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Sept. 2, 2025 - Rudy Giuliani
02:07:34
America's Mayor Live (747): Mayor Rudy Giuliani Shares Full Details of Saturday Night's Accident
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Good evening.
this is rudy giuliani and this is america's mayor live from mars I like this outfit.
This may become permanent, Ted.
It is similar to like football equipment.
If you play hockey or football or one of those sports, it reminds you of like shoulder pads or something.
It's more like a gladiator, you know?
What song did you have there?
I had the ride of the Valkyries, but I think I'm going to try gladiator music.
I want to make sure we're on Instagram, Steven.
I think it's justs just a quick button.
There we go.
Thank you, Steven.
Gladiator music.
So we are live, by the way.
This is live.
This is it's 8:01 on Tuesday night.
And we're here live with you in person.
So the mayor's not looking for, you know, he wanted to have a nice intro song.
We got to spend some time on that maybe for tomorrow night.
We'll have you, we'll have you walk out.
We should have had you walk out to some gladiator music or something.
That's what we need.
So, boy, is it, it's good to be with all of you tonight.
I can say that much.
Now, right now, we're...
We got to go through some ads here.
The mayor's got to suck.
We'll sign this later.
find this Oh, this is like a song from Gladiator.
I don't even know if they can hear it.
No, they can't.
Yeah.
Well, it would be very soft if they could.
So, but again, it's boy is it good to be with all of you tonight.
It doesn't go on.
It doesn't go on.
Yeah.
Well, we'll play.
I'll play it directly from the, from the show.
Yeah.
We just wanted a little appropriate music.
Well, as you know, I think you know.
Don't ban it.
We shouldn't assume that everybody knows.
Right.
On Friday, on Saturday night, Ted and I were in an accident and other things.
Other things meaning an interruption of a domestic violence situation, a terrible accident where I was injured pretty badly.
He got shook up somewhat, but I got a, not a permanent, but one that has to be resolved over a period of time, injury in a hospital for a couple of days.
But we're out, we're doing our show, and God was very, very good to us.
He looked after us and he made sure that everything worked out okay.
Okay.
Okay.
And we did the right thing so we can feel good about ourselves and we can be an example for other people of what they should do, which is what Jesus wants you to do.
That's right.
And what did he say when you see one?
We wanted to.
We've had you since baseball.
Right.
Since the Yankees and the Indians, otherwise known as the Guardians.
October of 2022.
We've been with you every single night.
I'm believing that all those names are going to get changed.
But go ahead.
So speaking of baseball, we had a whole weekend of baseball lined up.
We were going to, well, we did attend the Manchester Fisher Cats game.
I think it's at AA?
AA, minor league baseball.
The Manchester Fisher Cats that was Saturday evening with plans on Sunday to go to Fenway Park, which would have been my first time to Fenway.
To Fenway for the first time.
And even though I'm a Yankee fan, I consider Fenway like a surreal experience, a beautiful baseball experience.
Beautiful.
So while I was excited, I was, it was in my head, right?
It wasn't lost on me that I'm going to go to Fenway with the mayor before I go to Yankee Stadium.
Well, now.
The only reason that's appropriate is it's older.
Yes.
That's a good point.
Fenway Park the oldest, Yankee Stadium the second oldest.
No, I don't think so.
I think some of them, first of all, I think the Cubs Stadium goes down.
Oh, Wrigley Field.
I think so.
But that's about it.
I can't, I don't, well, I don't think there could be an older one than Wrigley left.
There probably were teams that had, make pole grounds might have been earlier than all of them gone a long time.
In any event, we attended the Fisher Cats game.
The mayor and I leave a little early.
Did we stay for the seventh inning stretch?
I don't know.
We did.
We sang the national.
Not that we sang something.
Take me out to the ball game.
Take me out to the ball game or something.
So we leave shortly after that, I believe.
Or about ten minutes.
We kissed everybody goodbye and we left.
Yes.
So we leave.
It's after dark at this point.
We're about five to ten minutes away from the stadium, making our way back.
Navigating beautifully by our.
Yeah, we know the way.
Not as if I don't want people to think we were lost.
We've been here now two months.
We've been back and forth to Manchester five, six times.
We've been to that ballpark a few times.
We used to stay next to that ballpark.
Absolutely.
So we know the area.
It's not as if we were in any way confused.
It was nothing.
Ted was just driving normal.
And we see a woman at the side of the road.
A woman?
He has a slightly different recollection than I do.
I think he saw it first, actually.
Because he said something.
Look over there.
And tell them what you saw.
Then I'll tell them what I saw.
So I see a woman and someone else waving traffic down, right?
Waving someone down for help help.
At this point, it could be, you know, a blown tire, right?
The car just broke down.
We don't know.
With another individual.
I specifically remember another car slowing down, them like speaking into her speaking into the car, and the car driving, you know, continuing forward.
We come up, you know, this is now clearly a distressed woman who needs, seems to need immediate, you know, appears to need immediate assistance, right?
And yes, it's after dark.
It's a busy interstate.
Come on, I'm with Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
You think we're going to pass by and not stop to help?
So we would say this is about 8.40, 8.45.
Sure.
We have, and we've talked about this on the previous show, I recall this portion being about 20 to 30 seconds, maybe a little bit longer.
I recall it being 5 to 10 minutes.
Yeah, so we pull up to the car, or we pull up to this individual, we know it's a woman who appears to be in clear distress, and another individual a few feet behind them with a light.
What I believe was the back of their cell phone, the light on the back of their cell phone.
At first, we're not sure who this, you know, man or woman, but the woman comes immediately into the mayor's side, right?
The mayor's in the passenger seat saying she needs help.
I need to get out of here.
Passenger side and Ted was driving, and she came up.
Now, she, I'm just evaluating her.
her obviously i looked at her very very carefully and your professional instincts kick in.
So you watch every single thing about her.
She did not seem to be panicked.
She did not seem to be over.
overwhelmed in her mannerism.
Her words were.
She said, I'm, she said two or three different things, two or three different versions of the same thing.
I'm being attacked.
I'm under threat.
I'm being hit.
I don't want to go back there.
Yeah.
I got to get out of here.
Can you take me in the car?
Must have said take me in the car two or three times.
Right.
I do recall that.
To which we said, no, we can't do that, but we can help you.
Why don't you?
Why don't you um well i want to make no no no i gotta tell you the truth i said come in the car i told them yes she don't want to you're talking about later on yeah she's in the car can i come in the car i said come on oh and i went to open the back door and i was look i was i was already on red flags immediately i see her you thought you thought that's going to be crazy because she could Well, not even that necessarily, Mayor.
I was more focused on the under-individual.
I didn't know this woman.
I didn't trust her, but I was okay with taking the risk of her coming in the car.
What I didn't want to risk.
What I saw in the distance when she said she was beating up was a round light.
Yes.
That's what I was concerned about.
I saw a figure around it, but I couldn't make out if it was a man or a woman.
Couldn't see their hands.
I thought it was a moderately sized person because I thought the light was at the level of that face, but I'm not sure of that.
And that's all I saw.
He was at that point, it was making no noise.
Right.
She was distressed.
Right.
And so my concern almost immediately, okay, we know now this isn't just a broken down car or a blown tire, right?
We know this is, there's escalation.
There's something else happening here.
We don't know what.
The woman, yeah, the mayor did invite her in the car.
I didn't like that, but I understood where the mayor's coming from.
And I also realized we're not going to leave the situation if there's a woman that's in danger.
And so we'll take the risk of her coming in the car, right?
We'll deal with what we have to deal with.
Get her out of immediate danger and figure it out.
She refuses.
And I believe this was twenty to thirty seconds.
I say that because the whole time I'm extremely focused on this light and this and not being able to see the person's hand.
He said to me, I'm afraid he's going to attack.
I said, get in the car.
Yeah, exactly.
I thought he could come up to her right away.
and start attacking her.
If we got her in the car, we can protect her better.
Yeah, and the mayor doesn't like this, but I was thinking of his safety as well and mine.
Now, at the same time, the light wasn't moving.
Right.
The guy was not indicating that he was coming at her trying to stop her.
But I gave it a few seconds with that light in our face and I couldn't remain.
There's too much of a risk to the mayor, to myself and our vehicles.
It all resolved itself either in 20 or 30 seconds or four or five minutes.
It resolved itself in, you stay right here.
Yeah, I yelled to them.
Yes, stay there.
We're going to pull up and we're going to call the police.
And that's what we did.
We pulled up about 100 to 200 feet, right, along the median.
We stopped.
Yeah.
We called 911.
We called 911.
And we reported it to 911.
And then after a little, you know, the usual little back and forth, back and forth, I did what I could to light a fire under them.
Yeah.
And I said that she's in great danger and you should get a police vehicle here right away.
Right.
They said they would and to remain there.
Right.
Oh, if we feel safe.
They said remain there if you feel safe.
Oh, that's what they said?
They said, okay.
And at this point, we still don't know what's going on behind us.
I'm still concerned, extremely concerned at this point, that this is a setup, some sort of robbery, you know, they want to steal the car or something worse, right?
It could have been.
I'll tell you, the thing that, when he would say that, I would sort of weigh it.
Yeah.
uh i i i wasn't so i wasn't i didn't have like an instinct that the guy was a danger to us what the guy could have had a gun right yeah i didn't know i didn't yeah i did i did think there was something wrong about her She didn't look like a woman who was getting beaten up.
Right.
Right.
And I've seen domestic violence cases any number of times.
So it's not as if I don't have seem like a woman.
Even a woman who's gotten beaten up and is trying to cover it up, she didn't seem like that.
Right.
And so now my concern is we're staying there, we're not leaving.
We don't know what's happening behind us at this point, right?
We're in our car, 100 to 200 feet in front of their car, but their headlights are right into us.
So I can see very little.
I'm trying to see.
I'm, you know, I want to see.
I'm waiting.
I'm watching where those two individuals are.
Are they coming up on us at any point?
But at the same time, if there's any chance that there's a woman in need on the side of the highway, we are going to stop.
The mayor is not let, he can't, he wouldn't be able to live with himself, as he said.
And so Steven just put a picture up.
That's the side of the highway.
That's the only picture we have from the night.
And that's near the end of this part of the incident.
You notice in the foreground, that's the taillight of our vehicle.
The headlights there, you see, that is what we believe is a vehicle that was on the side of the road with the two individuals who had flagged us down.
At this point, we have backed up.
This is right before we left this stop, but we were much further ahead, but we had slowly backed up over the course of the nineteen minute and nineteen and a half minute phone call we had with 911.
So would you like to hear some of this?
So here's a 15 second clip from the only clip we have from the night.
But they'll get some.
There's something interesting in this short video.
The cops should go and check with us.
Well, they're the cop, I don't know where they are.
I just know there's a cop car behind their car.
But I think the mayor wants to make sure that this is taken care of before we go anywhere.
Okay, so the officer is there on scene and they're going to handle the situation.
So I'm going to let you go.
Okay, so we'll play it again, but let me give you some context first.
So as you listen to this clip, we are both communicating to the 911 dispatcher.
You'll hear the mayor say something.
You'll hear me say something.
We are talking to the 911 dispatcher.
This is the end of the 911 call.
