This is Rudy Giuliani, and this is the Rudy Giuliani show on Lindel TV and on X.
And that's where you can get it.
You cannot get it by smoke signals or any other thing like that.
Get on Lindel TV.
You know why?
They tell the truth.
And with Donald Trump in office, they don't get put in jail for it.
So we want to keep going as long as we can in case those guys come back.
And we'll all be in the gulag.
Imagine if I covered some of the stories that I cover now about Biden.
Well, today was an interesting day at the White House.
I really think days like today are, I just, when I was in the White House working for President Reagan, and when I was in the White House being the president's lawyer and not snooping around, but you still couldn't miss when the head of state came in or among other things, he'd have to interrupt his time with his lawyers, if nothing else, right?
Just fascinating because Trump really gets things done.
The meetings in the president's office were always like ceremonial, but he has like real meetings.
Now he doesn't waste any time at all.
He has, this thing you're seeing on the screen right now, I do not believe existed at any other time in the presidency.
There's a whole new thing.
This is the president, the president has like a, it's not even a press conference.
It's like an open book exam, right?
It's like I'm sitting in my law office, I'm getting ready for a case, and I have my assistants come in and we start talk about the case and have it on television.
Or I have the opposing lawyer come in and we're having a closing, we're having a settlement conference, and I have the press come in.
Now, of course, it's a little different.
Those are confidential.
The things he talks about here are clearly not.
They're not classified.
But most presidents would consider them, I think, incorrectly confidential.
Now, what they do, what this does, which is a great, great thing President Trump is doing, and he did it the first time too, but in a different way.
He's the only president that really explains his rationale for a decision as he's making it.
Most presidents in the past, including my hero, Ronald Reagan, and some of the really very smart presidents that I can remember during my lifetime, I would have considered Kennedy very, very smart.
Johnson, not so.
Carter, believe it or not, although a graduate of the Naval Academy, no.
You see, like even Cheats who graduates from the Naval Academy can become governors.
Isn't that amazing?
I mean, New Jersey's got enough to live down, but to have to have a governor who actually cheated on her exams at West Point is really disgusting.
Clinton was a smart guy, really smart guy.
And Obama was a smart guy, but not as smart as they claimed.
The wife was smarter.
I mean, brighter, brighter, more intellectual, more intellectually inquisitive, that sort of thing.
And a little bit of Obama's intellectuality could be affected by the fact, believe it or not, he's one of the few presidents I ever met that wasn't very talkative.
And Clinton, Clinton, Reagan, and Trump share in common, you go into their office and they like you, the whole schedule is dead, dead, gone.
I mean, they're there until, because all three of them worked.
They're there until much later than they should be, or they have to come back after dinner, or they have to work at home.
And Kennedy used to have to take work at home with him.
But isn't that the key to why they were such good politicians?
They love people.
And it's real.
It's real.
I mean, you can say a lot of things about Clinton.
I probably have, haven't, but he does.
Maybe he loves people too much.
I don't know.
But he loves people.
He obviously is engaged with people.
And it is true they talk a lot about their ideas.
But each one of them would want to know about you.
I think it was their way of taking a poll.
It was their way of developing their sort of, I call it political radar.
So I borrowed that from Reagan.
And of course, Clinton was a contemporary.
He was doing the same thing I was doing.
But I would let very few opportunities pass where somebody was around without asking, you know, what do you, if, I mean, my predecessor, Koch, used to say, how am I doing?
It was like a, which I didn't consider terribly helpful because they either love you and say, you're doing great, or they tell you you're awful, terrible.
I used to say, I used to ask him, you know, what's, when you think about the city, what's the first on your mind now?
Or something like that.
And, or if there was an obvious issue going on, I'd ask him about that.
So today, we got to see the president do two big things.
First, I don't know if he did it first.
I think the meetings with Kazakhstan started first at a level right below him so that the details could be worked out.
So this is a, this is a, so therefore I'm probably, I probably am reporting them in the reverse order in which they happen.
