America's Mayor Live (781): Ceasefire Deal Still in Place as Israel Warns Hamas of Violations
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Rudy Giuliani, and this is America's Mayor Live.
And we are live from Palm Beach, Florida, not terribly far from where that hunting uh stand was.
And uh on the earlier show, we spent a lot of time, we'll spend some time near the end talking about it, uh, which is uh how long was it there?
And if it was there a couple of months, why don't they...
Thank you.
Okay, that enough for that.
We're gonna go on what is probably it it this may be one of the most insane things I've ever seen happen in America.
Uh I'm talking about America now, not just New York.
It is the most insane thing that's ever happened in New York, and New York, after all, has been New York City has been a toy of the crooked Democrat Party for 170 years, with a few minor exceptions when a Republican or independent was elected like me or LaGuardia, or like Ed Koch, who was an independent Democrat, uh really independent Democrat.
I mean, he actually ran against Carmine DeSapia, who was the head of the Democratic crooked machine, uh, and took him out.
Uh, but there are very few of those.
So we have a candidate for mayor of uh New York, and it is close to insane that he's a candidate.
If it isn't insane, uh we shouldn't even be uh uh anywhere near this.
But over this weekend, well, starting on Friday, he went to visit a um uh uh an imam who was very famous, well known to me and well known to people in law enforcement for a very, very long time.
Uh the Imam runs a very large um mosque in uh in Brooklyn, and he uh he was uh Siraj Wa Wahaj, uh whose uh uh uh his original name, I think is Jeffrey Kearns, if I recall correctly.
Uh, but I guess Saraj Wahaj sounds really good when you're talking about murdering people, which he has for a long time.
He was a co-conspirator, uh, unnamed co-conspirator in the 1993 bombing that killed seven new new New Yorkers.
Uh he was um he was he he wrote and and preached uh very auditory things about that.
Uh he testified in the trial of the blind sheikh, who uh was responsible for numerous murders, was uh a wild and insane Islamic uh terrorist and was put in jail for 100 years and threatened to have the judge killed uh who presided over his case.
Well, they were they were good friends, and he testified for uh for for him.
Um Dami went to see him on Friday, and then for the whole weekend the press was chasing Mandami to ask Mandami if he, you know, what he thought of this guy, and basically Mandami, which we'll show you uh a little later, uh said that this guy was a really a great example of m Muslim leadership all throughout the world.
So if if you understand as any intelligent, well-educated uh person would, that the Muslim religion is virtually divided in half, as Muhammad is.
They they say the Mecca Muhammad and the Medina Muhammad.
And on one side you have the religion that George Bush described as a religion of peace, and on the other side, you have the religion of mass murder, uh both coming out of the mouth of Muhammad.
Uh this this imam is clearly uh part of that group that's the mass murder group, which he praises is part of um, has given speeches about uh basically applauded the 9-11 murders that did more damage to my city than any single group of people.
Remember, they weren't just people, they were Islamic terrorists who attacked New York.
New York wasn't attacked for some generic reason.
It was attacked because hundreds of years ago, uh, Muhammad uh told uh the Islamic people that as part of their religion, they were supposed to kill Jews, Christians, and people who oppose the Muslim religion.
Uh, that was interpreted by these people as meaning New York, uh, Washington, and they came and killed us.
That's the reason they did it.
Now you know the reason they did it.
So don't go off in some kind of euphemistic silly land and think, oh, gee, these were just bad people, or we encourage them to do it, or nobody encouraged them other than Muhammad.
And uh when they were seeing Allah Akbar and yelling it when they when they yell our Akbar when they're killing you, you didn't cause it.
Muhammad did.
Okay.
Allah Akbar.
Allah is the is Mohammed's version of God.
Um a God who loves to watch people killed if they don't agree with him.
Uh now Mandami has virtually declared, as a virtually, Montami has declared himself part of that version of Islam.
He's done it many times.
He did it inextricably this weekend, when he defended his seeing this guy, called him a great man, and said uh the um that he's being put he being put in this pro, he's being given this problem because of his religion.
Well, he's yeah, in a way he is, because his religion is a problem.
We're not supposed to have a religious test for office, right?
Well, we shouldn't have a religious test for office.
Real question is is it a religion when you have your people and you encourage them to eliminate all Jews and all Christians?
Is that a religion?
Is that what we define as a religion?
Or is that satanic?
Well, in any event, uh, we don't like blaming the sins of the of the of the father on the son, uh, unless the son assumes them.
Now, uh, Dr. Maria uh during her show, and you're gonna see it at nine when you when you leave us, uh, has done a really good analysis of this, and you're gonna go see it later, but I wanted to tell you a little about it right now, so we don't um so we don't get conf, we don't get uh we don't get confused.
I don't want you to be confused because uh there's an awful lot of confusion about just how dangerous and how satanic that version of Islam is.
So tell us about Mandami comes from a very rich family, millionaires.
He's had a very, very uh a privileged background, and his father is a professor uh at Columbia, which used to mean something.
Yes, the father Mahmood Man Dani is a radical Islamic professor.
He does not hide from who he is or what he believes.
That's why I don't want people to be fooled about his son, because he might have this great big pearly white smile, attractive young man, but you gotta look at what he says and really listen.
People generally tell you what they're gonna do.
But Mahmood, Daddy, uh, is on an advisory board in London, and it's guess what?
You got it anti-Jew.
He doesn't hide anything.
Let's face it, his son is an anti-Jew.
He does not think Israel should exist.
I don't think he thinks a Jewish people should exist.
And here is so Mahmood wrote a book, and I got it up on a little whiteboard here for you.
I know you can't really read that, so I'll read it here.
Okay.
So this is a quote from Mahmood.
Suicide bombing needs to be understood as a feature of modern violence rather than stigmatize as an act of barbarism.
Are you kidding me?
Like modern violence is okay, and it needs to be understood as that.
And we shouldn't condemn it as anything else.
So I just warned the people of New York are bright people.
They want to have a family.
They want safe streets.
They do want affordability.
That's all that Zoran can say to you.
But he really doesn't have plans that make any sense.
We are going through an Islamic takeover of the United States.
It's already happening in Europe.
52 Sharia courts in London alone.
They're illegal, but they're functioning.
And we've got to really be in London.
In London.
I mean, they have really have to be aware.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Who's a nutjob?
And we've got mosques going up everywhere.
Um, some uh radical Islamic group in Texas brought bought property where they can see where the military is going and everything.
It is a takeover.
And the mayor, I encourage people to watch my show because Mayor Giuliani gave us all a lesson in what's in the Quran.
You're probably like me, I've never read it.
Uh, and I do appreciate it.
I've heard the propaganda, they're a peaceful religion.
It is far from peaceful.
They don't believe you or I should exist, and they don't believe Israel should exist.
So New Yorkers gotta get out and vote.