I believe I'm actually filming using my phone to see if I could see more than my eyes could, right?
To zoom in.
And you could, right?
Because of the lighting, there's ways.
So I want to use my phone to get more information to try and see if I could see what's happening behind us.
So, and you did, you heard the 911 operator, but we'll play that again because just to kind of give you, set the scene a little bit more here.
Cops are going to check with us.
Well, they're the cop.
I don't know where they are.
I just know there's a cop car behind their car.
But I think the mayor wants to make sure that this is taken care of before we go anywhere.
Okay, so the officers, they're on scene, and they're going to handle the situation, so I'm going to let you go now.
So it was a short clip.
I think I either realized I wasn't getting good.
For whatever reason, it was a short clip.
So at that point, the police arrived, and then you want to talk about the police interaction with us?
Before the police arrived.
Oh, yes, this is important.
We began to back, after we pulled up, made the call to 911, We, in increments, backed up up to get closer to the scene so we could hear what was going on in case she was getting attacked or we had to get out we don't know what's going on the mayor's insisting yes we creeped up.
Yeah, backwards.
So by the time you see our picture, we're a little closer.
Put that picture back up, yeah.
Out of the blue, without any warning to us, she shows up again, this time on Ted's side, which is the driver's side, but interestingly exposed to the traffic.
Right.
First time, she was on the side that was the safe side against the traffic or on the other side of the traffic.
She's in an extraordinarily dangerous position.
And the first thing I think we did was to try to tell her to go, one of the first things that would come around, come around, and try to get her to go around and she she did seem to be missing that yes she did seem to be missing that yes and she's her first question she that might be like she's going after the car right well that's i don't know because she asked for the she asked for a cell phone right so her first question so so this is during the 20 minute or 19 and a half minute 911 call right we're on the phone at 911 we're ahead of their vehicle but
their headlights are shining right at us.
So we, we don't know what's going on.
We're still concerned about someone who might be in distress.
So we're slowly creeping back as we're talking to 911, you know, really ask them to get there, right?
Please, please, there's something happening right now.
And you know, the mayor, he's not just going to sit by while something could be happening.
So we're backing up.
I'm still, we're still weighing risk, right?
Weighing our, you know, what is an acceptable risk in order to ensure where she comes up to the car.
Can I have your cell phone?
That's right.
say well no no no no what do you want her for yeah she said i want to call my sister she's only a few miles from here and she can come and take me right i said well i tell you what uh uh give me the phone number and we'll call yeah or we'll take it yes and i'm thinking it's only two miles away we'll just drive you there and you're out of here yes and then the rest of it can be dealt with later right and i'm thinking at the the same time, Mayor, maybe she doesn't want to say it.
He's listening.
So maybe I'm so I'm trying to say, is there anything you want to tell us?
You want to say to her, is there anything you want to tell us?
I whisper her, right?
Is she scared?
just be afraid and like so i'm thinking is this is a said no she said Yeah.
She said no.
And so now I'm really thinking, okay, this is your chance, your last chance.
Get in the car.
We drive away.
And then we can talk.
Because again, I have an unknown threat.
What may be an unknown threat behind us still.
Who knows if she's working with him or with at this point we knew we were pretty sure it was a man.
But she wouldn't get in the car, right?
and this is when I really started to think she changed her mind because her original request was I want to get in the car and we said okay but then she never got in and then she didn't get in and then we requested her to come in the car again for her own good interestingly enough though she gave you a phone number to call and we did call it we got to check that it was a phone number we don't know whose phone number it was it was a real phone number
someone answered the machine answered and we left a message I think we left a message I'm not sure yeah I don't know if we did but I do recall you getting the phone it was a working number come on get in the car and we'll try she said it to her sister she pointed we also told her to get on the other side of the road and I'm thinking if she can't is that because she's afraid of him again I'm thinking of all these things we want to do the right thing but we have to think of our safety nowadays it's not
advisable especially on your own right to stop the mayor look but you know the mayor this is mayor rudy giuliani a little older well no it's not the age well that is probably there's some generational factors there but mayor you're always going to do the right thing if you see somebody in need and look at immediately this was it looked as if this person was distressed.
I was thinking, I was thinking if she had a knife or a gun, we'd grab it and knock it right down.
The two of us could have disabled the gun.
Yeah.
I was willing to take that risk with her, right?
Again, my concern early on in this was the light and not knowing.
Yeah.
So now we're at the point where she's acting strange with us just a minute or two before.
We believe the 911 operator, which you heard on that short video clip, tells us, hey, police are here.
I'm getting off the phone.
So we wait.
Police come.
They kind of handle.
She abruptly leaves.
She leaves while we're talking about it.
Almost as we're talking to each other about what should we do next.
Right.
You know, what should we do?
Should we get out of the car?
We were getting ready to get out of the car at this point.
Maybe grab her or something?
Yeah.
I'm thinking, look, yeah.
And all of a sudden, he turns around.
I turn.
He turns around first.
He's like, ah, where is she?
Yeah.
And then I'm thinking, where is she?
And I'm locking the doors.
And we watched her walking back.
Yep.
Now, it wasn't too concerning because almost immediately we get you see a police officer.
car first we believe we see police lights i think that's a police car coming and and then we have then the then the uh 911 operator the police are there right they'll be come I'll come up to you in a minute.
Please wait.
Right.
Right.
Um 911 hangs up.
Police handle whatever they have to handle over there.
They come up to us then.
They come to the mayor's side.
Correct.
And they uh first you know, will you guys want us to call 911?
Uh, you know, uh, some information about who we are.
I believe at that point they took our license.
At some point they did.
And then uh, they just asked us to kind of hang tight, right?
He also asked, did you see what happened?
And we said, no.
I mean, we didn't see what happened.
She can't, all we can give you is the description that she gave us.
Right.
And then they said, are you busy?
And we looked, we were kind of busy.
We wanted to go to sleep because we get up very early the next morning.
We looked at each other and said, no, no, we're okay.
We're going to be here for you.
You got to help us.
You know the mayor's going to.
So we stay.
The officer, the trooper goes back.
They handle the situation.
He then comes back and informs us.
Right?
This is what.
He informs us.
It happened a couple little questions here and there because he broke it on his knife.
I was like, yeah, what?
Yeah.
He was more like, yeah, his first question was like, did you see him?
Did you see the condition?
An ambulance came.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You saw the ambulance.
You even thought that might've been two.
Yeah.
Ambulance.
But I think it was an ambulance and a fire truck.
Something like that.
Or in our police car.
Or a police car.
Yeah.
The ambulance comes up.
So we figured the ambulance maybe is for her.
Maybe she got injured.
We didn't know that.
Maybe even in the interim after she left, she got injured.
He comes up.
He says, I got a few more questions, but it's resolved now.
And somebody's getting in the ambulance.
I can see that.
And I say, are they, is she badly injured?
Right.
I mean, I don't think, we didn't, she didn't look like an ambulance.
Right, right.
Is she badly injured right he looked at me he said no no not her him right and ted and i both were shocked now shocked him yeah we're 12 180 from what we thought right what we're dealing with for the last hour he uh used some expletive with it like he he she beat the out of him right yeah.
And it wasn't just, yeah, you know, like a quick comment.
It was multiple comments.
This guy was beat up.
Ambulance necessary beat the shit out of him.
Yeah.
She had blood under her neck.
Now we're really trying to look to see, but we can't, because I think they're putting him in the air.
He said, didn't you notice the blood and skin under her nails?
We did not.
I do kind of remember she had very long nails.
Do you remember?
Okay.
I do.
Well, only because I thought they were dangerous to us yeah you know I kind of looked at the the nails and I thought oh boy if you start scratching we'll have to yeah but come on yeah we're not going to let nails stop us at this you gotta you always think of it yeah you always think of your plant so so and she really inflicted a lot of damage on him now we never went any further i do not believe that nail well i don't know i guess what you do can inflict damage on you have to go into an ambulance right she must have done a lot more
I think I even said, well, she must have done a lot more to him.
And he said, yes.
Yes.
Yeah.
He, yeah.
He was very, very, yeah.
So then we, we continue to pretty bad.
And so now we talk for a bit, we talk for a bit.
He goes off in the ambulance.
I'm not sure if she goes off in the police car.
Right.
I think, I believe they said she was detained, but not sure.
I don't want to get, yeah, let's, I don't know if she was arrested.
I don't, she was detained.
I don't know if they let her go or they took her with that.
I don't know.
Right.
a while yeah and we started talking and then they very uh very shyly yeah said if it's okay if it's okay with our they were so i've been so tough before that they turned into like children yeah they said is it okay mayor if we take a picture and chad said yeah he always, he always takes pictures.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they asked their supervisor.
Maybe even asked you first.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Yeah.
We have to ask our supervisor.
Right.
Absolutely.
We don't want to get you in trouble.
Ask your supervisor.
Absolutely.
I mean, come on.
You can't follow the supervisor.
He came over.
He was friendly as hell.
He was great.
We took a picture with him.
I wanted to let you know that your son, Andrew.
is taking a break from his oh he actually has to come on now doesn't he yeah he's he's here waiting for us if you want to bring him in yeah bring him on yeah we got to get andrew on andrew there you are you look nice and nice and jam Well, you know, I mean, look, I I'm just so glad I'm on with you over here.
I just, this has been such a whirlwind last 72 hours here, dad.
And I mean, I'm pretty good.
Oh, my goodness.
You look good.
You look good when you think about You see my You look, you look like Gladiator right there.
You're ready to go to battle.
You're ready to go to battle.
I like the music and everything.
So Andrew, tell us, tell us, tell us your perspective because it's very, very interesting.
I don't know if a lot of people know this exists.
Yeah, really fascinating.
So I get a text message.
I looked back actually.
actually just at the timing before I came on, but I got a text message at 9:55 on Saturday night that a crash had been detected and the text message came from your phone.
So imagine your father texting you and I see that a crash had been detected.
It shows exactly where it is right off of 93 in New Hampshire.
Immediately I tried to call you, no answer obviously.
Try to call again, no answer.
Try to call Ted thinking that he might be with you, no answer.
And then I keep tracking it as I see that you've now moved from that spot to on location in the hospital and then you're in the hospital.
So of course at this point you're a little concerned.
Crash detected.
I see you in the hospital.
I'm not getting any response at that point.
It's funny how going back and seeing the actual timing of this, this had felt like it was ninety minutes.
And I had told people earlier today that it had been ninety minutes from the time that I got that text message to when I actually got in touch with Ted first, as a matter of fact.
Maybe Maria.
Maybe I got with Maria first as a matter of fact.
And then ended up talking to Ted who then put you on the phone.
It turns out it was only about twenty minutes, but it felt like ninety minutes.
Yeah, sure.
That happened.
So actually going back and seeing that, but then obviously hearing your voice that night, it felt it was good to hear you because you know you felt like your normal self just like you're doing the show right now.
The interesting thing, and with September 11th only about 10 days away now, it brought me back to my feelings about you on September 11th when you knew that there was obviously a major incident.
You could see what had happened down at Ground Zero with the towers coming down first the South Tower and then the North Tower and couldn't get in touch with you.
But the thing that's interesting, and I don't know if this is God, this is just knowing you or whatever it is.
