America's Mayor Live (744): Democrats Hit New Low—Mocking Prayer After Catholic Church Shooting
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Good evening.
This is Murray Giuliani and this is America's Mayor Live.
And we are in New Hampshire.
Dover, New Hampshire.
Now, just in case you don't recognize it, because it would sound highly out of character when you watch her on TV as I asked you to do last night and she'll be on tomorrow night again.
Dr. Maria is here and she's going to be with us to help us.
to help us get through all of this health care news, which includes this whole situation with, is it, is it, I really want to examine my proposition that it's about time we take a look at this whole transgender gender situation and see what kind of connection it has to violence because there's just too many of these killings involving transgender people.
Now, unlike the musings of that idiot boy mayor in Minnesota, This is nothing about an attack on the transgender community.
This is for the benefit of the transgender community.
You don't help them by leading them into increased numbers of suicides, which apparently is the case.
And all of Europe knows that.
But in America, we don't say.
that or we're not allowed to say that because much like what happened during the pandemic, there's a whole big medical, pharmaceutical, whatever industrial complex that makes billions, if not trillions, of transgender surgery, Transgender transitions.
Remember, it was costing a tampon Kim $400,000 or $500,000 a shot in
All of a sudden, if in fact there happens to be an infiltration in our pharmaceutical medical health community of a bunch of criminals, which there seems to be, who are using it for purposes of greed, this is going to be a great thing to collect money on when money is kind of short in other places.
It doesn't matter if you can get more people killed.
I mean, they didn't care about that during the pandemic.
Why would they care about it now?
So we want to take a look at that because nobody is raising it and it's an outrage that they're not.
Because the reality, the number of times it's happened, the number of times it's been covered up.
And one of the things that I pride ourselves on is we really led the way to a very large extent in taking the veil off alien killings.
I mean, you go back to when Biden first started this, the first two years, they were saying, oh, you know, aliens are no more dangerous.
They commit less crime than Americans.
Now, I knew that wasn't true.
I knew it wasn't true because that used to be true.
It used to be true when we had a different situation of entry.
It changed dramatically when he opened the doors and therefore every terrorist group.
group, every country that wants to bring spies here, drug dealers, human traffickers, child traffickers.
So the doors open.
It's like opening the doors in a town.
You don't think you're going to get all the houseburgers to come there?
So we want to look at this because all of the Democrats are one horse pony here, one note song for 40 years, and that is Gun control, gun control, gun control.
They forget to tell you they have gun control in Minnesota.
The strictest in the country.
And what good did it do them?
That's the same good additional gun control will do.
There's a reason for that.
You can't control the behavior of serious criminals or mentally ill people.
That's why they're serious criminals and mentally ill.
They're not either able to or willing to follow controls.
You control law-abiding people.
Now, how stupid is that?
And how useless is that?
And how much more useful is it to try to figure out the mental illnesses that are involved and try and identify them earlier?
Because it's the mental illness or the person's propensity to crime that pulls the trigger, not the gun.
And if they didn't have a gun, they would use bombs.
And if they didn't have bombs, they would use knives or some kind of gas.
Well, let's first get to a couple of the areas of news, and then we'll come back to this.
And in the next segment, we'll talk about all of the things that are going on at the And there's a lot of, I don't know.
Is there a lot of controversy about that, Ted?
I guess there is.
I don't think there should be.
Whether you agree with his answers or not, and I'm not expert enough to, I mean, I agree with probably most, if not all of them.
What aren't you an expert on, Mayor?
Come on.
Well, I'm not an expert.
She isn't.
That's why we're going to have her on.
So what's going on with Iran?
And I think we're going to have Ali Razor with us again tonight, right?
That's right, Mayor.
We are just moments away from having...
Well, let me tell you what...
And that is that President Trump has made a suggestion.
I hope he follows up on this.
You know, he says things and I think sometimes.
he does it as trial balloons to see how people are going to jump on it.
He suggested a 2026 convention.
When I first saw the headline, I thought he wanted to nominate the president in 2026.
And I said, what the hell is he residing?
Then I read it more carefully.
He wants to have an interim convention.
I really didn't remember.
You think I'm a great expert on American history, and this happened during my lifetime.
I didn't remember that the Democratic Party did this.
had one of these mini conventions in 78 and in 92, in 82.
And then after they got their head kicked in in 84, they decided it was bad luck.
Reagan won 49 of 50 states in 84.
So they decided, oh boy, we better not do this.
And they took a pretty big look at it in 88 too.
But, so this is not completely, I guess it would be novel for the Republican Party and the idea of the president is to focus on what has been accomplished halfway through the administration.
obviously to put the Republican Party in the best position he can for the congressional elections because he's going to use every minute of his administration to get these things done.
And I think, you know, one of the, a lot of people said, oh, it's terrible if you just, you know, one term and we're not going to get anything done.
He's so far gotten more done than I think almost any other president has in eight years.
And he hasn't stopped yet.
And I think he stops on the day that he, I think he stops on midnight or the day he turns the office over, hopefully another Republican.
The economy is growing.
It's growing at an annualized pace now of 3.3%.
That succeeds preliminary estimatesate was 3%.
Is that 3.3?
There were all kinds of, you know, what could happen with the tariffs.
And although maybe that's a song that's getting kind of old, right?
We've been dealing with tariffs.
And here's what's happening with tariffs.
We collected record revenues in the month of August that literally have gone so far as to help us stop wiping the deficit out.
Now, that is not going to continue.
That's because we have a lot of these tariffs.s in effect that are intended to get people to agree.
And some of them have already agreed.
So I suspect, I suspect, but what the hell do I know?
It could all change.
We can't pencil in $30 billion a month.
That was a month because some people were a little recalcitrant in going along with the deal that Trump wanted.
A lot of them have fallen into place now.
But what that means is probably going to be a real benefit to the market.
There's an argument, and it was briefly summarized in the post, but it laid out in more detail in reason by Robert Suave that the whole ban or penalty for flag burning,
ridiculous you know it's ridiculous he's wasting time on it that flag burning is clearly protected by the first amendment it I mean, If the federal government could abridge speech because other people might react negatively to it, then the First Amendment would cease to be a useful defense against censorship.
That's a little ridiculous.
I mean, to say that burning something is the same thing as saying something.
Yeah, it can under certain circumstances be purely symbolic speech, unless you add to it that in a, let's say in an urban environment or in the environment of a protest, if you burn something, that is far different than just saying a few words.
Among other things, it could put people on fire.
We generally don't allow people to burn things just out in the public, whether it's a flag or not.
To recognize a particular symbol as a symbol of tremendous value in holding a country together, because there aren't many things that hold countries together, is certainly a reasonable thing for government to do.
And to put things that are so sacred to us beyond the ability to people to demean them, seems to me that those are all things that a very left-wing Supreme Court, when it decided that flag burning was speech, maybe that was as ridiculous as deciding that we have a right to privacy when it's not in the Constitution.
And Justice Douglas had to create something called penumbras from the rights in the Constitution.
If he hadn't written that, the one good thing, I wouldn't know what penumbra meant.
It's the most ridiculous idea ever by any justice that the rights in the Constitution have reflective power, shadows.
They create clouds.
And then you put enough of them together and you can write in that cloud, right of privacy, and then you can put under it, they can't prohibit you from having condoms they can't prohibit you from killing babies that's the progression that's the ideological progression of roe against wade it's about as uh intellectually sensible as saying that burning a flag is the same thing as speech and as i said i mean burning something is
inherently dangerous um and also a flag is not just another piece of another piece of of of of of property there are few things that we have that hold us together.
Flag is one, national anthem is another.
We certainly have a right as a nation that has to have certain things that help to pull us together to decide on certain symbols that say you're an American or you're not American.
Because not everybody is.
So we're going to take a break.
And when we come back, we're going to have Dr. Maria with us.
And we're going to talk about what's going on at the...
Just before Dr. Maria...
Uzan?
He's standing by.
What do you think?
Okay.
So we're going to come right to Ali Reza to discuss the snapback provisions.
The snapback provisions which were just mentioned.
I think we mentioned them earlier, but we'll explain to them what they are.
Hello Ali Reza, how are you, my friend?
Great, great to see you, Mayor.
Always a pleasure to be on your show.
Well, as you know, he's the Deputy Director of the Washington Office of the National Council of Resistance of Iran.
He has been, I would say, a very, very brave advocate for a free and a democratic nuclear free and Iran now for many, many years trying to deliver the people of Iran from the servitude of the Ayatollah and the reign of terror.
But what we're interested in tonight, Ali Reza, is, and it's coming up very quickly, the snapback provisions and how they could be as effective.
maybe or even more effective than military action.
Well, certainly you're correct, Mayor, because the snapback of the sanctions on the Iran regime is extremely crucial because that's what really hurts the ayatollah because there were a lot of efforts done over the years to impose sanctions on the Iran regime that started actually by the revelation of the Iranian nuclear sites back in 2002
by the Iranian resistance, the National Council of Resistance relying on their network in Iran, the MEK, that triggered the inspections of Iranian nuclear sites and then a whole whole host of other revelations by the Iranian resistance really eventually got the IAEA Board of Governors to refer the nuclear file of Iran to the Security Council.
And then at that time, decisions were made to impose sanctions on the Iran regime.
And there were six UN Security Council resolutions, each of them dealing with different aspects, for instance, in terms of arms embargo, in terms of restrictions on their ballistic missile program, on their oil sales, on their visa bans.
There is a whole host of sanctions that was really hurting the regime.
It was making it very difficult, if not impossible, for the regime to secure revenue for funding the Revolutionary Guards and their nuclear program.
Then came the JCPOA, the nuclear agreement that eventually was finalized in 2015.
And part of that agreement was resolution by Security Council 2231 that put a hold on all of those previous UN Security Council resolutions, basically removing all of those restrictions, allowing the regime to gradually get away with a lot of those restrictions in terms of arms purchases, missile program, and all of that.
Now, what happens is that with this snapback, which interestingly is being triggered by the Europeans, those who were sort of in divide with the United States over the years, it actually puts back all of those sanctions associated with those six UN Security Council resolutions.
And there is no one that can actually stop that.
There is just like a process of 30 days that once the.
Once the one of the members of the JCPOA, actually in this case it was three countries that they referred, they triggered the snapback.
If within 30 days there is not a resolution to stop this process, then at the end of 30 days, all of those sanctions will automatically come back.
And it's almost impossible to get a resolution.
Let's say one of the permanent members would bring a resolution, let's say Russia or any country.
Well, for that resolution to pass, they need nine votes plus they need no..
veto.
Well, you have, you know, Britain, you have the United States, you have France, they can veto that resolution.
What do they have to do?
And what's the deadline for doing it in order to start that process of the snapback provisions?
The only thing.
And that resolution will go nowhere because that resolution in order to stop the snapback can easily be vetoed.
It doesn't even have the vote, but even if it did, it could easily be vetoed by, you know, UK.
Any time that that's going to happen?
That's going to happen just automatically or that they have to do something?
If that resolution is not filed or is filed and gets nowhere, then at the end of the 30 day, which will be the end of September, all of those sanctions will come back automatically.
And if no resolution is filed, what happens?
If no resolution is filed, still at the end of 30 days, the sanctions will come back.
So an action has to be taken to stop it.
Right, exactly.
The only way to stop it is to have an action and that action is a resolution and that resolution has to pass with no veto and that's not going to happen.
So that's why I think this is an important day for all of the people who have been concerned but also fighting to impose restrictions on the Iranian regime.
Also it signals not just in terms of sanctions, it signals a change of circumstances.
You know, there is a sea change between now and 2015.
This regime is much, much weaker.
They don't have the kind of consensus they had on their side before.
To the contrary, you have a lot of these Europeans who are on board with the other nations like the United States and others.
They're fed up with the terrorism of the Iran regime.
They're fed up with the way the regime is threatening those European nations.
And they're fed up with the non-compliance of the Iran regime.
They just use whatever you give them and ask for more.
And I think more importantly, the world.
has realized that this regime is so weak.