You gotta get out and vote, or you're gonna get a very, very bad mayor, and the whole city is gonna go down the drinks because you know what?
The people who are funding everything through taxes are gonna leave.
And you're gonna end up with chaos on the streets.
He's are he already hates the NYPD.
All the other candidates said they're gonna increase officers.
He says he's not gonna decrease it, but through retirement, he's not gonna replace those officers.
Yeah, the head, the the head of the detectives association in New York City, there are about five or six thousand detectives in New York, uh part of the 14 um, I'm sorry, 30, 32,000 police department.
Uh he says it's gonna be the biggest massive walkout you've ever seen.
Now, the Pazia had some major walkouts.
I mean, they're down about 8,000 cops.
And they took a billion dollars out of the budget, never put back by Adams.
Adams forgets.
Yeah, he promised to put it back, he never did.
And the reason we're in this in this problem is that Matt Adams couldn't do anything he promised to do.
Uh, part partially because he's afraid.
You know, mayor, everybody, wherever you go, they want you to run for they yell all the time, please come back and be my mayor.
Uh I I am in a complete state of confusion as to what happened to my city and him getting nominated.
I do not understand how a city that was attacked by Islamic terrorists is going to uh elect an Islamic terrorist sympathizer, and that's the best you can say about him.
Yeah, that he's an Amar terrorist sympathizer, and I sure as hell would have that guy under such investigation make your head spin.
Because if that guy hasn't contributed to Hamas in a meaningful way and to terrorist groups in a meaningful way, I I'd be shocked.
And if he did, I'd have him in prison so fast it would make us a little asshake.
A lot of the people who are funding him and donating are outside of New York.
What does that say?
I would imagine he's got any number of illegal donations, given the kind of people that he attracts.
Um, but we'll see.
And uh I don't know for sure that he's under investigation.
I have to assume he is the the old man is under investigation, has been for years, and uh and the and the and the imam, the imam uh is a national security threat, officially.
So what what happened was the little sneaky bastard went to see him on on Friday, and he just put a thing out, he went he went to see Wash uh Jeffrey Kearns.
He went to see Jeffrey Kearns, uh, and um at the majid al-Taqwa, which is a very large um well, I know it really well.
I know it really well.
I mean, I can I can almost describe it to you in my head.
You're gonna wonder why do I know it so well?
Well, you go figure out why I know it so well.
I also know about eight of them in New Jersey really well, and I know a whole group of them in downtown Brooklyn really, because if you think after 1993, we didn't infiltrate them, you're out of your mind.
Oh, Bloomberg got Bloomberg got caught, but I did it uh for violating their religion.
Mike Hell, I'm violating their religion.
Their religious book says they want to kill me.
I mean, what am I what am I gonna do?
You want to write that you're gonna kill me, I'm gonna take it seriously until you cross it out, okay?
If you want to write in the Quran that you should kill all Jews, and I got the largest Jewish population in the world at that time, and I'm not gonna come and investigate you.
You got another thing coming, pal.
Uh religion.
I I'm sorry, I know religion.
I studied religion probably more deeply than anything else.
When you when you say you're gonna kill mass numbers of people, that ain't no religion.
No, it's the devil.
Now, are there let's let's let's be there good, decent people who are Muslims?
Absolutely.
Are there a lot of them?
Yes, but they need to stand out, right?
Right, Rudy.
They should be.
I always say And there are some.
Yes, they're right now protesting, electing this guy because they think he's gonna hurt them.
However, there's not enough of them.
Yeah, I always say it's best when it comes from within a group, like the Democrats, the party of slavery and KKK and murdering of babies.
They need to either walk away or stand up.
They, you know, they've got to.
Same with Muslims.
They gotta stand up against this radical Islamic, brutal organization.
You can't you can't, for example, do what the guy who wants to be mayor did on Friday, go to the Majid at Taqwa, and then put on X the following.
These are his words, not mine, put on X by him before the little sneaky bastard got caught.
Today at Majid at Taqwa, I had the pleasure of meeting with Imam Siraj Waja, one of the nation's foremost Muslim leaders.
I would tell you what side he's on of the Muslim divide, and a pillar of the Bed Stai community, like Kelly is for nearly half a century.
Mandami wrote on X of the Friday encounter.
I wonder, I wonder in Bedford Stuyvesant, which is largely a bad commute community, if uh if uh Imam Siraj Wahaj uh tells his Muslim congregants that the Islamic uh uh the Islamic movement has killed more blacks,
has taken more slaves than all of uh uh all of Europe and America combined, and for much longer that uh the the their um taking of slaves from Africa started oh gosh,
uh five 500 years before Europe and continued a hundred years more and was considerably more brutal, and also involved not just uh uh doing uh work uh but involved all kinds of perversions that I'm not even gonna describe,
and that if you want to talk about enemies of black people, how how we ended up with a black Muslim movement is only because they lied to them about the history of the Islamic religion.
If you were black, it's the last religion in the world you would think about.
After I mean, long long before any uh uh uh long before America was even anybody's mind, they were taking black slaves and killing them and they're doing it in Nigeria right now.
52,000 black Christians have been murdered by ISIS, an ISIS group here's the thing that's really amazing.
People know there's a lot of war in Africa, right?
But it's just war in Africa.
Must be those Africans murdering each other.
No, it isn't.
No, it is all that war is is Muhammad's.
Yeah.
All that is Islamic.
It's the Islamic people killing Christians.
Yeah.
Catholic and Protestant.
Yeah.
Poom.
Wiping them out.
Thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands.
That's all the uh the civil wars in Africa are pretty much over.
There are a couple here and there.
Mine.
You had when as Africa was developing and they broke away from colonialism, you had some civil wars, which were political.
War now is is it's all one reason because the Muslims cannot stand uh people being Christian as much as they can.
I mean they hate Christians as much as Jews.
Yeah, I think the the Jewish issue gets magnified a little more because of Palestine.
But it's small in numbers compared to the Christian issue.
Oh goodness me, look at what Hezbollah did to Lebanon, drove the Christian people out or murder them.
And I really find the combination with communism fascinating because uh uh communists are particularly the Chinese communists, even more than the Russian communists, are really against religion.
Um Russians had more of a religious tradition and background.
The Chinese religious tradition and background is considerably vaguer, it's a much vague religion, you know.
Um they how plus people people talk about the um the uh Ugh people the Ugh.
Wigger or Ugger, yeah, I don't know.
Correct the weaker people, yeah.
We're yeah, so they nobody even thinks what what are the Uyghurs?
They're Muslims, they're Muslims, they're being killed by the Chinese because they don't want Muslims.
Meanwhile, where they can, they're siding with them, like in Iran and sure, right?
But when they both get there, I mean they get rid of America, right?
And they both get there, my money's on the Chinese, a white mount.
Yeah, China's a white mount.