But I felt the calm that you were, that you were going to be okay.
I showed it to my wife and of course she was concerned.
I was concerned trying to get in touch with you, but I kind of knew for some reason that you're going to be okay.
I don't know if it's the angels that are watching out for you or whatever it is, but we need you here on this earth for a lot longer here.
Thank you, Andrew.
I tell you, it was very comforting.
As I'm going in the ambulance, I hear three names.
First thing is Maria is here.
She wants to get in the ambulance but she's too far away your son and daughter want to talk to you and i'm saying to myself what was it on the radio how would they know this was minutes after it happened i had no idea you had a communication like this yeah and i'm thinking how would you or caroline los angeles and even maria who wasn't far away but how would they know And I'm thinking,
oh, I bet they put it out on the radio and it's on television or radio.
Yeah, it's crazy how.
But it was very comforting.
They were pretty worried about me..
Pretty miraculous to have that technology where you can actually see that and what a great thing that is.
So obviously, recommend for anyone to put their, uh, put their loved one as an emergency contact.
So that way, if they are in the area, they can go and, you know, save them in an emergency service situation like that.
But, uh, obviously, feel, feel so blessed that we still have you with you.
A great lesson to wear your seatbelt, um, you know, and, uh, it's just, uh, nerve wracking, some nerve wracking moments.
But, um, you know, we, uh, we need, we need you a lot longer here, dad.
So I'm, I'm glad.
And then you were with the president when he called.
me?
Yes.
Yes, I was.
So the president was I was scheduled to play golf with the president on Monday and of course the crash happens Saturday night and Sunday I'm debating.
I talked to you a couple times.
I'm debating, do I go up to New Hampshire or do I go and play golf with the president?
So what does any good son do?
He goes and plays golf with the president, of course.
That was good.
No, but, but you know, I'm really happy that we did because I think probably just obviously the first thing.
he did when he saw me was he said, I don't care about you, put, get your father on the phone.
And I gave him your number.
He called me immediately.
You guys talked for, I don't know, twenty minutes.
He was obviously checking on the situation, what had happened, how you're feeling, all that.
But then it was later that day at the end of the round that he said, one more time, he said, get your father on the phone.
And I did.
And I kind of had an idea what might be coming, but to hear it was pretty amazing when he said that he wanted you to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
And for perspective, yeah, for perspective, for non-military, this is the equivalent of the Congressional Medal of Honor.
So this is the highest honor that only the greatest Americans in history have received.
And when I think about, and I said this in the Oval Office about a week and a half ago, but when I think about true resilience and standing up in the face of adversity and not just the emotion of the last 72 hours, but really the emotion of the last five years.
And what you've taught me, not just as an American, but as a son about never giving up, about always believing in yourself and always believing in your cause and sacrificing for not just the greater good, but for our future and for our children.
You embody those ideals.
Those aren't just words.
You showed the world true resilience, dad.
So I can't wait to stand with you one day when the president puts that medal on your neck.
Because I gather say there's been no American in my lifetime more deserving of that.
Do you promise not to walk all around the?
No promise.
I learned from my boss.
This is the art of negotiation, the art of the deal.
No promises here.
You know, I've got an MO.
I need to keep up with what I do.
No, you know what?
I'll let you get a few words in this time.
What about that?
Okay.
I love you.
I love Grace.
I love you too.
Hold on, one second.
Hold on, hold on.
One second.
Never, never give up.
Make him bigger.
Put him full screen.
Put him full screen if you can.
Never, never, never give up.
There you go.
That's you.
You incarnate that.
That's God's bless.
I'm so proud of you.
I love you.
Ted, I'm glad you're doing well.
I'm sorry you had to go to a Boston Red Sox game.
I mean, you shouldn't celebrate your life by going to watch the Boston Red Sox.
See the Yankees.
Oh, right.
It's such a beautiful ballpark.
It is.
It is.
We went to the first time.
It was great.
Well, Andrew and Caroline were like the first two calls in Dr. Maria and I couldn't believe it.
I couldn't not believe how quickly it means a lot at a time like that, Angel.
You know, you have a daughter now and you have a great wife, Zee.
So give my love to Zee and to Grace, okay?
Well, Ted, I'm really, really glad you're okay.
I love you, my son.
Thank you.
Thank you, Andrew.
Thanks a lot.
You're doing a great job.
You're just perfect for that job.
Thank you, Andrew.
I've learned a lot.
I've learned a lot.
It is true.
He's absolutely perfect for that job.
Thank you.
Absolutely perfect.
We're going to take a short break and we'll be right back and maybe we'll get Dr. Mullen.
And we also need to finish, but we had to fit Andrew in, but a lot of our audience hasn't heard the rest of the story, but we'll come back with that after the break.
There's a surprise here.
Right.
But we got to take a quick break.
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, rotobusco, 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.
My goodness!
you're going to want to specially order these This is what goes into Rudy's coffee.
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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, Nobusto, all Arabica.
They're going to go into the roaster, and it'll get roasted for about 20 minutes or so.
*music*
Oh my goodness, look at these.
Oh my goodness!
They're going to want to specially order these.
This is what goes into rudy's coffee there we are and they're back on america's mayor live and i think everyone knows to that's a great shot that's a great background right it's the very glamorous dr uh dr maria ryan who must must have been at a ball tonight or something She looks very glamorous,
doesn't she, Ted?
She does.
She looks great.
And, you know, our shot's okay, but, you know, we're doing this now.
It's just you and I here.
God bless Stephen for being here.
for us as well.
Thank you Steven.
I look so much bigger than you two.
Yeah.
That's right.
We got to get Steven here to readjust the shot.
We don't care.
And Raleigh is doing the adjusting.
So we have to wait for Steven to come back.
Yeah.
And if things get a little strange, Raleigh doesn't exactly know how to adjust.
How do you like my?
How do you like my gladiator costume?
I hope you're not sitting too much.
Do the cut.
Do the cut.
I hope you're not sitting too much.
No, no, I've been standing up every break, right, Chad?
Okay.
Right.
He's a taskmaster.
master he won't even be like this like a master don't don't bend he says i'm going like that don't bend well i think it's important we gotta make sure no we mayor we gotta we gotta make sure i can't stand up like a stiff like a stiff board well if that's what we have to do to get you healthy well doctor we were just on with andrew and andrew told us how he found out And it's the whole thing,
as I described, that I was getting into the ambulance.
The first thing I hear is, Maria is here and your two children want to talk to you.
And I said to myself, you know, here I am in terrible writhing in pain, right?
And worried about what's going to happen.
And I'm saying to myself, how could this doesn't make any sense?
Maybe it was on the radio.
And how could Maria get here so fast?
So tell us what happened.
You know, it's the smartphone wonder.
The smartphone knew you were in a moving vehicle, knew it was abruptly hit.
So anybody you had designated as an emergency contact got a text that said this was coming from Rudolfolph's phone.
There was a major collision and literally gave you the directions on how to get where you were.
And I have to say at first, I thought, it can't be right.
You know, number one, I never saw that kind of alert before.
But number two, I'm like, these two cannot still be in Manchester.
So I didn't know about the whole, you know, you guys were being good Samaritans.
But once Andrew called me, I said, I have a feeling this is real.
So I went up there and I think they had just taken you two away and the state troopers were able to debrief me on what happened.
We left you at the ballpark with your brother Chuck and your sister-in-law, right?
And the other people that were with us.
And we were going to get together again tomorrow, the next day.
And we're all going to Fenway Park so that this guy could get to see Fenway Park for the first time.
I think you and I were more excited that he was going to get to see Fenway Park the next day than he was.
Absolutely.
I had to force him to go.
Well, you know, he was talking about it.
He was talking about it.
So you want me to talk at all about your injury or no?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, we should talk about that?
Why don't you talk about them?
We didn't we didn't really talk about my injury because we're going to have you on and we know you can do it more intelligently and in a way that people will understand.
Well, you have a cervical spine.
They're made up of what's called vertebrae.
There's 33 bones in your vertebrae.
We usually divide them up.
So in the cervical spine, which is your neck area, there are seven bones.
In your thoracic area, mid back, you have 12 vertebrae.
Lumbar region low in your back, you have 5.
Sacrum, they're usually fused but there's five there and then your tail the coccyx you have four fused there my tail you hear that no twisting you can't twist right i got a tail rally rally i got a you can't twist mayor no you broke your thoracic vertebrae at number nine level is that down below so mid back mid back yeah So
mid back.
And the good thing is that the fracture was not displaced, not impinging on your cervical cord or your, excuse me, your spinal cord at all.
No numbness, no tingling.
So it's one of those things that has to heal on its own.
It takes a little time, but by doing no BLTs, no bending, lifting or twisting, and relying on your thoracic brace for support, it will make healing much better.
It's kind of cool.
Yeah, it looks kind of cool too.
I'm enjoying it.
You know, I this reminds me of what I used to we play, when I was mayor, I used to do the plays and I did the Lion King and I think the Gladiator.
I could do the Gladiator with this.
Well, I tell you, I know your family, Andrew and Caroline and all your cousins got thousands and thousands of calls as well as Ted and myself.
You are so loved, Mayor Giuliani, and people were very, very worried about you.
And not surprising that you had stopped to help somebody.
That is part of your character to always.
always give aid to those who need it.
Dr. Maria, you're an angel.
Couldn't have said that better myself.
And, you know, we do have to, for our audience, we have to go over, you know, the rest of this.
We have to go over the rest of the story here because we kind of left them hanging at the scene of the The big shocker when the police officer came back.
This is where we left off, right?
And he was, he was, he was like getting us ready to go, but he wanted to chat i knew i knew he wanted to take a picture i knew he wanted to take right yeah i i just knew it yeah but so he's talking and talking and i asked him why why did we have an ambulance because she did not look injured he said well there were very bad injuries and i thought oh my goodness either we didn't see them or they happened at that maybe that period right after and
then i felt bad maybe we caused him by And he said, I said, is she okay?
He said, she's fine.
He's in very bad shape.
We had to put him in the ambulance.
I said, he?
And then it turned out even though she flagged us down and she wanted our cell phone, she was the one who was the aggressor.
How weird.
I'm Trying to escape from the area.
And as the state trooper says, it's a different world.
You know, it used to be we always stopped for a woman.
Yeah, he kind of smiled.
But sometimes they want to rob you.
Right.
Maybe even want to kill you.
So the days of just giving people a ride are, you know, you did the best thing.
You called the police.
And so we're there and, you know, we kind of recall this part a little bit differently.
I'm thinking it's 20, 30 seconds, right?
When they flagged us down.
It took us a little bit longer.
The mayor recalls it a little bit longer.
And yes, my initial, right away, once I realized it wasn't just a flat tire, when I realized this is a woman in distress or at least acting as if she's in distress and there's another individual with a light so you can't see them, my red flags, right?
Red flags, red flags.
But we know, you know, you and I, we know the mayor.
He is not, if there's even a chance that there's someone in urgent need, he's not going to just drive on by.
He's not going to drive on by.
And of course, we've been asked, I've been asked countless times, I'm sure you have, people, the mayor, you know, what did you, what are you guys doing?
stopping?
In the middle of the night on the side of the highway.
Well, with Mayor Rudy Giuliani, this guy.
