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Nov. 26, 2025 - Rudy Giuliani
56:47
The Rudy Giuliani Show: Wednesday, November 26, 2025
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Good evening.
This is Rudy Giuliani, and this is the Rudy Giuliani show on Lindell TV.
It is, of course, the evening before Thanksgiving, probably one of, for many people, their favorite holiday, their warmest, most beautiful holiday.
Others might say Christmas, or they might say Easter, or they might say, if they're Jewish, the High Holy Days or Yom Kippur, whatever.
But this is among the very, very great holidays in America, and one in which we may forget a little what it's for sometimes because of the days off as a vacation and maybe the Black Friday shopping and the football games,
of course, both really, both high school, college, and then the professional games that have been a tradition on Thanksgiving Sunday.
All of that.
But not far from our memories, I don't think, no matter how far removed we get, is the wonderful celebration back in 1621.
Oh, gosh, about 60 miles from where I'm sitting right now, 70 miles, 80 miles, something like that, when the pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock.
And they had begun their journey months before.
They had lost a number of brave, brave people on board.
They came to a land totally unknown, totally unexpected.
There were no cell phone pictures that others could show them of it.
So we'll celebrate Thanksgiving toward the end of this show as we go into the next show, because we have something very tragic to report first, and that is the shooting in the nation's capital today.
It's about 2.20 this afternoon Eastern time.
It was at 7th and I Street.
Those of you who know Washington would know exactly where that is.
And we don't have all of the facts.
The shooter is shot and arrested and in critical condition, but expected to recover.
The two National Guardsmen from West Virginia, whose identities have still been, have been withheld to this point, and as they should, so that the families can be notified.
And I assume that they have been, but still that's all in due time.
And the National Guardsmen were both killed by this man who has been not yet identified or even particularly described.
Tell us the photo that you're showing us.
That looks like an ambulance where someone is being put in the ambulance.
That's the shooter being put in the ambulance.
Now, the two National Guardsmen were taken to George Washington Hospital, which is the hospital that I know really well.
You might remember, I've told you any number of times as a third-ranking official in the Justice Department when President Ronald Reagan was shot and almost killed.
And I recall vividly he was headed back to the White House, and the Secret Service agent saved his life by realizing there was a serious gunshot wound and took him right to George Washington Hospital.
George Washington Hospital is very, very close to that site.
But then one of the National Guardsmen was medevaced to a hospital a few miles north connected to George Washington, presumably because of more complex surgery that was going to be necessary for him.
I do not know where the shooter was taken, nor do I want to, nor do I want to report it, I guess, given how crazy this country has become, huh?
There you're watching, you're watching, I guess you're watching the medevac.
I thought he was actually taken to the hospital first, but it looks to me like he might have been taken to the special, the specialist hospital, the specialty hospital at first.
You know, things in an emergency are very, very confusing.
There was even a report today by the governor, I believe.
That's the corner, correct, Ted?
That's the corner right there where it happened.
And there's the metro stop that we're talking about.
That's I and 17th.
They describe it as two or three blocks from the White House, but you have to walk through a park.
It's really, it's very close to the White House.
If you're thinking as a New Yorker, two or three blocks, think more like four or five, because you have to walk through a park to get there.
But it is very close.
I'm pretty sure that from there you can get a partial view of the White House.
You certainly can see St. John's Church.
And you can see some of the lawn in front of the White House.
Exactly the details, who shot, how it all started, what the dispute was.
Was he being arrested?
We know none of that at this point, right?
And has that been revealed at all?
I mean, I stopped about 20 minutes ago.
Has there been a press conference or something to give us more details about it?
We are still awaiting further details.
Well, we'll get more as the show goes along going into the eight o'clock show on X and bring you up to date.
I suspect that we'll get more information pretty quickly.
This is the Farragut West Metro Station.
And a little bit later, we'll come back to this and I'll show you the map and I'll show you just where it was.
And those of you who know Washington, of course, so many people do because they visit Washington.
Some of the impression today, and this, of course, again, is perfectly understandable.
No conspiracy, no allegations of a conspiracy made here, other than having gone through many, many emergencies like this.
The facts are never recited correctly at the beginning.
There are always confusing things.
