America's Mayor Live (851): President Trump sends Tom Homan to Minneapolis
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Finger Bit Off?
00:14:45
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| Giuliani, and this is America's Mayor Live, live from Palm Beach. | |
| Do you know that a homeland security agent had his finger bit off by one of those poor, desperate, lovely, wonderful illegal aliens in Minnesota? | |
| Oh, they're so nice and civilized, and they're being so poorly treated that they bit a finger off. | |
| Oh, but you don't find out about that. | |
| Uh-uh. | |
| See what happens at NBC. | |
| I'm going to show you what happens to me. | |
| They bit a finger off. | |
| Get rid of that one and don't let anybody see the finger going off, huh? | |
| Oh, and don't let them know the statistics on the gun, right? | |
| The gun, the gun was a SIG Sauer P 320 total price with the scope 1800 bucks. | |
| This guy wasn't buying cheap guns. | |
| He had some more ammunition with him that could have been used to take out the entire group of ICE agents. | |
| That's in order to protect himself. | |
| He's got a gun that's like a very, very dangerous weapon for warfare in order to protect himself and enough ammunition to wipe out all the ICE agents. | |
| And then he has a license to carry it, but the license doesn't say you're allowed to carry it in the middle of a federal arrest. | |
| In fact, common sense tells you if you carry a gun that that's lethal in the middle of a federal arrest and they see it on you, they may very well draw a conclusion that you want to kill them. | |
| Something may go wrong and you'll get killed. | |
| Now, do you think, you probably think, because you're a nice person, that this all happened accidentally? | |
| Oh, the lady came along. | |
| She saw the arrest. | |
| Oh, you don't know about the arrest, do you? | |
| No. | |
| You don't know about the arrest because we are not America anymore. | |
| We're a censored, we're a censored species at this point. | |
| You don't know that they were in the middle of arresting Jose Huerta Schuma. | |
| Not Chuck Schumer, Truma, Truma. | |
| Here he is. | |
| He is in need of a little dental work. | |
| And that, by the way, just to be clear, his tooth was not knocked out by an ICE agent. | |
| He came this way. | |
| This is the way he came to us like this. | |
| Jose was the real object of what ICE was there for. | |
| Oh, numerous domestic assaults, meaning he was beating the shit out of his girlfriend. | |
| Disorderly conduct, beating the shit out of other people, and then driving without a valid license. | |
| And he probably doesn't know how to drive. | |
| And they give him licenses without driving tests. | |
| Because you're an illegal alien, you presume you know how to drive. | |
| And they kill people that way. | |
| They were in the midst of apprehending him. | |
| Now, what happened is right out of the playbook, and I'm trying to get the playbook. | |
| I haven't gotten it yet. | |
| I'm trying to get it. | |
| What I'm talking about, the playbook is they belong to an organization that trains you in how to disrupt ICE. | |
| Has to be funded by Soros, the communists, or the Islamic, the Islamics. | |
| And there's a process called rearrest. | |
| The way rearrest works is they distract the agents and they extract the person. | |
| So we're going to play it. | |
| But Brianna, can we first introduce you? | |
| Yeah, let's go. | |
| Brianna Morella. | |
| Pleasure. | |
| It's very, very nice to see you. | |
| I watch you all the time and I think you do a great job. | |
| Thank you, sir. | |
| Well, Mike is hurt. | |
| And I'm going to, I'm going to, I'm going to play these. | |
| And I'm just going to, as an introduction, I'm going to tell you that, and I've seen the playbook. | |
| I just don't have a copy of it. | |
| These people are instructed all over the country. | |
| These are trained disruptors. | |
| They're trained in trying to disrupt ICE and make them look bad so they can create riots. | |
| And they're also trained in helping people to escape, which is a crime. | |
| And one of the ways they do it is by they have this rearrest program. | |
| And the rearrest program uses two or three of them to distract the agents so that the criminal can run away or they can help the criminal run away. | |
| So instead of four agents being on them, they can get it down to one. | |
| Now, this is what they were doing. | |
| This is what the woman that he supposedly was helping and he were doing. | |
| That's why he was there with his gun. | |
| So let's watch the beginning of this, Ted. | |
| So what you're up you're going to see in a second here is the beginning of the shooting. | |
| This is the first video we had, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So this is the initial, what I'll bring up is the initial video of the shooting. | |
| So just taking a second here, we got to. | |
| But while we're doing that, what do you think of I always kind of, what do you think of the president doing this? | |
| Was this something he just had to do to calm things down? | |
| Or will this turn out to be sort of an indication to others like in Chicago and Denver and all these other illegal places that they can do the same thing? | |
| Well, I hope that this is an agreement that's just come about where they're going to start working with the president. | |
| That's ideal here. | |
| But I'm not so sure what to make of it. | |
| You know, I've been trying to reach out and get comment on all of this to help understand what's going on here because it's quite confusing. | |
| We're hearing two different sides. | |
| Tim Walt is claiming victory here. | |
| And yeah, he put up a tweet on his Twitter page. | |
| I believe he said that ICE is going to be leaving or they're going to be flushing out a lot of the federal agents, which is them claiming victory, which would be an absolute nightmare. | |
| So I'm trying to figure out what the truth is here because you have two people. | |
| I saw the president's post on Truth Social earlier today. | |
| The President's post and the conditions he laid out were extremely, I mean, basically the conditions was get rid of your Sanctuary City. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| And that's what he laid out. | |
| And so I wonder if there was an agreement that was made that maybe there's going to be fewer federal agents. | |
| And I know it's CNN. | |
| I don't trust it, but CNN did say earlier in the day that there was an agreement where some federal agents were going to be tossed away. | |
| I'm still trying to flush a lot of this away with DHS right now. | |
| They did tell me, because I know there was a Gregory Bovino who was being accused of being fired is what was floating around on social media earlier today too. | |
| It doesn't look like that's the case. | |
| DHS telling me that he's actually going to keep his job, but I don't know if he has a different role. | |
| Yeah, I think they're going to keep it. | |
| They're going to move him. | |
| But even in moving him, it's a bit of a concession. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He wasn't doing anything wrong. | |
| Did nothing wrong. | |
| And that's what's really upsetting here. | |
| Because he was a hero. | |
| And so, and I also hear that some people are upset with Secretary Noam. | |
| Gosh, she got on my presidential list with what she was doing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| She went there. | |
| She went there in the middle of the night. | |
| She supported them. | |
| I mean, I ran the biggest police department in the country where you had more crime than you can dream of. | |
| And you got to, if you don't stand up for your police, you're not going to win the battle. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And that's the problem here. | |
| DHS. | |
| I mean, Chrissy Noam has a ton of different agencies on her plate. | |
| Like, she's got a lot in her. | |
| What a job she's doing. | |
| And it's, she actually does a great job. | |
| And I have to say, out of all of the agencies, DHS operates to me the best as a media outlet. | |
| When I reach out for comment, they respond super fast. | |
| They're quick and they try to flesh out the truth very quickly with us in the media world. | |
| So it's been great so far. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So they've done an incredible job at trying to be as transparent as possible. | |
| And I'll give them credit when I can, though. | |
| But it's unfortunate to hear all these rumors floating around. | |
| I do think, though, a lot of it might be from the left, just trying to stir the thought a little bit. | |
| I do think so. | |
| I really, I don't really sense myself that there's a real jeopardy there. | |
| I'm just worried that this is sort of a very strange game. | |
| It's a game of momentum. | |
| They were trying to get momentum originally out of the woman who they claim was, you know, shot, killed for no reason. | |
| Meanwhile, she's trying to drive a two-ton truck into the sky. | |
| And the officer has internal bleeding. | |
| How does that happen? | |
| Imagine driving a two-ton truck at him. | |
| I would have shot her too. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You want to drive a two-ton truck into me, lady? | |
| I'm sorry. | |
| And there's no place he could have gone at that point. | |
| She was this close room. | |
| Yeah. | |
| If he jumped, she could have got him. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So that I think diffused. | |
| When that video came out, that kind of diffused. | |
| Then they tried the five-year-old kid. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We arrested a five-year-old kid. | |
| No, we didn't. | |
| The father gave up his son, and the mother wouldn't take him. | |
| Nice mom, huh? | |
| Yeah. | |
| What a great mother of the year. | |
| Mom, will you take your kid? | |
| Nah, you gave him. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And ICE also offered not even to arrest her if she was an illegal alien. | |
| They said, just take your kid. | |
| We don't want to take your kid in. | |
| Please take it. | |
| And she wouldn't do it. | |
| So, I mean, at what point do we say, okay, this is ridiculous? | |
| By the way, that's that five-year-old story. | |
| They've been trying to push this narrative with kids being detained by ICE. | |
| They did so last year where they used another five-year-old girl and tried to lie to the press and saying, oh, a five-year-old girl was held and detained by ICE. | |
| Wasn't true. | |
| That one flopped too. | |
| So they've been just trying to pull up the emotional strings of Americans for a while now, and they're hoping one of these will stick. | |
| They may have gotten one. | |
| I know. | |
| I know. | |
| Sadly, I think people aren't paying attention enough. | |
| And this one, and this one, this one's just as phony. | |
| Yeah. | |
| This is just as phony. | |
| This agent had no choice. | |