They're vulnerable.
They're rejected by their own population inside the country.
They can't even hold and keep alive their own proxies in the region.
You know, look at Hezbollah, they've been badly shattered.
Their biggest ally, Assad in Syria, is gone.
So that's why I think this is an important first step, certainly.
It's not the end of the day, the end of the game.
This is but it starts a process that needs to be augmented and backed up with a process that would further.
further weaken the regime because as far as Tehran is concerned, they're going to pursue their nuclear weapons no matter what until the last day.
I think the Ayatollah announced that just a day or two ago.
He said, We don't want to talk to the United States.
We don't want to have any conversations and they're useless anyway because we're going ahead.
So we have the answer.
Now is this, is this, does this, does some action have to be taken in the next day or two to start this period running or is it running right now?
No, nothing is needed.
It's already running.
The only action if anyone wants to stop it, they need to file that resolution and pass it within 30 days.
I'm not sure who's going to dare to do it and how far it's going to go.
Russia, China?
Of course, I mean, the regime talks about them, but it's not going to go anywhere.
And I think that's why we need to 15 years ago, 20 years ago.
Why would you want to allow the regime to get this far?
But as long as the Mollas are in power, you're going to see their continuation of their nuclear weapons program, you're going to see their terrorism, you're going to see their missile program, their drone program, and all of that.
That's why, as we have always argued, and you have always argued, Mayor, the only lasting solution for the whole region, really, because the head of the snake of war and terror lies in Tehran, the solution also lies there, and that's the change of the regime by the people of Iran.
No Foreign boots are needed on the ground, no appropriation of money, no giving them weapons, nothing of that.
The only thing they need to do is hold the regime accountable, don't give them money and resources.
Strangely, I think Ali Razor, that you eliminate Iran, the rest of the region is ready for peace.
I think they're tired.
They're tired of just constant war going nowhere, just killing people on all sides.
Well, thank you, Ali Razor, but we'll keep in touch with you because this is a very important period of time.
God bless you.
Thank you so much, Mayor.
Always a pleasure.
Appreciate that.
We're going to take a short break and we'll be back right.
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Here we are, pretty much at the beginning of the process here at this pristine, I call it a laboratory.
It's not like a factory, it's like a hospital.
This is the beginning of the process for roasting.
Deep green, very good quality.
Most people don't use this quality.
We deal with small farmers because they like to know who we're dealing with.
They give us the highest quality, all organic, non GMO.
You should know all Arabica beans, Lotobusto, all Arabica.
They're going to go into the roaster and it'll get roasted for about 20 minutes or so.
Oh my goodness, look at these.
Oh my goodness!
You're going to want to specially order these.
This is what goes into Rudy's coffee.
Rudy's coffee.
Welcome back to America's Mayor Live.
And we have with us, Dr. Maria, who I have here for several reasons, because I want to ask you some questions good seeing you mayor great show by the way doctor thank you we uh constantly tell our people to go over and watch you you'll be on tomorrow night again i will nine o'clock monday wednesday and i'm sure covering some of these subjects in even more detail but um the the there's a lot of activity over at a at uh cdc right hhc cdc
well i'm talking about the whole oh hhc the whole umbrella of agencies that is run by Robert Kennedy Jr. and one of them is he's I guess he fired or Or she resigned and then decided not to, the head of CDC, right?
Yes.
Who didn't seem to be qualified for the job in the first place.
No, I was a little upset with the appointment, if I'm going to be honest with you.
But we want you to be honest.
Yeah, her name is, let's see here, I almost forgot it, Manarez.
And she's got a PhD, but she's got a certain ideology.
And that's why I was disappointed in her appointment.
So the story goes that Robert Kennedy said, you know, the agency has been really not about patients.
It's been more about an ideology.
I think these people should go.
And she said, no way.
She told everybody about what he said.
Instead of it being a private conversation, she rallied the troops.
And so he asked her to resign.
She initially agreed, and then she rescinded it.
And then President Trump terminated her.
Along with her termination, three of some of the top doctors resigned.
Isn't that good?
I mean, the CDC is.
I'm glad you said that, Mayor Julie.
Well, I've known it was awful since I was mayor.
I mean, I think the CDC is a political organization, not a health organization.
Well, what you did for your people with West Nile virus, if it wasn't for a year, if I listened to see, they all be dead.
Exactly.
10 days.
I'd have waited 10 days instead of following the advice of my health department, which turned out to be not only right, but I mean, we still have West Nile virus.
They basically, And they had some people who had seen it before.
CDC didn't have anybody that's seen it before.
They sent it to the CDC and the CDC ruled.
It can't be a West Nile virus.
We don't have it in the Western Hemisphere.
Well, I mean, it could always come here, jerks.
And so I went to a doctor.
I went to a doctor.
Actually, it was the personal doctor of Governor Kerry, who actually had served in Africa and had treated, it was the guy who had treated in America who had treated the most people for West Nile virus.
And just in case, and my entire agency asked me to do that because they were a little nervous.
I mean, they're doctors and they're very good, obviously better than the CDC, but they said, but they're more responsible.
They said, why don't we get this resolved by going to somebody who really knows something about it he looked at it in five minutes he said it's obviously well there can't be anything else so we began spraying they were going to sue me and the cdc yeah the clinton minister and i called clinton and i told clinton they're dead and wrong they're dead they're dead wrong and i'm going to just go ahead i'm going to go ahead because they told me if you waited too long it could really oh of course yeah also you have to treat west nile virus it's a little bit like um like any
of these diseases, you got to treat it real quick.
Yeah.
The same thing you have to do with COVID.
You have to treat it real quick.
Yeah, absolutely.
And if you treat it real quick, you can get under control.
And by doing that, I think we ended up that year, we had some casualties.
It was way less than 100.
But they were predicting at the beginning we'd have a couple thousand.
Oh boy.
And if I had, and I look back on it and look, I don't know, I didn't know the answer.
I think some other mayor would have been intimidated by the CDC.
But I know that Washington is largely a whole lot of bullshit.
And you got to go with people that really work.
Yeah.
People in Washington haven't worked in.
I don't know, since before Roosevelt, I think.
It's funny.
My interactions with the CDC were always very positive.
No, awful.
Awful bureaucrats.
Until the pandemic and their stance in how, you know, they're supposed to be about public health, they never stood up and said, wait a minute, you can't keep people from going to work.
You can't isolate them because it'll lead to depression, anxiety.
They did none of that.
And then they backed the mRNA injection, which clearly almost from the beginning, we knew about the myocarditis.
And we also knew that it didn't stop the transmission, which their former CDC director, Rachel Walensky, lied to the American public, really looked right in the camera and said, if you take this, you'll stop the spread.
And if you don't, you're going to kill your grandmother.
So Biden went around accusing me of murder because I didn't take it.
But of course I had the disease and I had, I had, From the very beginning, I was able from talking to you to some extent, but even my own common sense to realize that natural immunity is going to be better than anything.
Of course.
This is the way people have saved their lives from before we even knew how to talk.
Yes.
Right?
We knew this in John Adams.
That probably goes back 5,000 years.
In New England, where you are now, there was big outbreaks of smallpox.
So what they did on John Adams, his wife and his children, the doctor took a little bit of a live virus from a pox from somebody else and gave it, inoculated each one of them so they could build natural immunity.
I used to have hay fever.
Yeah.
And I used to have early grass fever.
And I was a baseball player.
And I didn't like the way it affected me behind my mask.
I was a catcher.
And then I found a doctor that he would come and he would, he would scratch, he could do, he could do an allergy test.
He would scratch your skin.
Yeah.
And he figured out, and then he would scratch your skin again and give you some of the, give you some of the, whatever it was.
And then you, by and large, have immunity for that season, at least.
And eventually my allergies went away with that treatment.
If Robert Kennedy were to ask me what to do, because obviously right now they have the left-wing media on their side.
These doctors who voluntarily resigned, which is a good thing because they were probably going to be terminated anyway.
They rallied the employees, rallied everybody, and went outside and started the fear-mongering.
What's happening within the CDC is against public health.
which isn't true.
But you have to have a good, truthful, transparent story to come out in front of the American public and do it quickly and say, no, the reason we'rere having a shakeup is because they weren't for you.
They were pro an ideology, not pro public health.
And they need to lay it out.
Well, I think most of the American people know that Washington hasn't worked for a very, very long time.
The CDC is just one example of it.
And it's a little ridiculous to have elected Trump to fix it and not figure he's got to fire people.
Yeah, you're right.
The reason Washington is so bad is because the policies they have are so bad.
Yeah.
And it isn't the fault of everybody that works for the government, but it is the fault of some of them.
Yeah.
Because they invented these policies.
Yeah.
And what they did during the pandemic, they're lucky they're not going to jail for the rest of their lives.
Yeah.
They got people killed.
They literally got people killed by frightening them away from hydroxychloroquine and ifamectin.
And had that been used in the right way, oh my gosh, I don't know how many lives you would have saved.
Oh my gosh.
You and I both know that from Dr. Zelenko and from the others that we dealt with.
Yeah.
And it's really strange because you've got to go to European studies now to see.
At least the success with the hydroxychloroquine.
Yeah.
Because early on they suppressed even all information.
Even with this whole insanity of gender treatment.
Yeah.
And we were getting people.
killed by the way we do it and the way they do it.
But I think it's because they don't have as corrupt a healthcare industrial, military industrial complex.
They don't have the wealthmongers that we have who have taken over our healthcare.
So they can come to more honest scientific decisions than we can.
You know, speaking of the gender dysmorphia.
whole craze that happened.
We never saw so many transgender children than under the Biden administration and they were praised.
And what was happening is sometimes the kid, there was such isolation right during the pandemic schools were closed in certain states so kids were getting a little down they go see a psychiatrist psychologist a therapist and I don't know if they were taught to say this, but they would tell the kid they were confused because they should be in the opposite sex.
Some of them did not even go to that therapist to say, I'm confused about my body or I'm feeling a little different.
They were just saying they were lonely, some of them.
And they pushed this gender ideology, then pushed the hormones, pushed the surgery.
And I encourage people to go to transition justice, you will hear from some of these children.
And the stories are horrific.
Twelve years old, being forced to go on medication, having a double mastectomy by the time you're 13, and now your body's so screwed up and you know you really are a woman.
You never really felt like a boy.
Can I tell you, before this craze, this is an important thing that I always forget to mention, before this craze of really pushing children.
to do this and even parents, you know, mutilating their children, terrible.
But before this, when we talked about gender dysmorphia, we always said they'd grow out of it right it was in our literature as a medical provider unbelievable majority a majority yes almost like an 80 yes that if if younger teenagers say they're not even quite a teenager start thinking oh i'm you know say i'm a boy i want to dress in a dress they tend to grow out of that by the time they're 17 18 years old so
all we have to do is support these kids in their confusion try to give them task lists to keep their mind occupied get them socialization if they have underlying depression treat the depression through cognitive therapy.
We don't always have to jump to a pill unless they truly have a chemical imbalance, which does happen, but we way over prescribe antidepressants and do real, old, basic cognitive therapy.
We will help these children through it.
But I ask you a very, very much more sensitive question.
Of course.
Only sensitive because we still I'm a girl.
This is sensitive because we still have a tyranny against thinking in this country if you don't think what they want you to think.
Not the Trump administration, but the prevailing elite, whatever they are.
There's an awful lot of the numbers of transgender, what do we want to call the mass murders?
Murders is, I'm telling you this as a law enforcement person.
These are numbers that would require an investigation.
So I'll just make you an analogy.
If you had as many murders attributed to one person, we'd be way beyond the serial murder category.
And then we keep asking this question, what are we going to do to identify what causes this and how we can stop it?
Well, maybe we should take a look at the transgender situation.
Yeah.
I mean, how many have we had?
We've had 10, 12 in about three years or four years.
Yeah.
That's a lot.
That's a lot.
And we got to look at what medications they were put on.
Does it create rage?
You know, we need more studies on that.
antidepressants, but we also have to look at social media.