It won't be like it won't be like the crusades or the like wars and stuff like that.
China's just white mountain.
Goodbye, like they're doing with the Ugh people Uyghur people, or or um which they also use for body parts.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
They have a huge black market for for organs.
Yeah, you know the way they control rare earth and everything else, they control the organ market.
Yeah, yeah, except they take it from live people.
So they must have interesting uh he and his father must have interesting conversations.
Now we wouldn't bring this up if he doesn't say things that suggest he can put he agrees completely with his father.
Here's what he wrote about um be interesting to know if if Wahaj, I'm sorry, Jeffrey Curse and his father are friends.
Uh Jeffrey Kurtz uh was um uh he went to see him on Friday, and then he put an X the following today at Masjid Attaqwa, I had the pleasure of meeting with Iman Wahaj Siraj Wahaj, one of the nation's foremost Muslim leaders, and a pillar of the Bedstai community for nearly half a century, a beautiful Juma wrote.
That's the weekly prayer, the Juma.
Uh, do you know how they end the Juma weekly in Iran?
Oh dear.
Death to Israel, death to America, and death to America, yeah.
Yeah, that's right.
I bet in your Christian or church or uh Catholic church or Protestant church or Jewish uh uh synagogue.
I bet you don't end it by saying death to Islam.
No, we say God bless you.
We pray for them, yeah.
We forgive them.
Yeah, what we shouldn't do is let them use our churches like the Vatican is doing.
What the heck?
We gotta ask the Pope about that.
I just think I just think it's outrageous that we let a religion that is dedicated to wiping us out.
They're gonna probably bomb from within, God help us, unless unless they demonstrate on paper that they have separated themselves from it.
I'm I'm more than willing to accept a reformed Muslim religion.
I actually know, I'll see if I can get them to come on.
I mean, a lot of them are afraid, that's the problem.
I actually know some Imams who are.
Oh, yes, you had one on your podcast many years ago.
I've read a lot of this, but a lot of it is very hard to read.
It was explained to me by a Muslim.
What I'm telling you was explained to me by a Muslim who hates the radicals.
The radicals.
It was explained to me by a Muslim in detail.
In fact, I kind of took lessons from like you get real.
Like if you if you got the Quran, it would be you'd have to buy, you'd have to buy a reorganized Quran.
and I'll recommend a few that's done in chronological order.
The Koran is written, I think it's written by length of the book or the chapter, you know, like the book of Isaiah or the book of Proverbs.
They're basically, at least in the Old Testament, as far as we know, in chronological order.
They're in the order of the shortest one first and the longest one last.
Interesting.
So it really is like mixing the deck.
So you have the good Muhammad and the bad Muhammad.
The good, good, good, bad, bad, bad.
Good, good, good, bad, bad, bad.
So what you can't tell is how did he end up?
Because if he started off bad and ended up good, then he'd be a sign of a person who was redeemed.
Yeah.
He started off good and ended up bad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this Wahhaj guy heads.
You're gonna tell me this is a legit organization?
The Muslim Alliance in North America.
Um he was uh um prosecutors acknowledge that he's the unindicted co-conspirator of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, which killed which killed uh seven New Yorkers.
Um he has defended the potters of the attack, uh saying that the FBI and the CIA who prosecuted them were the real terrorists.
Oh my goodness.
Um he's uh during the uh during the um during the sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman uh trial, that's the blind sheik.
Uh he called him a respected scholar.
This is the guy who uh who put out a lifetime fat war on my friend and the former attorney general, uh Michael Mukesi.
Um and also killed, I can't remember, he wouldn't remember the number, lots of people.
Um according to a foreign intelligence assessment.
Uh, this comes out of uh a speech that he gave.
Uh I pray one day Allah will bless us to raise an army.
And I'm serious about this.
Let them hear your voice, let them hear it at night, let them hear it 24 hours until the whole city can't sleep.
We had made intention to raise an army of 10,000 men in New York City, Muslim men to go fight in the way of subhanashu wa tala, he said, which translates roughly to glory be to Allah.
Okay, yeah.
And he has been determined uh to pose a direct national security threat to New York City and the United States.
In other words, that's how uh gotta be that the they gotta keep a close watch on.
Yeah, um Dami all weekend they were chasing him around asking him, did you meet with this guy?
And finally they got him, and Mandami answered uh that this is being only done because of the fact of my faith, and because I'm on the precipice of winning this election.
Um think about that.
If his faith requires him to go see terrorists, what kind of faith is it?
That's the way he interprets his faith.
Isn't he telling us that he interprets it the way the let's say the the bad Muslims do, not the good ones?
Isn't he on the bad side?
He is on the bad side.
Yeah, I know he is, but I'm just trying to prove it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Also, um a number of the people involved in the attack, the nine uh the the attack of 1993, actually uh were well, I don't know what you call people who go to a mosque congregants or yeah, they were followers of his also.
That's why he's one of the unindicted co-conspirators.
Wow, yeah.
Yeah, Miranda Devine, who of course is one of the great New York columnists, right?
And one of the great patriots, writes 24 years after 9-11, New York City is on the brink of voting in it for voting in a Uganda-born Islamist mayor who campaigned last week with an unendicted co-conspirator in the first World Trade Center terrorist attack that killed six New Yorkers.
He didn't go meet just um not just any Muslim, but an unapologetic Islamo Marxist who appears to have been carefully constructed for electoral success in the same political laboratory as Barack Hussein Obama.
Very pressing point.
There's a picture of his meeting.
Mandami is so cocky that he boasted on social media about his Friday visit to radical Imam Saraj Wahaj at his Bedford Stuyvesant Mosque, despite Wahaja's links to terrorists.
Oh, by the way, and this openly homophobic rants.
Well, of course, all of them hate he has given anybody homosexual.
He has given speeches about how uh horrible homosexuality is.
I don't know if he has advocated violence against him.
I'm not sure.
I I have a recollection, but I don't want to say that.
Well, in their homeland, they throw him off of buildings.
I don't want to say that.
I mean, I'll look for the proof of it, but I have a I think he did.
And he is described by Mandami, this uh hater of gays and lover of Islamic terrorism, and murderer of six New Yorkers.
He's he is he is described as a pillar of the Bedford Stuyvesant community.
Yeah, crazy.
Whoa, whoa.
How are they walking by another picture of what we're gonna pull up here?
And now she also, like you, focused on his old man.
Mandami's leftist Columbia professor father Mahmood's reaction to 9-11 was to write a book blaming the U.S. for bringing the attack on a child.
Yeah, absolutely.
I can't stand him.
I can't.
Anyone who up to the murder that's why I gave the 10 million back to the Arab Princeton.
Yeah, because he blamed it on the U.S. and Israel.
Yeah, only you would have enough guts to do that.
Only you.
Well, he's I mean, I'm you have integrity.
That's why people want you as the mayor.
