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July 1, 2025 - Human Events Daily - Jack Posobiec
43:33
The Big Beautiful Deportation Bill and Trump Vs Elon Round 2

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This is what happens when the fourth turning meets fifth generation warfare.
*Pewds*
A commentator, international social media sensation, and former Navy intelligence veteran.
This is Human Events with your host, Jack Posovic.
Christ is.
Center dubbed Alligator Alcatraz opens to detainees today, despite protests and a federal lawsuit.
That's right.
The ICE facility is on the side of a remote airfield in the heart of the Everglades.
It's known as Alligator Alcatraz.
Very soon, this facility will house some of the most menacing migrants, some of the most vicious people on the planet.
We're surrounded by miles of treacherous swampland, and the only way out is really deportation.
The Justice Department is launching a lawsuit, claiming LA's Sanctuary City Ordinance is in part to blame for the violence.
This lawsuit is about the supremacy clause and who gets to set immigration laws in the United States.
Zorhan Mandami, who in his nomination speech said he will defy ICE and will not allow ICE to arrest criminal aliens in New York City.
Your message to communist Zorhan Mandami.
Well, then we'll have to arrest him.
Look, we don't need a communist in this country, but if we have one, I'm going to be watching over him very carefully on behalf of the nation.
The yays are 50.
The nays are 50.
The Senate being evenly divided, the Vice President votes in the affirmative.
The bill, as amended, is passed.
We might have to put Doge on Elon.
You know what Doge is?
Does it have to go back and meet Elon.
But Elon's very upset that the EV mandate is going to be terminated.
And you know what?
When you look at it, who wants, not everybody wants an electric car.
I don't want an electric car.
I want to have maybe gasoline, maybe electric, maybe a hybrid.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, welcome aboard today's edition of Human Events Daily here live in Washington, D.C. Today is July 1st, 2025.
Annodomine.
Folks, we're sitting here.
We're looking at all of it that's going on.
We're looking at everything that's happening.
The big, beautiful bill passing in the United States Senate.
They have the votes.
The votes are coming in.
And there's some people who aren't too happy about the vote.
And that, of course, Elon Musk.
Elon Musk coming out and saying that he is totally against this.
And in fact, saying that he will work to primary members of the House who go and vote for it.
And in fact, he's now backing Thomas Massey, who has been one of President Trump's proverbial nemeses when it comes to these spending bills.
And Trump, of course, is now backing different challengers to Thomas Massey.
I don't believe they've chosen a specific one as of yet.
So this is the state of play on all of it.
And here's where I come down.
Here's where I come down on all this.
America's finances are absolutely in tatters.
The disparity, the disruption that you see on the financial side is 100% true.
However, there is a larger threat to the United States of America than an economic downturn or some over-levered companies going under.
And you know what that threat is?
That is the threat of the mass immigration crisis.
And the mass immigration crisis is the foundational issue upon which MAGA was built.
That's what President Trump talked about when he came down the golden escalator.
That's what all of 2016 was about.
And every single moment from that time till now has been about deporting every single last person who shouldn't be in this country back to where they came from or at least somewhere else.
You don't have to go home, but you can't stay here.
So whether it's Alligator Alcatraz or Guantanamo Bay or whatever it is, I don't particularly care.
I just want them out.
I want them out of my country.
I don't want to give my kids a country where every single public place is completely overrun, just completely overrun by third worlders.
I'm sick of it.
I'm done of it and done with it.
And there's been too much time spent, I think, on side quests.
Let's get back to the main quest, boys and girls.
And the main quest is getting our country back to the country we were all born in.
Can it be done?
Yes, it can, because we have Donald J. Trump on our side.
We'll be right back, Human Events Daily.
What America First truly means.
Welcome to the second American Revolution.
All right, Jack Pesopic QER back live, Human Events Daily, Washington, D.C. We're here.
It's a muggy day in D.C., getting close to that 4th of July holiday.