The question is, what will you have been doing not stopping?
Bingo.
That's it.
That's the answer.
That's the real question.
And why are you questioning it?
You should be stopping too, pal.
You know what, Mayor?
That's the real question.
If we helped each other, we could get out of this.
If we all helped each other, these criminals wouldn't be able to do the things that they're doing.
I know that since I was a kid.
and since I was a U.S. attorney and well, that's that's lecturing.
It was very interesting that it turned out right.
Then, of course, I had the great benefit in my treatment of having a brilliant diagnostician helping me, Dr. Maria.
The wonderful doctors and nurses at Elliott Hospital.
Can't say enough about them, doctor, right?
You ran a hospital.
Yeah, no, I was very impressed.
You were formed and you changed.
That lady right there was the number one rural hospital CEO in the country, seven years running.
So she knows a little something about a hospital and my I right that they were very good?
They were excellent from the emergency room physician, from the paramedics, the people who brought you in, the emergency room physician, the the bedroom physician, the nurses, the technicians for all your tests, up until we get up on the floor, the admitting doctor, the neurochirurg, you know, I could go on and on.
I wouldn't want to forget anyone by mentioning names.
But I, someone sticks out to me is the nurse Paige, who, when you were having a difficult time with pain control, she thought of everything in the world to get you more comfortable.
And she did.
She did.
She's a wonderful nurse.
So we thought Paige was number one, right?
Yeah, I think so.
And now you said she could get the Daisy Award, I gotta, you know, I know they do that at Elliott, they do that at several hospitals where a patient can nominate a nurse or maybe it's a nurse's aide for a day, or it could be just for nurses, I may not be quite sure, but for a Daisy Award, they get recognized, they may get some flowers and they get recognized.
Can we recognize?
It's a lovely thing.
How can you find out how we do that here in New Hampshire?
We'll figure it out for sure.
Right.
Yes.
And it's actually shocking that Maria was never missed New Hampshire.
There's nobody that loves New Hampshire more, and she's more beautiful than any of the new New Hampshire.
I do love my state.
I really do.
Yeah, well, you got the looks too, you know.
And everyone was, and everybody was professional.
Right?
Everybody was just so professional from the moment we, you know, the state troopers arrived on scene until.
Did you see how valuable it was, though?
This is very important.
When you're twisting, you got to move the whole chair.
Okay.
You got to move the whole chair if you want to twist.
Good job, Ted.
You're in BLT.
he's gonna drive me nuts And well, the idea is the mayor knows this, right?
Any of you that have gone through something like this, you can't, it's the moments, the quick moment where you drop something and it's almost reflex to go and pick it up.
If I annoy him for a couple of days over every five minutes saying it, you get beat into the head, right?
So then he just doesn't do it, right?
You got to squash.
I don't know.
Yeah.
You get a squat?
With everything you've been through, my goodness, you're the last guy to have it.
If I just lean over like this, okay?
If it isn't him, it's Steven.
Don't bend.
I'm not pinging.
don't bend my goodness they take it so literally bend is like you just bent I think that that brace is a marvel of engineering.
So I feel pretty comfortable with you.
Don't you think they mean by bending like going all the way down?
No, no, no.
It's any kind of bending right now you shouldn't be doing.
Don't forget to use your hips and your knees to squat.
Well, you don't want to risk it.
Not over your knees.
All it takes is one mistake.
All it takes is one mistake.
I'll teach you how to squat correctly.
Which, by the way, aren't we supposed to lift heavy objects that way anyway?
Yes.
It's all in the legs, back straight.
Don't bend, don't lift, don't twerk.
Don't twist.
No twerking, Mayor.
No twerking or twisting.
I've never said twerking.
I don't feel like Steven knows how to twerk.
I don't even really know what twerking is.
It's dancing.
Yeah, but like...
It's sexy dancing.
Is that it?
I don't know if it's sexy or not.
I don't think it looks very sexy.
But I think it's more specific than that.
To me it is.
You pop up your butt or something.
I don't know.
Okay.
But, so, I just wanted to point out...
Trying to get off.
Well, Dr. Maria, being from here, well, I know she's got some other...
other uh interviews to do but i did want to say but while she's here where are you going to be this i can watch you i'm newsmax with greg kelly what time 9 30 newsmax greg kelly 9 30 see if she looks as good on Newsmax, I think our cameras are better, then we'll tell Ruddy.
But she's obviously, she's from New Hampshire.
She's been very involved in the hostel administration system.
Nobody knows this person.
Exactly.
And having her there, it was invaluable.
It's been invaluable having her with us.
Right.
Oh, yeah, right.
We got it.
We got it.
Having it was like having Dr. Mario there, right?
Got us, we were, we had the best care.
We ensured everything was taken care of.
And I do have a For those people who would have a resentment of giving me special care.
Yeah.
She got us over.
And on that note, though, and Dr. Mario, I think would agree, that staff, those folks would have been professional no matter who it was.
100%.
Right.
And I just got the best feeling from those folks.
Yeah.
I was very, very impressed.
I was very happy.
Let me just say publicly, as I will, as I said to Andrew, and now I'm going to say to you, I really appreciate what you did.
It was above and beyond a call of duty.
You two, the two of you.
And I'm going to cry.
So let's move.
No, and I want to thank, obviously, you, you mayor, but also Dr. Maria.
She helped me a lot in the last few days as well.
I do want to say that.
And the president cured me.
Now, is it President, Dr. Trump, or is it Dr. President Trump?
president trump either way whatever he wants you know he's got to give him a presidential freedom he can be dr president trump dr trump president trump uh nobel peace prize winner trump two time president two time president two time doctor with the man scourge scourge three time winner scourge three time winner scourge three time winner right Oh, but we're lucky that we are both lucky.
You keep listening to Stephen and Ted and rest, and I will talk to you tomorrow.
All right, God, let's get a good night.
We'll try to watch that interview with Greg.
Right.
She's always very, very good.
Now, we had to get those interviews in due to scheduling, but I feel bad because we haven't finished the full story.
Let's do it.
Let's do that, and then I want to allow you, because I know you don't want to do this.
You want to get back to the stories and to the show.
We can do a little soccer time.
Yes.
So we pick up now.
I don't want to push it too much.
But this audience of everyone, you guys have been with us, and we want to make sure you hear from us what happened.
Nobody else.
We're not telling this to anybody else.
You're the first people we've sat down and talked to, right?
Outside of the public statements, this is our first.
We want to tell it to our friends because we want you to know exactly how it happened.
We have no idea what distortions they'll be, even totally innocent distortion.
Right.
Because when a story gets told from this one to that one to this one to that one, details are left out, details are added.
Right.
You know.
Right.
We're going to try to give you the story now.
And this way we'll have it on tape because a year from now, if we tell the story, it might be different.
Yeah.
Because you remember it.
A year from now, we saved 100 people, right?
Yeah, right.
no in all seriousness So now we've, yeah, we're shocked at this point.
Wow, it was the, apparently according to law enforcement, it was the female that was the aggressor.
The male was in rough shape.
The trooper didn't just tell us, oh yeah, she beat him up.
He mentioned it and stressed it a few times.
He is in bad shape.
To this moment, I have no idea.
I haven't seen him.
Maybe we can try to.
There must be a police report on that.
Let's poke around tomorrow and find out what actually happened to him because.
Yeah.
So he was standing up with a light.
Yes, at that point.
Well, that's the thing.
In those twenty minutes, we don't even know what happened.
Is it possible that wasn't him?
Oh, like a third person on, I didn't even think of that.
I guess.
I guess.
The trooper was never mentioned.
He had somebody else helping him.
Yeah.
So just to catch up to spe where we're at now, we leave the Fisher Cats game.
We're leaving town to go home for the night to go to the Red Sox game the next day.
We're on 93 South.
We're waved down by a couple.
And we enjoyed the game.
We did.
We're waved down by these individuals.
I quickly have a lot of questions about what's going on, right?
When we allowed them into our window basically in the dead of night.
So we drive up, we call 911, we're on the phone with 911 for nineteen minutes, nineteen and a half minutes.
In that time period, I'm backing up our car safely, right?
We're off to the side to get closer to this vehicle with the two individuals who have flagged us down.
Because look, if this is someone in need, every second counts.
We're on the phone at 911, but we're not just going to sit there and wait for the police, which may or may not be advisable, right, mayor?
But we're not, that's just not who the mayor is, right?
That's not, I'd like to think I would have done it without the mayor, but certainly when you're with Mayor Rudy Giuliani, you, you definitely, there's a little bit more of that courage, right?
It rubs off on you.
Also, you have to understand, I mean, really, I don't want to sound.
I know what I'm doing in higher situations.
Right.
You can't imagine how many irons were in the back of my mind as to what we would have to do if.
It's not as if I do them like a jerk.
I've been through them all my life, both personally growing up in Bedford Stuyveson and I've been through them in law enforcement.
So my father trained me and my uncle, Rudy, who was a police officer.
I always have a plan in mind.
If God forbid, like if she had pulled out a gun, it would have been really stupid.
She was too close to me to pull out a gun.
I'd have been able to grab the nozzle of that gun and smash it against a window.
Right.
Had she pulled out a knife, I could have done the same thing.
The problem was my real concern was not her.
And I kept my eye on her.
My concern was the guy in the back.
With the light.
obviously it turns out should have been but he was the guy that got beaten up yeah uh but i didn't know what the hell did he have right and was he like a crazy crazed lover who's going to get jealous about us yeah and start shooting at us but i i thought that's why we drove ahead so i thought we had to take but i thought we had to take that risk um and when and when and when she never when she didn't get in the car and when she acted kind of ambiguous I realized this was an emergency,
but it wasn't exactly at the level at which she was.
It didn't need like immediate intervention.
Right.
Right.
Like we were thinking for a good start.
There was something more complicated about this.
So please show up.
And sorry, we've told the story now last show and this show, but I believe we've gotten through all the parts up until those state troopers are taking pictures and we are now free to go, right?
So we leave, we get back on 93.
We take an exit, turning back around.
Now we're heading northbound on 93.
The domestic violence situation is now on the other side of the road.
But we're now, yeah, we're coming.
We turned around, took a while.
Yeah.
We turned around, we saw another pol passed another car pulled over.
That's right.
That's the commanding over the New About.
Yeah, because I even mentioned that, right?
So, and I even mentioned it to you, like, look, wow, so much activity tonight.
We get on the interstate, we're driving northward now.
The situation is on the other side of the road, right?
Southward, a lot of lights in that.
We're driving, you know, getting ready for the Red Sox tomorrow or the next day.
And, And it happens like I've been told it happens, right?
These car accidents.
Boom, we get hit from behind.
But really, I'm going to emphasize, hit from behind can be hit from behind.
I haven't been in an accident in a long time, so I don't have great deal of experience with it, but I can remember being hit from behind.
Right?
This was, it could have been a Mac truck as far as we were concerned, right?
Right.
The sound was unreal.
Right.
The movement, the whiplash of my body was brutal.
And it was funny, it wasn't a whiplash of my neck because the harness here sort of held the neck back.
It held the lower body back.
It prevented the head from hitting the...
It did this.
Let's not reproduce any of that until you know, nice and mended.
But it did it like this.