At that point, I was probably in such a state that I probably would have ruined my, I probably would have ruined my career by if he if I knew who he was when he gave it to us, probably punched him.
I would love to have knocked him out.
I used to be able to do that when I was a boxer, but I was young then.
I probably could have knocked him out.
Oh, you can still shit.
He remembers a little shit.
He was a little shit with all his robes on and all the little robes on this is because of American Israel.
Also, he's sticking to his vow to arrest.
Yes, I want to think BB Netanyahu.
Oh my god, do you know the Canadian prime minister today?
Because he said it in the past and he was interviewed and asked, do you stand by that if Bibi Netanyahu ever came to Canada, you would arrest him?
And the prime minister said yes.
I'm boycotting Canada right now.
I'm with you.
And I'm a neighbor of Canada.
Yeah.
President was really nice to him.
I know.
He's never coming here again.
I don't care what President Trump says.
I'm gonna be in front of the White House like this.
No, he's not coming in.
I have him picked up in a chair and thrown out on the street.
Yeah.
I'd say, well, if you think you can arrest Bibi, I can't arrest me.
For what?
But I'm throwing you out of the White House.
I want my car.
Sorry, your car's gonna come and get you.
I'd have a couple of big Secret Service guys pick them up and stick them on the street in Washington.
Good.
Goodbye.
Goodbye, you dumb idiot.
I mean, yeah.
How does Can I know Canada may belong to the International Court of Justice?
He may actually he may actually have the legal authority to do it.
That's that's why see Mondami also proves his complete ignorance because he had he has no legal authority to do it.
Now here's an interesting confrontation.
If BB does come, the New York City Police Department would not be allowed to follow his orders.
We don't belong to International Court of Justice.
Oh, yeah, we don't have that piece of paper is like a piece of paper.
It's like this.
It's like I gave it to the police and they go arrest it.
It's worth shit.
Yeah.
Worth nothing.
Bibi can come stay at my house in New Hampshire.
And I gotta believe the New York police department would love to embarrass them.
I mean, I for NYPD.
You love the NYPD.
I still do.
You've got to be able to do it.
I'm bleeding for them.
In the FDNY, too, you love as well.
In the world.
He refuses to say that Hamas should lay down its weapons.
Right.
No, he actually is for Hamas.
Did he ever protest Hamas stealing the food out of Palestinian's mouth?
No.
Not once.
She does say the following.
Mandami berated a curiously meet Cuomo for not visiting Mormas.
Cuomo flapped around defending himself as being a big fan of the Muslim community.
Mandami is dangerous, as shown by his unabashed embrace of his Lamas radical mentors and has barely contained disrespect for the NYPD, which he has called racist and anti-queer.
What about the imam?
I've never heard any cop say they should be beaten up.
Yeah.
What about the imam?
Every single police officer, every single American in New York City should get out and vote.
The problem with New Yorkers, and it pisses me off, they don't get out to vote.
They don't.
The numbers are so low, it's crazy.
And now their life is dependent upon it.
Their way of life.
Well, a group of survivors of the 1993 World Trade Center attack uh today held a press conference.
Oh, good.
Attacking him.
Oh, good.
And explaining, and also the executive director of the Port Authority at the time, Stan Brezhnev, who was a deputy mayor for Ed Koch.
Basically beside himself.
And he also uh points out how the hospitals were overwhelmed.
If I recall correctly, Stan was also head of the Health and Hospitals Corporation, I think.
But in any event, it's called the statement that he made, he's a Democrat and a very, very strong Democrat.
As I said, he was Kotch's deputy mayor.
And uh he's like in a state of he's in a state of shock.
He's in a state of shock.
Um his anti-gay, his homophobic comments that Sarah Saraj Wahaj, uh, he called on followers to intimidate the LGPT community and to uh uh invoke violent rhetoric, not actually murdering them, but invoke violent rhetoric to try to convert them.
Jeez, it will never be, no matter how much the American and Canadian government legislated in their law that is acceptable, it will never be acceptable by the Muslims, said Wahaj.
The prophet Muhammad said the one who does it and the one whom it is done to kill them both.
As you know, brothers and sisters, you know what the punishment if a man is found was another man, the prophet Muhammad said the one who does it, and the one whom it is done to kill them both.
That is from Mandami's friend, Imam uh Suraj Waj, wah baba.
Now he said people shouldn't kill gays.
He doesn't believe it, but they should intimidate them, they should scare them into changing go to them and invite them to Islam and make them feel uncomfortable, but don't beat them up.
Well, that's what they say out loud, but that's not what they do in private.
And in July, of course, he was uh Mandami, who criticizes criticizing Cuomo for being anti-gay or somebody for being anti-gay.
Well, he says the NYPD.
Oh, the NYPD is anti-gay.
But he was he was uh he was uh pick he took a nice picture, happy picture, smile, smile, smile with deputy prime minister Rebecca Kadaja of Uganda, where uh gay people where it's illegal to be gay the legislation uh there's legislation that it is a punishable by 10 years in prison.
So I don't know what the Democrats who are supposed to be a party that well, I mean they're they're in favor of transgender people and uh gay people and transgender people and whatever and this is they this is their candidate never mind.
Let's take a short break.
We'll be right back.
Thank you.
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Act fast.
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.
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.
This is Rudy Giuliani back with you again on America's Mayor Live.
And let me show you the poll that came out today.
Let me analyze it for you.
This is the poll between uh if you just ran Mandami and Cuomo and Curtis Leewood got out of the race.
Um is at about 20%.
And um if he gets out of the race, it becomes 4145.
Um so that leaves that leaves um right.
Let's do the let's do the arithmetic.
That's only 86% of the vote, Ted, right?
Yeah.
So that's just 86% of the vote.
Right?
Right.
So what does that mean?
That means 14% is undecided, right?
Right.
14% is undecided.
Right.
Yes.
Now I haven't gotten the internals of the poll, which I'll get tomorrow.
This is where I can analyze it much better for you.
I don't know what this amounts to, but this is a piece of good news for Cuomo.
78%, I believe, of the undecided, okay, are 50 or over.
78% of the undecided are 50 or over.
Okay.
Now what why does that matter?
Right.
That matters, and this is where I don't have the rest of the poll.
Right.
We got, and I think it must be the case in this poll because it's described, but I got but I have to see the actual numbers to tell you.
There's no question that Mondami runs much stronger among uh uh from uh with young people than older people.
Uh I would imagine, and this would work only if you look at that poll, and the 50 are over are actually for Cuomo, or or Sliwa, in other words, that the Cuomo number when you take Sliwa out is greater than the Madami number.
If that's the case, then the undecided ones, if this is like any other political situation, are gonna break the same way, yeah, or they're not gonna vote.
Um, but it when you have a margin of four percent, if the poll is correct, remember it's a poll, and it's not just they're unfair to Trump, they are that's all that's given.
