and negotiating with themselves. | ||
Telling us it's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words, immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
No more. | ||
Not since he announced his re-election campaign in November 2022 have I told anybody to vote for Trump. | ||
When pushed for details on the policy, clearly. | ||
They're repeating the same script as every other Republican, and they show that they're really not serious about mass deportations. | ||
For that reason, I actually don't believe that illegal immigration will fall to historic lows. | ||
And this is your America First policy. | ||
We need the people. | ||
We need limitless green cards. | ||
And by the way, once they come in, you can't deport them. | ||
So people, when confronted with this reality, first they said it was a throwaway remark. | ||
They said he didn't really mean it. | ||
Well, he's doubled down on it many times. | ||
He doubled down on it in June, August, last week. | ||
Now they say, well, so what? | ||
Even if he means it, he said it last time. | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
Last time he was against H-1B visas. | ||
Like, you thought you were going to tap the screen to pressure Trump. | ||
unidentified
|
Except one problem, Elon owns the platform. | |
But now the check marks are being removed, which means people are being de-amplified, and it's being manipulated. | ||
They're manipulating the conversation. | ||
And Elon retweeted today, or reposted, Trump saying in June, staple the green cards to the diplomas. | ||
And that's a reminder, hey, this is what we got. | ||
This is the deal. | ||
I put in 277. I bought the platform for you. | ||
I've made Trump win. | ||
And now Trump's going to deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your checkmark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you to... | ||
I'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groyper War II. No, I'm back up, I'm back up. | |
On them, on them diamonds, girl, you see these diamonds? | ||
Girl, you see this jet? | ||
You know I'm different climbers, uh. | ||
How I got this hair? | ||
Got it, car ain't tryin' Wish it ain't like family, uh. | ||
Wish it ain't like mammy, yeah. | ||
Hold it up, where you at the club? | ||
Hold it up, where you had that gun? | ||
On them, yeah, pull up by side, yeah. | ||
Pull up on them, uh. | ||
Now I got this bag with hash on them. | ||
I'm straight out of these diamonds, I'm straight out of these lights, yeah. | ||
How you gon' take these bills? | ||
How you gon' take these lights? | ||
Yeah, turn up at my show, at least just do it right. | ||
Yeah, yeah, we go out all night. | ||
I'm gon' take me big, gon' take me big, gon' turn up all night. | ||
I'm gon' turn my drink, I'm gon' turn my cup, you gon' turn me all right. | ||
I got the feeling that they got the rocks on the bank, and they trouble the blocks, I'm tweakin'. | ||
We got no bills, you can put them outside, you out of your mind, you crazy tweakin'. | ||
Had you been out of my lane, bad in my mind, I'm really right out of my tweakin'. | ||
Know that you lovin' these lights, you lovin' this world, we runnin' it back every weekend. | ||
Shut it up with me every time I know, what you speakin'. | ||
All y'all drunk inside this life's that world, y'all get the runnin' back up every weekend. | ||
I want to be a dictator. | ||
I want to be a dictator. | ||
And you know why I want to be a dictator? | ||
'Cause I want a wall. | ||
Right? | ||
I want a wall. | ||
And I want to drill, drill, drill. | ||
Drill. | ||
Drill. Drill. | ||
Drill. | ||
unidentified
|
Drill. Drill. Drill. Drill. Drill. | |
Drill. Drill. Drill. Drill. | ||
unidentified
|
Drill. | |
Because I want a wall, right? | ||
I want a wall, and I want to drill, drill, drill! | ||
unidentified
|
I want a wall, and I want a wall, and I want to and I want to drill, drill, drill! | |
I want a wall, and I want a wall, and I want to and I want to drill, drill, drill! | ||
I'm tired of teddy on my chest, nigga, bring me, I'm about to slide those in the bed, nigga. | ||
I can't win the blade, I'm dead by the box. | ||
I cut it over, nothing likes, nigga, fucking lies. | ||
We should know this game, same, you can fucking die. | ||
I'm so good, I'm so good, and I'm like, guys. | ||
I'm a fire guy. | ||
I can't just let it, really, what can we just do, biz? | ||
You got no pain, I got no pain, you can't get back with us. | ||
You got no pain, you can't get back with us. | ||
This one here, they fucking with the wrong one. | ||
This one here. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Tuesday. | ||
Tonight, we're going to be live reacting to and watching Trump's first address to a joint session of Congress in a second term. | ||
It's supposed to start any minute now in about five minutes. | ||
And for those that don't know, this is effectively his State of the Union address. | ||
First year, the president gives the inaugural. | ||
That's not until the second year that they officially give a State of the Union. | ||
But this effectively is that. | ||
It is an address to a joint session of Congress, both the House and the Senate. | ||
It's going to be a policy speech, so it is effectively the same thing. | ||
It'll be... | ||
A landmark speech, I'm sure, reflecting on the past 45 days or 43 days of Trump's second term in office. | ||
He's also expected to lay out his agenda for the rest of the year. | ||
I'm sure he'll cover the economy, inflation, tariffs, doge. | ||
And it also takes place during the backdrop of an imminent government shutdown in 10 days. | ||
There is a deadline for Congress to pass a budget bill. | ||
And there is a lot of debate. | ||
Republicans are going to need the support of at least 10 Democrats in the Senate, or I should say at least 7 Democrats, to get a budget bill through the Senate and fund the government. | ||
Democrats are demanding that Republicans restrict Doge and its ability to make cuts to spending. | ||
Otherwise, they're not going to give the votes. | ||
Republicans have put up a clean, continuing resolution. | ||
That means... | ||
No modifications, no changes. | ||
It'll fund the government through the rest of the year. | ||
Doesn't touch Doge. | ||
And now there's a showdown over who is going to blink first. | ||
And it's really a debate over who gets the blame for the shutdown. | ||
Republicans for their insistence on a clean bill or Democrats for their insistence on a bill that cuts Doge. | ||
And this will be battled out in the media. | ||
So I'm sure they're going to be talking about that. | ||
They're going to be talking about the shutdown. | ||
They will talk about the budget reconciliation process, which has been underway, and the overall state of the country 44 days in, and the rest of the year. | ||
So it's going to be good. | ||
We're going to turn the volume on here. | ||
It looks like the Supreme Court is being seated. | ||
Congress is there. | ||
So we're now just waiting on the president. | ||
Should happen any moment now. | ||
And I'll adjust my audio levels. | ||
We'll see how we're doing here. | ||
I think it should be fine. | ||
But it's an exciting night. | ||
We're going to be here all night reacting to it. | ||
And then afterward, I'll be giving you my notes, my live reaction when the speech is over. | ||
And then we'll be taking Super Chat. | ||
So it should be a fun show. | ||
It's been a big news day, though, I have to say. | ||
I would have preferred to do a news show tonight. | ||
There's a lot to cover. | ||
Andrew Tate is in trouble again in the United States. | ||
Florida Attorney General opened a criminal case into the Tate brothers, so I wanted to talk about that and some other things. | ||
But tonight we're watching the speech. | ||
But it's going to be good. | ||
We got J.D. Vance, Mike Johnson. | ||
unidentified
|
Waiting on Trump. | |
Waiting on Trump. | ||
I have to say, though, it's been kind of a rocky... | ||
I'm going to turn this off. | ||
It's too loud for me. | ||
I have to say it's been not off to a terrific start. | ||
I think the Trump administration, because it's going to be a reflection on everything that's happened to date. | ||
Of course, I'll also talk about the remaining 50 out of the first 100 days. | ||
I'll talk about the rest of the year. | ||
The administration started out very disruptive, very aggressive, very confident. | ||
Some of the big initiatives. | ||
Diplomacy in Ukraine. | ||
Doge cuts to discretionary spending. | ||
The trade war against Canada, Mexico, the European Union, and China. | ||
The diplomatic effort in the Middle East with Trump's proposal on Gaza. | ||
There's been a lot of different things. | ||
Of course, the shutdown of the border and the ice raids. | ||
A lot of big initiatives, executive orders, promises, a lot of hype, a lot of talk. | ||
And here we are, a month and a half in, and it seems like a lot of these things are starting to crash into the rocks. | ||
The wave is cresting and crashing against the rocks on the shore of reality. | ||
A few examples, and we've been covering this on the show since the inauguration, on the border. | ||
There have been fewer deportations in Trump's first month in office than Joe Biden's average. | ||
Fewer deportation flights, which is expatriating illegal immigrants to their home country under Trump than on average under Biden. | ||
The border is closed, but the deportations are not being carried out. | ||
On Doge. | ||
They're posting these huge numbers on their website. | ||
They said there were billions of dollars in cuts. | ||
After the press reviewed the cuts, they found they were exaggerated by orders of magnitude. | ||
There's been like millions of dollars in cuts, not billions. | ||
And they're aiming for trillions. | ||
So they're shooting for two trillion in cuts. | ||
They said they had tens of billions. | ||
In reality, it's like in the millions of dollars in cuts. | ||
Doge and whether it's constitutional and what role Elon Musk officially has and whether he should have access to some of these sensitive information systems. | ||
In spite of it all, the cuts aren't really there. | ||
Then there's the trade war. | ||
Trump has threatened Canada and Mexico twice now with tariffs. | ||
First time last month, they were narrowly averted. | ||
They went into effect and then within days were reversed. | ||
Then yesterday, more tariffs went into effect against Mexico and Canada. | ||
Howard Lutnick now says they'll be reversed by Wednesday, by tomorrow, after Canada reciprocated with tariffs of their own. | ||
So the trade war seems like it's not off to a great start. | ||
In addition, a key metric for consumer spending shows that GDP in the first quarter is potentially going to be negative 3%. | ||
And that's based on seasonally adjusted average consumer spending. | ||
And they say that might be the impact of the trade war or uncertainty because of Trump's economic policies. | ||
So maybe it's backfiring. | ||
And then in the realm of foreign policy, Trump is trying to bring Zelensky to the table to make a peace agreement, but he's getting a lot of pushback and negative press in the United States where supporting Ukraine is still popular, in Europe where it's very popular. | ||
And now the United Kingdom and France have convened a Ukraine security conference of their own without the United States. | ||
So, a lot of initiatives, a lot of disruption, a lot of bluster and television and press. | ||
But here we are a month and a half in and it looks like things are a little shaky. | ||
It looks like we're not getting a ton of the benefits. | ||
But we are experiencing some of the pain. | ||
It's backfiring a little bit. | ||
So this will be a chance for Trump to state his agenda, particularly for Congress, because that is going to be the next big battle, is the budget battle in less than two weeks. | ||
It is going to be the budget reconciliation process, where Trump hopes to get his corporate tax cut from 2018 to be made permanent. | ||
As well as maybe implement immigration policy and give more money for border security. | ||
There's Melania Trump entering. | ||
I'm sure Trump isn't far behind. | ||
Any case. | ||
So this will be a chance for Trump to outline the congressional agenda, the rest of the agenda, but I have to say, not... | ||
Was that Matt Walsh? | ||
I thought I just saw Matt Walsh in the gallery there. | ||
There's Usha Vance. | ||
And who else is there? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know who these other people are. | |
Someone said Lex... | ||
Oh yeah, there's Matt Walsh. | ||
They showed it for a split second. | ||
Someone said Lex Friedman's there. | ||
Yeah, so that is Matt Walsh. | ||
Who else is there? | ||
What other e-celebs? | ||
Here we go. | ||
unidentified
|
That was Shapiro? | |
They showed it for a split second. | ||
I didn't even see. | ||
Marco Rubio. | ||
Scott Besant. | ||
Pete Hegseth. | ||
So the cabinet's coming in. | ||
All right, so they're still getting set up. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So it's an interesting benchmark. | ||
Like I said, I believe it's 44 days in to the Trump administration, so they're not quite halfway even through their first 100 days. | ||
So it's a little early to say. | ||
I'm not trying to bash the administration a ton. | ||
Just being fair, just calling it like it is. | ||
A lot of initiative, a lot of bluster, but the results are not there. | ||
And, in fairness, these different approaches, maybe they require a little bit of time. | ||
There's Howard Lutnick. | ||
RFK Jr. RFK Jr., did you see this? | ||
Health Human Services Secretary. | ||
He said the other day in an open letter in conjunction with the DOJ and I think one other federal department that anti-Semitism is a public health emergency. | ||
He said it's being incubated like a virus on college campuses. | ||
And now... | ||
The administration is threatening to withhold federal money from Columbia University because of their apparent tolerance for anti-Semitism or pro-Palestine activism on the campus. | ||
So it's the gift that keeps on giving. | ||
$12 billion for Israel. | ||
Foreign aid is frozen for every other country. | ||
It's frozen for Ukraine. | ||
But $12 billion in additional money for Israel. | ||
The DOJ is cracking down on anti-Semitism. | ||
Apparently HHS somehow is cracking down on anti-Semitism. | ||
They're going after the universities. | ||
This is something we talked about throughout last year, in particular Colombia, which was the epicenter of the pro-Palestine activism during the Gaza War. | ||
And now the big news is that the ceasefire in Gaza is about to... | ||
Breakdown at the same time that Israel is potentially preparing for operations inside Syria, backing Druze and other Muslim militant groups in southern Syria. | ||
They're looking to create another DMZ, which encompasses basically Syria's entire border with Jordan. | ||
So, a lot going on. | ||
Well, there's a lot going on in the first month and a half. | ||
Not all of it the best. | ||
Not any surprises. | ||
I'm not really surprised by any of it. | ||
Maybe you guys are. | ||
But I didn't have very high hopes from the beginning. | ||
So we'll see what he says. | ||
We got the Ukraine pin. | ||
Is that Dick Durbin, I think? | ||
And Amy Klobuchar. | ||
They have the Ukraine pins. | ||
The Democrats always have the outfits. | ||
The women are wearing the pink. | ||
What is that even for? | ||
Is that just like a general woman thing or like a feminism thing? | ||
And the other ones have the Ukraine pens. | ||
I really dislike Mike Johnson. | ||
Who's this one on the left? | ||
What's going on with that? | ||
Who's that? | ||
Who's that? | ||
Who's she? | ||
Yeah, well, they're still hanging out, so I think it's going to be a little while. | ||
Maybe it's going to be another ten minutes. | ||
Yeah, I really dislike this whole cast. | ||
It's sort of the problem, is that Trump is on the ticket, and you vote for Trump. | ||
I would have voted for Trump, but the problem is we don't get just Trump. | ||
unidentified
|
Trump... | |
Is the name that is on the ballot, but you get with him Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, who is not America first, not a nationalist. | ||
He's a very typical conservative. | ||
Small government, individual liberty, all that kind of stuff. | ||
You get him. | ||
You get Senator John Thune, the majority leader in the Senate, who is opposed to immigration restriction. | ||
It's opposite of MAGA. You get J.D. Vance, who was a never-Trumper five years ago. | ||
J.D. Vance, who's been groomed for the past 15 years by Peter Thiel and David Frum, a Jewish neocon, to become the moderate Republican president of the United States. | ||
You get him. | ||
You get these people in the cabinet, like Elise Stefanik. | ||
It was militant. | ||
Pro-Israel as the UN ambassador. | ||
You get Marco Rubio, whose campaign slogan in 2016 was named after an organ of the Israel lobby, Project for a New American Century. | ||
You get Pete Hegseth, who is an evangelical Zionist, believes in the reconstruction of the Third Temple. | ||
You get all these other people. | ||
RFK Jr., who is working with Rabbi Shmuley, clearly in the pocket of Israel. | ||
Maybe it's blackmail. | ||
In any case. | ||
So you're never just getting Trump, it's always the other people that are the problem. | ||
If it was just Trump, I'd maybe feel, I don't know if it would be perfect, but it would be better. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
But you see them all gathered together, and it reminds you, this is what we are working with here. | ||
This is what we got. | ||
And that is not, that's the future on the dais right there. | ||
At the dais is the future of the GOP. That's Mike Johnson and Vance. | ||
You have a techno-libertarian on one side, or I should say a protege of the techno-libertarians. | ||
He claims to be NatCon. | ||
On the other side, he got Mike Johnson. | ||
Very mainstream, typical conservative. | ||
It's not looking good. | ||
You'd think after 10 years of MAGA, there would be more nationalists. | ||
In the GOP that have risen through the ranks. | ||
You'd like to see better people, different people up on the stage. | ||
You'd like to see institutionalization of Trump's ideological realignment. | ||
Instead, you get the usual suspects. | ||
So, anyway, we're still waiting for Trump. | ||
He's a little bit late. | ||
He's like me. | ||
Ten minutes late. | ||
unidentified
|
But it's going to be a good speech. | |
Well, we'll see. | ||
I think it's going to be pretty standard stuff. | ||
I don't think it's going to be that crazy. | ||
I'd be interested to see how he plays it, if he's going to play unifier, if he's going to unite the country around the agenda and make some concessions to people in the middle. | ||
I'm sure he'll talk about common sense. | ||
They'll frame it that way. | ||
Cutting spending. | ||
We're going bankrupt. | ||
This is common sense. | ||
Or if he'll be aggressive and say that he has a mandate to govern, he's reforming the executive, he's pushing his agenda through the legislative branch, through Congress, because he won. | ||
Because he won the popular vote, he won an electoral college landslide. | ||
Therefore, it is his mandate. | ||
He has the people's mandate, the popular mandate, to do the things that... | ||
Usual suspects are preventing him from doing or trying to through the court system, through media slander, through congressional gridlock. | ||
So we'll see how he plays it, if it's going to be more or less aggressive. | ||
But I think we're going to hear a lot of talk about common sense. | ||
It's not a hard right agenda. | ||
This is just what we need to do. | ||
I'm sure he'll use the popular mandate to bolster that. | ||
I'm sure he'll tout the success at the border. | ||
That's maybe the biggest success. | ||
To his credit, so I've been pretty negative, but I will say in Trump's defense, they have closed the border. | ||
In February, they recorded 8,000 apprehensions at the southern border, which is, if you know the numbers, it's unbelievable. | ||
The numbers under Biden were 300,000 apprehensions. | ||
That means 300,000 illegals surrendering at a port of entry to be caught and released into the country. | ||
It was 300,000 every month under Biden. | ||
The previous high was like 150,000 under Trump in his first term back in 2019. So 8,000 is pretty remarkable. | ||
That means the border's effectively closed. | ||
Now, there are some caveats. | ||
There are more gotaways now. | ||
The GOAT! The GOAT! What's | ||
What's the face? | ||
unidentified
|
She's so stoic. | |
Thank you, Mr. President. | ||
He's looking good. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude, look at her. | |
You see her stupid sign? | ||
This is not normal. | ||
What a stupid bitch. | ||
There's Marjorie Green with the hat on. | ||
What a chud. | ||
The MAGA hat on is such a pick-me move. | ||
Look, look, Trum, I got my hat on. | ||
Like, have a little decorum, you fucking hillbilly. | ||
Have a little decorum. | ||
Have a little respect. | ||
You're wearing a hat on in the chamber during the address. | ||
Look, I got my hat on. | ||
Look at me. | ||
Look, I got the t-shirt. | ||
Like, really? | ||
I'm so sick of that hillbilly, I can't even tell you. | ||
unidentified
|
Have a little respect. | |
But she's such a pick-me. | ||
unidentified
|
That's such a pick-me. | |
That's like zip it up when you're done doing tricks on it. | ||
unidentified
|
I love when they're taking pictures of him. | |
I love when they're taking pictures of him. | ||
Making his way through. | ||
unidentified
|
He's looking great. | |
He's got to give it to him. | ||
The guy's 100 years old and he looks fantastic. | ||
Especially given what he's been through. | ||
Normally presidents age and they haven't been through half of what he's been through. | ||
He's been shot. | ||
He's been indicted. | ||
Not to glaze. | ||