Today, of course, being 1 July.
Folks, speaking of which, let's lay down some breaking news.
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It's a big deal.
It means central banks can now hold gold at full value and treat it as core capital.
They're not doing that for fun.
They are preparing for something.
If gold is good enough for banks and governments as a backstop, it should be good enough for your savings or retirement.
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So folks, there's a lot of people have a lot of ideas about this big, beautiful bill.
And one of the issues that I have with it, frankly, is the remittance tax.
Wait till 1%.
No, no, no, no, no.
Remittance tax got to go way up, way up.
You got to raise that remittance tax.
All the money that they're sending back to these foreign countries, no, all of it should be taxed.
It functions as a tariff because it keeps the money here at home, operating within our own nationality, our own polity.
But that being said, it focuses on the main quest.
It provides that money and funding and financing to the mass deportations that America and all Americans have been waiting for and petitioning their government for for years.
Someone who I think it's interesting that we're going to talk about this because I'm going to bring on a foreigner right now to get in on this, and I'll explain why in a second.
His name, of course, Dr. Charles Cornishdale, but you may know him online as the Raw Egg Nationalist.
What's up, Dr. Charles?
It's good to see you again, Jack.
Great to be with you.
So why am I bringing on a foreigner here when I'm launching this completely xenophobic anti-foreigner tirade today?
Well, I think you understand that I have a certain amount of insight maybe into America's future and maybe into the future of cities like New York.
I mean, you know, we've been talking over the past couple of days about Zoran Mamdami and about what he might do to New York and whether New York is only just a few years behind London in terms of its basically degeneration into third world conditions.
And so this is very interesting.
So Sadiq Khan gets elected mayor of London a decade ago.
They call it a decade.
So he gets elected a decade ago.
And now you've got this huge deterioration of London in that timeframe where he's been mayor.
All of a sudden, we're seeing at the same time, New York City suddenly has Zoran Mandami, someone, a name that none of us have heard before.
And I think that's kind of a similar trajectory from Sadiq Khan.
I mean, had he been someone who was really part of the national discourse prior to that?
No, I don't know.
I don't think he had.
I mean, I certainly don't really remember him.
I mean, I think he was a pretty low-level Labour politician.
And then he was put forward in the London mayoral race.
The Conservatives fielded, I think, Zach Goldsmith, who is the son of a former Conservative politician.
But Sadiq Khan won.
And it's been all change ever since.
I mean, London's been going downhill for a long time, probably for the better part of at least 25 years.
And I think that's probably true of New York, too.
I think that the, you know, I mean, you had some of the decline was arrested by Rudy Giuliani, you know, with his kind of very tough on crime measures.
But actually, I think what, you know, what this fits into is a broader pattern of decline, but it's accelerating.
And there's absolutely no doubt that crime in London is far, far worse under Sadiq Khan.
You know, since 2016, London has attacked more than ever.
Sadiq Khan has brought in, for instance, fairly recently this ultra-low emission zone tax.
So now not only do you have to pay a congestion charge to go into the centre of London, you also have to pay this ultra-low emission zones, ULES tax, which is enforced with these special cameras that they've mounted on the streets.
So you're effectively getting like a double whack of tax every time you go into London from the Ring Road, the M25 that runs around London.
You know, Londoners are paying more and more for declining living standards.
It's obvious.
You know, Londoners all talk about it.
If you get in a taxi in London and you actually happen to have a British taxi driver now, because a lot of them are Somali and foreign and they don't even speak English.
But if you speak to a traditional London cabby, he'll say, London isn't the same city.
London is just going to the dogs.
That's normally what they'll say.
And it looks like, you know, 25 years after 9-11, New York is going to have a Muslim mayor.
And I think that that is not only indicative of trends in America more broadly with mass immigration, but also in particular, trends in New York.
You know, you've had New York flooded with migrants, these sanctuary policies.
You've had a kind of soft on crime approach.