They're also very often completely useless.
So I'd have to see the poll to tell you if you can make a decision based on it.
But I will.
I'm getting trying to get it.
The whole when I say see the poll, a poll, the actual poll is like this big, and in it are what you call uh the internals of the poll, and the internals will show you something like um uh the age groups.
So how do they break down?
And you can also tell, you can also tell a little bit by by that, how accurate they are, because if you have some strange distortion in it, like let's say you had the distortion that older people were for Mondami and young people for Cuomo, there's a for cockta poll, as they say in Yiddish, yeah.
Um so I can't tell you much about this poll, other than those are the numbers, and uh it's a poll put out by Gotham polling and the city AARP.
Now AARP is very liberal, very left-wing.
Uh I would imagine AARP is not particularly pro-Muslim Islamic whatever.
Um again, we don't want to spend too much time on it because we can't analyze it right now, except other than it gives you a little picture, yeah.
And I I do want to know that all these polls, who's behind the polling, and I only say that because yes, of course, yeah, and you know why for our audience, right?
You want to know who's a favorable poll by the Cuomo camp right now, it's in their interest to do what they can to show, and I'm not saying whether they're real or not, right?
But to show whatever information they can that they can win this thing if they get it down to a two-man race.
So Cuomo and his team, and this is how they should do it, right?
They're gonna tell and look for anything, any poll, anything that shows them within striking distance of Mamdani, and they need to use that to get in.
This is them speaking, not me, right?
They need to use that to convince Curtis Sleewa to get out of the race, and that everyone coalesces behind Cuomo.
Uh For Sliwa, right, he's got his own rights.
But but I think that's the key point to point out.
Would you agree with that, Mayor?
100%.
Right on target.
Yeah, and I want to make that.
And the other thing about polls is they just they they are you never know.
But you can't, I mean, I can tell you if it's a legitimate by looking at the internals of a poll.
Yeah, I've been in this thing long enough, and my life is dependent on it.
Right.
Um I can tell you if it's if it's a good measure of where people stand right now or not.
Right.
That doesn't mean they're gonna vote that way.
Yeah.
Uh we've learned that.
But I I'd also like to point out, and maybe and you check me on this, mayor.
They I believe one of these polls was at least partially funded or supported by the AARP.
And yes, I understand that.
But I don't know where they are.
Let's find out where they are politically.
Politically.
Well, ARP, they lean left, they're Democrat, the organization at the top.
But my point being they would have an interest, right?
I'm guessing without even knowing anything else.
They would have an issue rather than rather than Mondami.
Yes.
Mamdani is this young guy.
Yeah, yeah.
That doesn't, he doesn't probably doesn't know what ARP is, right?
He's a young guy.
He's not getting the older voters.
Cuomo's voting base is AARP members.
I mean, this is me just kind of, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm not accusing him of anything wrong.
I just think it's up to all of us to, it's important to take note of these factors.
Who's behind the polling?
Who does it mean?
And this is a this is an op-ed piece today, uh, jointly written by Bill Bradden, who was my first commissioner and also commissioner in Los Angeles and commissioner in New York again, uh, who basically says he would ruin the New York City police department.
Yeah.
About a quarter of those cases, uh, because he wants to take now.
This is the strangest thing I've ever heard a candidate for mayor ever want to do.
Right now, when the civilian complaint review board issues a recommendation for discipline of a police officer, of course, it eventually goes to the chief executive officer of New York, to the commander-in-chief of the New York City police department, the mayor.
Yeah.
He decides, not a group of appointees who turn out to be left of left, of left, of left, and even with Adams, uh, they turn out to be uh they turn out to be wacky anti-police jackasses who have no appreciation of the fact that every criminal makes a complaint against the police officer that has any brains, right?
Because he'll get sympathy from the from the uh uh wacky crooked democrats and pro-criminal uh massive number of democrats in New York.
Yeah, and um according to their statistics, the police commissioner uh accepts it, accepts it 75% of the time and rejects it 25% of the time.
Well, not my police commissioner, that's for sure.
But in any event, he doesn't want the he doesn't want to go to the mayor.
He's gonna be the mayor.
Why is he doing that?
So it stays that way.
Should like a decent mayor come along four years from now.
And the city council will never change it because they're left of left of this is the city council that voted for illegals to have the right to vote, even though the constitution of New York sets the parameters for voting and says they have to be a citizen to vote.
So you can't understand how crazy they are.
They're crazy like he is.
So he he he doesn't even want the power to reverse a disciplinary decision.
He is sure that they'll be unfair to the police, so he doesn't need to oversee them to make sure that they are, and then for he can change it.
And he wants to make sure that it doesn't get passed down to the next mayor who might turn out to be a fair person and not a uh terrorist, anti-police sympathizer.
Uh the head of the of the detectives union has said, I have no doubt that Mandami and his uh comrades will lead to the biggest exodus from the police department in history.
And we've had some big ones, with particularly with Debazia.
Wow.
We had them turn their back on him because they thought he was responsible for a murder of two police officers, because he declared the New York City police department was racist at a time in which there were racial outbreaks in Baltimore because of a police killing.
And he said, Oh, he wanted, you know, he wanted to make sure.
Yeah.
Well, we're racist too.
And a short while later, a guy came up from Baltimore and assassinated two New York City police officers.
Right.
Right.
uh and then the new city please turn their back on them So the one of the Muslim associations has by embracing Wahaj Zoran Mandami.
Zorron.
By embracing Wahaj, Zom Ramandami is sidelining moderate Muslims.
Right.
And normalizing an extremist ideology.
It tells the broader American public that those aspiring to lead this country have forgotten what extremist ideology once did to New York Skyline.
That is from Dahlia Ziada, a Muslim scholar and fellow of the Institute for the Study of Global Anti-Semitism and Policy.
And there are and there are a whole group of Muslims that agree with her and signed on with her.
Early voting.
So it's coming up.
Right?
Yeah.
Almost here.
Right.
Five days.
Almost here.
Hakeem Jeffries hasn't made a decision yet.
What?
He's from New York, by the way.
I think he's from Brooklyn, too.
Really?
I think.
I think he's from Brooklyn.
He was he was a meaningless uh legislat state legislature.
Right.
I think I don't think he ever passed anything or did anything.
Just like he is as a uh minority leader.
He's completely meaningless.
Right.
Oh, wait, you think he's from Michigan?
No, no, no, no, no.
He's from Brooklyn.
Yeah, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, like, I mean, it's really weird.
We got a Democratic candidate for mayor who comes from Brooklyn, and the minority leader, Democrat from Brooklyn, hasn't endorsed him yet.
That is interesting.
Which makes the endorsement.
What does that tell you?
Makes the endorsement ridiculous.
Oh.
He's gonna do it because he has to.
He hasn't yet, though.
Hasn't yet.