But by the time later in the day, Kazakhstan signed on and is now part of the Abraham Accords.
This is a big, big, big, big step.
So we're out of the Middle East now, right?
We've got Kazakhstan now allying with the Arab countries that are part of the Abraham Accords and Israel.
Now, that's a big deal.
That's a very, very strong.
Now we're spanning continents, right?
Affirmation.
And Kazakhstan is a critical country and very respected country in that area of the world.
Please don't get angry, those other stands, but it's the big stand.
It's the one with all the oil, the one with all the gas, or it's the one that's been able to utilize all the oil and gas.
They probably have it there too.
Now, I am a little partial to Kazakhstan.
I had a law office there for a period of time, and I got sick there once, sicker than I almost ever was, and so are my entire staff.
And a few of them thought they were dying.
We think it was food poisoning.
But I still love it.
Had a street named after me, right downtown.
It happened to be the street the law firm was on.
As far as I can tell, last time I was there, I wasn't in the same town, but I was in the capital, and we tried to check.
I don't know if the street's still there.
So Kazakhstan joined the Abraham Accords, which means they have recognized Israel's right to exist.
This takes it right up into, you know, right, right.
Kazakhstan is a neighbor of two countries that you may know.
Kamala Harris would say, Russia is a big country, and China is a big country.
And Kazakhstan is a smaller country.
Oh, that's very good, Kamala.
That's good.
Yeah, that's right.
It is a small country.
What the hell does that mean?
That's the way she explained the whole Russian Ukraine.
Every time they'd asked her, the same thing she would say, Russia's a very, very big country.
Oh, really?
That's good.
That's good, Kama.
And Ukraine's a small country.
Okay, that's good, Kamala.
So what?
And that's, then she, then she showed you how sharp she was.
She'd reverse it and say, Ukraine is a very small country.
Russia is a big country.
So Kazakhstan does have a relationship with Israel.
And I mean, Kazakhstan was blessed with a leader who may very well have had a lot of problems that leaders in that part of the world have from the point of view of dictatorial whatever and whatever, whatever.
But he pretended to be a democratically elected leader.
They may have been.
I'm just trying to give you both sides of it.
But here's what he definitely was.
He was a Tito par ex os.
Now, you don't know what that means probably because you weren't alive probably then.
Tito was the head of Yugoslavia when Yugoslavia was one big country and they weren't killing each other.
Before the Orthodox Christians, the Roman Catholic Christians and the Muslims decided they'd all go into a three-way war with each other.
And then the, I don't remember who, I don't remember how it started.
I think it started with the two Christian countries against the Muslim country.
Then the Muslim country sided with the Orthodox country against the Roman Catholic country.
And the Roman Catholic country decided they would try to wipe out the Orthodox country so that the Muslim country didn't have an ally.
And then that's all the different Serbian wars that took place after Tito after they came out of the Soviet Union, after there was no longer a Soviet Union, after there was no longer a dictator, Tito, who and after he was gone, we all realized what the hell he was holding together.
And I didn't even mention Montenegro.
And I mean, those were war after war after war after war.
And he kept it together as a productive contributor to the Soviet Union.
However, I don't know that I describe him as a friend of the United States.
I would, actually.
I would describe him as when he could be, he would ally with the United States.
And he'd make sure he kept Russia happy, but not too much.
And he kept America happy, but not too much.
And China wasn't as big a factor then.
But China became a factor of the same thing.
And he was sort of a Trump in the sense that he was Yugoslavia first.
All the rest of you, I got to deal with for Yugoslavia.
Nazarbayev, very much like that.
Not as much tension because Russia had stopped at some point being a dictatorship of that kind.
And for a period of time, was not terribly dictatorial until Putin went into his attempt to recreate the Russian Empire.
But Nazarbayev developed even closer relationships with the United States, with Israel, with the West, to really grow his oil and gas business worldwide.