And by the time I was back here, immediately the pain was excruciating so that you couldn't move.
So I don't know what happened.
Did I break my back?
And at this point, all I remember is what I recall, what I recall, part of what I recall is just a lot of like debris kicking up, right?
So two metal vehicles crashing into each other, whether it's concrete dirt paint, everything, you know, just dust and holy smoke.
And I'm also thinking, wow, this is..
exactly like they said it would be right boom uh i look over to the mayor he's talking right i don't want to characterize him as good but he's talking and uh breathing and alive and communicating with me uh so that's good i look over i see the car in the media i mean i i really believe you know sometimes you're the not the best judge of this but i thought i was complete i don't think i ever lost any kind of uh consciousness or right i don't think so i thought i was like completely And I never felt any, probably because I never felt the impact on the head.
Yeah.
Oh, thank God.
Yeah.
Thank God.
This could have created unconsciousness if it affected the breathing, but it did.
Right.
So throughout.
i was aware of what was going on right probably when it happened fast and quickly and you get a little confused right but i seem to remember point by point by point by point and you're right i just make sure first of all i'm making sure we get the car off i saw you a little bit you said something you did give me some directions like make sure this car is off the road right something along those lines and we get the i think we're moving as i got knocked forward First thing I did is look over to you like that.
So my head was turned like this.
I was trying to see what was happening to you because I was going to grab over and try to hold you.
But you were, you seemed like I was fine.
I don't even know.
Fine.
I don't even know how far that went.
Here you go.
You just did it.
Yeah.
You can't do it.
No, but you can.
Just move.
Because I'm holding the wheel.
Yeah, about that.
Like that.
But no hit, nothing.
But not major.
Yeah.
One of the other things he had was, yeah, the steering wheel here.
I didn't.
Yeah.
And the airbags did not fall.
I don't think they did.
Maybe bad.
My seat is further back than yours.
I always put my seat further back.
Yes.
Yes.
Oh, God.
Thank God.
Yeah.
Way more.
That's so thank God.
Oh.
What I had was a much longer distance to get rid of.
Well, but the seatbelt.
The seatbelt kept me from getting.
Yeah.
But I got out.
More and more.
Yes.
Because you're leaning back.
And the seatbelt slash.
Some slack on the seat belt all you get is yeah this right you normally you normally would have gotten a whiplash yeah but i but quick i i want to get to this part because we both very much want to make sure you're not telling us um no i mean i've got some soreness but they said that you'd get some soreness right and so no and look i don't want to give you a problem if you don't have it right right no uh look mayor we I just want this part I want to get out too.
This is important to both of us, right?
So the mayor's, I see him visually.
I know that he's at, you know, right there.
I look to my left.
There's the car.
car the other car very much in bad shape in the median i see the lady's car I feel very sorry for her.
We really want her.
I don't think she's a bad actor here at all.
No.
If anybody does, I don't think so.
I think I'm going to tell you what I think happened.
She was driving.
If you say she was driving fast, everybody in New Hampshire drives fast.
I'm sorry.
She wasn't driving any faster than anybody else.
Was she driving too fast?
Probably.
But I'm not going to hold that against her.
How would she know?
And I think maybe, maybe, but I would tell her as a lawyer.
don't make a statement about this um maybe she rub a neck that's what the cops thought cop cops said to us this happened they saw it happen.
I already said this happens a lot.
Yes.
And I knew that I've heard that.
Right.
But then there's an accident.
I heard that too, sure.
When there's an accident, they rub the neck.
So now let's say she's driving along.
Boom.
Right.
And it just happens.
And it seems to me, but I'm not sure of this, at the very last minute she tried to swerve.
I mean, that must have been part.
I just, yeah, there's something because we were moving.
Right.
Right.
Because she must have gone in the median.
She must have gone that way.
Yeah.
So I see the car.
First question, is there anyone else in that car as I see this woman coming out?
She says, no, that's important, right?
Because you got to.
And then I see her.
She's obviously upset and distraught.
All I care, though, is that she's OK.
I grab her or, you know, I try to, you know, I get up close to her and just make sure she's OK.
I believe there's a little bit of blood.
But other than that, she seemed fine.
I don't want to say fine, right?
But she at least seemed like, you know, nothing.
You know, they say they're investigating.
I would be very upset if they charged her and I would stop it.
I would do everything I could.
Of course, we have no plans.
I wouldn't even testify against her.
I just think the woman made a mistake.
mistake and she should move on with her life oh god god bless yeah 19 year old everybody makes mistakes uh if she made a mistake, maybe she didn't even make a mistake.
Maybe it was understandable.
In any event, the poor woman didn't mean any harm to anybody.
And thank God, it all worked out okay.
I'm fine.
He's fine.
Little rehabilitation.
That's it.
The Democrats are happy because they got a certain amount of pain.
It hurts.
Tell the Democrats.
Save people.
If you guys want a little, you want to get a little lust, what do you call it?
Bloodlust?
This was really painful, guys.
You know, you never did any pain to me like this.
I could always handle your pain because you're a bunch of foony bastards.
Boy, are you terrible?
Are you Democrats terrible?
I don't know what has happened to you.
You actually amaze me.
And I'm getting to move you into the category of evil now.
Only unless you're really stupid.
Unbelievable the things that you do.
Favoring criminals, favoring people that will kill other people.
Rosie O'Donnell.
Rosie O'Donnell immediately accuses the killer at Ascension School of being MAGA, sort of encouraged by Trump.
Trump to kill these kids and he turns out to have a thing on his gun saying I want to kill I want to kill Trump he's heartily mad at sweetheart he's what you've been breeding transgender and treating like oh it's perfectly okay it's perfectly okay get your cock cut off oh my gosh but but maybe to put a bow on this for now right uh do I get off the point sometimes No, but you're making other important points.
But I want to let you get back to some sense of normalcy tonight.
This isn't normal where I'm sitting here.
And we want you to get some of the news out, right?
There's a lot of news to discuss.
But I, you know, I just have to say, and I'm following in the words of Andrew and Dr. Maria, that the man sitting next to me here, I mean, this is just another example in a countless, endless line of, you know, another example in a countless list of you, Mayor, just showing incredible courage and bravery and doing the right thing.
And I learned some valuable lessons just by being with you this through this whole process.
Rudy the Base.
Hey, the Base here.
Yeah.
Within the next 15 minutes, although we are in undetermined soccer time, it'll be time for a landing of this crane.
No bending.
Don't bend too much.
I'm not allowed to bend.
No BLT.
If you suffer from an injury like this, it's going to be a blow.
I have to take the advantage of my co-pilot here.
to do some of the landing so I don't bend.
Clear to land.
Clear to land?
Okay.
Okay.
But what we should do right now, and thank you, yes.
Right on top of, can I land?
I see one right down there.
It says Biden Beachhole.
Can I land on that one and see if what we can find in there.
We're not going to find much there..
You think there are other hard drives there?
I hope not.
We're going to take a quick break, but I do want to say one more thing.
I want to apologize for some folks that we haven't gotten back to.
I broke our sound.
Oh gosh, put that back in there.
But those of you, you know, a lot of you have reached out literally like Andrew and Dr. Marino said, hundreds, if not thousands.
The mayor obviously appreciates all the well wishes and that.
We will give out an address.
I want to check on a few things before giving out an address on where you can.
People have been asking for, you know, sending well wishes and that.
We'll make sure that happens.
We'll get that out there.
you i mean you it amazed me because i you know i sometimes sometimes you only find out about the people who abandon you and not the people who stick with you now you do when the people abandon you the people who stick with you do write to you but there's no special occasion right but this gave me a sense of how many people stuck with me and i'm very very happy about that because it says something beyond me Now, please don't.
Well, I'm just going to say it.
It meant you stuck with your country.
Because all I was doing was what your country needs, trying to defend it against deprivation of free speech, deprivation of due process, unfair allegations of criminal conduct, just pure out and out nasty, vicious attacks of lies against people.
They still do it, ladies and gentlemen.
But I have a feeling, I don't know if I'm wrong about this.
I don't think so.
And I think in a few months it's going to turn out to be, you're going to see the polls on this.
I think their ability to do this now has been greatly diminished.
I don't think they're taken seriously when they do these wild, like Rosie O'Donnell, immediately they fact-checked her.
They didn't fact-check her in the past.
Here she is accusing this murderer of being a MAGA murderer.
And what a stupid thing to do.
I mean, the whole trans agenda industry that's making billions off breeding these children wants to kill them.
Right.
They want good publicity.
They don't want bad publicity.
Right.
And she jumps in and immediately accuses the guy of being a MAGA person.
And she brings highlight to the fact that as a transgender person, which may not be fair, none of this stuff is completely fair.
Any over-generalization is unfair.
But unfortunately, if she's going to bring MAGA into it, and she's going to bring transgender into it, and we look at the last six, mass killings, five of them are transgender, none of them are MAGA.
So which is the more current problem?
The one you're lying about or the one you're trying to suppress.
Right.
Right.
But I know none of our audience is that shocked to see the mayor right back at it tonight with live programming.
Maybe we take a short break.
Do you want to do something?
We'll stand up a little and then we'll come back and have you discuss the news of the day.
We can't go at night without hearing some of the news of the day.
With this thing.
No, no.
I'm looking at this place here.
I could do what I did at the Sheridan.
Maybe I could do it like a fool.
we leave here we could use one of those i could do like a uh i could fly or come in on ro on like uh yeah that'd be a great entrance.
Maybe we'll find that picture and show it to them.
I got to find that.
Okay.
For those who don't know what he was pointing at, there is a full lift that looks like it could lift probably about 10 tons.
That could lift me.
I'm not that heavy.
Oh, yeah.
We're going to have some fun with it.
Anyhow.
Well, we're going to take a short break and we're going to be right back i know this is a bit of an unusual show but i hope it's interesting to you u.s army major scott smiley paid a high price serving our nation Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed.
Scott would become the first blind active duty military officer before medical.
before medically retiring years later.
Thanks to friends like you, the Tunnel to Towers Foundation gave Scott and his family a mortgage free, specially adapted smart home.
Show your support for America's Heroes now.
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 we like to know who we're dealing with.
They give us the highest quality, all organic, non-GMO.
You should know, all Arabica beans.
No robusto.
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.
Mike goodness.
You're gonna want to specially order these.
This is what goes into...
Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed.
Scott would become the first blind active duty military officer before medically retiring years later.
Thanks to friends like you, the Tunnel of the Towers Foundation gave Scott and his family a mortgage-free, specially adapted smart home.
Show your support for America's Heroes now.
Donate $11 a month to Tunnels and Towers at T2.
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'd like to know who we're dealing with.
They give us the highest quality, all organic, non GMO.
You should know all Arabica beans.
Nobusco.
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!
They're going to want to specially order these.
This is what goes into Rudy's coffee, US U.S. Army Major Scott Smiley paid a high price serving on Nation.
Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed.
Scott would become the first blind active duty military officer before medically retiring years later.
Thanks to friends like you, the Tunnels of Towers Foundation gave Scott and his family a mortgage-free, specially adapted smart home.
Show your support for America's heroes.
Now, donate $11 a month to Tunnels of Towers at ttt.org.
I love these pens.
I love those pens.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Well, here I was explaining to Ted one of my psychological problems.
