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The silent majority is no longer silent. | |
This is The War Room with Owen Schroyer. | ||
Please stand by for further details. | ||
We return you now to your readily scheduled program. | ||
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*BOOM* | |
Ghelane Maxwell, serving a 20-year sentence for her role in Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking crimes, was interviewed by the Department of Justice under the Trump administration, sparking renewed interest in Epstein's network. | ||
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, a former Trump lawyer, met Maxwell in Tallahassee, Florida on July 24th through the 25th to probe potential information about others involved in Epstein's crimes. | ||
I think Glenn did a wonderful job. | ||
She literally answered every question. | ||
She didn't say, you know what, don't ask me that. | ||
I'm not going to talk about this person. | ||
She was asked maybe about 100 different people. | ||
She answered questions about everybody and she didn't hold anything back. | ||
But her lawyer, David Oscar Marcus, declined to disclose specifics. | ||
The speculation fueled by this interview and the lingering question of a pardon concerning Maxwell revolve around Epstein's alleged ties to foreign entities, not just politicians and celebrities, as the plot thickens. | ||
But a lot of people have asked about pardon. | ||
This is just not a time to be talking about pardons. | ||
Todd will come back with whatever he's got. | ||
You make it a very big thing over something that's not a big thing. | ||
You should be talking about, if you're going to talk about that, talk about Clinton, talk about the former president of Harvard, talk about all of his friends, talk about the hedge fund guys that were with him all the time. | ||
Don't talk about Trump. | ||
The Democrats pushing Trump on this and trying to connect him to all of this has massively backfired. | ||
And I've been saying for 20 plus days since this all broke, Trump needs to lean into this and order everything released, and that's all starting. | ||
Democrat judges all over the country, Florida, New York, are trying to block the release the Epstein files now. | ||
Evidence suggesting Epstein's connections to Mossad and Russian entities continues to burrow down the rabbit hole. | ||
So 21 trillion disappeared from DOD and HUD over the period that Epstein was operating. | ||
He went to the White House his first time in the White House. | ||
Rubin, who became Secretary of Treasury, took him, I think, in 1994. | ||
And then Rubin goes to Treasury. | ||
Money starts disappearing. | ||
And then, you know, Epstein is ballooning fantastic amounts of money. | ||
So I think Epstein was laundering the money that was coming out of DOD. | ||
And if you look at his relationships with Mossad and Israeli intelligence, when Mossad is taking over DOD and the money's going missing, and we know the cybersecurity and IT and the Israeli sort of constellation was very active in government at that time. | ||
So if you let the files out, people are going to connect the dots between Epstein, Mossad, the growing power of Israel, APAC, and then where did their pension fund money go? | ||
Of course, Ghelane's father, Robert Maxwell, was alleged in books like Robert Maxwell's Israel Super Spy to have worked with Mossad. | ||
Similarly, Epstein's ties to Russian figures such as Sergei Belyakov, a former Russian official who assisted Epstein with a Russian model and visa issues, and Epstein's processing of millions through Russian banks suggest possible Russian intelligence interest. | ||
Ghelain Maxwell's own activities also add to the scrutiny, particularly her Terramar project, a nonprofit founded in 2012 to promote ocean conservation, which likely functioned as a shell company. | ||
The New York Post reveals that Terramar, which shut down after Epstein's 2019 arrest, had minimal financial transparency and was linked to Epstein's funding of his illicit network, raising questions about its true purpose. | ||
The Teramar project raised approximately $197,000 in public donations over its operational years from 2012 to 2019. | ||
Maxwell loaned significant sums to keep the organization afloat, with tax filings indicating that by 2017, the nonprofit owed her $539,000. | ||
And by the end of 2018, this debt had increased to $561,000. | ||
The Teramar project was endorsed by the Clinton Global Initiative in 2013, but direct financial contributions are not clearly documented. | ||
It's all a hive of scum and villainry. | ||
The infinite Epstein rabbit hole. | ||
That bound report can be found at band.video. | ||
All right, we kick off the war room, the fastest three hours on the internet on the other side of this break. | ||
Well, one thing that's happening that is great right now is that the EPA under Lee Zeldin is slashing and gashing into regulations, including some extremely petty things. | ||
Some of the bigger nonsensical things like the windmills and then some of the more petty nuisances. | ||
Like the auto engine. | ||
Auto on, auto off, auto start stop. | ||
You got one of those in your car. | ||
First of all, it's bad for your engine. | ||
It doesn't do a damn thing for the environment. | ||
And they started to try to regulate those into every vehicle. | ||
So if you know about that, if you have to deal with one of those, it's one of the more obnoxious things that you have to deal with in cars now from the beeping when you don't have your seatbelt in. | ||
Now the auto engines, it's just obnoxious. | ||
It's just regulate everything into torture is what it is. | ||
Oh, I'm going to go flying. | ||
Well, actually, it's kind of a torturous experience. | ||
Maybe I won't. | ||
Maybe I'll stay home. | ||
Oh, I know. | ||
I'll go for a ride in my car. | ||
Oh, I got that damn seatbelt thing that beeps in my ears and auto start stop. | ||
Like, what else? | ||
What's next? | ||
Oh, yeah, the gas is so expensive. | ||
The toll roads are more expensive. | ||
Just regulate everything to make the entire living experience torturous. | ||
So that's what we're trying to stop here. | ||
And a lot of that is happening at the EPA under Lee Zeldin. | ||
So I'll get into that stack, as well as some other political developments like the redistricting in Texas and what that means. | ||
Now, we do have some audio from Trump. | ||
He did have a press conference earlier today. | ||
He signed a executive order helping veterans and the VA. | ||
So we'll have some of those clips, including Trump responding to what's going on with the latest development in the crossfire hurricane exposure, which I think half people are kind of leaning into it, thinking this is going to result in something. | ||
And then you have another half of the people that think this is all just a distraction. | ||
This is all to get headlines off of Epstein. | ||
And at the end of the day, I guess we'll just see if Pam Bondi wants to make a move or not, because it seems where everything goes to die. | ||
And you've got the Article 3 project right now that's working on all kinds of transparency cases dealing with the federal government. | ||
And Mike Davis, who runs it, is running around doing media tours. | ||
And it's like the same conclusion. | ||
It's like, hey, we're doing all this great work. | ||
We're trying to get all this stuff into the open and get all this transparency. | ||
But it's like, once it gets to the DOJ, once it gets to Pam Bondi, it just dies. | ||
It's just, it's over. | ||
Flatline. | ||
So it seems to be the case with everything. | ||
And you just sit here and you watch it, and Trump's talking about how she's doing such a great job. | ||
Well, Trump kind of does lip service to everyone. | ||
Most of the time, I guess, unless you're Jerome Powell or maybe Rosie O'Donnell, who's actually funny again, ironically enough, in her Trump hatred videos. | ||
They're actually funny. | ||
I get a good laugh out of them now. | ||
So O'Donnell's funny again, if we got anything else going for us. | ||
But, man, everybody's going to continue to talk about Epstein no matter how hard he tries. | ||
And that's just the story at the end of the day. | ||
So unless they deliver arrests of the deep state, then that's just going to be the story. | ||
He covered up Epstein, and maybe we can get a good economy. | ||
Maybe we can get some other things done. | ||
We secured the border. | ||
We're slashing these regulations. | ||
It's like, yeah, there's good stuff, but that's going to be the legacy driver. | ||
And why he continues to compliment Pam Bondi, where everything goes to die. | ||
And you start to wonder, is that her job? | ||
Is to just kill everything and then take the blame? | ||
Is that what she's there to do? | ||
I understand Trump pays lip service to everybody, but it's like whenever there's a big development, once it gets to Bondi's desk, everything stops. | ||
And everybody knows it now. | ||
So here's the big development, though. | ||
Cash Patel says he finds burn bags is the catchphrase today. | ||
Burn bags. | ||
And we'll get into some other geopolitical news, some other developments here, but let's just get into this now. | ||
And I found this funny. | ||
They were building this up, and Cash Patel's young performing artist girlfriend, Alexis Wilkins, has been getting a lot of attention lately. | ||
People think she's a honeypot for Israel. | ||
I don't know. | ||
That's the rumor, but so she gets a bunch of attention. | ||
Well, now she's doing media tours. | ||
Now they're building her public profile up, but she's already kind of had one. | ||
She sings at events. | ||
She sings the national anthem. | ||
She's been dating Cash Patel, I guess, for a while now. | ||
So she goes to all the D.C. events. | ||
So she's been hanging around. | ||
Cash Patel's girlfriend, Alexis Wilkins, to make big reveal amid new Russia documents claims. | ||
Oh, and guess where she was today doing the big reveal? | ||
She was on with Megan Kelly. | ||
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Oh, wow. | |
It's Cash Patel's girlfriend and Megan Kelly with the big Russian collusion reveal. | ||
Oh, guys, didn't you know there was no Trump-Russia collusion? | ||
Wow. | ||
Didn't you know it was Hillary Clinton paid for opposition? | ||
Didn't you know it was the Obama administration that signed off on it, even though they knew it was fake? | ||
Don't you know? | ||
Here, here's Alexis Wilkins and Megan Kelly to break the news as Cash Patel is talking about burn bags. | ||
Now, I imagine, in fact, I could probably get an FBI expert on from any of the former feds that come on the show, former FBI agents, whistleblowers, and maybe I will, just to find out how believable this is or not. | ||
Because the whole public perception that they want here with the comment of burn bags is like, oh my gosh, we found the evidence that they were going to destroy. | ||
This is the big one. | ||
We got it right here. | ||
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It's in a burn bag. | |
People think, oh, my gosh, they were going to burn it. | ||
They were going to literally light it on fire. | ||
No, it's likely just a stack of things they're going to throw away or a stack of things that they're going to shred, whatever. | ||
It's probably just part of the process. | ||
Anybody that works with a bunch of paperwork has a process of what you do with the paperwork. | ||
So maybe we can get a clarification, but it's like, oh, my gosh, we're breaking all of this. | ||
And then it's with Megan Kelly. | ||
It's like, I don't want to get in all these little spats with all these big personalities, but it's like everything she ever builds up never happens. | ||
And so like, she'll say something big. | ||
I forget what the most recent one is. | ||
Maybe the crew can remind me. | ||
She'll say something big to get a bunch of attentions and headlines, and then it never happens. | ||
It's like, oh, we'll be hearing from Epstein soon. | ||
People are like, oh, my gosh, Megan Kelly has information. | ||
He's still alive. | ||
That was like two years ago. | ||
So it's like, what is this about? | ||
She comes here to do a hit piece. | ||
What is this about? | ||
She gets Cash Patel's girlfriend on the show, and it's all this controlled rollout. | ||
Hey, look, we're talking about Russia. | ||
We're talking about Russian Collusion. | ||
We're talking about the corruption of the Obama years. | ||
We're talking about stuff that happened 10 years ago. | ||
We're talking about stuff that should have been investigated in Trump's first term. | ||
So, yes, people think it's a distraction. | ||
Cash Patel finds thousands sensitive Trump-Russia probe documents inside burn bags in secret FBI room. | ||
And notice how they all do this. | ||
It's like this big James Bond act. | ||
It's like, oh, wow. | ||
It's all just political theater, no results. | ||
Political theater, no results. | ||
Political theater, no results. | ||
And you start to realize the longer you follow these politicians, the more you realize if you just count on them lying to you, then you're probably going to be better off. | ||
Like I got this clip of Chuck Schumer today. | ||
He's talking about the economy. | ||
No, you can just be honest about the economy. | ||
Some things are good. | ||
Some things are bad. | ||
But they need a delivery on the justice side of things. | ||
You're getting victories. | ||
Okay. | ||
We've got a secure border. | ||
Do we want more deportations? | ||
Yeah, but it's a sticky thing. | ||
We're trying to figure it out. | ||
But we got a secure border. | ||
Okay. | ||
The economy. | ||
Yeah, you've got some good things going on in the economy. | ||
I think that's more of a, it's going to be a slower process to get the economy where we need it to be. | ||
But I think things are being done that we can look at that and say, you know what, I can see things happening here. | ||
And we have a track record from the first administration. | ||
So is the economy where we want it to be? | ||
No. | ||
Do we have some problems? | ||
Yes. | ||
Interest rates are crushing a lot of people, but we're hoping maybe in a little bit, maybe when Powell gets out. | ||
And, you know, that was the deal Trump should have made with Powell. | ||
He should have said, look, because now Powell is just going to be a jerk the rest of the way. | ||
He should have said, look, if you're afraid about the tariffs, if you're afraid about the trade deals and everything else, and you're saying it's an unknown, fine. | ||
Give me a day. | ||
Keep it wherever it is. | ||
Keep it where you want, 7%. | ||
I'll let you keep it here against my best wishes. | ||
But give me a timeframe. | ||
Say four months. | ||
You got eight months left. | ||
In four months, if these things happen like I say they're going to happen and the economy is going good, I want you to cut the rate in half. | ||
But I won't bitch about it now. | ||
I won't give you a hard time now. | ||
I won't put you on blast for whatever the hell's going on at the renovations at the Federal Reserve. | ||
We'll take it easy on you. | ||
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I'll quit calling you an idiot. | |
But just do that for me. | ||
In four months, if these things happen, then cut them in half. | ||
You can leave them at seven now. | ||
I won't bitch. | ||
You cut them in half in four months. | ||
But so there's good economic news today. | ||
And then Chuck Schumer goes to the floor and he says, oh, how bad it is. | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
Because it was so great under Biden. | ||
Like the Democrats tried to put out that line graph and they said, look at life under Trump. | ||
And the whole thing is the cost of living going up under Biden. | ||
Literally, that's the graph of what it was. | ||
And they said, look at it, it's Trump. | ||
I mean, it's like them holding up a picture of Joe Biden and saying, look at this. | ||
Look at this, Donald Trump. | ||
Look at this right here. | ||
It's literally a picture of Biden. | ||
Can you believe this Trump? | ||
Look at what he's done. | ||
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Look. | |
That's Joe Biden. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I don't think, I think they can run and try to make different twists and turns. | ||
Oh, burn bags and, oh, secret documents, hidden rooms. | ||
I mean, who knows? | ||
One was under a spell. | ||
What's like a spell? | ||
What's anybody, I don't know, the crew who doesn't play Dungeons and Dragons. | ||
What's like a big spell from Dungeons and Dragons? | ||
There's one in the movie, like Morden Kanan. | ||
It has Morden Kanin's protection on it. | ||
Yes, well, Cash Patel went into the FBI. | ||
He found a hidden room. | ||
It's protected by Morden Caden's spell. | ||
So he actually had to go get the helmet of Infinites in order to break the spell and attempt to open the files. | ||
It's all very serious stuff. | ||
All very serious. | ||
But don't talk about Epstein. | ||
We're talking about spells and witchcraft protecting the Obama files. | ||
Yes. | ||
Soon it'll be aliens already teasing that. | ||
But I'll tell you what, let's go to Trump on this and some other issues at a press conference today. | ||
And again, I think that there's a level of we want you to stop talking about Epstein because they're probably not going to deliver or they're trying to cover it up. | ||
So there's like a level of that. | ||
But then there's also a level of, no, they do make things up and they do lie and they do twist and they do deceive. | ||
And so they'll try to turn this into some negative thing about Trump and Epstein when it should be about Epstein and his clients in the island. | ||
But part of that process involves Trump being a little more honest, which he hasn't been. | ||
And I get it. | ||
I can understand Trump's psychology just saying, hey, look, I hadn't hung out with that guy since the 90s. | ||
Whatever we had in common, we were into, was all legal. | ||
I wasn't aware of any illegal activity. | ||
I wouldn't even consider it immoral. | ||
Just hot women in their 20s, whatever. | ||
But I get it. | ||
He's just thinking this is going to be bad for the country. | ||
I do think, except maybe when it comes to Israel, Trump has America's national interests first. | ||
So he's just saying, hey, this is going to be bad for the country. | ||
This is going to be bad for the White House. | ||