Look at our politicians, Mayor Giuliani, are telling these kids that Trump is out to get them.
Listen, we all love these children, no matter what they are, but we're protecting them.
We love them more because we're asking questions about them.
We're actually loving them more.
Whether we're ultimately right or wrong, and I think we're headed in the right direction, we obviously see.
that there's a terrible problem here and it's not being handled right.
Yeah.
They just want to go ahead and keep handling it that way.
They're already vulnerable children, very confused, probably on all kinds of suicides suicides are more likely after they transition and they keep yes you can see why they keep terrorizing the parents uh these people and we can't escape the fact just like the pandemic uh uh uh distortions in healthcare were all about money there's no other they were not about ideology even they were all about making billions of dollars i remember when one of the companies finally they made It
was worth a trillion dollars.
They had a big New Year's Eve party.
People are dying in these miserable baskets they have in the New Year's Eve party.
I mean, this is all about money.
This whole thing with, it's about communism, Marxism, and money.
I was hoping you would add those other two.
Communism and money.
Because obviously big pharma wants money.
The healthcare institutions that do the surgery want money having sex.
So let's get to vaccines quickly.
So vaccines.
Isn't Kennedy right to raise the question that we have to absolutely.
Whether some of them are good and some of them are bad.
We got to stop.
There's two damn many of them.
Yeah, yeah.
All he's asking us to do is really good research and look at it.
And the people that are saying, well, I'm pro-vaccine.
If you're not, you're a bad person.
I would love it for one of them to think about the patient, the human being.
They shouldn't be pro or against a vaccine.
I am for real science and I'm for the health of the people because we have to absolutely take a look at all vaccines, anything that we're recommending, especially to children.
But I have to get on my little soapbox real quick.
I know my time's probably up.
We've got to take, no, you're not going to take a hook.
We have to get the mRNA off the market.
I know right now they said, okay, we'll just do it for 65 and above or if there's extenuating circumstances.
It's an option that you don't have to take it.
No, no, no, but it shouldn't even be on the market.
Look at, we've taken things off the market in 19705, when we had the swine flu, that vaccine, five people died.
Ford took it right off the market.
He did the right thing.
We've had, I don't know how many deaths, you know, 20, 30,000.
Way more than we're ever going to know because they covered it up.
When we were first covering this and trying to get the, they were, Yep.
Now we know about the myocarditis.
We know about the heart attacks.
We know about the blood clots.
Myocarditis was nothing.
We know about strokes.
Actually, better if you get it than if you don't.
Dr. Peter McCullough was on the Dr. Maria show in the most recent study shows, because we have blood tests, tested 3.2 years after patients have been vaccinated, the spike protein is still circulating in your blood.
Now remember, they all said you get the injection, the spike protein, all that just stays in your deltoid and you'll build antibodies from there.
It went immediately all through the body.
Talk about money, right?
How big pharma and it was all about money.
So all these big investment firms that, you know, back big pharma or involved in big pharma, they're now doing treatment centers for these turbo cancers.
So now they're going to make money from what they cause.
they caught they want to pick up the dead bodies either way yeah because the turbo cancers are crazy infertility of women miscarriages all about money doctor i was taught as an investigator follow the money trail follow the money yeah and boy it's uh most people can't resist it look at me fauci sold himself out we still don't know how many options he has he won't choose all the royalty payments And why is he protected against getting prosecuted?
That guy bongs in jail more than half the people that are put in jail.
I mean, he's killed more people than...
Yes.
He has no immunity.
State attorney generals.
Oh, you could probably prosecute.
He probably killed people in every state with the deliberately false advice that he was given for which he was being paid.
Yep.
By having, I don't even understand how this was permitted, but I was shocked when I found out they got royalties.
These bastards have royalties.
Yeah, how can you get that?
You're a government employee taking royalties from big pharma.
Well, that's why.
The more people Kennedy fires, the better.
It is.
I mean, he's got to have the fortification.
If we could do it, if we could fire 70% of the federal employees and start over again, it would be good.
I mean, first of all, let me just give you a partisan example.
I was in the Justice Department.
I'd be really happy starting over again with all new people.
85% of them are Democrats.
How can I?
Just because they're a Democrat, it's a Democrat that doesn't do their job.
But that's not representative of America.
I guess 5% of America is not Democrat.
Well, I guess I still live in a naive world that we shouldn't identify.
Yeah, and falling.
That the Justice Department, the State Department, all of these healthcare crooks, they're anywhere from 78 to 90% Democrat in Washington.
Yeah.
So you put a Republican president in, all he has is a bunch of people trying to undermine him yeah all the time and the democrats have learned how to do it with the most dishonest fraudulent things they can do yeah um and that's why it's i mean the best thing he's doing is cleaning it out So his first administration, Senator Schumer said, don't mess with the intelligence community.
They have six ways of sending to get you.
So that happened, right?
Absolutely.
They tried to kill him.
Going into this.
They tried to kill him.
Going into the second term, what did Schumer say?
We have the courts.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, they do have the courts right now.
They've got, I mean, every time you look at these decisions, nine times out of 10, you can be sure it's an Obama judge, a Biden judge, every once in a while a Bush judge.
But after all, Bush voted for Biden.
Biden I'm sorry, I love George Bush, but that was a terrible disgrace, what he did.
I mean, Biden wasn't changing what he had to do was ask you information about biden in china and selling his office he voted he voted for the single biggest cricket in the presidency yeah i mean it was out of disrespect from the office that he helped to vote for biden yeah to vote for biden um if you if and he has to know that it was true i mean he has to know he's a smart enough man to know that the guy the guy took uh 30 31 million dollars from china i mean biden was a pervert a massive criminal
and a traitor.
And he got Americans killed.
Yeah.
I mean, he's a president.
You can say presidents get people killed indirectly and whatever.
There are people dead that just wouldn't be dead if that election in 2020 hadn't been a fraud.
And by the way, I don't know if he knows that, but that election was a fraud.
Hugely.
And history will prove that.
Hugely.
It's getting proven every day now.
Yeah.
I mean, if anybody would go look at what's come out already, it's already there.
You had massive proof.
You had massive proof.
Of course they did.
And what they tried to do is bury it.
The judges tried to throw every case out of court.
That judge did not want to hear from the witnesses.
No, and that's when I decided there's something wrong here.
Yeah These cases are fixed.
Look, I've been in court orphaned enough.
A hundred times, a hundred trials.
I investigated more corruption than most people even think exists.
I can smell it.
I mean, I knew immediately that the court was fixed.
Can I brag about you for one second?
No.
You're such a wonderful person.
You can do long videos from other times.
You got a lot of things to cover.
Okay.
Yeah.
The president did a great enough job last week.
It was very, very nice.
I was very, I was very, I was, I was shocked because I didn't expect it.
I was watching my son, Andrew, and extraordinarily proud, like a proud father.
Of course.
And all of a sudden, he says., your father was the greatest mayor in the history of New York City, and he's right about everything.
Which, by the way, I hear President Trump every time I see him, he would tell everyone he was one of my constituents.
He was one of my constituents.
I remember one of the things they were going after me for was at one point I cleaned up all the homeless encampments in New York.
People used to live under the Coney Island boardwalk.
People used to live on streets in New York and connect their electricity to a public light bulb.
Oh, I love it.
the you know all the lights in new york big city right below is a whole electrical support for it is it still like that no you could open you could open they would open the box they'd open the box and they're i'm not saying a lot of the homeless people are very smart they're just mentally ill yeah um or down in their luck maybe i know the majority are many none of it has anything to do with the lack of housing yeah and everything the democrats do is they get money for housing you know why they steal most of the money You did a great podcast many years ago called,
oh my God, the Poverty Pimp.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It was about Adams giving money to all his buddies in the sky with the last name of Brown, got quite a bit of money to help with the homeless.
Or was it like group homes?
That was five years ago.
What's coming out now?
Well, what Adams people did in homelessness, they then repeated accepted three times the numbers.
And so you had to say to yourself, why is Adams encouraging all of these aliens to come to New York?
does he want more aliens to come to New York than any place else?
He's giving them credit cards.
He's giving them free education.
Give them free medical care.
He's throwing the veterans out of their housing because they're paying three times more.
He's actually getting a four-star hotels that have decided to close down and become places for the aliens.
The illegal aliens ruined them.
Yeah, but the reason is that all these contracts are padded with the kickback money.
It's almost systemic.
And they've been doing it.
The numbers always go up every year, but they've been doing it since Boss tweeted.
I mean, this is like 150 years of doing it.
And you have to be a fool not to know it.
I knew it even before I was a prosecutor and prosecuted it.
If you're a New Yorker, you really know New York, you know New York courts are fixed the appointment process is a completely corrupt appointment process i got the crash course words of that people you look at enga moron or the other guy with the daughter making millions from biden and that wasn't the exception that's the norm for if you hear the word new york supreme court justice in manhattan the bronx queens or brooklyn more than likely so
first of all the guy could be totally dishonest on a political case He's owned by the county leader who appointed him.
The county leader in the Bronx, in the Manhattan, who appointed these people, Engel Moron and the other guy, his father was one of the craziest, most destructive judges in the history of New York.
Let him lose Bruce.
Koch, he was Koch's nemesis.
Let him lose Bruce.
Koch, Koch, another Democrat would tell you what I just told you.
Yeah.
And his son has appointed, basically he decides who gets appointed.
So it's not elected by the people.
Well, Angham Mormon was elected.
He just didn't have an opponent.
Yeah, he doesn't have an opponent.
Is that an election?
No.
That happened.
Actually, that's the way Stalin got elected.
That's the way Hitler got elected.
New York government is so different than any place I've ever known.
The borough presidents have all the power who goes out they have no power they just have a lot of political extortion they have no actual government power okay they have political let me ask you a question so i know it's the county leader that's the really important the county leader okay the borough president is a the borough president is a figurehead okay who's hoping he can polish up his image and run for president that's what adams was okay the person with the real power is the head of the Democrat Party in Brooklyn.
Well, this was the head of the Democrats.
I put several of them in jail.
So real briefly, a person told me they wanted to run for mayor in my state in New Hampshire.
Anybody who wants to run run can run nobody can tell them no she was told no we're only supporting the candidate we have instead of saying open field let the best man or woman that wasn't the republican party and they did it to andrew right that's what i'm saying and then they and then they cheated and then that's the county clerk no i'm trying to get down to the bottom and then they challenge his petitions right for no reason other than to start So who has that power to say,
no, you can't get on that ballot?
Was that the county clerk?
No.
I thought she told me it was a borough president.
Well, there's everything.
They make everything look good like you do in a communist country.
So they say the party can designate a candidate and that candidate gets on without having to do petitions.
But you can petition your way on.
And you would think, well, that's not so bad, except they use every trick imaginable.
To disqualify your petitions, including seeing if they can get in front of a dishonest judge, we'll do it anyway.
Now, it's a little harder for Republicans because there aren't too many Democrat judges.
They're going to be totally disqualifying.
dishonest for republicans a democratic petition process is ridiculous you know i mean there's no chance you're going to get an honest judge that'll decide it when i ran i mean i knew this i I know this because I put these people.
I know.
And the establishment in New York supports this completely because they all count on it.
They get a big case.
They can try to fix it.
They like it better that way.
The Bar Association that Disbarred Me supports it.
170 years of this system.
Logically, it's a system that almost you would obviously say is going to lead to corruption.
Political leaders pick judges and then have power to reappoint them.
What do you think the political leaders are going to do?
They're going to fix political cases.
And we've left it that way.
And the association of the bar of the city of New York,
she didn't work because she was looking at her thing all the time.
But, you know, Rudy, I understand that in the practicality, but I guess I'm of the character I couldn't look myself in the mirror just to fix something against a human being, the greatest lawyer of all time.
Dr. Maria, you're going to see what they look like.
If they can look at themselves, it's not hard for them to look at themselves.
Well, I know you only have a few minutes left, and I think Ted was going to update us on something here, wasn't he?
Go ahead, Ted.