And as a result of that, ended up with more liberty of action with regard to both Russia and China.
I mean, they, of course, they're more powerful than Kazakhstan, but they don't want to mess around with the oil, the pipelines.
I mean, if Kazakhstan, you know, if Kazakhstan were to close down in some way, it would be a big hit both to Asia and to Europe.
And they've always maintained a good relationship with us.
Oh, we have a picture of me with, oh, yeah.
And I was in Kazakhstan, I don't know, six months ago.
Something like six months ago.
As I said, I have close relationships with a lot of people in Kazakhstan, having practiced, you know, having had a law firm there.
And we represented American oil companies there.
And do we have that picture?
President Qasim Joma Tokayev.
And President Tokayev is, I think he is, I think he's the second president after Nazarbayev.
I do think so.
Maybe there was somebody in between.
But I had a very, very good meeting with him, caught up on a lot of the things that, you know, I hadn't been there in five or six years.
And today the president did a three-way call with him and Netanyahu.
And of course, they made the signing of the accords official.
And they can have a signing, they can have a signing ceremony also.
And of course, the president is being a little cagey here.
And there may be some other countries coming.
Our anticipated accession to Abrahamico represents a natural and logical continuation of Kazakhstan's foreign policy course, grounded in dialogue, mutual respect, and regional stability.
And actually, it has a relationship with Israel already.
It recognizes Israel, has full diplomatic relationships, and has a trade relationship.
And it's actually going to bring them closer to some of the Arab countries that have signed on to the Arab Accords.
Now, see, yeah, the president, he's making he's making he's making the Abraham Accords now something somebody wants to join so they can make some money.
They're doing it as though they already have pretty full relationship with Israel, but this will give them, and I think what they're really hoping, knowing the Kazakhs, as I do, because they're very business-oriented, they're just sitting there thinking they got in cheap because once Saudi Arabia becomes a part, you're going to be really hard getting in there with all the money that'll be in that place.
And he was there with, now this is very interesting, and I think this was probably very, very good for Jomart because every region of the world needs kind of a leader, right?
And this pretty much cements his relationship as a leader because these other countries can go in a lot of different directions.
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan were also there.
This is extraordinary that he can get five presidents at the White House for half a day.
And no one of them is as rich as Kazakhstan or as sophisticated as Kazakhstan.
You put them all together, though.
First of all, it's a big chunk of real estate.
It's a lot of oil and gas.
And it's a lot of rare minerals.
Rare minerals, you know, like the ones we need to compete with China.
The ones where China had us over a barrel until we got a president instead of a jackass that was paid by China.
That's at the core.
You don't have to mention it.
That's the core of everyone.
And some of these other countries are going to be joining the Abraham Accords also.
And oh, and Steve Woodcoff indicated there is another country that's going to be added when the ceremony takes place.
Right.
And apparently there were several countries that were going to join before the whole Gaza thing broke out.
And even the Biden administration was hopeful they would get a few people to join.
It was all set up.
But then we had the war that never should have happened.
In just a second, we're going to have we got some clips here.
We just added.
We'll put those up.
Now, the big, I shouldn't say the big meeting.
I mean, this is extraordinarily extraordinarily important.
So Mohammed bin Salman, otherwise known as MBS, who's the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, but in effect, the leader, his dad, is very, very old.
I don't know if how much he functions because they keep that very quiet, but he runs the country.
It's changed it quite a bit.
And he's coming on.
Now they've announced the date of November 18th.
Pretty darn close to Thanksgiving.
Wonder if the president will invite him to his Thanksgiving feast.
Now, they are close, which really helped fix the whole situation in the Middle East.
Because the alliance that the president had put together in the southern part of the Middle East to counter Iran's hegemonic extension of the northern part of the Middle East was enormously important under Biden because there was no one under Biden that could do what Bibi and Trump did, which is to neuter Iran.
Iran is now like useless.
You're useless when an entire squadron of massive bombers and fighters fly over your country, destroy its most important asset, and you don't even fire a shot at them.