Someone reports, maybe the police officer, I'm sorry, the National Guardsman took a turn for the worst, and somebody prematurely reports that they're dead, and that goes out on the wire, and the governor hears it, and the governor says it.
But we checked before we went on, as of just a short while ago, the two police officers are both still alive.
Now, again, this could be not a correct report, but there have several times throughout the day been reports that one police officer, again, National Guardsman, I had 50 of these before September 11, where police officers died.
I can't tell you how many shootings.
They were, as I understand it, wearing vests.
I'm not familiar with the vests worn by the National Guard.
I am very familiar with the vests worn by the New York City police officers, what they cover, where they cover it, where they can be effective, and even where you'll get injuries anywhere from minor to rather severe if it's a certain kind of bullet, a certain kind of gun.
But I can't think of, at least in the case of New York City, where it didn't work to prevent death.
And when I used to think of the numbers that we had dead, and there were many, many more even before I was mayor, once the vest came out, the lives that were saved.
Same thing with the equipment for the fire department that I purchased for them.
We used to note, because there were some people in the city council that didn't want to spend the money, we used to, every time a firefighter was saved or a police officer was saved, we would note it so that they'd understand that this was quite a humanitarian and important investment for the country.
The Ukraine is in a state of flux, but doesn't that have to be the case in a very complex negotiation?
I mean, complex negotiations usually get solved when you think they're not going to be solved, when somebody just mixes the whole deck up and comes up with the formulas that work.
Now, many have been tried.
There was the original meeting in Alaska where Putin was extraordinarily disappointing in his unwillingness to really do anything.
Then I would say the 28-point program, if we should call it that, the 28-point proposal, has been widely criticized as being too pro-Russian.
But it does have the value of finally getting them to put down in writing everything they want.
So you have something to negotiate from.
It's impossible to negotiate when no one is articulating what they want.
If what they want is everything, and you can still put it down on paper and now start negotiating.
The only thing that I think raises any question at all is that the United States appears to have agreed with that.
And it was done in a meeting with Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner and it looks like Steve Witkoff, and this created a hullabaloo, I guess, was giving advice to the Russians on how to dress, how to schmooze, really, I would have to say that was it, right?
Donald Trump doesn't exist.
Now, this could have been a setup.
I mean, this could have been done on purpose.
I don't see why.
Is it really possible that big progress is being made in peace talks between Russia and Ukraine?
Don't believe it until you see it, but something good just may be happening.
God bless America.
That was Trump.
The one I'm looking for is the advice given by Steve Ukraine to Dmitriev, I believe it was, that he should make sure that he compliments Donald Trump at the beginning of the meeting, and it'll go better for Russia if he does so.
I don't know what that did within the White House in terms of changing negotiators or putting more responsibility.
I do know that immediately the Secretary of State was sent to Ukraine.
Now, all throughout this, as these people are playing around with 28 proposals and 19-point proposals, the Russians are murdering the hell out of Ukrainian civilians.
I haven't seen an attack on the Ukrainian army in a long, long time.
They claim to want, for example, the Donbass, they have many names for it, let's say Fort, the Donbass security, the Donbass security installations that Russia has been unable to penetrate in almost the four years of war.
And they want it just given to them.
But they're not doing much fighting there.
Polkorska, they have done some fighting for.
They got some of it.
Some of it was taken back by the Ukrainians, but that was like three or four weeks ago.
They did make a few gains there.
That would give them a little bit of it, a little bit of what they're looking for.
But then the Ukrainians knocked them back a little.
And now you get two different versions of where the Russians are, where they are not as in complete control.
Otherwise, they wouldn't be asking for it.
So they have not, not only have they not gotten it by the unjust war against humanity that they conducted, war in violation of their own word and treaty.
They've attempted to get it and lost probably more troops in attempting to get what they want to be given for nothing now than any place else.
Just Tuesday, which is just two days ago, Ukraine and Russia traded massive blows for two countries that are supposedly getting close to peace, and we're optimistic about it.
Moscow fired 460 drones and 22 missiles into Ukraine.
I believe all in civilian, totally civilian targets.
They killed seven people and wounded 21.
I believe in Kyiv.
That's the second major attack on Kyiv this month.
This is, I guess, Putin's Christmas present, right?
And then they also made a, they also made an attack with less casualties in Zaporizhka, which is the other side of, well, not quite the other side of Russia, but it's quite a ways from Kyiv.