I know a lot of the Glazers say that, but I can't deny he's like an unbelievable phenom in terms of energy. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Making his way through. . | ||
Look at Really dude What a pig Alright here we go Thank you | ||
Thank you Who's this girl? | ||
What does the pink mean? | ||
I don't even... | ||
It's always a statement, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Oh my gosh, dude. | ||
Who's that on the right? | ||
What is that? | ||
You got Shapiro, though. | ||
That's nuts. | ||
That's crazy that Shapiro's there. | ||
It's a great honor. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Speaker Johnson, Vice President Vance, the First Lady of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
I love her aura. | |
Iconic. | ||
She's iconic. | ||
Members of the United States Congress, thank you very much. | ||
And to my fellow citizens, America is back. | ||
unidentified
|
Doesn't feel bad. | |
USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! | ||
Six weeks ago, I stood beneath the dome of this Capitol and proclaimed the dawn of the Golden Age of America. | ||
From that moment on, it has been nothing but swift and unrelenting action to usher in the greatest and most successful era in the history of our country. | ||
We have accomplished more in 43 days than most administrations. | ||
Accomplished in four years or eight years, and we are just getting started. | ||
unidentified
|
Seems tired. | |
Hair's a little disheveled. | ||
Seems a little tired. | ||
Oh, brother. | ||
at least wearing a suit tonight. | ||
I return to this chamber tonight to report That America's momentum is back, our spirit is back, our pride is back, our confidence is back, and the American dream is surging bigger and better than ever before. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at this ugly pig behind him. | |
The American dream is unstoppable, and our country is on the verge of a comeback, the likes of which the world has never witnessed, and perhaps... | ||
We'll never witness again. | ||
There's never been anything like it. | ||
The presidential election of November 5th was a mandate like has not been seen in many decades. | ||
we won all seven swing states, giving us an electoral college victory of 312 votes. | ||
We won the popular vote by big numbers and won counties in our country. | ||
unidentified
|
What's going on? | |
Heckler? | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Look at this guy. | ||
USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! And one county's in our country, 2,700 to 525. to 525. | ||
Love that. | ||
...more Republican. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at this. | |
Now, for the first time in modern history, more Americans believe that our country is headed in the right direction than the wrong direction. | ||
In fact, it's an astonishing record. | ||
27-point swing the most ever. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a congressman. | |
Why are they not getting this guy out of there? | ||
Likewise... | ||
unidentified
|
He's still there! | |
Small business optimism, so its single largest one-month gain ever recorded, a 41-point jump. | ||
unidentified
|
Members are directed to uphold and maintain decorum in the House and to cease any further disruptions. | |
Get this fucker out of there. | ||
unidentified
|
Members are engaging and willful in continuing breach of decorum, and the chair is prepared to direct the sergeant-at-arms to restore order. | |
Yeah, get him out! | ||
What a joke. | ||
That's so typical, isn't it? | ||
Look at this piece of shit. | ||
I'd love to see him dragged out of there. | ||
Take your seat, sir. | ||
Take your seat. | ||
Finding that members continue to engage in willful and concerted disruption of proper decorum, the chair now directs the sergeant-at-arms to restore the order. | ||
Let's go. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's go. | |
Okay, let's fucking get it. | ||
Let's go. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Time to go. | ||
Time to go, thug. | ||
What an ignoramus. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, time to go, piece of shit. | |
What a joke. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, bye. . | |
Members are directed to uphold and maintain decorum in the House. | ||
Mr. President, continue. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Over the past six weeks, I have signed nearly 100 executive orders. | ||
And taken more than 400 executive actions, a record, to restore common sense, safety, optimism, and wealth all across our wonderful land. | ||
The people elected me to do the job, and I'm doing it. | ||
unidentified
|
That's awesome, though. | |
It started with the heckler getting thrown out, and he's black, too. | ||
Kind of a go-to way to start, throwing out a black guy. | ||
He's thrown out of black, hopefully. | ||
In fact, In fact, it has been stated by many that the first month of our presidency -- it's our presidency -- is the most successful in the history of our nation. | ||
unidentified
|
By many. | |
He's pissed. | ||
Look at him. | ||
He's furious. | ||
Look at that. | ||
Dude, you know what? | ||
And what makes it even more impressive is that... | ||
Do you know who number two is? | ||
George Washington. | ||
How about that? | ||
unidentified
|
Love it. | |
I don't know about that list, but we'll take it. | ||
Within hours of taking the oath of office, I declared a national emergency on our southern border, and I deployed the U.S. military and border patrol to repel the invasion of our country. | ||
And what a job they've done. | ||
As a result... | ||
I just, like, predicted the whole address. | ||
unidentified
|
not a hard prediction, but still. | |
These Democrats are making me like that. | ||
They heard my words and they chose not to come. | ||
Much easier that way. | ||
In comparison, under Joe Biden, the worst president in American history, there were hundreds of thousands of illegal crossings a month, and virtually all of them, including murderers, drug dealers, gang members, and people from mental institutions and insane asylums, were released into our country. | ||
Who would want to do that? | ||
This is my fifth such speech to Congress. | ||
And once again, I look at the Democrats in front of me, and I realize there is absolutely nothing I can say to make them happy or to make them stand or smile or applaud. | ||
Nothing I can do. | ||
I could find a cure to the most devastating disease, a disease that would wipe out entire nations or announce the answers to the greatest economy in history or the stoppage of crime to the lowest levels ever recorded. | ||
And these people sitting right here will not clap, will not stand and certainly will not cheer for these astronomical achievements. | ||
They won't do it no matter what. - Awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
That's awesome. | |
That's awesome. | ||
Love it. | ||
That was pretty smart. | ||
That was a great call out. | ||
So, Democrats sitting before me, for just this one night, why not join us in celebrating so many incredible wins for America? | ||
For the good of our nation, let's work together and let's truly make America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at this box. | |
Every day my administration is fighting to deliver the change America needs to bring a future that America deserves. | ||
And we're doing it. | ||
This is a time for big dreams and bold action. | ||
Upon taking office, I imposed an immediate freeze on all federal hiring, a freeze on all new federal regulations, and a freeze on all foreign aid. | ||
unidentified
|
Not all. | |
Not all. | ||
I terminated the ridiculous Green News scam. | ||
I withdrew from the unfair Paris Climate Accord, which was costing us trillions of dollars that other countries were not paying. | ||
I withdrew from the Corrupt World Health Organization. | ||
And I also withdrew from the anti-American U.N. Human Rights Council. | ||
We ended all of Biden's environmental restrictions that were making our country far less safe and totally unaffordable. | ||
And importantly, we ended the last administration's insane electric vehicle mandate. | ||
saving our autoworkers and companies from economic destruction. | ||
To unshackle our economy, I have directed that for every one new regulation, I have directed that for every one new regulation, 10 old regulations must be eliminated. | ||
just like I did in my very successful first term. | ||
And in that first term, we set records on ending unnecessary rules and regulations like no other president had done before. | ||
We ordered all federal workers to return to the office. | ||
They will either show up for work, in person, or be removed from their job. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my gosh. | |
With this one. | ||
What an idiot. | ||
And we've ended weaponized government where, as an example, a sitting president is allowed to viciously prosecute his political opponent, like me. | ||
How did that work out? | ||
Not too good. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's go. | |
Let's fucking go. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Look at these morons. | ||
And I've stopped all government censorship and brought back free speech in America. | ||
And two days ago, I signed an order making English the official language of the United States of America. | ||
I renamed the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America. | ||
And likewise, I renamed for a great president, William McKinley, Mount McKinley again. | ||
Beautiful Alaska. | ||
We've ended the tyranny of so-called diversity, equity and inclusion policies all across the entire federal government and indeed the private sector and our military. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, my God. | |
Really? | ||
And our country will be woke no longer. | ||
We believe that whether you are a doctor, an accountant, a lawyer, or an air traffic controller, you should be hired and promoted based on skill and you should be hired and promoted based on skill and competence, not race or gender. | ||
Very important. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at this nutjob. | |
You can see it in her eyes. | ||
She's crazy. | ||
You should be hired based on merit. | ||
And the Supreme Court, in a brave and very powerful decision, has allowed us to do so. | ||
unidentified
|
Very powerful. | |
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
A very powerful decision. | ||
We have removed the poison of critical race theory from our public schools. | ||
And I signed an order making it the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders, male and female. | ||
I also signed an executive order to ban men from playing in women's sports. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Look at this. | ||
Look at this. | ||
Who's that woman? | ||
She looks like a freak. | ||
Oh, that's not cool. that's not cool. | ||
Like she's never seen before. | ||
She's never seen anything like it. | ||
Peyton is here tonight in the gallery, and Peyton, from now on, schools will kick the men off the girls' team, or they will lose all federal funding. | ||
unidentified
|
That's not funny. | |
She's there because some tranny spiked a volleyball and it knocked her out. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
That doesn't even sound real. | ||
That's like the plot of Lady Ballers. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
She got choke slams in the all-female WWE. If you really want to see numbers, just take a look at what happened in the women's boxing, weightlifting, track and field, swimming, or cycling, where a male recently finished a long-distance race. | ||
Five hours and 14 minutes. | ||
Ahead of a woman for a new record by five hours. | ||
Broke the record by five hours. | ||
It's demeaning for women, and it's very bad for our country. | ||
we're not going to put up with it any longer. | ||
unidentified
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Why does she look like that? | |
What I have just described is only a small fraction of the common sense revolution that is now, because of us, sweeping the entire world. | ||
Common sense has become a common theme. | ||
And we will never go back. | ||
Never. | ||
Ever going to let that happen. | ||
unidentified
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Love that. | |
Among my very highest priorities is to rescue our economy and get dramatic and immediate relief to working families. | ||
As you know, we inherited from the last administration an economic catastrophe and an inflation nightmare. | ||
Their policies drove up energy prices, pushed up grocery costs, and drove the necessities of life out of reach for millions and millions of Americans. | ||
They've never had anything like it. | ||
We suffered the worst inflation in 48 years, but perhaps even in the history of our country. | ||
They're not sure. | ||
As president, I'm fighting every day to reverse this damage and make America affordable again. | ||
unidentified
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The signs are really obnoxious. | |
Joe Biden especially let the price of eggs get out of control. | ||
The egg price is out of control. | ||
And we're working hard to get it back down. | ||
Secretary, do a good job on that. | ||
You inherited a total mess from the previous administration. | ||
Do a good job. | ||
A major focus of our fight to defeat inflation is rapidly reducing the cost of energy. | ||
The previous administration cut the number of new oil and gas leases by 95%, slowed pipeline construction to a halt, and closed more than 100 power plants. | ||
We are opening up many of those power plants right now. | ||
unidentified
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And frankly, we have never seen anything like it. | |
That's why on my first day in office, I declared a national energy emergency. | ||
As you've heard me say many times, we have more liquid gold under our feet than any nation on Earth, and by far. | ||
And now, I fully authorize the most talented team ever assembled to go and get it. | ||
It's called Drill Baby Drill. | ||
My administration is also working on a gigantic natural gas pipeline in Alaska, among the largest in the world, where Japan, South Korea, and other nations want to be our partner with investments of trillions of dollars each. | ||
There's never been anything like that one. | ||
It will be truly spectacular. | ||
It's all set to go. | ||
The permitting is gotten. | ||
And later this week, I will also take historic action to dramatically expand production. | ||
of critical minerals and rare earths here in the USA. To further combat inflation, we will not only be reducing the cost of energy, but we'll be ending the flagrant waste of taxpayer dollars. | ||
And to that end, I have created the brand new Department of Government Efficiency. | ||
unidentified
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Goj. | |
Perhaps you've heard of it. | ||
unidentified
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Perhaps. | |
Did he say Goge? | ||
Which is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight. | ||
unidentified
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He is really funny. | |
Look at this, bitch. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
Thank you, Elon. | ||
unidentified
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He makes me laugh, even though... | |
He didn't need this. | ||
He didn't need this. | ||
Even though we disagree on some things. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
We appreciate it. | ||
Everybody here, even this side, appreciates it, I believe. | ||
unidentified
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Love the bait. | |
Love the rage bait. | ||
Just listen to some of the appalling waste. | ||
We have already identified $22 billion from HHS to provide free housing and cars for illegal aliens. | ||
$45 million for diversity, equity, and inclusion scholarships in Burma. | ||
$40 million to improve the social and economic inclusion of sedentary migrants. | ||
Nobody knows what that is. | ||
$8 million to promote LGBTQI plus in the African nation of Lesotho, which nobody has ever heard of. | ||
$60 million for indigenous peoples and Afro-Colombian empowerment in Central America. | ||
$60 million. | ||
$8 million for making mice transgender. | ||
This is real. | ||
$32 million for a left-wing propaganda operation in Moldova. | ||
$10 million for male circumcision in Mozambique. | ||
$20 million for the Arab Sesame Street in the Middle East. | ||
It's a program. | ||
$20 million for a program. | ||
$1.9 billion to recently created decarbonization of Homes Committee. | ||
Headed up, and we know she's involved. | ||
Just at the last moment, the money was passed over by a woman named Stacey Abrams. | ||
Have you ever heard of her? | ||
A $3.5 million consulting contract for lavish fish monitoring. | ||
$1.5 million for voter confidence in Liberia. | ||
$14 million for social cohesion in Mali. | ||
$59 million for illegal alien hotel rooms in New York City. | ||
He's a real estate developer. | ||
He's done very well. | ||
$250,000 to increase vegan local climate action innovation in Zambia. | ||
$42 million for social and behavior change in Uganda. | ||
$14 million for improving public procurement in Serbia. | ||
$47 million for improving learning outcomes in Asia. | ||
Asia's doing very well with learning. | ||
We don't know what we're doing. | ||
We should use it ourselves. | ||
$101 million for DEI contracts at the Department of Education. | ||
The most ever paid. | ||
Nothing even like it. | ||
Under the Trump administration, all of these scams, and they're far worse, but I didn't think it was appropriate to talk about them. | ||
They're so bad. | ||
Many more have been found out and exposed and swiftly terminated by a group of very intelligent, mostly young people, headed up by Ilana. | ||
We appreciate it. | ||
we found hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud. | ||
And we've taken back the money and reduced our debt to fight inflation and other things. | ||
Taken back a lot of that money. | ||
We got it just in time. | ||
This is just the beginning. | ||
The Government Accountability Office, the federal government office, has estimated annual fraud of over $500 billion in our nation. | ||
And we are working very hard to stop it. | ||
We're going to. | ||
We're also identifying shocking levels of incompetence and probable fraud in the Social Security program for our seniors, and that our seniors and people that we love rely on. | ||
Believe it or not, government databases list 4.7 million Social Security members from people aged 100 to 109 years old. | ||
It lists 3.6 million people from ages 110 to 119. I don't know any of them. | ||
I know some people that are rather elderly, but not quite that elderly. | ||
3.47 million people from ages 120 to 129. 3.9 million people from ages 130 to 139. 3.5 million people from ages 140 to 149. And money is being paid to many of them. | ||
And we're searching right now. | ||
In fact, Pam, good luck. | ||
Good luck. | ||
You're going to find it. | ||
But a lot of money is paid out to people because it just keeps getting paid and paid and nobody does. | ||
And it really hurts Social Security and hurts our country. | ||
1.3 million people from ages 150 to 159 and over 130,000 people according to the Social Security databases are age over. | ||
160 years old. | ||
We have a healthier country than I thought, Bobby. | ||
unidentified
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Man, the speech sucks. | |
Including... | ||
To finish, 1,039 people between the ages of 220 and 229. One person between the age of 240 and 249. And one person is listed at 360 years of age. | ||
More than 100 years. | ||
More than 100 years older than our country. | ||
But we're going to find out where that money's going, and it's not going to be pretty. | ||
by slashing all of the fraud, waste, and theft we can find. | ||
We will defeat inflation, bring down mortgage rates, lower car payments and grocery prices, protect our seniors, and put more money in the pockets of American families. | ||
unidentified
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That was tedious. | |
Thank you. | ||
And today, interest rates took a beautiful drop. | ||
Big, beautiful drop. | ||
It's about time. | ||
And in the near future, I want to do what has not been done in 24 years. | ||
Balance the federal budget. | ||
unidentified
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We're going to balance it. | |
We'll see. | ||
I'm skeptical. | ||
I'm skeptical. | ||
With that goal in mind, we have developed in great detail what we are calling the gold card, which goes on sale very, very soon. | ||
For $5 million, we will allow the most successful job creating people from all over the world to buy a path to U.S. citizenship. | ||
It's like the green card, but better and more sophisticated. | ||
And these people will have to pay tax in our country. | ||
They won't have to pay tax from where they came. | ||
The money that they've made, you wouldn't want to do that, but they have to pay tax, create jobs. | ||
They'll also be taking people out of colleges and paying for them so that we can keep them in our country instead of having them being forced out. | ||
Number one, at the top school, as an example, being forced out and not being allowed to stay and create tremendous numbers of jobs and great success for a company out there. | ||
So while we take out... | ||
The criminals, killers, traffickers, and child predators who are allowed to enter our country under the open-border policy of these people, the Democrats, the Biden administration, the open-border insane policies that you've allowed to destroy our country. | ||
We will now bring in brilliant, hard-working job creating people. | ||
They're going to pay a lot of money, and we're going to reduce our debt with that money. | ||