| When you see this video, when he hears the word gun, they're in a scrum. | |
| They're all like this. | |
| They're all like below here. | |
| He doesn't know where the gun is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But he does know there's a gun. | |
| And he knows he's got three or four guys there in jeopardy. | |
| So what is he going to do? | |
| He's got to take the guy out before he uses the gun. | |
| He doesn't know that another agent pulled the gun out. | |
| So he does what he should do. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then the cause of it is this guy being trained to do a rearrest and executing it with a very lethal firearm in his possession. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's the cause of it. | |
| And why is he doing a rearrest? | |
| That's illegal to start with. | |
| It's a euphemistic way of saying, I'm going to break out a criminal. | |
| I'm going to break a criminal out of jail. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, it's so crazy, too, Mary. | |
| And you probably could have speak to this, but as a prosecutor, and obviously as the former mayor of New York City, there's a lot of people out there that don't want to take responsibility for their own actions. | |
| And none of these situations would have escalated if the individuals involved weren't trying to initiate and be agitators and do all of that. | |
| Brianna, you're 100% right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's so frustrating. | |
| Well, the good news is it sounds like there's body cam footage. | |
| Earlier today, the press secretary was asked about it at the White House. | |
| And unfortunately, she said that she hasn't spoken with the president yet and whether they're planning on releasing it. | |
| But man, oh man, we know body cam footage always works in favor of law enforcement. | |
| I feel like 95 plus times, 100% times, I'd say. | |
| So I think that once that gets out there, I think we'll finally see it's chaos. | |
| It's really hard to call a situation like that when everything's happening so quickly. | |
| It's chaotic. | |
| I mean, remember, also, they deployed Mace right before all that. | |
| And that probably also is very sensitive to the agents involved. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the reality is this is a very, this has become more and more a professional use of our highly, I mean, it's not hard. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There's such a biased media. | |
| You know, I know I told Ted this a lot. | |
| They're constantly saying, oh, this Democrat strategist is so brilliant. | |
| Look how this strategy worked. | |
| And this Republican strategist is so terrible because it doesn't. | |
| If I owned the press, any strategy that I carried out would work. | |
| I mean, this is like playing a basketball game where I shoot a basket, I get two points. | |
| The other team shoots a basket, they get 10. | |
| How am I going to win? | |
| So the reality is that we're playing up against it. | |
| And the only people they can rely on are people like you and me and the independent, the independent sources that tell them the truth. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I think if there's any sign of hope is we're winning at that, at least. | |
| We are. | |
| Because we have millions of audience members who watch live all the time. | |
| And you're watching the numbers. | |
| A lot of these mainstream outlets can't pick up a million viewers. | |
| And I think that's really telling in itself. | |
| You know, Nick Sortor has been incredible posting footage and it immediately goes viral once he does so. | |
| He gets more views than any cable news outlet or anything. | |
| And I think that's really key here is independent journalists will save this country. | |
| And they're the ones that are on the ground right now. | |
| These cable news outlets, they're not sending their journalists in or journalists. | |
| Why? | |
| Because their journalists are garbage. | |
| But most importantly, they're afraid. | |
| They're probably scared. | |
| They are scared. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We've got some brave people on the front lines right now. | |
| The one we use all the time is on his first trip, but he's Palestinian allowance. | |
| Oh, you're with Nick on it. | |
| Come with us. | |
| That's how he made his career. | |
| That was like the big jumping point for Nick. | |
| We went to Palestine. | |
| We were there with him. | |
| We went to Palestine before. | |
| Everybody got there before the president. | |
| We went there this morning. | |
| Biden, President Biden. | |
| We came there the night before Little Petey showed up. | |
| And the next day I met with the mayor. | |
| The mayor had a meeting with me. | |
| And we've had about an hour meeting. | |
| And all of a sudden, a guy comes in and says, the secretary is ready to come in now. | |
| And the mayor said, tell him to wait. | |
| That'll be a useless conversation. | |
| I'm having a useful one now. | |
| Kept him waiting an hour. | |
| Wow. | |
| That's interesting. | |
| He's a useless little shit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, you like to hear it, though. | |
| Yeah, well, I knew he was a useless little shit. | |
| He was a terrible mayor in terrible mayor in Notre Dame. | |
| Where was he the mayor? | |
| He was a small town, too. | |
| South Bend. | |
| South Bend. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It wasn't even a real town. | |
| It was like a small, well, not a real town. | |
| It's a town. | |
| It's a college town. | |
| The University of Notre Dame. | |
| Yeah, I mean, it wouldn't be a town if the fighting Irish weren't there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So here they're trying to arrest this guy. | |
| This guy, who I showed you, this guy, this Fuerto guy. | |
|
Small Town Politics
00:07:40
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| Yeah. | |
| This is a bad guy. | |
| Why? | |
| So you have to ask yourself, why are they on the side of these guys? | |
| Because they want to destroy America. | |
| They want to destroy us. | |
| Whether it's Tampon Tim, who spent most of his life in China being brainwashed by them. | |
| Can't be that they'd have him back 30 times and he isn't a communist. | |
| It can't be. | |
| Yeah, it can't be. | |
| And he was taken out of Harvard and brought right over there to be trained. | |
| I mean, he's like, and then you got the Islamics. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And their Koran tells them to kill us. | |
| And so the idea of creating a domestic chaos here is exactly what they want to do. | |
| I think they're really running flat on midterms right now. | |
| And so what did they do in 2020? | |
| They stirred the pot with the George Floyd nonsense. | |
| And it's all the same characters, Mayor. | |
| It's all the same people who are behind the 2020 riots. | |
| They're all doing this again. | |
| And while they'll sit there and say, oh, be peaceful, be peaceful. | |
| They're also using keywords to ignite their base. | |
| But, you know, I speak to independent journalists who are on the ground right now. | |
| And many of them have told me that it's all the same people that they've seen in riots years before. | |
| So what's happening? | |
| They're all being bussed right now. | |
| The professionals. | |
| Yes. | |
| Yes. | |
| So they're all being brought in and they're hiding this from the American people right now, sadly. | |
| But we need a full-on investigation and we need massive arrests, but not only the arrests. | |
| So when someone's arrested right now in Minneapolis, what's happening is these left-wing groups are supplying them, but they're attorneys. | |
| As soon as they're arrested, they're there at the station once they get in. | |
| And once they get out, they have a car service, whether it's a van or one of them, it drives them to wherever they have to go afterwards. | |
| There was a woman giving an interview and she was so thankful after she was detained and then released that they had a van outside at the police station so she could be brought to wherever she had to go. | |
| But it was run by one of the left-wing groups. | |
| So this is well orchestrated at this point. | |
| It's just so frustrating. | |
| And you would know this obviously better than anyone, that we haven't really gone after these people. | |
| RICO cases, I would assume, would be amazing for this situation. | |
| But after Charlie Kirk was assassinated, we were promised that these groups were going to be targeted. | |
| I don't know if we've really seen anything ever since then. | |
| I don't know that we did. | |
| And we should. | |
| It could be an investigation. | |
| It's still going. | |
| We should. | |
| And we should. | |
| And we got, we talked to someone today in Minneapolis who said, you know, Minnesota doesn't really need too many people from the outside. | |
| They already have them. | |
| They are very left. | |
| You know, in other words, they've already trained the people. | |
| They need a little help from the outside, but not a lot. | |
| They're ready to go. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they're also ready to go other places to help other people. | |
| So, I mean, this happened in the ideal place for the movement because after all, this is where the George Floyd thing started, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| When Little Baby Fry gave up the police station, for which I will never talk to him, never look at him, never shake his hand. | |
| I was a mayor. | |
| I never heard of a mayor giving up a police station. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I'm going to give up a police station, a bunch of rioters. | |
| Are you crazy? | |
| Cowards. | |
| Shoot me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, they're all cowards. | |
| And it's really frustrating to sit back and watch because, again, there was no accountability for those who allowed the city to burn. | |
| And unfortunately, they all still have their positions. | |
| They're all still doing the same thing. | |
| How could they all be still around? | |
| Isn't that crazy? | |
| I mean, there's a lot of conspiracies floating out there. | |
| How are they all around? | |
| You think? | |
| And with that, that multi-billion dollar, we don't even know how much money they stole. | |
| We know it's more than a billion. | |
| Some people think it's over nine. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Isn't that crazy? | |
| But this is all deflection. | |
| They could use these now. | |
| And I feel like that's why they're stirring the pot to deflect up the front. | |
| They had to do this. | |
| They had to come up with something right now because it was starting to look really bad. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And it cannot possibly be, Brianna, that this only happens with the Democrats. | |
