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Aug. 5, 2025 - Human Events Daily - Jack Posobiec
47:12
Making Poland Great Again and Subpoenas Issued For the Clintons Over Jeffrey Epstein

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This is what happens when the fourth turning meets fifth generation warfare.
The commentator, international social media sensation, and former Navy intelligence veteran.
This is Human Events with your host, Jack Pesovic.
Christ is King.
The showdown in Texas between Republicans and Democrats is going into overtime.
State GOP members are expected to reconvene later today at the state Capitol in an effort to move forward on their redistricting plan.
Democrats that fled the state to block the attempt are now facing warrants for their return.
The State Department is now proposing that some visa applicants pay a bond to enter the country.
Under the proposal, people applying for business or tourist visas would be required to pay up to $15,000, particularly if they're from countries with high overtime rates.
A twelve month pilot program could begin later this month.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wants junk food stripped from snacks.
This is part of President Trump's plan to make America healthy again.
Attorney General Pam Bondy is calling for a grand jury to investigate how Obama era officials handled Russian interference in the 2016 election.
The official said a letter signed by Bondy instructs an unnamed federal prosecutor to begin presenting evidence to a grand jury to secure potential federal indictments from the Associated Press.
Breaking, the House oversight panel issues subpoenas and depositions for eight former top law enforcement officials, including their former president Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres is cutting more than $700 million in spending as part of plans to overhaul the organization.
The move comes as the United States, which is the organization's largest sponsor, pulls back on its funding and logistical support.
Under the proposal, the UN would face 20% reductions in spending and staff.
A nationalist candidate backed by Donald Trump Carol Navrocki has won Poland's presidential election in a neck and neck race.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome aboard today's very special edition of Human Events Daily.
Today is August 5, 2025.
Anno Domini and we are coming to you live from Warsaw, Poland.
We're here for the inauguration of a patriot president and we're so excited to be welcomed here by TV Republican.
And we're sitting down with the program director of TV Republican, Michael Rashon, right now.
Thank you so much for having us.
Great.
I'm really glad that you are here again with your great program and with the great viewers of Human Events.
How important is this victory of Karl Nowrodski for Poland?
Absolutely fundamental.
I mean, we are, as probably the viewers who are interested in European politics and conservative politics know, in Poland, the liberal left globalist government won election two years ago.
And it took in parliament.
In parliament.
And it took only two years, half of a term, to the Polish voters to realize what does it really, what does it mean?
After eight years of conservative PIS government, they decided, the Polish voters decided to give the parliament to the liberal left.
And after two years, they decided that it's enough.
So they decided that the president will have to be conservative president for the next five and maybe next ten years.
It means that so short time was enough for Polish people to say that they are they do not want to have illegal migration, that they do not want to have all this woke madness, they do not want this globalist agenda of the European Union and basically Germany ruling the European nations.
We just want Poland to be Poland.
So you talk about these things, migration, wokeness.
These are the exact same issues that we're facing at home in the United States.
And so that's why people say to me, okay, Jack, we get it.
You're Polish.
You want to come to Poland and talk about.
I say, but if we work together, we can actually achieve so much more because we have the same enemy.
Well, we, the sovereign states and sovereign nations, are being attacked right now by the globalist elites.
And the same pattern, the same agenda is in the United States to attack your borders from south, your identity by the woke ideology, your sovereignty by claiming that there is no such thing as American nation, for example.
So we got exactly the same kind of problems.
We got the same migration flow, which is artificially treated by the states that simply want to destroy our state.
They are flowing and putting illegal migrants through our borders just to destroy the fabric of our society.
We got all the same problems all over the world in the Western civilization because Western civilization is under attack.
And it's exactly the same kind of war that you are fighting in the US.
We just saw the anniversary of the Polish uprising and as I've been going around Warsaw here, you can see there's wreaths everywhere, there's candles.
I watched those videos of the marches and the memorials.
And I said, this is a nation that is deeply connected to its history.
That's what it's all about, isn't it?
President Donald Trump, when he was in Warsaw, when he gave his big Warsaw speech, one of the fundamental, the monumental speech of Donald Trump was exactly about the values.
And he was referring to the Warsaw Uprising.
My grandfather was fighting this uprising.
His sister was killed here, like 300 meters from this place by the German bomb.
