America's Mayor Live (852): President Trump Sends Tom Homan to Minneapolis as Tensions Remain High
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Mozart's Light Requiem
00:02:42
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| Well, this is the birthday, the 256th or 57th, 270th birthday of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who lived until, and I'm borrowing this. | |
| I always have to tell you this, because I don't want to be a cheat like the Democrats. | |
| I borrowed this from the Epoch Times, who focused on his birthday in their edition this week. | |
| And he was born on January 27, 1756 in Salzburg, Austria. | |
| He composed his first piece of music at five years old. | |
| At five years old? | |
| He lived to be only 35, yet he has a compendium of music, 600 pieces plus, that are some of the greatest pieces of music ever written by man. | |
| My favorite, I mean, you could argue, music experts will argue about this, with Don Giovanni, The Greatest Opera, or The Marriage of Figaro. | |
| I'd say more people come out on the side of marriage of Figaro. | |
| I come out on the side of Don Giovanni. | |
| What about, I think his Requiem is by far, even compared to Verdi. | |
| Here I am in Italian. | |
| I love Verdi. | |
| I think his Requiem Mass is the best Requiem Mass written by anyone, composed by anyone. | |
| It's a Requiem Mass that's joyful. | |
| It was played for John F. Kennedy's funeral. | |
| And there's a wonderful recording of it with Eric Leinstoff in which you actually hear Cardinal Cushing saying goodbye, Jack. | |
| It'll make you cry. | |
| But it's a joyful requiem because, of course, you're praying and hoping and celebrating, hopefully, the person going to heaven. | |
| That's what the religion's all about. | |
| Mozart understood that. | |
| There isn't a piece of music that he's written, even in his tragedies, that I don't know, it just makes me feel better. | |
| Whenever I was down, I would play, even now, I play Mozart. | |
| You listen to that Eino Kleinenach music. | |
| That's a little night music. | |
| That's just beautiful. | |
| I mean, for what it is, it's a light piece of music. | |
| Probably one of the lightest ones that he wrote. | |
| One of the most popular. | |
| It's a great piece of music. | |
| Great to listen to, given the times we're going through. | |
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Arrests and Lethal Weapons
00:04:40
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| I feel that Gregory Bovino and Christy Noam and their crew have been dealt, you know, have been dealt a really bad hand here. | |
| And I understand and respect what the president did and a shift had to be done. | |
| But by no means is it their fault. | |
| They were just doing what they were told. | |
| They were just doing what the law tells them to do, much less the president. | |
| And they did a damn good job. | |
| Under any other circumstances, any other mayor and governor would be kissing their feet. | |
| I would if I were a mayor again. | |
| And they came in and got rid of these rapists and murderers out of my jurisdiction. | |
| Instead, they obstructed them. | |
| I mean, there's no question that Walls and Fry have violated the law over and over and over again. | |
| People ask me, how can you do this? | |
| How can you just say, oh, we're not going to cooperate with the federal government? | |
| You can't. | |
| Not with regard to the execution of the laws. | |
| I mean, they directly interfered with the execution of the laws. | |
| The man who was killed, pretty, who I know you're not supposed to say anything but really nice things about now, otherwise you get fired, but they can't fire me. | |
| I mean, the guy was a trained, he was a trained criminal in that he was trained to obstruct arrests made by federal agents. | |
| That's a criminal. | |
| He was trained in the art of, and they have a name for it, rearrest. | |
| When I look at that video, I see something different than you see. | |
| I see what they trained him for. | |
| And I wish I could get my hands on their training videos because you would see that he and the woman were trained to do that. | |
| They were distracting. | |
| Don't you realize what they were doing? | |
| They were distracting the agents so they could get the guy out who was a domestic violence criminal, like convicted and arrested, and likes to beat up women. | |
| They were helping to get him out so he could beat up some more women. | |
| And these are like high moral people. | |
| No, they're, I mean, at best, they're screwed up. | |
| Why you would go train in learning how to rearrest? | |
| I mean, it's just another way that communists say of obstruction of justice, obstruction of an arrest. | |
| So she comes in, she distracts a few of the agents. | |
| He comes in, gets into that argument with the agent, and pulls him out here. | |
| Now the guy's down to a smaller number. | |
| He can deal with and maybe he can get away. | |
| I don't know if he did get away or not. | |
| They eventually arrested him again. | |
| But in any event, that led to the fight. | |
| And I don't know what you think is going to happen if you're going there deliberately for the purpose of obstructing arrests by federal law enforcement. | |
| And you have a very lethal weapon. | |
| You had a license for it, but you've got a very lethal weapon. | |
| You've got to make choices and you have to have the judgment on your possession. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I thought you asked me in advance as your lawyer or something. | |
| I'd say, please don't do this. | |
| You just don't. | |
| You're going to create the situation in which this man who got you is going to have to live with it all his life. | |
| He had no other choice. | |
| I mean, this is terrible. | |
| I mean, this is terrible what they do there. | |
| So on my other show, I interviewed a guy who's very, very knowledgeable about Minneapolis and Minnesota, and who's, I guess, one of the most popular podcasters there. | |
| And he's distraught over the condition of Minneapolis, and he should be. | |
| Any decent person would be. | |
| It's being run by criminals. | |
| Fry is a criminal. | |
| He's also a little jackass. | |
| I can say that as having had a very successful eight years as mayor, and he's had an entirely unsuccessful eight years as mayor, including helping to spark the riots in 2020 by giving up a precinct. | |
| I've never heard of a mayor giving up a police precinct. | |
| What a miserable little coward he is. | |
| Or maybe communists like the governor. | |
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Paying and Collecting Fractions
00:14:19
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| I mean, I will continue to say he's a communist until he gives sufficient answers to the questions that arise from his being recruited by China through Harvard to go over there and get trained for 15 months and then making anywhere from 15 to 30 trips back there. | |
| We don't know if it's 15 or 30. | |
| He says 30 and Payne says 15. | |
| And nobody really bothers to check. | |
| The Congress kind of did an investigation, but I mean, that's, I mean, pretty easy to figure out how many he actually made there and who was paying the money. | |
| I got a pretty good idea who was paying the money. | |
| They do admit a couple where there was transparency paid for by red China. | |
| And I'm going to tell you, you take 50 kids a year to China regularly, and that's your business. | |
| You make a profit on that. | |
| China doesn't let you come there unless you're teaching them to be communists. | |
| You got to be crazy. | |
| And they trust you. | |
| And that's why he ends up saying things like China would be the best moral force to arbitrate and work out the benefit of the United States, the Middle East problem. | |
| Who the hell would say that, but a red Chinese communist? | |
| Or what was it? | |
| One man's socialism is another man's generosity, something like that. | |
| Yeah, like hell it is. | |
| I mean, socialism has wiped out more people than any ideology in the history of the world. | |
| Socialism, the inventor of socialism is Karl Marx. | |
| Socialism is simply the economic system used by communists. | |
| And just to be fair to Tim Walz here, the actual quote is that one man's socialism is another man's neighborliness. | |
| Neighborliness. | |
| So we don't want to mischaracterize him. | |
| Okay, neighborliness. | |
| Okay, Tim. | |
| The socialists are really neighborly, very neighborly people. | |