You want me to stay here, Mayor?
Yeah, I do.
I do.
But she's keeping me on time.
She always does that.
We used to do a show together.
But I want to go back to Dr. Maria.
Well, that's a good point, right?
And each state is different in how they put candidates on the party lines and all these different ways So they find another.
Michigan.
When I was going around representing the president, by the time I got to Michigan, I had already given up on courts.
Pennsylvania decided me to give up on courts in one place.
But in Michigan, I found their legislature to be one of the worst.
Really?
Including the Republicans.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, she wasn't a bad witness.
Of course she was treated poorly.
She's a person that was getting up there frightened as hell because she knew what was going to happen to her career would be ruined.
One of the ladies that testified, I wouldn't tell you which one, it wasn't her because she's tough, had a nervous breakdown.
Another one, she couldn't go back to her job.
Nobody would hire her, including Republicans.
Republicans in Michigan, I know them, boy, because I know the Republicans in Albany.
They live off the scraps that Democrats give them.
And all they do is suck up.
They don't mind losing.
Yeah, they're terrible.
It's a terrible.
And here the head of the Republican Party had come from Michigan, right?
Back in the day, oh, Ronald Ronnie Bowles.
Oh, I mean, we should have had a Democrat run onning it right well as doctor mias said i'll be keeping up the ballot the republican party did that to trump in 16 they tried to they tried to right president trump you know a real leader a real man and a real woman could do it too right uh wouldn't let it happen yeah sanders got run over by the democrat party oh i know multiple times yeah but he he pretty sure yeah but pretty sure because he's become a millionaire yeah Bingo, there it is.
Yeah.
I mean, do you think Bernie really, you think Bernie really believes all that crap?
For being in public life, public circular life, you can't become a millionaire.
Yeah.
I mean, he's another.
Well, I guess if you invested wisely without insider trading like Nancy Well, how come all of them invest wisely?
I mean, they're stupid about everything else.
The only thing they're smart about is investments.
I mean, if you listen to Bernie Sanders' public policy, America would be gone by now.
Yeah.
If we followed his wisdom on how to guide America, there'd be no America.
We'd be so bankrupt that it'd be ridiculous.
No, the richest people in a communist country are the head of the Communist Party.
The whole thing, if you read it, and please don't think I'm crazy because 10 years ago I would have, on this I would have known I'm not crazy because I'm a bit of an expert on communism, it's a satanic plot by a man who had a Satan complex.
Marx at various times thought he was that if there was a God, the God was Satan.
And Satan was the more effective because he rebelled against.
He thinks of God as, and this happens with a lot of the liberals from the Ivy League schools that are communists.
They think they're the smartest people in the world.
They're much smarter than everybody else.
And anybody who thinks they're too smart is actually very dumb.
And then they think, well, there can't be a God because I'm smarter than that.
And if you want to read about it, you can read about it in Marx.
Marx would debate whether he was smarter than God.
And therefore, he didn't want a God.
Yeah.
Because then he could make decisions and he could do anything he wanted.
If he wanted to go rape a woman, he'd go rape a woman.
Oh, dear Lord.
Well, they want us to be as immoral as possible.
Yeah.
Because we can't do it.
The more immoral we are, the less capable we are of defending ourselves.
And they like to pit us against us.
Yeah.
People leading perverted, degenerate lives can't defend themselves.
Right.
You got to defend yourself.
You got to be a pretty solid person.
You don't have to be perfect.
We've got to be a pretty solid person.
Well, I think we've got to go to the football news because-Yes, now, Ted-
they support loses yeah well are democrats still gonna i mean i thought they were against marriage and happy families are they now going to turn out of the house well they're going to count on the fact that she's going to that he's going to leave her in two years and she can write a hit songong.
Aww.
That's a good point to stop.
We're looking to do a happy album too, right, for the record.
Yeah.
Yeah, but I sincerely wish anybody getting married or any good thing in life.
I wish everybody the most success.
Yeah, let's not make this a bad thing.
Yeah.
I don't think it's a bad thing.
I think it's a bad thing that we pay so much attention to what we're even talking about.
Yeah.
I mean, there are so many things.
There are so many things I have here to talk about.
So many important things for you.
And that's important to them.
Yes.
We were talking, we're talking about, um, Well, how about the fact that the Democrat Party., it was pointed out by a very good column today in the Post.
Basically, how do you figure out the policies of the Democratic Party?
Go look at what Trump is for or Trump has done.
And they will be on the other side of it, even if they had been on his side of it the day before he announced it.
And then she comes up with a whole list of them.
I mean, it goes back to the fence, right, or the wall.
Yeah.
They were extremely in favor of the wall.
Oh, for sure.
They were in favor of a very, very tight border, too, because they used to be the party of the labor unions.
And Obama had deported so many illegal aliens, and they were all supportive of that biggest supporters of the wall was schumer and biden yeah and why because the labor unions felt that the illegals were taking their jobs the illegals in those days worked yeah they were i mean if i if i could say this yes they had some that were criminals and yes they had some that were drug dealers but they had a much higher proportion of people who wanted to work because um you had to take a chance
to come in here so that did limit the number who came in You could get caught.
Yeah.
If you got caught, Obama would throw you out.
Yeah.
His head of his head of Homeland Security, Jay Johnson was one of my assistant U.S. attorneys.
In fact, was a friend of mine.
And Jay, when they were getting close to like a million people coming in in one month, one year, he said this would be catastrophic.
Biden had a year with 3.5 million.
And it was catastrophic.
And then what happens is the quality of entrant goes down.
That's why when the New York Times idiots were stupidly saying that migrants commit.
less crimes than Americans.
They were talking about migrants 20 years ago.
Yeah, yeah, it was a different story.
I mean, illegal migrants.
Yeah, yeah.
What I'm telling you is we went from legal migrants who were a real credit to America.
Yeah.
Right.
They weren't coming here.
never expected a job.
They knew they had to work.
They created for us.
They created for us like the Irish who built the railroads, right?
Yeah.
I mean, I can go on to each group and tell you the things they contributed, all the things the Italians built.
Yeah.
but These people aren't coming here to build railroads.
They're coming here to suck criminals.
And they're encouraged to come here for that reason.
Yeah, it was a New York Assembly person who said, I want these illegal, or she can call me legals, but these migrants undocumented to come because it'll help my district.
Yeah, no, she actually said I'm sure it's a good idea that all these undocumented come in, but it keeps up my census numbers.
Something like that, yeah.
Yeah, and therefore I can keep my district.
Yeah.
Well, a few minutes ago, I said Ted had breaking news.
Yeah, Ted is getting married.
What's the breaking news?
You're not getting married, are you, Ted?
Yeah, are you getting married?
You're doing the wedding, right, ma'am?
I told you I'd do the wedding.
I mean, but if it's a democratic state, they probably deny me now.
I haven't.
You wouldn't want to be official then.
I haven't asked for permission.
I married my nephew.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah.
Yeah, I wasn't around for that one.
But at the time you had, I think you had a, I want to see the mayor.
He was very professional.
Almost close to being a priest, right?
Yeah.
Oh, I work hard at my weddings.
I do research and figure out what the people want.
And I can do very, very formal old fashioned weddings.
I can do a combination of Jewish Catholic, Jewish Greek.
I remember doing a Jewish Greek one.
And after on the receiving line, the Jewish people were very, very complimentary of the wedding.
And the Greek people seemed a little disappointed.
So I asked a father, the Greek father, I said, I thought that was it.
He said, no, no.
He said, they're not sure the kids are married.
I said, why?
He said, because it only took a half hour.
Our weddings take an hour and a half.
I said, yeah, that's because you say everything seven times in the Orthodox Church.
You think God is hard of hearing.
They have no idea that I know the Orthodox Church liturgy and theology as well as they do the Roman Catholic Church.
The difference between the two churches is they literally like, you know, when they go around the bride.
Yeah.
You only have to do it once.
They do it seven times.
It won't take unless you do it seven times.
You got to go around seven times.
Everything they do everything seven times.
Oh, wow.
The prayers that we say once, they say seven times.
Oh, it must mean something, though.
Yeah, they think God has so much going on.
You gotta keep repeating to them.
I can understand that.
So just to put a bow around this, breaking news, the Dallas Cowboys, so I apologize to our non-sports fans for this, but we want to break in and let you know that the Cowboys have traded who is considered the best pass rusher of our generation.
Micah Parsons is leaving the Dallas Cowboys and coming to the Green Bay Packers, and even to non-football fans, right, just to see these.
Packers are going to get Parsons?
Parsons, yeah.
You know him as a Giants fan.
You've seen him.
Yeah, sure, but he's about 62, right?
No, no, no.
He's younger.
He's been here and just signed with $120 million.
Yeah.
Well, that's not going to work out.
$120 million.
Yeah, I bet it doesn't.
Did the Packers take a look if he has any knees left?
Right.
That's the thing.
What does Jerry Jones know that we don't?
A lot.
I bet that was a good trade about five years ago.
I can't believe you, man.
that.
So is that the one going now?
Michael Parsons!
He's an unstoppable force on the edge.
He can break a game in a time and go in.
He's like a person.
No, no.
What have they done?
Okay.
He's talking about the facts.
It's the feeling.
It's number 11, Micah Parsons.
You have to be worried about where he is, no matter where he lines up.
I'm just so honored and blessed to represent the star and have an opportunity to be a star here.
On the way to the Green Bay.
Oh, that's how it goes.
Yeah.
And I'm okay in a way though when your team loses in the playoffs you want that the team that beats you to go on to win it all right yeah yeah and we're the reason yeah yeah yeah doctor maria we're the reason that the patriots are not an undefeated team and you've never beaten us in a supermarket remembers that for sure she remembers the great the great belichick teams and uh tom uh tom brady tom pretty boy brady uh didn't didn't uh was not able was not able to beat uh eli manning Right.
His record in the Super Bowl against the Giants is 0.2.
And he spent a good deal of his time on his ass.
He doesn't have a statue of him.
He's on his ass.
Yeah.
How do you feel about that, getting a statue put up?
Giant Stadium will put up a statue of him on his ass.
well i yeah what are your uh thoughts on on this recent trade Well, Ted, I don't know a lot about it.
If it's a good thing, yeah, yeah.
Stick to Red Sox and all things New England up here.
Yeah, pretty much.
You know, I'm obviously I would root for the Patriots, but I'm not a huge football fan at all.
Yeah.
game this year yeah i'm definitely uh more of a baseball game well we'll have to discuss baseball because the yankees and the red socks are beginning to do what a great a number of uh sports writers wrote four months ago and it seemed very unlikely the yankees at that time were four games in first place the red socks were about nine games out and toronto looked like nothing so toronto goes ahead and buries both of them gets about eight games ahead of the yankees and the red socks The Yankees are still ahead of the Red Sox.
Then the Red Sox passed the Yankees.
And now the Red Sox are four games behind and the Yankees are four and a half games behind Toronto.
And if the sports writers are right, by the time you get to the middle of September, it'll be the Yankees and the Red Sox.
Let's see what happens.
Baseball writers tend to be the most knowledgeable I've found in terms of sports journalism.
I don't know, maybe that's a fair matter, but I would say for some reason, I mean, some of the Yankees who were kept out for part of having the best season they ever had.
And all of a sudden, the last couple weeks, they were losing, losing, losing.
So they've been preserving their players for late August and September.
And the Red Sox somehow did the impossible.
They got rid of their best player and they're a better team.
Isn't that interesting?
Get rid of Devers.
Everybody wrote them off.
Well, not this year, next year.
And all of a sudden, maybe since that day until now, they may have the best record in baseball.
Yeah.
Since the day they got, it would be like the Yankees getting rid of Judge and then having the best record in baseball.
It wouldn't happen.
You know what?
Because it falls apart if they got rid of Judge.
One of the things that I'm kind of sad about, and it's not too late, is that you were here all summer, Ted, and you never went to Fenway Park.
And I need to see your face when you go in that park.
Yeah, I agree with that.
I totally agree with that.
It's so wonderful.