All of it civilian, except for the fact that the assault on Kyiv had the effect of knocking out water, electricity, and heating services.
for the capital.
And I can tell you, having been in, I think my first trip, believe it or not, to Ukraine was the three or four days before Thanksgiving.
And I remember I was very concerned that I would not be back in time for my Thanksgiving celebration with my family because I was held up at the airport because I refused to meet with the murdering dictator of Ukraine.
I had been told by John McCain and others and by the CIA that he was suspected of chopping the head of a newspaper reporter off and was a Kuchma, his name was.
And John said to me, you don't want a picture with him.
He is a mass murderer.
Or maybe he didn't say mass murder.
He said he's a brutal murderer and there's every reason to believe he chopped this reporter's head off where he certainly wants everybody to think it so they'll be frightened of him.
And I asked, is there anybody I can deal with there, any, you know, really, I was giving a speech to all the former, I was giving a speech to all the former prime ministers and presidents except for Kuchma, who was in the hospital trying out, which would happen regularly.
He would get drunk, so drunk they had to take him out of the whatever they have, statehouse, and put him in a hospital and pump his stomach.
And he was a creature of Russia.
He was a Soviet and was extraordinarily loyal to Russia, even pre-Putin, and tried very, very hard to keep Ukraine away from the West, or at least he let Putin think that.
He also was related both by marriage and blood to some of the crookedest oligarchs in Russia, almost all of whom had very close relationships with the Democrat Party.
So I refused to see him.
They refused to continue my security.
When I got to the airport, they held me up with all kinds of questions about my passport.
And I just made it onto the plane.
And they had actually done that to Henry Kissinger a couple of years before, because Henry called and warned me before I went over.
That's what we're talking about there.
And that was the Russian directed government, crooked government of Ukraine.
You've got both.
We have stolen a lot of money, meaning America from Ukraine.
And Russia has stolen a lot of money from Ukraine.
And the Ukrainian oligarchs have stolen a lot of money from Ukraine.
And Zelensky sits on top of all that and knows the whole thing and isn't revealing it.
There are three candidates as a possible replacement for him.
The third one is the former president Poroshenko, who he knows and has airtight evidence of Poroshenko taking about $100 million in bribes.
This is the kind of money that could actually affect the starvation level in Ukraine.
These people are becoming extraordinarily wealthy and letting their people starve.
So I think we have every right to be sympathetic with the people of Ukraine, and we have every right to distrust the leadership.
They also destroyed an energy facility in the Black Sea port of Odessa, and they left six people injured there.
And they entered into, they went over the border into Moldova, which is a neutral country and is not a NATO country.
So Ukraine retaliated with the fourth largest drone attack.
They fired more than 249 across the border, and they killed three people in the city of Tangerong and eight injured, according to the Russians.
So the war is, wouldn't say hot and heavy, but it's certainly being prosecuted and pursued very, very strongly,
and nobody seems to be delaying at all because there are peace talks going on, which is always a bad sign, always a bad sign with the real desire, the real desire for peace.
So the 28-point proposal was rejected by Ukraine as you knew that it would.
It required, just briefly, it required Ukraine to reduce its army to 600,000.
It's a little unclear as to exactly how big the army is, 1,200, 1.2 million, 1 million.
But roughly, they were saying they have to cut the army in half.
Absurd, because all it tells you is Russia is trying to get a peace plan that sets up a much easier invasion next time.
Now, I mean, you got to be a stupid submoron to not figure that out.
They want the army cut in half.
They don't want them to join NATO.
They don't want any foreign troops in Russia.
They want them to give up a lot of the missiles.
The only ones that they're allowed to, the only missiles they'll be allowed to keep are the ones that you can throw, like, you know, like the kids throw those things.
No missiles with, they can go more than two miles.
It's not quite that bad, but it's something like that.
And they want Donbass given back and the area of Donbass that has the substantial fortifications that makes it difficult for Russia to invade Ukraine.
And that has cost Russia more lives than anything has cost Russian lives since the Germans, since they fought the Germans.
I mean, a lot more than anything they lost in, a lot more than anything they lost in Afghanistan.
So now it is rumored, and I say rumored, that we have come back and agreed with the Ukrainians on a 19-point proposal.
And the proposal will make the following alterations that I know of.