| They like teach each other everything. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like when they, the minute, the minute I heard that they had closed down the ballots in, what was the first place I heard, Pennsylvania. | |
| And then the next thing I heard is they closed down the ballots in Atlanta the night of the election. | |
| Yes. | |
| This is a conspiracy. | |
| And they closed down four more places. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Isn't that, and you know, it's even crazier too? | |
| This reminds me of New York City. | |
| You would know this. | |
| Bill de Blasio. | |
| Remember him? | |
| Yeah. | |
| He had his honeymoon in Cuba. | |
| Yes. | |
| Yes. | |
| Well, his lovely wife, remember when she started this homeless program and they shuffled about a billion dollars? | |
| His wife, who he was a lesbian, and he announced in his first debate that because of him, she became a non-lesbian. | |
| What a single thing. | |
| Now she's gone back to being a lesbian. | |
| Well, I mean, it's pretty much the same thing. | |
| It's a lateral move at that point. | |
| But the best part about their story, and it's never been investigated criminally, which is so mind-blowing to me. | |
| She was called in front of the city council because $750 million went missing. | |
| It's a lot of money. | |
| And nobody even cared to follow up. | |
| It was over a billion dollars that he shifted over to her. | |
| And then $750 million he said in front of the city council. | |
| Oh, sorry. | |
| I don't have any, I don't know where it went. | |
| I don't have receipts. | |
| I don't have any proof of where that money went. | |
| Well, that's a big problem. | |
| And I know it was a big story for a little bit and then it kind of floated away. | |
| But the homeless funding is a major, major one. | |
| I know California just announced that they're launched an investigation to follow the money in California as well, because they've been shuffling that money all around. | |
| There's a great independent journalist in Portland, and he has been following the money because I think their budget is like $750 to $800 million a year for the homeless crisis that's over there that they've self-inflicted, of course. | |
| And he says, if you go around, he asks homeless people all the time, has any outreach program reached out to you? | |
| They say, no. | |
| If you gave me $700 million to $800 million to solve the homeless problem in Portland, I tell you, I'd solve it in six months. | |
| It would be easy. | |
| The reason we still have all of this poverty, all of this homelessness, is because they continuously steal the money. | |
| It goes back to Lyndon Johnson. | |
| It goes back to the Great Society. | |
| It goes back to some of the black politicians who sold out their communities, like Charlie Wrangel. | |
| I mean, enough money went to Harlem before I was mayor to make it Monaco. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Except it ended up in the hands of the black politicians, not in the hands of black people. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And it's true of them all. | |
| I mean, it's a disease of the Democrat Party that goes back to Boss Tweed. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And but where's the accountability? | |
| These people belong in prison and they're never held. | |
| There's no accountability because they have control of the media and the establishment. | |
| And they grade it. | |
| They graded that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They sell themselves. | |
| You'd rather have Democrats in office because it's look, we got some you can buy, but they have everybody you can buy just about. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, for them, it's systemic. | |
| For us, it's occasional. | |
| I mean, we both have crooks, but they've got a they've got and they have some honest people, but they have a big systemic problem of corruption. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And we have the human problem of corruption. | |
| And if people don't realize that and they keep reelecting them, like it's crazy that they keep re-electing them in Chicago. | |
| Yeah. | |
| 65 years of Democrat mayors. | |
| And if you look at the history of New York, it's 170 years of Democratic mayors. | |
| And your only periods of honesty are when you had a Republican or an Independent. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Chicago has the last election was low voter turnout was how they landed that communists. | |
| So there wasn't that many people. | |
| I forgot the numbers exactly, but I looked at the numbers and they were very discouraging. | |
| So low voter turnout is really what's to blame for a lot of this. | |
| But it's just, it's insane to me that this even like this No Rand Madani stuff. | |
| I know you've talked about it often. | |
| I talk about it all the time. | |
| I can't believe we even allowed him to run for mayor. | |
| I mean, the guy has ties to the communist party and we just dismiss it all and just say it's okay. | |
| And but he lied to get citizenship. | |
|
More Channels, Less Cost
00:04:02
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| Let's find out if he has gotten any kind of security clearance. | |
| Well, he has access to the NYPD database, wouldn't he? | |
| The terrorist database as mayor, would he have access to that? | |
| I don't know. | |
| You know, DeBasio didn't. | |
| Ah, Di Blasio was cut off from a lot of access. | |
| And he was cut off by Democrats because he had a background of supporting the Sandinistas and he had a background of going to Cuba on his honeymoon. | |
| And his mother was an official communist. | |
| So he, I mean, they, they had very limited access and they gave the information to Ray Kelly, who was the police commissioner, who had been an official in the federal government, a very honorable guy. | |
| So I don't know what they're doing with him. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, this is before he officially made his way into the office. | |
| People did reach out to me. | |
| They were very concerned about that. | |
| So I did flag it for DHS personally so that they knew that this was a possibility. | |
| We're going to find out. | |
| We got to find out. | |
| That's a very important matter. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We're going to take a short break and we'll be right back. | |
| So let's see. | |
| U.S. Army Major Scott Smiley paid a high price serving on Nation. | |
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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. | |
| No Robusto. | |
| All Arabica. | |
| they're gonna 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. | |
|
Setup Revealed
00:15:37
|
|
| Welcome back, and we're going to take a look now at the setup that we were trying to show you before and show you how this was an absolute scripted rearrest scenario as they're trained to do. | |
| So please understand that this guy, Pretty, who was killed, was an activist operative who was trained to break up federal arrests. | |
| Now, if you select that as your profession, there's a very good chance you're going to get killed, particularly if you carry guns around, whether you're licensed or not. | |
| So we're going to play the first clip we have. | |
| Yep. | |
| Let's do that. | |
| This is one of the early clips that was released before I received it. | |
| Yes, yes, yes. | |
| That's him. | |
| So now. | |
| This is welcome for him. | |
| That's him. | |
| Yes, I see him there. | |
| That's the woman. | |
| That's him and that's the woman. | |
| So, what they're engaged in right now is trying to distract the agents who were over there on the right, trying to arrest the domestic attacker who they were attempting, they were attempting to arrest. | |
| So, what she succeeded in doing is moving about four agents away from the original arrest. | |
| Keep going. | |
| That's what she's trained to do. | |
| That's what re-arrest is training. | |
| And once they're in the ICE engage in arrest, try to start separating them into different groups. | |
| This took us way ahead now to the shooting. | |
| This is before the shooting. | |
| Can I start again? | |
| we want to see before the shooting particularly when they're engaging with him | |
| this is this is all intended to they see that they they know what they see an arrest is going on and they're doing everything they can Probably it's about four or five agents. | |
| I can't make out exactly how many agents are there. | |
| This is the same one we played before. | |
| This will give us no more there. | |
| There he is. | |
| Now, notice how this is before he gets shot. | |
| They're moving him away. | |
| Now, why is he doing that with the camera? | |
| Because he's taking this agent away from the arrest. | |
| He's taking this agent away. | |
| She's taking the other agent away to the point. | |
| The guy should escape. | |
| I don't know if the guy escaped or they grabbed him and took him off to the side. | |
| But then somehow he comes back and he re-engages with them. | |
| And they end up on the ground with the police off the ICE agents trying to cuff him. | |
| And then a gun is seen. | |
| This is the distraction part. | |
| This is the rearrest part where they move them away from the arrest they're making over there. | |
| You can't quite see it. | |
| That takes one agent away. | |
| She takes two agents or less. | |
| Yep, right, right. | |
| That's a woman today, bus. | |
| And right there, these are the two individuals from Sea Life's cursor. | |
| He's going. | |
| This is the gentleman. | |
| He's filming right here. | |
| And that's the woman right there. | |
| The only part that we miss is how after that, where they either succeeded or failed, their job is to keep those agents over there so that the guy that they're trying to arrest, which is out of the screen, can get away. | |
| Now, whether they succeeded in getting the guy away or not, I don't know. | |
| I don't think so because we have his map sheet and his arrest or they arrested him later. | |
| But here's trying to this is the effort. | |
| There's the effort of trying to arrest him at some point here. | |
| You'll hear a shot. | |
| You didn't hear someone yelling gun before those shots. | |
| So if you watch the guy in the gray shirt and the gray jacket when he pulls the fire off from him, it looks like I think he has it in his hand. | |
| He gets it away. | |
| It kind of looks like he jumps up a little bit. | |
| I don't know if it accidentally went off. | |
| They think it did. | |
| They think it went off because the lever is in the office. | |
| The lever indicates the one bullet was fired. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So either it happened, it happened accidentally, which this gun is prone to. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Or the agent accidentally set it off. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But in any event, all of that happens before he shoots. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So from his point of view, he doesn't know that. | |