| They just happen to have, there's no ideology in the history of the world that's led to more deaths, more killings, and more atrocities than the combination of communism and socialism. | |
| More poverty, more suffering, more hunger. | |
| Absolutely, look at your city, Fry. | |
| It's a piece of shit. | |
| Less freedom, no freedom of religion. | |
| Of course there's no freedom. | |
| They decide how much money you get. | |
| You don't have anything to say about it. | |
| They decide who you realize what happens to the human personality when they're in charge of other people. | |
| They become bullies. | |
| They become tyrants. | |
| They become, it just happens all the time. | |
| Every experiment with socialism ended up like Venezuela. | |
| I mean, China is the one. | |
| You want to be China? | |
| I mean, he does. | |
| He wants to be China. | |
| They've only wiped out 80 to 100 million of their own people. | |
| That's great. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Just want to keep people under control. | |
| Kill them. | |
| You don't want to have girl babies? | |
| Kill them. | |
| You want to sell organs because you can make a big profit? | |
| Grab the falon gun and pull out their kidneys. | |
| And they can't fight for their liberty when they're starving. | |
| Hunger. | |
| No, half the country is starving. | |
| That's another thing when they compare it to the United States and they use economic comparisons. | |
| And we and even Western Europe, Eastern Europe, we don't have half our country in third world poverty. | |
| They do. | |
| They don't really give a damn. | |
| They actually don't give a damn. | |
| I mean, one of the dumbest remarks, well, he didn't make this. | |
| Somebody else did who was also probably a communist. | |
| That, oh, They would never have just deliberately spread COVID because they wouldn't want to see so many Chinese people die. | |
| Best thing can happen is you tell them some of the Chinese died. | |
| It depends on who. | |
| I mean, as long as they're not the 100 million Communist Party members, they're fine. | |
| In fact, they kill them. | |
| Yeah, that statement actually makes the opposite point if you think about it. | |
| Yeah, they need to call it. | |
| Yeah, that's great. | |
| Yeah, a lot of those people died that aren't part of the party. | |
| Yeah, great. | |
| Go. | |
| There's more for us. | |
| So I don't know what's going to happen. | |
| I don't know if these guys, Fry and Tampon Tim, are capable of cooperating with proper law enforcement in a way that will straighten out the situation in Minneapolis. | |
| And I really don't, I really understand. | |
| I understand the politics of it, but I really fear that maybe we're teaching the wrong lesson here. | |
| Maybe we're teaching that you can scare us off. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I hope not. | |
| I hope not. | |
| Now, the president did select the guy. | |
| Maybe he should have been the guy to go in first. | |
| I mean, Holman, nobody knows more about this than Tom Holman. | |
| But he's got two committed anti-American haters who really are in the business of trying to create chaos because that's what Karl Marx taught them to do. | |
| That's what you wonder why do they do this? | |
| They do it because they want to create a chaotic situation so that we come to hate our government. | |
| Now, they hate our government. | |
| You listen to the Democrats. | |
| You listen to the congresswoman who married her brother. | |
| All she does is tell us what a terrible country we are. | |
| Now, she comes from a country that's an abomination. | |
| Somalia. | |
| It's not new either. | |
| I think we can remember, we'll also quote Michelle Obama here and say that she was never proud of our country until her husband was elected. | |
| Yeah, another reason why they get away with murder. | |
| Who the heck can say, who can say that? | |
| And then, you know, she and her husband get elected president and they wanted to run for president. | |
| She was never proud of the country until he became until this unqualified, pompous ass became head of the country and ruined us. | |
| He had no qualifications to be president. | |
| The whole idea that he's so damn smart is a joke. | |
| What he is, what he is is conniving. | |
| Listen to him when he doesn't have something to read. | |
| And when he weighs in on these issues, you can just grab. | |
| He was president during a time when he was on video a lot and we can find him. | |
| So you can just pull out contradictions one after another. | |
| He doesn't weigh in on a lot, but when he does weigh in, you can just pull clip after clip of him being a total hypocrite. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, how about on Obamacare, right? | |
| I mean, unreal. | |
| You can keep your plan. | |
| No, everybody's lost their plan. | |
| It'll save you money. | |
| No, you're paying three times more. | |
| Yeah. | |
| How's that going? | |
| How's that going for everybody? | |
| How is Obamacare doing? | |
| It's a disaster. | |
| Everything he promised is wrong, and they're bankrupting us with it. | |
| They're literally bankrupting. | |
| It's unaffordable without the subsidies. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then who knows how many people are collecting it fraudulently? | |
| It's a ridiculous percentage, a ridiculous number. | |
| People are collecting the names of fictitious people the way they vote, the way the Democrats vote with fictitious people, which, you know, the media will tell you I'm insane for saying that or insane. | |
| I know it. | |
| I've seen it. | |
| I've seen it for years in New York. | |
| Happened in my elections. | |
| Well, and the legal fees alone that have resulted from Obamacare and the expansion of the statutes for healthcare, it's got to be in the hundreds of billions, if not trillions of dollars these lawyers have made just off of the paperwork. | |
| Well, look at all the people they have found that are collecting it more than once. | |
| The people who are collecting it who are dead. | |
| The people who are collecting it don't exist. | |
| The people who are collecting it fairly, but have to siphon off about 40% of it for compliance. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't know. | |
| That doesn't help health. | |
| I think you would be shocked if it came up with a percentage of entirely fraudulent payments. | |
| I think you'd be shocked. | |
| We're going to have fraud stories coming out until the midterms, and that's what we got to keep hammering home. | |
| And if you think Minneapolis is the only place that has, and the Somaliks are the only ones who cheat, look, first of all, they came here. | |
| They had to learn it from somebody. | |
| I mean, cheating in Somali, in Somali is very different than cheating here. | |
| Somebody got to teach you how to play these great society and Biden programs. | |
| But they have the heart for it. | |
| Cheating is in their heart. | |
| They just. | |
| Yeah, let's steal the money from the kids that are supposed to get it. | |
| I mean, every one of those places that was empty of kids for five years are kids that didn't get educated. | |
| It's their kids. | |
| They really actually don't really give a shit. | |
| I mean, let's just steal the money. | |
| Let's not educate the kids. | |
| Let's steal the money from the food programs. | |
| Let's not feed them the food. | |
| One of the big problems that everyone's talking about, especially in New York, is the cost of child care. | |
| And you know, when a lot of the money that's supposed to go to it gets siphoned off, as they want to do, childcare gets more expensive. | |
| The hardworking people who actually work to pay for it. | |
| Yep, yep. | |
| And the commie who's running New York and Islamic terrorist lover is going to make it even more expensive. | |
| So here's what I'm worried about. | |
| I don't know how Fry and Tampon Tim make a big switch around. | |
| And now I think we had up there for a little while the demands the president made. | |
| Now, this would be a total change of position by both of them if they agreed to this. | |
| Now, theoretically, they have. | |
| I mean, the president has done, you know, a contract, a contract has two people that have to act. | |
| You can leave it that way. | |
| That's great. | |
| The contract has two people that have to act, right? | |
| You have to do your part, the other person do their part. | |
| So the president's part here was, I guess, remove Bovino. | |
| In essence, remove Christy Noome because Holman reports directly to President Trump. | |