There might be others, pro-Ukraine or pro- or pro-Russian, but at least there's some balance to this.
You can't tell how balanced it is until you see the whole thing.
But these are all positive things that start to make an agreement look possible.
The army reduction would be to 750.
I'm sorry, 800.
Well, actually, both numbers have been given out.
The more frequent number is 800,000, which would be a reduction of either 200 or 400,000.
That's a big reduction.
But there is a caveat: if Russia invades or Russia threatens to invade, they are allowed then to protect themselves and raise an additional army of reserves that could get to as much as two million.
Actually, that has been able to get to as much as 2 million.
I can't say they'll be limited at 2 million.
The original provision was they couldn't join NATO.
They will now have the way it was put with some ability to join NATO.
We'll have to see how it's written out to understand what that means.
But if they can join NATO, it solves a great deal of the security problems.
They would keep Donbas and the other land, that's the land that Russia seeks that it hadn't captured, will be negotiated.
But they'll keep Donbas.
We don't know the other, those are only one, two, three, four, five provisions out of 19.
We don't know the others.
So it's hard to really evaluate it.
But this is something closer to what they can agree to.
And the indications are that whatever else is in this agreement, Ukraine could conceivably agree to this.
So that I think that justifies some of the president's optimism.
Do we have a clip?
Do we have a clip of the president talking about this?
We have Marco Rubio.
Let's play that.
The report today is that I think today was worthwhile.
It was very, very, it is probably the most productive day we have had on this issue, maybe in the entirety of our engagement, but certainly in a very long time.
But work remains, and because this continues to be a working process, you know, I don't want to declare victory or finality here.
There's still some work to be done.
But we are much further ahead today at this time than we were when we began this morning and where we were a week ago for certain.
So the reality is that Russia is going to have to concede rather substantial parts of its desire to make Ukraine neutralized,
demilitarized, unable to defend itself, and to make a Russian future attack, which is almost inevitable, just much easier to achieve than this one turned out to be.
So the question is, they had the 28 points.
How flexible are they on the key one?
The negotiators for us were Witkov and Jared Kushner.
The negotiator for them was Kirill Dmitriev, who is very friendly with many Americans, and he also is one of the richest men in Russia, but no one is richer than Putin in Russia.
he's the richest man in russia um and um when that first plan was presented to um when that first plan was presented to um the ukrainians
Zelensky Zelensky apparently was very upset, not quite as open about it as he was the first time that he met with Trump, but fairly open about it.
That's right.
And so we have some comments from President Trump.
This is from Air Force One yesterday.
Yes.
The latest one with Russia and Ukraine, we're having Zelensky to come visit you.
We're having good, I don't know, he would like to come, but I think we should get a deal done first.
We're having good talks.
We started with Russia.
We're having some talks with Russia.
Ukraine is doing well.
I think they're pretty happy about it.
They'd like to see it end.
And we won't know for a little while, but we're making progress.
The disputed call that caused all of the angst was a call between Steve Witkov and Yuri Yushakov, the top foreign policy aide to Vladimir Putin.
It was on October 14th.
During the five-minute call, Witkov advised Yushikov to instruct Putin to congratulate Trump and open the conversation with some complimentary remarks, which Putin agreeably did.
And the idea was that you get better, you put the president in a better mood to help, well, apparently to help Russia get what it wanted, which the White House hasn't commented on.
That's the allegation that's made.
I don't know if that's on tape or that's just a leak.
Do you, Ted?
No.
We do not have it on tape.
There was a leak.
Well, as soon as that came out, a couple of other pictures were brought in from out of the bullpen.
I don't know that you could call Marco Rubio out of the bullpen.
He comes out of the dugout, really.
And he was sent over there right away to try to put it back on track with the Ukrainians because the first agreement combined with that call got the Ukrainians very, very nervous.
And also Dan Driscoll, who was the secretary of the army and a close friend of JD Vance, has now taken up a very, very big role in negotiating with the Russians.
And Driscoll is considered to be the biggest expert on drones that we have and in getting ourselves caught up with Russia and with Ukraine on drones, where they in this war have kind of gotten a real edge on us.
Driscoll also met with Zelensky last week.
So we don't know exactly what his role is, but he's playing a role in trying to bring them closer together.