And New York has changed so much that now, yes, 25 years since 9-11, it's conceivable that actually you'll have a Muslim mayor.
Well, and this is what's interesting too, is because you see this mass, it's actually a tripling of South Asian, so Indian, Pakistani, and Middle Eastern immigration to the New York City metro area has tripled since that time of 9-11.
It's gone up and absolutely skyrocketed since then.
And so people point out, say, well, wait a minute, you know, the exact coalition that Mamdani was able to put together, say, well, it's not just all immigrants.
I said, no, no, it isn't.
But the effect of mass immigration has created a sense where, because I saw some other, you know, social scientists were kind of disagreeing with my analysis.
They said, well, wait a minute, you know, what about the blacks and Hispanics?
Because they largely voted for Andrew Cuomo.
And the point is, is, you sort of got old New York versus New New York because he's able to peel off the Gen Zers who can now vote.
So you're 18 to 29.
He's able to peel off your white theater kid liberals.
And he's able to pull off something like 80% of the South Asian vote.
And that's simply a coalition that's able to defeat the previous working class and with somewhat of a Wall Street backing type candidate like a Cuomo.
So New New York is actually beating old New York.
And this is very similar to what we saw in London a decade ago.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, the demographic changes that have taken place in London have, like you say, they've pushed out old London, if you will.
You know, they've pushed white English people, white British people out to the margins of the city and even beyond the city into neighboring counties like Essex and Kent.
You know, you've seen a wholesale demographic replacement in the city.
And of course it's changed the politics.
And so, of course, it's changed the politics in New York as well.
Working class neighbourhoods, working class voters don't matter.
Class as a mobilizing force isn't key here.
It's identity politics.
And that includes, like you said, the white Gen Z and millennials.
And it's important, actually, I think, to understand that although, you know, Gen Z, you know, white Gen Z and millennial voters haven't been sort of put into New York through mass immigration, their opinions, their values nevertheless,
have been massively, massively, I think, affected and determined by mass immigration so that it is, you know, so that you do have these sort of hipster, kind of Bushwick millennials and Zumas who are all absolutely, absolutely crazy about Zoran Mandami.
Of course, because it almost explains the South Asian land and so on.
This is what they do.
Interesting book that came out about a year ago about that.
right back with more of the raw egg nationalist on human events daily Talk about influencers.
These are influencers.
And they're friends of mine.
Jack Pesovic.
Where's Jack?
Jack.
He's done a great job.
All right, Jack Pasovic.
Here we are back live, Human Events Daily, Washington, D.C. Folks, let me tell you something.
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I want to get back in here with, we're talking with Royal Egg Nationalist Dr. Charles Cordish Dale about how these similar conditions and similar forces that we've seen in London a decade ago that he saw and experienced in London are very, very similar to the pressures we're seeing in New York City play out today.
And in many ways, New York is just a decade behind where London is and how this, it's just this mass flood of immigrants will inevitably, it'll change your demographics, it will change your politics, and it will change the character of your country because of course these will all be led behind it.
And now, this is one of the things that I've said when we talk about the big beautiful bill, there's so many people who want to focus on the issues with it.
And I say focus on the fact that at least the one thing that it does do, right?
And this is why I'm behind it so much, the big, beautiful bill.
And I want it to become the big, beautiful law, because it centers us back on the main quest.
And the main quest is mass deportation.
So, Roy, if you could for us, walk us through why it is that immigration is sort of the main quest.
And if we allow ourselves to be distracted and spend political capital on various other issues, or I'm not saying they don't exist and aren't out there, but ultimately this one thing will alter or destroy your entire country if you don't focus on it.
Yeah, well, you know, there's been a lot of talk on Twitter about the Big Beautiful bill, about the benefits and the deficits.
And look, I mean, no bill is perfect.
Every single bill that is passed, every single law is a product of compromise, where you have to weigh competing interests.
You have to achieve some kind of consensus by making concessions.