The values that we are protecting, the values that the Western civilization is protecting, are common values of the American nation and of Polish nation, which is the reason for which our bond, the geopolitical bond on one hand, but the cultural bond on the other hand are fundaments of the transatlantic cooperation.
And Televisa Repubblica, my station, our station, wants to be a part of this great historical cooperation.
You have a lot of duties.
You're a busy man about town.
I'll let you go.
Great to be sitting here with you.
Thank you very much for welcoming me.
We are very happy that you guys are here and hope that we're going to see and you're going to see the inauguration of the Polish president as we were witnessing the inauguration of President Trump in the US.
in us we'll see it all god bless we'll be right back human events daily real america's voice nothing will stand in our way and our golden age has just begun this is human events with jack pesovic now it's time for everyone to understand what america first truly means welcome to the second american revolution All right,
Jack Pesovic, here we are back on Real America's Voice, Human Events Daily.
Thank you so much to Television Republica here in Warsaw, Poland for allowing us the use of their studios and hosting us while we're here for coverage of this historical presidential inauguration which will actually take place tomorrow.
Folks, let me tell you something though.
Whether you're in Poland, whether you're in America, this summer is not just hot, it is historic.
And I'm not just talking about the heat, I'm talking about the weather.
Flash flood warnings are at a 40-year high, and it's not slowing down.
We've all seen the horrific images.
towns underwater, roads washed out, and in every crisis zone, what do you see?
The exact same scene.
Crowds standing in line waiting.
What are they waiting for?
They're waiting for bottled water, waiting for food, waiting for someone to show up and save them.
They tell you that help is on the way, but what if it's not?
What if help takes days or it doesn't come at all?
You think the system's built to protect you?
They can barely handle one emergency, let alone dozens.
I don't know about you, but I'm not going to be the one caught empty-handed.
Poso ain't going down like that, and the Poso family ain't going down like that.
So right now, my Patriot Supply, our partners, are giving away a four week emergency food supply.
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This is something that's so great to have, by the way, if you want to just throw it in your garage.
if you want to throw it in the back of your car it's something that gives you the peace of mind of knowing whether you're stuck on the road or you're stuck in one of those crazy situations you will always have it my patriot supply dot com slash jack well folks we're looking at the newsws, of course, in the United States, huge movement on a few fronts.
Of course, the grand jury ruling, something we've been talking about here for about a month now in Human Events Daily, that's now come out officially by the Department of Justice, a grand jury order signed off by the Attorney General.
And of course, John Solomon also pointing out putting out that it looks like those grand juries are going to be taking place in Florida or at least the main grand jury there.
And one of the reasons could be, again, like we talked about with Matt Gates just a few weeks ago, if any of the predicate actions of a conspiracy against President Trump took place in Florida, that means the venue would be then secured for Florida.
We're going to see that.
We're going to see so much more as the story breaks.
What else do we see in terms of breaking news?
The House Oversight Committee, Congressman Comer, putting out all of those subpoenas early this morning.
James Comey, Merrick Garland, both Clintons, all on Epstein.
We've got to get to the bottom of what exactly went there.
And of course, this is the traction.
This is the movement that we've been looking for for so long from there.
But I wanted to take a step back and talk a little bit more about these questions that we've been getting into all.
Sometimes people say it's politically incorrect.
And so we're here in Eastern Europe and I said, you know, I've got to get on my resident expert from Eastern Europe, my wife.
So folks, we have Tanya Tei Pesobic joining us here live in Warsaw.
Wow, sweetheart, thank you so much for making the trip.
So we're, you know, people know your story.
People know you're from Eastern Europe.
You originally born and raised and then came to the United States.
But when we come back to visit, and we are going to be seeing some of your family while we're here, we're always very nice.
But it's it's it brings up so many of those issues because things like heritage, history, identity, culture, these are not just words on a piece of paper.
When you come over here, it's all real, isn't it?
It really is.
And every time I know I have a trip to Poland, what I expect is a table full of food, a great sense of community, and lots of Catholic churches just about in every corner.
Yeah, you turn around, you see a church, it's going to be there.
I always joke about that.
People say, Oh, we're religious.
I'm Catholic.
I'm Polish.
We pretty much only come in one flavor.
Of course we're Catholic.
Everyone out here is Catholic.
Every you walk up and down the street, what do you see?
You see Poles.
They're all speaking Polish.