And of course, what he's afraid of isn't he's gonna, he's gonna have a uh defeat in the house at this car.
I bet his wealthy donors, and uh I don't blame him.
They don't want Mamdani.
So Schumer being the uh non-leader, you know, suck up to whoever Schumer kind of endorsed him, right?
Didn't he?
Oh, did he?
Okay, let me check.
I think so.
Be interesting to see they're all kinds of.
I don't even know.
I mean, if he's fallen into place, right?
If he did, he went like this.
I endorse one.
Right, exactly.
Is that how I'm oh no, I don't want the I never liked me in front of the microphone.
I've never looked at the.
Nowadays that's the same thing.
Someone's gotten very shy in front of the microphone.
That's the safest place in America now, between Chuck Schumer and a camera.
Well, um, they're move, they're moving, they're moving to dismiss uh James Cardinal Comey's uh lawyer because James Cardinal Colby's in trouble Fitzgerald is a witness in the case against him.
Isn't that something?
Now I don't know why I'm smiling.
I hired both of them.
Oh Fitzgerald, too?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think I think Fitzgerald was the last guy I hired.
Oh man, I wish I had left one day earlier.
Yeah, I mean that that guy is like what a zealot.
Wow.
And what and what he's doing, defending his friend who is uh a disgrace to the FBI is an abomination.
That guy uh come is an absolute disgrace to the Southern District of New York and the FBI.
Liar after liar after liar after liar.
This is the least of what he did uh in France.
Uh a um there was an attempt to kill a dissident.
Uh four men have been arrested.
It's a Russian dissident, Vladimir Oschenkin, uh, who has opposed uh uh Putin uh for being uh a president for life, a dictator.
Um they were all taken into custody on Monday.
The men are aged between 26 and 38, they haven't been identified.
There are thousands and thousands of Russians, apparently hidden in France and elsewhere that left after the Ukraine invasion, and um in March of 2024, not that we've ever heard about this, right?
Uh uh Leonid Volkov was attacked outside of his home in Vilnius, Lithuania.
Right.
He was also a uh what do they used to call them?
Refusnik, they used to call the the Jewish the Jewish people who wanted to leave.
That's interesting.
Yeah, I used to go to those rallies with uh Schumer and Gore for Soviet Jew.
Wow, wow, I'm the only one still in favor of the Jewish people.
Yeah, I'm the only one left.
See, you got only got me.
O'Shekit O'Shenkine, who was the guy they tried to kill, sought political asylum in France.
He's actually published videos of torture in the Russian penitentiary penitentiary system.
So you can see why you can see why um you can see why uh Putin wants him dead.
Uh uh, so I I want to spend a little did we take we take a uh break?
We did okay, good.
So that I have a few minutes because I want you to go over and see Dr. Maria in a little while on um on Wendell TV.
Um first of all, I gotta ask you you think Oton O'Tani is human?
No.
Oh, okay.
You think he's like he's the best.
He that that was the best performance we've seen.
I mean, he had three home runs and he what he have six scoreless innings, at least six scoreless innings.
I mean he struck out 10 batters.
You and President Trump had to talk about it today.
And he had three home runs.
That's ridiculous.
That's like Babe Ruth.
Babe Ruth was a great pitcher.
In fact, Babe Bruce had the record for the most scoreless innings in the world series in a row until Whitey Ford broke it.
I mean, he was he was an outstanding pitcher.
Uh many people believe that Babe Bruce, had he remained just a pitcher, would have been like one of the top three or four pitches in the history of baseball.
He ended up being the greatest hitter in the history of baseball, but right, and I think the Yankees made the right choice.
Yeah, and I think they'd make the right choice with this guy if they just stick him in as a battery gonna probably take you know a couple of years off his career doing this.
Yeah, but they're in it for the money, right?
Uh for sure, yeah.
Yes, quite literally, yes.
He had a 469-foot home run, a 427-foot home run.
The Brut has stood no chance.
He had three home runs, and there was a 5-1 win.
What did he have all the RBIs?
Pretty close to it, right?
You know, this is ridiculous.
O'Tani isn't just the most talented player on the planet, he's likely the most talented player in history.
He got to play a lot longer than this to be the most talented player in history.
You know, uh well, mayor, just to be fair, talented or accomplished.
Tell me what his batting average is.
That doesn't even compare.
I don't know.
Well, I'll bring it up though, but but you're saying oh, you're saying to be considered the most talented, you have to do a consistent.
This moron, this moron has made him the most talented player in baseball history.
Oh, you're saying it's you can't say that yet.
Well, one time you're gonna do it one time.
282.
I mean, on one on one day, Don Lawson was a better pitcher.
All time he's 282.
His batting average.
Yeah.
You wouldn't even get in the hall of fame on 282.
I mean, you uh 282 is like uh go look at Babe Rusley all the time batting average.
282.
What do you think is what do you think it is?
Well, 340, 33.
342.
There you go.
You're gonna question me about baseball.
You know the difference between 282 and 342.
And 342 is for 13, 14, 15 years.
That's his career.
This is for three or four years.
And legitimately his best three or four years.
He played in Japan.
He's basically middle, he's a middle-aged baseball player right now.
That's what he is.
And that's between 27 and 32 are the best years, usually for a baseball player.
How old is he?
That's what I'm getting right now.
He's at Otani's been in Major League Baseball one, two, eight years.
This is his eighth year in the majors.
So he must be about 27, right?
28.
Yeah.
28.
So he's coming right into his prime.
He's 31.
Okay.
Well, then he's he's a little beat.
Remember, he came from Japan.
So okay, so he's in the he's in.
If we define it classically, he's in the second half of his prime.
He's got another two to three prime years.
That doesn't mean that doesn't mean he won't be he won't do it for 38.
We're going by averages.
Babe Ruth had 8,399 at bats.
8,399.
That's a lot.
Yeah.
To have that kind of batting average.
Oh Otani's had career, remember, eight over 8,000.
Oh, 8,400 for uh Babe Ruth.
Otani is only at 3700.
So he's got a long ways to go.
And and he's betting average, or yeah.
Your batting average goes down as you get older.
And some he's he's not gonna catch Babe Ruth.
He ain't gonna have a 340 batting average.
I guarantee you of that.
So you tell me he's the best player in baseball.
Now he's not even close to the best pitcher in baseball.
He doesn't pitch enough to be the best pitcher in baseball.
But combining the two, has he had a no-hitter?
I don't think so.
But combining the two, combining the two, the fact that he pitched six four list innings, and then hit three home runs.
So what?
So yeah, I mean so what?
That makes you the best player in baseball.
Does it make you the most valuable player in baseball?
No, but I'd I'd rather have him as a pitcher or a hitter.
Oh, you're saying I think this is all this is ridiculous.
Did he think they just did it because they were up three games to none?
I don't know what no, I don't know what they did.