| I guess the next part is to make some reduction in the numbers. | |
| Then in return for that, they're going to do this. | |
| Turn over all illegal immigrants in local jails or those with active warrants. | |
| Now, very smart, they said local jails. | |
| I'll tell you in a little while. | |
| Well, now they're disputing how many there are. | |
| Tampon Tim says there are a couple hundred and federal government says there's 1,300. | |
| Big difference, right? | |
| Or state, local law enforcement agree to turn over all illegal immigrants. | |
| They can do that, really? | |
| Local police to assist feds in tracking down illegal immigrants. | |
| Democrats to partner with feds to protect American citizens in removing all illegal immigrants. | |
| I mean, you think they're going to do that? | |
| I mean, they're already, I think, protesting Walls for even having talked to Trump. | |
| This guy's going to cave in a second. | |
| So I hope. | |
| I hope not. | |
| I mean, I hope that this results in not just a face-saving and... | |
| So now they're protesting Tim Walsh. | |
| I mean, they couldn't have a more accommodating criminal than Tim Walz. | |
| I mean, the guy has had an entire criminal regime as governor. | |
| Every one of those things that constitutes their version of the sanctuary city is against the law, except nobody ever did anything about it. | |
| Right. | |
| People say to me, How can that be legal? | |
| It's not. | |
| It's not. | |
| You're a better lawyer than anybody from the media. | |
| It's not legal. | |
| It's not legal to have a law saying you can't turn over information to the federal government in an area that's an area of federal preemption. | |
| So, Mr. Bovino, you're a big, big guy and a good guy, and you did a great job. | |
| And I think you were terrific. | |
| And Christy, you're one of his best cabinet members, and you're doing what he wants. | |
| I think maybe this change had to be made. | |
| I understand it. | |
| I don't understand, though, this criticism, even from some of the conservative newspapers. | |
| I mean, you've gotten, you and your team have gotten rid of so many illegals in such a short period of time. | |
| It's probably the principal reason why crime is down as much as it is. | |
| Because this group of criminals, this group of illegals that could be as many as 20 or 30 million, were peculiarly criminal, much more so than in the past. | |
|
Gunfire and Distractions
00:09:25
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| And when you look at it and you look at their records, some disproportionate number of them are people who abuse children and women. | |
| They don't seem to care. | |
| They actually harbor them. | |
| So now I guess it's been determined that this is a, this, there was an errant shot from the gun, the SIG Sauer P320. | |
| And tell us a little about, do you know, do either one of you know this gun pretty well? | |
| I don't. | |
| Do either one of you know this gun pretty well? | |
| They say law enforcement uses it also. | |
| I didn't know. | |
| So it depends. | |
| I never remember, maybe it didn't exist when I was. | |
| I never remember buying this thing. | |
| A number of manufacturers that make this particular variant, and actually there's been a lot of chatter about this. | |
| The slide, this is one of the few firearms that can actually fire based on just moving the slide without actually, you know, intending to solve. | |
| So there are hundreds of lawsuits. | |
| So therefore, it's dangerous. | |
| This thing is. | |
| It is. | |
| And people can't believe that they even still allow it to be manufactured, actually, because it has such a history of being. | |
| Well, they have something like 100 lawsuits, right? | |
| They have something like 100 lawsuits for the thing going off without anybody. | |
| I mean, I used to make fun of the ball in case that the gun went off and he never touched the trigger. | |
| This apparently is a gun that goes off rather regularly without touching the trigger. | |
| It's so rare. | |
| And there are, and actually, just go ahead and if you're on YouTube, if you want to look at it, just type in the name of the firearm. | |
| And there's more than enough videos from firearm experts that kind of go through and analyze the problem. | |
| So this is the gun. | |
| I don't know if I have it. | |
| Oh, there you go. | |
| You got a great picture of it. | |
| I have this one here. | |
| So each magazine has 21 rounds, I think. | |
| And I think he had three loaded and he had three extra. | |
| Now, what the hell is he doing with that many rounds? | |
| So when somebody is criticized for saying that this guy and the good woman are domestic terrorists, I don't know. | |
| This guy was obviously trained in the practice of rearrest. | |
| Rearrest is just a nice way of saying breaking somebody out of jail or breaking somebody out of the custody of the police. | |
| It's another way of saying accessory after the fact, obstruction of justice. | |
| They teach them how to create some kind of multiple distractions so that the person arrested by federal agents, in many cases, a person who has been already found guilty of rape or murder or you see the numbers. | |
| I mean, we went through the list the other night. | |
| It's about five out of 10 are involved in some form of sexual abuse. | |
| About two or three out of 10 in murder. | |
| So this isn't a nice group of people. | |
| So they practice and they are trained to create a distraction the person can get away. | |
| That's what they were doing. | |
| So I don't know if anybody else will tell you that, but that's what they were doing. | |
| She was distracting the police. | |
| The agents, he was distracting the agents so that the guy that they were trying to arrest could go free. | |
| And the guy that they go arrested had a rap sheet like this and was a dangerous criminal. | |
| Now, the guy, I don't know if they didn't succeed or they caught the guy after, but the guy has now been, the guy that was the object of that particular arrest has been has been arrested. | |
| But when you look at what they were doing, that is exactly what they're trained to do. | |
| Pretty was doing it a week before, and there's video of him doing it a week before. | |
| So he was a trained obstructor of justice. | |
| And so was the woman who got herself thrown down and yelled and screamed so that the agents would be distracted from arresting the criminal and they'd get away. | |
| Now, people questioned about Pretty said he was obsessed with this whole how horrible ICE was. | |
| Well, this wasn't even ICE. | |
| This was the Border Patrol. | |
| Now, I'm not sure that makes a difference to him. | |
| Maybe it would have because he seemed like he was, doesn't seem like he was normal. | |
| That's the agent who took the gun. | |
| They're showing you the agent who took the gun from Pretty. | |
| And what they think is that gun went off. | |
| It all happened like within two seconds, right? | |
| That guy grabs the gun. | |
| Somebody yells gun, maybe him, but he doesn't yell, I have the gun. | |
| He yells it. | |
| If you hear it, it sounds like there's a gun now engaged in the frankest that's going on. | |
| And the other agent who doesn't see this part here, doesn't know where that gun came from, shoots the guy to try to protect his guys that are right in the middle, thinking that a gun came out. | |
| And that gun could kill any one of his buddies, any one of his federal, his fellow agents. | |
| And you're supposed to protect it. | |
| The reason you go in together like that is to protect each other. | |
| And I don't know that there's anything there that says they weren't well trained. | |
| I mean, you can't tell how well trained they were. | |
| They were, they weren't, because they were obstructed. | |
| I mean, I know policing really well. | |
| And maybe the only thing I can think of is they haven't really internalized yet exactly how well organized this group is that's coming against them. | |
| This is a very, this is a very well-organized group of criminals. | |
| And as we check with people in Minneapolis, I was told, you know, one of the things wrong is you think that there are a lot of outsiders that have come in. | |
| You don't need a lot of outsiders because they're well trained inside of Minneapolis to obstruct. | |
| I mean, they did a pretty good job of burning their city down in 2020, right? | |
| I mean, now, I'll tell you what isn't happening, though. | |
| Even with all this stuff and changing people and et cetera, this isn't catching on all over the country. | |