unidentified
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We don't want them. | |
We don't want them either. | ||
But that's the curse. | ||
That's the deal. | ||
That's what they've been saying for years. | ||
Americans have given us a mandate for bold and profound change. | ||
For nearly 100 years, the federal bureaucracy has grown until it has crushed our freedoms, ballooned our deficits, and held back America's potential in every possible way. | ||
The nation founded by pioneers and risk takers now drowns under millions and millions of pages of regulations and debt. | ||
Approvals that should take 10 days to get instead take 10 years, 15 years, and even 20 years before you're rejected. | ||
Meanwhile, we have hundreds of thousands of federal workers who have not been showing up to work. | ||
My administration will reclaim power from this unaccountable bureaucracy, and we will restore true democracy to America again. | ||
And any federal bureaucrat who resists this change will be removed from office immediately. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Because we are draining the swamp. | ||
It's very simple. | ||
And the days of rule by unelected bureaucrats are over. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, they're laughing because Elon. | |
And the next phase of our plan to deliver the greatest economy in history is for this Congress to pass tax cuts for everybody. | ||
They're in there. | ||
They're waiting for you to vote. | ||
And I'm sure that the people on my right, I don't mean the Republican right, but my right right here, I'm sure you're going to vote for those tax cuts because otherwise I don't believe the people will ever vote you into office. | ||
So I'm doing a big favor by telling you that. | ||
But I know this group is going to be voting for the tech. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
It's a very, very big part of our plan. | ||
We had tremendous success in our first term with it. | ||
A very big part of our plan. | ||
We're seeking permanent income tax cuts all across the board. | ||
and to get urgently needed relief to Americans hit especially hard by inflation. | ||
I'm calling for no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, and no tax on Social Security benefits for our great seniors. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
And I also want to make interest payments on car loans tax deductible, but only if the car is made in America. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
And by the way, we're going to have growth in the auto industry like nobody's ever seen. | ||
Plants are opening up all over the place. | ||
Deals are being made. | ||
Never seen. | ||
That's a combination of the election win and tariffs. | ||
It's a beautiful word, isn't it? | ||
That, along with our other policies, will allow our auto industry to absolutely boom. | ||
It's going to boom. | ||
I spoke to the majors today, all three, the top people, and they're so excited. | ||
In fact... | ||
Already, numerous car companies have announced that they will be building massive automobile plants in America, with Honda just announcing a new plant in Indiana, one of the largest anywhere in the world. | ||
And this has taken place since our great victory on November 5th, a date which will hopefully go down as one of the most important in the history of our country. | ||
Applause In addition, as part of our tax cuts, we want to cut taxes on domestic production and all manufacturing. | ||
And just as we did before, we will provide 100% expensing. | ||
It will be retroactive to January 20th, 2025. And it was one of the main reasons why our tax cuts were so successful in our first term, giving us the most successful economy in the history of our country. | ||
First term. | ||
We had a great first term. | ||
If you don't make your product in America, however, under the Trump administration, you will pay a tariff, and in some cases, a rather large one. | ||
Other countries have used tariffs against us for decades, and now it's our turn to start using them against those other countries. | ||
On average, the European Union, China, Brazil, India, Mexico, and Canada. | ||
Have you heard of them? | ||
And countless other nations charge us tremendously higher tariffs than we charge them. | ||
It's very unfair. | ||
India charges us auto tariffs higher than 100%. | ||
China's average tariff on our products is twice what we charge them. | ||
And South Korea's average tariff is four times higher. | ||
Think of that four times higher. | ||
And we give so much help militarily and in so many other ways to South Korea. | ||
But that's what happens. | ||
This is happening by friend and foe. | ||
This system is not fair to the United States and never was. | ||
And so on April 2nd, I wanted to make it April 1st, but I didn't want to be accused of April Fool's Day. | ||
That's not... | ||
Just one day would cost us a lot of money. | ||
But we're going to do it in April. | ||
I'm a very superstitious person. | ||
April 2nd, reciprocal tariffs kick in. | ||
And whatever they tariff us, other countries, we will tariff them. | ||
That's reciprocal, back and forth. | ||
Whatever they tax us, we will tax them. | ||
If they do non-monetary tariffs... | ||
To keep us out of their market, then we will do non-monetary barriers to keep them out of our market. | ||
There's a lot of that, too. | ||
They don't even allow us in their market. | ||
We will take in trillions and trillions of dollars and create jobs like we have never seen before. | ||
I did it with China and I did it with others, and the Biden administration couldn't do anything about it because there was so much money they couldn't do anything about it. | ||
We have been ripped off for decades by nearly every country on Earth, and we will not let that happen any longer. | ||
unidentified
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It's good. | |
Much has been said over the last three months about Mexico and Canada. | ||
But we have very large deficits with both of them, but even more importantly, they've allowed fentanyl to come into our country at levels never seen before, killing hundreds of thousands of our citizens and many very young, beautiful people destroying families. | ||
Nobody's ever seen anything like it. | ||
They are, in effect, receiving subsidies of hundreds of billions of dollars. | ||
We pay subsidies to Canada. | ||
And to Mexico of hundreds of billions of dollars. | ||
And the United States will not be doing that any longer. | ||
We're not going to do it any longer. | ||
Thanks to our America First policies we're putting into place, we have had $1.7 trillion of new investment in America in just the past few weeks. | ||
The combination of the election... | ||
And our economic policies that people of SoftBank, one of the most brilliant anywhere in the world, announced a $200 billion investment. | ||
OpenAI and Oracle, Larry Ellison, announced $500 billion investment, which they wouldn't have done if Kamala had won. | ||
Apple announced $500 billion investment. | ||
Called me. | ||
He said, I cannot spend it fast enough. | ||
It's going to be much higher than that, I believe. | ||
They'll be building their plants here instead of in China. | ||
And just yesterday, Taiwan, semiconductor, the biggest in the world, most powerful in the world, has a tremendous amount, 97% of the market, announced a $165 billion investment to build the most powerful chips on Earth right here in the USA. And | ||
we're not giving them any money. | ||
Your CHIPS Act is a horrible, horrible thing. | ||
We give hundreds of billions of dollars, and it doesn't mean a thing. | ||
They take our money and they don't spend it. | ||
All that meant to them, we're giving them no money. | ||
All that was important to them was they didn't want to pay the tariffs, so they came and they're building, and many other companies are coming. | ||
We don't have to give them money. | ||
We just want to protect our businesses and our people. | ||
And they will come because they won't have to pay tariffs if they build in America. | ||
So it's very amazing. | ||
You should get rid of the CHIP Act and whatever's left over, Mr. Speaker, you should use it to reduce debt. | ||
Or any other reason you want to. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Interesting freestyle. | ||
Our new trade policy will also be great for the American farmer. | ||
I love the farmer. | ||
Who will now be selling into our home market, the USA, because nobody is going to be able to compete with you. | ||
Because those goods that come in from other countries and companies, they're really, really in a bad position in so many different ways. | ||
Uninspected. | ||
They may be very dirty and disgusting, and they come in and they pour in, and they hurt our American farmers. | ||
The tariffs will go on agricultural product coming into America, and our farmers starting on April 2nd. | ||
It may be a little bit of an adjustment period. | ||
We had that before when I made the deal with China. | ||
$50 billion of purchases, and I said, just bear with me. | ||
And they did. | ||
They did. | ||
probably have to bear with me again, and this will be even better. | ||
That was great. | ||
The problem with it was that Biden didn't enforce it. | ||
He didn't enforce it. | ||
$50 billion of purchases, and we were doing great, but Biden did not enforce it. | ||
And it hurt our farmers. | ||
But our farmers are going to have a field day right now. | ||
So to our farmers... | ||
Have a lot of fun. | ||
I love you, too. | ||
I love you, too. | ||
It's all going to happen. | ||
unidentified
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Have a lot of fun? | |
And I have also imposed a 25% tariff on foreign aluminum, copper, lumber, and steel. | ||
unidentified
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I'm sleeping. | |
I'm sleeping. | ||
If we don't have, as an example, steel. | ||
This is exhausting. | ||
And lots of other things. | ||
We don't have a military. | ||
And frankly, we just won't have a country very long. | ||
Here today is a proud American steelworker, fantastic person, from Decatur, Alabama, Jeff Denard. | ||
Has been working at the same steel plant for 27 years in a job that has allowed him to serve as the captain of his local volunteer fire department, raise seven children with his beautiful wife, Nicole, and over the years provide a loving home for more than 40 foster children. | ||
So great, Jeff. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Jeff. Jeff. | |
Stories like Jeff's remind us that tariffs are not just about protecting American jobs. | ||
They're about protecting the soul of our country. | ||
Tariffs are about making America rich again and making America great again. | ||
And it's happening, and it will happen rather quickly. | ||
There'll be a little disturbance. | ||
We're okay with that. | ||
It won't be much. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, my gosh. | |
And look where Biden took us. | ||
unidentified
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Tough watch. | |
This is a tough watch. | ||
Jeff, I want to thank you very much. | ||
And I also want to recognize another person who has devoted herself to foster care community. | ||
She worked so hard on it. | ||
A very loving person. | ||
our magnificent First Lady of the United States. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
Melania's work has yielded incredible results, helping prepare our nation's future leaders as they enter the workforce. | ||
Our First Lady is joined by two impressive young women, very impressive. | ||
Haley Ferguson, who benefited from the First Lady's Fostering the Future initiative, and is poised to complete her education and become a teacher. | ||
And Elliston Berry, who became a victim of an illicit, deepfake image produced by a peer. | ||
With Elliston's help, the Senate just passed the Take It Down Act, and this is so important. | ||
Thank you very much, John. | ||
unidentified
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That's nice. | |
Good for her. | ||
Thank you, John. | ||
Thank you all very much. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
And thank you to John Thune and the Senate. | ||
Great job. | ||
To criminalize the publication of such images online is a terrible, terrible thing. | ||
And once it passes the House, I look forward to signing that bill into law. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And I'm going to use that bill for myself, too, if you don't mind. | ||
Because nobody gets treated worse than I do online. | ||
Nobody. | ||
That's great. | ||
Thank you very much to the Senate. | ||
Thank you. | ||
But if we truly care about protecting Americans' children, no step is more crucial than securing America's borders. | ||
Over the past four years, 21 million people poured into the United States. | ||
Many of them were murderers, human traffickers, gang members and other criminals from the streets of dangerous cities all throughout the world because of Joe Biden's insane and very dangerous open-border policies. | ||
They are now strongly embedded in our country, but we are getting them out and getting them out fast. | ||
unidentified
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And I want to thank Tom Holman and Christelle. | |
I want to thank you and Paul of Border Patrol. | ||
I want to thank you. | ||
What a job they've all done, everybody. | ||
Border Patrol, ICE, law enforcement in general is incredible. | ||
We have to take care of our law enforcement. | ||
After -- last year, a brilliant 22-year-old nursing student named Lakin Riley, the best in her a brilliant 22-year-old nursing student named Lakin Riley, the best in her class, admired by everybody, went out for a jog on the campus of the University | ||
That morning, Lakin was viciously attacked, assaulted, beaten, brutalized, and horrifically murdered. | ||
Lakin was stolen from us by a savage illegal alien gang member who was arrested while trespassing across Biden's open southern border. | ||
And then set loose into the United States under the heartless policies of that failed administration. | ||
It was indeed a failed administration. | ||
He had then been arrested and released in a Democrat-run sanctuary city, a disaster, before ending the life of this beautiful young angel. | ||
With us this evening are Lakin's beloved mother, Allison, and her sister, Lauren. | ||
unidentified
|
Last year I told Lakin's grieving parents that we | |
would ensure their daughter would not have died in vain. | ||
That's why the very first bill I signed into law as your 47th president mandates the detention of all dangerous criminal aliens who threaten public safety. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a very strong, powerful act. | |
It's a very powerful act. | ||
Very strong and very powerful law. | ||
It's called the Lakin-Riley Act. | ||
So Allison and Lauren, America will never, ever forget our beautiful Laken Hope Rally. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
. | |
Since taking office, my administration has launched the most sweeping border and immigration crackdown in American history, and we quickly achieved the lowest numbers of illegal border crossers ever recorded. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The media and our friends in the Democrat Party kept saying we needed new legislation. | ||
We must have legislation to secure the border. | ||
But it turned out that all we really needed was a new president. | ||
unidentified
|
Epic. | |
Epic line. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Joe Biden didn't just open our borders. | ||
He flew illegal aliens over them to overwhelm our schools, hospitals, and communities throughout the country. | ||
Entire towns like Aurora, Colorado, and Springfield, Ohio, buckled under the weight of the migrant occupation and corruption like nobody's ever seen before. | ||
Beautiful towns destroyed. | ||
Now just as I promised in my inaugural address, we are achieving the great liberation of America. | ||
But there still is much work to be done. | ||
Here tonight is a woman I have gotten to know, Alexis Ngary from Houston. | ||
Wonderful woman. | ||
Last June, Alexis' 12-year-old daughter, her precious Jocelyn. | ||
Walked to a nearby convenience store. | ||
She was kidnapped, tied up, assaulted for two hours under a bridge and horrifically murdered. | ||
Arrested and charged with this heinous crime are two illegal alien monsters from Venezuela, released into America by the last administration through their ridiculous open border. | ||
The death of this beautiful 12-year-old girl and the agony of her mother and family. | ||
Alexis, I promised we would always remember your daughter, your magnificent daughter. | ||
And earlier tonight, I signed an order keeping my word to you. | ||
One thing I have learned about Jocelyn is that she loved animals so much. | ||
She loved nature. | ||
Across Galveston Bay from where Jocelyn lived in Houston, you'll find a magnificent national wildlife refuge. | ||
A pristine, peaceful, 34,000-acre sanctuary for all of God's creatures on the edge of the Gulf of America. | ||
Alexis, moments ago, I formally renamed that refuge in loving memory of your beautiful daughter, Jocelyn. | ||
So, Mr. Vice President, if you would, may I have the order. | ||
unidentified
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It's a nice moment. | |
Thank you very much. | ||
All three savages charged with Jocelyn and Lakin's murders were members of the Venezuelan prison gang, the toughest gang they say in the world, known as Tren de Aragua. | ||
Two weeks ago, I officially designated this gang along with MS-13 and the bloodthirsty Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Very good. | ||
They are now officially in the same category as ISIS, and that's not good for them. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Countless thousands of these terrorists were welcomed into the U.S. by the Biden administration. | ||
But now every last one will be rounded up and forcibly removed from our country, or, if they're too dangerous, put in jails, standing trial in this country, because we don't want them to come back ever. | ||
With us this evening is a warrior on the front lines of that battle, Border Patrol Agent Roberto Ortiz. | ||
Great guy. | ||
Thank you. | ||
We're patrolling by the Rio Grande near an area known as Cartel Island. | ||
Doesn't sound too nice to me. | ||
When heavily armed gunmen started shooting at them, Roberto saw that his partner was totally exposed at great danger, and he leapt into action, returning fire and providing crucial seconds for his fellow agent to... | ||
Seek safety, and just barely. | ||
I have some of the prints of that event, and it was not good. | ||
Agent Ortiz, we salute you for your great courage and for your line of fire that you took and for the bravery that you showed. | ||
We honor you, and we will always honor you. | ||
Thank you, Roberto, very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Roberto. | |
Thank you. | ||
And I actually got to know him on my many calls to the border. | ||
He's a great, great gentleman. | ||
The territory to the immediate south of our border is now dominated entirely by criminal cartels that murder, rape, torture and exercise total control. | ||
They have total control over a whole nation, posing a grave threat to our national security. | ||
The cartels are waging war on America, and it's time for America to wage war on the cartels. | ||
Five nights ago, Mexican authorities, because of our tariff policies being imposed on them, think of this. | ||
Handed over to us 29 of the biggest cartel leaders in their country. | ||
That has never happened before. | ||
They want to make us happy. | ||
First time ever. | ||
But we need Mexico and Canada to do much more than they've done, and they have to stop the fentanyl and drugs pouring into the USA. They're going to stop it. | ||
I have sent Congress a detailed funding request laying out exactly how we will eliminate these threats to protect our homeland and complete the largest deportation operation in American history, larger even than current record holder, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a moderate man, but someone who believed very strongly in borders. | ||
Americans expect Congress to send me this funding without delay so I can sign it into law. | ||
Mr. Speaker, John Thune, both of you, I hope you're going to be able to do that, Mr. Speaker. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Mr. Leader, thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
And let's get it to me. | ||
I'll sign it so fast, you won't even believe it. | ||
unidentified
|
I just can't. | |
I can't anymore. | ||
I just can't. | ||
It's like being with a relative that's super old and they keep saying the same thing over and over. | ||
And as we reclaim our sovereignty, we must also bring back law and order to our cities and towns. | ||
In recent years, our justice system has been turned upside down by radical left lunatics. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Many jurisdictions virtually seized enforcing the law against dangerous repeat offenders while weaponizing law enforcement against political opponents like me. | ||
My administration has acted swiftly and decisively to restore fair, equal, and impartial justice under the constitutional rule of law, starting at the FBI and the DOJ. Pam, good luck. | ||
Cash, wherever you may be, good luck. | ||
Good luck. | ||
Pam Bond. | ||
Good luck. | ||
So important. | ||
Gonna do a great job. | ||
Cash, thank you. | ||
Thank you, Kesh. | ||
They've already started very strongly. | ||
They're going to do a fantastic job. | ||
You're going to be very proud of them. | ||
We're also once again giving our police officers the support, protection, and respect they so dearly deserve. | ||
They have to get it. | ||