That's a nation.
And when you see those connections to the history, which, you know, and I was talking about it with Mihail in the previous segment, but the incredible images that I saw last week of the marches and the processions for the Warsaw Uprising.
For folks who don't know, the Warsaw Uprising was this massive, really, revolt against the Nazi occupation that took place here in 1944.
And incredibly brutal, the battles and the retribution from the Germans bombing and destroying this entire city afterwards.
It's something where and Miguel was talking about, he said his grandfather's sister died in the bombings.
So that's something that it as horrible as it is, it connects you to that history and it makes that history absolutely real.
And so the fact that people are still connected to it, they're honoring their history.
We've totally you just don't see that in the United States the same way.
You really don't.
And this history is everywhere you look, truly, because in one corner you see a medieval castle and on the other side of the street you'll see the tall, great buildings that are the remnants of the Soviet era.
And then people somehow manage to embrace suicide.
And then they'll be walking on cobblestones on one side and then looking up the skyscrapers that also made the modern, right?
The modern culture and they embrace all those aspects and Poland is changing.
It's walking step in step with the modern technology, but it's still embracing its culture and traditions.
And yes, every Sunday you hear the bell.
Hold on, hold on, hold on.
I was told, I was told though, that in order to embrace progress and to embrace culture, you had to.
have globalization, you had to have the euro, you had to have migrants, you had to have them flooding into your country.
But Poland hasn't done any of those things.
They're the hottest economy in the EU right now.
Let me just ask you a question.
Have you ever once while walking around in Warsaw or Krakow or any of the cities that we go to in Gdansk, any of the cities we go to in Poland, have you ever as a woman felt unsafe?
And I don't just mean because you're with me.
I could honestly say that Poland is one of the safest countries I've ever been to.
Every time I talk about traveling internationally, I say I would love to bring my kids here because I can just let them run around on the playground, not have to worry about them.
And if somehow I turn around, I know there's another mom who is keeping an eye on all the kids because the playground is packed with all the moms, all the kids, everybody gets along.
And guess what?
It's a very diverse crowd because you have blonde haired Polish kids, you have blue-eyed Polish kids, they are very diverse in their sense of and some of them may speak Polish, some of them may speak English because English is also widely taught here.
But at the same time, it's a lot, actually.
And there's also some of the Russian-speaking or Belarusian-speaking kids, which we have come across and our boys were able to interact with.
And at the same time, well, and you do also hear the Russian-speaking from a lot of the Ukrainian families that have been here.
That's very true.
So the crowd is diverse, but it's a European diversity.
And looking at it, it brings out a true cultural blend of Polish, Russian, Belarusian, and Russian, Belarusian, Ukrainian, Eastern European roots.
Right.
And so, and to your point, so it's, it's, you know, most people looking at it would say, Oh, Eastern Europe, that's all the same thing.
But you talk to the actual Eastern Europeans, none of them would say that, would they?
They wouldn't.
They would say, No, no, we're all, we're all.
And at the same time, there are rural Polish men, and at the same time, there are citifolk.
That's right.
Yeah, rural, urban, those splits.
And so, you know, I think that's one thing that, you know, you see those as well.
But one of the big things that we have been talking about for so long, especially in America, we talk about what is an American.
And you sort of need these bigger categories.
But ever since, you know, really year 2000, maybe even 1965, you have so many people coming in that are from cultures that are completely incompatible and just so completely distant from the United States that you to your point, right, you even within a Even within a closed geography, you can find lots of diversity and lots of differences.
But now when you're talking about bringing in people from all over the world, places like the Third World, they're coming in.
And suddenly you're like, what's going on?
We were in, well, two days ago, we were in Upstate New York.
And we visited Niagara, but we were also staying in, I'm not going to say the name of the town, but we were staying in that tiny little town that we were there with a beautiful waterfall in the middle of the town and near Ithaca area.
And that bus stopped off and all these workers get off.
None of them are speaking English.
In the middle of nowhere, in this tiny little town.
And they just, they didn't fit.
I'm just going to say it.
They just didn't fit, did they?
And it takes one look to, even without them having to speak, where you see the way manners, the way they carry themselves around each other and you just know they're not American.
She's talking about the trash folks.
She's talking about she was going off.
She said, why are they barefoot?
There's trash.
They're eating with the hands.