| I shouldn't do that. | |
| I just say, thank God. | |
| I mean, and I don't want to say, I don't want to say anything about it because maybe I'll jinx it. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But this isn't catching on. | |
| It isn't like anything like Floyd or even the 2024 university anti-Semitic riots. | |
| So I think people very quietly have made their own judgment about both of these people. | |
| You can say all the things you want about, you know, you feel sorry. | |
| You do, you do feel sorry. | |
| But in some ways, I feel sorry for the unbelievable problems they've caused for these agents. | |
| And these guys have to live with this for the rest of their life. | |
| They didn't want this. | |
| They didn't want this. | |
| The people who were shot wanted it. | |
| They're the ones who intruded. | |
| Well, we have, we'll take a short break. | |
| We'll take a short break and we'll be right back. | |
| U.S. Army Major Scott Smiley paid a high price serving our nation. | |
| Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed. | |
| Scott would become the first blind, active duty military officer before medically retiring years later. | |
| Thanks to friends like you, the Tunnels of Towers Foundation gave Scott and his family a mortgage-free, specially adapted smart home. | |
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00:17:39
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| These deals are selling out. | |
| Here we are, pretty much at the beginning of the process here at this pristine, I call it a laboratory. | |
| It's not like a factory. | |
| It's like a hospital. | |
| This is the beginning of the process for roasting. | |
| Deep green, very good quality. | |
| Most people don't use this quality. | |
| We deal with small farmers because they'd like to know who we're dealing with. | |
| They give us the highest quality, all organic, non-GMO. | |
| You should know all Arabica beans. | |
| No Robusto. | |
| All Arabica. | |
| They're going to go into the roaster, and it'll get roasted for about 20 minutes or so. | |
| Oh, my goodness. | |
| Look at these. | |
| My goodness, you're going to want to specially order these. | |
| This is what goes into Rudy's coffee. | |
| Well, I posted earlier a question, a quiz, a question to see how good you guys are on keeping up with current events. | |
| And it was, who said this? | |
| Who is the voice in the world that can negotiate some type of agreement in this? | |
| Talking about Hamas and Israel. | |
| Who holds the moral authority? | |
| Who holds the ability to do it? | |
| Because we, meaning the United States, are not seen as a neutral actor. | |
| And we maybe never were. | |
| Might as well hit your own country. | |
| Then he added, I mean, consistently over and over again, we're going to have to face the reality. | |
| It might be the Chinese. | |
| This is just, this was on June 13th, 2025, at the Center for American Progress. | |
| When you hear the word progress, it means the Center for American Communism. | |
| On June 13, 2025, I bet Choosing the Chinese got a standing ovation from these commies. | |
| That's Tim Walz. | |
| So you want the answer to why he is deliberately creating this chaos and violence and destruction in Minneapolis and in his state? | |
| Because he's been an operative. | |
| Until he answers these questions, I got to assume of the red Chinese government. | |
| He didn't just say this. | |
| He was drafted. | |
| He was drafted. | |
| He was drafted out of college by Harvard to go over to China and get trained for 15 months. | |
| He went back there anywhere 15 to 30 times. | |
| Now, why do we say 15 to 30? | |
| Because he says 30. | |
| His campaign says 15. | |
| And nobody's ever thought it was really necessary to investigate this, even though it sure as hell looks like he's a Chinese operative. | |
| When you say things like this, how about when he was doing the white dudes for Harris, White Dudes for Harris live stream on August 5th, 2024? | |
| Here's the exact quote. | |
| Don't ever shy away from our progressive substitute communist values. | |
| One person's socialism is another person's neighborliness. | |
| Are you kidding me? | |
| Are you kidding me? | |
| He's also basically came back from a trip to China and said, we praise the Chinese for what they're doing in China and Tibet. | |
| Yeah, go ask the Dalai Lambra about that. | |
| So I did a lot of checking into his program, although it's hard, but restricted in the program for the 50 kids he brought over every year to brainwash as communists was any discussion of Tiananmen Square, any discussion of Taiwan, any discussion of the genocide of the Muslims, any discussion of the taking of organs from the Fal Gong and Christians, | |
| any discussion of the persecution of Christians. | |
| Okay, now you come away, no discussion of any of that, and plus a lot of other things. | |
| And you come away as a big fan of China. | |
| Meanwhile, China is the most lethal country on earth. | |
| People don't learn, those kids don't learn when they go there that combination of Xi Jinming going back to Mount Zedong, they've killed 100 million of their own people. | |
| When the people in San Francisco, the poor Chinese people were waving at the behest of Mayor Nuscombe, Governor Newscomb, for Xi Jinming, they were cheering for the guy on earth who's killed more Chinese people than anyone else. | |
| Now, those kids didn't learn any of that because they were brainwashed. | |
| Why do you think all these little morons walk in these parades? | |
| And he's very much a part of it. | |
| And he made money on it. | |
| Two businesses, him and his wife, sending people over to China to get their brains washed. | |
| Well, we've got another issue, and the issue is Iran. | |
| And don't get it off your radar because it's not off the president. | |
| The armada that he was talking about is there now, pretty much in place. | |
| The numbers, the numbers that are coming out of Iran in terms of the number of protesters they've killed go up by quantum leaps every day. | |
| I think we may be at 30,000 at this point. | |
| Wow. | |
| So we have with us again Dr. Firouz Danisgade of Queza Western Reserve To discuss Iran with us, so we get we get the opinion of an expert, some guidance from it. | |
| Doctor, thank you very much for coming back with us. | |
| Thank you, Mayor. | |
| It's an honor and pleasure always to be with you. | |
| As I've said, you're one of my American heroes. | |
| Well, gosh, that means a lot. | |
| Thank you very much, Doctor. | |
| But I'd like to know how you see it now at this point. | |
| Are we still in a situation where there could be an overthrow if America takes some decisive action? | |
| Well, I think the issue is really, I believe that the foreign military power won't topple this clerical regime. | |
| As been demonstrated, and as you mentioned, a real revolution led by youth, led by women, is going on on the streets of over 400 cities in Iran. | |
| And that is what the real change is, and that is what is going to topple the regime. | |
| The revolution uprising has entered into a new phase, and because people said enough is enough. | |
| And they have actually thrown the ball of the fear to the court of the regime. | |
| As you would see, which I have seen in many, many videos, as you may have seen, is that this nation is ready to topple this regime. | |
| Of course, any foreign action or anything that would weaken the regime would benefit the revolution. | |
| But the act of the toppling the regime is going to have to come from inside Iran because people are ready and they have paid the heavy price of being here. | |
| So maybe I'm wrong, Doctor, but I get a sense that the momentum has slowed down a little. | |
| And the reason I said some outside support, whatever it is, would help is I think they do think it was like more active a week, a week and a half ago than it is right now. | |
| So you have the unbelievable, I don't even think we know the dimension of the crackdown done by the regime. | |
| I hear numbers like 30,000 people. | |
| That's a very short period of time to kill 30,000 people, doctor. | |
| Right. | |
| You got to be killing people left and right to do that, even 20,000, which I think is a definitely conservative, accurate number from the humanitarian groups. | |
| Right. | |
| Almost have always been on the side of Iran. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Regardless of the exact numbers, as you're saying, there's no question that is in thousands. | |
| And it shows the degree of the fear of the regime. | |