I love these pens.
Fabulous for underlining.
Oh.
Oh.
Man, and then, then, see that article?
Right there, all underlined beautifully.
So I can just tell you.
The Post has some really, really good columnists.
I'm not happy with the ownership of that whole Fox thing with Rupert.
Because I think Rupert and his sons...
I just don't think they're all there.
They're all on board.
But boy, do they have some good reporters?
Ricky Scott is fabulous.
She's fabulous.
This is a great article.
about the new school in Manhattan.
Now, the new school in Manhattan has always been like a old tired out, yippy school.
Hippy, hiie, school.
Everybody who goes there looks like they're worn out from having taken drugs.
So it's hard to see how they could do really good academic work.
But on the other hand, over the last number of years, as I've not known as much about them, and I was there for a big seminar a while back and I was impressed, maybe they've changed.
But listen to this.
And you tell me how a normal, non-criminal person does this.
They have a sociology seminar about petty crime.
It's called The Politics, Ethics, and Aesthetics of Petty Crime.
I have no idea what aesthetics petty crime has, but I guess it does.
And then it goes on to say, in a world where accumulation is sacred.
So immediately you can see this is a prejudice against, against anybody owning anything.
It's justified that you can steal what I have because I have too much.
Dispossession is routine.
No, it's not.
You dispossess me.
I fight like hell like I did in the bankruptcy court.
Right.
And the line between private property and public good is drawn in blood.
I do not know what they mean by that.
But if what they mean by that is my blood to get my property, these are F ⁇ Communists.
Now this course includes, this is to help the kids take this, field trips where capital is hoarded and value is contested like museums banks and even grocery stores in other words this these people have so much you can take it from them this is a college course i guess it's fitting in new york where shoplifting loot worth less than a thousand dollars is a mere misdemeanor and
that's why everything is in a cage in new york In fact, a lot of the people should be in cages.
What were your instructions to police officers when dealing with shoplifters?
Arrest them.
You know how to get the maximum sentence.
If they do it more than once, put them in jail.
If they do it more than twice, even put them in jail for a long time.
Only way to stop them.
I'm not going to just recirculate them to the street.
Yeah, God, you know, we got people with 50 shoplifting convictions.
Right.
Or arrests.
And they're back on the street in 12 hours.
I mean, who wants to interrupt their shoplifting?
I mean, they get annoyed if you make it take too long.
Right.
They said, oh, gee, you know, you took took 12 hours out of my out of my schedule right it depends on whether a pathological society or an honest society.
And a society without God becomes a pathological society.
I know we're mixing in a lot of very important things, but they're all very important.
The course catalog on this rather unusual course says that the class is a look at radical ethics and asks, is it possible to steal back what was already stolen?
Now, the steal is extremely specific.
The stolen is generalized to 100.
70 years ago That's what they're talking about, Ted.
it's a full credit course i could become a doctor of That's absurd.
Columbia University.
Oh, gosh.
Speaking of absurd, well, is Columbia or Harvard?
The number one Jew hating university.
Is it still Columbia?
2024.
Okay.
Harvard is the number one Jew hating university.
25.
When does the season start?
What?
When does the season start?
What season?
How can a school overcome another school?
They just have to go that much more physically.
Yeah, they have to beat up and keep more Jewish kids out of school.
They have to make Jewish kids feel completely uncomfortable.
They probably have to beat up a few.
Yeah, that kind of stuff.
And then the professors, the professors have to be ridiculously anti-Jewish, Holocaust deniers.
I think we have a competitive field.
Muslim, Muslim.
Muslim lovers without any acknowledgement that the grand mufti of the Muslim religion was an ally of Hitler or that the Muslims in large extent are carrying out Hitler's pledge to eliminate the Jewish people.
Nothing would have made Muhammad more happy than that.
Right.
Or happier than that.
So Columbia has an entire course.
This used to be a place used to teach Western civilization.
That ended a long time ago when they went back to the jungles.
Columbia University now has an entire course dedicated to the fictitious HBO series.
Game of Thrones as a way to study empires.
Why not use England?
It's like real.
So Game of Thrones for those of you out there is a was a popular TV series on HBO from around I would say 2010 or 2011 until 2017 or 2018.
I think it's five books.
Yeah.
Or I don't know how many, but it's a number of books.
I've read three.
Oh, you are Game of Thrones.
Oh, my God.
I read three.
When did you get into it?
When it was popular?
Uh-uh.
I got into it about eight months into the first season.
Eight episodes in the first year.
You got into the books.
I watched it and I liked it.
So I didn't get the books yet.
I put it on and I put it on.
My wife and I used to like watching them together.
So I put them on.
And the first night it was too brutal for me.
Oh, yes.
I do remember that.
It was too brutal.
The head gets it.
Something happens.
It took about two weeks.
Then something about it got to her.
And she said, can we watch it again?
I want to watch it with you because it gets me scared.
And we watched it and we went right through two episodes.
And the next night, we went through five.
Wow.
She really got hooked on it then.
You really like it.
Really hooked on it.
And her nephew was reading it.
And I went out and got the books and I started reading it.
And then we started seeing the variations from the book to the movie.
And the variations were minor, but interesting because you could see what they were trying to do.
Yeah, that's a good question.
Did the books have more dragons?
Yes.
Because that's a big complaint of the show.
I guess it's just expensive.
Not enough dragons?
Yeah.
Yeah, the show doesn't have enough dragons.
Well, because the dragons are, dragons are, Right.
So they compromised that minimal fancifulness.
But in fact, it couldn't be because it was absurd.
Absurd can be great, but for example, the whole major problem were the possible attack of the dead people in the kingdom beyond that could come and kill all of the people.
North of the wall.
North of the wall.
The white walk.
Those people were all dead.
Yeah.
Of course, that's ridiculous.
I think it's ridiculous.
I hope it's ridiculous.
Oh, that's a basic.
Well, that's a basic.
I thought you were going a little bit deeper.
On the other hand, if you're going to do fanciful it's not ridiculous right but i think i i think game of thrones is one of the great movie things there is i think it's a terrific book and i would recommend it except it doesn't become comfortable with itself it doesn't become comfortable with the fact what is it is it fictional history or is it fictional fantasy and what it is is it's fairly
obvious history made into fanciful, fanciful situations.
A lot and heavy on dialogue if some of the seasons anyway.
I remember sitting there thinking, you know what, these episodes are turning out into just like dialogue.
I mean, good dialogue.
A lot of, right, sometimes very interesting conversations.
Parts of it, I mean.
But dialogue.
I just pointed out to you one flaw.
Maybe it had two more, very few others.
Yeah.
It's a fabulous drama.
Yes.
So in the dialogue, it's about, conversations.
Also, if you want to use a drum to not not teach people history, the facts of it, the little fact, but the sweep of it, it really does describe how the English You're starting to, yeah, you're starting, mayor, you're starting to warm up to the idea of Columbia University having this Game of Thrones class.
Oh, no, no.
I don't think you should teach an empire based on a fantasy.
There's an empire to teach.
It's the real empire.
This is somebody's prejudices, somebody's...
Okay, okay, okay.
But I have no objection to the work of fiction.
Oh, for like fourth grade.
For like kindergarten.
A lot of history of the Roman Empire, we're learning it through the lens of, say, like Gibbonons thought he was a historian.
He wasn't writing fiction.
The people who wrote Game of Thrones didn't think they were writing history.
They were writing purely fiction.
And the fiction was a very loose description of the beginning of the British Empire.
Very loose.
So they didn't feel any connection to any particular reality.
And do I think you can have both?
Yes.
You can't confuse them.
You can't say, I'm going to teach the geography of England by teaching the geography of the seven kingdoms.
Yeah.
I'm sorry.
You know a lot about the seven kingdoms.
The seven kingdoms is in your f ⁇ ing mind.
I didn't realize.
Geography of England is real.
I didn't realize you knew so much about Game of Thrones.
Would you like me to compare the similarities between the geography of England and the Nordic countries and the geography of the Game of Thrones?
Kingdoms and how they sort of mirrored each other and then where they varied.
Yeah.
I think you loved this class, would take this class and teach this class.
Mayor, you sound like someone that could be.
You could teach this class.
You're getting me into it.
These woke assholes don't teach it that way.
They teach like it's real.
And then Cersei Lannister in the year 18th.
Cersei was a fascinating character.
I agree.
That's fascinating, right?
That's one of the words I use for.
The best character of all, though, whose name I'm going to forget.
The short guy.
No, not the short guy.
It was the funniest character.
Yeah, yeah.
Peter?
Well, that's his act.
That's the actor.
I'm about to call him Midget.
No, we called him short.
But he was the most interesting character.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, he was.
i think uh i and i'm away from it now long enough i can't remember the real hero the only real hero in this is the first um ned does he yeah does he die?
Yeah, does he die?
Oh, is this a spoiler alert?
Does he die in the first year or the second?
I don't remember.
It's either the first or the, yeah, you're right.
So it's either the end of the first season or the end of the second.
The beginning of the first or the second.
Or it's just the first episode.
No, no, no, no.
He has five, six episodes.
Okay, because you get to know him and like him, and then boom, he's done.
And then his children become the key.
His bastard child, Snow.
Snow?
Yes.
Sean snow I love snow's fabulous.
You are bringing it all back for me, Mayor.
Now, I think we might have to take a required break for stretching and standing, but no bending, lifting, or twisting at this point.
Or we can keep talking and just standing.
I have no desire to twist.
Or we can keep talking and just stand up with our mics what do you prefer we could do it but no we'll take a break take a break i think i think everybody would like a little break and they could go to the bathroom or something like that and then we'll come back and we'll finish up on our soccer soccer time and this is a good time to do it because we're not interfering on the more superior show dr maria 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'd like to know who we're dealing with.
They give us the highest quality, all organic, non-GMO.
You should know all Arabica beans, rotobusto, all Arabica.
they're going to go into the roaster and it'll get roasted for about 20 minutes or so oh Oh, my goodness.
Look at these.
Oh my goodness!
They're gonna want to specially order these.
Are you ready for some action?
I'm ready for action.
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US Army Major Scott Smiley paid a high price serving on Nation.
Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed.
Scott would become the first blind active duty military officer before medically retiring years later.
Thanks to friends like you, the Tunnel of the Towers Foundation gave Scott and his family a mortgage free, specially adapted, stationary cellar.
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 grain, 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, Rotorbusco, 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.
My goodness!
You're going to want to specially order these.
This is what goes into Rudy's Coffee.
Rudy's Coffee.
you you All right.
Here we are.
Here we are.
Rudy Giuliani.
Ken Goodman.
The creators of America's Mayor Live.
Number one.
Seven hundred and forty seven.
What's the what's the major airplane?
Seven hundred and forty seven.
Is the seven hundred and forty seven one of the major airplanes?
They're all crashing.
Wow.
So that's, by the way, folks, that's...
So we've had a couple tape shows, we have to say, right?
Obviously, yesterday.
Did they get numbered?
They get numbered, yeah.
They get 747.
This is a 747 straight weeknight that the mayor and I have done this show.
Starting back in October of 2022.
We're just a month away from the three-year anniversary.
I tried to come on last night.
Oh, we were...