And that involves chipping away at certain aspects of an ideally presented initial bill.
So we've had the remittance tax chipped down, for example.
But yeah, this idea of immigration being the main quest in MAGA is absolutely true.
And people have been saying on Twitter, look, what do you want?
What kind of America do you want in 30 years' time?
Do you want an America that has a much lower deficit, let's say, but is demographically a totally different country?
So you don't pass the Big Beautiful Bill and whatever effects the Big Beautiful Bill might have had on the national debt, they don't happen.
But you don't fund the border wall.
You don't provide more funding for ICE and for DHS and deportations, etc.
So you get a totally changed America.
Or in 30 years' time, maybe you have an America that has a bit more debt or even significantly more debt, but the demographic change has been arrested and reversed.
And America is still then fundamentally America.
So, I mean, I think that that is the best way to put it.
You know, it's like, okay, you can reduce the deficit, but then you don't do anything about demographics or you do something about demographics, which is, I think, the fundamental problem, because if America's demographics change anymore, then America is going to be a different country.
And the economic side won't matter.
So, yes, I mean, this is immigration is the main quest.
It was, like you said, it was the main quest when Donald Trump came down that escalator 10 years ago.
It's always been the central MAGA quest.
All of the other things are side quests.
This is the MAGA agenda.
And ultimately, look, you're not going to get a better bill than this, I don't think.
Now is the time to fund deportation, to fund the building of the border wall, and to get all of these millions and millions of people out of America before actually America is changed for good and you can't do anything about it.
There's never going to be a position or a politician like Donald Trump.
He's never going to be at a position where he's at the zenith of his power more than he is right now.
He's there.
This is it.
We are at the pinnacle.
This is the pivotal moment that everyone has been waiting for.
And yes, of course, politics is the art of the possible, as they say.
And I'm here in Washington, D.C., and I can tell you that's definitely how it works on a day-to-day basis.
But think of the Overton window shift from 10 years ago, you know, President Trump, he could only really, when he was Mr. Trump, if real estate developer Trump, candidate Trump, could only talk about a wall, but he would say why we need the wall.
And he would describe the character of the people who were coming over.
And the media instantly, and Don Lemon and CNN instantly attacked him for this, saying, how dare you even question this?
Now, you notice, they talk about the treatment.
They'll say, oh, you're sending them to Alligator Alcatraz.
Oh, you're sending them to El Salvador.
But they don't defend the types of people who are here illegally because they've seen the numbers.
They've seen President Trump win by winning the popular vote and winning this massive victory in every single swing state because Americans absolutely want this.
And you've seen a galvanization of the American people as well.
55% support all mass immigration.
It's done.
Just final minute to you.
Could you talk us through how significant it is of where we've come from in the last 10 years to get to this point?
Yeah, well, like you say, the Overton window has shifted enormously.
When Trump took power in 2016, you know, he was pretty radical, but nowhere near as radical as he is now.
You know, a huge amount has happened in 2016.
You know, I mean, he laid the seeds.
He laid the groundwork, really, you know, for what he's finally, finally getting around to doing now, which is actually addressing the fundamental issue, which is mass immigration.
You know, he's been subject to incredible reversals.
2020, the stealing of the election.
He nearly had his head blown off on national television.
All of these things have, I think, radicalized him and pushed him, I think, to a position where actually he is really prepared now to do what is necessary.
This is his second term.
He doesn't have to run for re-election.
He doesn't have to worry about, let's say, momentary sort of political advantage.
He really can pursue a radical agenda.
Royag, where can people follow you, brother?
On Twitter, Royg Nationalist Baby Gravy9.
I have a sub stack, rawegstack.com, and my magazine is mansworldmag.online.
And I've got a new book coming out soon called The Last Men, Liberalism and the Death of Masculinity.
So watch my Twitter.
Check them out.
Baby Gravy9, the Raw Egg Nationalist.