They have such a hard, dangerous job, but we're going to make it less dangerous. | ||
The problem is the bad guys don't respect the law, but they're starting to respect it, and they soon will respect it. | ||
This also includes our great fire departments throughout the country. | ||
Our firemen and women are unbelievable people, and I will never forget them. | ||
It's these, like, verbal tics. | ||
I just can't. | ||
They voted for me in record numbers. | ||
It's so hard to listen to for hours. | ||
One year ago this month, 31-year-old New York police officer Jonathan Diller, unbelievably wonderful person 31-year-old New York police officer Jonathan Diller, unbelievably wonderful person and a great officer, was gunned down at a traffic stop on Long Island. | ||
I went to his funeral. | ||
The vicious criminal charged with his murder had 21 prior arrests, and they were rough arrests. | ||
He was a real bad one. | ||
The thug in the seat next to him had 14 prior arrests and went by the name of Killer. | ||
He was Killer. | ||
He killed other people, they say, a lot of them. | ||
I attended Officer Diller's service, and when I met his wife and one-year-old son, Ryan, it was very inspirational, actually. | ||
His widow's name is Stephanie, and she is here tonight. | ||
Stephanie, thank you very much, Stephanie. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Stephanie, we're going to make we're going to make sure that Ryan knows his dad was a true hero, New York's finest. | ||
And we're going to get these cold-blooded killers and repeat offenders off our streets, and we're going to do it fast. | ||
Got to stop it. | ||
They get out with 28 arrests. | ||
They push people into subway trains. | ||
They hit people over the head, back of the head with baseball bats. | ||
We got to get them out of here. | ||
I've already signed an executive order requiring a mandatory death penalty for anyone who murders a police officer. | ||
And tonight, I'm asking Congress to pass that policy into permanent law. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm also asking Congress to pass that policy into permanent law. | |
For a new crime bill getting tough on repeat offenders while enhancing protections for America's police officers so they can do their jobs without fear of their lives being totally destroyed. | ||
They don't want to be killed. | ||
We're not going to let them be killed. | ||
Joining us in the gallery tonight is a young man who truly loves our police. | ||
His name is DJ Daniel. | ||
He is 13 years old, and he has always dreamed of becoming a police officer. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
So what is that, like half black, half Mexican? | ||
All right. | ||
Alright. | ||
But in 2018, DJ was diagnosed with brain cancer. | ||
The doctors gave him five months at most to live. | ||
That was more than six years ago. | ||
Since that time, DJ and his dad have been on a quest to make his dream come true. | ||
And DJ has been sworn in as an honorary law enforcement officer actually a number of times before. | ||
The police love him. | ||
The police departments love him. | ||
And tonight, D.J., we're going to do you the biggest honor of them all. | ||
I am asking our new Secret Service director. | ||
Sean Curran to officially make you an agent of the United States Secret Service. | ||
unidentified
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That's cute. | |
All right. | ||
Aw. | ||
That's nice. | ||
Thank you, DJ. | ||
DJ's doctors believe his cancer likely came from a chemical he was exposed to when he was younger. | ||
Since 1975, rates of child cancer have increased by more than 40 percent. | ||
Reversing this trend is one of the top priorities for our new presidential commission to make America healthy again, chaired by our new Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. With | ||
the name Kennedy, you would have thought everybody over here would have been cheering. | ||
How quickly they forget. | ||
Our goal is to get toxins out of our environment, poisons out of our food supply, and keep our children healthy and strong. | ||
As an example, not long ago, and you can't even believe these numbers, one in 10,000 children had autism. | ||
One in 10,000. | ||
And now it's 1 in 36. There's something wrong. | ||
1 in 36. Think of that. | ||
So we're going to find out what it is, and there's nobody better than Bobby and all of the people that are working with you. | ||
You have the best to figure out what is going on. | ||
Okay, Bobby? | ||
Good luck. | ||
It's a very important job. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Good job. | |
Thank you. | ||
My administration is also working to protect our children from toxic ideologies in our schools. | ||
A few years ago, January, little John and her husband discovered that their daughter's school had secretly socially transitioned their 13-year-old little girl. | ||
Teachers and administrators conspired to deceive January and her husband while encouraging her daughter to use a new name and pronouns. | ||
They, them pronoun, actually. | ||
All without telling January, who is here tonight and is now a courageous advocate against this form of child abuse. | ||
January, thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Stories like this are why, shortly after taking office, I signed an executive order banning public schools from indoctrinating our children with transgender ideology. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
I also signed an order to cut off all taxpayer funding to any institution that engages in the sexual mutilation of our youth. | ||
And now I want Congress to pass a bill permanently banning and criminalizing sex changes on children and forever ending the lie that any child is trapped in the wrong body. | ||
This is a big lie. | ||
And our message to every child in America is that you are perfect exactly the way God made you. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
It's a good message. | ||
Because we're getting wokeness out of our schools and out of our military, and it's already out, and it's out of our society. | ||
We don't want it. | ||
Wokeness is trouble. | ||
Wokeness is bad. | ||
It's gone. | ||
It's gone. | ||
And we feel so much better for it, don't we? | ||
Don't we feel better? | ||
Our service members won't be activists and ideologues. | ||
They will be fighters and warriors. | ||
They will fight for our country. | ||
And Pete, congratulations. | ||
Secretary of Defense, congratulations. | ||
And he's not big into the woke movement, I can tell you. | ||
I know him well. | ||
I am pleased to report that in January, the U.S. Army had its single best recruiting month in 15 years, and that all armed services are having among the best recruiting results ever in the history of our services. | ||
What a difference. | ||
And you know, it was just a few months ago. | ||
Where the results were exactly the opposite. | ||
We couldn't recruit anywhere. | ||
We couldn't recruit. | ||
Now we're having the best results just about that we've ever had. | ||
What a tremendous turnaround. | ||
It's really a beautiful thing to see. | ||
People love our country again. | ||
It's very simple. | ||
They love our country, and they love being in our military again. | ||
So it's a great thing, and thank you very much. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
unidentified
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Great job. | |
Thank you. | ||
We're joined tonight by a young man, Jason Hartley, who knows the weight of that call of duty. | ||
Jason's father, grandfather, and great-grandfather all wore the uniform. | ||
Jason tragically lost his dad, who was also a Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy when he was just a boy, and now he wants to carry on the family legacy of service. | ||
Jason is a senior in high school, a six-letter varsity athlete, a really good athlete, they say. | ||
a brilliant student with a 4.46, that's good, GPA. | ||
And his greatest dream is to attend the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. | ||
And Jason, that's a very big deal getting in. | ||
That's a hard one to get into. | ||
But I'm pleased to inform you that your application has been accepted. | ||
You will soon be joining the Corb Kiddow. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Jason, you're going to be on the long gray line, Jason. | ||
As Commander-in-Chief, my focus is on building the most powerful military of the future. | ||
As a first step, I'm asking Congress to fund a state-of-the-art Golden Dome Missile Defense Shield to protect our homeland, all made in the USA. Golden Dome. | ||
unidentified
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Of course. | |
Ronald Reagan wanted to do it long ago, but the technology just wasn't there, not even close. | ||
But now we have the technology. | ||
It's incredible, actually. | ||
And other places, they have it. | ||
Israel has it. | ||
Other places have it. | ||
And the United States should have it, too. | ||
Right, Tim? | ||
Right? | ||
They should have it, too. | ||
So I want to thank you. | ||
But it's very important. | ||
This is a... | ||
Very dangerous world. | ||
We should have it. | ||
We want to be protected, and we're going to protect our citizens like never before. | ||
To boost our defense industrial base, we are also going to resurrect the American shipbuilding industry, including commercial shipbuilding and military shipbuilding. | ||
unidentified
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That's good. | |
And for that purpose, I am announcing tonight... | ||
That we will create a new office of shipbuilding in the White House and offer special tax incentives to bring this industry home to America where it belongs. | ||
We used to make so many ships. | ||
We don't make them anymore very much. | ||
We're going to make them very fast, very soon. | ||
It will have a huge impact. | ||
To further enhance our national security, my administration will be reclaiming the Panama Canal. | ||
And we've already started doing it. | ||
Just today, a large American company announced they are buying both ports around the Panama Canal and lots of other things. | ||
unidentified
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I like how he says it's a large American company. | |
I believe that was BlackRock. | ||
The Panama Canal was built by Americans, not for others. | ||
Others could use it. | ||
But it was built at tremendous cost of American blood and treasure. | ||
38,000 workers died. | ||
Building the Panama Canal. | ||
They died of malaria. | ||
They died of snake bites and mosquitoes. | ||
Not a nice place to work. | ||
They paid them very highly to go there, knowing there was a 25% chance that they would die. | ||
The most expensive project also that was ever built in our country's history, if you bring it up to modern-day costs. | ||
It was given away by the Carter administration for $1. | ||
But that agreement has been violated very severely. | ||
We didn't give it to China. | ||
We gave it to Panama, and we're taking it back. | ||
unidentified
|
We're taking it back. | |
And we have Marco Rubio in charge. | ||
Good luck, Marco. | ||
We know who to blame if anything goes wrong. | ||
Marco's been amazing, and he's going to do a great job. | ||
Think of it. | ||
He got 100 votes. | ||
You know, he was approved with actually 99, but the 100th was this gentleman, and I feel very certain. | ||
So let's assume he got 100 votes, and I'm either very, very happy about that or I'm very concerned about it. | ||
He's already proven. | ||
He's a great gentleman. | ||
He's respected by everybody. | ||
And we appreciate you voting for Marco. | ||
He's going to do a fantastic job. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
He's doing a great job. | ||
Great job. | ||
And I also have a message tonight for the incredible people of Greenland. | ||
We strongly support your right to determine your own future. | ||
And if you choose, we welcome you into the United States of America. | ||
We need Greenland for national security and even international security. | ||
And we're working with everybody involved to try and get it. | ||
But we need it really for international world security. | ||
And I think we're going to get it. | ||
One way or the other, we're going to get it. | ||
We will keep you safe. | ||
We will make you rich. | ||
We're going to get it one way or another. | ||
We will take Greenland to heights like you have never thought possible before. | ||
It's a very small population, but very, very large piece of land and very, very important for military security. | ||
America is once again standing strong against the forces of radical Islamic terrorism. | ||
Three and a half years ago, ISIS terrorists killed 13 American service members and countless others. | ||
In the Abbey Gate bombing during the disastrous and incompetent withdrawal from Afghanistan. | ||
Not that they were withdrawing. | ||
It was the way they withdrew. | ||
Perhaps the most embarrassing moment in the history of our country. | ||
Tonight I am pleased to announce that we have just apprehended the top terrorist responsible for that atrocity. | ||
And he is right now on his way here to face the swift... | ||
sword of American justice. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at these idiots. | |
And I want to thank especially the government of Pakistan for helping arrest this monster. | ||
This was a very momentous day for those 13 families, who I actually got to know very well, most of them, whose children were murdered and the many people that were so badly, over 42 people, so badly injured on that fateful day in Afghanistan. | ||
What a horrible day. | ||
Such incompetence was shown. | ||
That when Putin saw what happened, I guess he said, wow, maybe this is my chance. | ||
That's how bad it was. | ||
Should have never happened. | ||
Grossly incompetent people. | ||
I spoke to many of the parents and loved ones, and they're all in our hearts tonight. | ||
Just spoke to them on the phone. | ||
We had a big call. | ||
Every one of them called, and everybody was on the line. | ||
They did nothing but cry with happiness. | ||
They were very happy, as happy as you can be under those circumstances. | ||
Their child, brother, sister, son, daughter was killed for no reason whatsoever. | ||
In the Middle East, we're bringing back our hostages from Gaza. | ||
In my first term, we achieved one of the most groundbreaking peace agreements. | ||
in generations, the Abraham Accords. | ||
And now we're going to build on that foundation to create a more peaceful and prosperous future For the entire region. | ||
A lot of things are happening in the Middle East. | ||
People have been talking about that so much lately with everything going on with Ukraine and Russia. | ||
A lot of things are happening in the Middle East. | ||
It's a rough neighborhood, actually. | ||
I'm also working tirelessly to end the savage conflict in Ukraine. | ||
Millions of Ukrainians and Russians have been needlessly killed or wounded in this horrific and brutal conflict with no end in sight. | ||
The United States has sent hundreds of billions of dollars to support Ukraine's defense with no security, with no anything. | ||
Do you want to keep it going for another five years? | ||
Yeah, you would say Pocahontas says yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Mogged. | |
fucking mogged. | ||
2,000 people are being killed every single week. | ||
More than that. | ||
unidentified
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Love it. | |
They're Russian young people. | ||
They're Ukrainian young people. | ||
They're not Americans. | ||
But I wanted to stop. | ||
Meanwhile, Europe has sadly spent more money buying Russian oil and gas than they have spent on defending Ukraine, by far. | ||
Think of that. | ||
They've spent more buying Russian oil and gas than they have defending. | ||
And we've spent perhaps $350 billion, like taking candy from a baby. | ||
That's what happened. | ||
And they've spent $100 billion. | ||
What a difference that is. | ||
A notion separating us, and they don't. | ||
But we're getting along very well with them, and lots of good things are happening. | ||
Biden has authorized more money in this fight than Europe has spent by billions and billions of dollars. | ||
It's hard to believe that they wouldn't have stopped it and said, at some point, come on, let's equalize. | ||
You've got to be equal to us. | ||
But that didn't happen. | ||
Earlier today, I received an important letter from President Zelensky of Ukraine. | ||
The letter reads, Ukraine is ready to come to the negotiating table as soon as possible to bring lasting peace closer. | ||
Nobody wants peace more than the Ukrainians, he said. | ||
My team and I stand ready to work under President Trump's strong leadership to get a peace that lasts. | ||
We do really value how much America has done to help Ukraine maintain its sovereignty and independence. | ||
Regarding the agreement on minerals and security, Ukraine is ready to sign it at any time that is convenient for you. | ||
I appreciate that he sent this letter. | ||
Just got it a little while ago. | ||
Simultaneously, we've had serious discussions with Russia and have received strong signals that they are ready for peace. | ||
Wouldn't that be beautiful? | ||
It's time to stop this madness. | ||
It's time to halt the killing. | ||
It's time to end this senseless war. | ||
If you want to end wars, you have to talk to both sides. | ||
Nearly four years ago, amid rising tensions, a history teacher named Mark Fogle was detained in Russia. | ||
And sentenced to 14 years in a penal colony. | ||
Rough stuff. | ||
The previous administration barely lifted a finger to help him. | ||
They knew he was innocent, but they had no idea where to begin. | ||
But last summer I promised his 95-year-old mother, Malfime, that we would bring her boy safely back home. | ||
After 22 days in office, I did just that. | ||
and they are here tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
To Mark and his great mom, we are delighted to have you safe and sound and with us. | ||
As fate would have it, Mark Fogle was born in a small rural town in Butler, Pennsylvania. | ||
Have you heard of it? | ||
Where his mother has lived for the past 78 years. | ||
I just happened to go there last July 13th for a rally. | ||
That was not pleasant. | ||
And that is where I met his beautiful mom right before I walked onto that stage. | ||
And I told her I would not forget what she said about her son. | ||
And I never did, did I? Never forgot. | ||
Less than 10 minutes later, at that same rally, gunfire rang out and a sick and deranged assassin unloaded eight bullets from his sniper's perch into a crowd of many thousands of people. | ||
My life was saved by a fraction of an inch, but some were not so lucky. | ||
Corey Comparator was a firefighter, a veteran, a Christian, a husband, a devoted father, and above all, a protector. | ||
When the sound of gunshots pierced, the air was a horrible sound. | ||
Corey knew instantly what it was and what to do. | ||
He threw himself on top of his wife and daughters and shielded them from the bullets with his own body. | ||
Corey was hit really hard. | ||
You know the story from there. | ||
He sacrificed his life to save theirs. | ||
Two others, very fine people, were also seriously hit. | ||
But thankfully, with the help of two great country doctors, we thought they were gone and they were saved, so those doctors had great talent. | ||
We're joined by Corey's wife, Helen, who was his high school sweetheart, and their two beloved daughters, Allison and Kaylee. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
They don't seem happy to be there. | ||
Thank you. | ||
To Helen, Allison, and Kaylee, Corey is looking down on his three beautiful ladies right now, and he is cheering you on. | ||
He loves you. | ||
He is cheering you on. | ||
Corey was taken from us much too soon, but his destiny was to leave us all with a shining example of the selfless devotion of a true American patriot. | ||
It was love like Cory's that built our country, and it's love like Cory's that is going to make our country more majestic than ever before. | ||
I believe that my life was saved that day in Butler for a very good reason. | ||
I was saved by God to make America great again. | ||
I believe that. | ||
unidentified
|
They don't like that. | |
Yeah, they are not happy about that. | ||
Well, their dad got killed. | ||
They're probably thinking it should have been you. | ||
That's probably what they're thinking. | ||
Those are probably the intrusive thoughts. | ||
Not to be inappropriate, but, you know. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
From the patriots of Lexington and Concord to the heroes of Gettysburg and Normandy, from the warriors who crossed the Delaware to the trailblazers who climbed the Rockies, and from the legends who... | ||
Soared at Kitty Hawk to the astronauts who touched the moon. | ||
Americans have always been the people who defied all arts, transcended all dangers, made the most extraordinary sacrifices, and did whatever it took to defend our children, our country, and our freedom. | ||
And as we have seen in this chamber tonight, that same strength, faith, love, and spirit is still alive and thriving in the hearts of The American people. | ||
Despite the best efforts of those who would try to censor us, silence us, break us, destroy us, Americans are today a proud, free, sovereign and independent nation that will always be free and we will fight for it till death. | ||
We will never let anything happen to our beloved country because we are a country of doers, dreamers, fighters and survivors. | ||
Our ancestors crossed a vast ocean, strode into the unknown wilderness and carved their fortunes from the rock and soil part of a perilous and very dangerous frontier. | ||
carve their fortunes from the rock and soil part of a perilous and very dangerous frontier. | ||