You've pretty much been neutered.
Didn't fire a shot.
And for that, we have to thank Netanyahu.
And we also have to look at those Americans who attacked Netanyahu as either complete stupid, ill-informed morons, anti-Semites, or Islamic terrorists.
Because there's nothing that Netanyahu didn't do that wasn't in the best interest of the United States.
And the idea that they're doing a genocide, I don't know where.
I mean, I don't know how they Israel works harder than any military force I've ever seen to avoid killing civilians.
They always have.
And with the emphasis put on it, they pay much more attention than we ever did when we were at war.
You look at the difference between Israel's attacks, which are centered at getting the Hamas, the Nazi, you know, the Nazis.
That's like saying, well, you're going to practice genocide in Germany by getting rid of the Nazis.
There's no attempt on the part of Israel to get rid of the Palestinian people.
My God, aren't there 2 million Palestinians in Israel?
Nobody kills them.
Right.
And I hear these people say this, even Republicans say this.
Oh, I'm very upset with the genocide in Israel.
What genocide?
Are you talking about eliminating Hamas?
Eliminating the Nazis.
Eliminating the people who came and killed unarmed civilians, tortured them, raped them, ripped their bodies apart, and took them hostage, or who are sworn from the day they're born to destroy the Jewish people and have not only swear to it, but periodically killed the Jewish people.
Well, that's called defense.
There's not a thing that suggests that Israel is attempting to eliminate the Palestinian people.
So I don't get this.
And they pay no attention to the Muslim attempts in various parts of the world to eliminate not only the Jewish people, but Christians.
What do you think is going on in Africa?
It's been going on for a very long time, but none of these fools care about that, nor do they care about what China does to Muslims and to Christians.
Well, so Ben Salman will be coming.
And you know, the whole effort here is to get them to get them to join the Abraham Accords.
Also being somewhere on the list is Azerbaijan, which developed a close relationship with when he settled the war, the forever war between Azerbaijan and Armenia.
Now, that was a Muslim-Christian war.
And when you talk about the Turkish genocide in Armenia, that was a Muslim attempt to eliminate all of the Christians in Armenia.
So Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan are next on the list.
It says, and I mean, that could change too.
I think he trolls around and he gets, I mean, he really gets around.
So let's see.
Let's see how this all works out in Ukraine.
The president, when he was meeting with Victor, first they spent a lot of time on American, Hungarian, and Hungarian Eastern or Hungarian European Union issues.
Hungary is part of the European Union.
Hungary is part of NATO, but it's one that the left, Victor Orban is a persona non-grata among the left wing in Europe.
You know, the left wing that recognizes Palestine, the left wing that hates the United States or hates the United States, people like us who love the United States.
They love the people in the United States who demonstrate against it and hate it.
And they pretty much hate their own countries.
And some of them are turning into Muslim countries like England.
And Victor is persona non-grata, because Victor from the very beginning has been: I'm sorry, Hungary is not open to everybody.
We have very strict immigration laws, and we're just not going to let you in because we think you want to come here to change our culture, change our religion, and change our way of life.
We're a Western Christian nation and we're going to stay that way.
And you're not going to come here and change us.
I mean, I've read history.
I understand the 1400-year effort of a good part of the Muslim religion to destroy Christianity.
I'm just not going to let you have a chance to do it.
A pretty logical position.
Of course, that's when the rest of Europe, all the geniuses in Europe, were destroying their countries.
And now you've got an England where, jokingly, I said to a guy who was English, who I was just walking with, gosh, I wonder if it's going to become an Islamic country.
He said, it is.
What do you mean, when is it?
You think the mayor of London is the only Islamic mayor?
They're all over the place and they pray in the streets and the number of members of the English church are going down to nothing.
What happens?
What happens to Charles, the King Charles, if there's no longer an Anglican church?
I mean, if the Church of England is down to him and his family.
Because I think all of them, all of them are either becoming Muslims or becoming Catholics.