I don't even know if it's necessarily an ego thing with him personally, but maybe really he just, he knows this is going to be reflective of the whole country. | ||
And we're trying to do good things here. | ||
And this could destroy it all. | ||
And he's right about that. | ||
It could destroy it all. | ||
Some would argue it already has. | ||
But that's how the process is going to have to go. | ||
You can only make so many ridiculous, hey, let's just keep bringing the Obama stuff back up and telling we're going to arrest people. | ||
They can't even get Letitia James on a basic mortgage fraud. | ||
They can't even get Adam Schiff on a basic mortgage fraud. | ||
Now they're debating, well, who's got immunity? | ||
Who doesn't? | ||
Who's got statute of limitations? | ||
Who doesn't? | ||
So to me, it's just all the sign of we're just throwing red meat out there. | ||
We're just throwing this out there, trying to get you off the other stories, trying to get you off the Epstein thing. | ||
You know, get the hopes up. | ||
We're going to arrest the deep state. | ||
So Trump comments on this here in clip two. | ||
unidentified
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Cash Patel reportedly found burn bags of Russia materials, and we'd love to hear your thoughts on that. | |
He said what? | ||
unidentified
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Burn bags of Russia gate materials that the guys supposedly found. | |
I don't know that. | ||
I don't know what you mean by that statement. | ||
unidentified
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Bags full of Russia gate documents. | |
Burnbag, I thought you said appointed a man named Burnbag. | ||
unidentified
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Go ahead. | |
You've got to speak up. | ||
unidentified
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Thousands of documents in these bags, supposedly burned bags at the FBI in the secret room. | |
Well, I want everything to be shown. | ||
You know, as long as it's fair and reasonable, I think it will be shown and it should be shown. | ||
And I think he feels that way, and I think Pam feels that way. | ||
But it's got to be stuff that really doesn't hurt people unfairly because you have so many people involved. | ||
And if they can do that in a fair way, I think it's great. | ||
I think it's really great. | ||
The whole thing is a scam. | ||
It's a scam set up by the Democrats, and they love talking about it. | ||
But I would like to see people exposed that might be bad. | ||
And we'll see how that all works out. | ||
But it's getting to be very old news. | ||
You know, if they had anything, they would have done it the week before the election because they were losing by a lot. | ||
If they had anything, they would have done it. | ||
They control the file. | ||
The Democrats controlled it, Comey, and all this, you know, sleazebags, every one of them, that you read about all the time. | ||
And I guess they've got some problems now having to do with yet a different scandal, very big one. | ||
But they control that file. | ||
So I would think that if they would have had something in the file, they would have released it about a week before the election. | ||
Maybe two weeks, right, Brian? | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Mr. President, I'm not sure what he's talking about there as far as the other issues that they're facing. | ||
He didn't clarify on that, so I'm not so sure what he means there. | ||
But it's just when I hear this, and I can't help but kind of fall into the same pattern of thinking just because it's very clear and present in the current right, what would be considered the MAGA coalition. | ||
You know, for me hearing this, maybe for you hearing this, anybody that was around in 2016 and 17, it's like, what are we doing? | ||
That's like asking me to go back to eighth grade and pass a vocabulary test or something. | ||
It's like, go back to eighth grade and pass your English exam. | ||
I'm like, well, what are you talking about? | ||
I got an A on that. | ||
It's like, yeah, but we're going to bring that back up. | ||
We're going to put that on your desk. | ||
We're going to need you to pass that. | ||
It's like, what are we doing here? | ||
Dan Bongino literally wrote the book on this story. | ||
Cash Patel knows all the details. | ||
I guess I don't know about Pam Bondi, but I mean, it's like, you literally have the guys in there that already did the legwork on this. | ||
What files do you need? | ||
We know who Bruce Orr is. | ||
We know who Nellie Orr is. | ||
We know who Christopher Steele is. | ||
We know who was running it in the Hillary Clinton campaign. | ||
We know who went to Obama and told him, even though it's bad intelligence, we have to go with it anyway. | ||
Why am I talking about a burn bag at the FBI? | ||
80% of this administration knows exactly what went down. | ||
So it's, oh, I need you to go back and pass a test from freshman year high school. | ||
But see, there it is. | ||
There's the new MAGA. | ||
There's the new MAGA, which hasn't heard about this stuff. | ||
There's the new MAGA that wasn't paying attention in 2016 and 2017. | ||
Don't know about George Papadopoulos. | ||
I mean, the list just goes on and on and on. | ||
They were using ham radios to communicate. | ||
It's like, okay, now, okay, so I guess I got to go do the exam again, pour through all of it in my head. | ||
We've already done this. | ||
Hey, here's some MLK files. | ||
So I was actually glad because I didn't even have this in my news today, anything about Epstein. | ||
And then we played the John Bound report to open the show about it. | ||
I was like, well, that's good because I don't really plan on talking about it. | ||
But yet here it is again. | ||
Because it just feels like it's all a distraction. | ||
Here's more from Trump talking about lowering rates. | ||
And we'll have other news. | ||
We'll have other news on the rates coming up as well. | ||
But here's Trump talking about the rates in clip three. | ||
What you do is you lower them, and let's see if there's inflation. | ||
Right now, there's no inflation. | ||
Everybody thought there would be. | ||
All we have is billions of dollars of cash pouring into our country from other countries that took advantage of us for many, many years. | ||
You know, they were taken advantage of. | ||
We were like the stupid people that didn't know what they were doing. | ||
They took advantage of us. | ||
Other countries, friend and foe. | ||
And by the way, the friend was oftentimes much worse than the foe when it comes to trade. | ||
So if that happens, what you do is you raise your rates and you do what you have to do to stop inflation. | ||
But we're keeping the rates high and it's hurting people from buying houses. | ||
So we don't want that. | ||
If for any reason that happened in a year or two, if there's some signs of inflation coming back, right now there's not. | ||
We have a great thing going. | ||
I think we're going to have the richest economy you've ever seen. | ||
We have money coming in that we've never even thought about at numbers that nobody's ever seen before. | ||
We have a deal with Japan where they're going to pay us $550 billion. | ||
We have a deal with Europe where they're doing $750 billion plus $400 billion plus $300 billion. | ||
And many other countries, it's likewise, you know, relatively, those are the two big ones, but likewise. | ||
So we have a lot of money coming in and we have no inflation and we're very strong and we should be lowering the rates. | ||
You know, each point that this gentleman keeps up costs us $365 billion a year. | ||
Think of that. | ||
One point. | ||
$365 billion. | ||
If you bring it down a point, we save $365. | ||
We should be the lowest interest rate. | ||
And we're not. | ||
We're 38, number 38 because of the Fed. | ||
It's all because of the Fed. | ||
He's done a bad job. | ||
Now, he's got a meeting today, but I call him too late. | ||
You know, he's always too late. | ||
Even if he does it today, probably won't. | ||
I hear they're going to do it in September, not today. | ||
For what reason? | ||
Nobody knows. | ||
But Europe, as you know, cut their rates 11 times in the last short period of time. | ||
But the good news is we're doing better than anybody anywhere in the world. | ||
Nobody's doing anything even close to us, even with the higher rates. | ||
The higher rates do affect housing, though, because people can't go out and get a loan or refinance their house. | ||
It's a disaster. | ||
The U.S. economy grew at 3% rate in quarter two, better than expected. | ||
So Chuck Schumer goes to the floor and says this. | ||
And while the Trump administration will try to wave rosy headlines about the Q2 number, today's GDP number is in fact a mirage because some ominous numbers lurk under the hood. | ||
Business investment plunged in the second quarter by 3.1%. | ||
The fact that business investment plunged so starkly. | ||
You know, he doesn't even try. | ||
He just gets up there, he slumps over the microphone, slumps over the podium, mutters in, Q2 numbers mean nothing. | ||
You know, you just realize they're just all liars. | ||
He would have told you how great the Biden economy was. | ||
He would have told you it's the greatest economy ever. | ||
So now he wants to lecture us about the Trump economy, though, because the Biden economy was such an example of greatness. | ||
So despite Trump's pressure on Powell and a bit of a public humiliation campaign, Fed leaves rates unchanged, defying Trump's demand for aggressive cuts. | ||
And the Federal Open Market Committee voted to keep the federal funds rate set in a range between 4.2 and 4.5. | ||
The decision was met with opposition from Governors Michelle Bowman and Christopher Waller, both of whom have advocated for the Fed to start easing. | ||
This was the first time since late 93 that multiple governors cast no votes on a rate decision. | ||
President Trump has been pushing the central bank to cut the benchmark rate. | ||
During the news conference, Powell said the FOMC hadn't yet made a decision about what they would do at a September meeting. | ||
So they should have had the negotiations, and Trump just said, all right, if you're worried about what's going to happen because you're on unknown territory with the tariffs and everything, give it till September. | ||
And then when it happens, if what I say happens and inflation stays low, cut them in half. | ||
So you can keep them up, and I won't complain. | ||
But we're going to want to cut them in half then in September. | ||
And just agree to that now. | ||
But now you're going to have another fight just to get him cut again. | ||
And maybe even Powell just wants to be a nuisance after Trump called him a moron and humiliated him in public with that $3.1 billion bill at the Federal Reserve Renovations. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
Maybe Powell just, you know, he's kind of a little weasel. | ||
Maybe Powell just says, you know what, I'm just going to, in my last days here, my last months here, I'm just going to stick it to Trump. | ||
I'm just going to bother him. | ||
He's going to be a pest. | ||
Which is why really he probably should be fired. | ||
Now, James Fishback and his group, Azoria, are leading a charge right now to get transparency when it comes to the Federal Reserve. | ||
Now, he's done a lot of in and out of courts, and he had some press conferences over the weekend. | ||
I'm just going to read you this statement, which is kind of a good summary from over the weekend. | ||
Azoria, an American investment firm, today participated in an emergency federal court hearing in Washington, D.C. in an attempt to force Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to comply with a federal law, government in the Sunshine Act of 1976, that requires federal agencies to hold their meetings open to public observation. | ||
Golly gee, what a big ask for the American people that the federal government hold their meetings open to public observation and they fight against it so hard. | ||
While our emergency temporary restraining order was not granted by U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, there were two key developments that we learned today. | ||
First, the Federal Reserve's lawyers asked the court to dismiss Azoria's case, a motion that was swiftly denied by Judge Howell, meaning Azoria's case for transparency and accountability from the Federal Reserve will proceed. | ||
Second, the Federal Reserve's lawyers conceded that tomorrow's Federal Open Market Committee meeting is actually being jointly held with the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. | ||
That's where they landed on the interest rates thing, which the Federal Reserve's attorneys concede is in fact subject to the Sunshine Act. | ||
Azoria believes that these joint meetings between the FOMC and the Board of Governors may be an attempt to dodge the Sunshine Act and deny Americans their legal right to know what the Federal Reserve is actually doing. | ||
Azoria looks forward to continuing our case and fighting for transparency and accountability for all Americans. | ||
You know, this would be a good thing for Trump to maybe just throw a little weight behind, even if it was just a true social post, just say, hey, you want to know why they won't cut interest rates? | ||
Well, you know what? | ||
Maybe we should all be listening to their discussions. | ||
Maybe we should all be listening in on their meetings where they decide we're going to keep interest rates high. | ||
We're going to keep Americans out of the asset column by having the interest rates so high on assets that they already can't afford. | ||
Yeah, let's go ahead and listen to those meetings. | ||
They don't want to cut the rates. | ||
I've tried to get them to cut the rates. | ||
They won't do it. | ||
So maybe we should be listening in to their discussions. | ||
And, you know, the one thing that you can't deny, they're going to get issues. | ||
Oh, most transparent administration ever. | ||
But, I mean, Trump has cabinet meetings and he lets the media In. | ||
I mean, it has a degree of transparency when it comes to the meetings and access to the Oval Office and what Trump's doing. | ||
I mean, it has a very high level of transparency. | ||
I don't know if you ever saw, I mean, how often did you see Biden really leading cabinet meetings? | ||
There was a couple famous ones where Jill Biden was running the deal. | ||
So they just nixed that. | ||
It's like, no, that's a bad look. | ||
No, I think we should. | ||
And I think we should also know what's going on in federal court proceedings as well, actually. | ||
I think we need a lot more eyes and ears on what the federal government is up to. | ||
I think we need a lot more eyes and ears in transparency when it comes to D.C. So this case could lead to a lot more things, but I'd like to see that too. | ||
Let's put live cameras in federal courtrooms. | ||
Let's let people see how that goes down. | ||
Oh, they're going to have a meeting to discuss interest rates? | ||
Let's get the American people eyes and ears in that room as well. | ||
Let's go ahead and see what they're saying. | ||
So that'd be a good way for Trump to kind of go back at Powell, go back at the Fed by supporting that when they don't do what he wants. | ||
By the way, on the Biden case, the Autopen investigation, there are, I think it's almost a dozen people have been interviewed now. | ||
The number keeps growing. | ||
Now some people are actually starting to talk and not plead the fifth. | ||
And then some of them are starting to talk to the public as well, like Pete Butt Edge Edge, Pete Booty Juice. | ||
He's like, oh, well, yeah, everybody kind of could tell he was fading. | ||
You could tell he was aging fast, but we don't think it affected anything. | ||
Like Ron Klain and others. | ||
So they've all got their story in a row. | ||
They've all talked to their lawyers. | ||
They've all centralized the communications. | ||
You took too long to move on the AutoPen. | ||
And I guess at the end of the day, it's going to be more of a publicity stunt than anything else unless they can prove that somebody was using the AutoPen without Biden's permission, without him knowing, then I just don't really know what comes of this. | ||
And it really is one of the bigger scandals of all time. | ||
And so that's the problem. | ||
It's like even Trump, how many times has President Trump came out and said it's one of the biggest scandals of all time? | ||
I believe he's even called it treasonous. | ||
And I forget who it was that said it. | ||
And it's been said multiple different ways, I suppose, but it's like, you know, live by the Epstein, die by the Epstein files. | ||
I think that was Mike Benz. | ||
But no, there was someone else that was like, you can't, you campaigned about the deep state and arresting the deep state and all the criminals and the treasonous actors. | ||
Well, yeah, people expect you to do it now. | ||
And you can't just get in there and be like, I was just running a campaign. | ||
Oh, I was just trying to get reelected. | ||
No, no, we expect deep state arrests. | ||
I'd like to invest in a handcuff business and get rich. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
Top Biden Ave Steve Richetti tells GOP panel ex-president was fully capable. | ||
Well, that's not consistent with other testimony. | ||
But see, again, it's like the whole thing is this exercise in just exercising, like just running on a hamster wheel. | ||
The Obama files, Spygate, Russian collusion. | ||
Okay, yeah, we know. | ||
Are you going to arrest somebody? | ||
You're going to charge somebody? | ||
Oh, the autopin scandal. | ||
Oh, Joe Biden. | ||
Was he fit? | ||
Was he not? | ||
Let's find out. | ||
More at midnight. | ||
More at noon. | ||
More at seven. | ||
We don't know. | ||
Who ran the Russian hoax? | ||
We just have no clue. | ||
More at nine. | ||
Was Joe Biden fit for office? | ||
Was he mentally with it? | ||
More at 10. | ||
It's like, no, we already know the answer to all this stuff. | ||
You're either going to arrest people or you're not. | ||
You're either going to run investigations and charge people or you're not. | ||
That's what this comes down to. | ||
Now, here's one that, I mean, again, now Trump wading into this territory again. | ||
A congressional stock trading ban just got closer to becoming law. | ||