And we're talking, and by the way, that's something, bringing it back to Poland, it's so clean.
It's so clean.
And I've struck that struck me every single time that we've come here, even to Warsaw, huge marches that we've been to.
Because they have so much respect for their home, for their country.
And they're teaching the young ones to do the same.
Because it starts from the little kid picking up the trash after himself and then truly loving the country.
and making sure they protect it, starting from the little things like that.
Little things like that's a mom's perspective, folks.
Right back, Human Events Daily.
Jack Posobiec, Real America's Voice, live in Warsaw, Poland.
Today, you know, they talk about influences.
These are influences.
And they're friends of mine, Jack Posobik.
Where is Jack?
Jack.
He's got a great job.
All right, folks, Jack Posobik, here we are back, live, Warsaw, Poland, Real America's Voice, Human Events Daily.
By the way, shout out to the whole team here at TV Republica for hosting us.
And also shout out, of course, to the great Real America's Voice team supporting us for being here and being able to do all this.
And shout out also to our White House correspondents who got to see President Trump on the, you know, I'm kind of looking at the skyline of Poland and Warsaw here.
And he's up on the roof of the White House itself earlier today.
I think the first time this is a guy, by the way, I would have loved to see the Secret Service's face when they, when he told them that he's going going to be walking around up on the roof.
Here we are, you know, one after everything that he's been through.
I'm not going to say it, but after everything that he's been through, after everything that he's been through, and he just goes up there and says, Yeah, I'm going to go up there.
I'm going to take a little look.
I'm going to look around.
I'm going to see what's going on up on the top.
And he just does it.
He just does it.
He even takes questions up there from reporters because why not?
You know, you're there to the White House and you look up and you see the President of the United States up on the roof.
And of course what he's doing, and I'll bring Tanya Tay in now.
So what he's doing though is he has this vision for making the White House better.
And he wants to expand the White House.
Now, we've been to the White House a number of times.
We've been to Christmases there.
We've been to Easters there, probably a whole bunch of other events that I can't even think of on the top of my head.
But there is one thing that the White House currently doesn't have, and that's a ballroom, isn't it?
So let me ask you from the feminine side of things, do you think the White House should have a ballroom or should they leave it the way it is?
Well, I'll start with this.
I remember the first time I saw the White House and I thought to myself., where's the rest of it?
Oh, gosh.
It's it's not that So here we're here in Warsaw, by the way.
We're in Eastern Europe.
And there's like, here's this palace and here's that palace.
And, you know, that's Europe, right?
That's Europe's style.
It's just the, you know, the random palace just Yeah, and that's like, it's like, oh, that's, well, that's the mayor of Warsaw's palace and here's the president's palace down the street.
And then you go to the White House and you're like, oh, okay.
It's iconic.
It's iconic.
But it's not that big.
It's just, it's just true for the rest of it.
It's iconic.
But it's not that big.
It's just, it's just true for the rest of it.
So answering your question, yes, there has to be a ballroom and it has to be grand.
And what I love about President Trump is Wait, wait, and by the way, guys, for people who think that who think what Tanya is saying is harsh, just consider when other people come from other countries like Eastern Europe or wherever they might be coming from and they come to the White House, that's the perspective that they're going to have too, because that was her perspective coming to the United States and saying, Wait a minute, where's the rest of the White House?
Right, so I do believe that the White House should have a ballroom.
And what I love about President Trump is that he makes his own rules.
If he decides to go on a roof, guess what?
He's not asking for permission, he just goes and does it.
And when he is in charge of the project And something as grand as adding a ballroom to the White House, he will look through the process from the beginning to end, and he will be there on the roof overlooking the whole process and making sure it's done perfect in every way,
make sure it's done to the scale that he visions it to be, and making sure that it is as impressive as it could be to present the grand character of the White House that it carries.
Well, and you know that, so for example, the ballroom, and you've been to the ballroom, we've been to the ballroom, our Lago, tons of events are there.
are held there, but that wasn't originally part of Mar-a-Lago.
So that was actually something that he built and added to Mar-a-Lago, but it's not that he changed the character of Mar-a-Lago.
He understood the character of the property.
He wasn't the original owner of Mary, Mary Weather Post was Lee Mary Weather Post, and he added to it so that he could hold these wonderful events, and it fits in perfectly.