It's just.
That would mean I would make it to Fenway Park before Yankee Stadium.
But we know we've all been boycotting.
We've been boycotting, yeah.
We'll go through that history at some point.
But it all has to do with Black Lives Matter, which is not a joke.
Black Lives Matter is a communist organization.
Yeah, the expression is fine.
Of course, Black Lives Matter.
And of course, all lives matter.
Except for the fact it sounds exclusionary.
I don't think decent Black people think that only Black Lives Matter any more than I think only White Lives Matter.
And it's just as racist for them to think Black Lives Only Matter for me to think that White Lives Only Matter.
There's no such thing as there's no Black racism, there's no way there's, there's either racism or not you're either making decisions based on race and not on the quality of a person right or you're not and if you're making decisions based on race you're sick there's something wrong with you yeah and of course that bringing sports time into politics that's been a huge issue in American sports for the past decade.
Yeah.
The virtue signaling, as you said there, between the pride flags and the BLM flags.
Well, i never thought i would see it in baseball i mean we had to live through the nfl and the nba basically working for china and and the nfl you know disgracing our american flag um and uh but then baseball honoring Black Lives Matter that kills that specializes in killing cops encouraging the killing of cops.
They're not smart enough to know that every rally, they say, you know, fry them like bacon.
Yeah, yeah.
And then that we've had a massive increase in the attacks and killings of cocks since they started that crap.
You know, they didn't even do one thing to save a black life.
Entitled players.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know if anyone doesn't make more than a million dollars.
They should be kissing the ground of America constantly.
And the Japanese should come here and kiss the ground of America because they wouldn't be making that kind of money if it wasn't for America.
Yeah.
Japan, it was a middle class sport.
Yeah.
They're a republic.
We pull the money.
Yet somehow the international media has paint America still as looked at as the devil.
You know, the interesting thing because I look at, for the last four months, I have this great app and I look at all the foreign papers real quickly every day.
Yeah, and the reality is he does get bad, he gets much worse coverage in the United States now than he does in Europe.
The European papers are fairer to him than the American.
And number two, the European papers have an undercurrent in them, as Europe does.
They respect him.
Yeah.
And you can feel it in the article.
Even the articles that attack him, they now are inclined not to bet against him.
It's like what Macron says.
Now, he and Macron don't get along at all, right?
Macron said, well, I'd never bet against him.
Yeah.
I mean, just being perfectly honest, he said, I never underestimate the guy.
You underestimate the guy.
He's going to take you to the clutches.
And then I remember the first time he was in office, I would go to Europe and they would say to me, I'd say, you know, I don't know why he said, well, first of all, even people didn't like him.
They would say, but I wish we had a president like him.
Yeah.
I mean, we just don't have anybody that can.
I remember being in Aberdeen, Scotland, and all the Scottish people are like, oh, we wish we had a president that stuck up for us like yours does.
Yeah, you know, it may be tough to deal with America first, but we wish we had somebody that was England first.
Yeah.
England's going to be a Muslim country and the major Christian religion will be Roman Catholicism.
Henry VIII and Elizabeth I would be turning over in their grave.
I mean, they killed an awful lot of Catholics to become an Yeah.
That's what people tell me.
They say I missed the chance to see Europe when it was Europe.
Yeah.
I know.
How sad.
I used to love going.
I was a European.
a european girl you know i love henry the eighth killed all those people for nothing absolutely he could have just stayed catholic because they're going back to being catholic nobody wants to be an angling because it doesn't stand for anything anymore so crazy town is coming to my state of new hampshire on labor day on on monday bernie sanders and what is that guy's called ro con ro khan yeah they're coming doing that we should go and protest Ro Khanna.
A Labor Day rally at the New Hampshire State House on Monday.
Oh, he's a big bullshit on us, that guy.
Definitely.
is, but I will say he's at least, he's, yeah, no, you're right there.
He pretends to be more moderate and he obviously got you a little.
Can you hear me stop?
Yeah, because then you listen to him.
I got sucked in by him a long time ago.
I was listening to him.
Oh, he's pretty much.
Then I hear him.
when he gets a chance to go age.
He lies just like all the rest of them.
Yeah.
You're right.
I mean, the worst part of them isn't even their, well, it is.
Their political theory is what makes them liars.
They're communists.
And communists are allowed to lie.
And even the ones who aren't communists have that same elitism.
What we're doing is so much more important than what you're doing, that we're allowed to lie in order to accomplish it.
That was the Clintons.
The Clintons believed they could do anything because they were doing good.
I don't know what good they were doing.
They were stealing from Haiti.
They were stealing from America.
As a governor, basically, he's just sold the state about 40 different times.
And she was putting all the money in our law firm.
She's as big a crook as he is.
Well, Dr. Maria, thank you very much for being with us.
It was great being here.
here Ted, anything else we need to cover?
Well, we got a big, we'll be following everything, right?
That's going on a lot to follow here as we close up the week tomorrow.
It'll be interesting.
We didn't really get to talk much about Russia and Ukraine, but we can pick that up tomorrow.
And of course, continuing to follow up what's happening in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and let's see whether Democrat politicians choose to mock prayer following a shooting that took the lives of two innocent young children at a Catholic church.
Is there anything good that they're not against?
They're against God.
They're against families.
They're against children.
I mean, you shouldn't have children.
And then if you have a child, they should be brainwashed and taken away from the parents.
Let's see.
They're against working hard.
They're against teaching American history or praising America.
Oh, they're against putting dangerous criminals in jail.
They're against getting rid of alien rapers, alien female beaters.
They're against stopping doing the things that are necessary to get the mentally ill off the street.
I probably missed another 40 or 50 horrible things that they're for.
Right, like you said, they're taking what Trump is for, and they're against the other.
Well, therefore, you know, they support Trump.
Well, you should, the thing I should tell you, because then nobody's going to report this, is that Newsom's wife is making a fortune off the state of California.
Surprised?
He's a Democrat.
She gets all kinds of money from the state running a program.
I think the program has something to do with gender dysmorphia.
So she's doing as good a job as she can to ruin the lives of these kids.
And she's making a fortune doing it and it's being paid for by the state.
And then she's got another operation where she reaches out to people.
And the people that donate to her are the same people.
that are lobbying him for all sorts of benefits and they have to pay her sounds like clinton in arkansas right um so somebody one of the do-good-a groups has revealed all that.
That's a new little twist on Hareboy.
Yeah.
The thing that I loved about him was the great celebration he gave him, Zi Jinming.
Right.
With Caesar returning to Rome, except he took all the Chinese people in San Francisco.
First of all, he got rid of the homeless for one day.
Then he got all the Chinese people to have to cheer for the guy who's killed more Chinese.
than any person alive today.
Yeah, who's cheering for him?
I thought the idea was that they were...
Half of them, he probably killed their brother, their father, their uncle, their cousin.
But Hollywood boy doesn't care about that.
Oh, my God.
He's got to be the phoniest creation in politics.
Right.
And he does appeal to the left-wing Democrat in California, which means he has no appeal to the average American.
What's that?
that's the parade that Gavin Newsom threw for Xi Jinping.
Look at those Chinese flags.
That looks like Biden coming to New York.
Well, look at those Chinese flags well yeah but they would they would have the chinese flag out of biden right remember the time we were at abc and we were looking out the window and the crowd there were crowds the people there were a few people people going to work people trying to get to work waiting waiting for biden and not a single one of them had an american flag and i said i don't think i've ever remembered a president in a motorcade including clinton because i used to have to take care of him when he came to new york without american flags being waved at a president you pointed that out to me i'm like the democrats don't have then then i was in maine with my cousin the
a couple weeks ago yeah and he was driving us through a community and he said i said is this a republican or democrat community well you know how we can tell the ones if there are a lot of flags at it's a republican community and if there aren't then there's he said, and then what did we see?
We saw the American flag.
And then we saw the gay pride.
Right.
Right.
That holds true around the country, by the way.
I used to do, even five, 10 years ago, I doorknock, right, for candidates for office.
And you could tell, right, if there was no American flag, chances are they a Democrat.
Don't hit them up.
Well, I've noticed that now a little in New Hampshire when we're driving through.
the American flag out a lot.
And I don't see it on some of the...
What I would say is though, being such a liberal city, New York is the exception to that rule, right?
You see the American flag everywhere in Manhattan.
And there was another town there where they had the American flag like at about door level.
Yeah.
And the gay pride flag above it, which is against all protocol.
And it has nothing to do with what the other flag is.
You don't put another flag above the American flag.
Not unless you have total disrespect for the United States.
Such disrespect.
And that's why, Mayor, and I'd like to get your opinion on this.
You've talked a little bit about the flag burning.
At what point do we as a country, of course we respect the First Amendment and freedom of expression.
I don't know how the court got itself into it because it was a liberal court.
Yeah.
It's the same court that ended up putting all kinds of criminals on the street that eventually had to get readjusted in the 90s.
Right.
The Warren Court.
How is burning something speech?
Right, yeah, right.
I mean, whatever it is, whatever points you want to make, you can make without, can't make it you want to burn the flag because you think the president is a crook let's say all right so the president's a crook You're not doing much for me by burning the flag.
You're not conveying a message to me by burning the flag.
You know what you're doing?
And this is why it can be made illegal.
You put everybody in danger around the flag.
Like fire burns you?
Fire can kill you?
I mean, there certainly is enough of a basis to distinguish it from speech.
Right.
And that our ability to have free speech doesn't hang on whether we have flag burning or not.
In fact, we went through four years of Biden when we didn't have free speech.
I certainly didn't.
Yeah.
I didn't have free speech.
I mean, when I started to offend people, But I wasn't allowed to do that.
Now that'd be kind of crazy because they indicted me for the 2020 election.
I'm not supposed to defend myself.
Right.
But I mean, it reached down that far.
And I was a man.
Was I the only one?
Absolutely not.
Was I the worst treated?
Absolutely not.
But you think we had free speech during the Biden era.
You're living in a dream world.
And the fact that we allowed burning of the flag in order to preserve the free speech, it certainly didn't work during the Biden era.
We didn't have free speech.
But we had the burning of the flag.
Believe me, it's going to take nothing out of free speech if we say you got to go to jail if you burn the flag.
It's not going to stop anybody from saying they hate Trump or they love Trump or they hate Biden or they love Biden.
You know what it's going to stop if they start putting you in jail for that?
And the Democrats have already done that.
The idea that he's weaponizing law enforcement is ridiculous.
It has already been weaponized completely.
What they're doing is they're raising that.
because they want to discourage them from doing the right thing.
They want to discourage them from holding people accountable for the crimes they committed.
And you think we'm certainly not going to be snowballed by their telling me, well, you just, even if they say, you just do what the Democrats did.
No, we're not.
The Democrats freed people.
The Democrats made up things that weren't true.
All we got to do is look at the Russian gate, which is the main one, but completely untrue.
It wasn't only made up, it was paid for.
The fact that the governor of the Fed claimed that she had two primary residences at the same time in order to get favorable, to cheat the government out of tax money and to cheat the banks out of the proper down payment and interest rate is a violation of the law.
Carrying out an activity that doesn't lead to any loss of money for someone is not fraud.
So you can't compare one and the other.
You can't say, well, you know, the Republicans are now doing what the Democrats did.
No, they're not.
We would have to be going around making up crimes and prosecuting them for it.
I didn't put her signature on those two documents.
did uh same thing with shifty shift i mean prosecuting shifty shifts i would say for mortgage fraud it's like prosecuting al capone for income tax evasion i mean the reality is he's a lot more serious a criminal than that mortgage fraud is a certain i'm not even sure i'm not even sure it rises to the level of you should put him in jail probably rises to the level of you should prosecute them but not put him in jail uh and
it certainly rises to the level of you should remove them from public office that people who cheat on their mortgage shouldn't be deciding the most important questions of our economy without fear that they're going to be compromised in doing it.
But as a prosecutor, I would separate that from the exercise of prosecutorial discretion.
I can see how you would look for a civil, maybe a civil, you have to take these cases a little differently because some may be more egregious than others.