A bill that bans politicians from trading stocks just passed a key Senate committee. | ||
Lawmakers would have to sell off stocks starting next term and the VP and president in 2029 sparking a ferocious debate among Republicans on the panel. | ||
Well, I guess we know who in that panel is benefiting in the stock market, huh? | ||
Wouldn't you like to know? | ||
Like Trump just made a statement on True Social about he's negotiating a deal with Pakistan right now and oil reserves and maybe Pakistan starting to move oil, export oil. | ||
And he says, what oil company is going to get that deal? | ||
Boy, wouldn't you like to know? | ||
Wouldn't you like to know? | ||
I guess you could just put a bet on every single number on the roulette wheel and you're going to win. | ||
Oh, who am I going to broker this deal for in the oil industry? | ||
So yes, insider trading in D.C. go hand in hand. | ||
And I'm not even an insider in D.C. You can just follow it. | ||
You just follow the news and developments. | ||
You won't get fully ahead of the curve, but it's like you can get in right when it starts to curve. | ||
Just if you're paying attention to the pulse of news and current events, you can get right behind the curve. | ||
But oh, you know, like, oh, yeah, I know who's coming to the White House today. | ||
I know what deal Trump's about to sign. | ||
I know what oil company is about to get this deal. | ||
It's like, oh, yeah. | ||
You hear things when you're in Washington, D.C. You hear things when you're in Congress. | ||
All Democrats voted for it in the committee, while every Republican voted against it, except one, Josh Hawley, who sponsored the bill. | ||
So he can't even get Republicans on his own bill. | ||
So that tells you something. | ||
And so this statement from President Trump just moments ago, why would one Republican, Senator Josh Hawley from the great state of Missouri, join with all of the Democrats to block a review sponsored by Senator Rick Scott and with the support of almost all of the Republicans of Nancy Pelosi's stock trading over the last 25 years, the information was inappropriately released just minutes before the vote, very much like sabotage. | ||
The Democrats, because of their tremendous achievements and success, because of our tremendous achievements and success, have been trying to target me for a long period of time, and they're using Josh Holly, who I got elected twice, as a pawn to help them. | ||
I wonder why Holly would pass a bill that Nancy Pelosi is in absolute love with. | ||
He is playing right into the dirty hands of the Democrats. | ||
It's a great bill for her and her husband, in quotes. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
unidentified
|
Mm. | |
Mm. | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Her husband. | ||
Remember Hammergate? | ||
I digress. | ||
But so bad for our country. | ||
I don't think real Republicans want to see their president who has had unprecedented success targeted because of the whims of a second-tier senator named Josh Holly. | ||
This is just strange. | ||
This is just really strange. | ||
Well, Trump said this about Pelosi stock trading earlier today in clip four. | ||
Things very carefully, and this just happened, so I'll take a look at it. | ||
But conceptually, I like it. | ||
And what I do think is Nancy Pelosi should be investigated because she has the highest return of anybody practically in the history of Wall Street, save a few. | ||
And how did that happen? | ||
It happened by she knows exactly what's going to happen, what's going to be announced. | ||
She buys stock, and then the stock goes up after the announcement's made. | ||
And she ought to be investigated. | ||
She ought to be investigated. | ||
Yeah, I think we agree. | ||
Who are you going to call? | ||
Ghostbusters? | ||
Pam Bondi? | ||
Same difference. | ||
You're going to get the same result. | ||
Pelosi isn't the only one. | ||
Pelosi is not the only one. | ||
Lots of Republicans do very well in the stock market. | ||
I think Dan Crenshaw was the leader in the clubhouse last fiscal year on the Republican side. | ||
I think they all still trail Nancy Pelosi. | ||
I can't remember exactly, but she and her quote-unquote husband over the years have done quite well. | ||
They have done quite well. | ||
You know what? | ||
I skipped over this, and I'm sorry to have to go back, but I forgot to play this clip dealing with the Biden Autopen interviews, the Biden mental acuity interviews. | ||
Eric Burleson, who's a part of this investigation, he had this to say about some of the most recent testimony that he's hearing in clip six. | ||
unidentified
|
Give us the latest with the Autopen hearings, investigations, whatever we want to call them. | |
Yeah, so far, almost everybody that has been subpoenaed has pled the fifth. | ||
The only person that did not invoke the Fifth Amendment was Ron Klain, who is the former White House Chief of Staff. | ||
And he testified that there was a deterioration in Biden's mental acuity. | ||
He said that his memory had deteriorated just a little bit, and he wasn't as sharp compared to his earlier term, but he didn't indicate that it was dramatic enough to be noticed. | ||
unidentified
|
So where does that you guys in your investigation? | |
If nobody's talking to you, you kind of had to expect that some of this would happen, but then what happens now? | ||
Yeah, there's more people that we're subpoenaing. | ||
We have Mike Dunlan, Anita Dunn, Steve Richetti. | ||
And Chairman Comer has even suggested that he's going to bring in Joe Biden and possibly even Kamala Harris. | ||
But this is about investigating whether or not the people that are responsible for invoking the 25th Amendment failed in their duties. | ||
And then furthermore, that they took advantage of this. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's a good angle. | ||
Even if all else fails on the Auto Pen scandal, at least you have the angle of, no, you knew he wasn't mentally fit. | ||
You knew he was mentally incapacitated. | ||
And you took advantage of that. | ||
You consciously took advantage of that. | ||
You know, that'll at least show you the true nature of the Biden administration and the Democrat Party at large. | ||
All right, President Trump is live right now with RFK Jr. | ||
I think they have some announcements dealing with the medical industries here. | ||
Let's go live. | ||
Is regarded as the highest flourishing nation on earth since 1990. | ||
It has increased the lifespan of its women by eight years, of its men by nine years. | ||
There is no country that has a record like that. | ||
There are two major innovations that allowed them to achieve that extraordinary outcome. | ||
And one of those was to disincentivize people from eating processed foods. | ||
You are paid not to eat processed foods and you are penalized for eating processed foods. | ||
The other innovation that really transformed Indonesia was allowing people control of their individual health records. | ||
He showed me the app that they use that everybody in Indonesia has. | ||
And it shows your height, your weight, your blood type, your BMI, your cardiac markers, your diabetes markers, your cholesterol, and any kind of individualized treatments that you've had. | ||
If you go to a doctor in another town, he doesn't do what we have to do here, which is to sit there with a clipboard and a fax machine in order to get your health records. | ||
It's available and it allows them to give better treatment, but it also allows you to make better choices over your life. | ||
And there's other apps like Yaka in Indonesia that allow you to choose good foods when you go to the grocery store. | ||
So you can turn your app on on your phone and you can get full information of those foods. | ||
Well, now if you have your medical records, you can get personalized advice. | ||
And that app will also give you advice about a better alternative. | ||
So we're going to be able to, we met, Dr. Oz and I met with the former Prime Minister Rudd of Australia just before, just after the election during the transition phase. | ||
And he, after his retirement as prime minister, he ran a commission to reorganize the Australian health system and they revolutionized it and they vastly improved health in Australia. | ||
And he said the single thing that he did that was most important to that transformation was the transparency that occurs when people control their own health records. | ||
Because it gives people the choice over their own health decisions and over their own lives. | ||
And it gives them a sense of responsibility and allows them to measure the interventions if they change their diet, if they change their exercise. | ||
It can show you how many steps you took today. | ||
It can tell you if your glucose is spiking. | ||
And all of that information will now be available to American citizens. | ||
60 years ago today, we passed Medicaid and Medicare in this country. | ||
And we have 60 CEOs in this room of these extraordinary companies, some of which the president just mentioned, that have all agreed voluntarily to start sharing information. | ||
President Trump during his first term passed the interoperability rule. | ||
And it was intended to do this for 20 years. | ||
The federal government has been trying to do this. | ||
Everybody recognizes it's absolutely critical innovation for us advancing the health of American citizens to give them responsibility and to give them control over their own health care choices. | ||
And unfortunately, you ran out of time the last time around. | ||
President Trump gave us instructions that he wanted this to happen within six months. | ||
We barely made it under the wire thanks to Dr. Haas' leadership. | ||
And within six months, every American's going to be doing it thanks to the cooperation of the corporate leaders in this room. | ||
You know, about three months ago, I met with the food executives and I asked them to voluntarily come forward and get rid of food dyes of the nine synthetic petroleum dyes. | ||
And this is something, again, the government, Democrats and Republicans have been trying to do for 20 years. | ||
And the industry came forward and now 40% of the food industry in this country has taken the pledge to remove food dyes from all of their foods. | ||
That happened because of your leadership, Mr. President. | ||
Tuma, a month ago, we got, after a lot of work by Chris Klump and Dr. Oz and a lot of other people in our agency, we got all the insurance executives to come together in our country and in our offices and agree to get rid of pre-authorization for 80% of the DSM clothes. | ||
This is a voluntary agreement. | ||
80% of the industry has now agreed to do that. | ||
This is happening because of good leadership. | ||
President Trump, you've asked us to think big. | ||
You've inspired us to dream big. | ||
And you've enabled us to accomplish things that no other president has been able to do. | ||
So I want to thank you for your leadership, for allowing this to happen. | ||
And with your leadership, we're going to make America healthy again. | ||
Now I want to introduce my friend, my colleague, the crypto czar, the acting administrator of Doge, David Sachs. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Doge, that's his business. | ||
Thank you, Secretary Kennedy. | ||
I recently got a text message from a friend whose wife has been suffering from a chronic illness for something like a decade, and they've been trying to figure out what it is. | ||
They've never been able to figure it out. | ||
And I just want to read this to you right off my phone. | ||
He said, I uploaded my wife's blood work into one of our leading AI engines on Friday. | ||
It essentially diagnosed her as having a rare genetic defect that causes bone marrow failure. | ||
It's caused every single thing that's happened to her. | ||
She has every single symptom. | ||
It started at exactly the same age of presentation as 10 people out of 1 million. | ||
There's absolutely no way this is not it. | ||
So wow, that was, it's really an incredible example of what AI is already able to do just today. | ||
And we're just getting started. | ||
And this was one person putting his wife's data in one of our consumer AI apps. | ||
And he's already been able to get that diagnosis. | ||
And that's going to help them tremendously. | ||
The key is here is the unlocking of the data because the more data that AI has, the better it performs. | ||
And so kudos to Dr. Oz and Secretary Kennedy for this pledge today. | ||
They were able to get 60 major companies across different sectors of the economy to agree to unlock their data so that AI could use it to drive better patient outcomes. | ||
And this is all due to your leadership and President Trump's leadership to put the American people's health care needs first. | ||
And I remember Dr. Oz, he was one of the first people to call me during the transition when the project. | ||
We're up against a break here. | ||
So look, technology can be used for good or for bad, but you hear Kennedy talking about implantable devices in all Americans. | ||
You hear them talking about putting everything onto a centralized AI database. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, ladies and gentlemen, tonight, tonight, tonight, debate night here in InfoWars. | ||
That's right. | ||
Should American patriots still support Trump, Nick Fuentez versus Alex Jones? | ||
Tonight, 8 p.m. | ||
Central. | ||
So two hours after we here at the InfoWars War Room sign off, we'll be going back live from the InfoWars World Headquarters in Austin, Texas. | ||
And Trump support will be debated by Jones and Fuentes. | ||
So tune into that. | ||
And then afterwards, we're working on putting together kind of a post-debate coverage, myself and Harrison Smith. | ||
He sent me messages about that this morning. | ||
So probably have a little post-debate going on as well. | ||
So putting in the extra hours here at Infowars. | ||
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Okay, let's pick this press conference back up here and we'll carry it while it's live. | ||
Last we were there, Sachs was still speaking, and then I believe Trump is set to sign an executive order on this issue. | ||
Let's go back. | ||
You know, kudos to Dr. Oz and Secretary Kennedy for this pledge today. | ||
They were able to get 60 major companies across different sectors of the economy to agree to unlock their data so that AI could use it to drive better patient outcomes. | ||
And this is all due to your leadership and President Trump's leadership to put the American people's health care needs first. | ||
And I remember Dr. Oz, he was one of the first people to call me during the transition when the president announced that the AI czar because he wanted to ask me about how AI could better be used in health care. | ||
So kudos to you, Dr. Oz. | ||
Your passion is really incredible. | ||
And kudos to you, Secretary Kennedy, your passion as well. | ||
And I remember a couple of years ago, I was a big fan of Bobby Kennedy when he was running as a Democrat. | ||
And I remember thinking... | ||
Well, I remember thinking there's this one problem with Bobby Kennedy. | ||
He's not a Republican. | ||
But thanks to President Trump, I think we fixed that. | ||
And I think that getting people like Dr. Oz and Bobby Kennedy into the administration is a testament to President Trump and the talent that he's able to attract and pull together. | ||
We're up against the break here. | ||
We'll pick this back up in the long segment, probably carry it to its conclusion on the other side. | ||
I say this with a little tongue-in-cheek, but no, there's a little realness to it. | ||
You know, you see all these people running healthcare, government healthcare positions, Canada, these countries, and it's fat, disgusting blobs. | ||
You know exactly what I'm talking about, fat, like beyond obese, like disgusting looking freaks telling you about healthcare. | ||
You know, I like the guy. | ||
Give me RFK Jr. who has to get custom-made jackets because his shoulders and biceps are so big. | ||
Give me the meathead who needs custom-made suits. | ||
I'll take that guy. | ||
All right, I believe Trump is about to sign an executive order on AI and sharing information in the healthcare sector. | ||
Let's go back live now. | ||
People who could be doing other things. | ||
So it's really a testament to the great talent that President Trump always attracts around him. | ||
Today's pledge by these companies is going to tear down barriers that allows both startups and established firms to compete freely. | ||
We're opening up the playing field so that the best tools can scale, compete on value, and discover new methods for making Americans healthy again. | ||
Technologies like AI, they do things like they will expand access to care, cut administrative costs, reduce fraud, and deliver better results for patients and doctors. | ||
And I want to thank you, President Trump, for your promise to not only make Americans healthy again, but also to ensure that America is a predominant AI superpower. | ||
Just last week, you announced a major AI action plan with hundreds of billions of dollars of new investment in AI infrastructure and also getting red tape out of the way so that we can be the leading country in AI. | ||
And it's these life-saving applications that are going to be built on top of all that infrastructure. | ||
So thank you for your leadership and making the United States the number one country in AI. | ||
David, thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
And now, Dr. Oz. | |
Mr. President, today we are making American health technology remarkably great again. | ||
We've always been at the leadership. | ||
David's right. | ||
I called him early on After the president offered me the position and him as well. | ||
And we began brainstorming on this. | ||
Secretary Kennedy from day one appreciated the crisis that we're in and how we needed to address it. | ||
So today is a remarkably important day, one that you will remember, I believe, for years to come for three reasons. | ||
Yes, it is the 60th birthday of Medicare Medicaid. | ||
The first patient, by the way, was Harry S. Truman, although Lyndon Johnson signed the legislation 60 years ago today, not far from here. | ||