I think or was he part of their regular rotation?
They do it because it's a clown show now.
It's not baseball.
This guy should be a purist.
This guy should be a hitter or a pitch.
You don't like pitchers batting.
I think it's bad for him.
Uh oh, maybe he doesn't care because he's he's a multi-zillionaire.
But if if you tell me that an average, you tell me what the average career is, and I don't care what kind of condition this is.
You're taking you're taking time off his career by having him do both, particularly by pitching.
Pitching pitching is an exhausting thing to do.
That's why you're you rest for three or four.
Right.
Why does a pitcher not pitch every day?
If it's so a better bats every day, a pitcher can't pitch every day.
You're taking a lot more out of him by having him pitch.
His career as a hitter would be whatever the hell it's going to be, it would be 20% longer if he wasn't a pitcher, right?
So they're gonna regret this when he gets to be 35 or 36.
You think 100%.
I don't I mean, I don't even have to think about it.
You just keep using him as a pitcher, they're gonna regret it.
They're not gonna get they're not gonna have a guy hitting how many home runs did he hit this year.
Otani otani this year, 55.
Wow, okay.
That's the most he's had.
That's the most he's had, right?
If he had 54 last year, 44 the year before that, 34.
So this, you know, again, entering his eighth season.
He's already had 280 home runs, which is a good amount, right?
For that, yeah.
Now we're talking about we are we putting in his Japan numbers?
No, this is just American.
He's been eight years in America.
He's in playing, isn't that crazy?
Eight years, only two years with the Dodgers.
Remember, he was with the Angels for six years.
I forgot that.
And a lot of people don't.
I think of him now as a dodger and only a dodger.
It's kind of funny.
Yeah, he was great with the Angels.
Remember the Angels had Otani, Mike Trout, but then a couple of and they never won anything.
Did he pitch with the Angels?
Let's see if he pitched that day.
I don't remember his career with the Angels.
Remember, his stat sheet is so crazy because you got pitching and batting.
But all right, the Angels.
The number of home runs for eight years is very impressive.
The batting average is less than average, lower than average.
Yeah.
He pitched.
Yeah, he pitched, he started 10 games in his his first year.
And he went four and two.
Games started.
Yeah, he started 10 games.
And the next year he only started two.
And then the next three years, Mayor, he had a full.
I mean, he had a full pitching season, right?
He started 23, 28, and 2023 again.
Games.
And then when he got to LA, I guess in 2024, he didn't pitch at all.
And in 2025.
And what were his home run numbers then?
Back then.
So his home run numbers.
So let's say in the good pitching years.
So his first year, he went four and two, then he went nine and two.
His third year, and then 15 and 9.
So let's see in 2020.
15 and 9.
That's a full season.
15 and 9 in 2022, starting 28 games.
That same year he hit 34 home runs.
Okay.
And batting average.
And his batting average.
273.
So you were saying that doesn't make you the best.
So what does that make you?
What does that mean?
Well, you can do both.
You have a above average season, 15 and 9 is considered above average, right?
15 and 9 is above average.
Strong season.
But 272 is a below average batting average.
Right.
I mean, you do that long enough, you're gone.
What you I mean, no, no, you get back to 270.
Nowadays, you know, batting averages have gone down.
Yeah.
Batting averages have gone down.
Uh, what did he have?
How many home runs that year?
He had 34.
34 home runs and a 272 batting average.
If he weren't a pitcher, right?
Yeah.
Would make him right.
No, you'd make him a little better than average outfielder.
Yep.
30 the 34 home runs would be impressive.
Right.
I mean, 34 homes is a lot of home runs.
You're used to looking at his 50 or 55 or judges 50 or 60 or whatever.
Right.
But 34 home runs.
Anybody who can hit 34 home runs is going to have a place in baseball.
Yes.
If he can still hit 35 home runs at 36, right?
Then um then I'm uh if he if if he can stay 30 home runs or more in the 36 to 40 uh category, yeah, then I'm wrong.
Yeah.
But if I'm right, he can start, he's 31.
Yep.
He's gonna start to tail off in about three years.
Yeah, I would suspect that these numbers are gonna start to come down.
He did a lot of pitching.
Obviously, he did a lot of pitching for the Angels.
I don't even remember.
And um that had to take a lot out of him, right?
So this guy is unless he's abnormal, unless he's Superman.
Is he well?
Look, he's uh really good baseball player, bear.
And oh my god, he's a great baseball player.
I just don't like this.
He's the greatest baseball player.
What is that?
If he keeps a lifetime batting average in two seventies and two eighties, he's never gonna be the greatest baseball player ever.
What if he hits these 40 to 50 home runs every year for 10 more years?
And he's never seen and he's pitching.
Then he'll be the greatest.
Oh, I see.
You want to say overall he's made the biggest contribution.
Might be for 10 more years he can do it could be if he not even 10.
If he does it for five, six more years, okay, like 15 and nine records.
Yeah, but I get what you're saying.
Either if you just take one or the other, it's not the most dominant, but also if he does things like he did yesterday, not even quite as dramatic, but these clutch things.
This is real.
I mean, this is yeah, uh, this is really I mean, it's really important if he's vying for the greatest baseball player ever.
He's got to be better than Ty Cobb and Babe Bruce, and okay, and the pitching does count.
I mean, it's hard to evaluate.
Yeah, I mean, um he's not gonna be the best hitter.
You get what you're saying.
Well, any question, he will not be the best hitter ever.
There are just too many people in the 350s and 340s, and I mean Ted Williams is a better hitter than him, yeah, by far.
Yeah, I mean, Ted Williams almost hit 400.
Yeah, The last guy to hit 400.
Yeah.
So if we say who was the best hitter in baseball, he's he would be in the top, maybe he'll be in the top 10.
Yeah.
And that batting average will bring him down a little.
Right.
Right.
Mickey Mann batted 299.
He did.
Yeah.
He went below 300 in his last season.
I was gonna say that's and at that point, it's probably hard to get it back up.
And what happened to Demand was he played one or two seasons too long to get a few more home runs, which was a mistake.
Yeah, it killed his batting average.
Yeah.
Or hurt it, didn't kill it.
No, no, I mean 299 is right there, right?
Yeah, but you like it to be 300, right?
Yeah.
Uh hard to get it to go up.
But he was a great, he was a great uh power hitter.
Yeah.
You're right, though.
Can you imagine retiring at 299?
Yeah, you're not the 300 club, that's a thing, right?
Yeah, you want to be a 300 hitter if you if you're gonna if you want to be called the greatest baseball player ever.
And I I get your point about him being able to do both.
Well, so we're gonna be back tomorrow night.
And I uh I don't know.
I hope you like us.
You gotta let us know if you like us talking about sports.
I will not mention the New York football giants.
I will not.
And I'm gonna tell you.
I'm so sorry, Mayor.