PhD from Oxford, folks.
Right back.
Hey, Jack, where's Jack?
Where is Jack?
Where is he?
Jack, I want to see you.
Great job, Jack.
Thank you.
What a job you do.
You know, we have an incredible thing.
We're always talking about the fake news and the bad news, but we have guys.
And these are the guys that be getting posted.
All right, Jack.
What's up?
Here we are back live Human Events Daily.
We're here in Washington, D.C. By the way, I've got some other shout outs in the chat here.
People talking about, of course, Alligator Alcatraz down in Florida, really driving the news today.
So a lot of people saying, though, as well, you know, what about the other states?
What about the other regions of the United States?
So we've been going back and forth.
Let's see.
We got the Arizona Hot Box or the Arizona Rattlesnake Roundup, the Jersey Gridlock, the DC Swamp, the Philly Penn, the Texas Dust Vale, Tennessee Hollows, the Yukon labor camps, the Georgia Pit, Louisiana, of course, the Bayou Bastille, Hawaii, the Volcano Vault, Oklahoma, the Tornado Towers.
And personally, I love this, the Northern California Grizzly Gulags.
I really, really, really am looking forward to the Grizzly Gulags.
I'm sure the Supreme Court will have a lot to say about all of this, but I wanted to get into some of this with the Supreme Court.
And so we saw these decisions come out last week.
And one in particular that's really got a lot of people talking, of course, was the back and forth between Katanji Brown Jackson and her dissent, as well as Amy Coney Barrett writing for the majority on this question of nationwide injunctions and a lot of heated words back and forth.
Of course, Amy Coney Barrett running, I believe, the initial welcoming cardy for Katanji Brown Jackson and playing the theme song from Hamilton For her, when she was welcomed.
So we knew we had to bring someone in to break all this down for us.
So I had to get Will Chamberlain senior counsel for the Article 3 project.
What's up, Will?
Not much, man.
Before we get started, I do want to, since we were talking about Alligator Alcatraz, I want to give a shout out to Florida Attorney General James Uthmeyer, a former colleague of mine, both in Florida and a former member of the law journal I was on, actually.
He's a fellow Georgetown law alum.
So he's an absolute badass.
You should try and have him on.
Really, really good dude.
Good shot.
He's done great work.
I got to say, though, I've been watching some of his stuff lately.
I don't think he needs the beard.
I think he actually pulls off the clean shave and look better.
Just my two cents.
Give me some feedback.
I don't think the beard is bad.
I'm just saying clean shape for him.
I think it works.
For some folks, JD, myself, the beard is better.
President Trump, nah, he doesn't need the beard.
James, go back to the clean shape.
I think he worked better.
That's just my two cents.
I think I see something going on down there on the Will Chamberlain chin strap there.
Yeah, yeah, I got a little bit.
A little bit, a little bit of a chin strap.
Okay.
But so when we're looking at these, you know, this thing, I mean, it went just incredibly viral.
First, it was Amy Coney Barrett's majority decision, or marginality opinion, rather, that, you know, that a lot of people saw.
But then people even started, myself included, looking at Katanji Brown's dissent, and it was ridiculous.
And some people think it was written by AI.
I'm actually not sure.
I think she wrote this herself in some extent.
I mean, she's got slang in there.
She's got millennial colloquialisms in there.
I mean, Will, just give us the context.
Is this the type of stuff that we usually see coming out of a Supreme Court?
No, I don't think I've seen a more strident dissent ever.
And I've seen, I've read some very aggressive dissents from people like Scalia, who was known for writing very pointed dissents, but this was extremely strident and flippant.
And as a result, she got smoked in the majority opinion in very aggressive terms.
And I talked a lot about this last week with a few people, but it's not just that Justice Barrett put out this opinion.
It's that six conservative justices signed on to an opinion that was overtly mocking of Justice Jackson's legal reasoning.
And that really shows that, I mean, the bulk of the court basically just doesn't even take her seriously anymore.