It is not just the ability to bring 60 of the top incumbents and insurgents in health technology, hospital systems, insurance companies, electronic medical record companies, AI companies, the big players, you're all here and we appreciate that very much. | ||
But Mr. President, use the power to convene. | ||
That's fundamentally what I think the president has been able to offer us. | ||
And Secretary Kennedy offered us as a group some examples, but there are more to come. | ||
And I want to touch on some of these. | ||
But first, I've got to do what doctors often have to do, which is to tell you the truth, even if you don't want to hear it. | ||
So here goes. | ||
These beautiful programs, which are the backbone of the social network, the social support system of this country, the safety net, they're flailing. | ||
They're flailing for a bunch of reasons. | ||
Medicaid is a unique entity. | ||
It has deviated from its original purpose by drift and by design. | ||
The One Big Beautiful Bill, the OB3 law, was elegant for that very reason. | ||
And President, I don't know if you remember this, I can share this, but he called me once and he was upset at me because I was going too strident at something. | ||
And he said, this is about fraud, waste, and abuse. | ||
That's what we're interested in doing. | ||
And that's exactly what the One Big Beautiful bill accomplished. | ||
And it especially did it to save Medicaid by putting $200 billion more dollars into it and allocating funds very specifically to use to support rural America. | ||
And primarily, some of that money will be used to support digital infrastructure, which is terribly lacking in many parts of the country. | ||
The money that's sent from Washington doesn't get to rural America. | ||
About 7% of Medicaid dollars get to rural hospitals. | ||
We now have an ability to infuse funds through this $50 billion rural health transformation fund into that system. | ||
The gathering today is another example of how we can actually jumpstart that it accelerated. | ||
The other reality is COVID broke the system. | ||
It didn't for many reasons. | ||
Medicaid expenses went up 50% in five years. | ||
Medicare, the trust fund that we met at actually Treasury with Secretary Besson and Secretary Kennedy as trustees, it goes bankrupt in 2033. | ||
And that is actually a conservative estimate. | ||
It could go bankrupt as early as 2029. | ||
Thankfully, due to the economy, that's not going to happen. | ||
But you don't want to have to take that risk. | ||
And I do believe Trump is going to sign this executive order. | ||
That's kind of what I'm waiting for here, aside from the commentary we're hearing. | ||
They have been saying that about Medicare, Medicaid, and about Social Security for years. | ||
And it's really true, but it's basically like the 37 trillion debt or whatever the numbers. | ||
It's just this number that just hangs out there. | ||
It's like, well, nobody ever takes it seriously. | ||
It's like, yeah, well, actually, Social Security is about to go broke. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's like, yeah, we'll print more money. | |
We'll infuse more money. | ||
So just keep that in mind because there's some other stories on that exact issue in the news today as well. | ||
But let's go back to the White House. | ||
Trump is going to sign an executive order infusing AI and data sharing into the healthcare industries. | ||
I think there are a lot of realities to how healthcare has gone. | ||
Unfortunately, this system is frozen, and it has been for many reasons, despite efforts in the first administration. | ||
It's frozen in time, so it cannot address the quality lags that exist. | ||
While Netflix and Airbnb and Uber drivers are racing ahead, making arrangements, identifying the problems that are challenging us in healthcare, have become incredibly difficult. | ||
You can't make appointments. | ||
The average Americans are tired. | ||
They're tired of waiting for a doctor's appointment. | ||
They're tired of waiting for the surprise of what your hospital bill is going to offer. | ||
That's being addressed by one of the president's executive orders. | ||
They're tired of waiting for access to their medical records. | ||
You own your medical records. | ||
They're yours. | ||
Why you can't have access to them is a stunning reality in modern day America. | ||
They're also tired of waiting for Washington to take action. | ||
And this president emphatically stated that wasn't going to happen anymore. | ||
And today we made that vision into a reality. | ||
And there's a fine line between vision and hallucination. | ||
What you did today was show it's a vision because you share it with us and we're moving ahead on it. | ||
And that's what today's commitments essentially are reflecting. | ||
And they are pledges. | ||
They're not laws. | ||
They're nimble and they're fast and they're quick because the president understands that you, each of you in your own way, understand these needs. | ||
And Secretary Kennedy spoke beautifully about the reality of what happens when you actually have electronic records because what he said is happening in Indonesia, we'll have here. | ||
Within a year on your device, 91% of Medicaid patients have smartphones. | ||
On this device, you'll get insights based on your records if you want. | ||
You don't have to take this, but if you desire, Amy Gleason, who's one of the smartest people I've ever worked with, has built a mechanism to be able to get you that information in a way with all these partners helping so that you can get nudged to pay attention to what you're eating and avoid processed foods that Secretary Kennedy smartly and wisely highlighted is so dangerous to our well-being. | ||
All this, by the way, is that we'll be at the fingertips. | ||
In addition, advice about which doctor to see, when to go see them, nudges, reminding you why you didn't do certain things. | ||
If you're a doctor like me, it's a very different story. | ||
It's to help you navigate the system better. | ||
It's giving you advice, decision support, which is becoming increasingly important as medicine gets more difficult. | ||
But I'll tell you the best thing of all. | ||
How many of you have been with your doctor, telling them something heartfelt, very emotional, and they're looking to decide typing into their computer, right? | ||
It's common. | ||
Put your hands up. | ||
I just want to see it. | ||
Yeah, most everybody. | ||
And that's unfortunate because the whole sacrament, the whole covenant of being with the doctor is having them look you in the eyes and realize you're there for each other. | ||
That process is going to go away. | ||
We will, within the workflow of doctors, be able, with your help, allow physicians to take care of patients, gather the information while they're doing it, and we'll destroy the upcoding that has hurt Medicare Advantage and other programs in a similar fashion. | ||
The IT infrastructure that's going to change promises to improve a lot of things. | ||
We're going to cut fraud, waste, and abuse. | ||
Mr. President, we announced with the DOJ two weeks ago a $15 billion bust. | ||
$15 billion. | ||
It's a multinational criminal syndicate based primarily, we believe, in the Soviet Union, in Russia. | ||
And what they did was hack using beneficiary numbers into the system. | ||
We'll be able to stop that because of a system that Amy has put together and the wonderful work of Amy Brandt, who has a fraud war room using this kind of technology because we'll know who you are and who your doctor is. | ||
we can block this. | ||
We're going to have remarkable advances in how consumers can use their own records. | ||
We'll have beneficiaries be able to get Maha advice and prevention tips and even be able to nudge them and reward them perhaps for that. | ||
And all this comes back to one fundamental issue, Mr. President, which is leadership. | ||
Nudge and reward. | ||
By the way, as they're talking here. | ||
What is it called? | ||
There's a new app. | ||
I mean, I kind of like it. | ||
It's an interesting idea. | ||
There's a new app where you can bet on yourself to lose weight. | ||
So you basically make a bet on this app and you say, I'm going to lose whatever, 40 pounds by next year or something. | ||
And then you get to go check on that bet in a year. | ||
And if you did it, it pays out the bet. | ||
I forget the name of the app. | ||
It just came out. | ||
So it sounds like they're kind of instituting a similar idea here. | ||
It's like, oh, maybe, you know, you do something good for your health, you get a kickback. | ||
Well, how about you just do something good for your health because it's good for your health? | ||
The healthy wager app, get paid to lose weight. | ||
You know, part of me looks at that as like a really dark thing because it's like, I mean, if you think about it, they're basically betting that fatties aren't going to lose the weight. | ||
They're basically sitting here saying, we're going to make a bunch of money because people are going to bet on themselves to lose weight and they're not going to do it. | ||
So let's scam these fatties. | ||
Or maybe just out of the goodness of their heart, they hope that they have to just pay a bunch of money to lose weight. | ||
I mean, where's your business model here? | ||
So you're betting that fatties are going to pay you a bunch of money because they're too lazy to lose weight is what you're doing. | ||
So it's like from that aspect of it, I'm like, this is actually really dark. | ||
But then on the other side, hey, if it works and they're just out of the goodness of their heart, like, let's help motivate people to lose weight. | ||
Maybe they can make money selling products in there. | ||
Maybe that's the bottom line. | ||
But so I guess we're trying to find ways to institute this into the government as well. | ||
So, you know, it's just, it gets to a point where you're talking about big government again. | ||
So it kind of just turns me off. | ||
So I get it. | ||
And I don't have to deal, you know, I mean, knock on wood. | ||
I don't go to hospitals. | ||
I don't deal with medical problems because I take care of myself. | ||
But so maybe it is really bad. | ||
I mean, the couple times where I've had to deal with a doctor, I mean, it's bad. | ||
A couple of times where I've had to deal with the medical institutions, industries, it is a nightmare. | ||
That's why I never do. | ||
But you see what's going on here. | ||
It's just everything being funneled into centralized data banks and processing. | ||
Everything being funneled into AI. | ||
Everything. | ||
All right, let's go back live. | ||
Manual situations. | ||
But today, thanks to President Trump, we're changing that. | ||
Over 15 years, we've tried to regulate our way to a better outcome. | ||
And we have gotten a path forward. | ||
But they have not delivered the modern health care experience that Americans expect and deserve. | ||
I'm so proud today that these 60 companies have voluntarily stepped forward to make a pledge to take action and to join us to say, we're ready. | ||
Let's fix this. | ||
We're in. | ||
We're trying something different. | ||
It's not regulation or rulemaking. | ||
This is a voluntary alignment around a shared vision, a commitment to work across boundaries, across competitors, and across silos. | ||
We're bringing together data sharing networks, electronic medical records, doctors, health systems, payers, and app developers. | ||
And we're asking one simple question. | ||
What can we do right now to make this work for patients? | ||
The companies pledging today are agreeing to collaborate, even with their direct competitors, because they know we can't keep kicking the can down the road. | ||
We have to stop talking about data interoperability and make the data flow. | ||
Here's something important. | ||
Not all patients will want these tools. | ||
Some will rely on their caregivers and others will rely on their doctors, so they don't have to carry it themselves. | ||
But no matter how people engage, we must make sure it works for everyone. | ||
CMS is doing its part. | ||
We're clearing the path for innovation by building the long overdue national provider directory, a kind of digital map for healthcare. | ||
You know, what are they saying? | ||
The road to hell is paved with good intentions. | ||
I just can't help but think where this is all going. | ||
And the movie Idiocracy, Justin Long is playing the doctor, and he's, you know, basically an illiterate. | ||
But, you know, he's the doctor because everything's on the AI. | ||
Everything's on the computer. | ||
So you really don't have to know anything. | ||
The computer runs everything. | ||
So it's technology can be good or bad. | ||
And I'd like to see the issue is it really relies on the people. | ||
When you talk about health decision, it relies on the people. | ||
People are either going to make good health decisions or they're not. | ||
And I guess the idea is if we give them if we give them the resources to make good health decisions, then that will take stress off of the medical industry, the healthcare industry that is totally under stress and burden right now because of all the chronic diseases. | ||
And so it's like, if you're trying to get to the root of it and you're saying, look, we got all this chronic disease. | ||
We got all these people unhealthy, different mental health problems, physical health problems. | ||
We're identifying the root causes of this. | ||
Bad diet, lack of exercise. | ||
So now, okay, well, what's the solution? | ||
Well, we can bring, good God. | ||
I'm sorry if you're listening. | ||
The crew, I don't know what this is. | ||
Okay. | ||
They've got people on the screen here that are so fat That they use their guts as a table. | ||
I don't think an app is going to help that lady. | ||
I think a chainsaw might be the only option. | ||
I mean, see, I mean, honestly, that's sad. | ||
That's just sad. | ||
That's got to be a miserable life. | ||
I can't even imagine that. | ||
Good God. | ||
Guys, I have to ask her, can you just not, I can't, with that on the screen, I can't even, that's like modern Marvel stuff. | ||
That's like Ripley's believe it or not stuff. | ||
I can't, wow. | ||
How do you even get to that point? | ||
So RFK Jr., Make America Healthy Again, they say, here are the root causes of all the health problems. | ||
So, yeah, you have the whole entire medical healthcare industry under stress because all these people are sick. | ||
So address the root causes, bad diet, lack of exercise, find a way to promote healthy behavior internally, and then you can have people that are healthy. | ||
I mean, I would guess that my crew here, which is mostly healthy guys, probably right in ideal age and shape, and probably never, between the whole crew here, most in their 30s, maybe, I mean, how often does anybody ever go to a hospital here? | ||
Zero? | ||
Does this crew put any stress on the healthcare system at all? | ||
All right, so Trump is speaking now. | ||
So it's like, I get where they're going. | ||
It's like, we already have a problem with not enough doctors. | ||
We already have a problem where we need more doctors. | ||
Now, are you going to start having dumber doctors and the whole thing is going to be relying on AI? | ||
And it's just like, oh, my gosh, we're going into idiocracy. | ||
All right, let's go to President Trump. | ||
I even see Newt. | ||
Do I see Newt? | ||
I'd see Newt. | ||
Look at him. | ||
He's such a handsome man. | ||
He's a healthy man. | ||
We don't have to do any tests on him. | ||
But good to see you, Newt. | ||
But I just want to thank everybody. | ||
This is a very big undertaking, and it's a very serious undertaking. | ||
It's going to make a lot of people lead a much better life. | ||
Thank you all very much for coming. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Can I call you button? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I give them credit for this. | ||
They're trying something different. | ||
I give them credit for this. | ||
And, you know, I'll remain skeptical about centralizing all the data and turning everything over to AI. | ||
We'll remain with a healthy skepticism of that. | ||
But you know what? | ||
I'll give them credit. | ||
They're trying something different. | ||
And I see the bigger picture trying to address the root causes and then take the stress off of the healthcare institutions so that they're not so overwhelmed. | ||
And then really, because really what you would like to see is you'd like to see a situation where really people are just going to the hospital when they need, when it's an emergency. | ||
You need stitches, broken leg, whatever, traumatic surgery. | ||
But like, oh, the mental health and like, oh, the chronic disease and the obesity and everything that comes along with it. | ||
It's just basic, basic physical maintenance. | ||
But how do you, if a person isn't motivated to do that on their own, then you think a government app is going to change that? | ||
Oh, we'll find a way to give them kickbacks and stuff. | ||
Well, again, it all comes down to a person. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
Maybe there is a portion of Americans that just do not realize they're making bad health decisions. | ||
They just don't know it. | ||
They just assume, oh, hey, if they're going to put their cereal on the shelves, then it must be fine. | ||
They don't know about red dyes or all the other artificial ingredients are loaded up on processed sugars. | ||
So I'll give them credit. | ||
They're trying something different. | ||
We'll see if it works. | ||
They'll get attacked for it. | ||
I'll remain skeptical of the AI, but you know what? | ||
They're trying something different. | ||
So you got to give them credit there. | ||
All right. | ||
You know what? | ||
We still got some geopolitical news to get to here. | ||
And then some of these other headlines. | ||
We'll cover the EPA headlines coming up here too. | ||
But there's more on AI. | ||
And then I want to get back to this idea of Medicaid, Medicare going broke. | ||
The whole system is broke. | ||
You're $37 trillion in debt. | ||
The whole thing is broke. | ||
But this is what I've been talking about and why I hope they're not putting the cart before the horse here. | ||
AI in Wyoming may soon use more electricity than state's human residents. | ||
So I've been preaching this for months about how you have to increase your energy capabilities immediately if you want to become the AI leader in the world. | ||