They chased our destiny across a boundless continent. | ||
They chased our destiny across a boundless continent. | ||
They built the railroads, laid the highways and graced the world with American marvels like the Empire State Building, the mighty Hoover Dam and the towering Golden Gate Bridge. | ||
They built the railroads, laid the highways and graced the world with American marvels like the Empire State Building, the mighty Hoover Dam and the towering Golden Gate Bridge. | ||
They lit the world with electricity, broke free of the force of gravity, fired up the engines of American industry, vanquished the communists, fascists and Marxists all over the world and gave us countless modern wonders fascists and Marxists all over the world and gave us countless modern wonders sculpted out of iron, | ||
We stand on the shoulders of these pioneers who won and built the modern age, these workers who poured their sweat into the skylines of our cities. | ||
These warriors who shed their blood on fields of battle and gave everything they had for our rights and for our freedom. | ||
Now it is our time to take up the righteous cause of American liberty. | ||
And it is our turn to take America's destiny into our own hands and begin the most thrilling days in the history of our country. | ||
This will be our greatest era. | ||
With God's help over the next four years, we are going to lead this nation even higher, and we are going to forge the freest, most advanced, most dynamic, and most dominant civilization ever to exist on the face of this earth. | ||
We are going to create the highest quality of life, build the safest and wealthiest and healthiest and most vital. | ||
Communities anywhere in the world. | ||
we are going to conquer the vast frontiers of science and we are going to lead humanity into space and plant the American flag on the planet Mars and even far beyond. | ||
And through it all, we are going to rediscover the unstoppable power of the American spirit. | ||
And we are going to renew unlimited promise of the American dream. | ||
every single day we will stand up and we will fight, fight, fight for the country our citizens believe in and for the country our people deserve. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, brother. | |
Thank you. | ||
Fight, fight, fight. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I know what that's from. | ||
Call back. | ||
My fellow Americans, get ready for an incredible future because the golden age of America has only just begun. | ||
It will be like nothing that has ever been seen before. | ||
Thank you. | ||
God bless you. | ||
And God bless America. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Thank you. | ||
All right. | ||
Long speech. | ||
That's a long speech. | ||
There you go. | ||
Well there you have it. | ||
That was Trump's first address to the joint session of Congress. | ||
Technically, his first State of the Union in the second term. | ||
unidentified
|
Almost two hours. | |
So I think we got started around 8.15. | ||
It is now 10 o'clock. | ||
Hour and 45 minute speech. | ||
It was long. | ||
And it was monotonous. | ||
And it was basically everything that we've already heard in every other speech. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Off to an exciting start. | ||
With... | ||
The representative from Texas, Al Green, heckling the president and then being removed from the sergeant at arms forcibly. | ||
Democrats heckled throughout. | ||
A lot of jeering, yelling, laughing. | ||
But Trump overcame some dynamic moments, some news. | ||
We're informed that the leader... | ||
And a conspirator who planned the attack against the soldiers in Afghanistan has been captured. | ||
We got the letter from Zelensky. | ||
Some other dynamic moments. | ||
Secret Service badge for the Mexican kid. | ||
Fat guy that got into West Point. | ||
Signed that bill about the animal sanctuary. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
It's really what you can expect. | ||
So it was all the usual suspects talking about tariffs, talking about the border, doge, tax cuts, law enforcement, the usual. | ||
A lot of it is literally borrowed from speeches from years ago. | ||
Lakin Riley, I know he signed the bill, but that... | ||
unidentified
|
We've been hearing about forever. | |
The whole thing at the end. | ||
I'm so sick of the thing at the end where he does the Our ancestors came across and built the fucking railroads and went to the moon. | ||
How many fucking times are we going to hear that canned corny ass outro? | ||
This total half-ass amateur hour like Half-hearted little history deal. | ||
Who is that for? | ||
Like, you could tell that Trump tells the speech writers, oh, I like that part. | ||
Throw some of that stuff in there at the end. | ||
I like that. | ||
Who is that for? | ||
Is that for, like, idiots? | ||
It's just so amateurish. | ||
He's not a good speaker. | ||
I mean, he was never great at scripted speeches. | ||
He was always a little more entertaining off the cuff. | ||
But these are just becoming unbearable. | ||
Every time he goes off the teleprompter, he gets lost. | ||
Used to be the case that he would go off the teleprompter and he'd actually deliver like a cogent sidebar that was relevant or funny. | ||
And there were some funny moments in this one. | ||
But these days, he gets off the teleprompter and then just gets lost. | ||
He just starts repeating himself, saying the same, have you ever heard of it? | ||
Like, no one's ever seen. | ||
And like I said during the speech, it's like it reminds you of an old relative. | ||
It reminds me of, like, my parents. | ||
Like, my parents say a lot of the same stuff. | ||
You know, like your grandparents tell the same stories. | ||
It's like that. | ||
And it's just getting really hard to watch. | ||
It was super long. | ||
The reading is just not great. | ||
He struggles to get through these speeches. | ||
I don't know if he has a hard time reading them or he doesn't practice them in advance. | ||
But, I mean, some of these sentences, there's no dynamic delivery. | ||
It's extremely monotone. | ||
And you could tell a lot of times he starts a sentence not knowing where it's going, so the delivery's awkward. | ||
And when you're doing that for an hour and 50 minutes... | ||
It's a little tough. | ||
It's a little tough to get through. | ||
And very dry, too. | ||
The material's very dry. | ||
And I understand what he was trying to do in the middle. | ||
He got into the Doge tax cuts, or the, I should say, the Doge spending cuts. | ||
And I think that was deliberate. | ||
He went through and listed about a dozen or two dozen different items that Doge was cutting. | ||
He went through and listed all the categories of super seniors. | ||
Supercentenarians who are allegedly receiving Social Security benefits and people rolling their eyes. | ||
All right, move on. | ||
The Democrats were jeering. | ||
That was the point. | ||
That was a rhetorical tool. | ||
I don't know how effective that was. | ||
I think it's just tedious. | ||
And I think it's interesting how much of the speech is dedicated now to these other issues. | ||
This is a different platform than what Trump ran on in 2016. In particular, very little discussion of immigration. | ||
It's not that it didn't come up at all. | ||
It did. | ||
But it was a minor part of the speech. | ||
And not only that, but the script on immigration has been flipped. | ||
We thought when Trump ran the first time that we were going to a place where we were going to... | ||
Remove all the immigrants. | ||
That we were going to ban all immigrants from coming here. | ||
We would have a moratorium or net zero. | ||
There would be large deportations. | ||
And now the immigration proposal is flipped where they say something like, we're getting the criminal illegals out and we're getting the good ones in. | ||
That's different. | ||
That's different than what it was 10 years ago. | ||
10 years ago, we thought eventually we'd get to a place where you say, We've had enough. | ||
We're full. | ||
We don't want any more. | ||
On net, we want to be zero or negative on immigration. | ||
Now we're at a place where they're saying, we actually want people to come here, we want more immigration, and we're going to offset it when we remove these criminal illegals. | ||
Not even all illegals, but the ones that have committed crimes. | ||
So, so much of it is about... | ||
Tax and spend, which is never really a big part of the MAGA agenda. | ||
The MAGA agenda was more about tariffs. | ||
We wanted to protect entitlements, didn't really mind the deficits. | ||
Trump had very high deficits. | ||
Now it's all tax and spend. | ||
It's all about fighting those interest rates down. | ||
These tax cuts, they want to cut the tax on tips, corporate tax cut, 100% expensing. | ||
They want a tax credit for car loans. | ||
Cut the tax on overtime on Social Security. | ||
And the tax cuts, you can't have it all ways. | ||
You can't be a budget hawk and want to balance budget. | ||
You can't cut all the waste and abuse. | ||
Also not touch entitlements. | ||
Also do huge tax cuts. | ||
Also do tariffs. | ||
Also get everybody out. | ||
You can't have it all. | ||
There's going to have to be choices. | ||
And that's why I'm concerned about how they're prioritizing these things. | ||
Because if you have to choose between all those items... | ||
And most of the initiative is behind austerity and most of the initiative is behind tax cuts, then that's clearly the priority. | ||
And if we have to keep more immigrants here to keep the austerity, then they'll do that. | ||
Anyway, so that was the State of the Union. | ||
That was a marathon, nearly two hours. | ||
Very chaotic. | ||
There was no decorum this time. | ||
Like I said, it was notable that the Democrats were extremely rowdy. | ||
Started with basically civil disobedience from Al Green, the Democratic congressman from Texas. | ||
He refused to sit down. | ||
He refused to leave. | ||
Very awkward. | ||
I think it put Trump off his game initially. | ||
Trump, you could tell, was furious. | ||
Eventually he was removed by the sergeant at arms and he was kicked out. | ||
And it took a moment for Trump to get his mojo. | ||
But once that happened, it was on. | ||
And then Trump just... | ||
Kept coming back with the drive-by shots at the Democrats repeatedly throughout the night, hitting them, hitting Biden on inflation, on illegal immigrants, gloating about his victory over Kamala, that only he could fix these things. | ||
God saved him to make America great. | ||
And the Democrats were equally as disruptive. | ||
They were screaming, holding up their stupid little signs on their phones. | ||
Some of them were sleeping. | ||
Very disrespectful, very inappropriate. | ||
But you know what? | ||
You know, not for nothing, he sets the tone. | ||
You can't complain about a lack of decorum when you have no decorum. | ||
And I know it goes back 10 years. | ||
I mean, they've been prosecuting this guy. | ||
They've been getting this guy in a lot of trouble. | ||
But the way he's been running the Oval Office, The people that are being brought in, the sort of glibness, you sort of invite that. | ||
I don't know that that's necessarily a good thing. | ||
And I'm not the biggest civility cuck. | ||
I understand to an extent that you want to gloat, and I understand to an extent you want to be frank and you want to speak plainly. | ||
But it is just a circus now. | ||
I mean, there's just no rules. | ||
There's no rules for Elon. | ||
There's no rules for Vance. | ||
No rules for Trump. | ||
No rules for the Democrats. | ||
It's just a total free-for-all. | ||
It's a total joke. | ||
Who could take our country seriously? | ||
How do you watch this? | ||
And you see half the chamber is on their phones, sleeping, holding up stupid signs, screaming, that's our president, screaming out and yelling. | ||
One of them had to be kicked out. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
Aside from that, the speech was unusual, and I, look. | ||
I'm not trying to hate. | ||
This is not me hating. | ||
This is just true. | ||
Trump is not a strong speaker. | ||
He never was. | ||
Trump was good at the rallies. | ||
And you could count on one hand how many speeches that were scripted he really delivered with heart, with gusto. | ||
But especially now, and it's been getting worse every year, these speeches just become brutal. | ||
And I don't know if it's just me. | ||
I'm telling you my reaction. | ||
Other people claim they're still loving this. | ||
I don't know if they're watching the same thing. | ||
But they're so monotonous and so boring. | ||
And it's all the same material. | ||
This is the same material from the inaugural. | ||
This is the same material from... | ||
That was a stump speech. | ||
There's no rhetoric in there. | ||
And like I said, that's the scripted part. | ||
The scripted part is... | ||
unidentified
|
Monotonous. | |
Then he goes off the script and gets lost. | ||
He goes off the script and he's kind of making it up as he goes along. | ||
He used to be able to do it better. | ||
It was funny. | ||
Now he just, I don't know where he's going with a lot of this stuff. | ||
He kind of falls back on these weird verbal tics, these weird patterns. | ||
So it's a tough watch. | ||
And a lot of the phrasing is really awkward. | ||
Like I said, he'll start a sentence, not really know where it's going. | ||
It doesn't really stick the landing. | ||
And they try to put some of these moments in there, and they always do that at the State of the Unions. | ||
They have the kid with cancer, the girl who got a volleyball smashed into her face by a guy. | ||
You got all the wives of people that died and daughters of people that got shot in the head or whatever. | ||
And these are the touching, artful moments. | ||
To me, they just come across really as insincere. | ||
They come across as really insincere and canned and corny and in a cruel and sort of sick way, almost self-conscious of what it is. | ||
There's not even like a good K-Fob. | ||
There's not even a good pretense. | ||
So I really can't stand these speeches anymore. | ||
In terms of just the pure delivery, they're just hard to watch. | ||
They're just tough to watch. | ||
Especially, and Vance sitting behind him is so ugly. | ||
This has got to be the ugliest vice president in American history. | ||
At least before, we didn't like her, but at least before we had Kamala, she looked good. | ||
And at least before he had Mike Pence, he looked like a total normie, but he looked okay. | ||
And Joe Biden is a handsome guy. | ||
This guy, oh my gosh, sitting there for two hours looking at this fat, ugly face, look at him! | ||
And people are trying to portray this guy like he's some kind of Chad. | ||
People are trying to portray, oh, he's got a Chad beard. | ||
He's super masculine. | ||
Look at this fat, ugly, pouty baby face. | ||
He looks like a giant, fat, adult baby with this pouty little face. | ||
Look at this pouty little mouth. | ||
Look at how the fat hangs from his face like that. | ||
Those weird, sunken-in eyes. | ||
It's just, like, offensive. | ||
Nobody wants to look at that. | ||
This, like, shadow on his... | ||
Neck from his neckbeard? | ||
I hate it. | ||
I hate the way he looks. | ||
Trump's looking tired. | ||
Hair's looking thin. | ||
I'm not going to lie, guys. | ||
This was a tough watch. | ||
I'm just about at the end of it in terms of I don't know how much I support any of this anymore. | ||
And you almost feel more sympathetic to the Republicans just because you see the Democrats. | ||
The Democrats are such a freak show. | ||
They're so insane. | ||
They're so ridiculous. | ||
You almost, by default, have to automatically be with the Republicans. | ||
And you're reminded when you see them, when you hear them, it's like, oh, yeah, I'm definitely with the right. | ||
But just on their own, for their own sake, it's getting rough. | ||
It's getting hard to watch. | ||
I don't know, guys. | ||
Is this the golden age? | ||
If that's the golden age, it's not exactly what I had in mind. | ||
My golden age would have a lot less talk about taxes and spending. | ||
It'd have a lot more talk about crime in the cities. | ||
Where's the talk about crime? | ||
There's like a crime wave going on. | ||
It's out of control. | ||
There's just nothing on that. | ||
There's supposed to be a mass deportation. | ||
There's almost nothing on that. | ||
I thought we were supposed to build a border wall. | ||
Wasn't even mentioned. | ||
Like, that's just for openers. | ||
When I think about the biggest problems in the country, I think about crime. | ||
I think about the border and the illegals that are coming here. | ||
The border's okay, but where's the wall? | ||
Where's the deportations? | ||
Crime wasn't even mentioned. | ||
At least, strictly speaking, the kind of crime in, like, Democrat. | ||
Cities, the carjackings, the property crimes, drive-by shootings, things like that. | ||
So that wasn't discussed. | ||
Nothing to be said about social media, nothing to be said about artificial intelligence, hardly. | ||
It's a lot of talk about things that the interests like. | ||
Getting interest rates down, cutting taxes, selling citizenship to rich people. | ||
Critical minerals, rare earths, all this kind of stuff. | ||
So in a way, it's disappointing. | ||
When are we just going to get the goods? | ||
When are we just going to get the goods? | ||
When are we going to get the meat? | ||
We're getting all this other stuff. | ||
And you recognize, by the way, so much of what has been done in the first 45 days was done for this moment, literally. | ||
English isn't going to become the official language of America without a constitutional amendment or a law in Congress. | ||
He signed that executive order so he could say it during this address. | ||
It doesn't really matter that we pulled out of the WHO. We're probably going back. | ||
They just did it for this address. | ||
And so many of the other things are that way. | ||
It's for the headline. | ||
It's so they can run on it. | ||
It's literally to stack the resume for occasions like this. | ||
How much of it is really happening? | ||
How much of that is really what the base wants? | ||
How much of that is really changing anything for that matter? | ||
So I'm disappointed that we're 10 years in and there just doesn't seem to be too much development. | ||
And if anything, it's developing in the wrong direction. | ||
We started this journey 10 years ago and it seemed like it was more sophisticated and more robust and more revolutionary at the start than at the beginning. | ||
At the start, I feel like there were more radical ideas, radical rhetoric. | ||
They were talking about globalism. | ||
The way they framed the dreamers, the DACA recipients, was to say our people have dreams as well. | ||
And there was talk about building physical infrastructure to prevent immigrants from coming here, not just scaring them away by being tough. | ||
And so it seemed almost like 10 years ago was... | ||
It was more hardy, better, more revolutionary, more sophisticated. | ||
Now it's been ground down, it's been sanded down by the interests to be this kind of like big corpo, globo corpo thing with some, with a nice facade, with this pretense that it's for social conservatives or for immigration restrictionists. | ||
It's tax cuts, budget cuts, interest rate cuts, but also we signed an executive order on trannies, but also immigration is lower now. | ||
Yeah, that's kind of too little too late. | ||
You know, 10 million people came in in four years. | ||
Now people aren't going to come for four years and they're going to start coming back in the next administration. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I don't love it. | ||
It doesn't excite me. | ||
And I think a lot of the people that are really into this stuff, I think a lot of them are just pretending. | ||
Honestly, the people that are really into this stuff, it's almost a form of self-delusion. | ||
It's a form of everybody's getting together and pretending it's better than it is. | ||
It's a form of collective delusion where everybody says, yep, yep, this is just what I wanted. | ||
This is what I voted for. | ||
And it's like, yeah, I didn't vote because none of this stuff really interests me. | ||
We're budget hawks now? | ||
They're talking about balanced budget. | ||
We got to be deficit hawks. | ||
What? | ||
Like, since when? | ||
I know he talked a little bit about that in his first campaign, but that's like Paul Ryan's dream. | ||
That's like Eric Cantor's dream. | ||
Cutting the budget, balancing the budget. | ||
Getting the deficit down, being really concerned, getting interest rates back to zero. | ||
Are you crazy? | ||
Interest rates should be higher. | ||
Getting interest rates back. | ||
They've been zero for 20 years to fuel more speculation, more, a bigger bubble in AI and these tech companies. | ||
What? | ||
unidentified
|
Like... | |
That's not what it was ever supposed to be about. | ||
No mention of a wall, barely any talk about crime. | ||
I mean, what happened to law and order? | ||
It's just interesting. | ||
Getting the free money again, because who does that benefit? | ||
Asset holders and billionaires. | ||
Getting them their free money that they can borrow. | ||
Cutting their taxes, cutting their expenses. | ||
And again, replacing the sum, a small section of the illegal immigrants. | ||
With cheap, high-skilled labor from India or something. | ||
And at the same time, it's not even funny. | ||
Like, it'd be one thing if Trump still had energy and he was still big and forceful. | ||
But you see him, he's in a lot of ways sort of a diminished figure. | ||
And, you know, he still has that fight in him. | ||
Like, you're never going to see him totally crash out. | ||
But this is, compared to the RNC in 2016, compared to some of the speeches he gave at the start, you know, it just, it doesn't really even get you going. | ||