First of all, you have to see how much money they cheated the government out of.
What would the alternative have been if they told the truth?
How much money did they cheat the banks out of it.
If it was an insignificant amount of money, then the chance of prosecuting would be much less, the chance of a civil resolution much higher.
But the question of whether they should be in public office is easily decided by the fact that they lied.
And don't tell me they're confused about whether you can have two primary residents.
These are all intelligent people.
They know what that means.
They know that primary residence means the place you're going to pay your taxes, the place you're going to vote.
You can't vote in two places.
Democrats get away with murder.
Even the Wall Street Journal, and they're all worried about her being prosecuted.
Oh, my God.
Come on.
She lied on her.
She lied about her primary.
If she did it, if she didn't do it, then he's wrong.
She's right.
Right.
And she should stay on.
But I don't know.
I think.
Has she denied it?
It's pretty fundamental.
Her signature, those are her signatures.
Yeah, right, right.
I don't know.
They're about four days apart.
And they haven't, she hasn't come out with an outright denial.
And I'm not going to give her a pass on thinking she could have two primary residences and then staying on the Fed board.
That's what it's right.
Because if she really thought that, then she's too stupid to be on the Fed board.
Right.
She's going to lose all our money for us.
Right.
Either she's too incompetent to be on the board or she's too crooked.
Either way, she's got, well, if the, if in fact she signed that right.
You might consider prosecuting them the way you did prosecute Al Capone for tax evasion and say, well, you know, we're not sure we're going to get them on the things they really did wrong.
And this is wrong and therefore they can be prosecuted uh but that's that's questionable i would probably because i always exercised uh doubt on the side of not prosecute, I'd probably investigate them, referred for a civil recovery, and probably not prosecute the case.
Because you have integrity.
Yeah.
A lot different than there's no doubt that I'd prosecute Clapper.
Well, you have to.
Brennan, Deschures.
How do you...
Including me.
And they seem to think they had to wear.
They were behind the 51 spies who lied, who claimed and remained the truth to all of the prostitute newspapers that I was a Russian agent, according to Joe Biden.
He said that publicly at the last debate about me and Trump.
I mean, those guys should be, the 51 spies who lied should be prosecuted for trying to fix an election.
They did fix an election.
They're not trying to.
I mean, you don't even have to get to this.
By the time they counted the votes, they had already fixed the election by holding back the hard drive, which is something that was probably the biggest fraud in any American political election history.
It revealed the career of a so far the most corrupt figure in American politics, Joe Biden.
Nobody's ever taken the bribes he took.
And the idea that he wasn't getting money is completely disproven by the hard drive.
Let's see.
I think we've got everything.
Mandami has now met with the minority leader of the House, Jeffries, two times, and Jeffries can't decide whether to endorse him or not.
He's a very decisive guy, huh?
Right.
It's like...
But mayor.
He can't decide whether to endorse him.
And Hogel Pogel can't decide either.
But you, because I really did struggle for a minute.
They're really decisive people.
But I really struggled for a minute in thinking, why wouldn't Hakeem Jeffries endorse?
But you had the answer.
You knew right away.
And why is that?
No, he hasn't done it because he's afraid.
It's already been attributed to him by leaks.
But it sounds true.
He thinks if Manami gets elected, they've just born the House of Representatives., maybe for 10 years, for as long as Mandami is around.
I mean, whether the people of New York, and I love New York, but we probably have, with the exception of Chicago, maybe Chicago's worse, I don't know, there's 65 years of Democrats.
Whereas in New York, in 110 years, we've had four Republicans, or three.
But they haven't had 65 years.
And then they don't want the help of the National Guard and six people get blown away last weekend.
and 27 get injured.
I mean, that kind of rivals a war.
But every weekend.
Right.
And nobody's trying to make peace.
In fact, they're resisting it.
I mean, somebody should just come in and throw both of them out of office, the mayor and the governor.
They don't care about the lives of their citizens.
When you when you have six people being murdered in a city regularly every weekend, and sometimes it's more than that.
To say that you don't need any help fighting crime has got to be the greatest indication that you don't give a damn about human life.
All you care about is you and your pathetic party of slavery.
It's terrible.
Well.
We'll be back tomorrow night at seven o'clock.
On.
Windell TV.
And X. And we'll be here on X at eight o'clock.
And we'll see where these are going.
who knows what Trump is going to surprise us with?
Right.
never know.
But we'll...
This is like the last two minutes of a football game for four years, Ted.
Four years?
That's exciting.
Maybe it isn't like soccer time because we know when it ends.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Soccer time would be, we never know.
Trump's going to have to finish his term, but we're not going to tell you when.
That's right.
He's going to get an extension.
Oh God.
Yeah.
Well, mayor.
People will go crazy if I, you can't, We'll take all the time that they deprived him of.
Yeah.
Last time because they interrupted him with false charges and we'll let him, we'll tack it on to the end of his term and he'll have an extra, but nobody will know how much.
Right.
And I know we maybe we just don't trust the election system, but I've never been big on term limits.
I mean, what the heck is the point of these elections every four years and for congressmen every two years?
So.
And the argument against it is we don't have a system we can trust, which is true to this day.
But, you know, if we're if we trust the system, I have to tell you, I mean, New York City has a term limited city council and a term limited mayor.
That hasn't made New York City any better.
Well, how did Bloomberg get a third term?
He cheated.
What he did was it almost lost the election for him, even though he spent $100 million.
He made a deal that's too hard to describe, but in New York City, New York City had voted twice.
It had voted twice to impose term limits.
They did when I was mayor and they did while he was mayor.
However, here's what you're allowed to do.
You're allowed to disagree with a voted resolution, the mayor can.
But then you have to put it on the ballot.
If you don't follow it, you have to put it on the ballot in the next general election.
Follow me?
Yep.
So the mayor can say that resolution is wrong.
We're not going to follow that.
But he only gets a chance to do that.
He's got to put it on the ballot at the next regularly scheduled election.
So when you get up to the term that he's going to run, right?
I think that means like a certain date in the year that he's going to run.
He waited until that date.
He never presented it to the city council.
The city council didn't because the speaker of the city council made a deal with him.
She wanted to be the next mayor.
So she decided that they wouldn't press it.
They wouldn't put in a resolution before.
I've forgotten the date, but let's say May 1st.
Yeah.
If the resolution doesn't go in in May 1st, you can disregard.
This is stupid, of course, but this is the law.
You can disregard, since it's been changed, you can disregard the two times that the New York City people voted for term limits.
You can do away with the term limits and then you don't have to put it on the ballot for two and a half more years.
Okay.
Because the next regularly scheduled election is a year or two years after the mayoral election is no longer the next regularly scheduled election after a certain date.
Now you'd say, well, how could he win?
He'd have to run very late because he spent $100 million.
Yeah.
I never spent more than $10 or $12 million on an election.
Well, forgive me for not knowing this.
I spent 10 times more than I did.
Yeah, forgive me for not knowing this.
Was there a big push for you to run for a third term?
There was.
And I even thought about it because it was September.
Right.
I mean, that's why FDR, that was the argument.
However, after a day or so, I decided no.
I thought it was wrong.
And I thought it was better.
And that's when I really got out and supported Bloomberg very, very heavily.
Right.
And I decided it was better.
That's why Bloomberg won.
That's the only reason.
It was better.
It was better for, you know, I gotten elected on those premises that I was two terms.
And it didn't.
It just was, it was better to rely on the democratic process to take care of the city than me.
Sure.
I thought about it for maybe less than 24 hours.
But a lot of people, I mean, you would have won that in a landslide.
So I thought it deserved 24 hours.
And then, of course, the New York Times pretends as if I wanted to do it.
Right.
Oh, I wanted to be a dictator and I should just be the opposite.
They should really say, I basically made the George Washington choice.
But the New York Times will never do that.
I mean, I took it seriously that they've proposed it.
And I thought about it.
And then I decided, no, I don't want to do it.
Right.
And at the time, I had about a 90% approval rating today.
Of course.
And my endorsement of Bloomberg took him from 12 points behind and he won it by about two or three or four.
Right.
And that, I don't want to get it.
And there's no doubt that I won the election for him.
He would have a hard time acknowledging it, but he would have lost like any other Republican.
Not by, even though he spent $100 million on that too.
Remember, when Bloomberg spent $100 million on every election, you basically get the same vote I got for $10 million.
When he ran for president, he got like negative negative, because he was polling in the negatives.
I don't know if he ever broke one percent.
I don't think he did.
And then he debated and he was in negative numbers.
Which is absurd.
He got wiped out of the debate, which I don't understand because he's a bright guy.
But he's not a natural politician.
I mean, he's not a trying guy.
He's not.
He's like, yeah, he reminds you of like your boss, like your nagging boss, like a manager.
I remember that when he ran.
I'm like, I thought this might.
He was a good mayor.
Right.
But if, if, well, he.
It's like being born on third base, right?
When and acting like I hit a run.
I turned over.
You turned it over to him.
The city in better shape than it ever been.
Right.
And then he improved it and he turned it over to DeBasio as a city in better shape than it ever been.
He improved it until he started doing the whole sugar.
Until that last term, that was a terrible mistake.
First of all, he was the..
mayor, he was very popular or relatively popular.
last four years he was a negative negative numbers one of the reasons why his presidential campaign was so bad is that he had left a very one of If you be honest, now he makes a cheap backroom political deal.
to override their wishes.
I mean, as soon as they had a chance to vote again, they voted like 65% for term limits.
So he was to a candidate who was a very, very nice man, but a very, very poor candidate who spent about $8 or $9 million.
He spent $100 million, won by 4%.
Wow.
After having won by 17 or 18% four years earlier.
So it goes to show that.
His whole, I mean, there was a chance.
If there had been a better candidate against him.
He would have still lost.
Well, I'd say if de Blasio had run against him, who was a better candidate.
Debasio would have beat him because the people felt double-crossed.
Right.
And it has permanently.
A lot of people think of him as being not a completely honorable guy.
They don't even know why because they don't remember what I just told you.
But somebody told them that he wasn't because that's the reason why they feel that way.
Because it was really a very, very cheap political deal.
It showed no regard for real democracy because there's no question the will of the people was a very, very substantial majority.
that we should have term limits, whether you agree with them or not.
That's right.
I don't completely agree with term limits.
I mean, I think it's absurd.
Actually, the term limits for the city council were even dumber than term limits for the mayor because you're constantly electing a bunch of amateurs.
So then the staff.
Right.
And it takes about four or five years of practicality to get them not to want to, you know, spend three times more than we have.
So by the time they get some censorship, they're limited out.
Or steal everything out of City Hall.
And then the staff and the professionals in that office end up running the city hall.
Yeah, until they realize that somebody's going to prosecute them, the first instinct is to, you know, take everything.
Oh, that's too bad.
But Dinkin's, the prior mayor took all the silverware with him.
It's absurd.
Too many people wiped out.
city hall.
He just took all the civil rights, city property.
But I mean, he was living on the government tent for his whole life and taking bribes with the inner city broadcasting.
Find something else.
Proven beyond a doubt and not prosecuted because the U.S. attorney was afraid there'd be race riots because he was the first black mayor.
It was okay that he took a bribe for inner city broadcasting to vote for it and become a millionaire and make Jesse Jackson a millionaire.
and all the other Percy Sutton and where was Al Sharpton from yeah he was New York well they it was a phony deal in which they were given a cable contract they were given the city divided up cable into seven so they could make money on it.
Right.
And they gave two of it to a black owned company.
Yep.
Except the black owned company didn't know how to run a broadcast network, didn't even have people to do it, didn't know how to lay cable, never laid cable.
It was a shell company made up of prominent political blacks who he had to pay off.
And then while he was borough president, his secretary walked into his office or she walked into his secretary's office about whom there were certain allegations.
And he said to her, D, I'm a millionaire now.
And that's when the thing got passed.
And he was going to get it.
It's going to all of a sudden have like really more like seven or eight million dollars worth of stock.