If we get out ahead of this and we do the actual AI before the energy, then it's going to collapse. | ||
So I mean, you got to start building nuclear power like yesterday. | ||
Okay? | ||
You got to. | ||
And I would be, I'd be calling every coal-powered company, every company that does coal, and I'd call and I'd say, hey, what can we do? | ||
What can we do? | ||
Can we double output in six months? | ||
Can we quadruple output in a year? | ||
What can we do? | ||
We need the energy. | ||
How long will it take to build a nuclear facility to power this AI? | ||
If you start to turn on the AI and all this data processing, you know, they do all these freakouts. | ||
It's like, oh, it's hot. | ||
Turn off your AC. | ||
Oh, it's cold. | ||
Turn off your heat. | ||
And most of that is just synthetic, like you've never dealt with hot weather or cold weather. | ||
Most of that is just kind of synthetic fear-mongering over fake climate change. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
You'll have a real situation if they flip on all of this AI data processing and they don't start building power plants to handle it, then you actually will see power grid problems. | ||
And it won't be some selective thing they do in California where they just say, we're going to do rolling blackouts. | ||
That's part of our green initiative here. | ||
No, they'll be like, we have to turn the power off. | ||
We have to keep the AI systems going. | ||
Because what do you think they're going to do when all these AI systems have all the government information on them? | ||
When the whole government is turned into these AI data processing farms and everybody's information is sitting in these data farms, they can't turn it off. | ||
So what do you think is going to happen? | ||
Well, the power grid is short on power. | ||
What are we going to do? | ||
Well, we're going to shut the consumer's power off. | ||
We're going to shut the residents' power off because we have to keep the government AI systems running. | ||
So you got to, honestly, they got to start. | ||
There's only so much you can do overnight when it comes to oil. | ||
But I mean, I would, I mean, coal, you got to get coal going fast. | ||
You can't get enough coal right now, as far as I can tell. | ||
And then while you're trying to develop these nuclear power plants, I would just, I'd call every coal mining operation, every coal power, and I'd say, what can we do? | ||
Let's double in six months. | ||
What can we do for you? | ||
We got to do this now. | ||
So that's just an idea. | ||
That's Wyoming. | ||
But if they start building this stuff in California and they start building this stuff in Texas, New York, oh yeah, they'll just start telling you, we're shutting off the power. | ||
Say, why? | ||
Well, the government AI processing facilities are here, so we have to keep those powered up because if they turn off, the whole system shuts down. | ||
You see? | ||
So centralizing anything has its pitfalls. | ||
But if we run into this AI thing and we don't have the power behind it, we're going to have big problems. | ||
What do you think the best science fiction cinema representation of AI is? | ||
You think it's The Terminator? | ||
You think it's iRobot? | ||
You think it's Space Odyssey. | ||
You think it's... | ||
I forget the name of it. | ||
The one after that. | ||
Covenant. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
What about in Covenant, maybe? | ||
But the story is the same. | ||
The AI starts to think for itself, develop its own ideas, make its own decisions, and ultimately separate itself from the humans. | ||
So, you know, Sam Altman, Elon Musk calls him scam Altman. | ||
You know, he's saying some interesting things about AI. | ||
He now says he wants a doomsday bunker. | ||
Sam Alton's doomsday bunker confession is open AI CEO fears bombs dropping. | ||
Well, is that because humans are going to decide it's time? | ||
Or maybe something else is going to decide it's time? | ||
Do you think you'll have a, will it be run by AI in there? | ||
Or is he going to go with something a little more old-fashioned? | ||
Now, you heard, I think it was Dr. Oz talk about Medicare, Medicaid going broke. | ||
I've been hearing about this. | ||
It always makes it way into the headlines. | ||
Oh, Social Security is going broke. | ||
And they've had to extend these programs probably a dozen times or it's going to go broke. | ||
And then they find a way to extend and extend and extend. | ||
So it's the same game. | ||
You couldn't get more credit if you were $37 trillion in debt. | ||
But the U.S. government can get as much credit as they want, and they can continue to rack up debt as they're paying a trillion dollars now annually just on the debt alone. | ||
Now, one individual who's really good at communicating this is Byron Donalds. | ||
Trump has backdoor to privatizing social security. | ||
Now, they could be thinking about tying all of this into crypto as they're mainstreaming that, buying up all this crypto. | ||
Scott Besson, President Trump's Treasury Secretary, said at a Breitbart event Wednesday that the Trump accounts created by the Big Beautiful Bill are a backdoor to privatizing Social Security. | ||
Trump accounts included in the President's massive tax and spending package consist of a one-time deposit of $1,000 from the federal government for all children born in the United States from 2025 to 2028. | ||
Parents and others will be able to contribute up to $5,000 per year until the child turns 18. | ||
By the way, this idea actually was a Hillary Clinton idea years ago, and the Republicans hated it, just for the record. | ||
Now, it's great. | ||
We want you to understand it, said Besant, referencing the accounts. | ||
I'm not sure when the distribution date should be, whether it's 30, and you can buy a house, should it be 60, but in a way, it's a backdoor for privatizing Social Security. | ||
Critics have warned that after the beneficiary of the account turns 18, it will then adhere to IRA rules, meaning savers will need to pay a tax on penalty on withdraws before aged 59 and a half. | ||
Oh, more taxes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Now, again, Byron Donalds is really smart with this stuff, really good on financial discussions. | ||
And the way he explained it, I think it was to Maria Bartiromo some time ago, but he's done multiple interviews on this and debates on this about privatizing Social Security. | ||
And basically, the concept is when you leave your money stagnant in a bank, let's say, your money is losing its value. | ||
And so Donalds argues that we should be privatizing Social Security. | ||
We should be privatizing Medicare and Medicaid. | ||
And it would be more beneficial to the beneficiary to have it that way because instead of just cash losing value, you can actually have it go up in value or actually get a return like an interest rate. | ||
So there is some purpose behind this. | ||
Now, you're going To have a debate over whether or not the one-time deposit of $1,000 for all children born in the U.S. is a good idea or not. | ||
Again, that was a Democrat idea years ago. | ||
Now the Republicans hated it, and now they love it. | ||
So it's, you know, again, it's like, well, they're trying new things, but everything is going towards more government, bigger government, instead of smaller government, less government, which is what true conservatism is about, at least in my view, smaller government. | ||
That's what we should be fighting for. | ||
Smaller government. | ||
And we're doing it in the EPA, though. | ||
I will say that. | ||
Massive change is happening with the EPA. | ||
I mean, it's just headline after headline. | ||
Lees Eldon's EPA liberates American industry. | ||
They are just slashing into all the Obama, Democrat, Green News scams. | ||
In game-changing climate rollback, EPA aims to kill a bedrock scientific finding. | ||
So they're basically going right to the foundation of the man-made climate change arguments and saying it's a lie. | ||
It's a lie. | ||
Carbon emissions, more or less, are not causing these issues like they claim. | ||
All the claims, the results that they said would have happened by the year 2025, none of them have come true. | ||
And so they're basically just going right to the core of this issue and saying it was always a lie. | ||
The fundamental lies that the theory of man-made climate change had been built off of are all dead. | ||
So we're rolling back every single regulation that was based off of these lies. | ||
EPA released his proposal to rescind Obama-era endangerment finding regulations that paved the way for electric vehicle mandates. | ||
In other words, they looked at the science. | ||
Yep, you're not really making much of a difference whether you're driving an electric vehicle or a gas-powered vehicle. | ||
Their studies were wrong. | ||
Drive whatever you want. | ||
Trump moves to scrap climate change rule, tying greenhouse gases to public health harm. | ||
That was a big buzzword in the early 2000s was greenhouse gases. | ||
But it's more of the mythology that people like Al Gore started building up. | ||
The hole in the ozone, acid rain, global freezing, all of these lies, they never came true. | ||
So they constantly have to change the wording, change the initiative, keep pivoting. | ||
I hope people just can't even keep up. | ||
So then it was, for a minute, it was greenhouse gases. | ||
That was like right after the ozone, which is back. | ||
The ozone holes are repairing themselves. | ||
So it's probably just stuff that happens in time. | ||
You know, it really should be a bigger story. | ||
It's like one of those things we all knew was a lie. | ||
So when it comes out, it was a total lie and they admit it was a total lie and then they show you it was a total lie. | ||
You're just like, well, yeah, I knew it was a total lie. | ||
They reshaped many sectors of the economy based off of this. | ||
They caused energy prices to skyrocket because of this. | ||
They wanted us to remake, to reconsider the entire way we live life on planet Earth because of these lies. | ||
And it's kind of just happening. | ||
It's like a silent whisper. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like, hey, they lied to us. | |
The entire man-made climate change global warming initiative was all based on lies. | ||
Yes, they wanted to reshape human life on planet Earth. | ||
Yes, they wanted population control. | ||
Yes, they wanted to ration your life from birth till death. | ||
They wanted a global government to do this because it was a global problem of the global climate and the whole thing was a lie. | ||
I mean, I think Lee Zeldin probably right now is the top of the class when it comes to the Trump administration. | ||
It's like the only sector where there's been nothing negative to come out of it. | ||
I mean, this should be celebrated. | ||
We should be taking victory laps. | ||
We should be shoving this in the face of the radical left and the globalists that wanted to use this to conquer our planet. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, this is huge. | |
So you got all of these different groups, and people always want to focus on one group or the other and say, it's all about this or it's all about that, like it's all about Israel or it's all about China or it's all about this other group, whatever. | ||
No, there's a lot of different, there's a lot of different groups struggling for power. | ||
And then there's kind of a consortium of groups that want to have a global government and centralized governance. | ||
And they use things like man-made climate change or a pandemic to do it because, oh, it's a world problem. | ||
It's not a local problem. | ||
It's not a state problem. | ||
It's not a nation problem. | ||
It's a global thing, a pandemic. | ||
It's a global thing, climate change. | ||
So we need to establish a global governance. | ||
And then they tell you, well, you're killing the planet by existing, so we have to do something about that. | ||
No, Trump has struck at the heart of this since his first administration. | ||
And now they're just, I mean, they're just tearing it down. | ||
So you're going to, as it continues, it's going to be so much easier to access energy. | ||
It's going to be so much easier to innovate in energy. | ||
So we're not even just talking about the lies of global warming that they tried to influence a global government with. | ||
We're talking about even getting access to energy here. | ||
So this is really huge. | ||
And as a little petty thing, do you deal with the start-stop engine? | ||
Is it not the most obnoxious thing since the seatbelt thing? | ||
It's got to be the most obnoxious thing. | ||
You stop your car, you're sitting in a light, your Car stops, turns off. | ||
Who knows? | ||
The whole thing is just a mess. | ||
And this is all an Obama-era regulation because apparently stopping and starting your engine is better for the environment, which is debatable anyway. | ||
It's horrible for your engine. | ||
That's not debatable. | ||
It's just awful for your engine. | ||
The wear and tear, everything else. | ||
So I guess, you know, maybe the automakers are like, well, we build these cars. | ||
They go like 250,000 miles. | ||
But if their engine is starting and stopping every time they're alive, boy, you know, we're probably shortening the lifespan of these vehicles down to like 100,000. | ||
And they'll have to buy more cars. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, isn't this such a perfect illustration? | ||
The crew is playing all these different videos, just stop oil and all these other groups. | ||
I mean, folks, they glue themselves to the streets. | ||
I can't even, they jump in front of cars and it's so sad with the left, and this isn't trying to even do the, separate the left and the right, but I mean, the right will fall for lies and propaganda. | ||
I mean, yeah, okay. | ||
No, the left lives in a world of lies and propaganda. | ||
The left, leftists will literally, this actually happened, they will super glue their breasts to the streets off of completely fabricated ideas like man-made climate change. | ||
They put I've seen them put their arms and legs into pipes, plastic pipes, and then put quick-drying cement in there so that they can cement themselves to streets and sidewalks. | ||
They get in front of cars. | ||
They stand on racetracks, cars going 100 miles an hour. | ||
They destroy great works of art. | ||
They disrupt sporting events. | ||
And you just sit here and you're like, you know, your entire movement is based off of lies. | ||
Your entire movement is based off of lies. | ||
And they want to turn you into a slave in the name of man-made climate change. | ||
This is what they want to do. | ||
They want to turn you into, you're a prisoner on this planet now. | ||
Everything is rationed. | ||
Oh, I'm saving the planet. | ||
Oh, look at me. | ||
They're getting dragged out by law enforcement. | ||
Start-stop engines. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good riddance. | ||
Good riddance. | ||
And Zeldon talked about doing that as early as May, and now they finally are tackling it. | ||
No, I got to say, Trump, A, when it comes to dealing with the climate change and the EPA and Lee Zeldon, that's like the strongest work. | ||
That's some of the strongest work they've done. | ||
Undeniable. | ||
I mean, all of the stuff from the first administration and stuff continuing here, I mean, they have struck a dagger into the heart of the man-made climate change agenda. | ||
A dagger into the heart, folks. | ||
And that doesn't mean we don't care about the environment. | ||
We do care about the environment, actually. | ||
I'd like to see, in fact, I would like to see more laws and regulations dealing with littering, to be quite honest with you. | ||
Why is the crew reacting to that? | ||
I hear the crew grumbling behind me. | ||
What are you guys a bunch of, you guys trash your communities back there? | ||
Like, I'll go do a run in a park or something, and it's just trash littered everywhere. | ||
I'm like, who are these heathens? | ||
And I got friends that do this too. | ||
I give them a hard time. | ||
They throw their cigarette butts out their car windows. | ||
You're disgusting. | ||
You know, I don't care if you want to smoke a cigarette. | ||
But people throwing cigarettes out their car window. | ||
I mean, it's just lazy. | ||
It's like, that's the kind of stuff that I can get behind. | ||
It's like, that's the kind of stuff you can do. | ||
Yeah, that's a conservative thing. | ||
Hey, hey, let's not throw trash out our car windows. | ||
And yes, if you're somebody that does that, listen to this. | ||
I am talking to you. | ||
Stop it. | ||
You know that's gross. | ||
You know that's gross. | ||
So it's like climate or like environment action like that. | ||
It's like, yeah, let's keep our, let's have some, but see, but that's just having a sense of pride. | ||
It's like you wouldn't go home and throw a cigarette butt out on your kitchen floor, would you? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe you would. | ||
No, EPA, Lee Zeldon, Trump on this, they've done great work, and they are really taking us out of the grip of the man-made climate change agenda, truly. | ||
And they're just tearing down the entire structure that they were trying to build around us and trap us in in the name of this. | ||
Yeah, we're talking about making you eat bugs. | ||
We're talking about telling you you can't have a gas-powered car, a gas-powered lawnmower. | ||
I mean, you name it. | ||
We're talking about that. | ||
They are taking it all down. | ||
So on that deal, that's an A. And they continue to win on that. | ||
But I guess it's not sexy, so it doesn't really get the headlines. | ||
And people are distracted with other things going on. | ||
unidentified
|
There's wars all over the planet. | |
Deep state infighting. | ||
No, the Trump administration for the second straight time is really getting us out of the grips of the man-made climate agenda. | ||
That is definitely happening. | ||
So I applaud them for that. | ||
Some other big developments today. | ||
New Texas redistricting plan could achieve Trump's aims. | ||
One Texas redistricting map shows Lubbock San Antonio in same district. | ||
So they're complaining about this redistricting. | ||
And I mean, look, you can look at some of this stuff and say, well, that's in odd shape. | ||