| He's standing over here. | |
| All he hears, all the agent hears is gun. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then boop. | |
| And then he shoots to protect the other people from getting shot. | |
| He probably thinks one's already been shot. | |
| As a firearm owner, too, it's really hard to wrap my mind around why people still carry that gun on them. | |
| The brand itself has been accused of automatically firing when it's not supposed to fire. | |
| It's a good gun if you want to wipe out a lot of people. | |
| Which I mean, it's really not the kind of gun you would buy if you're just thinking about protecting yourself. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's the kind of gun you would buy if you're a gangster, you know, if you if you want to get involved in a shootout. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And he had enough weapons there to do a shootout. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, I had enough ammunition there to wipe out all the agents. | |
| So I don't know what the hell he had in his mind. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| None of it really is adding up right now. | |
| I'm hopeful if there is body cam footage that we will get that soon though. | |
| But if it's favorable to law enforcement, it should just be released right now. | |
| Even if it's not favorable, I mean, we just got to figure this out because I feel like there should be an automatic, like at least a 48-hour holding period on footage because this is how the left is able to control the narrative. | |
| They stir the pot. | |
| And let's just say that they are in the right. | |
| I mean, why are we holding back the footage? | |
| If you remember when Renee Good was killed after she tried to use her vehicle as a weapon, or she did use her vehicle as a weapon, there was an extra footage that we didn't have access to before that was actually shot by a federal agent who came out of the vehicle and was filming her on his cell phone. | |
| That one, I think, is clear as day that she intentionally looked right at them in the face and then drove her car into that officer. | |
| So I just think they're transparent. | |
| I don't know why they don't release it either. | |
| Yeah, the press secretary said that she has not yet spoken to the president about it. | |
| And so she wouldn't feel comfortable speaking about it at the podium. | |
| And she says it's helpful. | |
| She didn't say anything. | |
| She said she doesn't feel comfortable speaking about it at the podium. | |
| That's why I wonder. | |
| This is the gun. | |
| We can show it to people. | |
| This is this is a but that's the gun without the scope. | |
| I think. | |
| No, it has a scope. | |
| There it is. | |
| So this all altogether costs 1800 bucks. | |
| I mean, this is not a very pricey. | |
| This is an unsophisticated, this is not an unsophisticated weapon. | |
| He's a nurse. | |
| Yeah, a nurse needs something like this to protect himself. | |
| It's quite crazy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I mean, the real objection to this is what the hell do you do go into the middle of an arrest carrying this? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's not the smartest thing to do and to be an agitator as well. | |
| You're asking for it. | |
| They're obviously creating chaos and creating a chaotic scene that's going to have law enforcement on edge. | |
| I mean, ICE agents, I think today the latest number that came out from DHS in the email that I received that the threats that they receive are at like an 8,000% increase over these last few months. | |
| There's a reason for that. | |
| They've demonized these people successfully. | |
| And so, in their hearts, they're always on edge because they never know when something's going to happen. | |
| You remember the shooting in Dallas where that one radical left-wing terrorist got up the top of the roof and started shooting down at the Dallas ICE facility, thinking that it was ICE agents in the car. | |
| Sadly, I mean, thank God the ICE agents are okay, but sadly, he murdered migrants. | |
| Right. | |
| And so, they're all on edge. | |
| I mean, they've seen this before. | |
| The threats are real. | |
| So, local law enforcement was real upset up until this Daniel Raymond, this sort of peace treaty between Trump and Walls. | |
| Local law enforcement was all upset they're not being allowed to be involved in the investigation. | |
| Now, why should they be involved in the investigation when they don't help with the arrest? | |
| They have struck with the arrest. | |
| I mean, if I'm in charge of ICE and I want your help, you're not going to give it to me. | |
| But then, when there's an investigation, you want to be part of it. | |
| Well, first of all, how am I going to trust you? | |
| Can't. | |
| You're obviously, from my point of view, you're on the side of the criminals and I'm going to let you investigate it. | |
| I mean, it's ridiculous. | |
| And I don't know what's going to happen now with this peace treaty that they've made, but they should have no part of this case. | |
| This agent should never have to be judged by these by these fascists. | |
| I mean, ever. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, they shouldn't. | |
| And if you remember, too, when George Floyd went down, there were two separate autopsies, right? | |
| There was the autopsy that was prepared originally by the officials, and then the family brought in a second group of, I don't know who they were exactly to do the other thing. | |
| Very famous, a very famous coroner. | |
| He used to be the one in New York. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, all of a sudden they had two different results. | |
| I mean, one, one even acknowledged there was fentanyl in the system. | |
| So it's quite crazy. | |
| One result was he died of natural causes. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because he had fentanyl. | |
| He was so overwhelmed with drugs that he would have died no matter what. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He was on his way to death when the agent picked him up. | |
| And we know that the amount of fentanyl that was in his system that day would have killed any of us because we're not active fentanyl users. | |
| But because he was an active fentanyl user, they think that maybe they try to argue, maybe he had immunity to it because he took so much fentanyl. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He was a gigantic man, too. | |
| He was a very big man, but he had really his whole body had deteriorated from both drugs and alcohol. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, he had a totally deteriorated body, and he was on, he was at the point where he was going to die no matter what. | |
| So, what do you think politically is going to happen with this? | |
| Is this it would seem to me from the polls that you look at, but who knows if they're right, that more people think that the president has is not using, is not executing the immigration laws correctly. | |
| I mean, they were very much on his side for a while, and now it seems to be switching a little. | |
| Is that correct, or is that an impression they're trying to create in order to get him to back off? | |
| I think the narrative was always going to be spun as soon as it started. | |
| I think that the left understands how to pull the heartstrings of Americans. | |
| They give them altered facts, right? | |
| It's a certain perspective, certain narrative. | |
| We just should have been more prepared to combat that because we need to be as quick as possible when they try to put out false information to push out the right information, but also call these people out who are putting it out intentionally because they're trying to serve this pot. | |
| They're trying to create the civil war. | |
| They want all this violence. | |
| They're the ones who are the experts who create the chaos. | |
| When it comes to the border security, I'm a little discouraged because we keep hearing people not coming out and saying, maybe we should just go after the worst of the worst. | |
| I agree that we should definitely get those people out of the country. | |
| But anyone who came here legally needs to go. | |
| That's the reason why Democrats flooded this country with millions of illegals. | |
| They'll throw us a number, what, like 10, 15 million? | |
| I think it's probably double. | |
| I had sources on the ground during the Biden years telling me that security footage, the cameras itself that were on the border, they were intentionally, when they were breaking, they were never fixing them because they never wanted to see who was coming into this country. | |
| And so there were so many people, so many border patrol agents who were so upset about this because they weren't fixing any of these things. | |
| They weren't doing any of the maintenance because they didn't want to know the exact numbers of how many people were coming to this country. | |
| We have been flooded with millions of illegals. | |
| What do you think the Biden number is? | |
| I'm thinking it's way north of 20 million. | |
| It's at least 20 million. | |
| It has to be. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, the best number they'll come up with right now is 15. | |
| But do you know what they're ignoring? | |
| And I have an example of it here somewhere. | |
| We used to have three categories of illegals. | |
| The ones that we process, and they're either seeking asylum or we throw them out, or they're official. | |
| That number was about 8 million. | |
| Then we have what are called the gotaways. | |
| Those are the ones that we almost got. | |
| Two, we just got a view of them. | |
| So they're a very vague category of we had the person and he ran away, or we saw him running over the border, we chased him when we didn't get him. | |
| That was about 2 million. | |
| There was a third category that we always kept that Biden dropped, which are the people that we never process and we never see. | |
| Now, one was just arrested in New York. | |
| So I always like to point these out because it shows you they're not telling you about one group. | |
| They're not telling you about one group that is coming in all the time. | |
| This guy was throwing rocks down from a bridge and he severely injured a five-year-old. | |
| Now, when they talk about when he came in, they say he's illegal, but we don't know when he entered. | |
| That's a group of people that you never see. | |
| And you never see them because the border is 1,400, right? | |
| 1,400 miles. | |
| You've got big gaps between it. | |
| When the agents are engaged in stopping them at the border points, people can come over in any of those places. | |
| And the cartels know them well. | |
| So when they used to pay attention to this, they used to say you can calculate them. | |