So to some people who say, wait a minute, the East Wing is this, first of all, the White House has been expanded and gutted and changed over presidents and inaugurations and administrations over and over.
So it would certainly not be the first time that's been done.
I think the current East Wing has only been there since the 1940s.
So this isn't like some, you know, super hundreds of years old part of the White House.
And look, I think he's right though.
The idea that you have to, you know, set up a tent on the lawn to have a real ball, it just doesn't make any sense.
This is the White House.
It's the symbol of our nation and it's something that could be added on.
Plus, by the way, did you know that it's not going to be funded by the taxpayers?
How interesting.
So he is he's raising a fund.
He's calling up all of his friends and he's putting in his own money into it as well.
Well, that's a very Trump thing to do.
And if I could choose one person to be in charge of such a project, I would choose Donald Trump every day of the month.
And honestly, I'm sure it will be finished ahead of time.
Oh, here we go.
You know where I'm going with that.
Under budget and ahead of schedule.
Under budget, ahead of schedule.
But it's, it's, I think what you need though, too, is it's talking about that heritage and the fact that we covered it last week, I covered online that the architect that he's appointed to be really in charge of the whole whole thing is a Catholic, neoclassical architect, and that firm has done a lot of the churches around Washington, DC, and that's specifically the style they look at, the exact style of the White House.
And so they're going to take from the crenellations to the pillars to the windows, all of those design features are going to be incorporated into the ballroom.
So it's not going to be like it's some separate, you know, separate freestanding piece.
It's going to fit with the flow and as he's talking about, the actual architecture and the layout of the compound as well.
I love it.
We need to see Americans actually build stuff and create stuff.
And what's more American than embracing that American culture and bringing it to the White House, to the Nationalist Capitol, where it can be a pride of every American?
Well, and the idea of building is, and you can see Trump, this is definitely, I think, an idea he's probably had for a while now.
And I'm sure he thought of it the first time he was in office, and it's just been sort of in the back of his head, he said, if I ever get back there, I'm going to do this.
And you get the sense that he's really wanted to for a long time.
And that's why, because, you know, people are are saying, wait a minute, he's only been in office.
Real estate is a specialist.
He's a builder.
He is a builder, so who, not President Trump, will come up with something great like that.
It's incredible.
Right back, Jack Posobik, Tanya Tay, Real America's Voice, Even Events Daily, Warsaw, Poland.
back.
Hey, Jack, where's Jack?
Where's Jack?
Where is he?
Jack, I want to see you.
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, but we have guys.
And these are the guys who should be getting publishers.
All right, Jack from Subic.
We're back live here, Human Events Daily.
We're live in Warsaw, Poland.
And gosh, I am looking at this list, and I just want to go through this for everybody to give you an explanation and really an understanding of where we are on this in terms of the House Oversight Committee.
The Clintons themselves, two top former DOJ officials, all testimony on Jeffrey Epstein.
And by the way, there's Republicans on on this list as well as Democrats.
So it's definitely both sides.
This is going to be huge, but I wonder though, I've got a theory about one of them that I want to tell you, but I'm going to read through the list right now.
I think I have this in order.
The way I'm reading is a little off.
U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr, August 18th.
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, August 26th.
That was Bush's...
Former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, August 28th.
Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, September 2nd.
Former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, September 9th.
Former US Attorney General Eric Holder, september thirtieth.
Then you go back a little bit and we've got FBI Director James Comey, August seventh, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, October ninth, former President Bill Clinton, October fourteenth.
One noticeable error that I or glaring omission, I should say, is the fact that you don't see who?
You don't see Chris Ray on this list at all, who was the immediate former FBI director.
But here's a key.
Loretta Lynch also played a huge role in Russia Gate.
And so it's going to be interesting to see whether or not in this hearing, so of course she's brought in ostensibly for the purposes of talking about Epstein, and I hope she answers all of her questions she'll need to, as well as all of them.
But Loretta Lynch played a very, very interesting part in Russia Gate itself.
And of course, Hillary did as well.
So I wonder if we're going to see a few questions regarding that, because we remember, what was the tarmac meeting?
This is one for Bill as well.
What was that tarmac meeting between Bill Clinton and Loretta Lynch?
We know that was her providing him information regarding this Russia plot and James Comey was the one who wrote about it in his book and I've been talking about this all last week.