The Roman Catholic faith has increased dramatically in England, and there are people who say it's larger now than the Anglican church.
And if that is true, we should have some kind of ceremony honoring St. Thomas Moore, who lost his head to Henry VIII because he wouldn't acknowledge the king as the head of the church.
You know, if you think about that, that was a heck of a brave, courageous thing.
And also very logical.
How could a king be the head of a church?
I mean, you get it.
Now, it isn't as bad as Muhammad.
I mean, what did he have?
He had like six wives, right?
Yeah, six.
I mean, Muhammad had multiples of six.
Don't know that Muhammad killed his wives.
He killed a lot of Jews, killed a lot of Christians, and he killed a lot of Arabs.
I don't know if he killed his wives, like Henry did.
But Henry didn't kill all his wives.
Some actually died of natural causes.
One died that he probably was unfortunately he loved, and she had given him a son.
Another, they just broke up.
He was very disappointed.
Cromwell had brought a picture of him or a painting done by a great artist.
I've forgotten which one of her before he married her.
I think she was also Anne of Cleves.
And he was dying to get married again.
He decided he wanted, I think he was brokenhearted over the last one that he lost.
Every once in a while, he actually loved them.
So he's going to marry Anne of Cleves.
But he never saw her.
He always liked to get a peek before, you know.
So he brought him a picture.
The picture was like, fabulous.
Oh, wow.
Wow.
Man, I'm going to marry her, boy.
She comes in and she's nowhere.
Historically, some people say this is exaggerated.
But historically, she was like, not like a plain Jane.
And from the very beginning, he was disappointed, from the very beginning.
And she had a great fondness for her neck.
So she brought it up to him.
She said, well, we can get divorced.
You know, I know you're fooling around with all the young girls.
It's all right, Henry.
You know, I understand.
Just don't take my head off.
He got her a great palace.
And she was part of the court.
And she was there when he died.
I think he had three more wives after her.
But I mean, you see, if you knew how to get along with Henry, you could keep your head.
Anne Boleyn, Anne Boleyn, Anne Boleyn just wouldn't deal with him.
And Catherine, his first wife, who he put aside and caused a divorce and the break with the church, Catherine, he was afraid to kill.
You know why?
Catherine's was the daughter of the king and queen of Spain, and her brother was the Holy Roman Emperor.
And he was working real hard to try to keep Spain and the Holy Roman Emperor, at least one of them, as a hedge against his real enemy, France.
And at that time, if all of them had been able to ever figure out how to get together, they probably could have crushed him.
So he had to be real careful with Catherine.
He couldn't, he could, he pushed it and created some, but their own bickering made it impossible for them all to get together.
So it looks like Victor is going to get to continue to buy oil from Russia.
He convinced Trump that he's landlocked, Hungary has no access to the sea, that over a period of some time, they had developed lines, you know, below the earth to deliver oil from Russia, and that this was critical to them and it would cost too much to make the change.
Now, I know those lines pretty darn well.
Not really like the experts do, but like a lawyer would who's been involved in litigation over all that stuff.
There's no question you could get other oil into Hungary.
So Victor, who I like also, is spreading a little bit of bullshit here.
Also, Ukraine and several other countries, maybe, maybe their neighbors, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, have sort of offered, because they're on that pipeline too, to transmit oil and gas and therefore cut out Russia.
And I'm sure that they would, they'd match Russia's, I know they'd match Russia's price and probably even do a little better.
So there's more to this than meets the eye.
And it's not that this, I mean, it's just critical.
This isn't going to make or break Russia.
It's not that much oil.
I think it's less than 11%.
What really would help is the president hasn't yet really done the secondary sanctions in full.
You could let Victor have his own little game there and it's not going to affect anything if you want to keep him as a friend on other things.
But just cut off a secondary, just really start enforcing those secondary sanctions.
And you'll squeeze him and squeeze them and squeeze them.