| This is the regime's fight for survival. | |
| And that's why it has crossed all the human known boundaries. | |
| We've heard that they basically their military arms with their gun machines on their top, placed on the squares on the rooftops, and basically showering people. | |
| And if you have seen some of the pictures from the morgues, that the numbers are in thousands. | |
| But to me, as a supporter of the revolution in Iran, this is just telling me that this degree of the fear of the regime has. | |
| Otherwise, which regime wants to create this massacre of its own people? | |
| And going back to what you mentioned in the beginning, as very much like any other war, there is the attack and pulling back, reconfigure yourself. | |
| You see where the enemy is, where the weak points are. | |
| And I think it is not the quieting down of the uprising. | |
| It's really change of the posture, change of the tactique. | |
| Because as soon as today, as late as today and tomorrow, we are getting the news from inside Iran where now they're going after people who ordered the massacres. | |
| Basically, they've killed them, the revolutionary groups. | |
| They continue to attack the sites of the Basij and the IRGC. | |
| There is an active revolution, active war going on. | |
| The tactics may have changed. | |
| And therefore, you don't see the people recording the videos probably from their balcony. | |
| Yeah, but I mean, I was worried that maybe it lost some momentum, but I did think it could be easily revived if they felt they had outside support. | |
| Definitely. | |
| There's no question. | |
| And I think what I don't understand completely is how do you dislodge the revolutionary? | |
| How do you dislodge the revolutionary guard? | |
| Would some of them kind of just sort of, if it got big enough, give up? | |
| I think so, right? | |
| they're only human beings they're only they're only uh yeah is is really the mayor is uh is the battle of the resolve Who has the fire, basically the ultimate? | |
| And there's no question, as again, the history of mankind has written this very clearly. | |
| When the nation decides that enough is enough, there is not enough military power. | |
| There's not enough bullets in any dictator's gunpower to suppress and to stop the regime. | |
| If Khamenei hasn't learned this, he should ask Saddam and he should ask Gaddafi and all those people who were before him. | |
| So there's no question, again, from a person who's been watching this and involved for the past 40 years, it is the beginning of the end for the regime. | |
| It's just a matter of the tactics, that what they, what posture, you know, people are going to play the resistance. | |
| And as you know, if I mention this, there were significant transformational features into this uprising. | |
| Number one, it was organized. | |
| I think the fact that according to the regime itself, within a few hours, within a day, it spread to over 400 cities is not the matter of a spontaneous kind of haphazard spread. | |
| It was led by an organized resistance. | |
| It was organized. | |
| The resistance units basically started the demonstration. | |
| They led the people. | |
| They actually paid the price preventing people being killed so the movement can go. | |
| So definitely an organizational structure of the uprising was a distinguished differentiator between this uprising and the previous ones a couple of years ago. | |
| Number two was that all layers of the society were there. | |
| As again, you've seen from poor, from young, from, as you've seen in the numbers, there are kids among the killed, you know, elderly. | |
| The entire society is ready there to get rid of this regime. | |
| So beginning of the end. | |
| And also geographically, it seems to almost permeate the entire geography when you look at the maps that have been done, even by outside groups who have no particular prejudice one way or the other. | |
| It looks like it's covered pretty much the entire geography of the country, including sometimes the ethnic, what are called minorities. | |
| Minorities, they seem to be as involved in it as what would we call the ones that aren't the ethnic minorities, the Persians? | |
| What would be the problem? | |
| Again, it's very close, right? | |
| It's like 5149, right? | |
| Just about. | |
| Yes, you're correct. | |
| 51% are what we would call native Persians? | |
| They're not, I mean, they all are native. | |
| It's just really the Iran has a very, has an ethnic complexity to a point maybe close to the U.S. As you said very correctly, close to 40% of it are composed of Azeris. | |
| That is my heritage. | |
| So that's ultimately Azerbaijan and Turkey. | |
| Right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Azerbaijan, there's an eastern, western Azerbaijan. | |
| And as you know, about a century or so ago, part of the existing Azerbaijan was the part of Iran. | |
| So that is about 25% of Iran's population. | |
| Another 10-15% that are courts that are on the west side. | |
| And there is about less than about 5% Baluchis, which are on the east corner itself. | |
| So therefore, the ethnic complexity of Iran is about 40% ethnic minorities. | |
| I mean, they're not minorities, ethnic groups. | |
| And then the others being Persians, which goes back to the, again, to the, as you mentioned, goes back to the drive of these groups, the Azeris and so forth, for driving the revolution forward. | |
|
Contact With IRJs
00:12:52
|
|
| Again, as again, it's my heritage, and my family has been dislodged from that part of, you know, with every revolution. | |
| It started with the constitutional revolution that started from Tabriz, from Azerbaijan. | |
| The founder of the MEK is from Azerbaijan, Hanif. | |
| During the very first time, he was killed by Shah. | |
| And then one of the prominent leaders of MEK, Musa, Musa Khiyabani, was also in Tabriz. | |
| I never forget, I was in actually in the first year of college when I went to Tabriz. | |
| It was an election for the first parliament. | |
| Musa Khiyabani got the number one votes by popular vote in Tabriz. | |
| I was sitting in a voting session. | |
| One of the mullahs came and threw this turbine. | |
| This was 1970, 1980, 1970, 80, 1980. | |
| So after the Ayatollah came in. | |
| A theocracy. | |
| That's right. | |
| They didn't allow MEK to participate in the presidency illegally, but then they allowed to participate in the parliament. | |
| And again, in the city of Tabriz, I know for a fact because I was one of the observers, Musa Khiabani got the number one vote. | |
| And the mullah threw his turban down and says, heck, you know, these people are getting the most popular votes. | |
| And of course, did not allow one single of the MEK's member to enter into parliament. | |
| Well, the MEK has been there, and this is what upsets me so much, because I do know a lot about them, and a lot of my countrymen don't. | |
| And it's spread quite a bit more than it used to be. | |
| But there is a pocket of real prejudice against them that's completely ignorant. | |
| It's like I look at them like you're, don't you read history? | |
| But they don't. | |
| So they'll tell me things like, you're supporting a terrorist group. | |
| See, we fought that battle with the Clinton administration and won. | |
| I was part of that to win that battle. | |
| They're not a terrorist group. | |
| Yeah, they're a terrorist group because they oppose probably one of the most homicidal regimes on earth. | |
| That's right. | |
| And they're willing to do it by just a ballot if they could. | |
| They're not a violent group. | |
| 100%. | |
| Mrs. Rajavi has mentioned many, many times: give us a security of one or two days, an election witnessed by the international organizations, and you'll see how we will wipe you off you by the ballot. | |
| That is absolutely true. | |
| And this goes back in their history, which I've taken the time to read, but nobody bothers to read anymore. | |
| They just listen to the propagandists. | |
| Well, there's no question that this upright, recent uprising showed it is this group that is the engine of the revolution inside Iran. | |
| Has, as we mentioned last time, it has created a transgenerational motivation for youth, for women, being inspired by Ms. Rejavi, being inspired by what people, people who are in Asia F3, who are determined to overthrow this regime. | |
| And that is one of the issues of opposition with them, because they're the ones who are the doers. | |
| They're going to get the job done. | |
| Well, I know that. | |