| And the formula was anywhere from 50% to 200% of the number that you are legally processing. | |
| So let's say 8 million came in. | |
|
Undocumented Immigration Narratives
00:13:33
|
|
| Then bare minimum, another 4 million came in that we never saw. | |
| Two, another 12 million. | |
| And here, these are studies from MIT, Princeton, and Harvard. | |
| When they used to do this, that 50% starts to move toward 200%, the larger the number of known are. | |
| So if we have 500,000 a year coming in, we're probably at 50%. | |
| But if we have 3.5 million come in, our resources are overwhelmed. | |
| So the ability to come in and not be detected is much greater. | |
| So that's why we're in a completely we're in completely unknowledgeable, we're in the dark. | |
| So we know 8 million came in. | |
| We know 2 million more were gotaways. | |
| That's 10 million. | |
| And we know the people came in we never saw. | |
| So those people could be as many as 5 million more. | |
| Or could they be, they could be as many as 20 million more. | |
| They're somewhere between, so it's somewhere, if you want to be, if you want to use their studies, somewhere between 15 and 30 million. | |
| Isn't that crazy? | |
| And we don't know who they are. | |
| As if it's not bad enough that we have a whole bunch of jihadists out there looking to go and kill us. | |
| We don't know who they are. | |
| No idea. | |
| And and it's so frustrating. | |
| So you discover a guy who's throwing bricks down in New Jersey. | |
| Uh uh, probably destroys a kid for life yeah, and now he? | |
| They have no, they have no idea how long he's been here. | |
| They know he's illegal, he has no papers, he comes from Mexico, but they never saw him. | |
| And this is the first time we, we met up with him and he's got a big he's got a big long record too of because the uh in New York and in New Jersey, they're instructed not to tell immigration. | |
| So I I we, we get a guy who commits a rape. | |
| He's illegal, he comes from Venezuela. | |
| In New York, police are not allowed to tell the immigration service about him. | |
| Why yeah, why we want to keep him. | |
| Yeah, we want to keep who? | |
| Who in their right mind wants to keep a rapist? | |
| This has to be, and this isn't even for votes. | |
| This has to be because you want to destroy our country. | |
| Yeah yeah, there's no other option. | |
| At this point. | |
| I think it's pretty obvious that that's the case. | |
| And what about all the? | |
| Aren't there Democrats that can think through this, can't they? | |
| Or are they so tied to their party and they hate Trump so much they don't think anymore. | |
| I mean, you should be able to think your way through this. | |
| What, like when that congressman Van Holland was going down there to bring the guy who beat up his wife and his kid back, even if we got rid of him accidentally, isn't that good riddance? | |
| That great we got rid of one guy who's beating up his wife and his kid. | |
| Yeah, you know what? | |
| I think they're spending your time trying to bring him back. | |
| Yeah well, I think they don't want to prove what we're saying is truthful, because if they admit that yeah, we have to get rid of the rapists, we get rid of the murderers, then they have to admit okay, there's been rapists and murderers brought into this country and in fact, we know that there were, under the Biden regime uh, rapists and and sexual predators, children predators, who were brought into the country because, if you recall, when they were shuffling these people on commercial airlines uh, you and I would have to show our ids to get through. | |
| They didn't have any ids, photo ids so they instead and I know this class actually sued TSA and we won that lawsuit. | |
| So we forced them to hand over the documents and one of the documents that they used to validate who these people were. | |
| They allowed these sex offenders convicted sex offenders to use their sex offender paperwork as identification to get through TSA lines. | |
| So the Biden administration knowingly did all of this, knowing that these people were prior charged with rape, with all these horrible crimes, and still let them on commercial flights. | |
| It's almost um. | |
| It gets close to impossible to figure out the motivation for it. | |
| Evil, because it gets you. | |
| It gets you to such horrible conclusions about the human personality that your mind rejects it. | |
| Your mind wants to reject it is evil. | |
| Yeah, it's like um, i've gotten to points in analyzing what they do and I think i'm. | |
| Dealing with Satan. | |
| Yeah yeah, that's. | |
| I mean they, they don't believe in a god, most of them, I mean it's pretty crazy, they believe in Satan. | |
| I think yeah yeah, they believe in something and they're evil. | |
| And it's like you don't want to vilify everyone, because I think a lot of their base probably is just people who aren't very well versed on these topics and they don't understand these things. | |
| And if you say in your little echo chamber, maybe you don't really know that these people are rapists who are coming into our country, maybe you truly believe that these are just families because you watch CNN all day but um, we got to break into that algorithm, right? | |
| So the guy that I was talking about is Hernando Garcia Morales, a fine gentleman. | |
| He was um, he was he's 40 years old and uh, he was hurling rocks on a New Jersey turnpike overpass, wow and he fractured the skull of an eight-year-old girl. | |
| Yeah, or baby, he's got a long record. | |
| I mean, this is not uh, now he. | |
| The Department OF Homeland Security does not know when or where Garcia Morales legally entered this country. | |
| But his criminal history in New Jersey goes back for 20 years. | |
| He's arrested for possession of a weapon and theft. | |
| He was arrested for assault. | |
| He was arrested for burglary. | |
| He was arrested for burglary again. | |
| He was arrested for beating someone up. | |
| He was arrested and did spend 330 days in prison, but never turned over to immigration for rock throwing at cars, which he finally did again. | |
| Then he's got a charge for peeping into homes in Bogota, New Jersey. | |
| And never, ever at any of these times, did the New Jersey police turn him over to immigration, knowing that there was no record of him coming into the United States. | |
| So he falls into the category that they never want to tell you about, which is this is a guy that doesn't show up in any of these lists. | |
| He's not on the list of people that were illegal, and we let them in for a period of time to determine their status or the people that were gotaways. | |
| This is one of the unknowns. | |
| How many of them are there? | |
| So I told you the studies say it's anywhere from 50% to 200% of the known. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's millions of people. | |
| And it's crazy to me that we can't actually sue these officials who just kept releasing this guy. | |
| I mean, they were all liabilities. | |
| They all put all these lives at risk. | |
| And thank God that the girl didn't die from this because we all know that when you're throwing a rock through a bus, I don't know if it was moving at the time. | |
| You could have killed her. | |
| They kill and rape people plenty of times. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, it's totally indefensible. | |
| And somehow, with the warped media that we have, they make it defensible and justifiable. | |
| And they make the people who want to try to get rid of these criminals bad guys. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They're the fascists and the bad guys. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Wow. | |
| We got a lot of work to do, right? | |
| You got to recontrol the narrative. | |
| That's the problem here, right? | |
| Because we got to control the narrative. | |
| I mean, they're over here calling this fascist. | |
| They use the language all the time. | |
| And the problem is, is on the right, we just, we play footsie with these people. | |
| We use their terms. | |
| You got to stop using their terms. | |
| These are illegal aliens. | |
| Don't budge on it. | |
| You could call them illegal invaders. | |
| They started that. | |
| Chris Cuomo started that again with somebody the other night. | |
| You can't call them illegal. | |
| Tough guy. | |
| What do you think? | |
| You're a tough guy. | |
| What do you think you're a tough guy calling them an illegal alien just because that's what the law says? | |
| We decided a long time ago that we're going to call them undocumented. | |
| Who decided? | |
| You decided. | |
| That's what he's saying. | |
| His Democratic Party. | |
| We decided with Orwell that we will use the opposite word. | |
| Like the Department, the Department of Department of Peace in Orwell's 1984 was the Department of War. | |
| So if you're an illegal alien, we're going to call you undocumented because it doesn't suggest you violated the law, which you did. | |
| Right. | |
| And second, yeah, there are a few that are undocumented, but most of them are purely illegal. | |
| The category of undocumented are the people who came in with a visa and then overstayed the visa. | |
| That's the category of undocumented. | |
| That was the original group of undocumented. | |
| Now they want to use it for the rapists and murderers that were brought in by the cartels. | |
| Yeah, they're people. | |
| So we can fool people. | |
| So you can think you have some poor, nice little undocumented alien next to you and all he wants to do is rape your four-year-old baby. | |
| Right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right. | |
| Yeah, but they never want to tell you that narrative. | |
| They instead will tell you, oh, this is just a father looking to make some income and send it back to his family of 10 back in El Salvador. | |
| I mean, it's the craziest narratives that they spin and they get away with it. | |
| It gets unchallenged. | |
| DHS again does a good job at pushing back on it, but I'd like to see more done in that arena. | |
| What I try to do every night, I try to tell them things they're not going to hear anyplace else. | |
| Yes, that's important. | |
| I'll give you one for example. | |
| They're not going to hear that there was a study done by an education association, National Educational Association, and they surveyed teachers in K-12. | |
| 61.6% of respondents experienced or witnessed anti-Semitism in the K-12 classroom. | |
| And 45.5% said that most of the vile hatred was generated by the unions. | |
| It's really only two unions, both of which were founded by communists. | |
| How long we're going to keep this going on, this anti-Semitism, I don't know. | |
| But every Jewish member of Congress has retreated none more than Trader Schumer. | |
| You will never hear him talk about anti-Semitism. | |
| You'll never hear him condemn another Democrat who says horribly anti-Semitic things. | |
| I mean, the guy might as well change his religion. | |