And apparently, he is very much, he's a very close friend of JD Vance, but he's also very much trusted by President Trump and his family.
So at least a new player has been added to it, which is not a bad idea when things aren't getting anywhere.
You got to keep trying.
The discussion in Ukraine, as you might expect, is very, very difficult because with the 28-point plan, they were given a very difficult choice whether to really, I mean, the plan would give away their sovereignty big time.
It would be a humiliating destruction of anything meaningful about Ukraine other than it was a patchy of Russia would determine how many troops they have.
Russia would determine whether they could join military alliances.
Russia would determine if they could have outside troops in the country.
Russia would really be running them.
And of course, this is a thousand-year humiliation and dispute humiliation in which they've given up a lot of lives as a result of Russian savage behavior against them, including Stalin's attempt to perform a genocide against them.
But because the war seems to be going so poorly in one respect, and because the West seems to be tired of giving them weapons, which they need very badly, some Ukrainians feel that we might as well just cave in and take what we can get and live to fight another day.
But the majority, or at least the plurality of Ukrainians, based on the polling that was done, would appear to say: if we can't get an agreement with honor, if we can't get an agreement that retains our sovereignty, then we'd rather fight on because we're going to be fighting them again in five years anyway.
The overwhelming view among the Ukrainian public that was aware of this and able to analyze it was that whether it was intended to be or not, it basically had Russia achieve everything it wanted through war other than complete control right now of Ukraine.
But that it led the way to the inevitable complete control of Ukraine within five years, including a takeover by the Russian Orthodox Church over their church.
And again, a return to forcing the Ukrainians to speak the Russian language.
And in fact, many ethnic Ukrainians didn't know Ukrainian because under the wonderful leadership of Russia, you know, Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev, then the whole group of other communist killers and murderers, and then the professional murderer of Putin, there's been one attempt after another to wipe out the Ukrainian nationality,
much the same way as the Nazis tried to wipe out the nationalities of the Eastern European countries as well as the Jewish people.
So we'll have to see if it can be put back on track.
I mean, it seemed with the 28-point plan and Woodkov's giving advice to the Russians on how to negotiate, things were pretty much off track.
But the president is very, very resourceful.
And he looks like he put it right back, he put it right back on track.
So maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe Rubio, as the New York Post says, maybe Rubio can save it.
And I will say the Post gave Steve credit for getting Putin, even if it was a one-sided agreement, at least to put his negotiations down, put him down.
Now, maybe the price of that was our agreeing to, and then let Ukraine disagree with him.
Maybe that was.
And if that was the case, then Steve shouldn't be criticized quite the way he is.
But maybe after it's over, that can be explained because when you're in the middle of something like this, you can't start giving away the good guy-bad guy strategy, or it's not going to work in the future.
So The positions are changing every day a little bit.
The reason that there's hope that there is a deal is that Ukraine is willing to is willing to accept some of the demands because they just don't want war anymore.
And if the Russian people had a part of this, they'd feel the same.
But Khrushchev makes sure his people do not know about this.
And if they ever had any idea of the proportionate loss of life in a war that Putin claims he won, he certainly didn't win it if you start counting up the number of dead Russians and the number of dead Ukrainians, even when you consider the civilians that he killed.
I mean, they did one heck of a job of wiping him, wiping him around.
And after the first couple of months of the war, he's made like two inches of progress.
Even now, again, the critical thing here is the Donbass fortifications.
And there are four or five major gaps between the two, but this might be the biggest one.
One says it's handed over to Russia.
The other says Ukraine keeps it.
Now, Ukraine wants to deny them any additional territory.
But it seems to me that the real focus is the Donbass fortifications, because I'm not sure the others.
Now, I'm saying I'm not sure that the others are as critical.
There may be valuable mineral rights there that have become much more valuable now, given the condition of the world, the competition with China, and the agreement that Ukraine made with the United States.
Now, Ukraine will be allowed to add recruits according to the, if they would need it.
If for some reason we wake up tomorrow morning or the morning after and we find out that Zielinski was part of the kickback of the how much money is involved, 100 million kickback scheme with the energy company.
God, it's like it's deja vu all over again from the day I first got involved in, gosh, I guess it was about November of 2018.
But it's gotten very, very close to Zelensky, his partner in his silly production company.
But a silly production company is worth multiple millions of dollars.