| Also, I wanted to ask you about this group. | |
| I think I'm going to talk to him tomorrow. | |
| And he did this study in which, gosh, I don't even understand it. | |
| It's a very complex cyber investigation in which he came to the conclusion that the regime, meaning the Ayatollah and his Moas and that whole group of murderers, were putting out information, making it appear as if the baby Shah, you know, the son of the Shah, was very popular inside of the country. | |
| Now, we don't know why they were, they could be a couple of motives, right? | |
| One could be people saying, what the heck are we fighting for this for? | |
| We're going to put our lives at risk and our children at risk. | |
| So we substitute this dictatorship for monarchy dictatorship. | |
| We go back to where we were, which really, in terms of if you were the one that were killed, didn't matter. | |
| Or could it be that he's cooperating with them? | |
| I find, as a former prosecutor who did a lot of terrorism cases, very suspicious, his enormous number of contacts with the Revolutionary Guard. | |
| Somehow I think they're smarter than he is. | |
| And I don't think they'd be having those contacts with him getting the advantage of it. | |
| Not this Nerdwell, you know, Nepo Shah. | |
| So also, you know, it's really technically illegal for him to be in contact with them. | |
| I don't know if he's actually, I can't imagine he's a citizen of the United States. | |
| He's probably some kind of lawful resident. | |
| I mean, I thought he should be investigated and prosecuted for being in contact with the Revolutionary Guard. | |
| But they may be using him as a pawn. | |
| There's no question in my mind. | |
| Why are they texting out massive numbers that make it look falsely like he has support in Iran, when in fact he probably has a very, very narrow? | |
| I can't imagine that too many people in Iran want to fight this battle to go back to a monarchy. | |
| Exactly. | |
| There's no question that the regime is using him as an anti-revolution tactique. | |
| Because as you've seen again, there's an actual revolution going on inside Iran. | |
| Thousands of Iranians have given their lives to stand for the freedom. | |
| And this is the guy who comes on the media and so forth. | |
| He's proud that he's in contact with IRGC. | |
| People inside Iran are giving their lives to take down the IRGC. | |
| And this guy claims to be a leader and he's proud to be in contact with, it's like during the Nazi regime, someone is proud to be in contact with Geshdapu to take down the Nazi regime. | |
| There is no question that he's an anti-revolution project prompted by the regime. | |
| There's no question in my mind. | |
| But going back to our ethnic issues, Mayor, there are significant, frankly, bloodbath between the ethnic groups and him and his father and his grandfather. | |
| His father and his grandfather basically carried out the policy of minority, the tribal suppression, very actively. | |
| There are histories written in Azeri. | |
| My family, again, from Tabriz, there was a movement for autonomous government there. | |
| My father, I remember the very first couple of years, he was taught in Azeri. | |
| And then, of course, Shah comes in and stops everyone, kills everyone. | |
| My parents escape. | |
| His grandfather and his father, again, did this suppression of the courts. | |
| There are stories that how many of the leaders of the court autonomous movement, they hung and so forth. | |
| So there's a real bloodbath between that minority. | |
| And therefore, he's acting, in my opinion, he's acting two things. | |
| One is he's basically deflating or trying to deflate the energy of the revolution by this relationship with IRJs. | |
| He's proud of himself that the IRJC people are texting him. | |
| And the second is that he becomes a point of anti-unity and anti-stability. | |
| So he has, yeah, he's becoming, he has become the puppet. | |
| So I think I've written, and I think it seems to me that if somehow he were to be the titular head of the government, you could very well have a civil war. | |
| And then you have a really difficult situation because the Aziri would be very that Turkey would like that, but they wouldn't like what was happening in Kurdistan. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You'd have a real massive problem if somebody can't hold this together at least for a while. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you're correct, Mayor. | |
| If you don't have to go that far, he published recently a booklet called the Emergency Phase Booklet. | |
| And in that booklet, very explicitly, he says he's going to suppress the minorities, those who want to basically have a voice. | |
| So his playbook is not that different from his father and his grandfather. | |
| So he has two detrimental functions against the revolution. | |
| One is, again, he's trying to replace the power of resolve, the power that people have on the street with his interactions with IRGC, which to me is a crime. | |
| And you're an investigator. | |
| I think the fact that he's in contact with IRGC on itself may be breaking a U.S. law. | |
| I know he pays taxes in the U.S., so he has some kind of status. | |
| I mean, they have been designated as a foreign terrorist group. | |
| That's right. | |
| And contact with them is, unless you have some special reason or permission from the government, is basically illegal. | |
| And it seems to me he's being used to further their ends. | |
| Otherwise, they wouldn't be spending all this money texting out for him and making it appear as if he's a lot more popular than he actually is. | |
| I mean, that is extraordinary. | |
| Yes. | |
| Well, yes. | |
| It's really a distractor, the distractor, and that is what his function is, which is very unfortunate because, again, as you've seen, I've seen some of the videos from people who left Iran. | |
| They said basically Iranian people have entered into a new phase. | |
| It's not the matter of if, it's a matter of when. | |
| They have pushed the element of the fear into the enemy's camp. | |
| It is the regime now who is feeding the population, not the other Iran. | |
| That's very well, doctor. | |
| This has been very, very illuminating, as it always is. | |
| And I thank you. | |
| And please be available to us because who knows what's going to happen? | |
| These things happen in the middle of the night when you least expect it, right? | |
| We wake up the next morning and we say, well, this one, at least we see some progress here. | |
| But how many of these have been? | |
| How did they overthrow that guy? | |
| My God. | |
| Yep. | |
| Right? | |
| Well, as a surgeon, I'm available 24-7, Mayor. | |
| So whenever during the time at night, I'm available at your discretion. | |
| Well, doctor, you're a remarkable man, and we really appreciate you very, very much. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Thank you, ma'am. | |
| Appreciate it. | |
| Isn't he exceptional? | |
| He really is exceptional. | |
| And that, you know, everybody's individual and he's an extraordinarily talented man. | |
| But that gives you an idea of the tremendous amount of talent this country has. | |
| This is a very ancient civilization. | |
| Not just the Persian, but the Aziri and the Kurds and the Balushi. | |
|
Muhammad's Complex Legacy
00:04:33
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|
| And these are very, very intelligent. | |
| Very, these people were scientists before there was science with their original religion, the Zoroastrian religion. | |
| You know why they became Muslims because they basically, Muhammad and his successors engaged in genocide against the Zoroastrians and pretty much tried to eliminate the entire religion the way they'd like to eliminate Christians and Jews now. | |
| So let's, I mean, let's be, one of the things we haven't been, which is to our detriment, we have not been realistic about what the Islamic religion, the Quran, let me say the Quran, what the Quran says and what it tells them to do. | |
| So if you're doing what the Ayatollah is doing, you're doing what Muhammad told you to do. | |
| If you're opposing it, you're basically saying, let's just read out Muhammad. | |
| Let's read him out. | |
| Let's take those chapters of the Quran that talk about killing Christians and Jews and killing the infidels and getting to paradise and all this, just write them out. | |
| And it basically is the second half of Muhammad's life. | |