And also keep turning your back, as you have, and let Ukraine do what it did the other night when it hit the second biggest refinery in Russia.
They went into Russia, went into Russian territory.
They didn't have the Tomahawk missiles.
I don't know exactly which missiles or bombs they used, but it didn't matter because they didn't have to go 1,500 miles to do this.
And they found their second largest refinery.
And this will be an immediate 30% reduction in what Russia has available to sell.
So I don't know if you run a store and 30% of what you have isn't going to be ready to be sold for a bunch of months.
And a whole bunch of other things are missing.
And you already have big lines in three or four parts of Russia for oil.
And because the price of everything else has gone up, If he doesn't have an ulcer yet, he's getting one.
And this is the way to hit him.
Because lies don't mean anything to Putin.
Money does.
And position.
And how he comes out of this.
Now, at the same time, Russia is making a very, very big effort.
And I'm going to see if I can get you.
We're going to take a little break.
I'm going to show you the geography of this because this war, of course, has a lot to do about geography, as you know.
And Russia is mounting now another very, very, they were doing like they were doing like little offensives here and there.
And they were actually doing terror tactics.
They were hitting non-strategic targets, civilian targets in places they're never going to capture just to frighten the like spot bombing of Kyiv and bombing of Lvev.
Lvev is right on the border of Poland, dangerous as hell.
Dangerous as hell because they came really, really close to violating or to invoking Article 4 of the NATO Treaty, which says that if you attack a NATO country, they all come to the defense of the NATO country.
So when their drones came into Poland and they say it came into Poland accidentally, but there were 1,500 of them.
That's a lot of accidental drones going way into Poland.
Now, did that trigger NATO, the NATO treaty?
Well, they didn't shoot anything.
They didn't bomb anything.
But they did, they did cross their borders.
And not only did they cross the borders like a couple miles, they went into Poland.
I don't know exactly how far, but maybe about a third of the way into Poland.
Well, that would mean they could take an awful lot of, like the balloon that got the joyride around America for the part of the price of, I guess, part of the value that they got from bribing Biden.
Why that guy wasn't tried as a traitor?
You tell me.
You tell me.
I mean, in the fullness of history, we'll find out, I guess.
But I mean, he makes Benedict Arnold look like, well, he makes Benedict Arto look like what he is.
But at least Benedict Arnold got held accountable.
Begram is another one.
What the hell are we doing without Begram 400 miles from China, 400 miles from Russia, 500 miles from Iran?
And Biden walked out and left billions of dollars of arms there.
You know, Trump is trying to get that back.
Push hard enough, I think he would.
So we'll come back and we'll get this set up and we'll show it to you.
And then we've got a lot of other things to share with you as we go into the weekend.
This is going to be a very, very interesting weekend in terms of how these things move ahead.
And then, of course, I want to talk to you about the reaction to the election the other day, which everybody has very, very strong opinions about and really knows what happened and exactly what will happen.
I try to remind them there's only one person who knows the future.
And you get to talk to him, but he doesn't get to talk to us.
He doesn't talk to us unless you're Moses.
Right?
I mean, I pray to God and I talk to him.
So far, he hasn't talked back to me.
Eric Adams.
Go talk to Eric.
Maybe Eric knows.
We'll be right back.
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And this is now the second large agreement Where they used a favored nation process on which is which is used a lot in international trade, but I don't think it's ever been used before with drugs.
And basically, with the drugs that are specified, the company has to offer the drugs in the United States for the lowest price that it offers around the world.
And I think, Dr. Maria, you correct me where I'm wrong here and where you have to fill in.
But just to explain to people why drugs are so expensive in the United States, prescription drugs are so expensive in the United States.
These drugs have to be developed.
Research and development is enormously expensive.
And most of the world, the big markets in the world, are socialized medicine.
Right.
And they depend on us in the United States to pay for research and development.
Which the only way you can crack through that is with most favored nations by saying, okay, you're going to do that drug company?