So if Comey comes in there, he can say that he was the one who raised the red flag over this and especially over that meeting during the campaign between Bill Clinton and Loretta Lynch.
James Comey, I'm telling you, this is not exactly the kind of guy who's going to stand up under pressure.
Comey will fold and then you can use him to ping some of the others.
The real question here is whether or not they can get in questions about Russia Gate.
Now this is totally separate, by the way, from the grand jury.
However, if those questions are asked under oath, they can be provided to the grand jury as well as testimony evidence.
So that's the latest that we're seeing from Washington, DC, some interesting Rushogate connections.
Obviously, all the Jeffrey Epstein stuff needs to be investigated thoroughly and in full.
And I'll just say this from my perspective, the American people don't deserve just another high pressure, high stakes TV show.
They deserve people in bracelets, in silver bracelets for what it came down to those victims, to those women, to those young girls.
And so I'll flip that back around because we're here with Tanya Tay.
Hi, sweetheart.
So great to be here.
Well, I mean, you came with me.
Like, where else would you come from?
Oh, you're so great.
Well, thank you for bringing me along.
I was like, you could have just said, I'm going to have all the kilbas all by myself.
I am going to have all the kilbas.
But here's the thing.
We were talking about how safe it is for women here in Poland.
And it's true, it really is.
But it's also so safe for kids because Poland really is a family first oriented society, all the way from the presidential level down to just what you see on the street.
You see families all over the place.
Talk to us a little bit about we've heard the stories and for those who haven't, Poland has these huge government programs that help people to have kids that essentially give you money to have kids, they help you to buy a larger car, they help you with housing, they help you with all these things regarding kids.
But how is Poland culturally, because you've been here with our boys, how is it different from when we're in America with the boys from a mother's perspective?
So one of the biggest differences is the huge sense of community here.
So all the people come as one.
And the value of mother and a child here, I would say it's probably on top of the list in Poland.
If you are an expectant mother, if you are a new mother, if you are a mother with one, two, multiple children, which is highly encouraged, you are the most valuable member of the society.
And here's why, because mother, she brings life.
And mother is the one who is continuing, continuing.
I see the smile on your face.
Continuing the family.
The family, the family history.
Well, I'm just smiling because I don't know if she's coming after me, folks.
I don't know what's going on here.
So, and that's the reason why Mothers raise society.
She is.
Mothers raise society, grandmothers and mothers, of course, together.
So, the amount of support that mothers get in Poland is truly incredible, and it starts from maternity leave, the amount of time mothers are expected to have with their young ones.
There is a number of resources that are available to them, starting from the maternity fund and all the resources available to them.
Like the visits to the hospital, it's pretty common for a doctor to come to a mother, to the house, instead of her sitting in the hospital, waiting her turn to be treated.
In some waiting room filled with illegal aliens, and you can't even get in and nobody speaks the same language, here they'll have a doctor actually come to you, and it's all covered.
It is all covered, yes.
It's all covered.
And plus, just, you know, even beyond all of that, which as amazing as it is, you see kids everywhere in Poland and you see playgrounds everywhere.
They'll even have you, you know, you walk into a restaurant, it'd be a nice restaurantant.
And I only take Italian.
Italian say only goes to nice restaurants, folks.
Just try asking her to go to McDonald's.
It doesn't go well.
You see, you can't walk this into McDonald's.
That they'll always have a section for kids.
So the kids walk in.
Instead of having the kids try to be at the adult table, they have a kids section and usually someone to kind of keep an eye on them with toys and games and they can play.
And then when the food is ready, they could come and have their, you know, kids meal with mom and dad.
But then they go back because kids don't want to sit still.
They want to play and they want to interact and they want to have fun.
That's what makes it a nice experience for the whole family.
Kids run away.
They do their thing.
And then when they're ready, they join mother and father to talk.
And it's every airport, every public space, there's a playground or some kind of play setting, and it's all for kids.
And you realize how open they are to kids in Poland, and this is everywhere, even small towns.
And then it makes me think sometimes, wow, we're kind of hostile to children in America, in a sense.
We're, we're, you know, it's always shh.
And why is your kid being so loud?
And why would you bring kids here?
And all the rest of it.
And it's like, we don't even, we don't even appreciate little kids.