But at least there is a bit of a pattern to it now. | ||
It's not like they have these nonsensical where you can clearly see gerrymandering is going on. | ||
Now, did the Republicans maybe make some measurements to get some good results? | ||
Maybe. | ||
So I'm not going to sit here and act like Republicans couldn't gerrymander a deal as well here. | ||
But when you look at the redistricting, at least there's a pattern to the way they have this thing mapped out. | ||
Whereas the old one, it was just clear. | ||
I mean, it was like they were counting numbers and votes and just seeing how they could shape things so that Democrats would win elections and win House seats. | ||
So you see the headlines now. | ||
Democrat poll, Warren's GOP redistricting could cost Republicans up to seven points in competitive seats. | ||
No, it's the exact opposite. | ||
Actually, they really think this will probably flip it about five seats in favor of Republicans. | ||
And I would say that's the case. | ||
If you did this in 50 states, if you started redistricting in all 50 states whenever the Republicans get the chance, the Democrats would never win the House ever again. | ||
They never would. | ||
And I don't want to go through this exercise of showing you how they do it, but they know, the Democrats know, we don't need 80% of the votes in the major metropolitan areas. | ||
We don't need 80% of the votes in the downtown areas. | ||
All we need is 51. | ||
So they siphon off 6% here, 7% there, 8% over here, however much they need into the red areas, and then they flip it. | ||
And so all they've done here in Texas is they've just reversed that, and they've just said, no, we're not doing that. | ||
We're going to have maps that actually have some semblance of a pattern to them. | ||
This could save the House. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how big this is. | |
This could save the House from flipping. | ||
So I hope other Republicans take note here, especially if they see that it's successful, which I imagine it will be. | ||
So that's some big news, too. | ||
So if you thought maybe the Iran strikes or the Israel issue or the Epstein list could cost Republicans the House, redistricting, stopping the Democrat gerrymandering could be the thing that saves it. | ||
Could be the thing that stops the Democrats from flipping the House in the midterms, which most people agreed that they were on pace to do. | ||
So that's good. | ||
All right. | ||
I've lost my show clock here, guys. | ||
Can you tell me what we have left in the segment, please? | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
Thank you. | ||
All right. | ||
By the way, here, let me mention this in Texas, and we'll start to move on. | ||
The state-sponsored child abuse Texas Education 911 report just comes out. | ||
Folks, this thing is wild. | ||
Few educators become offenders, but opportunistic predators always seek access to kids. | ||
Will Texas close loopholes, hold them accountable, and deter them from employment in the school system? | ||
They found thousands of cases. | ||
Texas ed911.com. | ||
You can find this report. | ||
They found thousands of cases of child abuse, and the majority of them did not even get investigated to the degree which you would assume they're being investigated with. | ||
So they essentially are trying to cover this stuff up is what's going on. | ||
unidentified
|
They're trying to cover it up. | |
Wild stuff going on out there. | ||
But who could be surprised when your teacher shows up with rainbow hair and 10 nostril piercings and says, let me tell you about gay sex. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me tell you about my pride flag. | |
I thought this was a math class. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Let me tell you about math. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
You're surprised about all the child sex abuse cases? | ||
And of course, they don't want to tell you what's going on. | ||
Oh, you mean we had drag queen story time and the stripped for children? | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
Well, that's a bad look. | ||
So let's just bury that. | ||
Oh, you mean the teacher at the school with the gay pride flag is telling kids about where they like to put their wee wee? | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
unidentified
|
We don't want that report getting out. | |
So absolutely stunning stuff there. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
As we close out the second hour here of the Infowars Warroom, folks, it's debate night. | ||
It is debate night tonight. | ||
Should American Patriots still support Donald Trump, Nick Fuentez versus Alex Jones? | ||
We'll be hosting it right here in the Infowars World Headquarters in Austin, Texas. | ||
Live feed starts at 8 p.m. | ||
Central. | ||
Infowars.com slash show. | ||
We'll be broadcasting it on X as well at RealAlexJones. | ||
So make sure to follow that. | ||
Going to be, I imagine, highly entertaining and informative, looking at two perspectives on the issue here. | ||
And then I wouldn't be surprised if maybe Infowars collaborates for some post-debate coverage just to keep the fun going, because why not? | ||
But tune in tonight, InfoWars.com slash show or at realalxjones on X. And of course, this is all made possible with your support at thealxjonesstore.com. | ||
We have a big thing happening right now to thank our VIP members, but this is for VIP members only. | ||
Become a VIP member at thealxjonesstore.com slash VIP. | ||
Buy one, get one free on all supplements and all apparel while supplies last right now. | ||
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Other benefits include multiple bonus entries into our raffles and giveaways happening right now. | ||
All right, continuing on the Texas stories, At least for another moment here. | ||
This went down in the Texas House as they were debating issues like the redistricting. | ||
This man stepped to the podium, and you can hear the Democrats as he gets about halfway through his speech here, the wailing and gnashing of teeth you start to hear from the audience. | ||
That is the Democrats in the room upset over what the man is saying here. | ||
So check this out in clip seven. | ||
unidentified
|
In the great state of Texas, as a black American, Afghanistan veteran, a retired department head of the U.S. Department of Justice, I strongly support the Republican redistricting. | |
I do not want, nor does the great state of Texas or this magnificent nation deserve to continue. | ||
Gentlemen, we yield. | ||
The gentlemen will be accorded the same respect that everyone testifying receives. | ||
We will come to order. | ||
Everyone, regardless of your belief, political persuasion, or age, or whoever you are, you are an American and you are entitled to be heard and you will be heard in this committee. | ||
The audience will come to order. | ||
The gentleman is recognized to continue his testimony. | ||
unidentified
|
I do not want the great state of Texas or this magnificent nation deserved to continue seeing systemic gang and street violence, a plummeting educational system, communities deteriorating, men and women, sports, etc., while Democrats sit quietly and fall to condemn or acknowledge the systemic moral decay, screaming systemic racism for anything that does not fit their narrative. | |
These acts of evil must stop. | ||
We need Republican leadership for such a time as this. | ||
Republicans have a larger story. | ||
Echoing the words of the American icon, Mr. Frederick Douglass, you will not be judged by the heights you have risen, but from the depths you have climbed. | ||
I am a Republican. | ||
A black dyed in the wool Republican, and I never intend to belong to any other party but the party of freedom and progress, Frederick Douglass. | ||
We need and must have increased Republican leadership in the great state of Texas to remain great. | ||
As president of the Frederick Douglass Republicans of Tarran County, I stand behind this statement, simplifying. | ||
Thank you for your testimony. | ||
unidentified
|
Any questions for me? | |
Members, any questions for this witness? | ||
unidentified
|
And Mr. Chairman, hold, yield. | |
Hey, this is America. | ||
We hear from everyone whether we agree with them or not. | ||
And the audience will come to order and extend. | ||
Now, you ever notice this? | ||
Because we play these clips frequently. | ||
Democrats getting outraged. | ||
Specifically in this case, whenever you're dealing with just political action, committees, town halls, whatever. | ||
And something will be said that the Democrats don't like. | ||
Sometimes at their protests. | ||
You ever hear it sounds like the sounds of hell? | ||
Like, if you could imagine the sound of demons in hell screaming and wailing, that's it. | ||
You got it about 20 seconds or so into that video. | ||
Maybe we can play that on the way out. | ||
But you know what really drives them nuts? | ||
If that was some white guy up there saying it, they probably wouldn't even have bothered to scream and shout. | ||
But because it was a black man, see, that's like, you know, Democrats don't like when their slaves leave the plantation. | ||
They don't like a black man that doesn't do their bidding. | ||
They don't like a black man that is convicted in his thoughts in support of the Republican Party or Donald Trump. | ||
That gets them extra angry. | ||
That sends them into fits of rage that makes them sound like they're right out of hell. | ||
Listen to this. | ||
That's the soundtrack of hell. | ||
Gentlemen, we're here. | ||
That's good stuff. | ||
The general. | ||
Well done, crew. | ||
The gentleman. | ||
But seriously, if I could somehow in my mind, what would the sounds of wailing demons of hell sound like? | ||
It sounded like liberals complaining. | ||
All right, we got a couple of developments here with the situation in Israel and the Gaza Strip. | ||
And I'll hone in on a couple specific things and then look at the larger picture here. | ||
Now, Trump was forced to address the issue of the starving children in Gaza that you'll have Israel tells you it doesn't exist. | ||
And of course, they're trying to have a complete blockade on any media, getting the videos and images out of what's really going on in the Gaza Strip. | ||
They're sending in IDF operatives to social media companies to try to censor this type of content, but they just can't keep it under wraps. | ||
So despite Israel's best attempts to mute the noise coming out of Gaza and silence the voices and censor the images, it has failed miserably. | ||
And so this is obviously a problem with their policy in the region. | ||
And now they're basically about to, I mean, they're about to go full disclosure soon and just say, yeah, the plan is to just conquer it. | ||
The plan is we're taking it. | ||
It's ours now. | ||
That's the plan. | ||
So they're like one or two clicks away from just being like, yeah, this is the agenda. | ||
Some of them are starting to murmur it and mutter it. | ||
Netanyahu, once he says it, then it's like, yeah, okay, they're just going to tell you. | ||
But Trump and Netanyahu with conflicting messages. | ||
First, here, Trump was forced to address this. | ||
He was asked about it, and he said this from Air Force One in Clip 5. | ||
unidentified
|
Can I ask about that first lady? | |
You mentioned a couple of weeks ago her role in talking to you about the war in Ukraine and perhaps a big part of your evolution in thinking. | ||
Have you discussed the crisis in Gaza and the terrifying pictures that you see that we've all seen? | ||
I think everybody of this is pretty cool. | ||
There's nothing you can say when you see the kids. | ||
Those are kids. | ||
They talk starvation. | ||
Those are kids that are starving. | ||
I mean, they are starving. | ||
When you see the mothers, they love them so much. | ||
There's just nothing they seem to be able to do. | ||
unidentified
|
They've got to get them food, and we're going to get them food. | |
And they have committed to more aid there. | ||
But Trump says, well, they're cold-hearted, they're nuts. | ||
Oh, President Trump, you know, you're talking about some of your own Republicans and freaks like Randy Fine. | ||
By the way, there was a rumor yesterday that AIPAC dropped Randy Fine. | ||
Apparently, that was just a fake news rumor. | ||
They've said no such thing and are saying, no, we still stand behind Randy Fine. | ||
So, you know, signing bullets to kill women and children, innocent people. | ||
That's what Randy Fine is into. | ||
Celebrating starving children in Gaza, that's what Randy Fine is into. | ||
But that's who Trump endorsed. | ||
And now you have the new MAGA, which is all the pro-Israel people that love the starving children and love all the death and destruction in Gaza like a Mark Levin. | ||
But then he comes out and says, well, they're nuts. | ||
They have cold hearts. | ||
You're talking about your friend Mark Levin. | ||
You're talking about the guy who endorsed Randy Fine. | ||
These are the sick, heartless freaks you're talking about. | ||
These are the new leaders of MAGA, President Trump. | ||
You see why people are so pissed? | ||
Maybe now you get a better idea. | ||
Because that stuff sickens us just like it sickens you. | ||
And Netanyahu is trying to do damage control on this because they can't stop the images from getting out. | ||
They've tried their best. | ||
They can't stop it. | ||
They can't deny what's going on there. | ||
They can't deny what they've done. | ||
All Netanyahu can do is come out and say it doesn't exist like he does here in Clip 9. | ||
There is no starvation in Gaza, no policy of starvation in Gaza. | ||
And I assure you that we have a commitment to achieve our war goals. | ||
We'll continue to fight till we achieve the release of our hostages and the destruction of Hamas's military and governing capabilities. | ||
They shall be there no more. | ||
We shall not have any more of these massacres. | ||
We shall not have any more of these monstrosities. | ||
We stand for human freedom and human life. | ||
And that is not commensurate with Hamas or with Iran, other Iranian proxies. | ||
We fought this battle together. | ||
We shall win it together. | ||
That's the monster right there, is Benjamin Netanyahu. | ||
He's the monster. | ||
Randy Fine is the monster. | ||
Mark Levin is the monster. | ||
And I understand why people in D.C. are very, and people in the White House press score, very nervous, hesitant to want to go there with the president. | ||
But I think if you're sick of the Epstein deal and you want to generate some buzz here, start asking about Gaza. | ||
Start asking about Israel. | ||
Because the whole world is watching what's going on. | ||
And, you know, I see the attempts to obfuscate. | ||
And there's a level of fairness to it when they say, why didn't you cover, you just had 49 Christians slaughtered in Congo by radical Islamists. | ||
They just came out with some big story about hundreds of thousands of people dying in Yemen from starvation in these wars. | ||
And so, you know, the Israel defenders will come out and say, oh, you don't talk about this. | ||
Oh, you don't cover this. | ||
Well, we do cover it all. | ||
unidentified
|
But we're not funding that. | |
I'm not funding the death and destruction of Yemen like I'm funding Israel's death and destruction in the Gaza Strip. | ||
I'm not, well, I guess we probably are funding all of it, sadly enough, but it's like we're not supposed to know it. | ||
I'm not funding radical Islam in Africa slaughtering Christian villages. | ||
I don't have their flags waving in my Congress. | ||
I don't have all of their representatives, all their spokespeople, all of their surrogates going on my mainstream news all day, every day, every night, telling me how great it is in Yemen, telling me how great things are in the Congo for Christians. | ||
I don't have that. | ||
I do have people saying that about Israel every night. | ||
I do have people in Congress waving the Israeli flag, putting up the Israeli flag in their office, the flag, the lapel pin, every night, mainstream news, the Israeli flag. | ||
So, no, there is a difference. | ||
The big difference. | ||
It's not, oh, well, you can't comment on the Gaza Strip if you don't comment on Yemen. | ||
I'm not supposedly financially supporting the death and destruction in Yemen, although somehow I'm sure our tax dollars go to that too. | ||
But I'm not told how great it is over there. | ||
Nobody's waving the Yemen flag in my face for all this other garbage. | ||
That only goes on with Israel. | ||
So you can try to obfuscate, but it's really a lame attempt, and you know it, you're smarter than that. | ||
But this is all part of the propaganda push for you to say, oh, I'm not supposed to care about what's going on in Gaza. | ||
Well, maybe we would have less concern if Netanyahu wasn't in the White House every month. | ||
Maybe we would have less concern if we weren't directly involved in funding it and supporting it militarily. | ||
Then maybe we would have less of a concern over that. | ||
But since that is the case, no, we do have a right to be concerned over that. | ||
And if you want that blood on your hands, if you're an Israeli citizen, if you want that blood on your hands, which now the Israelis are turning on Netanyahu, the IDF is turning on Netanyahu, even right-wingers are turning on Netanyahu, because they don't want that blood on their hands. | ||
And they're saying there's a level of response to October 7th, and then there's what we're doing, and it's not good. | ||
And even if they don't even want to comment on the military action. | ||
They just see how Israel is now, the support for Israel, approval, whatever you want to call it, is at record lows. | ||
And even, I mean, look, obviously, CNN isn't necessarily pro-Israel, but I do think these polls are very reflective of where things are at that they aired last night here in Clip 8. | ||
You know, Benjamin Netanyahu, if you look at polling in the United States, he is lost in the court of public opinion. | ||
I want you to take a look here at his net favorable rating. | ||
It is the lowest on record, according to Gallup, and they have records going all the way back since the 1990s. | ||
What are we talking about here? | ||
Well, in April of 2019, before, obviously, Israel in Gaza in the latest war that's been going on for a long time, Benjamin Nanyahu was on the positive side at plus 13 points. | ||