They don't think she's smart.
And that's not good for her because she's in the minority.
So, you know, she's just going to get to write furious, weak, pointless dissents for the next, what, 20 years until the Democrats get a majority again?
She won't be able to have any meaningful influence over the bulk of the court.
She won't be able to pull them onto her way on a moderate case.
If they end up agreeing with her, it's despite her, not because of her.
Well, and so, and this is, this is crazy, right?
This is this idea that you would even have judge, and by the way, Will, so even though Amy Coney Barrett, she authored the opinion, the other justices, including Chief Justice Roberts, signed off on this.
So they saw what she wrote and said, yeah, I endorse that.
Yeah, exactly.
That's what I'm saying.
They were willing to have her basic, have six justices criticized her dissent as not being based in law at all.
Wow.
And you have to go back to, I mean, what is her theory?
Her theory is that the judicial power is basically unconstrained and judges should go around unprompted by a case or controversy, unconstrained by laws passed by Congress or the Constitution, saying, you, the executive, are doing something illegal, stop it.
And it's like, that's not our system of government because that would place the Supreme Court above the executive and legislative branches.
And we have a co-equal system of government with co-equal branches.
And in the same way that the executive and legislative branches are constrained in various ways, so is the court.
And the court is constrained both by the Constitution and by laws passed by Congress, and therefore can't actually do anything it wants, can't stop every instance of illegality in the executive branch because its own jurisdiction is constrained.
And this is something where, you know, and I read through a ton of her dissent.
I mean, it's actually kind of interesting because you could almost label this the no king's dissent because that's what she kept trying to say over and over and over.
Oh, America doesn't have a king.
America doesn't have a king.
And then she cited, she cited Hamilton.
So she cites Hamilton as this, who is, and I realized something.
I said, wait a minute, this just goes back to my contention.
These are all theater kids.
They get all of their actual knowledge of history from media and the consumption of fiction rather than reality.
Because one thing, of course, that they don't mention in the Hamilton musical, or at least not in any great extent, is that Hamilton, of course, Alexander Hamilton, was famously a monarchist.
He wanted a king.
He was one of the people who was championing for this.
And in fact, the reason that we have the Constitution at all is because the previous system, which lacked an executive, fell apart and collapsed.
The entire point of the exercise of creating the Constitution was to create a stronger executive, but also place it within the bounds of these checks and balances of the judiciary and the legislature.
But Will, nowhere in her dissent did she seem to have any even understanding of this.
No, if anything, she criticized it as legalese.
I mean, I actually have her opinion pulled up.
You know, I just, this, it actually just, you should just read from this because people need to understand what this dissent said.
Quote, to hear the majority tell it, this suit raises a mind-numbingly technical query.
Are universal injunctions sufficiently analogous to the relief issued by the High Court of Chancery in England at the time of the adoption of the Constitution?
But that legalese is a smokescreen.
I'm sorry, whoa, step back, step back.
You're mocking.
And the whole point of her dissent is this argument.
Oh, we must force the executive to follow the law.
And then when the majority says, whoa, whoa, we also need to follow the law.
Here is the law that governs our authority and exactly how far it reaches.
She's like, oh, that's a dumb, mind-numbingly technical legalese inquiry.
Well, then couldn't you say the same about whatever your criticism of the executive branch is?
Like the executive could get up and say, well, yeah, the Supreme Court's making this argument about what I can and can't do, but that's a mind-numbingly technical legalese theory.
I'm going to do what I want.
It's internally inconsistent, dramatically so.
Right.
And of course, you know, this, this is part of the thesis of the book that Joshua Lysik and myself put out last year, The Unhumans, Secrecy of Communist Revolutions, and How to Crush Them, was this is exactly what they do.
They do this every time, where they say, this power is, it's essentially, it's akin to just sort of the meme of saying, it's good when I do it and it's bad when you do it.
And it really just comes down to that.