Or someone walks up with their, you know, the mom with her stroller, and she's got all the bags and it's like the mothers are treated as a burden it feels like in the United States like it's oh your son you see people rolling their eyes the rest of it you never see that in Poland and I'll just I'll end this little rant with one thing that I remember when we were in Krakow the one time and it wasn't our kid but there was a kid who kind of like you know kind of like went a little before the green light you know what I mean into the street and he wasn't like running into
the street but he was he was doing something he should have been doing and because he saw a playground he wanted to run to it but he ran across traffic I remember this story and there was a bus a city bus that just slammed on the on the brakes for a kid.
And it just struck me that, you know, I'm not saying that wouldn't happen in the United States anywhere, but the fact that it happened so quickly in Poland, it just really struck home to me how much little kids are absolutely respected here and valued.
And I remember the story so clearly, and I think there were some of the pedestrians who like reached over to grab the kid right away, which, you know, as you expect in a high-functioning society, they would protect the little ones who are just, you know.
Wait, so it's a high-trust society.
And that's the difference.
High-trust.
Because you don't have the crime.
If people like want to be helpful.
I'm not saying it's perfect, right?
You know, there's issues, but it's it's so different from now compare that to like Times Square.
I honestly Where we haven't even taken our little kids.
We haven't taken them.
And I honestly don't feel like I could if I'm without you, I don't know if I would like to take our kids to the Times Square because I will be holding on to them for dear life.
You had a physical reaction when I said that.
When I said that.
So taking the kids to the city center of Poland versus Times Square, New York.
And I could see your reaction.
You had a physical reaction.
And I know there's a little difference in numbers.
I mean, I'll give that.
but it just I don't have that sense of security when I am in the US in another big country.
Moms, no.
Moms, no.
You can't fool mom.
You just feel it, you sense it, and you just...
The mom dar went off.
All right, right back.
Jack Posobiec, Real America's Voice, Warsaw, Poland, Human Events Daily.
Jack Posobiec, Real America's Voice, Warsaw, Poland, 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 and we're going to turn it around and make our country great again.
Amen.
All right folks, Jack Posobic here, Real America's voice, human events daily, live Warsaw, Poland.
Again, thank you again to TV Republica for being here and welcoming us, hosting us here.
We're here in Warsaw because tomorrow is the historic inauguration of Karl Navrocki, the conservative patriot, the populist nationalist who defeated the forces of globalist liberalism and wokeness and mass migration funded totally out of Brussels and in fact actually it's really funny you guys can't see it really right now because of where I'm sitting but the the office of the opponent who lost the lost the presidential election
is right across the street here.
I was like, I want to go under those green laser pointers and like right into it.
No, I would never.
I would never.
No, totally not do that.
Not me.
But no, it's amazing to be here.
And so thank you to everybody as well as to Real America's Voice for supporting us and being able to do the technology to be able to allow us to be here.
And we're talking about this.
And we're talking about Poland.
We're talking about some of the differences of Poland and how Poland has been able to maintain its success while also being a great partner of the United States.
But some of these issues of what makes a nation?
What is a nation?
What is a people?
What does it mean to have a heritage?
What does it mean to have a history?
Well, you come to Poland and it's very simple and it's very clear.
It's language, it's religion, it's your culture, it's the way you carry yourself and it is your history, your great, incredible and wonderful history.
And certainly there's dark periods in Poland's history.
And what do they do?
They don't hide them.
They don't shy away from them.
They memorialize them.
And so we're on Tanya Tay.
as to be our almost entire hour guest on here.
And I suppose the what President Trump is doing, and you saw Todd Blanche was out there yesterday with AG Bondi and President Trump at the at the briefing room and they were talking about all of the wins that are happening for parents is that there's something about, you know, we talk about the parents of the United States, the parents in Poland.
It really does come down to moms and dads, doesn't it?
It really does.
And the one goal that parents in US and Poland have is have the opportunity to have the roof over their children's head to be able to afford some basic groceries to provide a safe daycare school, university environment.
Environment for their kids and have them be successful individuals who will later on in life take over and become the true representatives of their nations.
And so it's all about that with the idea of having this environment.
And when you have kids, it makes you think differently about your country and about your town.
Because suddenly when you have kids, you say, oh, wait a minute, this town is this town is disgustinging.
We need to clean it up.
You got to have a town that's worthy of these little kids coming in.
We have to have a town and a state and a country that's worthy of these little kids.
A hospital where you can take your kids to where a great hospital.