Right.
That he shouldn't have been holding at all.
And then they phoned it up and made it appear as if his son, he gave the stock to his son, except they wrote that.
Yeah.
years later when it was brought up during the investigation you know how you know it how The contract was on yellow foolscap.
In other words, yellow legal paper.
It said, I hereby give to my son the stock in Inner City Broadcasting to be given back to me in 10 years.
Yeah.
Now, I don't, first of all, I don't really think that divest you of it if you can get it back.
Then he voted on it.
Except the thing, the FBI, when they got the paper, right, did an analysis of it.
And I guess they had to pull one out right away, real fast, pull it off the sheet, right?
Yep.
So they went, they pull one out and they wrote on it.
And the FBI analyzed it and you could see the impressions of what was written on the page before it.
On the page before it, there were several names with phone numbers because it was his son's pad, his son was in some kind of business or other, I've forgotten.
And several of the phone numbers didn't exist eight years ago.
The phone numbers had just been put, it was a new, it was a new code that we got like two years before.
And this was predated six years before.
So it couldn't possibly have been a piece of paper.
Also, they analyzed the paper.
And they were able to figure out the paper was only about three years old.
Except the transaction was seven years ago.
Yeah.
Witnesses including his secretary who would testify against him that it was a bribe.
Yeah.
U.S. attorney had a case that you would have brought against a white guy for sure.
Yeah.
And he was a Republican U.S. attorney.
And he was afraid.
He'll tell you.
I mean, he was a friend of mine.
This was 30 years.
You told me after an argument, I'm not going to have a, I mean, I couldn't have a riot.
Oh, that's too bad.
No, no, it's part of why we're in the part of I can show you how we got to where we were and then we went through four years of the worst time for America in history.
Yeah.
But it didn't come just in that four year period.
The Democrat Party was building up to that for a long time.
Yeah.
Just a good way.
Corruption and entitlement and getting away with murder and getting away with murder if based on the color of your skin and the political party you were in.
And they were soft on crime back then.
And being persecuted if you weren't politically favored or correct.
I mean that.
This was before the crime.
I mean, Dinkins had seven to eight times more crime than we have today in New York with things bad.
Even when things were a couple of years ago, when things were really high, it was still seven or eight times more under him.
I took over the city with seven times more crime than exists today.
Wow.
That's subtle, Joe.
Dinkins averaged 2,200 murders a year for four years.
Four or five riots and two major ones.
Right.
I'm going to get the statistics.
The murders this year are going to be, one year Dinkins was 2,400.
That was his worst year.
Okay.
So this year we're going to have about four or five hundred.
That's a different, a complete different order of magnitude.
It was without any doubt the most dangerous city in America and I turned it into the Savior's Lodge City in America only because I was honest I mean I picked I used my common sense I didn't know anybody and if you tried to if you tried to do it to me I'm telling you to go to hell I wasn't there to please anybody.
I was there to do a good job for the people who elected me and be proud of myself.
I'm the judge of me.
In conscience.
In 1990, David Dinkins' first year in office, New York City had a record high 2,245 homicides.
Don't even bother going beyond that.
It went up to 2,400.
But then I want to compare that to the mayor's last year in office, 1990, not last year, last year of your first term in office, 770 murders.
Yeah.
That was after only four years.
That was after only four years.
It went down at more and now it's down to about.
I think they're about, what are they about 200 something right now?
Yeah.
New York City right now is what?
Then we can extrapolate, you know, a couple more months.
Yeah.
I forgot.
Well, you just looked at it in comparison to.
Yeah, I'll bring that up.
Murder rate comparison 2024.
Yeah, so New York.
Right now.
Up to date.
Let's get the raw numbers.
Up to date, New York City 100.
Oh, it got me more than that.
Murders from January to May 2025.
Yeah.
112.
No, it got me more than that.
You're talking about DC.
Okay.
it's 200 and something 230 240.
yeah so as of now we're up to Isn't it amazing?
I know the numbers.
I don't need to.
Yeah.
I'm going to get them for you.
That's funny.
So.
Show off.
Watch this.
So.
So all you do, if you want to find out the New York.
Now, nobody bothers to tell you this, but I created this with help, with the collaboration of Bratton and Ed Maple and a few other people.
I created this.
I've been wanting to do it for 12 years.
Tell you the story.
Maybe I have already, but anyway.
in any event i created this with that with their help putting it out every week i did by myself and since then and, and I did it for a reason, I knew the corrupt Democrats would take over after me, and I wanted public accountability.
This has worked.
This has worked because the first thing they noticed about DeBlasio is how the crime rate was going up.
So now put down NYC, Comstat numbers.
I invented Comstat.
should have should have um should have copyrighted it or something uh all right The wrong one.
Let's go to the right one here.
Wrong one.
This is not the wrong one, but you have to do extrapolating for that.
Right.
We want the weekly.
Yeah, I guess.
There it is.
Okay.
This is what it looks like.
Want to put it up there, Ted?
Number four.
This is the current one that the police department has.
So this goes through August 24th.
Okay.
Yeah.
A few days ago.
Okay.
And you can look at everything here, but it'll show you the number to date of murders in 2020, year to date murders 259.
204 sorry 204.
204 it was 259 last year so it's down 21 okay so now let's say that continues let's say they end up the month at 210 okay okay and then what do we have left september october and november yep though those slower are those more or less usually uh increase or decrease the worst time is going to be the next two or three weeks the summer Really?
The end of the summer.
They were down even lower.
The murders.
Murders are up at the end of summer?
Usually, the murders increase in June, July, and August.
Sometimes it carries over into September.
Okay.
But then by the time you get to, by the time you get to October, November, and December, they should go down.
Yeah.
So another 60 murders.
Right.
Make it 300.
That would be a lot.
Make it 300 murders compared to what was Dinkins last year.
21.
Oh, the one that I found the first year was 2,000.
Oh my God.
You see the 32-year change, right?
83.8.
Oh, they put it right on there.
83.8%.
That's the, that's the, how far back does that go?
32 years.
1970.
Oh, the beginning of Comstad.
Yeah.
That's when it started.
So Dinkins, his first year as mayor.
Now I got the, I got a bunch of other data points here now, but he was his first year, 1990, 2245.
Now you might, so this was before Comstad, so we wouldn't be able to check these numbers, but they're probably low.
But this is what we're getting from.
Comstad started in 1994.
Yeah.
So 1990, this is according to an AI algorithm.
They're reporting 2245 homicides in 1990.
But of course, AI is still not perfect, so I'm going to go to the mayor for this one.
But they're reporting at least 2245.
So even with that number 2245 in 1990.
Yeah.
And that's the deadliest Well, that was his first full year in office.
Yeah.
And that's the deadliest year recorded since NYC.
The year after should be worse.
Well, okay.
They have it going down in 1991, but, you know, I'm sure this is.
What about 92?
No, but the source of this is...
We'll get 92 and 93 then.
It went down each year, but again, this is from the NAACP.
Oh, no, that's not right.
It went down and then it went up.
Yeah.
It went.
went up for two years, went down for a year and went up for a year.
But this is, of course, you know, I'm sure the NAACP.
But I thought I always thought his second year was the record.
Then there was a decline from that.
And then in his third year, in his fourth year, there was a slight increase.
Yeah, I'm going to ask again.
But there are crimes.
I remember them.
I used to use them in my campaign.
I don't want to say them because I might have them slightly wrong, but I think I know them.
Now, this is overall.
And don't use the NAACP.
My God, they'd be lying completely.
Right.
And that's interesting.
That's how these AI models work.
It was their candidate.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Of course.
It's extraordinary that they would report that number.
Right.
They tell me that's the number.
I got to believe the number was at least a couple hundred more.
When your own friends are trying to make it as good as they can.
Even if the number was 1800.
Right.
Right.
I mean, that's true.
It's going to be 300 at worst this year.
You're in a different universe.
Right.
And that's why when the people in New York complain about crime, a lot of the old timers say you're a bunch of cities.
Right.
The other thing that's extraordinary is when I give you these numbers, this city always was the number one city for crime before I was mayor.
Even now, even now, even a year ago or when Adams had the big spike and now he's got a degree.
We've been number 12.
Washington is seven times right now with the with Washington's decline Washington is seven times more dangerous than New York yes Chicago about 14 times more dangerous I mean New York is by is by no means the most dangerous large city in America.
Right.
Not close.
In fact, it's probably in the top three or four in terms of cities of a million or more in terms of safety.
Right.
With all the crime that we have.
Not too much crime.
We have too much crime.
Thinking, and that's with all the stories we've been talking about for the last few years.
What happens is people, I mean, look, it's been 20, 30 years.
People are conditioned.
Not that many people are alive back in the old days of 2400 2200 2100 murders or 1900 murders they haven't seen anything close to a thousand murders in forever so they're living in a different in a different experience right right but they have no idea what their grandfathers lived under Right, and that's where there wasn't, there was one poll or thing taken during the time I was running because I would use it.
Virtually everybody in New York had been affected by crime in one way or another.
My car was stolen twice.
Yours?
My automobile.
It wasn't stolen.
I'm sorry.
The radio was stolen.
Yeah.
See it's Yeah.
My father was mugged and he beat up the muggers.
I was going to say.
The stories I hear about your father, he's the last guy I'd mugged.
beat up the muggers too and I'm with the loss.
Well, nowadays, I saw them with a boxer.
What would he be saying about some of the stories of today?
What would he say about that Daniel Penny situation or these...
He would have contributed money to him.
Yeah.
And he would have wanted to have him over for dinner.
What would he say about these Democrat politicians mocking you?
You know what would bother him the most?
De Blasio, because he was part Italian.
He'd say, we shouldn't have people like that.
He used to think that the Italian communists weren't really Italian.
But they would tell him, you know, there's a big communist movement in Northern Italy and all this.
And he came from Northern Italy.
and he said it can't be well you made a good you you mentioned to me because i thought So the idea, he also went to jail.
So you got to understand, he had a very complicated life.
But he had become very religious.
See the statue behind me?
He used to have like four of them.
And he would pray every day.
And he used to go to mass every week.
Except he started to go mass on Monday instead of Sunday.
He said Sunday was too crowded.
Yeah, that's it.
My dad would do this.
Sunday's too crowded.
Yeah.
He was with people on Sunday at the church.
The church he was going to then, he went by car and somebody cut him off.
And he said, if people can go to our church on Sunday and cut you off, it doesn't do any good.
So he would go religiously, boom, in quotes, every Monday.
He'd go to like 730 Mass on Sunday.
That's funny.
My dad started going Saturday nights for a similar reason.
Actually, when they started putting in Saturday night masses, he reverted to Sunday night.
That's not true.
He actually would go every so often.
He would go check out the church on sunday he'd go check out the church on sunday see how crowded it was see if i and then he would occasionally go back on sundays and then he'd get annoyed just to check in see if it got better that's great for example the day the day that jack ruby it was a sunday on sunday morning that jack ruby killed was killed uh he was shot uh what's it what's his name uh lee harvey oswald lee harvey oswald right that when he killed him I was at church and he was home.
He wasn't going to church until Monday.
And I walked in and they were able actually, this is way back in 1963.
They were able to do a replaplay.
Yeah.
I watched it.
My father watched it live.
Yeah.
And my mother and I went to church.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
So he was just watching it.
He was in his Monday morning phase of going to church on Monday.
Well, look, he was able to see history.
Gosh, that must have been crazy to see live.
Yeah, he saw it live.
I walked in and he said, You won't believe it.
I said, What happened?
He said, I think I'm not even sure they knew he was quite, they're quite dead.
Yeah.
He said, I think they killed Lee Javi Oswald.
I said, Who killed him?
They're not sure.
Some bar owner.
That's got, hey, a lot of not to go on that track, but I don't know what your initial reaction was at the time there but I would have had some questions there similar to when when I found out Epstein killed himself in the prison right I was like okay what's going on here Lee Harvey Oswald getting shot well that that's getting shot that's correct that would that looked like my my father who came from Harlem had had a rough upbringing had to had to reform himself and stuff like that my my father went to his grave thinking
that Lee Harvey Oswald came from the mob.