| For convenience, very often the scholars divide it into the Mecca Muhammad and the Medina Muhammad, the Mecca Muhammad being the more benign one and the Medina being the more brutal, brutal, I mean, incredibly brutal, mass murderer, pedophile, you name it. | |
| And that's really a chronological issue because it's the early part of his life in which he's okay. | |
| And it's the second part of his life when he's a mass murderer. | |
| Now, this is a little complex, but here's what happens. | |
| The Quran is not in chronological order. | |
| And you don't get a sense of that if you read the Quran. | |
| And then they put in this abrogation theory, which is the last thing that he says is the dominant thing. | |
| So if you don't put it in chronological order, you're in the dark because what he said last comes second after the little prayer. | |
| The surah number two is the longest surah. | |
| It was written about three years before he died. | |
| And it basically tells him to kill Christians and Jews. | |
| Then later on, the things he said in his youth exist, which were more benign. | |
| They weren't like friendly, but they're just more benign. | |
| So I don't know if that was done on purpose or I have no idea why they would reorder the, it'd be like taking the Bible, forgetting about New Testament, Old Testament, or take either one of the two and put the longest book first. | |
| Particularly in the Old Testament, that would be extraordinarily confusing. | |
| Because as I remember from my ancient history course decades ago, we read the Bible as a history. | |
| Our ancient history professor excerpted the books of the Bible that would be regarded as history, not necessarily accurate history, but any of the history you read from it 2,000, 3,000 years ago, you really don't know how accurate it is, including Herodotus and Thucydides. | |
| And I mean, probably pretty accurate because they were great historians, but we're not sure. | |
| Well, the Bible has history in it. | |
| So you take out the Psalms, you take out the Proverbs, maybe you take out Job, right, which is sort of a lesson. | |
| And you concentrate particularly on the first four books and the historical books that trace the kings. | |
| And it's about a third, maybe half of the New Testament. | |
| I don't remember. | |
| I remember the professor as if it was yesterday, Professor Hazelton. | |
| And I thought it was a great, these were four years of courses on Western civilization, which is under great assault right now. | |
|
Four Years of Western Civilization
00:02:30
|
|
| And it's probably one of the reasons why I'm a great defender of Western civilization, because I learned it in great detail as a kid. | |
| So let's take a short break and we'll be back into a little bit of soccer time so we catch you up on all the things that you're not getting anywhere else. | |
| Believe me. | |
| U.S. Army Major Scott Smiley paid a high price serving our nation. | |
| Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed. | |
| Scott would become the first blind, active duty military officer before medically retiring years later. | |
| Thanks to friends like you, the Tunnels of Towers Foundation gave Scott and his family a mortgage-free, specially adapted smart home. | |
| Show your support for America's heroes now. | |
| Donate $11 a month to Tunnels of Towers at t2t.org. | |
| 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 going to go into the roaster and it'll get roasted for about 20 minutes or so oh my goodness Look at these. | |
| My goodness, you're going to want to specially order these. | |
| This is what goes into Rudy's Coffee. | |
| Welcome back to America's Mayor Live. | |
| And now we're going to give you kind of a quick review of stuff that maybe either isn't covered or isn't covered with the attention that it should get. | |
|
Come Back, Fang Bang
00:07:16
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|
| For example, Walls's, we took you through Walls' comments, which would raise the question, is he a operative of the Red Chinese government? | |
| The issues in his life are so severe that you really have to ask that question. | |
| It is absolutely irresponsible of both our press and our government not to have really done this a long time ago. | |
| I mean, here's what it looks like, and there may be an explanation for it, but he's never been asked to give it. | |
| Looks like he was recruited by the Chinese government as part of that Harvard program. | |
| He spent 15 months there. | |
| He had an affair with a Chinese girl whose father was a big shot communist. | |
| He said things that are extraordinary for an American who's gone to China to say, like they're a moral authority or it's a very great place to live. | |
| I mean, I've been to China, and if you come back with that impression, there's either something wrong with you or you're a communist. | |
| Plus, there's no way he'd be allowed to conduct the business that he had, which was a for-profit business, two of them with his wife, and bring all these poor kids to China to brainwash them. | |
| And there's no doubt they're being brainwashed because there are a whole group of things they're not going to find out about. | |
| And who knows what they did find out about that was not true. | |
| We know what they didn't find out about that was true, which creates the impression of a much nicer, better, more pleasant society than one that has killed 80 million of their own people, one that wants to wipe out the Ugers, one that is attempting to wipe out the Christians, one that is trying to destroy the Dalai Lama and Tibet. | |
| He comes back at one point and says, oh, the relationships between China and Tibet are wonderful. | |
| Go tell the Dalai Lama that, that they're wonderful. | |
| It's ridiculous. | |
| China will kill them on site. | |
| So, and yeah, and the kids that go there don't learn that China by far is the biggest purveyor and seller of human organs all over the world. | |
| And they take them from live people. | |
| They take them basically, largely from the Falun Gong, but also from Christians and Muslims who are subjected to a massive extermination by the Chinese government. | |
| They go through phases. | |
| The Uger people is consistent. | |
| And the Falun Gong is pretty consistent with regard to using, I don't know why they've used them for organs more than anyone else, but they have. | |
| And then the Christian religion, both the Catholic and the Protestant version, they go through phases and they'll have priests and bishops in concentration camps. | |
| They'll kill them. | |
| They'll do the same thing with ministers. | |
| But the kids don't learn any of this. | |
| So they come back and they repeat the garbage that Tampon Tim says. | |
| Now, why he isn't investigated for this, which is in some ways, I think, even more serious than is he involved in the $1 to $9 billion fraud that was going on under his nose with the Somali people. | |
| What the hell did he change the flag of Minnesota? | |
| Nobody even has. | |
| Why'd you change the flag of Minnesota from what it was to making it look like the Somali flag? | |
| What the hell is wrong with your walls? | |
| Are you an American? | |
| Imagine if we took the American flag and we made it look like China. | |
| I mean, Biden probably would have done that if he had a chance. | |
| I mean, he got so much money from Red China. | |
| But what's happened to us? | |
| We don't want to protect ourselves. | |
| We don't have a sense of survival, a lot of us. | |
| I mean, I don't get it. | |
| Even Republicans don't ask the right questions about walls. | |
| I see there's a committee that has investigated his ties to China. | |
| They've gone about halfway. | |
| Where was his money coming for his businesses? | |
| Come on. | |
| I mean, and why do we find so many Democrats with these red Chinese connections? | |
| Swalwell is screwing Fang Fang Bang Bang, right? | |
| And Diane Feinstein, 19 years as a red Chinese driver. | |
| She was on the intelligence committee, and she's some kind of saint in the Congress. | |
| I mean, Cuomo and Hochl had Chinese spies that are on trial right now. | |
| You don't know that, right? | |
| You don't know that. | |
| They're on trial right now in Brooklyn. | |
| She was with them for both of them at a high level, making sure they screwed Taiwan and helped Red China. | |
| Well, and it definitely can help explain some of the initial responses at the start of the pandemic when they came out and they were doing press events in Chinatown. | |
| Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
| And how about when Trump in the end of January, very early, cut off any Chinese coming in here? | |