And, you know, I'm sorry to the folks who get upset when I say this, but this is why the friend enemy distinction exists in politics, that sometimes it's just these people are my friends and I like them and these people are my foes and I dislike them.
And that's really all it comes down to.
So I wish, by the way, that we could go back to the previous systems and actually have this, you know, system of law and the checks and balances and all this, right?
But when you have people like Atanji Braun Jackson and you have a significant and a non-insignificant part of this country, the MSNBC crowd, basically, who totally agree with her.
They will completely agree with every single word of her dissent and they will be left scratching their heads trying to figure out why it is that they were slapped down in the first place.
It's because they've just willfully and over a long period of time had a completely fried mental model of the world.
And I really do attribute this just to just to mass media and fiction and the mass consumption of pop history rather than actually understanding our true history.
Of course, Will, this begs the question of, I mean, correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Katachi Brown Jackson Harvard law?
Yeah, Harvard law.
Just because you got into Harvard law doesn't mean you're all that sharp.
I can speak as someone who went to an elite law school that I wasn't that impressed with a decent number of my colleagues.
Like, just because you got into a good law school and graduated from it doesn't mean you have a good handle on the law.
And this is really basic constitutional law 101.
The law of standing is something you discuss in your first year of law school.
The idea of constrained judicial powers is something you discuss in your first year of law school.
And it's definitely something you cover in detail in a class called federal courts, which is something that anybody interested in clerking is going to take.
So yeah, this stuff is actually fairly straightforward.
And part of the reason that I think the six conservative justices were so angry is that this is stuff 010 would have gotten.
They would have looked at her arguments and her dissent and been like, Katanji, what are you thinking?
This isn't even close.
This repudiates the law of standing that our court has developed over hundreds of years.
It's like, you know, there are close questions in the law.
This isn't even one of them.
Is the Supreme Court's jurisdiction constrained?
Yes.
Do we have to obey the Judiciary Act of 1789 when considering our equitable jurisdiction?
Yes, because that's where it was granted.
No kidding.
No, and it's amazing because, again, you have a situation where people are pushed through.
And, you know, just going to have to say it, right?
This is exactly why people were so worried and so concerned about the rise in use of DEI in hiring practices, in politics, certainly, because people were chosen because, not because of their ability to analyze law, Elena Kagan, right?
She wouldn't be making arguments like this, but instead, we know that Joe Biden, when he was president, and I've made the argument that in fact she was not a DEI hire, she was an Autopen hire and probably illegitimate because of that.
We don't actually know who nominated her in the first place and certainly who signed that commission.
But the issue is, of course, that we knew that he said, I'm going to choose an African-American woman and then did so, which is the opposite of President Trump, who came out and said, I'm going to choose the best person for the job.
And I'm always going to do that.
And he certainly did when he chose his Supreme Court justices.
And he absolutely did with J.D. Vance as Vice President.
Jack Posobic.
We'll be right back here at Human Events Daily.
Human Events Daily.
Jack is a great guy.
He's written a fantastic book.
Everybody's talking about it.
Go get it.
And he's been my friend right from the beginning of this whole beautiful event.
Amen.
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All right, Jack Retubic, here we are back live, Human Events Daily on Real America's Voice, the only place, by the way, incredible Real America's Voice coverage.
Shout out to the team earlier today that was there at Alligator Alcatraz, Brian Glenn, our camera crew, everyone who was there getting all the questions in.
A fantastic, fantastic job by the team who was there.
President Trump, by the way, tweeting during the show, I just caught up on some of his posts saying that, number one, of course, congratulating the passage of the big, beautiful bill in the Senate.
Goes through, says he's urging the House to complete it so that it can be done and you and your family can have it before we go on the July 4th vacation.
The American people need and deserve it.
They sent us here to get it done.
It's no longer the House bill or the Senate bill.
It is everyone's bill.
I like what he said down here.