Came from.
But of course, he knew the mafia.
Yeah.
He grew up with them.
Yeah.
Some of the people I put in jail were his high school classmates.
Right.
So he was convinced that Lee Harvey Oswald was a mafia.
But that part of whether the rest of it was done by the mafia or not, he was never sure of.
Yeah.
But he said that this is a guy, he's probably his bar is a protected mob bar.
Carlos Marcello would have been Dallas really didn't have have an italian mob no but uh the the most of the south to the extent they had a mafia and the biggest one was in new orleans new orleans was run by carlos marcello So he would have reached out and been the person that had the most authority there.
And New Orleans had a big mob and a big Italian community.
That's the place where a lot of Italians went that ended up being lynched.
Was there a the Ku Klux Klan.
Did the Italian Catholic, the mafia look at Irish Catholics as being different?
Because one thing that, you know, the Catholic connection, right?
They killed the first Catholic president if they were in fact a white man.
They looked at Irish as being different and the Irish looked down on them.
The Irish look down on the Italians.
The Irish look down on the Italians.
Sure.
On the Italians.
Really?
Well, the Irish were here long.
They were here first, Irish.
And they spoke English.
The Italians didn't speak English.
But it wasn't, I mean, and so in a lot of places in New York and other Italian immigrant communities, they used to actually have an Italian church.
So in my neighborhood in Brooklyn, there was the main church, St. Francis of Assisi, that almost looked like a cathedral.
And then a little tiny church, I've forgotten the name, maybe St. Benedict, the Italian church.
Wow.
And the priest would say the sermon.
Of course, the mass was all said in Latin, whether it was the Irish church or the Italian.
All the masses were.
By the way, they were Polish churches also.
There was a lot of internal discrimination.
Okay.
I mean, every archbishop of New York that I know of has been Irish.
To this day, there hasn't been an Italianalian American or Dolan.
You're a Polish or Dolan is Irish?
Dolan.
Yeah, all of them.
Every archbishop that I can remember is Irish Catholic.
O'Connor, that's the one you always talk about.
Spellman.
Spellman, you talk about.
Well, he was Cardinal.
Spellman was called.
Isn't there a school named after him?
What?
There's a school named after him.
Of course.
He was very, I mean, he was very powerful.
Politically, he was probably the most powerful.
American Cardinal.
Right.
Maybe Ever Cushing, who was the Cardinal of Boston when Kennedy was president.
Okay.
Dolan's got some juice.
They all do.
But politically, Spellman was like the boss of bosses.
Yeah.
And also, you know, New York no longer has the dominant effect that it had before, particularly if Republicans are in power, right?
It has no power.
Right.
Nobody's going to be like, New York has a lot more power because Trump is the president.
Yes.
And Trump is a quintessential New Yorker.
I mean, he's.
Yeah, you and him both.
He looks at the world that way.
So he's going to always feel sorry for me.
Right.
He's going to feel sorry for New York, even though they probably don't deserve it, but he feels sorry for them.
Right.
And New York, and until he ran for president, New York was very good to him.
Yeah, exactly.
It's funny how that works, right?
He was an enormously popular guy.
Everybody liked Trump.
Somewhat controversial because when he went after you, he'd really take off after you.
So he would always have these little feuds.
Yeah.
But it was entertainment.
It was a part of it was entertainment.
And a lot of people didn't take it as seriously as they do now.
Yes.
And he also was a very good guy.
He was a charitable guy.
Personable guy.
A lot of outsiders probably thought of him as a Playboy billionaire, millionaire.
He actually was a guy who never liked going to parties.
He never drank a lot.
He never got in trouble that way.
Right.
He worked hard.
The only kind of trouble he ever had was he was married a couple of times.
Yeah.
But so was I. Yeah.
And he likes beautiful women.
I mean, is that actually, well, now that's a crime.
Oh, Jesus.
That is a crime now.
How daring.
Just the fact that I used the word normal is terrible.
Right.
Remember, I just, but I remember when they'd go at, like, sorry.
I mean, the dominant.
uh scientific approach to this biological is man woman are there some deviations i guess but that better be the dominant way otherwise the species is going to end right right like Right.
I mean, for no other reason, right?
If we do everything we can to fudge up the fact that a man is a man and a woman is a woman, and then the few that remain we abort, we're not going to have a species anymore.
Right.
I mean, look at the black population in New York.
I mean, I don't know if this was true last year.
The year before, I remember the statistics, and the year before that, there were more black babies that were killed, aborted, than born.
Well, and that's a good point you bring up with the issue of abortion.
The abortion is accomplishing what the Planned Parenthood was designed to do from the very beginning, which is eugenics.
It was supposed to get rid of the dumb poor people.
And right at the top of that list were black people.
Yeah, you know.
And the fact that these black politicians support abortion is like disgraceful to their heritage and their background.
They're basically supporting an organization that want to eliminate them.
And maybe they're accomplishing it, at least in terms of the poor blacks.
How does a Democrat win an election in this country moving forward?
What we just went through between brainwash people or they make them subservient.
They're in favor of killing babies.
They make them subservient if they're rich or poor.
If they're poor, they're subservient because they put them on welfare.
If they're rich, they're subservient because they can make a fortune off the corruption.
Right.
So if you're in the pharmaceutical industry and you want to make a trillion dollars on vaccines that aren't necessary, you stay with the Democrats because hopefully God willing will stop you.
Right.
I mean, the Republican Party, maybe not.
The Republican Party isn't perfect.
Oh, push isn't perfect.
It's the difference between systemic corruption and occasional corruption.
Right.
They are systemically corrupt.
Right.
Which means there's probably more of that than there is honest government.
Yeah, and I would say our problem isn't as much corruption as it is just feckless lack of leadership.
We get people who are greedy and they're just there for money.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it just happens.
Yeah, you're right.
We're always going to have that.
You're right.
Both parties are always going to have that.
It's a part of human nature until, you know, we get the last judgment and God takes us all.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I used to say, look, don't expect I can eliminate crime.
Yeah.
I'm not God.
I can reduce it.
Yeah.
And I actually reduced it twice as much as I thought I could.
Yeah.
If you had asked me originally, I would have said about half of that.
But.
I wasn't stupid enough to think I was going to end it completely.
Yeah, but what you did, Mayor, obviously it took courage and it took a lot of political willpower, but a lot of it is common sense, right?
When you look back at it retroactively, if you allow yourself to get elected to public office without any strings on you, you can do a hell of a job.
And if you say to yourself, which I did, it's not worth it if I, why should I get elected and I can't do what I have to do?
I mean, I wasn't, maybe if you're a dumb bum like a lot of them are, you have nothing else you can do, you have to do it.
But I had lots of options that were probably better than being in politics for me personally.
Right.
In the short term, definitely better financially.
Oh, God, yeah.
Yeah.
When I was out of office, you could have gotten to any law firm you wanted.
When I was out of office, I made more money than I thought existed.
Yeah, right.
But, well, that's your thing about you.
You've never been, you never were in my life.
I liked it.
I like being rich better than being poor.
Yeah, but you don't worship money, Mayor.
But I'd rather be poor and...
Right.
And my father, who went to jail, taught me that.
My father overcompensated in the way he brought me up.
I realized that only afterwards when I found out a lot more of the details of what happened with him.
But he overcompensated.
He was obsessive about my being honest.
He was obsessive about it.
And my mother was too, because my mother lived through that with him.
And it's probably the reason why he straightened himself out.
Well, you're the most honest person I know, mayor.
But sometimes I'm almost compulsive about it.
I drive people crazy.
Well, that's the weird thing with the media, right?
Back in the day, and this was before my time, it used to bother me that they affected that reputation with a certain number of people.
But then I said to myself, it was worth it for what I had to fight for.
Right.
But isn't that interesting?
The same media that used to get on you for being basically, you know, too much of a straight edge, too much by the book, you know, then turn on you and try to make you into something you're not in recent years i was also overdone like i was a real hard-nosed prosecutor when you compare me to the prosecutors today you can't imagine the number of people i didn't prosecute right uh as an exercise either of discretion sense mercy whatever i i prosecuted i i tried to prosecute people do you know how how um reluctant i am to impose
criminal penalties or certainly put people in jail right i think i i think jail should happen only if you have to well unless usually when it happens it should happen for a very long period of time right well unlike someone like kamala harris right her her only she wanted to be a prosecutor so she could get to the next step, rack up conviction rates, no matter what it was.
Right.
Parents whose kids miss school, low level drug offenders.
Meanwhile, you had Mayor Giuliani, then US Attorney Giuliani going after murderers, going after the literal mafia, crooked congressman.
That's and we need more prosecutors like that.
It's Ivan.
I think we went out of soccer time into football time.
Is that what we're calling?
Well, do we have to change the name of soccer?
We were never doing it to make fun of soccer.
But with your son's big role now, we're big soccer guys now, right?
Yeah, but I'm not making fun of the next.
I think it's kind of fascinating that you have to...
Somebody told me they may have changed that.
They actually tell the teams how much time they have.
We've got to ask Andrew if he can get him on and we'll give him a grilling on soccer.
Well, we foreshadowed his role.
At least he played soccer.
His father never played soccer.
Well, he played soccer and he was best at kicking the ball, whether it was a soccer towel or a kicker.
He was a good kicker.
Absolutely.
But now we have to say goodnight.
We have to ask you once again, because you're going to forget what I said a half hour ago, 45 minutes ago, which is to pray for Israel, the people of Israel.
Pray for the people of, Ukraine, the people of Iran, the people of the United States.
Pray for those families.
Pray for those poor families that lost the two children, the families that had the children injured and the elderly people who were injured, and all those who have gone through unbelievable, indescribable trauma as a result of a death
I can't tell you that we would have prevented this one if we did.
We prevent a lot of them.
Of course, I said we're never going to completely prevent murder and we're never going to completely prevent mass murder.
You always get aberrations to the human personality where that happens, but it should be not at a maximum like it is now and a condition that is suspiciously frequent now that we're afraid to look at.
and it may very well be that this has been created also like a lot of the pandemic uh crimes that agreed i mean part of it is communism part of it is destruction of our morality and destroyers as a But part of it is just you make a fortune when you can change somebody's agenda.
You make nothing if they don't change, except maybe a little consulting money for psychological counseling.
Well, and also pray for our president because he's got the biggest burdens of anyone and he handles them so well.
God bless America.
Who can say where the road goes, Where the day flows, only time And who can save your love of rose As your heart shines,
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Who can say when the roads lead that love
might lead in your heart?
And who can say when the day sleeps if the night leaves on your heart?
And who can say when the day sleeps if the night leaves on your heart?
And who can say when the day sleeps if the night sleeps if the night sleeps if the night sleeps.
And who can say when the day sleeps if the night sleeps if the night sleeps.
And who can say when the day sleeps if the night sleeps.
And who can say when the day sleeps if the night sleeps.
And who can say when the day sleeps.
our purpose to bring to bear the principle of common sense and rational discussion to the issues of our day.
America was created at a time of great turmoil, tremendous disagreements, anger, hatred.
It was a book written in 1776 that guided much of the discipline of thinking that brought to us the discovery of our freedoms, of our God-given freedoms.
It was Thomas Paine's Common Sense, written in 1776, one of the first American bestsellers in which Thomas Paine explained, by rational principles, the reason why these small colonies felt the necessity to separate from the Kingdom of Great Britain and the King of England.
He explained their inherent desire for liberty, for freedom, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, the ability to select the people who govern them.
And he explained it in ways that were understandable to all the people, not just the elite.
because the desire for freedom is universal.
The desire for freedom This is exactly the time we should consult our history.
Look at what we've done in the past and see if we can't use it to help us now.
We understand that our founders created the greatest country in the history of the world.
The greatest democracy, the freest country.
A country that has taken more people out of poverty than any country ever.
All of us are so fortunate to be Americans.
But a great deal of the reason for America's constant ability to self-improve.