I don't think I'd have been able to sit, though.
We made the right call.
The doctor, you know?
I had a chance today to lay out my back, stretch it out, exercise a little, kind of figure out that I could stand up, sit down.
While you were off, I was standing up, walking around.
Yep.
And I have to tell you, I don't know if it's your influence or whatever.
I feel great right now.
I'm ready to go out and...
But we can't...
I'm ready to go out and...
I know, but we got to take it easy.
One of those passes that nobody caught for.
Archie Manning Archie Manning now we're talking football and nobody caught it now as much as I'd like to talk football the mayor he wouldn't He's got to get through some of his stories or some important news today.
And look, we tune in to hear from his perspective, right?
That's why we love this program.
So, I mean, we watched a lot of football the last few days, but I think the mayor wants to get some of the news of the day here.
So we can see these numbers here.
I'm going to show you these numbers.
54, 8, and 32.
I talked to the president today, yesterday, several times.
Now, if I were him, and he's really upset about those numbers.
You know what those are?
Those are the numbers in Chicago.
Oh, Jesus.
In the city where they don't want help.
54 represents the number of people shot over a holiday weekend.
Eight is the number so far killed.
Before I started the show or shortly before, it was seven.
Who knows how many more of these are going to descend into that?
32 separate shooting incidents.
I raised that one to say it's all over the city.
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
What's a holiday weekend or a weekend in Chicago?
And just on that, check out this video.
This is just so sad.
As a youth sports official, I very much feel for this guy.
In Chicago, everybody got to get down.
Everybody got to get down because they shoot.
Everybody down.
They shoot.
We can't have no fun in Chicago, man.
You can't have no fun in Chicago.
It's just fun.
Yeah.
Wow.
Awful.
Now, here's what drives me crazy.
So the absolutely useless mayor of Chicago.
gets nasty and vicious and turns them down.
And Fatso Fogarty goes crazy.
What a guy.
There's a totally silly man.
He's a product of a very rich family where he was too stupid to run the business.
This happens a lot in these rich families.
And they figured he's not too stupid to ruin Chicago.
It's already ruined.
And he's there making every stupid decision that people tell him to make.
I don't know if he's a really completely stupid man or an overwhelmed man.
He could be an overwhelmed man.
He's always been considered a ne'er-do-well.
He doesn't have any pride in himself.
He wouldn't be fat pig like that if he did.
And he comes up with these, I don't even understand it.
How can you say no to hell when every weekend, even when crime is going down, for them or going up every weekend a shooting gallery right whether it's up or down that weekend right it's it's far too many last weekend it was seven and 27 seven deaths seven deaths 27 shootings this weekend it was eight and 54.
Thank goodness.
Do they get the 54?
Right.
People get shot.
Who knows if they're going to die?
And do you know getting shot?
Don't take any solace in shooting numbers.
Shooting numbers are killings that went wrong.
When you've got high shooting numbers, you're eventually going to have high kill numbers.
It's a very good point, man.
Somebody get lucky and aim correctly.
or they won't get to the hospital on time.
The reduced number of killings is a result of not just bad shooting, but also very good medical work that didn't exist.
I mean, it's like our military in the Civil War.
We probably would have had half those casualties if it wasn't for the fact that we didn't have great medical.
Right.
We also would have had an awful lot of paraplegics and an awful lot of people with one leg and an awful lot of people died.
Yeah.
Right.
That's a very good point, Mayor.
So somebody made the note.
point that you can have a thousand witnesses in the Epstein case for James Coomer.
It won't help.
Kuma won't get the point.
I'm sorry, but I'm very annoyed at him because he didn't get the point on, he didn't get the point on Biden.
He blew the case completely.
There were things he never even mentioned that I can't understand how he could have gone through it and not realize that Hunter is on tape explaining how he got money to his father, and he failed in showing how they got money to his father, at least in a simple, I mean, come on over and over,
over again has he failed to do things he failed to point out one thing that would be enormously critical to everything else that's going on that hunter knew that his father was demented in 2019.
Hey, it's on an email.
And Coomer Boomer couldn't figure it out.
I don't have a fix on him.
Ted, what do you think?
He likes to be on television too much.
He's on TV a lot.
And he deprives his staff.
That's what I hear.
He deprives his members of the, a good chairman.
shares it because he wants loyalty.
A good chairman says, okay, I'll be on twice as much, but you take this one, you take that one, you take this one.
You've got some pretty high powered members there.
So why?
What's wrong?
What's wrong with that campaign?
Is he an incompetent baby?
So with someone like Congressman Comer, you can take him and look at almost any member of Congress.
I'm not going to say all.
We have some friends in Congress that I think are good.
But for the most, but that's the exception, right?
Really, the rule in Congress is you get people in there who are either focused on I don't even get it, right?
I don't understand because someone like you wouldn't understand this, right?
You didn't go into public service for any of these reasons, but these folks go there and they get it.
First of all, they get impressed, right, by the lobby.ists and the nice dinners and the marble halls.
And so that gets to them.
And as you said, Mayor, they're seem to all be focused on press conferences, strongly worded ex posts, you know, tweets.
They like to get their moment on camera at a committee hearing, right?
Where they really get some dumb witness to say something.
So they sound great.
But at the end of the day, after all that, what do we get?
What do we get?
What are we getting done?
What does Congress have to follow through?
Right.
And what do they report on Biden?
Strangely, weirdly missed some of the key evidence again against it.
Right, I remember, yes.
So here's another thing, he wrote a book.
He's a sitting member of Congress who had time to write this book.
And really, the book is about how he didn't, he wasn't able to prosecute the Bidens based off, you know, not that he would have prosecuted them, but his investigation of the Bidens yielded very little, if any, results.
So there's a new opioid.
I don't know if it's new, but it's been discovered now.
They say it's 40 times more deadly than fentanyl.
40?
Which is hard to believe.
Fentanyl kills you like that.
Yeah, and it's called nidozine.
Holy songs.
Nidozine, and there is an actin in Congress, Nidazine Control Act, by Eugene Vinman and Michael Baumgardner from Virginia and Washington State, classifying the drug as having no medical use and high overdose risk.
risk.
They say that it has to be focused on early before it takes the place of fentanyl if they are ever able to control fentanyl.
Is that it?
This is the new drug.
Yep.
Scary.
Fentanyl was enough.
Right.
Oh my goodness.
Yeah, just what we need.
one, right?
So, the um, So Trump, maybe because it's back in New York, has been taking on New York State in their legislation to remove all Indigenous people designations for teams.
Now, it's not to remove insulting ones it's not to remove ones that indigenous people are upset about remove all so there are two an issue right now one is um connectiquat connectiquat i think it's pronounced enough i didn't pronounce it correctly it looks like connecticut but it's spelled differently connectiquat which is mid island they have a high school there The name of their
team are the Connecticut, and they're a good football.
They're one of the ranking football teams.
This is the other one we're going to talk about.
They're called the Connecticut Thunderbirds.
Well, that's apparently Thunderbirds, which I didn't know, like a car, right?
The Thunderbird is an indigenous people's reference.
So you have to get rid of it.
And they've negotiated so that they will get rid of it to the point of calling it the Connecticut T-Birds.
And they're not sure if that's going to fly.
Well, wait, wait.
I'm just telling you the facts.
Now, I don't know anything else.
Now, you take over from there.
Well, I got to read about this situation.
But all I can tell you, Mayor, is ever since they got rid of the Washington Redskins, nobody learns about, I mean, they used to really incorporate the local Native Americans, indigenous tribes, you know, they used to incorporate those folks into their games.
I was a Green Bay, I'm a huge, I am a huge Green Bay Packers fan.
I learned more about Native American history, whether this may be an indictment on me, but I learned, I learned a lot, I'll just say this, I learned a lot about Native American history or some, you know, and tradition through the Green Bay Packers.
They have the Oneida Nation gate.
That's one of the big entrances to the stadium, right?
They highlight some of the tribes during the game.
And I learned a lot about it.
I don't want to say a lot, but I was exposed.
You learned something about it.
I learned something and I was exposed to it.
Something more than the Cowboy movies taught you.
Right.
And so I can imagine the Washington Redskins used to honor all these different tribes.
They did.
They make them part of the game day experience.
The family.
That was the family of the guy.
Yeah.
What an honor.
The chief is stewing because they said that since they took him off, they've lost all their revenue.
They lost everything.
He was like a big hero.
Right.
He was even on a thing with Franklin Roosevelt.
Right.
And now they're going to forget it all.
Now they're the Washington commanders.
They have some corporate font Washington commanders.
No logo.
The logo is a W. So Redskins.
How could Redskins be there?
The accepted way to describe black people is black.
But yeah.
So if you call them Redskins.
White.
Or how about white?
Black.
Like you said.
Right.
Black people.
What is wrong with calling them red stars?
skins they don't really have all red skin but they have something close to red skin what's wrong with that And it's not even that we're calling anybody that.
It's the name of a team, right?
This isn't, we're not calling anybody a red skin.
It's not really making the money.
Yeah.
It's literally the name of a team.
We got the fighting Irish.
I mean, the fighting Sioux.
There was the fighting Sioux.
They had to get rid of that team name.
Of course.
Nobody talks about the Irish fighting.
Right, right.
That's another good example.
And I want to double check that.
I believe it's North Dakota or South Dakota State fighting Sioux.
There might be some other examples.
At least one of them had to change their name.
Yet we have the fighting Irish.
These same liberals.
I mean, we don't bring up any of them, but these same liberals are so.
They're not even consistent.
Or maybe they're cons officially canceling TED though because it is the Fighting Hawks TED.
Now, well, they changed it.
Well, that's the change, right?
They had to change your name from the was it South or North Dakota or South Dakota State?
Was this North or South Dakota State though?
It's North Dakota.
So let me just quickly explain this, right?
North Dakota State University used to be called the Fighting Sioux, right?
Notre Dame are known as the Fighting Irish.
The Fighting Sioux had to change their names to the Fighting Hawks.
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish haven't changed their name.
Who are the real racists here?
Who are the real ones that are pointing out?
Why do they have to change from the Sioux to the Hawks?
the sioux or the hawks because the sioux is a tribe the sioux tribe who are the hawks uh a hawk i'm guessing the bird like a hawk so they changed the name from the so they took away they weren't a tribe they were that's the that's a bird right we can we can defame the bird but not the tribe yeah well no so we can well we can defame the tribe if you say they fight That's the thing, Mayor.
This got so out of whack where we literally, this is honorable.
Who doesn't want to be fighting?
Who can we name that out of respect for them?
Exactly.
How many kids and Mayor, how many kids aren't going to be curious and ask about the Sioux culture and learn about things, especially because the local community is probably, you know, highly valued or they highly value the Sioux culture, right?
Because it's, you know, of course.
But who are the real racists?
The real museum to the Sioux?
People want to know about the fighting Sioux, the fighting Irish, the fighting Americans, right?
Just so bizarre.
But pointing that out is so key because.
There's a method to their madness, right?
They want to divide.
They want to create issues where there isn't one.
And then they get to come in and from all different places.
And then the society, the ultimate culture assimilates.
We assimilate.
We lose some of what we had.
We bring in some of what we had.
And it combines with others.
Sorry.
I was just saying no BLT.