Look at where he is today, minus 23 points. | ||
My goodness gracious. | ||
You look at those under the age of 35. | ||
His net favorable rating at this point, get this, 53 points underwater. | ||
My God. | ||
And this, of course, has everything to do with Israel's actions in Gaza. | ||
The American people at this particular point not exactly liking what they're seeing, and they believe that Benjamin Netanyahu is in large part responsible. | ||
unidentified
|
So to that point, how do Americans feel about Israel's actions in Gaza right now? | |
Yeah, so let's take a look at this. | ||
I mean, net approval, Israel's military acts in Gaza. | ||
You go back to November of 2023, it's on the positive side of the ledger, plus five points. | ||
I bet if you even go back a little bit further, it'd be a little bit higher, but Gallup only measured in November of 2023 at plus five points. | ||
Look at here where we are in July of 2025. | ||
Way down there at minus 28 points. | ||
Among those under the age of 35, get this. | ||
A negative 73-point net approval rating. | ||
This is all being led. | ||
All the negative opinions towards Israel and their acts in Gaz are being led by the younger folks in the electorate. | ||
Negative 73 points on the net approval rating. | ||
You rarely ever see numbers that low, and that is charging up this number, 28 points underwater. | ||
The net approval rating of Israel's military acts in Gaza. | ||
The American people do not like what they're seeing and increasingly dislike what they're seeing. | ||
unidentified
|
That is really a shift. | |
And this is leading, too, to a number of other feelings when it comes to Israel in general. | ||
I mean, as we look at that, and also questions about Palestinians and whether to recognize the state of Palestine, that's back in the news because of Emmanuel Macron. | ||
Where do we stand on some of those questions? | ||
So, you know, for the longest period of time, Americans have sympathized more with the Israelis than the Palestinians. | ||
That's still the case, but it's only by plus five. | ||
You go back to May of 2024, it was plus 17. | ||
Right after October 7th, look at this, it was plus 48. | ||
In 2017, it was plus 39 points. | ||
That is a dramatic drop. | ||
That is, what is that, a 43-point drop since the aftermath of October 7th? | ||
And again, under the age of 50, you look at those younger voters, it was plus 38 Israelis back, all the way back in 2017. | ||
You look now, it is plus 19 Palestinians. | ||
There has simply put, been a complete change of opinion on this topic, and it has been at least driven in large part by how Americans view the military actions of Israel in Gaza. | ||
unidentified
|
It was fascinating to see those numbers, Harry. | |
I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
You know, another poll, just 23% of Americans find Israelis' military actions in Gaza acceptable. | ||
And, you know, I've debated this issue a lot in the last couple of months because it has become a right-on-right issue. | ||
And this is just some of the scenes from Gaza folks. | ||
I mean, it's just, you can't even believe it. | ||
But it's so bad that even Trump is having to call it out and say it's too much. | ||
But they'll whip him back into shape. | ||
It's just really horrifying. | ||
And I have these debates and they'll say, oh, people still support Israel. | ||
You're not right. | ||
And I'm just like, look, man, I don't know what world it is you live in. | ||
Okay. | ||
And if you want to be able to understand politics, you have to understand that there's other people in the world that think differently than you, whether you like the way they think or agree with it or not. | ||
unidentified
|
They do exist. | |
You might be stunned that they exist, like I'm stunned leftists exist, but they exist. | ||
I have to recognize that. | ||
So this idea that, oh, I'm just going to mute any anti-Israel commentary and just pretend it doesn't exist, or I'm just going to live in some bubble where everybody thinks Israel is the good guy and is the exact opposite. | ||
It's a really strange phenomenon. | ||
And all of the polling continues to reflect it. | ||
The conversations I have in different social circles continue to reflect it. | ||
And it's just there's this social media denial class that they just pretend like, oh, it's not going on. | ||
It's not hurting Republicans. | ||
It's not hurting the administration. | ||
Oh, it very much is. | ||
It very much is. | ||
Yeah, Trump with the guy who's viewed as the most evil man in the world, Netanyahu, is definitely not good for his image. | ||
Trump chummy chummy with Netanyahu and Randy Fine and the rest of them. | ||
Yeah, not good for his image. | ||
Not good for our image. | ||
So you can sit here and pretend like the world isn't outraged over what's going on in Gaza. | ||
You can sit here and try to obfuscate and say, well, what about Yemen and what about Congo and all these other deals? | ||
It's not going to work. | ||
It's not going to work. | ||
And so now Netyahoo is really basically, he has to make a decision and maybe he's already made it. | ||
And maybe we'll find out soon. | ||
And then Trump will have to make a decision in response. | ||
But Netyahoo is either going to have to back up and back off this, which would kind of be in admittance of defeat, which is why I wouldn't expect it. | ||
Just realizing, okay, I've done so much damage to the international opinion of Israel. | ||
And you could even argue Jews. | ||
I've done so much damage to just the average Jew around the world now that I've got to back off this deal. | ||
I've got to. | ||
But he's already made the decision, folks. | ||
They want to conquer the Gaza Strip. | ||
They want to end any idea of a Palestinian state. | ||
They want to end any concept of a Palestinian people. | ||
And they want to move them to Europe. | ||
They want to move them to Africa. | ||
They want to move them to America. | ||
They just want them out. | ||
They want the land. | ||
That's what this whole thing is about. | ||
And then you have the IDF soldiers, which it's like, you know, I'm not going to sit here and try to armchair quarterback the military activity there. | ||
I'm not a military guy. | ||
I didn't serve, but I can sit here and make neutral observations. | ||
You know, you don't see videos of American troops overseas doing God knows what. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Let's just kind of put it simply like that. | ||
You don't see videos of American troops overseas doing their actions and, you know, celebrating it or teabagging people that are dead. | ||
Okay? | ||
But for whatever reason, the IDF, they're so numb to it. | ||
And people will argue, well, it's their teachings. | ||
They think the Gazans are less than them. | ||
They believe in religious superiority or Jewish superiority. | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
I'm not Jewish. | ||
I don't practice that. | ||
But I can see the actions. | ||
It's like, yeah, they don't care. | ||
I mean, even that slime ball known as destiny goes to Israel, sits down with a bunch of IDF people and says, hey, you know, maybe you wouldn't be hated as much if you didn't film your war atrocities. | ||
That greasy slime ball goes and has a talking to the IDF troop saying, hey, you know, maybe you should stop filming your war crimes and laughing about it. | ||
It's like, yeah, you don't say, but it's like a video game to them. | ||
They just carpet bomb the whole region and assume everyone's dead. | ||
And then once they assume everyone's dead, then they go in boost on the ground and they go play with the children's toys in the houses and they make fun. | ||
Oh, they ride their bikes around. | ||
They throw their pictures around, smash their pictures, put blood on the wall. | ||
It's like this whole fun game. | ||
It's like it's a video game for them. | ||
And they film this stuff. | ||
Now, notice that they're not really publishing it anymore. | ||
Notice that? | ||
First couple months of this, it was everywhere. | ||
They were celebrating it. | ||
Their approval rating was a net positive. | ||
It was funny for them. | ||
Oh, yeah, we're killing a bunch of people. | ||
We're running over them on the rubble now. | ||
It was like, oh, yeah, hell yeah, let's film this. | ||
It's fun. | ||
Notice how, yeah, the memo went out. | ||
Hey, stop videotaping your war crimes. | ||
Stop videotaping your war atrocities. | ||
And then now all the independent journalists in the Gaza Strip, the ones that the IDF can't shut down, sharing all the videos everywhere, you get to see the real humanitarian crisis. | ||
You get to see the real evil that's being done there. | ||
And then it's become such a hot political issue. | ||
You look at the, there's been a couple examples, but maybe the best example yet was Ted Cruz with Tucker Carlson. | ||
And you realize all these pro-Israel politicians have never had to defend the issue. | ||
They've never had to defend the issue on Israel. | ||
They've never been forced to defend what's going on in the Gaza Strip. | ||
It's always just been an easy thing. | ||
Oh, just support Israel, wave the Israeli flag when you're told to, take the APAC money, do what they tell you to do, everything will be fine. | ||
People don't care. | ||
Well, it's a different story now. | ||
Now they're actually being forced to defend it, and they can't do it. | ||
So that was one example. | ||
There was another example with Senator Slotkin, who goes on the breaking point show with Sagar and Genti and Crystal Ball, and they're giving her a similar treatment, and they're asking her stuff about Israel. | ||
And you realize, like, wow, they have never been forced to defend this issue. | ||
They don't know how to defend it. | ||
And it's not even that they don't know how to defend it. | ||
Folks, you can't defend it. | ||
It's indefensible. | ||
And really, it's like, how do you even, okay, October 7th? | ||
Well, that was a stand down, so that doesn't work. | ||
So what's the defense? | ||
Well, the defense is my religious book, my religious doctrine tells me this land was promised to me by God 3,000 years ago. | ||
So it's my land. | ||
Meanwhile, the actual, I mean, if you look at the actual genealogy and the ancestry, the Palestinians have more of a tie to that land than the modern day Israelis. | ||
But, oh, don't even have that debate. | ||
Don't you dare talk about that. | ||
So, no, they've never had to defend this issue, but it's so bad now, the American media is pressing them on it, and they just flop and flail, and they have no idea how to defend it because it's not defensible. | ||
And the timeline here keeps shrinking. | ||
But I think now 2028, 2032, being pro-Israel is going to be a negative, a net negative on a campaign. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I said it. | ||
I said Mom Dami is going to kind of be the first test case. | ||
And maybe we'll get another situation to see, okay, well, even in a mayor's race, shouldn't even have anything to do with Israel. | ||
It's a mayor's race. | ||
It shouldn't have anything to do with foreign policy. | ||
And yet it keeps coming up because you know it's like this is a winning issue. | ||
So that'll be, it was already your first test, and people are like, oh, this is communism. | ||
Communism is not the only factor here. | ||
Yeah, people that are disgruntled and disenfranchised with the economy voting communist. | ||
Okay, I'm not going to deny that's happening. | ||
But no, this is also a mandate on Israel. | ||
Do not fool yourself. | ||
People look at Israel with such disgust, such absolute disgust because of what's going on in the Gaza Strip that, yes, they'll go and vote in a mayor's race that has nothing to do with foreign policy just to show a vote against Israel. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
You already saw it once. | ||
I still think you're going to see it again when the final vote happens. | ||
But yeah, I'd say 2028, but definitely by 2032, it's your, you already kind of start to see it now. | ||
This is just the beginning, folks. | ||
If Netanyahu goes all the way and they just keep bombing and keep killing and the death count just keeps rolling up and then they just take the land and settle it and say, we're Jews, it's our land. | ||
Yeah, it's going to be a really bad situation for Israel. | ||
And of course, the only reason they're able to get away with any of it is because they have the support of the United States. | ||
The only reason they're able to get away with any of it is because President Trump supports them right now. | ||
So you remove that, you know, it's not a good situation. | ||
I mean, folks, you do realize Iran would have kept bombing them. | ||
You do realize they'd probably still be taking strikes from Iran today if Donald Trump didn't step in and stop it. | ||
It's like, don't you realize how bad this is for Israel? | ||
All right, final segment for today. | ||
Remember, though, tonight at 8 p.m. | ||
Central, Alex Jones and Nick Fuenez will be debating support for Donald Trump. | ||
Should American Patriots still support Donald Trump? | ||
Alex Jones, Nick Fuenez debating tonight, 8 p.m. | ||
Central, right here at InfoWars. | ||
You can tune in live on our own feeds, Infowars.com slash show, or watch on Alex's X feed at RealAlexJones. | ||
That will kick off 8 p.m. Central two hours after we sign off. | ||
And then the old InfoWars team might be doing a little post-debate coverage as well. | ||
So stay tuned on X for that. | ||
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Okay, a couple things left to cover here, but we should have time to take a couple phone calls before we sign off for today. | ||
So I want to give out the phone line. | ||
Let's put it on the screen now, please. | ||
877-789-2539. | ||
Numbers on the bottom of the screen. | ||
Anything we've covered today is fair game. | ||
877-789-2539. | ||
To finish up on the geopolitical issues, Keir Starmer is edging closure to recognizing Palestinian statehood. | ||
UK officials say, well, that was yesterday. | ||
Then today, Starmer says UK will recognize Palestinian state status unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire. | ||
Well, they'll agree to a ceasefire, violate it the next day, so that really means nothing. | ||
So the world is trying to find a way to stand up to Israel. | ||
It's tough because America is in the back pocket of Israel or vice versa. | ||
So they have to use weird diplomatic and political ways to do it. | ||
The only country that was really doing it militarily was Iran. | ||
The U.S. put an end to that. | ||
So they're trying to find other ways to do it. | ||
Canada says they're going to recognize the Palestinian statehood in September. | ||
Netherlands bans entry to Ben Gavir and other Israeli extremists overstatement on Gaza and West Bank. | ||
And these are the people that are now coming out and pressuring Netanyahu. | ||
They're saying, hey, just say it. | ||
We're taking the Gaza strip. | ||
Just say it. | ||
Because I guess they figure that'll be better PR. | ||
Because right now, it's, oh, it's self-defense. | ||
Like, yeah, I'm going to go into a nursery and start punching babies because it's self-defense. | ||
So I guess they're telling Netanyahu, they're saying, hey, just come out and say we're taking it. | ||
Just come out and say the agenda is for us to conquer the Gaza Strip. | ||
It's ours. | ||
We're the Jews. | ||
We're the holy people. | ||
So it's ours anyway. | ||
So yeah, we're going in there. | ||
We're clearing them out. | ||
They can go wherever the hell they want. | ||
We don't care. | ||
Tell America to take them. | ||
Tell Europe to take them. | ||
They need more diversity. | ||
Not us, of course. | ||
That diversity is for them. | ||
So they're just telling him, hey, just say we're conquering the Gaza Strip. | ||
It'll look better. | ||
You're saying it's self-defense. | ||
We're in there just killing and starving a bunch of people. | ||
It's not self-defense. | ||
They know that. | ||
So just say we're conquering it. | ||
Ooh, but see, oh, that's like, oh, well, now you're admitting, oh, okay. | ||
So the situation will just get worse. | ||
And it's really frustrating. | ||
It's really embarrassing, to be honest, as an American. | ||
It's embarrassing for our country. | ||
It's embarrassing for our country that our blood, sweat, and treasure, our flag, our government, our politicians, it's embarrassing. | ||
It's embarrassing that they're the enablers of this. | ||
And they are. | ||
Everybody knows it. | ||
And Israel can kind of manipulate the Gulf nation states. | ||
And who knows? | ||
They may got blackmail on some of them too. | ||
They might be on some Epstein list or some other Epstein-like character in the Gulf Nation states. | ||
It wouldn't surprise me. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But it's like they flip back and forth. | ||
One time they're like, no, we need to protect the Palestinians. | ||
Then another day they're saying, oh, no, we're with Israel. | ||
So they just, you know, they don't want the Palestinians. | ||
But everybody knows that Israel would not be as bold. | ||
Israel would not be as blatant. | ||
Israel would not be as forceful if they knew they wouldn't have the support of the United States. | ||
Iran would still be bombing Israel to this day. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Maybe to a very extreme degree. | ||
And maybe other countries too. | ||
But the U.S. stepped in. | ||
unidentified
|
The U.S. stopped it. | |
So the whole world watches Israel's evil. | ||
And then when the world is looking at it like, excuse me, do we need to do something about this? | ||
Okay, somebody's going to do something about this. | ||
Oh, then here comes America. | ||
Say, oh, no one's going to do anything about this. | ||
It's really embarrassing. | ||
It's embarrassing for our country. | ||
It's embarrassing for our politicians. | ||
It's embarrassing for our president that we're basically directly involved in this, supporting it, funding it, Netanyahu coming to D.C. to brag about it. | ||
It's disgusting. | ||
And I really you wonder how bad it's going to get. | ||
I mean, folks, how many are going to die? | ||
And then what's going to happen in the aftermath? | ||
And then what is the world going to say knowing Israel committed this great evil in the name of their own religious beliefs, claiming its self-defense as a cloak after a stand down? | ||