| I mean, I can't imagine. | |
| I can't imagine allowing that to happen. | |
| I thought anti-Semitism was over. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I thought it was gone. | |
| I thought it was something of, I thought the Holocaust kind of ended it, right? | |
| Well, one would think, right? | |
| But I mean, people still think it's debatable, the Holocaust. | |
| I think that's kind of the crazy part in all of this. | |
| Yeah, and we got a couple of crazy right-wingers who think that too. | |
| It's been a split with the right-wing party. | |
| You know, I understand. | |
| And this is the thing that I think is really critical here, right? | |
| Criticizing the Israeli government, I'm okay with. | |
| But then there's anti-Semitism. | |
| And I think we're seeing as people are kind of meshing the two to win the narrative over just trying to make sure that you can't criticize Israel. | |
| And I think that's also kind of the reason why so many people are getting a little upset here because, you know, we could talk about the Israeli government and maybe question how they acted on October 7th. | |
| They had a heads up from the Egyptian government and whether or not they went out there and made sure that that terror attack wasn't going to happen or not is where we could question it and we could ask those questions. | |
| But sadly, I think some people just put the anti-Semitism veil over it so that we can't criticize. | |
| You can't say things like Hitler was a good guy. | |
| Oh, yeah, absolutely not. | |
| Well, that's what Fuente says. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And that's what Tucker didn't question him about. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He lets this vile anti-Semite on his show. | |
| And the guy says in the middle of it, he drops another one and he says, you know, I've always really admired Lenin. | |
| Well, Lenin, right? | |
| Remember? | |
| Was it Stalin or Lenin? | |
| I think it might have been Stalin. | |
| Was it Stalin? | |
| It might have been. | |
| Don't quote me on it. | |
| Okay. | |
| It was one of the two. | |
| It doesn't matter. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I really always admired Stalin. | |
| And Hunter is taken by surprise and says, we'll double back to that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He never doubles back to it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, if a guy is going around telling us that Churchill really created the Second World War. | |
| And Tucker's had Tucker's had several people on who believe that, that Churchill created the Second World War. | |
| That's nuts. | |
| I mean, that's completely crazy nuts. | |
| Then you have a guy on who says that Hitler was really misunderstood and that the Holocaust is exaggerated. | |
| And Fuentes has said all of this. | |
| But you don't question him about it. | |
|
Quran's Complex Teachings
00:12:31
|
|
| What the hell do I conclude? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I'm very, very upset because Tucker was a friend of mine. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I don't take anti-Semitism lightly because I think it could, well, because I know that the Torah, that the Quran tells them to kill all the Jews. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, the minute this guy took his oath on the Torah, that book in there is Muhammad's telling him to kill all the Jews and Christians. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| Directly. | |
| Any non-believer. | |
| And people don't even, I'm like always telling people there's over 100, I think it's 109 verses in the Quran, which say go after and kill the non-believers. | |
| And I encourage everyone to read it for themselves because they've read it for themselves. | |
| They've realized how dangerous Islam is. | |
| And that's the real concern. | |
| In my room, near the back of the books is a big, tall book. | |
| And it has the Quran in the correct order. | |
| See if you can get it out. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The thing you got to learn about the Quran is it's very, very deceptive because it's not in chronological order. | |
| It's been rearranged in the order of the longest verse first. | |
| And that's it. | |
| This is the Quran in chronologically correct order. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, why is that important? | |
| That would generally not be that important, except it's confusing. | |
| The Muslims have a doctrine called abrogation. | |
| Abrogation means because Muhammad said many contradictory things, that you go by the last thing that he said. | |
| So it becomes critically important to know what's the last thing he said. | |
| So if you look at the holy Quran, which is completely confused by the longest verse being first, very often he's saying good things at the end and bad things at the beginning. | |
| And it sounds like he kind of flipped around and became a good guy. | |
| But it's just the opposite. | |
| The second verse of the Quran is the longest verse of the Quran. | |
| And it was written about four years before he died. | |
| And in it, he tells you to not be friends with Christians and Jews. | |
| Make sure that by the time the kingdom comes, that all the Christians and Jews are either dead or submitted. | |
| That you'll get to paradise if you kill the non-believer. | |
| However, if you go on in the Quran, you'll see toward the end, he starts saying things like, Christians and Jews are people of the book, and we should respect them, and they should respect us. | |
| So if you use this abrogation, but you don't know when he said it, you would say, oh, he became a good guy at the end. | |
| Those things at the end are the things that he said at the beginning, and the things in the beginning are the things that he said at the end, because he started to write longer and longer verses. | |
| And since the longer verses are first, the horrible things he was saying at the end of his life looked like they were at the beginning of his life. | |
| Now, here's what happened to him. | |
| Muhammad went to Mecca, and he thought he could convert all the Arabs, Christians, and Jews, because Gabriel had come to him and taken him to heaven. | |
| Now, if you want to believe that, you can, but the Brooklyn Bridge costs $22. | |
| And the people in Mecca who were educated people, the educated Arabs, Christians and Jews, said, get the hell out of here. | |
| And not only that, why do you go down on the floor all the time and have conniptions? | |
| And you go like this. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, people say he was an epileptic. | |
| Some people say he was possessed by the devil. | |
| And other people say he was paranoid, crazy, schizophrenic who didn't have control of his body. | |
| But he was one of those things. | |
| So he's trying to sell him on the fact that Gabriel rode him up to heaven. | |
| And then he's going on the ground having a fit. | |
| And they throw him out. | |
| They throw him out of Mecca. | |
| The Mecca Muhammad is the Muhammad saying all the good things. | |
| Now he goes out into the desert with the Bedouins and he starts preaching his message. | |
| Nobody can read. | |
| Nobody can write. | |
| He couldn't read or write either. | |
| And they all follow him because what do they know? | |
| Yeah, we'll go with you with Gabriel up to heaven. | |
| We'll all go up to heaven. | |
| What do you have to do? | |
| You got to kill all the people who disagree with me. | |
| And they do. | |
| They form an army and they start capturing town after town after town. | |
| And he goes back and he kills. | |
| He kills all the Arabs who threw him out. | |
| I mean, he didn't just kill Jews and Christians. | |
| He kills Arabs. | |
| Everybody disagrees with him. | |
| But he particularly has a real hatred for the Christians and Jews because they made fun of him. | |
| And he probably killed, oh, gosh, 10,000 people. | |
| That's the head of a religion. | |
| That's a religion. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He's telling them to continue to kill. | |
| That's a religion? | |
| Yeah. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't know. | |
| It's really crazy. | |
| We should have fought this from the very beginning. | |
| And instead, we had President Bush and I was sitting there and I almost vomited. | |
| He said in Congress, well, Islam is a religion of peace, which they've hijacked. | |
| It's a religion of war, which they are literally interpreting. | |
| And if they wanted to be good Muslims, and there are good ones, they just write that out. | |
| Get that out. | |
| Get it out and demonstrate that you got it out. | |
| Say, we don't follow that anymore. | |
| That was crazy Muhammad at a very bad time. | |
| We're just going to take, we're going to take that half out and we're going to use the half with the good, with the good things that he has taught us, which I wish there were some. | |
| But we pretend like it's really a religion like Christianity or Judaism or Buddhism. | |
| It's not. | |
| None of those religions teach you to kill. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I would want our governments right now to kind of question whether or not this is actually a religion. | |
| Wouldn't that be great to get that up in front of the Supreme Court to argue whether or not Islam is actually? | |
| They're entitled to the protections that a religion gets. | |
| A cult of murder is not entitled to the protections of a religion. | |
| That's a very good point, Brian. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And well, that's the main problem that we have right now in Texas. | |
| So I live over in Plano, Texas, and it's well known. | |
| Yeah, for Epic. | |
| And I was there. | |
| Yeah, I was there when we had the hearing and it was filled. | |
| So this was the epic because they're looking to build on their 400 acres they purchased. | |
| By the way, they didn't purchase it as a Muslim group of individuals. | |
| They purchased it with like a Chinese company was the front runner for this. | |
| So this is why it's so hard to push these people away. | |
| I've been to Plano. | |
| I used to have a law firm in Dallas and in Houston. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Braceville Giuliani. | |
| It's changed a little. | |
| It's changed a little. | |
| Houston has changed a lot. | |
| Houston and Dallas are the leaders right now. | |
| DFW over the last two years opened up 48 mosques. | |
| I'd probably be so disappointed because I was the law firm was an old established Texas law firm and they wanted to grow in New York. | |
| So I opened the New York office and we became very big and very successful. | |
| And I used to love going, I used to love when I spent a lot of time in Texas and I used to love it because more people agreed with me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I used to, when I used to get in front of an audience in Texas to give a speech, they would say, Do you feel uncomfortable? | |