So I just don't know what people are all excited about. | ||
The policies aren't there. | ||
The delivery really is getting tough to watch. | ||
But everybody loves it. | ||
Everybody's happy with what they're getting. | ||
I mean, they just fill up the trough. | ||
They fill it up with slop. | ||
And people go nuts. | ||
And all they have to do, if you ever start to doubt whether what you're getting is really as good as people are saying it is, they just show you the Democrats because that's how they've conditioned you. | ||
If you ever have the nerve to say, yeah, I don't know if I'm in love with what the Republicans are doing, all they have to do is show you the Democrats and you're conditioned to say, oh, I hate that. | ||
Yeah, this is great by comparison. | ||
I don't like Vance. | ||
I don't like Johnson. | ||
The speech was boring. | ||
The stuff that he says now, it's just getting kind of weird. | ||
This weird, like, Canada and Mexico, have you ever heard of that? | ||
What the fuck are you talking about? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Canada and Mexico, ever heard of them? | ||
Butler, Pennsylvania, ever heard of it? | ||
Like, no one's ever heard of before. | ||
Like, what are you talking about? | ||
Can we just, can we be normal? | ||
I almost said, but when the Democrats say this isn't normal, and I see this, and then Elon, it's like, yeah, it kind of isn't normal. | ||
In some ways, Biden was more normal. | ||
When you watched a Biden State of the Union, it was almost a little bit more normal, and he had his problems, obviously. | ||
So it's a little dispiriting, but... | ||
Anyway, so that's the first State of the Union. | ||
We're going to take a look at our super chats and then I'm going to get out of here because it's been a late night. | ||
And I'm exhausted, like mentally exhausted from watching all that. | ||
We don't even need to go over all the different policies because it's everything we've already heard before. | ||
All the greatest hits. | ||
Doge tax cuts. | ||
Lake and Riley. | ||
The swimmer. | ||
Who's the swimmer? | ||
My mom texted me during it. | ||
I said, who is that? | ||
My mom said, that's the swimmer, Riley Gaines. | ||
Lake and Riley, Riley Gaines. | ||
Riley Gaines, the transgender that woke, woke is dead. | ||
We're cutting everyone's taxes. | ||
Wasteful spending. | ||
Social Security's paying people 300 years old. | ||
You know, we sort of have heard all this before. | ||
We've heard it all before. | ||
None of it is terribly exciting. | ||
The few things I thought were good, here's what I thought was good. | ||
And I started to say this and then Trump came in. | ||
Here's the good stuff. | ||
That's the bad. | ||
Here's the good. | ||
The way that Trump called out the Democrats I thought was very smart in the beginning when he said, no matter what I say, no matter what I do, they're never going to clap for me. | ||
And it showed them. | ||
And I thought that was brilliant framing because it just made them look like assholes to set them up like that, to say, no matter what I say, they're going to boo me. | ||
And that's because they're so political and it shows them and they look miserable and angry. | ||
They got their stupid little signs. | ||
I thought that was very smart. | ||
And then to say, I hope maybe they'll just join up with America and be part of the solution. | ||
I thought that was a little weak, but maybe rhetorically smart. | ||
So that was okay. | ||
It's good that he closed the border. | ||
And it's like I said at the beginning of the stream, the one thing you got to give Trump credit for is that he did close the border. | ||
8,000 apprehensions in the month of February, which is unbelievable. | ||
They went from 160,000 in May 2019 up to 350,000 under Biden at the peak in like 2023, 2022, down to 8,000 in one month. | ||
It's unbelievable. | ||
It's unbelievably good. | ||
So that's awesome. | ||
And then aside from that, the stuff on Ukraine is great. | ||
Pushing Zelensky to come to the table to make a deal, I think that was excellent. | ||
Aside from that, not too enthusiastic about the rest of the speech. | ||
I feel like there was one other thing I was trying to remember, but I don't think there was even one other thing that was that great. | ||
And it's interesting, of course, that Ben Shapiro was there. | ||
How about that? | ||
Ben Shapiro. | ||
After all this time, the original never-Trumper. | ||
Remember Ben Shapiro did not vote for Trump in 2016? | ||
Ben Shapiro was a never-Trumper and a harsh critic. | ||
He would go on his show and talk about good Trump, bad Trump. | ||
And now he's an honored guest with his lapdog, Matt Walsh. | ||
And by the way, I don't care how based Matt Walsh is. | ||
As long as he works for Ben Shapiro, he's a bitch. | ||
And he seems like a nice guy. | ||
He seems like, honestly, he wants to be on our side. | ||
Matt Walsh obviously is spiritually with the Groypers. | ||
He wants to be on our side. | ||
He's a Catholic. | ||
He is a monarchist. | ||
He's pro-white. | ||
And he is a little bit critical of Israel. | ||
So clearly... | ||
Spiritually, maybe somewhere deep down, he's with us. | ||
And I give him credit. | ||
He's come a long way. | ||
Years ago, he was making excuses for Ahmaud Arbery. | ||
Remember that? | ||
Remember Ahmaud Arbery? | ||
He was a month before George Floyd. | ||
He got killed by a cop when he was on a construction site with his Timberlands. | ||
And everybody called him a jogger. | ||
Remember, he was out there jogging through a... | ||
Active construction site in his Timberland boots, miles from where he lived. | ||
And Matt Walsh said in 2020, oh, I go to construction sites all the time. | ||
It's what guys do. | ||
That's just a guy thing. | ||
Yeah, because blacks are really into that sort of thing. | ||
Because blacks are really going and checking out construction sites. | ||
And they're Timberlands when they're out on a jog because they're really into work. | ||
They're really into working like that, right? | ||
If you want to say white guys like to do that, if you want to say Italian guys like to do that, Polish guys, you want to say Mexican guys like to do that, I agree. | ||
Oh, but a black guy in his Timberlands in a neighborhood where there's a string of armed robberies and Matt Walsh said, oh, he's probably just jogging and taking a... | ||
So, to his credit, Matt Walsh has come a long way. | ||
Hasn't given anybody else credit. | ||
Doesn't want to throw a bone to the Groypers. | ||
We were on it from the beginning. | ||
But he's finally come to our side. | ||
Took him a long time, but you gotta give him credit. | ||
He's finally showed up. | ||
With that being said, we can't consider him to be anything other than Ben Shapiro's bitch. | ||
When he's showing up alongside him at the State of the Union. | ||
And you want to know why? | ||
Because if Candace Owens could do it, then you can do it. | ||
If Candace Owens, a black woman, if a black woman has more balls to stand up to Ben Shapiro and go it alone and start her own YouTube channel. | ||
If Candace Owens, a black woman, a black female who just had a second kid or a second or third kid, if Candace Owens, who's pregnant, if she has more balls to stand up to Shapiro and flame out a daily wire and burn them severely, And go and get millions of views on our own channel, then so can pussy Matt Walsh and Michael Knowles. | ||
If she can do it, if Brett Cooper could do it, Brett Cooper's like this big and she's a little white girl. | ||
If she could do it and Candace could do it with a child, then Matt Walsh and Michael Knowles, the Catholic-based chads, they could do it too. | ||
They don't have to be holding Ben Shapiro's hand at the State of the Union. | ||
Come on, Matt Walsh. | ||
He's probably got one of those child leashes on. | ||
You know how parents will put a leash on their kids when they take them to the mall? | ||
I wonder if Ben Shapiro's holding that just underneath the barrier, if he's just got that, just so Matt Walsh doesn't go and talk to Thomas Massey. | ||
In case Matt Walsh tries to leave Ben Shapiro's side and maybe talk a little bit with Thomas Massey or maybe talk a little bit with somebody anti-Semitic. | ||
That way Ben Shapiro could just, you know, jerk him back a little bit. | ||
So, and I'm just saying, it's nothing personal. | ||
When Matt Walsh is ready to do the right thing, I will respect him a lot more, and I would even be willing to be friendly with him. | ||
I think he has so much potential. | ||
But not until he ditches Shapiro. | ||
That's just embarrassing. | ||
You should be embarrassed. | ||
Especially because Shapiro is synonymous with... | ||
Out of touch, Israel, Jew-loving, neocon fucking bullshit. | ||
How could you? | ||
It'd be one thing if you're working at Blaze. | ||
At least Glenn Beck is likable. | ||
Glenn Beck, I actually kind of like him in spite of he's a super Zionist. | ||
And you can work at Fox News. | ||
They're obviously super controlled. | ||
But you're with Ben Shapiro. | ||
He's like synonymous with little privileged. | ||
Jew-lover, Israel-loving traitor, and you're standing there like an accessory. | ||
You're standing there with your manicured beard that he paid for as an accessory to Shapiro. | ||
It's a bad look. | ||
It's a bad look, Matt. | ||
And I don't judge. | ||
Well, I do judge. | ||
I don't know what his personal situation is. | ||
Maybe he needs the money. | ||
Maybe he needs the Jewish money to pay him. | ||
And he's got a family, so there's that. | ||
All these wife guys. | ||
They want to be so tough, but they need their money. | ||
They need their stable income. | ||
But we can't take him seriously until he leaves Shapiro. | ||
At this point, it's just embarrassing. | ||
We almost need to start a campaign to get Walsh and Knowles to leave Daily Wire. | ||
Candace left. | ||
Brett Cooper left. | ||
Daily Wire is in flames. | ||
They're done. | ||
They're cooked. | ||
They get no views. | ||
The only thing that's keeping them afloat is Walsh and Knowles. | ||
If Walsh and Knowles stood up, then their game is over. | ||
You know that meme? | ||
If we stood up, then their little game is over. | ||
It's literally if Matt Walsh and Michael Knowles just stood up. | ||
Ben Shapiro and Andrew Klavan and Jeremy Boring, that cocksucker, their game is over. | ||
So I think that it's time for Walsh and Knowles to be brave and do the right thing. | ||
Their base will support them. | ||
Their audience will support them. | ||
I cleared the way. | ||
Candace Owens cleared the way. | ||
Tucker Carlson has done some good in that direction. | ||
Now it's time for Matt Walsh and Michael Knowles to really deliver it, and it'll be a different country. | ||
Our fate, really, it's in their hands. | ||
These Shabbos goys, we need the white men to wake up. | ||
I can't be the only white man doing any heavy lifting. | ||
They say I'm not white. | ||
Let's see the other white guys do some lifting as well. | ||
Let's see Matt Walsh and Michael Knowles do something courageous. | ||
Anyway, so that was really interesting to see them up there. | ||
I wonder if we could find a frame of it because they showed it so briefly. | ||
I think they showed at the very beginning. | ||
Let me see if we can find it. | ||
But the picture's worth a thousand words to see Matt posted up like that right next to him. | ||
Anyway, well, we'll see if we can find it. | ||
But all right, so that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our super chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all that. | ||
That's my hot take on... | ||
The guests, the honored guests. | ||
I would give that joint address like a 4 out of 10. That was like maybe a 5 out of 10. Extremely average. | ||
It wasn't compelling. | ||
It wasn't uplifting. | ||
There wasn't one memorable moment where I said, wow, I really like that line. | ||
Wow, that was really... | ||
I never felt it. | ||
A lot of it just didn't land. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
Maybe you disagree. | ||
But I thought it was exceedingly average. | ||
And I don't like the direction they're going in. | ||
All right. | ||
Thanks for that. | ||
Twice. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
They're fine. | ||
They're fine. | ||
Not my favorite, but they're fine. | ||
My favorite is us. | ||
Well, Hollywood is not particularly... | ||
I mean, there's some Israeli infiltration, but a lot of them are Jewish liberals. | ||
I know. | ||
He endorsed Larry Hogan, who didn't even vote for him in 2024. Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
You're the GOAT. You're the GOAT, Spence. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
No message. | ||
That's not as good, but. | ||
By my metric, he's an immigrant. | ||
So you can say that his ancestors were here, but he wasn't. | ||
His parents weren't. | ||
That's like when Jews say, Israel's our homeland. | ||
It's like, what, 2,000 years ago? | ||
2,000 years ago? | ||
Even before that, because it was under the control of the Roman Empire 2,000 years ago. | ||
So when's the last time they even had a Jewish kingdom? | ||
It was centuries before that. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, if you go back 500 years ago... | |
Okay, but Elon's an immigrant. | ||
Elon wasn't born here. | ||
He didn't come here until later in life. | ||
His parents aren't from here. | ||
I believe his grandparents aren't from here, so... | ||
It doesn't carry over like that, actually. | ||
Have you heard about Gilbert Bijo, the richest man in Haiti? | ||
He's Haiti's only Jew and an oligarch who's basically orchestrating a large part of the gang violence there. | ||
Yeah, it's the same story everywhere. | ||
It's the same story when you go there. | ||
It's the same story when you go to Congo. | ||
It's the same story with all these former colonies because the Jews were running the colonies. | ||
Jeff Martin, purchasing manager at Trinity Western University, sent $10. | ||
I'm all in. | ||
That's it. | ||
I'm all in. | ||
Hey, Lizrael, I am now a full-blown Zionist. | ||
Unironically, Jews win. | ||
This trash doesn't. | ||
This is my last will and testament. | ||
Hey, Lizrael, hail our people. | ||
All right, Jeff Martin. | ||
Yeah, you know, it's a shame. | ||
Jeff Martin doxxed a lot of people. | ||
Jeff Martin, otherwise known as Martin from Twitter, that is a piece of shit who has doxed countless people, countless white people ruthlessly because he's an abominable human being. | ||
So I don't avow doxing when he does it. | ||
I don't avow it when liberal journalists do it. | ||
So I don't support that this journalist is out there doxing people, but I'm also not particularly upset. | ||
When this piece of shit has doxxed young groipers with families and gotten their lives destroyed and hurt white people. | ||
So, as far as I'm concerned, you live by it, you die by it. | ||
It's too bad. | ||
Glorp sent $25. | ||
Listen, Nick, I went to a website meant for purchasing exotic animals. | ||
However, I wanted to purchase as the end ears without the ants. | ||
If that makes sense, I want to have ants. | ||
Much? | ||
They sent me the ants without animal listed on the page. | ||
Let me just say, this story kind of makes me Arthur Morgan while you were Iron Man. | ||
All right. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, we're locking in for the fast. | ||
My least favorite time of the year. | ||
I'm not going to lie. | ||
I know, I know. | ||
You're supposed to like it, but look, I like to eat. | ||
It's hard for me. | ||
Eating is my one indulgence. | ||
It's easy for everybody else to do Lent when... | ||
People drink and smoke cigarettes and they're fucking and stuff and they're doing all kinds of things they're not supposed to be doing. | ||
I have very few vices. | ||
I have very few indulgences. | ||
And one of them is just that I like to eat. | ||
Okay, I like food. | ||
I like ice cream. | ||
I like burgers. | ||
So it's particularly hard on people like me. | ||
Other people are like, I'm going to give up smoking. | ||
It's like, I don't have smoking to give up. | ||
I don't have vaping to give up. | ||
So, fatties, fatties, hardest hit, fatties, fat gluttons and pigs that eat fast food, hardest hit by Lent. | ||
No, but it's actually better. | ||
It's actually good for you, spiritually, and it's actually good for your health. | ||
But, yeah, so I don't know what I'm going to give up. | ||
I've given up so much for the movement. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's hard to choose. | ||
Maybe I'll give up. | ||
It's so hard. | ||
I mean... | ||
I just love everything. | ||
I love ice cream so much. | ||
Can I give up ice cream? | ||
Can I give up soda? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Yeah, I guess you have to. | ||
You have to give up. | ||
unidentified
|
I guess that's the whole point. | |
But it's hard. | ||
It's hard on me. | ||
meeting was in Minecraft and like we lit the DNT around the Minecraft Congress building and they all- Okay. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
Orgroy percent $10. | ||
Here's how we stop VBank. | ||
We do the old hey look over there. | ||
Trick and distract him with pictures of Bobs and Vagene. | ||
This should distract him long enough for him to forget about campaigning. | ||
Bulletproof plan. | ||
What do you think? | ||
If you hire me into AF, I'll personally handle this for you. | ||
That's really funny. | ||
James Mason sent $10. | ||
Who is this guy? | ||
He's got like every meme ever produced on the internet. | ||
Airbnb. | ||
That's good. | ||
Because it's all an attention grab. | ||
And I understand they harassed that guy. | ||
They harassed some guy. | ||
Then the guy pressed them, and then they canceled the whole thing. | ||
They just don't have it in them, you know? | ||
They never do. | ||
They don't have that perseverance. | ||
They don't have that dog in them. | ||
Rick Fuentes sent $10. | ||
Me, Mom. | ||
Dad, I have something to tell you. | ||
I love Hitler, Dad. | ||
We raised you better than that son, Mom. | ||
We're racing a Nazi. | ||
Me, you don't understand. | ||
Just do the math. | ||
He's based. | ||
Hank Schrader sent $10. | ||
Hair looking immaculate tonight. | ||
It's not immaculate. | ||
It's a little better than yesterday. | ||
Willie Geeky 2 sent $10. | ||
Vance is just like us. | ||
Do you see him cracking up behind Trump? | ||
Based. | ||
The astroturfing of Vance is insane. | ||
I just see it all the time on Twitter. | ||
It's so gross, especially when he's such an ugly pig. | ||
He's so ugly and he was so against everything that we stand for just a few years ago. | ||
A few years ago, he's on Twitter saying, Trump is a lying, rapist, Nazi, Hitler, and I'm going to vote third party. | ||
That was like a few years ago. | ||
And now people have invented this meme. | ||
That he's like drinking Mountain Dew Code Red and playing Halo and he's saying nigger on voice chat. | ||
He was writing for David Frum in 2011. Where are you getting this? | ||
In 2011, he was a faggot writing in support of trannies and affirmative action in the Iraq War for David Frum. | ||
He was blogging, talking about how he cries for his transgender friends and he supports them. | ||
This was in 2011. So where are we getting this? | ||
Where are we getting this idea that he was like some based gamer? | ||
People say, oh, he was wearing a Halo t-shirt, drinking Code Red, playing Call of Duty, and imagine what he was saying in the lobby. | ||
No, we know where he was in 2011. He had a different name. | ||
That's first of all. | ||
He went by J.D. Hamill. | ||
He was working for David Frum, a neocon speechwriter from the Bush administration, and his writing supported the Iraq War, environmentalism, affirmative action. | ||
He's writing about how he thought he was gay. | ||
He has this trans friend who he's really supportive of, how he loved Obama, literally writing about how he has just got this heart on Obama, is so intelligent, and Republicans hate him because they're jealous, because they're jealous of how smart he is. | ||
Look it up. | ||
January 2017. I think it's in The Hill. | ||
And I don't know if it was for the New York Times or the Washington Post, but the article was called Barack Obama and Me. | ||
Look it up. | ||
It's archived. | ||
And this is who we're saying is doing Code Red. | ||
He was watching Glee. | ||
He was not playing Halo and drinking Code Red. | ||
He was watching Glee and he was doing poppers, okay? | ||
He was watching Glee. | ||
He was doing Mother Monster at the Lady Gaga concert. | ||
He was dancing to Born This Way in his blonde wig. | ||
I don't even want to hear that. | ||
He's a gamer. | ||
I mean, that's just stolen valor. | ||
Matt Evans served in Blood Gulch. | ||
What did you do? | ||
You don't deserve to wear that uniform. | ||
My friend Matt Evans served in Blood Gulch. | ||
What did you do? | ||
When my friend Matt Evans Zenker was fighting it out in Blood Gulch, Iraq, you were taking pictures. | ||
You were taking pictures and you were watching Glee and you were talking about how you're voting for Obama. | ||
I don't even want to hear it. | ||
So, it's just a load of garbage. | ||
I don't even want to hear that. | ||
I don't even want to hear that. | ||
My friends respawned and died. | ||
They died and respawned over and over again. | ||
While you didn't even have a, you had a fake name. | ||
Code Red. | ||
So yeah, I've just had enough of that. | ||
And all the people that are saying that, they weren't doing that either. | ||
Okay? | ||
They were all freaks too. | ||
You have people like Jack Posobiec. | ||
Dude, Jack Posobiec wasn't a fucking gamer. | ||
Mike Cernovich? | ||
What is he, 60 years old? | ||
What gaming did he do? | ||
Donkey Kong? | ||
You got people like Cernovich and Jack Posobiec astroturfing Vance talking about, he sent me Magic the Gathering cards. | ||
Hey, wrong generation, fucktard. | ||