When scrapes happen.
We did have to go through it.
We did have to go through a broken arm this summer already because our little road warrior adventurer was getting up there and decided to mess around the monkey bars.
But again, that's part of childhood too, is testing your limits, testing your strength.
And, of course, our boys test our limits.
I never test your limits, though, of course.
And you want to have that.
You're talking about a society.
And you're talking about those shared values and those shared beliefs that create a better society.
And I think in the United States, and maybe you can offer your perspective on this, but I think in the United States we've spent too much time worrying about money and how much money we can make and how much GDP we can produce and this company and that.
that company and we've totally gotten away from the point of what you should have a country for and I will bring it even a step further, it is expected of a moms to give birth to the child and jump in a workforce immediately where the baby is being basically passed on from one institution to another where there's strangers raising it and mom doesn't even have an opportunity to spend at least longer
than eight weeks with her newborn.
So yes, no system is perfect.
Yes, in U.S., there's certain expectations, but there's definitely room for improvement.
And I think if we give more opportunities for especially new mothers.
We could have a little better society in general and a few more families willing to start a family and not being scared of the financial burdens that come with a newborn.
So there's definitely some room for improvement.
No, I think so too.
And certainly, you know, Poland has been becoming more Americanized and more Westernized, certainly since the fall of communism.
And so where Poland was able to learn from America in that perspective, America, I think, can also learn from Poland a little bit.
You know, there's this sort of, you know, the Eastern European way is more family first and the Western European American way is more more like, work hard, go work, work all the time, never take a day off.
And I think the answer is somewhere in the middle.
I think the real answer is that you want to be somewhere in the middle, maybe not all one way, maybe not all the other way.
But when it comes to those ideas, those bedrock ideas of identity, of heritage, this is where it comes in.
And it's so funny because you can have a country like this and people say this, well, anyone can become an American and anyone can do this.
And it's like, you can't become Polish.
That's some strange notion that I guess Western Europe came up with.
But nobody, you come to Eastern Europe, nobody's going to say, Oh, you could become Polish.
It's ridiculous.
No, it truly comes, if I may say, with mother's milk, you know, and it starts with all the little lullabies that you sing to them in Polish.
And I know a lot of friends who are in Poland, and one of the first things they do, they learn the Polish language.
They embrace the Polish culture.
They go to Polish cathedrals and they truly appreciate for what it is.
Because it's such an important part of being a Polish citizen is to embrace all those cultural aspects of this country, which are incredible.
And every opportunity I get, where of course I'm hoping, you're taking me to a very big dinner with a table, because in Poland there's not just dinner.
There's dinner.
She's telling me what we're doing tonight.
Polish are hosting She's laying out the gauntlet for us.
It's a feast and I expect Oh, she wants to be feasted?
Pierogi.
She wants to be feasted, is that right?
I expect all the, all the kilbassas and corgi and all the pastries.
Because it is also all the things you mentioned that are Polish food.
Food is such an important part of it.
And it comes with, you know, being able to make those foods and teaching your, like, babchas, the Polish grandmothers who teach their young, uh, granddotters how to make those breads.
It's all part of the Polish history and Polish art.
Look, look, look.
So, will you make some babchas for me?
Is that what you're doing?
I could, I could.
You could, you could, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll see your baking skills when we Yeah, the master baker that you are.
Okay.
No, but it's, it's true that we just had, you know, we were just at a, uh, you know, family reunion up in, uh, upstate New York as well.
So it was all the Polish food.
And I have to say, folks, I may be a little stereotypical when it comes to this obviously biased.
I love Polish food.
It's my favorite food on the face of the planet and it's good food.
It's hearty stuff.
You get pierogis, you get your guampi, you get that's the pigs in the blanket, the stuffed cabbage, you get and of course kebabsie.
Just rows and endless rows of kebabsie.
That's what that's.
So beyond all the other things that we just mentioned, oh my gosh, like you can walk into any store in Poland on any corner and boom, kebabsie, all different kinds of it.
You just grab a couple of bags, you're set, you're totally set.
That's the difference between having a nation, an actual nation, and an economic extraction zone.
And I think that's what we're trying to get back to in the United States of America.
Ladies and gentlemen, the lovely and beautiful Tanya Tapasovic, thank you so much for spending time with us here today.
Cheese.
No cheese.
So there we go.
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