| Or I'd say, no, no, no, you guys applaud for me. | |
| In New York, all they do is boo. | |
| Yeah, well, that was the old days. | |
| I mean, we're still, we still have a Republican voting base, but it's very purple nowadays. | |
| There's a lot of rhinos too in the house, so it doesn't really help us out there. | |
| But this Muslim invasion of Texas really surprises me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, it's been well constructed over the last few years, but sadly, you know, Greg Abbott, someone who I strongly disagreed with, I think he's kind of tap dancer on the issue rather than addressing it head on. | |
| But now we see all these polls out there that Americans are concerned about Islam in the U.S. | |
| A lot of us, they snuck up. | |
| I happen to know a lot about it because I was going to be a priest and we spent a lot of time on comparative religion. | |
| And I read the Quran very, very young and it shocked the hell out of me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, I read all about the Reformation, the Protestant Reformation, all the Protestant religions. | |
| I know a little bit about Buddhism, not quite as much, but the three major religions-you know, there's Christianity, Judaism, and Muslim. | |
| So those are the three that I studied. | |
| And I start going with, I start reading the Quran, and I'm saying to the professor, the priest, he says, Don't be friends with Christians and Jews. | |
| Yeah, they're your enemies. | |
| They're your mortal enemies. | |
| He said, Well, yeah, it really isn't a religious book. | |
| Yeah, and they always feel very uncomfortable when they think of Muhammad being a pedophile. | |
| The priests, the priests, and the brothers are very open about it. | |
| It's not really, this is what the Crusades were about. | |
| It's not really, it's a book of murder. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, that's that's the argument that should be made. | |
| And we've got to start making that argument because I think right now what you see in Texas is actually happening all over Red States here in Florida as well, the Tampa area right now. | |
| Amy Mack from the Rare Foundation has done an incredible job at digging into all of this. | |
| And it's popping up in red states. | |
| And this is the reason why low regulations and they also like conservatives when it comes to our views on schools. | |
| There's no LGBT, whatever community infiltrating in our schools. | |
| We defend our schools. | |
| So they're building these Muslim compounds in red states. | |
| And I think most Americans don't realize it's happening there because they live on the compounds. | |
| They don't venture off. | |
| They don't want to coexist with us. | |
| They tried to build a mosque several years after 9-11 at 9-11. | |
| Oh, at the site. | |
| At the site. | |
| And I became an enormous, an enormous opponent of it. | |
| And everybody was sort of opposed to it. | |
| And I would tell them at that time what was in the Quran. | |
| And they would look at me like I was, you know, some kind of a nut. | |
| So what I started to, I have about eight versions of the Quran. | |
| And what I started to do is bring it with me. | |
| And I would show them, I would show them, I got a couple marked out. | |
| I would just show them the text and say, I didn't write that. | |
| Gabriel gave this to Muhammad, if you want to believe that. | |
| When we meet unbelievers in fight, smite at their necks. | |
| This is a religious leader. | |
| Remember, Jesus said stuff like this, right? | |
| At length, when you have thoroughly subdued them, bind a bond firmly on them. | |
| Thereafter, seek ransom. | |
| He lets you fight in order to test you. | |
| This is Allah. | |
| Some with others, but those who are slain in the way of Allah, he will never let their deeds be laws. | |
| Soon he will guide them and improve their condition. | |
| This is the part, this is the part about the 72 virgins, which is a little disputable. | |
| Could be 72, could be 79, could be 72 or 79. | |
| It is in the commentary rather than in the Koran itself, but it's in one of the commentaries. | |
| It's accepted as a valid commentary. | |
| The only thing I wonder about this is Arabs were always good at math. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We're basically one male for every female. | |
| Actually, there are a few more females. | |
| How are you going to end up with 79 virgins for every one male? | |
| Where are they going to come from? | |
| And finally, let's face it, you know. | |
| What do they look like? | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I think it's a book of fiction. | |
| I almost got myself a new fatwa by saying that the Ayatollah was getting very concerned with all of the Arabs, all of the Muslims that the Israelis were killing because they were using up all the virgins. | |
| Well, you think about it during the war, just think of all the ones that were killed. | |
| Yeah. | |
| How many 79 virgins are going to be left with all those guys being killed? | |
| Mass authors. | |
| It doesn't matter. | |
| I already have two attempts to kill me by the Iranians and four fatwas. | |
|
Fox News Controversies
00:11:54
|
|
| And they're not as good as the mafia who tried to kill me also, but decided not to. | |
| So I figure I'm okay. | |
| That was nice of them. | |
| So I have the mafia. | |
| I have the FARC. | |
| The FARC actually announced how they want to kill me because I talk so much. | |
| They want to cut my throat. | |
| Wow. | |
| So, well, I love these bullies. | |
| I mean, I just love these damn bullies. | |
| And you just can't, you just can't give into them. | |
| You just can't give in to them, including our domestic domestic communists. | |
| That's right. | |
| Ted, you want to calm me down now before I get into more trouble? | |
| No, no, never, Mayor. | |
| We're just getting started. | |
| It's just a Monday. | |
| It's been a very busy weekend, a very busy start to the week, but we want people to learn more about our friend Brianna here. | |
| Tell us about kind of your background and how you went from legacy media to the independent star that you are today. | |
| And you're just getting started. | |
| Well, you're talking me up a bit. | |
| So thank you, Ted. | |
| I appreciate that. | |
| I don't talk people up. | |
| Yes, she's always a 20. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Thank you. | |
| I started off in the corporate media world. | |
| I actually started off first in sports. | |
| I actually worked over at Major League Baseball and covered the Yankees for a bit. | |
| I know. | |
| Mr. Yankee. | |
| I know. | |
| When? | |
| When? | |
| What era? | |
| This was 2015-ish. | |
| Oh, before they had that great era when they couldn't lose. | |
| I know. | |
| I know. | |
| 2008 years playoff every year. | |
| I know. | |
| Who was the mayor then for every one of those years? | |
| You might have been the good luck charm. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's what I thought. | |
| Under me, they won four World Stars. | |
| Since then, they've basically the bench coach. | |
| Good luck charming. | |
| They've won one since me in 1909. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Joe Torrey would call him up between games. | |
| Joe Corey would call me up and ask me for advice. | |
| And then when I gave a speech for him, when he got a Hall of Fame, I explained that. | |
| I said he always called me and talked to me. | |
| And he said, you may think the mayor is bragging, but he's not. | |
| I always called him. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Always asked him for advice. | |
| And I always did the opposite. | |
| Well, you still gave him great advice, apparently, because it worked out well for them. | |
| So you started in sports. | |
| You're with the Yankees. | |
| Major League Baseball did a little Yankees, yes, network because it was all under the MLB advanced media. | |
| I recognized your name. | |
| Yeah, I've been 10 years now doing that. | |
| You were with the Yankees. | |
| I sure as hell saw you on. | |
| Well, with Major League Baseball, so it was their digital class. | |
| I was like, it was the Bible. | |
| I love it. | |
| Okay. | |
| So the people over at Yes were great to me. | |
| That's kind of where I would dip on and just, they were very nice to shadow and to let me shadow them and learn what they were up to. | |
| Ken Singleton was great to me over the years. | |
| Great guy, just an incredible person. | |
| And it was an honor. | |
| I love Ken Single. | |
| Yeah, he gave me the best career advice. | |
| So he was a great person. | |
| And then I worked a little bit over at ESPN Plus. | |
| And then I ventured off and worked for Fox News after I started reading through legislation going through New York, knew it was all going to be really, really bad. | |
| This was 2018-ish, 2019, and jumped into the news side of things. | |
| And so I went to, I did Fox for a little bit, then went to Newsmax, local news, and then back to Fox. | |
| Were you with Fox when they turned on him over January 7th? | |
| I was with Fox when they turned against me for the vaccine, actually. | |
| Oh, me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I'm not allowed on. | |
| I know that. | |
| I tried booking you for the 9-11 ceremony. | |
| Well, God forbid. | |
| And we weren't allowed to have young. | |
| Imagine not being on for 9-11. | |
| Isn't that, isn't it? | |
| It's like changing history. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They interview people that are talking about what I did. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And here I am available to explain it. | |
| And I used to be on Fox. | |
| I used to be on Fox every 9-11. | |
| Not only that, I put Fox on in New York when they wouldn't, when the CNN wouldn't give them, because Turner Broadcasting owned CNN. | |
| And Turner Broadcasting had all the cable outlets tied up in New York. | |
| And when Turner Broadcasting wouldn't give them anything in New York or California, New York had five of its own cable stations. | |
| And we had one that we were using for foreign broadcasting. | |
| And Fox offered me three times more than I was getting from the foreign broadcast. | |
| And I threw all the foreign broadcasters off and I put them on. | |
| And that was their first nine months in New York on New York City television. | |
| That's amazing. | |
| And they eventually developed such an audience that they had a big antitrust suit and they settled it. | |
| And then they finally were off. | |
| And for that reason, I mean, they always loved me. | |
| I put them on. | |
| I used to be on Fox almost like a regular, but I never would be a correspondent for that because I wanted to be independent. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then they threw me off completely. | |
| And then they all lied about January 7th. | |
| They all claimed they didn't believe it. | |