My God, I never made this mistake with baseball.
I was watching it, and we had to go out to dinner.
So I went, I put it off.
I thought, oh, this game's over.
Put my my uh uh jacket on and went out to dinner.
And I was absolutely certain they had won.
I don't remember the calculation I made in my mind, but I think they did they just can't come back.
And and the defense looked so good, they shut him out for a while.
Yeah, all of a sudden, I come hold right and I saw it.
I was thinking you because we had talked, Mayor, both.
Having won three in a row.
We're starting to look like, you know, yeah, you're a tell and Philadelphia looks vulnerable.
Philadelphia looks vulnerable.
Yeah, uh the cowboys look vulnerable.
The commanders look awful good.
But it's it's the happiest I've seen you since the Yankee loss in terms of sports.
The happiest I've felt when we talked yesterday.
I was watching the Packers, your Giants were on.
No, they didn't.
And you were in a you were feeling really good.
You look good.
Yeah, yeah.
You were you're really excited about it.
But for once their defense looked like and so excited.
I turned the Giants game off.
Right, I stopped paying attention after we talked, and then I saw it at the end, and that's what I gotta tell you, it bodes very poorly for the coach.
It does a team that can fold like that, is it just can't be very well coached team.
That's a good point.
And you shouldn't fold like that.
That's you can lose, yeah, but to fold like that.
I mean, if you lose by three points, you almost haven't lost.
It's like luck.
Right?
Who gets the ball last or right?
Did a some of these interceptions and and fumbles are just pure luck.
Like the quarterback throws a great pass, but it chips off the guy's hand, and the other guy's just in the right, just in the right place.
Right.
There's a lot of luck to that.
How many times does the ball come off his hand and go on the ground?
Oh my gosh.
And don't we uh and then and then when you get into a close game, right?
Yeah, you got I always I've maintained this about football forever.
You've got to look at interceptions differently.
If I'm losing, and my quarterback is throwing a desperation pass, which is the only way I can win that game.
I don't I don't get as angry at him for an interception, okay, as I do in the first half when he didn't have to throw that ball.
I mean, you don't throw the ball in traffic unless they're you know, 30 seconds to go and you gotta complete his pass.
The game's over anyway, so put it in traffic, right?
Right, and hope your guy goes up against the other two and pulls it out.
That's a different interception, yeah.
Of course, an interception in the first half when you didn't have to throw it there, and you just didn't look, or you got scared, or yep, that's a good point.
Um yeah, you sometimes it's not even their fault at all.
So you uh I I sometimes would analyze quarterbacks that way.
I go look for the fourth quarter interceptions, and I think fourth quarter interceptions, which the quarterback gets blamed for more because they're fourth quarter interceptions, are more understandable than first and second quarter interceptions.
You're putting the ball in places where you have taught your quarterback not to put it unless he has to.
Right.
And I think what you're saying, and that's something now nowadays with the analytics and they they start to measure that more.
You know who you could make into a much better quarterback if you took him out.
You took your your hero in in Green Bay, Brad Favre.
You're damn right.
Brett Farr had a fair number of fourth quarter interceptions because he had the damn guts to put the ball every year.
Every year he that's how we ended our season.
He also won a hell of a lot of games that way.
Exactly.
We lived by him and died by him.
And I was okay with it.
It was fun to watch.
He was a great quarterback.
And he was fun to watch.
One of the toughest quarterbacks ever.
And a big supporter of the president, and I'm sure Mayor Giuliani.
He remains my favorite.
What are the uh Green Bay quarterbacks are smart like uh Aaron Rodgers?
I didn't like until COVID, and he came out and took our side on.
Like this guy's like a perfect specimen of health, and they want to take a shot.
And he's like, uh, no.
You go over to Lindell TV right now.
You're probably gonna get to see me again.
Uh probably probably repeat a little of what I said here, but a few other things that I didn't say here.
And you'll get Dr. Maria's analysis on the old man, which is excellent.
I mean, we got a little of here, but she goes into more detail.
So God bless you.
God bless the people who were at war that were trying to save and stop in Ukraine and in Israel, people of Iran, people of the United States, of course, and for our great president.
So with the with the great uh temple wall behind us, let's say look down in favor, dear God on your chosen people, right?
Who are being uh maliciously persecuted, right?
Look down on us Christians.
We're we're being killed like crazy in Africa by the Muslim extremists.
And God bless America.
Brian, please.
First of all, congratulations.
I don't take questions from ABC fake news after what you did with Stephanopoulos to the vice president of the United States.
I don't take questions from ABC fake news.
Brian, go ahead.
Yes, sir.
First of all, congratulations on achieving peace.
You're indeed the peacemaker.
Uh hard to believe, right?
Did you ever think I was gonna be called the peacemaker?
Actually, I did.
I saw some of the actors you were doing.
Go ahead.
But on the latter note, uh Alyssa Farah, she is one of the hosts on ABC's show, The View.
She said a while back, I'll quote if Trump gets the Israeli hostages out, I promise I will wear a MAGA hat for one day on this show and say thank you for doing it.
Your response.
Well, did she put the hat on?
Well, she hasn't got the hat yet.
Who is it?
Which one of them?
Alyssa Fara.
Oh, yeah.
Well, she used to work for him.
So she used to work here.
I'll tell you about Alyssa.
She worked here.
She gave me the most beautiful letter when you know the administration, the time came up, the election was rigged.
I left.
She gave me the most beautiful letter you've ever seen.
I was a great president.
What a great job.
Some of the letters have been quoted.
This is Alyssa, uh, who I never thought was very outstanding.
I figured she would not make it.
And she didn't have a big role here either.
And then we had uh January 6th, and she left she left after that or before that, but she gave me the most beautiful letters, and then even months after she left, and while we weren't here any longer, she sent another letter, blowing letter, beautiful letter.
And then she got hired by the view, and they gave her a couple of bucks, and she changed her view very quickly.
I never thought she'd make it.
Never thought she had what it took in any way.
You know what that means.
Uh but she's on the view.
But it just shows what a fraud the view is because this woman gave me letters and statements.
She said I was the greatest president in her lifetime.
Now she's not that old, so I didn't consider it a great compliment, but but I've had better.
Well, recently I've had the greatest president of them all.
I like that much better.
Because I said, does that include Washington and Lincoln?
Yes, sir, it does.
I said, I like that person.
So I think she's a total.
I think she's a joke.
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 disagreements, anger, hatred.
It was a book written in 1776 that guided much of the discipline of thinking that brought to us the discovery of our freedoms, of our God-given freedoms.
It was Thomas Payne's common sense, written in 1776, one of the first American best sellers, in which Thomas Payne 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.
We're able to talk.
We're able to analyze.
We are able to apply our God-given common sense.
So let's do it.
They talked about raping their enemies and driving them to suicide and lauded Republicans who believe who they believed support slavery.