You're going to give it to Ireland for $200 and cost us $2,000?
You got to give to us for $200 too.
But that will force the drug company to do.
They're not going to lose money.
Drug companies never lose money.
They're going to start working on those countries to have to lift that price, lift that price, lift that price.
And if there's enough of them, they won't get hit that hard.
Like they may be paying $200 now, but you get 130 of them to pay $350.
That's going to make up for our paying $350.
And you get them to start paying for the research and development that we were paying for.
So I think this is a very, very good process.
I know you have lots of concerns about it because the companies are shady.
But if you don't do business with them, if you don't do something with them, if you don't regulate them, then how you ever get the price of drugs down?
It's a little more complicated than what you were saying about why drug prices are so high in the United States.
It is true that we handle most of the RD research and development.
But but, but, but.
We are a capitalist nation in the pharmaceutical company is a multi-billion dollar agency, even carrying all the RD cost of the world.
They still, their profit margin on certain drugs, especially when they first come out, are 500 to 1,000 times of what would go retail.
So it's not all on the fact that other companies get these drugs a lot cheaper.
It's the profit margin and it's the nation we are.
Having said that, it is a good thing that this administration is looking at lowering drug costs.
For years, when I was a hospital CEO, I tried to work with the federal government to get drugs from Canada because they were so much cheaper.
And Canada has control, has government control on the price of medicine.
Yeah, it's so much cheaper.
You can negotiate with the government.
Yeah.
And as a matter of fact, I'm not a big fan of Bernie Sanders, but he helped to get diabetic drugs a lot cheaper because we went through Canada.
I don't like pharmaceutical companies for a number of reasons.
They market and target things.
They go now directly to the consumer.
And the consumer do not know how most consumers don't know how to look at research papers.
So you can manipulate any kind of statistics.
Yes, that goes directly to the consumer.
You're going to get help.
We overdrug our population.
When I did undergraduate work in Germany, I learned a great blend of Eastern and Western medicine.
They're on a third of the pills we are.
We have good legislation now that makes doctors in nurses, nursing homes re-evaluate drugs because most of the reason those people can't get out of bed in a nursing home is not because of age.
It's called polypharmacology.
Too many drugs are making them sick and unable to be fruitful citizens in society.
But I want to tell you a little something about Pfizer.
And this is why I hate Pfizer, although I'm glad they're doing, they're lowering drug costs, but I hate them.
They are one of the most unethical companies we have.
And they hold a record for the largest fine from the Department of Justice in 2009 for $2.3 billion for kickbacks causing false claims to the government and all kinds of other illegal activities.
This January, and this goes on for years.
Pfizer is probably one of the worst pharmaceutical companies for ethics in integrity.
It is the biggest.
But this January, 2025, they just got another $60 million fine for fraud.
So, and then look at what they did during the pandemic.
I cannot forgive them.
They held back crucial information to the public.
Then they want their information not released for 75 years.
Absolutely.
Some of it is still being hidden from the public, although we know a lot more now.
But to have that CEO of Pfizer defile the Oval Office, I could have puked.
But again, I'm glad drug prices won't go down.
Sometimes you have to deal, having had a different background than you.
Yes, I know you had to deal with scumbags and the mafia or murderers to get your target.
How do you think you get a?
I probably said this to more than 100 juries, but you think priests and rabbis and ministers are going to come in and testify against the mafia?
First of all, they're not going to know what's going on.
You got to deal with this guy.
Yes, and I get it.
But here's the thing.
I'm a purist, right?
I know.
So I'm going to go around to get to a story, if you give me one couple of minutes here.
Peter McCullough, Dr. Peter McCulloch, cardiologist who I respect immensely, had really, for the public, in layman's terms, let people know how bad the mRNA shot was and is.
I will be forever grateful to that man.
But now he's in a company.
They're all trying to make money because they were kind of thrown out of their practices.
And he's in wellness companies and he's advocating for patients to buy antibiotics.