Okay, we don't care about that. | ||
Magic the Gathering and D&D. That's a bunch of nerd shit for like Gen Xers and Millennials. | ||
That's like Zillennial nonsense. | ||
I'm so sick of it. | ||
I just, uh, uh, This routine they're all doing, it's such a farce. | ||
Okay, I'm a real Zoomer. | ||
I actually played Modern Warfare 2. I actually played World at War, Zombies, Night of the Undead. | ||
We actually played those games. | ||
We actually played Fallout New Vegas. | ||
We actually discovered Dubstep when it came out. | ||
We actually played Minecraft Pocket Edition on our iPad. | ||
I'm an actual iPad kid. | ||
I was the first generation of iPad kids at Stolen Valor. | ||
I got an iPad when I was 12, and I played Minecraft Pocket Edition. | ||
For Jack Posobiec, who's 40 years old, to come in and pretend like he's one of us, it's disgraceful. | ||
And you know who's letting him do it? | ||
Faggots like John Doyle. | ||
John Doyle is like my age. | ||
And he's talking about Blink-182. | ||
Hey, fucking poser, before your time, Blink-182? | ||
These people are all spiritually transgender because they hate themselves. | ||
They're uncomfortable in their own skin. | ||
So they have carefully created, they have fabricated a version of themselves that they've seen on the internet that they like. | ||
So they have come up with this character. | ||
Who listens to Creed and Blink-182 and Tool and Korn and plays Halo and was a gamer and racist but also was like a NatCon, American Moment, brown noser. | ||
And they think that that person, you're not that person. | ||
You're not that person. | ||
Wrong generation. | ||
You're not that person. | ||
So, you know. | ||
Me, I reckon, look, I'm a weird guy. | ||
I am a product of Generation Z. And I can live with the contradictions. | ||
These other people, they want to be, you want to be Blink-182? | ||
Honestly, though, there is something honest about it because Blink-182 is pussy worship music and that's really what defines all of them. | ||
So it's actually fitting, but... | ||
They're all trying to do this character now. | ||
I'm this, like, white, I'm like this white zillennial who listened to Blink and shut the fuck up. | ||
Those people are not into Republican politics. | ||
Those people that were wearing, like, tap-out clothes and were into that kind of stuff, those people were not into Republican politics, okay? | ||
They weren't in speech and debate, you fucking retard. | ||
Those people were smoking weed. | ||
Those people were Obama supporters, actually. | ||
Those people were Redditors. | ||
So you have it all twisted. | ||
That's not what you think it is. | ||
The people that became racist were channers. | ||
The people that became racist were 4chan guys. | ||
They were like libertarians, libertarians, and channers. | ||
Which is sort of like a unique subset. | ||
Totally different, anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Someone says tool is not pussy worship. | ||
I didn't say, I said blink 182, not tool. | ||
Big difference. | ||
So, you didn't hear me. | ||
Reality person sent $10. | ||
The boomer slop isn't hitting. | ||
Sorry for blackpilling, but the initial statement he made about cutting all foreign aid made me sick. | ||
Seeing the Israeli wire crew didn't help either. | ||
Thanks for the show, bro. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Rapist werewolf sent $100. | ||
Richnickercheck and no slash. | ||
Hey, thanks for the big super chat. | ||
Shout out to rich people that give me $100 or more. | ||
If you give me $100 or more, I know that you're rich, and you're awesome, and I thank you for being rich. | ||
I thank you for being smarter than poor people. | ||
I thank you for being smarter than poor people that have to work hard. | ||
So, God bless. | ||
We love you all just a little bit more, but thank you. | ||
I thought that was the meme about the, uh, those like kids that do a podcast. | ||
There's like a meme on TikTok where there's like these 12 year old kids, 14 year old kids. | ||
And they're like, what kind of toppings do you like on your pizza? | ||
I like pepperoni. | ||
I only like cheese. | ||
That's like a meme now. | ||
So I thought that's what you're referring to. | ||
I sent that into my group chat. | ||
I'm like, without me, this is what you idiots would be talking about. | ||
Without me, you guys would be going back and forth talking about, I like beer. | ||
I wear my shirt with one sleeve, with one arm outside of a sleeve. | ||
Little subtweet. | ||
Little subtweet. | ||
My ongoing feud with Brant Wiggins, my ongoing battle with Brant. | ||
No, it's a joke, obviously, but I thought that's what you meant. | ||
I just like plain cheese. | ||
I just like plain cheese pizza. | ||
Every time I try to switch it up... | ||
I just figure I wanted cheese instead, you know? | ||
Like, sometimes I'll do green pepper. | ||
Sometimes I throw spinach on there, Italian beef, sausage. | ||
I'll do different combinations. | ||
I like different cheeses on there, like, I really like goat cheese or feta. | ||
But whenever I try and mess around with the different toppings, I always find that I just prefer the cheese. | ||
It's doing too much, you know? | ||
Cheese pizza's perfect. | ||
You don't need anything else on there. | ||
Home Run Inn has a really good pizza. | ||
The only time I'll get toppings, Home Run Inn has a really good for my Chicago people. | ||
I don't usually go there, but every now and again, they have got one of their specialty pizzas. | ||
It's Roma tomatoes and I want to say it's spinach. | ||
It's like the Nancy's Special or something like that. | ||
I know it's got Roma tomatoes. | ||
I've only gotten it a few times. | ||
It's really good. | ||
It's got this garlic butter crust. | ||
Really good. | ||
But generally speaking, when I order a deep dish, when I order a thin crust, I just do cheese. | ||
Cheese is good enough for me. | ||
I don't like to mess around with all that other stuff. | ||
Whoops, what's going on here? | ||
For me, it's only cheese. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
Thank you. | ||
Thanks for the big super chat. | ||
Hope you have a good lent as well. | ||
You must be rich. | ||
You must be a rich woman. | ||
What do you get in welfare? | ||
No, that's a joke. | ||
No, but I appreciate the big super chat. | ||
Rich, this girl gives me $100 a month. | ||
I don't feel comfortable with it, but I'll take the money. | ||
But yeah, she must be loaded over there. | ||
But likewise, hope you have a good Lent. | ||
Brian Blanco sent $50. | ||
25,000 niggas. | ||
25,000 hard-hitting niggas in the live chat. | ||
I was top three on Rumble. | ||
RSBN was number one. | ||
Timcast was number two. | ||
I was number three on Rumble. | ||
Beating out Benny Johnson, War Room, some of the other big ones. | ||
Easy. | ||
It's easy. | ||
It's easy when you're me. | ||
No, but how about it? | ||
They don't put me on the front page. | ||
They don't pay me. | ||
I don't get any money from Rumble. | ||
And I'm one of their biggest streamers. | ||
Most cancelled man in America. | ||
Sandy Balls sent $10. | ||
Here's another $10 if last chat was stupid slash annoying. | ||
Tie for you, sir. | ||
No, you're doing great. | ||
If we bring back industrial jobs to America while simultaneously reducing our immigrant population, what services would be affected? | ||
Or would this be a part of the multi-generational plan? | ||
If we bring back jobs while reducing our immigrant population, what services would be affected? | ||
What? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
I have no idea what you mean by that. | ||
What do you mean what services would be affected? | ||
Do you even know what you're saying? | ||
Are you hoping that I'm going to fill in the blanks for you? | ||
Because I have no idea what the basis of the question is. | ||
What services would be affected by bringing back jobs to America? | ||
What the fuck are you talking about? | ||
What the fuck are you talking about? | ||
I have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
Insane question. | ||
unidentified
|
Totally insane question. | |
Hey, thank you. | ||
I totally just went over that. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Wow, a lot of super chats from Sandy Balls tonight. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Sorry for going off on Ron. | ||
Ron, I'm sorry I went off on you, but I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
It's kind of irritating me. | ||
So I apologize, but I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
They say they're coming. | ||
I'm not going to hold my breath. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll see. | |
Who's that? | ||
Is that some Asian woman? | ||
Yeah, dude. | ||
It's a tough watch. | ||
Well, and you love that he catches himself. | ||
He goes, he goes, uh, wokeness is bad. | ||
It's trouble. | ||
It's gone. | ||
Cause you have to, he's always like doing this weird, like one upping himself. | ||
Wokeness is really bad, but it's already gone. | ||
Cause we're very strong and very powerful. | ||
Like, so it's this weird, like, look, I don't mean to be that guy, but it's like, There is this weird personality defect. | ||
I love the guy. | ||
I love Trump. | ||
But there's something off there. | ||
And maybe that's what makes him a superhuman. | ||
Maybe that's what makes him a superhero. | ||
That's what makes him unstoppable, unbreakable. | ||
That's what makes him such a champion. | ||
That's what makes him overcome everything. | ||
Like someone who is supernatural. | ||
But there's something a little weird there. | ||
And it's like a weird, like, insecurity, ego thing. | ||
What the Democrats say about him is there is a hint of truth there. | ||
There has to be. | ||
For him to always be like, it's bad. | ||
It's already gone. | ||
Because you can literally see in real time, he almost catches himself and says, problems don't exist in my world. | ||
I overcome all problems. | ||
So he starts to hit, he starts to attack the enemy and say the line, whoa, this is terrible. | ||
But it creates this dilemma where, but the bad things can't exist in his reality where he's the president. | ||
So it's already gone. | ||
It's trouble, it's bad. | ||
Well, it's also already gone. | ||
And it's, we're getting rid of it. | ||
So it's always this weird, like... | ||
You don't tell me what we're going to feel. | ||
It's a very strong and very powerful policy. | ||
Who the fuck talks like this? | ||
It's a very strong, very powerful policy. | ||
Like, who talks like... | ||
Is that just a LARP? And you realize it's not a LARP. Like, this is just a weird human being. | ||
He's a little bit of a weird guy. | ||
I love him. | ||
I love that about him. | ||
He is a little eccentric. | ||
He's a little strange. | ||
It's not an act. | ||
That's clearly who he is, but it's a little – sometimes it's a little bit off-putting. | ||
I'm not going to lie. | ||
It's a little bit disturbing. | ||
I'm not being a hater when I – I'm not being like – because obviously the energy and the perseverance is superhuman. | ||
So whatever it is, it's working. | ||
I'm not knocking it. | ||
I'm just saying he comes with some eccentricities or eccentricity. | ||
I didn't even pronounce that. | ||
Eccentricities. | ||
He's a little eccentric on top of the superpowers. | ||
But that goes with the territory. | ||
I guess you spoke too soon. | ||
Did you watch the stream? | ||
The whole thing. | ||
It's so funny how people watch my stream and half the audience says... | ||
You're so petty and negative and critical. | ||
You won't say anything nice about Trump. | ||
And then the same people, a different half, will say, look at you, cheerleading Trump. | ||
I can't believe it. | ||
Will you pick a side? | ||
It's like, how are people watching the same stream? | ||
What about this was cheerleading? | ||
I think it was pretty even-handed. | ||
I think it was very critical, but I think I also defended the things that were positive. | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
That was a little hard not to laugh. | ||
Not to chuckle. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
She got a volleyball spiked into her face by a guy. | ||
It's horrible. | ||
Like, that's obviously a horrible situation, but... | ||
How do you not laugh a little bit? | ||
It's like, you imagine some, like, jack dude in pigtails. | ||
You imagine some, like, 200-pound beast, 6'2", 200-pound beast in pigtails and makeup, slamming the volleyball, spiking the volleyball like a heat-seeking missile so hard it blows up her fucking head, and she has to get brain surgery, and then she's in Congress. | ||
She's in Congress in a wheelchair. | ||
A tranny spiked a volleyball into my head and now I have brain damage. | ||
We shouldn't make fun of it, but there is something kind of ludicrous about it that's a little bit... | ||
It's so absurd you have to laugh. | ||
There it is! | ||
Dude, look at this. | ||
Look at this. | ||
He's literally doing... | ||
He's literally doing the meme. | ||
First of all, the hat is getting bigger and bigger. | ||
I don't know if you've noticed that, but the hat is now eclipsing his entire scalp. | ||
Yes, very good. | ||
Trump. | ||
I love Donald Trump. | ||
Trump is doing so much for Israel. | ||
Trump. | ||
It's so good to have a pro-Israel president in office. | ||
Oh, I love Donald Trump. | ||
He's the most pro-Israel president we've ever had. | ||
Palestinians. | ||
He's like a Palestinian. | ||
Gaza will be wiped out 2,000 years. | ||
He's literally doing the meme. | ||
He can't help it. | ||
Look at how he does the Kubrick stare. | ||
Look at Matt Walsh. | ||
Matt Walsh is like, I'm just happy to be here. | ||
I'm a stupid white guy. | ||
Very good, President Trump. | ||
Very good. | ||
Our plan is almost complete. | ||
unidentified
|
Literally. | |
Can't help himself. | ||
Can't help himself but to rub his hands together. | ||
Pure evil. | ||
Look at how wicked he is. | ||
Look at how hollow and wicked he is. | ||
And Matt Walsh in tow. | ||
So, so sad. | ||
So pathetic. | ||
If only you knew how bad things really are. | ||
And then she just looks crazy. | ||
What's going on with her? | ||
Too much chlorine? | ||
Huffing chlorine too much? | ||
What's going on here, Crimson Chin? | ||
What's going on with that whole look? | ||
Like I said earlier, I didn't even recognize who that was. | ||
I wasn't following the whole girl swimming scandal or whatever, but... | ||
Yeah, she's looking rough, man. | ||
I don't know what that's all about. | ||
That's a good question. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10. | ||
The Lack and Riley part was actually touching caused the look on the mom's face. | ||
I'm not tearing up, you are tearing up. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10 when he was yapping about the social security age brackets and international spending on random shit was unbearable. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
Yeah, that was tough. | ||
No, no, I think Europe should become a nation. | ||
Don't be mean. | ||
Fuck the guy who posted a bunch of LLLLLLLs every five minutes in the chat. | ||
I am not watching live chat. | ||
Pellegrino sent $10. | ||
So write about Matt Walsh. | ||
Why are blacks like Ye and Candace doing more for white people in the fifth column than white people themselves? | ||
It's a valid question. | ||
How much more money does he need? | ||
Now is the time to take the reins from what Ye has done and speak up. | ||
They're all fucking around. | ||
It's a valid question. | ||
And that's all we're asking. | ||
We're just asking for those people to do a little bit more and do the right thing. | ||
And they say, oh, you supported a bipolar black guy. | ||
It's like, okay, but you're a pussy coward that won't talk about Jews. | ||
So you're damn right. | ||
I'll support Candace Owens and yay. | ||
And I'll support people. | ||
Andrew Tate, people that have the balls to speak up, you're damn right. | ||
People go, yeah, well, he's a born and a black guy. | ||
Yeah, because they're not taking money from the Jews. | ||
And you are. | ||
Big difference. | ||
So, yeah, I wish they would. | ||
All right. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat, Austrian Pinterest. | ||
Uh-oh, based alert? | ||
Austrian painter? | ||
I know who that is. | ||
What is wrong with you people? | ||
Can you just be normal? | ||
Niggas discover that Jews run society. | ||
It's well known at this point. | ||
And people go, I'm an Austrian painter. | ||
Know who that's referring to? | ||
No. | ||
No, very clever. | ||
I've never heard that before. | ||
That's very clever. | ||
Very subtle. | ||
Very subtle and clever little inside joke. | ||
Never invade Russia in the winter. | ||
Shut the fuck up. | ||
Thank you for the $100, though. | ||
Never invade Russia in the winter. | ||
France always surrenders. | ||
I'm an Austrian painter. | ||
Get this Reddit history shit out of here. | ||
Get this meme ball Reddit history out of here. | ||
But I appreciate the big super chat. | ||
Yeah. - Crunk will rise again, sent $10. | ||
The hyper real baby face set at advanced memes are the worst. | ||
No, they're being paid to do that. | ||
Wow, thank you. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
W, rich and smart. | ||
All of us. | ||
I love rich people, smart people. | ||
We're all in this big, rich club. | ||
You need to understand. | ||
America First is actually not about tarred wrangling idiots. | ||
America First is about finding the best, the smartest, the richest, the most cunning, the most savvy. | ||
Okay? | ||
We want only the best. | ||
So when I hear all these kinds of people constantly bitching and moaning about the show, I just don't even listen to them anymore. | ||
I just tune them out. | ||
Too stupid. | ||
Too poor. | ||
No motion. | ||
No bitches. | ||
No bags. | ||
No money. | ||
Not smart enough. | ||
Too stupid. | ||
And I just, the rich people and the best and brightest, I turn them up. | ||
I turn them up, okay? | ||
Because that's what turns me on. | ||
That's what gets me off and that's what gets me going. | ||
So if you're stupid or poor or excessively negative, you just need to go and get a fucking job. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Go and get a job. | ||
Go and get a life. | ||
Go and get a life, stupid loser. | ||
That's my message. | ||
unidentified
|
That's my message. | |
Anybody that's... | ||
Criticizing me in the live chat? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Go and get a life? | ||
Go and get a job, you stupid loser. | ||
Have you ever tried that? | ||
Why don't you try that? | ||
Hey, why don't you try that? | ||
Here's a little piece of advice. | ||
Here's a little piece of advice. | ||
Here's a little piece of advice free. | ||
Why don't you get a life? | ||
Why don't you get a job? | ||
Someone says Nick has gone Jew. | ||
If you identify being rich and successful with Jewish, you are part of the problem. | ||
Listen and listen well. | ||
If you identify being rich and successful at being Jewish, you are part of the problem. | ||
That is subhuman mentality. | ||
That is slave morality. | ||
Now, it's one thing if you take a vow of poverty because you're like a priest or something. | ||
It's totally different if you just have no motion and no bitches because you're stupid and poor. | ||
Big difference. | ||
Totally big difference. | ||
No excuses. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Didn't ask, but thank you for telling me. | ||
Hey, my favorite! | ||
You know, when I hear Pizza Diet Coke, it just makes me so happy. | ||
That's my favorite combination. | ||
Well, it would really be more like RC. RC and pizza. | ||
But thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, I could go for one of those right now. | ||
I could go for a little pizza. | ||
Bradley Galvin sent $10. | ||
Hey Nick, me and my friend Parker are staying in AB&B business, hoping to cash flow $500 million by the time we're done. | ||
We need more young men willing to invest in themselves. | ||
What do you think about this plan? | ||
Is it a good idea? | ||
Any book ideas to help us out? | ||
We could link up for advertising after. | ||
Okay, we'll see. | ||
Thanks for the tip. | ||
Airbnb business? | ||
You're staying in, starting in Airbnb? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
I don't know what A, B, and B is. | ||
All right. | ||
Look, I can't just, just on account of me being white, I just can't do that. | ||
I can't be the white guy. | ||
I can't be the white guy that's going around like... | ||
Look at my, what is it called? | ||
Look at my Kanafa. | ||
I'm a white guy that loves Kanafa. | ||
Mmm, Kanafa, my favorite. | ||
You just can't be that guy. | ||
You can't be that guy at the function. | ||
You can't be that guy that's like, mmm, Ethiopian food. | ||
I love goo-boo-boo-boo. | ||
unidentified
|
I love, what do they call the bread or whatever? | |
That fucking nonsense. | ||
They're eating with their hands. | ||
They're putting food in each other's mouths. | ||
Fork and knife. | ||
Let's give that a try. | ||
You know, you just can't be that guy. | ||
Mmm, kanafa. | ||
It's like being cucked. | ||
It's like cucked shit, but for food. | ||
Because then Muslim people get to be like, yeah, you like that shit, bitch. | ||
You like our kanafa, don't you? | ||
You can't give them that power over you. | ||
You can only... | ||
As I get older, I'm becoming far more racist with things like that. | ||
Like, I get self-conscious listening to rap music. | ||
Because it's like if most black people hate you and you listen to rap music, it's almost like you're their bitch, kind of, you know? | ||
It shouldn't be that way, but it feels like that. | ||
It's hard not to feel like that, you know what I mean? | ||
And, you know, the only people I don't feel like that is with Chinese people. | ||
Like, I could eat Chinese food, I guess because it's not really their native food. | ||