He said, to my GOP friends in the house, stay united, have fun, and vote yay.
God bless you all.
He said, have fun.
Amazing.
Will Chamberlain, we're back on.
We're talking about the Supreme Court here, Katanji Brown Jackson, this just ridiculous descent from her.
So for folks that are watching back at home, is there any real relief to this?
I mean, I don't know if my little idea of getting her decommissioned as a Supreme Court justice is really viable.
Obviously, impeachment is possible, but perhaps politically untenable.
What's the real best case for the future of Katanji Brune Jackson?
Because she's quite young and she'll be there for a while.
Yeah, I think I'd rather have her stay on the court in a liberal seat.
We need five.
We don't need nine.
Six is in fact good because it gives us some cushion.
But I'm fine with her being one of a minority of three discrediting and humiliating liberal jurisprudence for the next 30 years.
I think that's great.
You know, if there's going to be a liberal wing of the court, it would be better if they made arguments that were facile and frivolous and led people to understand like, oh, these people aren't even serious and they would destroy the country if we let them have power.
So maybe we shouldn't.
So I don't really think there's a reasonable way to remove her.
I mean, I don't think any Supreme Court justice has ever been impeached.
So I do think we're stuck with her until she goes.
But so long as she's in the minority, she doesn't threaten the conservative legal project because no one takes her seriously.
So she can't even persuade moderates like Roberts and Barrett to agree with her.
Well, you know, it's amazing because, and that's a brilliant point, too.
Producer Angelo here, Producer Foz is saying that, you know, there's value in having someone around who is always wrong.
There's value because number one, in some cases, it's more valuable than having someone that's either always right or sometimes right.
Because here's what's interesting is that when you have someone who's sometimes right, as you say, they can persuade people.
They could be smarter.
They could be more skillful.
They could persuade people to their position.
But when you have the person who's always wrong, you can always just do the opposite of what they say and you'll be correct and you'll have the right decision.
So now going forward, unless she figures this out, which I doubt, she will become the person that for the rest of the justices, they say, it's almost like a poison pill if Katashi gets behind something to say, oh, wait a minute, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
KBJ is on board with this?
All right.
Hold on.
Let me re-examine my position here.
Let me recheck the logic on this one.
I must have made a mistake somewhere.
Yeah.
I think the deep irony, she might be the Washington general of the Supreme Court, right?
She's just for, whereas the sixth conservative justices are the Harlem Globetrotters.
A little ironic under the circumstances, but I think that's her role going forward.
Like she's just, she's there to get beaten up on and be wrong consistently.
And it's really something too, as well, where, you know, I think that the left understands this because I don't see anyone defending her.
I haven't seen MSNBC trying to rally the troops.
I haven't seen Rachel Maddow go out.
Joy Reed's not even on air anymore, really.
So she's not there to, you know, rally anything.
Morning Joe hasn't mentioned this at all.
So it's, I think they all sort of realize that this is a losing bet.
And, hey, we're not going to throw good money behind a bad investment and we're just going to leave it as that.
Then unfortunately, we bought ourselves a clunker and she's going to be there as a testament to the only surviving piece of Joe Biden's legacy other than the millions of illegals that, of course, hopefully Stephen Miller and Tom Homan will be working through and making short work of once they get the funding that they need.
Will Chamberlain, where can people follow you and the good work of the Article 3 project?
Yeah, you can follow me at Will Chamberlain and on Twitter and follow the Article 3 action project at a3paction.com.
We also just put out a judicial sabotage tracker.
So you can check that out, I believe, at judicialsabotage.org.
Oh, thank you.
And by the way, from myself and Tanya, congratulations to you and Jordan.
Just announced number two is on the way.
So best of love.
God bless you guys.
Yeah.
Thank you, Jack.
All right.
And folks, incredible day.
Huge wins for President Trump.
We're getting rid of them.
We're rounding them up.
Start at Alexander Alcatraz and then move them all the way out.
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