His partner is one of the people now who's a fugitive and has run away.
His partner was soliciting kickbacks.
Now, his partner was out of the government.
What would he be getting kickbacks for?
It's like Hunter.
Why was Hunter getting money?
He couldn't do anything for Ukraine.
He couldn't do anything for Russia.
He couldn't do anything.
And then Biden went ahead and after getting all that money from China, gave up the air base 400 miles from China, made all kinds of changes in the entry of Chinese into the United States, virtually let him in without, I mean, without any vetting.
The vetting was four questions, if any, four.
Who would succeed Zelensky?
Now, Zelensky is, as the president used to point out when he was more sort of in a contentious relationship with Zelensky.
Zielensky is in overtime, right?
He's in banana republic time, where you had your two terms and now you want to be there like Juan Perrone.
I don't think there'll ever be a musical about him, but in any event.
Now, it is true that the law, the law of Ukraine, puts off an election so long as a war is going on or there's a national emergency or crisis.
I've read the law, but I don't know the background of it.
I don't know who put it there.
When was it put there?
Did Zelensky put it there so he could be there longer?
Did Zelensky's people put it there?
Was that put there by Poroshenko's people?
I mean, since Victor Yushchenko, back in, oh boy, 2005, 06, 07, they haven't had an honest man running that country.
One bigger crook after one pro, one pro on the Clintons, you know what?
So there is a very, very close connection of ongoing Democrat corruption.
One Ukrainian referred to Ukraine as a cash cow for Obama's Democrat Party.
Who would take over for him?
The Speaker of the Parliament, Rusyan Stefanchuk, would take over.
Much like if the president dies or is incapacitated and the vice president is a speaker, they apparently don't have a vice president at this point.
So the speaker of the legislature, who is pretty much a pro-Zelensky guy, would take over.
Now, if it goes to an election, he's being wiped out.
There are at least two candidates way ahead of him.
One is the war hero and general who has what's described as sky-high popularity, Krylo Budnov, who was the general at the beginning of the war, who fought them off.
Actually, he's the general that stopped them in their advance through the Vitaly Klitschko, who is and has been for some time now, all during its terrible period, the mayor of Kyiv, and you might remember the world heavyweight champion.
And please, when I say that, remember he's also a very well-educated man.
He's a PhD and a very popular.
He is particularly popular in Kyiv, where his approval rating is sky high, considerably more popular in Kyiv than the president.
And I think particularly popular throughout the country compared to the president, who is Zelensky is not very popular.
And I don't think this corruption scandal is helping very much because there's always been a distrust of him because he was given to them by a very, very crooked oligarch named Karlomoisky, who was the biggest money launderer.
So that's where we are.
If we wake up one morning and Zielinski is not around anymore, the head of the legislature will become the interim president.
And then there'll be an election and the major candidates, the major candidates would be actually Valerli Zaluvny, who is ahead right now, 65-35.
He's the Iron General.
And his approval rating is about 80%.
He was sacked by Zelensky in February of 2024.
He's now the ambassador to the UK.
Vitaly Klitschko has a 70% approval rating.
And he's been very vocal on Unity and has clashed mildly with Zelensky, positioning him as a pragmatic alternative.
Trump allies have name-dropped him as tough enough for handling this.
And then here is the insane choice.
Petro Poroshenko, the former president who was thrown out in a 70-30 election by Zelensky, because he is well known all throughout Ukraine as the most crooked president in the history who was stealing everything that didn't move and who Zelensky is now protecting.
Well, I think we are.
No, no, we have a little more time.
Do we take our break?
Let's take a break.
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Well, this has been two days of cases dismissed.
Now, they're very, very different cases, types of cases.
The cases that were dismissed yesterday against probably one of the biggest liars that ever worked for the federal government, James Cardinal Comey, who also found spiritually some devil, some satanic figure, came down on the beach and wrote that in front of him.
And he was able to get it.
86 is commonly used among cults as a way of describing kill.
And 47, of course, is the 47th president.
He thought it was real funny that he found this.
We find it really strange that he found it.
We think that James Cardinal Comey put it there, but he couldn't do that.
Somebody did it for him.
But that's not the worst of it.
The worst of it, to me, the worst of it, but two things.
First, signing the Pfizer warrants four times, knowing that the chief provider of information was a complete and absolute liar.