But you just can't be that guy. | ||
So that's why I exclusively enjoy... | ||
American food, Italian food, Mexican food, Irish food sometimes. | ||
Reluctantly, you know, there's some good Jewish food. | ||
I hate to admit they do have some good food. | ||
There are some good delis out there in LA. Crazy sandwiches, you know. | ||
So I do it in secret. | ||
I secretly get a Jewish sandwich and I don't tell anybody. | ||
I get a Jewish... | ||
I don't even want to say what it is because I don't want them to recognize me when I go there. | ||
But sometimes I'll... | ||
Not here. | ||
If I go to Manny's in Chicago, I feel like they're going to try and kill me. | ||
But sometimes sneak in a little corned beef sandwich, a little pastrami. | ||
There's a couple of spots in LA that just have these crazy good sandwiches. | ||
I'll go for that. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Sometimes you got to do what you got to do, but you got to be discreet about it. | ||
You can't be going around saying, this knuff was delicious. | ||
You can't be going around doing that. | ||
I only drink Muslim coffee. | ||
I only drink Yemeni coffee. | ||
You see, you can't be doing that because then you look like a liberal cuck. | ||
You look like a metro cosmopolitan cuck bitch. | ||
I can't get enough of this Yemeni coffee. | ||
Listen, I know it's good, but we got to just do the regular shit. | ||
And if you're going to go over there, you got to be very subtle. | ||
Can't broadcast it. | ||
You got to be doing it, but almost like an arrogant way, almost like reluctantly, kind of like, oh, all right. | ||
All right, I'll try your sandwich. | ||
I'll try your pastry. | ||
Yeah, all right. | ||
I'll give it a try. | ||
Yeah, 100%. | ||
That was awesome. | ||
He mogged. | ||
He did. | ||
He mogs them all day. | ||
And that was awesome. | ||
Hey! | ||
Thank you for the big super chat I know, shaking my head. | ||
They just haven't figured it out. | ||
They just don't get it. | ||
But they'll get there. | ||
But they'll get there eventually. | ||
No, I'm kidding, of course. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
People take that so personally. | ||
I don't... | ||
You know I love everybody, even if you're poor. | ||
It's... | ||
I have to say that because people are really stupid and really sensitive. | ||
It's crazy how I do this show. | ||
It kills the joke when you say, just kidding, but you literally have to or else everybody gets upset. | ||
He said, poor people suck. | ||
I'm poor. | ||
Relax. | ||
Relax, suck fest. | ||
It's just a joke, okay? | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Never mind. | ||
You got the clip. | ||
Yeah, we got it. | ||
But that has nothing to do with industry coming back. | ||
You're talking about two different sectors. | ||
How does bringing industry jobs come back affect service jobs? | ||
Here's how it is going to cause a obvious, and maybe you know this, but when you deport these illegals, It is going to cause a labor shortage. | ||
It is going to cause a tightening in the labor market in service, in hospitality, in retail, in construction, in agriculture, because that's where they work. | ||
Now, as it so happens, illegal immigrants are not the majority of any occupation in the country except for two. | ||
There was a study done by the Center for Immigration Studies. | ||
CIS, Mark Krikorian's nonprofit. | ||
And they went and tracked, occupation by occupation, the percentage of illegals that are employed. | ||
And there's only two occupations. | ||
It's like a seasonal agricultural worker, I think, was one. | ||
I forget the other. | ||
But even the ones that you would think are mostly illegals were actually mostly natives. | ||
That's according to a study. | ||
But they are overrepresented in those sectors. | ||
Construction, retail. | ||
So it wouldn't completely, you know, it's people, Americans do these jobs. | ||
The point is this. | ||
There are no jobs. | ||
This is the headline. | ||
There are no jobs that Americans will not do. | ||
So people say, Americans won't do those jobs. | ||
Americans, you know, they're doing the jobs Americans refuse to do or won't do. | ||
That is the biggest lie about immigration ever. | ||
There are no jobs Americans won't do, and that's borne out in the data, because in every occupation, every occupation for which there is data, except for two, the majority of people working in those occupations are native-born Americans. | ||
The corollary is this. | ||
There are no jobs, or rather, there are jobs that Americans won't do for low wages. | ||
For low wages, there are certain wages at which Americans won't do certain jobs. | ||
Because immigrants will come here and they get paid less than the minimum wage. | ||
They don't get benefits because they get paid out of the table. | ||
So they're not getting matching Social Security and Medicare. | ||
They don't always have the OSHA regulations. | ||
They're not getting their benefits. | ||
And they're getting paid an illegally low wage. | ||
They're able to make it in America because they're being subsidized by the government. | ||
They get subsidized housing. | ||
They don't have health insurance, so they rely on hospital visits. | ||
They use that like it's healthcare. | ||
They use that like it's a doctor's visit. | ||
They go to the emergency room. | ||
They send their kids to public schools. | ||
They get subsidized food or other programs because they all live in these big cities. | ||
And so the private sector will pay them a little bit. | ||
So if they're picking berries, they're picking grapes, they'll get paid a little bit, and then the government subsidizes their housing, their groceries, their healthcare, their kids' education, for everything else. | ||
They also will pack in a bunch of families in one dwelling, which is illegal, and they basically create this standard of living, this way of life, which is something that is unacceptable to Native Americans. | ||
Native Americans, one, they... | ||
Have to be employed on the books because they want health care. | ||
They want to be paid a living wage. | ||
They don't want to live with a bunch of families in a single-family dwelling. | ||
And here's the thing. | ||
A lot of illegals come here, and first of all, their quality of life, whatever it is here, is better than it was in Mexico because this is a much richer country. | ||
I've talked to illegal immigrants, and they say in Mexico, We don't eat meat every day. | ||
We can only afford to eat meat once, maybe twice a week. | ||
Here we eat meat every day. | ||
Americans don't think about quality of life in those terms, but that's how it is in Mexico. | ||
So a lot of them will come here, and any quality of life here is better than what it is there. | ||
But also, a lot of illegals will come here on a temporary basis, maybe for 20 years or 25 years. | ||
And they make money to send home because there are billions of dollars in remittances where illegals will come here, work, and they take a portion of their pay and they send it home to their family in Mexico or in Guatemala or Honduras or wherever in the Northern Triangle in Central America, in Venezuela and South America. | ||
And they do that in India too, by the way. | ||
Remittances are huge to India. | ||
So the question is... | ||
Not whether Americans will do those jobs. | ||
It is at what wage. | ||
Now, when we deport or if we deport illegal immigrants, the labor market gets tight. | ||
That means there's competition for labor. | ||
That means there's not enough workers to go around for every employer. | ||
So employers have to compete for the labor. | ||
They have to bid for the labor by offering them higher wages. | ||
In the same way that, you know, you go and there's a market for cereal and eggs and milk and there's a market for cars. | ||
And you are offering them money, and they have to compete for your business. | ||
In the same way, employers are offering wages to workers, and the employers have to compete with each other by offering wages to workers to try and get the workers to come and work for them. | ||
And that means higher pay, better benefits, a stipend for tuition, better health care, dental insurance, all kinds of things. | ||
This happened during the pandemic. | ||
A really interesting thing happened. | ||
When the economy was shut down during the COVID pandemic, people were being paid not to work. | ||
People were being paid from the Small Business Association. | ||
They were getting those grants. | ||
What do you call it? | ||
The Personal Protection Loan, or I forget the name of the program. | ||
PPO, PPP, Paycheck Protection Program. | ||
People were getting all this money as a subsidy because the government made them stop working or go out of business. | ||
They were getting increased unemployment benefits. | ||
They got the $1,200 check. | ||
They got another check a year later. | ||
Because people were being paid not to work and because of the other effects of the pandemic, the labor market was extremely tight and there was an intense labor shortage. | ||
And you might remember this. | ||
When we started to emerge from the pandemic and during the recovery, you would go to a restaurant or you go to a hotel or anywhere, and there were major shortages. | ||
Like, you couldn't get a table at a restaurant. | ||
I remember going to restaurants, and they were totally empty, but they would say, oh, we can't take you right now because we don't have enough waiters. | ||
And this was happening at restaurants, hotels. | ||
It was in hospitality. | ||
It was in retail. | ||
It was everywhere. | ||
Because people didn't want to go back to work. | ||
A lot of young people moved back in with their parents. | ||
They weren't paying rent or a mortgage. | ||
They were being paid these huge unemployment benefits that was more lucrative than working. | ||
They had their SBA, their PPP. They had all these other things. | ||
And so, at the same time, you would notice when you drove by Taco Bell or McDonald's, they would be advertising $25 an hour, $3,000 starting bonus. | ||
Stipend for tuition, dental. | ||
I mean, they were offering these crazy packages for people to work at Taco Bell and McDonald's. | ||
You don't see that anymore. | ||
You don't see the labor shortage anymore. | ||
You don't experience it. | ||
You don't see them offering benefits like that anymore. | ||
Because what started to happen? | ||
Well, we began to emerge from the pandemic in 2021, 2022. What happened at the same time? | ||
Illegal immigration exploded and 10 million came here. | ||
And the Federal Reserve talks about this and the economists were talking about this. | ||
They basically said we're going to let in the people to relieve the tightening in the labor market, to relieve the pressure. | ||
That's exactly what happened. | ||
And now you don't see that anymore. | ||
Now you don't see those help-wanted signs. | ||
You don't see them offering a much higher wage. | ||
Because now there is so much labor in the country, and now hiring has been at a standstill for years. | ||
It's at the lowest level in a very long time, and people struggle to get jobs because of the glut of people that came in. | ||
So there would be a period of adjustment, and there would be shortages. | ||
There would be a labor shortage, but the economy would eventually allocate resources. | ||
You just have to set the parameters. | ||
The economy is very good at what it does. | ||
The price mechanism and wages are a form of pricing. | ||
It's very good at allocating resources. | ||
It's the government's job to set the parameters. | ||
What I mean by that is if the government says you can't hire illegals, if the government says these people are out of the labor market, the economy will adjust. | ||
If the government sets those parameters, the economy will either automate the jobs that they can't replace with Americans and the ones that they – Have to replace with Americans, they'll offer higher wages. | ||
And if that means a higher cost, they'll make that up with price increases or they'll do other things. | ||
The economy will adjust eventually. | ||
There will be a period where there'll have to be capital investment for automation. | ||
And that will take time. | ||
There will be a period where there will be changing attitudes about work and people with high school diplomas will consider that. | ||
Working at a McDonald's career, things will have to change eventually. | ||
And over time, prices may go up, things may change, but eventually the resources will be allocated efficiently. | ||
Again, all the government needs to do is set the parameters. | ||
So they tell us this is how it has to be. | ||
It's like, no, this is how you want it to be because you want to maximize profits. | ||
The people that are telling us this is just how it is. | ||
Mexicans work those jobs. | ||
Natives don't. | ||
Those are jobs for illegals. | ||
Those are jobs for foreign students. | ||
That's just how it is. | ||
No, no. | ||
You're telling us that's how it has to be because you own the assets and the asset owners make the most money, make the most profit when they drive the labor cost down as much as possible by bringing in all this labor. | ||
No, it doesn't have to be that way. | ||
There are no jobs Americans won't do. | ||
You just don't want to fucking pay Americans. | ||
You don't want to pay Americans a competitive wage or do the other things that are necessary. | ||
But we didn't make it clear that it's just non-negotiable. | ||
It's non-negotiable that Americans should have high-paying jobs, should have employment. | ||
We should be the priority. | ||
And you know what? | ||
If this country had government efficacy, You could actually have temporary visas. | ||
Like, I'm in principle not opposed to that. | ||
Am I in principle opposed to people coming here and working these very low-level jobs on a temporary basis? | ||
Not in principle. | ||
The problem is they never leave. | ||
The problem is they come here, they have kids, the kids become citizens. | ||
And then because of chain migration, their whole family comes here and lives here, and we're paying for their schooling and their healthcare, and we're paying for everything for their entire lives for generations. | ||
If we had government efficacy, we could say, look, you can stay here for 10 years. | ||
20 years. | ||
You can make your money. | ||
Then you've got to go back. | ||
But the way you do that is you say, if you have kids here, they're not citizens. | ||
They have residency as long as you're here. | ||
And we're going to charge you for the schooling. | ||
That's going to come out of your end some way. | ||
And then you go back. | ||
The day that your visa expires, cops are at your door, time to go home. | ||
Like in principle, I'm not opposed to that. | ||
People talk about the Emirates. | ||
They talk about Saudi Arabia. | ||
It's very different because the population density is so low. | ||
And they're really realistically like city-states. | ||
And they have infinite oil wells. | ||
So it's a different story. | ||
But they do have huge populations of foreign workers. | ||
It works because they have government efficacy. | ||
We don't have that here. | ||
So, anyways, that's my point. | ||
I'd say Jesus was a Christian. | ||
Jesus Christ claimed to be God. | ||
That's a Christian belief. | ||
That's not a Jewish belief. | ||
So, I know Jewish people love to say that, but what did Jesus Christ say about himself? | ||
Jesus Christ said that he's God, that he's the Son of God. | ||
No one gets to the Father except through me. | ||
Is that a Jewish belief? | ||
Is that a tenet of the Jewish faith? | ||
So, you know, Christianity originally spread among the Jews and then went through a process in the early Christian community of becoming the Christian religion where they eschewed the law and there was a sectarian dispute. | ||
There were different sects of early Christians, you know, like James. | ||
We have to keep the dietary law. | ||
There were others who said you have to be circumcised. | ||
You basically have to keep kosher. | ||
You have to be Jewish to be Christian. | ||
And that all changed with St. Paul. | ||
So the rebuttal is Jesus was the first Christian because Jesus was the Christ. | ||
And he claimed to be the Christ. | ||
And the Christians are his followers. | ||
And what is a Jew today? | ||
A Jew is a person who persists in saying that Jesus was not the Messiah. | ||
You know, it's a contradiction. | ||
That's just like a cheap little thing they like to say. | ||
Teron Groeper sent $10. | ||
Bless lent to our Catholic brethren. | ||
Prayers for this Jubilee year to bring peace. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
The Jubilee. | ||
David adds Yashvili sent $10. | ||
I was watching Fox News before you went on and they said Ben Shapiro and The Daily Wire were Mike Johnson's guests. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Love it. | ||
Vivek Eats Bacon sent $10. | ||
I go on TikTok lives trying to slowly red pill Republican creators who are Israel cucks and the amount of Groepers that ruin everything by not making it easy to understand is ridiculous. | ||
Love that you're waking people up. | ||
Hate when retards make the movement sound retarded. | ||
Like, being a race mixer is fine. | ||
Being gay is fine. | ||
Being a feminist is fine. | ||
How many Republicans are liberals? | ||
So, you know, it's really interesting. | ||
Everybody, when they can't attack me, they love to attack the Groypers as if we have the only fan base that has Spurgs or, you know, people that are not the smartest or whatever. | ||
So I think that's just a cheap shot. | ||
You know, if you compare your average Groyper to your average Turning Point guy, I think the Groypers are better. | ||
Your average Turning Point guy is putting stickers up that say, I love Israel! | ||
What would you rather have? | ||
I prefer the Groypers, but everybody loves to give them shit because it's easy. | ||
Yeah, we are paying more, but... | ||
It's overall better. | ||
It's better for the economy. | ||
I'd rather have a country that has jobs and makes stuff. | ||
And you pay marginally more. | ||
But the supply chains are so distributed, you don't even feel the price increases. | ||
So, I mean, prices will go up marginally, but the way that people make it out, they act like, you know, it's a 25% tariff. | ||
It's going to be a 25% price increase. | ||
Joe Biden didn't get rid of the Trump tariffs. | ||
And it didn't change anything. | ||
So, no, that's a common misconception. | ||
True. | ||
Ah, very good, John. | ||
Very good, John. | ||
I really did, yeah. | ||
All right, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I don't think that's a real Chad Champion, though. | ||
Somehow I don't think that's the real one. | ||
I feel like that might be somebody trying to provoke this is a false flag attack on Chad Champion by some sort of Jewish person. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
But thank you for the big super chat. | ||
unidentified
|
Regardless, that's a $100 false flag. | |
It really is, yeah. | ||
Thanks for the content, as always, my guy. | ||
Love you, pal. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Love you, buddy. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I didn't call you poor. | ||
But I appreciate that. | ||
I didn't say you were poor. | ||
I just said we hate poor people in general. | ||
But thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
W. Kanafa. | ||
Yo, where's my Kanafa? | ||
Yo, this Muslim dude gave me Kanafa. | ||
Dog 123 sent $10. | ||
unidentified
|
This doesn't sound right. | |
What do you think about Prodigal on X? | ||
Juice by. | ||
Trapacolib sent $10. | ||
Had to go to urgent care yesterday because I sliced my finger open. | ||
Had to wait three hours just to be seen because of all these foreigners with a slight cough coming in. | ||
Only two other white people were there. | ||
That's real. | ||
Hospitals are like kill zones now. | ||
You go to a hospital to die now. | ||
Like, I would rather... | ||
You're almost better off not going because you go to the hospital and they'll just kill you. | ||
Because you go to the hospital, you wait like eight hours, no matter what. | ||
No matter what time of day, no matter what your issue is, you go to the hospital minimum. | ||
You're waiting three, four, five hours, maybe even longer. | ||
Because these illegals, I mean, they use it like it's, they use it to get a Benadryl. | ||
And it's, that's killing people. | ||
I wonder what the human cost is. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you for the super chat. | ||
That was actually a good question. | ||
Once you said it in a not stupid way, that was actually a really good question. | ||
But thank you very much, Hydro Built. | ||
Okay, that's our last super chat. | ||
That's going to do it for me on this long stream. | ||
Wow, I've been live for three hours. | ||
It's been a long night. | ||
But thanks, everybody, for tuning in. | ||
This was my coverage of Trump's first joint address to Congress or address to a joint session of Congress of his second term. | ||
I hope you enjoyed. | ||
We had the third biggest stream, so I appreciate all the support. | ||
Thanks, everybody, for checking us out. | ||
Remember to smash the follow button. | ||
Follow me here. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
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I'm on the air every Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock Central. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our super chatters. | ||
Special thanks to our top super chatters, Sandy Balls. | ||
Nice. | ||
Mufti Groyper, Spence, Rapist Werewolf, Bass Crocheter, Austrian Princess, Bassed, Grecoid, Versace Groyper, Pizza Diet Coke, Catholic Sonic, Chad Champion, and Slavik Lukovic. | ||
Thank you to all of them. | ||
Thanks to all our super chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. |