And then the whole world is going to know, they're going to look at America and they're going to say, you let this happen. | ||
And then what do you think they're going to say? | ||
You're going to take the Palestinians. | ||
We tried to stop Israel from doing this. | ||
We tried to stop them with the international criminal courts. | ||
You defended Netanyahu. | ||
We tried to stop them in the courts in Israel. | ||
You defended Netanyahu. | ||
We tried to stop them with the UN. | ||
You defended Netanyahu. | ||
There was military action against them in Yemen, in the ports with Iran, and you stopped them. | ||
And you bombed Israel's enemies, the only people standing up to Israel militarily, and you bombed them and you killed them. | ||
Yeah, you're running cover for what Israel is doing, conquering the Gaza Strip. | ||
And they've clearly decided there is no limit on the death and destruction or lies that'll be told or the levels of censorship. | ||
They'll kill journalists if they have to. | ||
They do not care. | ||
It's the most evil regime on the planet. | ||
It's the most evil man on the planet. | ||
And we're sitting here having to be in bed with that nasty demon. | ||
It's disgusting. | ||
It's embarrassing. | ||
It's embarrassing. | ||
And the whole world sees it. | ||
U.S. sanctions Brazilian judge Alexandra Damares, who's overseeing the case against Trump ally Jair Bolzonaro. | ||
Well, it's a nice symbolic thing, and it's the right thing to do, but it's not going to have any impact. | ||
We've already seen it, folks. | ||
Brazil is not going to, they're balking at everything Trump is doing. | ||
Same with Russia now, too. | ||
China as well. | ||
Whether that's because they don't trust President Trump or the United States, whether it's just a political stance against Trump right now for other reasons. | ||
But it's definitely less impactful than the first administration as far as the geopolitical weight that Trump can throw around here. | ||
Now, this is a wild one. | ||
So, you know, the Irish are trying to take their country back. | ||
They've dealt with the open borders and the invasion and the destruction of their culture. | ||
They're trying to stand up against it. | ||
It's unfortunate. | ||
You watch this stuff happen, and it's mostly just protests and then little results. | ||
Can you even vote your way out of this? | ||
I mean, we're trying deportations here. | ||
It's a problem. | ||
But then you have their Indian, Indian Irish. | ||
I don't even know how you say it. | ||
So you have all these Indians that have moved to Ireland. | ||
They're getting into government. | ||
Listen to one of them talk right here. | ||
And look, I'm not Irish, but it's like, are they not allowed to say, you know what? | ||
Can Ireland be for Irish? | ||
Can Irish people decide the fate of Ireland? | ||
No. | ||
No, this woman moves in from India and she's going to determine the fate. | ||
Listen to this in clip 14. | ||
unidentified
|
Most of the people who are like Irish people, they are very supportive of the people who are contributing in this country, whether it's from migrant backgrounds or whether people are supportive. | |
It's just a small part of the extremists, I would say, who are trying to spread hate with the ideologies that they have. | ||
Oh, it's hate. | ||
unidentified
|
And this is something that we should not allow. | |
This should not be allowed in our country. | ||
What needs to be done is that the youth who are basically get fueled with this kind of these things on the social media that needs to be controlled. | ||
And they need proper education about how the diversity is helping in the economy of the country. | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
This is where, I mean, people who are trying to spread the hate-fueled violence and stuff, they would get an answer that it's not. | ||
Ireland has always been a welcoming country. | ||
And we should not let these kind of extremist thoughts divide us. | ||
So you have to start asking the question then. | ||
What are you really saying? | ||
What are you really saying here? | ||
Because it sounds to me, not just in theory, but in practice, as you can see it, it sounds to me like what you're saying is white countries need to fall. | ||
Countries with a majority white population or traditionally white populations, cultures, values, whatever that means or represents, they just have to fall. | ||
They have to take the knee. | ||
And if people from all over the world move into their country and diversify it and then take it over and it's no longer run by traditional white Irish, well, then they just have to accept that. | ||
Or they're racists and they're bigots and they're extremists. | ||
So when does a white man or woman or family or country get to stand on its own two feet and say, no? | ||
When? | ||
So that's what they do with these topics. | ||
It's like they do it with Israel too. | ||
It's like, you can't say anything bad about Israel. | ||
They're the good guys. | ||
You're not allowed to have a white identity. | ||
You're not allowed to have a white country. | ||
You need diversity. | ||
And if you don't like that, you're an extremist. | ||
Oh, no, no, no. | ||
You're not allowed to be Irish and Support maintaining your culture. | ||
You're not allowed to be Irish and support keeping people from coming in that say, We want to diversify. | ||
You're not allowed to have that opinion. | ||
And then they slander you and call you an extremist. | ||
But everybody sees what's going on. | ||
Everybody sees what's going on. | ||
You're moving people out of the third world and you're moving them into Christian, Eurocentric countries and cultures. | ||
And then what happens? | ||
The European-centric, Christian cultures slowly disappear. | ||
Slowly gone. | ||
But they're told it's a good thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Make the sacrifice. | |
Sacrifice the white identity. | ||
Sacrifice the white culture. | ||
Sacrifice the Christian European-centric cultures. | ||
You need more diversity, extremist. | ||
Oh, but what do you think would happen if white people decided to go in and do that in India? | ||
What do you think would happen if white people decided to go and do that in Africa? | ||
You think that would go over well? | ||
You think the same messages would apply? | ||
Oh, you don't want the whites here running your government? | ||
You don't want the Europeans running your government? | ||
Oh, you're an extremist. | ||
No, it's this idea that somehow the whites are the bad people and they need to learn and they need to be diversified. | ||
And they don't even hide it. | ||
They publish the books. | ||
They put them on the front page of the books, the front sections of the bookstores. | ||
But then they just create this like white backlash that doesn't really get much political results. | ||
So it just builds into this pressure cooker. | ||
And you get a situation where they're going to arrest your leaders like Tommy Robinson and send a message. | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
You don't get to be like Tommy Robinson. | |
No way. | ||
Throw you in jail. | ||
You don't like the Islamification of your traditionally Christian schools? | ||
I'm going to throw you in jail, punk. | ||
You don't like them covering up the rape gangs that they're bringing in with the diversity? | ||
You don't like that? | ||
You're going to jail, punk. | ||
Yeah, you're white kids. | ||
They're going to get bashed over the head. | ||
Your daughter's going to get raped. | ||
It's diversity. | ||
It's diversity. | ||
So just get over it. | ||
And then we just try to do deportation efforts here with illegal aliens, criminals. | ||
They run stories like this, headline. | ||
His name is Jesus. | ||
He's a carpenter. | ||
And ICE arrested him. | ||
Ah, thank you. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Let's guilt. | ||
See, guilt trip the Catholics. | ||
Guilt trip the Christians. | ||
Oh, you're trying to protect your country from an illegal alien invasion. | ||
Oh, you're trying to deport criminals. | ||
Oh, you want to have a basic border security. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
You, you would have done this to Jesus. | ||
Some Christian you are. | ||
More Christian guilt, more white guilt. | ||
So yeah, people are sick of it, but then can you even get political results? | ||
That's the fight. | ||
All right, let's take some phone calls here before we sign off. | ||
We do have some other news we may get to, a couple other video clips. | ||
But I want to take some calls as we have them on the line. | ||
Let's go to Vendor in Florida or VendorX in Florida. | ||
You're on there. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey, how are you doing? | ||
Owen, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah, this is an independent audit or interview of the starving people in Gaza. | ||
And I also want to ask, what do you think is the fair solution to the Israel war? | ||
You know what? | ||
Do you mind? | ||
Let me just dodge your question. | ||
And then if you want to re-ask it, that's fine. | ||
I don't want anything to do with it. | ||
I want the U.S. to decouple from Israel, decouple from the Middle East. | ||
I want to stop all money going. | ||
I don't want anything to do with it. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's what I want. | ||
Now, and now if the region wants to handle Israel and what it's done, if the rest of the world wants to handle Israel and what it's done, fine. | ||
I'm done. | ||
I'm out. | ||
I'm done with my country running a protection racket for them. | ||
I'm done with Netanyahu, a war criminal, coming into my country and getting protection. | ||
I'm done with the foreign aid going to Israel. | ||
I'm done with this issue taking over my streets. | ||
Palestinian flags, Israel flags. | ||
I'm done with all of it. | ||
That's what I want. | ||
I'm sick of all of it. | ||
I don't want any of it anymore. | ||
I don't want to be involved. | ||
I want total decoupling from Israel, total decoupling from the Middle East. | ||
Now, the rest of the world wants to handle Israel after the big defense system of America backs off, then good luck. | ||
Good luck. | ||
But I'm done. | ||
Not my problem. | ||
I'm done with it being our problem. | ||
I'm done with it taking over our political debates and discussion and now our streets. | ||
So that's what I want. | ||
So I'm kind of dodging your question, but that's what I want. | ||
My answer is I'm not here to look for a solution. | ||
My solution is I'm out. | ||
I'm getting the hell out of here. | ||
It's like if I go to some party and there's two rival high schools there or their football teams or something, and it's like, oh, I see like, oh, a couple of them just grabbed some knives or they're about to get in a big fight. | ||
Somebody says, hey, what's your solution? | ||
Oh, I'm going to go and step in between them and try to stop. | ||
No, I'm going to get the hell out. | ||
That's my solution. | ||
I'm out. | ||
I'm out of here. | ||
Good luck. | ||
Yeah, I love the answer. | ||
I love the answer. | ||
And I don't know why Trump wouldn't have that same approach other than for whatever reason he's just being controlled by Israel. | ||
And maybe that's a wise thing. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But, you know, it's just so gross. | ||
It's grotesque. | ||
Complimenting Netanyahu. | ||
It's just disgusting. | ||
All right. | ||
Thank you for the call. | ||
We have a caller in Italy. | ||
Let's go overseas to Italy to Sazerio. | ||
I hope I get that right. | ||
Sazerio in Italy. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Hey, Owen, this is Saveri. | ||
Yeah, anyway, I called it a long time ago as well. | ||
Yeah, I'm talking about, you know, when the Trump was in Europe with van der Hael, the European president, is not worth about it, buy all the equipment. | ||
We have like the, remember the COVID-19 little house where they put people there? | ||
Well, they sent some paper there and they got a Trump. | ||
Unfortunately, he picked up everybody. | ||
I'm very disappointed about him, but he will pay the price at the end. | ||
It's in the Bible, you know, they send it to, you know, King David. | ||
Anyway, he'd be putting it. | ||
Anyway, they sent some paper. | ||
Europe doesn't buy equipment for, you know, for the war in Ukraine. | ||
They signed some paper also. | ||
They're going to give it some money to take all the poor people from Palestine. | ||
Anyway, God bless you, man. | ||
Hopefully you guys stay away from the United States. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm trying to understand you. | ||
Are you saying that Europe is going to end up taking the Palestinians? | ||
Is that what you're saying? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Well, they're already being told they have to. | ||
So they're already being told that's the plan. | ||
Israel's already telling them you're going to do this. | ||
I don't think it's going to go well. | ||
But yeah, that's what they want. | ||
That's what they anticipate. | ||
Yep. | ||
Well, it's good to hear from you again from Italy. | ||
Honored to have you tuning in from Cross the Pond, as they say. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Guys, I just lost my screen again. | ||
Thank you for the call. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Who did we have? | ||
Okay, yeah, thank you, guys. | ||
We got to do something about this. | ||
Let's go to Samantha in Oklahoma. | ||
Samantha, you're on the air. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Hi, Owen. | ||
I've spoken to you once before, but it's such a pleasure to talk to you. | ||
And thank you for giving time to people. | ||
We the people that we can voice our opinion a little bit because nobody really gives a damn what we say on social media and all. | ||
Yes, but who reaches Trump out? | ||
It's basically Alex Jones and his company. | ||
And of course, we also have Steve Barron. | ||
So I only watch YouTube and I get the latest news and news that before it happens, I tell my friends and they're like, where did you hear that from? | ||
I said, well, it's going to happen and watch. | ||
And it happens. | ||
So thank you so much for taking time out. | ||
Wait a second, wait a second. | ||
Are you saying, I really get a kick out of this, I'm honored. | ||
Are you saying that you have so much faith and trust in the reporting here at Infowars that you take this information to your friends, they think you're crazy, and then you always end up getting proven right? | ||
Of course. | ||
Of course, every time. | ||
And they think I'm crazy. | ||
Every time. | ||
And I don't care. | ||
I laugh at them. | ||
This is great. | ||
I love to hear this. | ||
One of them are my children, and they don't believe me. | ||
And I'm like, okay, here you go. | ||
And they're like, oh, mom, okay, well, here's my co-workers. | ||
They get all irritated and mad at me and they hate me. | ||
Well, I don't give a damn. | ||
Here's my news and it's happening. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I will tell you something. | ||
There's only one thing I want is arrest of Obama. | ||
And so I want the public to know that treason is not immunity, okay? | ||
You cannot get immunity with treason. | ||
So, yes, we want Obama arrested. | ||
I do not want Pam Bondi saying he has immunity. | ||
I want him damn arrested along with Hillary, Conan, and all these people. | ||
You're not alone. | ||
Yeah, you're not alone. | ||
And in fact, again, it was Andy Biggs earlier this week who said, either you arrest these people or all of this is worth nothing. | ||
You know what? | ||
I'm losing faith in even the Supreme Court and I'm losing faith in America. | ||
And I've been here for so many years from 1984 and it's breaking my heart. | ||
Well, I'll tell you what, I don't want to go there yet, Samantha. | ||
I thank you for the call. | ||
I don't want to go there yet. | ||
It's a little too much for me. | ||
But again, I hear you, and you're not the only one. | ||
You're not the only one that's starting to look at it and say, where is this really going? | ||
Where are things really going? | ||
What do I need to start thinking about in the future? | ||
Guys, what do we got on the clock? | ||
I'm sorry, my clock is still off. | ||
I hate having to do this. | ||
I just don't see it. | ||
What? | ||
Okay. | ||
We're almost out of time here. | ||
There was a big explosion at a plant in Nebraska. | ||
Nebraska biofuels plant explosion kills three people, including two young girls. | ||
Sad disaster there. | ||
The Sidney Sweeney phenomenon continues. | ||
Maybe I'll have to get to this tomorrow. | ||
Look, I'm sorry. | ||
These videos of liberal women responding to Sidney Sweeney is some of the most pure, entertaining, funny stuff I've ever seen. | ||
I'm out of time for today. | ||
Maybe we'll bring this one up tomorrow. | ||
But they're selling out of jeans. | ||
And one last, final gasp here, and it was a gasp. | ||
I'm starting to get into the WNBA, actually. | ||
I have to tell you, some of these controversies are pretty funny. | ||
I mean, the game is bad. | ||
It's poor quality basketball. | ||
Sex toy thrown on court during final moments of WNBA. | ||
Folks, they threw a neon green, I'm sorry, a neon green dildo onto the WNBA court. | ||
The announcer's response to it was hilarious. | ||
unidentified
|
That's funny stuff. | |
I'm only as strong as you are backing me. | ||
You figured it out yet? | ||
This is not like a regular show. | ||
The bad guys don't like it for a reason because we have the information and we have the spirit of victory. | ||
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I said I look the widest selection. | ||
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We'll be right back. | |
you Ladies and gentlemen, I'm cutting this on the afternoon of July 30th, 2025. | ||
You have seven days from this date to buy one bottle of any of our amazing supplements, the ultramethylene blue, the Irish C Mods, the Shilohy, the list goes on and on, Ultimate Life Force, and get a bottle absolutely free. | ||
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This catch is a great deal. | ||
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It's only running for seven days. | ||
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