| And some of them were more zealous about the election fraud than I was. | |
| They were zealots about it. | |
| I mean, I would tell them to calm down. | |
| You know, watch out for Sidney Powell. | |
| She's going a little nuts on this Kraken thing and be careful. | |
| You know, I fired her twice. | |
| And they were, and then all of a sudden, when they testified, oh, no, we never believed there was a, it's disgraceful what they did. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, it definitely changed the way media runs things now. | |
| I mean, the lawsuit itself against Fox has been an indicator for a lot of people. | |
| So you leave Fox and then you choose. | |
| Tell us how you've gotten to the point where you are now, which is put her back on. | |
| How you got to the point now where you are one of the top independent and reliable, right? | |
| That's the key to the new resources. | |
| When you speak, people listen to standards. | |
| Thank you. | |
| People want to know what you think, what your perspective is on something. | |
| And they trust you when they hear you speak. | |
| Yeah, well, I think a lot of it had to do when I left Fox and I publicly spoke about why I was no longer there. | |
| But now I do the morning news show over at Infowars every day, American Journal. | |
| So I'm hosting that. | |
| I also still do my independent journalism and I'm also now a Pentagon reporter. | |
| So I'm traveling with the Pentagon pool, the press pool, and that's been found. | |
| You're going on reporter for myself. | |
| Oh, okay, good. | |
| So you already attended. | |
| Totally independent. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And that's, isn't that just amazing how she's done it? | |
| Mayor, we hear so many people, right? | |
| Oh, they talk about what they're going to do, what they want to do. | |
| And if they only had this break or that break, she would have been on her own. | |
| There's going to be a lot more of you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because I would much rather hear from a Pentagon reporter's view that's independent than one that's maybe affected by Rupert Murdoch. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There's no one over me who's telling me what to say. | |
| That's the good news. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, it's been, it's been great. | |
| You know, and I've been critical of the Pentagon. | |
| And Secretary Pete Hegset, I think, has been great. | |
| There's been some things I felt a little on edge about. | |
| And I posted about it and I know that they disagreed with it, but I have to say that they gave me press credentials, even though they haven't agreed with all my reporting. | |
| And so while the media was going out there, and I had announced that actually, well, I was hosting my InfoWars show, I had announced that I had gotten the press passes. | |
| And the whole media blew up, like, InfoWars has press passes now. | |
| They were so upset. | |
| Alex, obviously, Alex Jones loved it, every second of it. | |
| And so we were going and just, you know, poking the bees. | |
| But these people were just so unhit. | |
| They all went in with their biases and they didn't do their jobs. | |
| When Lloyd Austin went missing as the defense secretary, nobody asked what happened with Lloyd Austin. | |
| He was having surgery. | |
| Not even the White House knew what happened with him. | |
| And the media let him off. | |
| And so we don't do that. | |
| I have a history of nothing. | |
| Pete were gone. | |
| They had to make up stuff about Pete. | |
| Yeah, yeah, he's drunk. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I worked at Fox. | |
| I would listen to them because I was running teleprompter when I first started there. | |
| And so I listened to them 24/7 because I have their microphones in my earpiece 24-7. | |
| And like, never was inappropriate, never sounded like he was drunk. | |
| My other friend, Joey. | |
| I should have never even said that. | |
| No, like they try to push that lie. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I know Pete really well. | |
| I wrote a letter in any way a drunk. | |
| Yeah, no, he wasn't. | |
| Ridiculous. | |
| Yeah, well, and Joey Jones, also another great patriot, was sitting next to him on the couch. | |
| He's a vet and he doesn't like the smell of alcohol. | |
| And he's like, if I ever smelled alcohol on anyone's breath, like I would know and I'd actually be upset about that. | |
| So it was a completely BS narrative. | |
| I actually, because it's anonymous sources, that story too, I actually put out a letter and sent it to all of the senators saying that as a former colleague over at Fox, I never had any indicators of any of this. | |
| Yeah, I never even thought that would never even thought that would take hold because he ran it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I know Pete from the time he started. | |
| You know, my campaign manager was Roger Rails. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I was with Roger when he developed Fox. | |
| That's amazing. | |
| He was one of my best friends, and we would have lunch together all the time and play ball together. | |
| And then when I was mayor, he would spend a lot of his time. | |
| He was married at City Hall. | |
| Oh, I didn't know that. | |
| Roger Rails married at City. | |
| They rented City Hall and I conducted their wedding. | |
| That's amazing. | |
| That's awesome. | |
| So I'm very close to Fox. | |
| I mean, but things have changed. | |
| It's unbelievable. | |
| Unbelievable. | |
| And it's unbelievable. | |
| I can see like there was a period of time when they spent about two months trying to promote Governor DeSantis. | |
| DeSantis. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I mean, it was ridiculous. | |
| Every show was about Governor DeSantis. | |
| Governor DeSantis, you know, invented the polio vaccine. | |
| DeSantis did this. | |
| Governor DeSantis did this. | |
| They started elevating him to this. | |
| They at least made it seem like that the party and the Republican primary base was split. | |
| And at no point were they split between Trump and Infinite. | |
| This isn't personal against DeSantis, right? | |
| But they were never, right? | |
| They stuck with President Trump all the way through. | |
| So we can even take DeSantis's name out, right? | |
| And say Fox had, they had obviously attempted to elevate others, including DeSantis. | |
| And they came down to thinking DeSantis was the one. | |
| They used to be used until it was sure to win. | |
| And then they started kissing him. | |
| Kiss him butt. | |
| No surprise. | |
| That's right. | |
| Ladies and gentlemen, we're going to have to. | |
| We were in soccer time here. | |
| This is after nine o'clock. | |
| We call it soccer time because, you know, in soccer, you get that extra penalty minutes at the end. | |
| Soccer time, right? | |
| You know what you never know? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you have to get used to this during the during the World Cup when it's in the game ends and then there's an unknown amount of time to play. | |
| Soccer time. | |
| Overtime and soccer. | |
| The degrees know, but the players don't tell you. | |
| Which I think is the most ridiculous thing in the world. | |
| It's like you don't know how much time you have to set up the goal. | |
| And we named our overtime. | |
| Three minutes? | |
| You could have two seconds. | |
| Mayor, we named our overtime soccer time before Andrew got the big job with heading the White House Task Force. | |
| We can't make fun of soccer. | |
| I'm not going to change the name. | |
| And my son is running the security for all of FIFA. | |
| The White House Task Force for the World Cup, yeah. | |
| Andrew is doing a great job. | |
| And, you know. | |
| That's a good job. | |
| But he played American football, but he was a kicker. | |
| So he played soccer. | |
| Oh, oh, oh, he played soccer as well. | |
| He was a really good soccer. | |
| He was a good soccer. | |
| He was such a good kicker. | |
| Well, he was a great kicker. | |
| He held the record for the most points in New Jersey for years. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's amazing. | |
| I wonder what he would have thought of Denver's kicker yesterday. | |
| I think he would have felt sorry for him. | |
| Denver's kickers from Miami. | |
| They had him kicking in the snow, missed a few big kicks. | |
| Yeah, how about it with a 40, 50 mile an hour wind swirling around like this? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, I'm not saying that. | |
| You could do it. | |
| He's lucky that the kids from Miami. | |
| They got a kicker from Miami. | |
| He's lucky the ball didn't come back into his face. | |
| Well, we're going to have to sign off. | |
| So I'm going to have to ask you to do what I always ask you to do, which is pray for Ukraine, the people of Ukraine. | |
| Pray for the people of Israel. | |
|
Why We Left Denver
00:02:39
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|
| Pray for the people of Iran, because I think, I think, I think, I think we're sort of at the end with this Ayatollah. | |
| He is now completely in hiding, completely in hiding. | |
| This is a guy that doesn't believe what he preaches. | |
| Because if he did, he'd be sitting there and saying, I want to go to paradise. | |
| Rat. | |
| And pray, of course, for the people of the United States and the president who has a very difficult job. | |
| And he needs your guidance. | |
| We all do. | |
| But he needs it specially. | |
| These are very difficult decisions. | |
| So, what are we going to say? | |
| God bless America. | |
| 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 Paine's Common Sense, written in 1776, one of the first American bestsellers, in which Thomas Paine explained, by rational principles, the reason why these small colonies felt the necessity to separate from the kingdom of Great Britain and the King of England. | |
| He explained their inherent desire for liberty, for freedom, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, the ability to select the people who govern them. | |
| And he explained it in ways that were understandable to all the people, not just the elite. | |
| Because the desire for freedom is universal. | |
| The desire for freedom adheres in the human mind and it is part of the human soul. | |
| This is exactly the time we should consult our history. | |
| Look at what we've done in the past and see if we can't use it to help us now. | |
| We understand that our founders created the greatest country in the history of the world. | |
| The greatest democracy, the freest country, a country that has taken more people out of poverty than any country ever. | |
| All of us are so fortunate to be Americans. | |
| But a great deal of the reason for America's constant ability to self-improve is because we're able to reason. | |
| We're able to talk. | |
| We're able to analyze. | |