And 99% of sore throats are viral.
An antibiotic treats bacterial infections.
So we over give our population antibiotics.
We already do.
We already have this problem.
We already have this problem.
In hospitals, we have to justify every antibiotic now because it's so bad because microorganisms, the bacteria, become smart.
They're called superbugs.
And they now are resistant to those antibiotics you kept prescribing.
As a result of that, we have lost some very valuable antibiotics that were very good.
Yes, very good.
I'm very impressed you understand that concept.
So now he's marketing directly the pro.
So there's parts of some doctors' practices I like, other parts I don't.
You give this kit to anybody they have a sore throat, they're going to go and take the antibiotic and it's probably viral.
Okay.
So now I'm coming around to the GLP drugs.
This is what Robert Kennedy hailed as great.
It's normally $1,200 for a month supply for weight loss.
Were they discussing all of that?
In the Oval Office.
From what I know, that was the main one.
Well, that was the main one.
The main one.
But there could have been others.
I'm just not aware of.
But the GLP got really excited.
You know, people who struggle with weight loss got really excited because GLP drugs cost a lot of money, anywhere from $1,200 to $1,500 a month.
They're saying it'll go down to like $430.
I thought even less.
Depending on which GLP drug.
Okay.
Sorry.
I don't mean to get so technical, but I'm a purist.
I can't.
So there's Ty Zepper.
There's semi-glutide.
There's different GLP medications.
And then they have, so then they have generic name, which is the drug component, like acetaminophen.
Semiglutide is the drug, but the company could be with the brand name Wagovi.
Oh, yeah, right.
So it gets a little confusing to some people.
These are the ones that are injected.
Yeah, but now it's coming out in drops.
They're coming out in tablets.
So there's a lot of research, but they were talking about the shot.
Here is the problem.
Okay.
GLP medications come with some risk.
Number one, they haven't been out that long.
Number two, we've seen abuses.
We've seen people who aren't overweight taking it because they're never skinny enough and suffer from malnutrition and all kinds of other problems.
Most likely, especially with the semi-glutide, you will get sick.
And when your body goes into starvation mode, because you can't eat because you're puking all the time, you're going to eat your muscle, which is really bad.
It won't go after fat first.
It will go after your muscle when you go into starvation mode.
The other risk besides malnutrition and muscle wasting is if you have any family history of any kind of medull tumors, you will be at higher risk of having those cancerous tumors.
So there is some risks, although I'm glad it's going down.
It is still by a physician or board-certified nurse practitioner.
So I would have to make out a prescription for you to take it.
But it's given out like candy now.
But what you're saying is it should be used for what it's intended for, obese individuals.
Obese or I don't know they have this term.
What's the difference between obese and morbidly?
Just more obese.
Morbidly obese was a horrible way to describe it.
Someone told me once I'm morbidly obese.
Not me.
He was morbidly obese.
And I said, how could a doctor ever tell you you're morbidly obese?
I've told many patients.
That means you're deadly obese.
Yeah.
That your fat can be killing you.
Because look at your own body, right?
So if you are at that, if you are at that weight, right, then it's worth you're saying it's worth taking the risk.
It may be.
You have to always look at risk and benefits of a medication.
But it's a good thing that we're looking at drugs and drug prices because it's crazy.
I really feel.
I think it is good.
I mean, it was all underground.
Yeah, it is really good.
But I always have to put the other side.
It was all behind a curtain that none of us understood.
And your explanation now was really brilliant.
And we thank you very much for it, Doctor.
It's going to be a great weekend, I hope, for everyone.
Maybe we'll have some peace somewhere, maybe in Ukraine, maybe in the Middle East.
And you go to X now, and we're going to pick up with the price of groceries and also, but what the heck is going to happen to my wonderful city and to our country now that we have gone ahead and elected a communist and a sympathizer with Islamic extremist terrorism.
Can you believe that?
Well, we're going to be talking about that in great detail and explain it to you and explain what we have to do about it.