You're getting close to twisting or.
Oh, BLT.
Well, you're starting to do your, you know, I get it, but I'm actually getting hungry.
I wouldn't mind a bacon lettuce in Jamaica.
How many BLTs do you think we're going to have before this whole thing is over?
We have a phone call here.
I was trying to shut up the phone call.
One never knows who it could be.
Who called us the other day?
Well, we have had someone call us on the program.
That was hundreds of episodes ago.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
So those of us, look, we know we talk about sports a lot and not everyone out there is a sports fan.
Dr. Maria, you're back on.
She's so blessed.
So we're still, we're still, no, we're still.
He's taking a call live on the show.
Steven, why don't you show, I want a quick shout out to Steven here.
We're putting you on speaker.
You're on the program live.
Let her know that she's on before, you know, she got it.
Yeah, you're on.
Well, what do you want to tell me?
Nobody can question it about that.
Go to you, go to you, go to you.
Which one?
Oh, wow.
I like this.
No, was it good?
It was.
Well, we're going to watch it now.
We can watch it over there.
So sorry, folks.
The mayor's taking a call.
We're still live on the air.
But I do want to do a quick shout out to her.
I wanted to know if we saw the Greg Kelly show.
But you know, that's a pretext for trying to get us off because she thinks I'm tired.
Right.
But I do want to say, look, and this is, there's so many people.
The mayor obviously would want to thank individually.
I want to thank individually.
We can't do that now, man.
No, no, no, because I want to, we shouldn't go beyond 10.
This is my first night back.
And Dr. Maria, our doctor, is actually giving us a nice warning.
But the second this happened, well, the second it became public that this happened, I heard from so many people.
I'm not, I'm not going to name, I'm only going to name one because there's so many of you that I'll follow up with and we'll talk about this over the coming days and weeks, but Steven Schumacher immediately got in his car in Michigan.
In Michigan.
I put him on, but the camera's not even facing him.
I don't know, but put the camera on the group shot.
But Steven got in his car.
Fine.
Put it back and come over.
There he is.
Okay.
So Stephen got in his car with Raleigh.
Where's Raleigh?
Raleigh's sleeping.
Go get Raleigh.
Get Raleigh.
Switch the camera.
Come over.
Treats.
But Stephen got in his car with his dog and drove 20 straight hours, 17 straight hours.
And he's been one of my best friends for years now.
There he is.
But Stephen was here.
Oh, no twisting.
Oh, yeah, no twisting.
No twisting.
Even with Raleigh.
Even for Raleigh.
Oh, Raleigh, you're being a little bit.
He's not wearing any pants.
right up here oh yeah bro look at the camera this is Raleigh no twisting Raleigh, who gives you treats?
Actually, everyone here does.
I give him the most.
Yeah, that is true.
He's got nothing to say.
Raleigh, say something important.
He's just happy.
He's happy you guys are okay just like I am.
My goodness.
You were very kind to me, Raleigh.
Don't twist.
Raleigh's not twisting there.
You got to move the whole chair.
You're a good boy.
Raleigh's dogs are a good, good medicine.
I love you very much.
You're such a sweet dog.
He happens to be a very, very well-behaved dog.
He's not for adoption, father.
He belongs to Stephen.
And they have a very, very close relationship.
This dog would be broken if he was taken from Stephen.
But he does get along really well with me and with Ted and with Vanessa and with everybody he's with.
Rob.
And tonight we had guests here who, who, who, Darren, right?
Another shout out, Darren.
And Darren.
He was better half.
And Darren, he was extremely, he doesn't know Darren.
He was extremely friendly to Darren.
And Darren makes the best coffee in the world he's our partner he's our partner in rudy coffee and darren makes the best coffee in america or the world he does and he knows that so he right he doesn't even like coffee he knows that we like coffee right but he knows when we like our coffee we'll give him a treat right in fact we'll give him a treat and he does right um Wow, but yes, but thank you to everyone we heard from the last few days.
I can't, there's so many, too many.
There's literally thousands, not just hundreds.
Thousands.
But I want you to know I'm okay.
The mayor's here.
And I can't tell you from the bottom of my heart how much I appreciate the love and the feelings.
And, you know, over the last five or six years, this is going to sound stupid and pathetic, but I'm going to say it anyway.
There were times I really thought I was unloved, an orphan who was unloved, given the way they were treating me.
And it's nice to see that there are a lot more people that love you and that remember what you did.
You know, remember what you did.
Because some of the things I did in the past took a lot of sacrifice and a lot of...
I have a 9-11 illness and so I don't want I don't want like extra.
Right.
I just don't want to be treated disrespectfully, you know?
And they've treated me horribly.
Amen.
Horribly.
Imagine arresting me for no reason, taking my mugshot.
Today, the New York Times, of course, had to write that I was disbarred.
I was disbarred in a totally dishonest, illegal.
The people who disbarred me should be disbarred.
If there's one thing that i can get done professionally for the rest of my life and i'm only 34 but if there's one more thing mayor I'm not sure we're getting your bar license back.
Yeah, we're good.
But I don't want to be part of the New York bar.
I'll tell you that.
Well, the DC one.
But can you imagine?
Can you imagine the guy who comforted not just the city not just the nation but the entire world following September 11th was disbarred in that state by a bunch of crooks by a bunch of can you imagine a bunch of I wouldn't mind if I was disbarred by honorable people I was disbarred by a bunch of democratic crooks and shame on them and shame on a number of these lawyers that didn't speak up I mean, damn it.
Were they scared?
To not speak up, look, all right, let's not go.
Mayor, we should get off.
Yeah.
We're doing well.
I think that...
Mayor, I can't testify.
I would love to testify for you.
I'll do something else.
Right.
Oh, my gosh.
What would you like to do?
Would you like to come and shine my shoes?
Okay.
Actually, that's really...
We shouldn't go here because...
We should end on a positive note.
On a positive note, Mayor, you know everyone is just so relieved and happy to see you.
We're going to stay positive.
I really am.
I really am very happy.
And I really, I must say that Donald Trump has exceeded all of our...
our expectations by so much it's ridiculous to even count it.
And our country is moving in the right directions.
Are there a couple of headwinds kind of moving us one way or another?
And there are a couple of things you got.
Of course there are.
We're human.
But I mean, this is about as good as it's been.
And I really do think the momentum that we have is going to keep us going in the right direction.
Okay?
And again, I'm going to conclude now.
First, I really don't want to leave out my prayers.
Pray hard too.
I want you to pray for the people of Israel.
and the people of Ukraine, and the people of Iran, because they're in particular difficulties.
I think you should pay for the people of Russia.
They've needed it since the Tsar.
They certainly need it over with this dictator monster who is running them, China.
Oh, my goodness.
You know, it's never the people.
It really is not.
When dictators take over, the people are eliminated to nothing.
These are all good people at core, and you can reach them.
But you've got to be tough enough to stand up to the dictators.
You can't pussyfoot with them.
with them and you can't appease which is of course the famous word right and we are doing some of that Diplomacy is wonderful when people are on roughly equivalent moral grounds.
Diplomacy is terrible with a good guy and a bad guy because the bad guy lies all the time and the good guy wants to be honest and the bad guy basically takes the good guy's pants off.
Right.
So, well, we'll be back tomorrow night.
Hopefully by then I'll be able to fly in this.
We got to have an entrance you gotta have yeah we gotta have some sort of entrance while we have that yeah come flying in okay and i want to make one more point maybe i did at the uh at the inner circle the power of prayer works the power of prayer works oh yeah isn't that good because didn't they make fun of prayer yeah oh yeah remember my gosh and we felt your prayer she lets you know she's an atheistic communist didn't she But we felt your prayers this week.
I don't want to hear anything about prayers and thoughts.
What is wrong with these guys?
I got out of here.
I don't get it.
But I just wanted to make that point.
All your prayers were helpful.
And whoever we put in power so they can get all the money.
That's right.
Thank you, Rudy Redline, Lionhood, for letting us know that you are a vicious atheist that won't allow us to pray.
And, of course, your insensitivity is a legend since you were telling us not to pray for children who were killed, shot, frightened.
And terrorized.
Evil.
Pray.
Evil.
The word evil is used too much in politics.
This is an example where it's called for.
Whether she believes or not.
Right.
Exactly.
What lack of sensitivity do you have to say?
I don't want to hear any more about prayers and thoughts.
It doesn't get worse than this.
Kids are praying at a mass.
That's another reason we need the mayor for years to come here.
We need the mayor and his wisdom and his voice.
this platform because you see this other stuff and where have we come to as a country when the leading democrat party figures are literally mocking children for praying and mocking the power of prayer at a time when others are hurting.
Yeah, and they have no other answer.
And they don't have answers.
They haven't discovered anything else.
Nobody told them they have gun control in Minnesota.
Nobody told them that.
The only thing stopping a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.
What you're going to do is put crazy people back where they belong.
And you left-wing cooks, let them out.
Because you're all crazy.
And we need people like the mayor who are willing to stop when they see somebody else in danger.
I can't tell you how many times I've been asked these last few days, why did you guys stop?
Mayor, what was your answer?
Why didn't we stop?
What was your question back to them?
Why didn't you stop?
Why wouldn't you stop?
Why are you surprised by that?
That's your problem, not mine.
If we all stopped, it would end.
You know that?
Wow.
But mayor, you know, I hate doing this.
We're past 10 o'clock now.
We know we could keep going, but we should just take it easy, stretch this out.
I mean, taking it easy for us is over an hour of soccer time.
Don't bend.
Don't twist.
Okay.
Is that twisting?
This involves twisting the No, no, it's okay.
You got to have your hand down here.
I know.
He's overdoing it.
Yeah, you don't want to be stiff.
By the time I'm finished, I won't be able to move.
I'll be walking around.
You know what'll happen when I finish my rehabilitation?
I'll be walking around like this.
Yeah.
Well, you'll be, yeah.
Then you won't have to, but you'll be using it.
Biden, that's a good Biden impression.
Wait a second.
Biden wouldn't even stay up.
I'll fall down.
Well, how about we're supposed to take it easy?
It's 10, we're an hour and four minutes into soccer time.
So pray hard, everyone.
Thank you tonight.
Thank you.
At least for me, yes.
I think this was very good.
It was part of my therapy.
The key part being Trump giving me the Congressional Medal of Freedom made me all better.
It beat any medicine you could get.
Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Please remember who we told you to pray for.
But mostly, you know who's got the toughest job leading us through this?
It's the man who called me and talked to me and had the time to do that, but he's such a good man.
And he's beaten up so much ridiculously.
And at the same time, he's got the right approach to what's going on.
And the more time he gets to explain it, the more clearly we understand it.
And it always works out right for us.
So pray for the president that he continues to stick to his vision.
and not get swayed by the horrible people who are trying to knock him off his trajectory.
Okay?
Ted?
Oh, man.
You can't bend and twist.
I'd give you a hug back.
And thank you for this one.
That's a kiss from Andrew, Maria, Caroline, Stephen for coming all the way here.
And many others who really went out of their way.
And you find out in good times and bad when people really love you.
God bless you.
Bye.
It's 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 disrupagreements, 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 adheres in the human mind and it is part of the human soul.
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 is because we're able to reason.
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