And by the time he signed it the last two times, he knows that he was paid.
He was paid to lie by Hillary Clinton in a money laundered transaction through the Perkins Coe law firm, where she described it as legal fees.
And it wasn't legal fees at all.
It was fees to produce a completely false report in which false crimes were alleged against Trump, for which he was investigated and cleared three times by the bureau, his bureau.
Yet he continued to maintain them.
He continued to sign that this man was truthful, even though the FBI fired him for lying.
Now, why he isn't prosecuted is held accountable is a tragedy.
Now, now, with this Democrat judge who threw the case out against him, because he says that U.S. Attorney Halligan was improperly appointed.
It will be impossible to recharge him on that because it's barred by the statute of limitations.
And if the government allegedly screws up, it doesn't get the benefit of tolling or extending the statute.
The second case involving U.S. Attorney Halligan, who you see there, was the one with Letitia James.
Now, that one can be brought again.
It is not barred by the statute of limitations.
It's a very strong, very, very strong case since she listed a primary residence in Virginia.
Yet she was Attorney General of New York, and that was her, what you see there was her primary residence, also listed as her primary residence.
She was able to obtain a much lower rate of interest and allowed to borrow more money, saving her, cheating the bank out of somewhere between 15 and 20 grand initially.
That's called, Letitia, a fraud.
What you charged against Trump when no one lost money is not a fraud.
A fraud has always had, as one of the material elements of it, loss.
Well, you provided laws, he didn't.
And it would seem to me you have a very hard time complaining about being prosecuted because you kept saying that nobody is above the law.
And now you're whining so much, it sounds like you think you're above the law.
We all can be reprosecuted.
The other guy, James Cardinal Comey, the only way to really reprosecute him is as part of the overall conspiracy to frame Trump over and over and over again,
right down to the last couple of weeks in which the Democrats in Congress put out that email in which it appeared as if Trump was carrying on with Virginia Juffre because they crossed a name out.
Stupid, because you just actually, you just lift it up and you see it says Virginia Guffray.
And then you just go back to the record, which is overwhelming in this case that she had no improper relationships with him.
And she said so under oath, even being led to say that she was asked by the slimy lawyer, when did Donald Trump furt with you?
As if he did.
She said he never did.
He was perfectly appropriate with me.
And all the evidence from all of the people that knew the situation at Mar-a-Lago, from independent reporters is the same.
And I have that part of it because I was defending him at the time this first came up and I collected it all.
So they were trying to frame him again.
I don't have to mention all the ones in between.
We're coming near the end of the show and we don't have time to go through their constant group of lies.
I do want to mention, and I only have a minute to mention, I probably should have spent more time on it, the case in which I was indicted for a felony in Georgia, which has now been dismissed and never should have been brought in the first place.
And I do want to point out, if you take a look at my, if you take a look at my tweet, X or whatever the hell else you want to characterize it under Chapter 7, false arrest, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, and abusive litigation.
And I and my co-defendants, all of whom were prosecuted maliciously, meaning for a crime that never Existed.
Like the alternate alternate electors is pointed out.
This was done by Nixon and Kennedy.
It is perfectly legal.
There's nothing, no one was defrauded of anything.
And we just followed the advice and agreed with the advice of Professor Eastman.
And he did nothing illegal.
He's been a proponent of this theory for 25 years.
He didn't hide it.
I can remember it's being publicly presented as alternative electors.
Several courts have already dismissed this.
Just think of how crooked these people in Georgia are and waiting so long to do this, just to do more damage to my reputation, my ability to earn a living.
And not just me, all of these people, 17, 18 people, none of whom did a damn thing wrong, prosecuted by Fulton County and the state of Georgia.
And no one intervenes.
The governor, the Republican governor, the scoundrel Rafsenberg, who somebody's got to investigate very carefully.
I don't even see an apology.
But there is a damn good lawsuit against him for malicious prosecution under Chapter 7 of the laws of Georgia, sections 5171 to 51785.
I say that for the benefit of my co-defendants.
Sue them.
Get your money back.
Cost you a lot.
Some of you were bankrupted by it.
That's why this is America.
This is Thanksgiving.
You go over to X and we'll tell you all about Thanksgiving.
We thank God for being Americans and we say, God bless America.
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