| Oh, they went crazy. | |
| Oh, my goodness. | |
| And it was probably saved a million lives. | |
| That one month or more. | |
| I mean, he did. | |
| He did. | |
| So they love to bring up the fact that originally he praised Xi Jinming because he got wrong information about how Xi Jinming was handling this. | |
| He did. | |
| He did in mid-January of 2020. | |
| But very quickly, before any of them, he realized that it looked like China was spreading this thing on purpose. | |
| And he said, cut him off. | |
| I think it was the end of, it was like January. | |
| I think it was January 30th because that's my son's birthday. | |
| I think I remember that. | |
| And gosh almighty, they went nuts on him. | |
| Biden accused him of being a xenophobe. | |
| Well, the second Trump does something, the second Trump does something, they automatically oppose it. | |
| So maybe we should like send Trump out, like, you know. | |
| Maybe he should be in favor of China. | |
| Yeah, it might work. | |
| They'll declare war. | |
| Exactly. | |
| I think he should say China is wonderful. | |
| And then somebody should slip in a declaration of war and they'll all sign it. | |
| They really are evil as hell, I must say. | |
| So Ann Frank, the people in Minnesota, the little girls in Minneapolis are like, according to Tampon Tema, like Ann Frank during the Nazi era. | |
|
Why They Automatically Oppose Trump
00:03:50
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|
| Now, I don't know. | |
| I do think unless he answers these questions, I have to assume for the safety of my country that he's a red Chinese operative. | |
| But he could also be just a major jackass. | |
| I mean, like a real jackass. | |
| It's a terrible thing for donkeys to be compared with the Democrats because actually donkeys are pretty smart. | |
| People are so dumb. | |
| If I were donkeys, I would sue the Democratic Party for the connect. | |
| Like when they changed the name of Indigenous people and stuff like that. | |
| I don't think donkeys should be defamed with a connection with the party of slavery. | |
| Donkeys are the hardest working animal on the farm. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| It's a shame. | |
| It doesn't make any sense. | |
| Well, I think they're thought of as being very dumb and stupid and corrupt because they're the symbol of the Democratic Party. | |
| Well, and donkeys are loyal. | |
| Donkeys are wonderful. | |
| Donkeys are loyal and Democrats are whatever the opposite of loyal is. | |
| Well, they're loyal to each other and they're loyal to communism and to making money illegally. | |
| Blindly following. | |
| Actually, you know what? | |
| Donkey kind of does make sense. | |
| I do have a soft spot for like the actual animal, but I can see it. | |
| Well, you know why? | |
| Because the nickname for donkey is jackass. | |
| Yes. | |
| It's true. | |
| For donkeys. | |
| I think it's unfortunate for donkeys. | |
| The last hostage's body was returned to Israel. | |
| That's just horrible after all this time, huh? | |
| Wow. | |
| Ran Gavili, he was a police officer, as a hero. | |
| He reminds me of, he reminds me of some of the 9-11 heroes. | |
| When it happened, he was off duty, ran to help, and then he got caught up by the animals. | |
| And they finally, I guess, returned his body. | |
| Here's his funeral. | |
| It's Gavili touches the casket of his son, Ran Gavili, on Monday during a ceremony at the Israeli military's Nahal Oz base following a search for his body. | |
| Gavili, a police officer, was the final remaining hostage from the October 7, 2023 attacks to be returned, fulfilling a central condition of the U.S. brokered ceasefire deal. | |
| There's one more essential condition. | |
| Hamas has to disarm. | |
| And if they don't, we got to help disarm them by going and taking their arms away from them and killing them if they don't want to give them up. | |
| This is the Nazi party. | |
| This is not anything to fool around with. | |
| Hamas is a brutal, disgusting, horrible, anti-American. | |
| Of course, anti-Jewish and anti-Israel, but anti-American. | |
| They follow every death to Israel or death to the Jews with death to America. | |
| And so does the Ayatollah every Friday. | |
| And death to MEK. | |
| And the reason that there's so much anti-MEK propaganda is because there's a tremendous Iranian regime infiltration in this country, almost equivalent to China. | |
| Maybe that's why they get along so well. | |
| Now, this mob that they have is absolutely horrible. | |
|
Debanked And Defunded
00:14:39
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|
| They attacked a hotel, virtually destroyed it, because they thought that some of the ICE people were in the hotel. | |
| But they weren't. | |
| So they had F-ICE written across it. | |
| They blew up a lot of it. | |
| They burned a lot of it. | |
| And people were coming out and telling them, you guys are doing this for no good reason. | |
| There's nobody here. | |
| But they just destroyed this hotel. | |
| And I don't think two people got arrested. | |
| And the district attorney there is some kind of a complete weirdo. | |
| And she lets everybody go. | |
| I don't know. | |
| She's a communist or an anarchist or just a Soros plaything. | |
| These people, even the two people they arrested, there's about 100 people that did this. | |
| Finally, the federal agents arrived there with an armored vehicle. | |
| They weren't staying there and they tried to protect the place. | |
| Where the hell were the police? | |
| It's home to Sweet's Hotel on University Avenue, which should be protected by the local authorities in Minneapolis. | |
| But the local authorities in Minneapolis are a group of criminals headed by the baby mayor who gave up his police precinct. | |
| Yeah, well, they're largely, yeah, they're led by criminals and they were directed to. | |
| Yeah, I mean, I don't know what the cops are like there. | |
| I really don't know. | |
| And I never will go against cops. | |
| But I don't know how I could be a police officer there. | |
| I have no idea how I could be a police officer under that jackass. | |
| Well, cops often get frustrated when the top brass puts maybe you have to learn a living. | |
| You can't go away. | |
| There are only 800 of them. | |
| It isn't a lot. | |
| I mean, there's only 800 Minnesota. | |
| It's ridiculous. | |
| The reason the president would have to bring in the National Guard is they don't have enough police just to deal with the daily problems of a city like that. | |
| 800 police is ridiculous. | |
| I mean, there are college campuses that have more. | |
| Well, they were like the center of the defund the police movement. | |
| Yeah, which means you kind of reap what you saw a little bit on that one. | |
| Well, you might as well be a radical there because you're probably going to get killed if you're not. | |
| There's nobody to protect you. | |
| I'm staying away. | |
| Charles Gasperino has a great column pointing out that unlike the George Floyd situation, none of the CEOs of the major companies are getting involved here. | |
| They're staying out now. | |
| Now, they made jackasses out of themselves supporting Black Lives Matter, which was a communist group completely opposed to American corporations and also with three thieves running it who stole all the money they gave them. | |
| But maybe they learned something and they are not getting involved, although Jamie Diamond did, as Charles Gasparino say, hysterically compared ICE enforcement to five grown men beating up a little old lady, which sounds like something that he got from the PR department of Antifa. | |
| Thank you, Charles. | |
| You got it. | |
| Now, he's the same guy that debanked Trump. | |
| I got debanked too, but I don't think by them. | |
| I got to go check. | |
| Oh, by the way, the place where Tampon Tim made his remarks that China is the moral authority that could help settle the Middle East was the Center for American Progress. | |
| How about we find out who belongs to that? | |
| The second one where he made his very famous, very famous comment, one person's socialism is another person's neighborliness, was the white dudes for Harris live stream. | |
| White dudes for Harris. | |
| Maybe Biden was right, but he's looking in the wrong place when he said America is systemically racist. | |
| Maybe he meant the Democrat Party is systemically racist. | |
| I mean, this is the Iran armada is in place. | |
| The carrier group got there. | |
| Everything, CENTCOM is very well positioned. | |
| We're in a position now to protect our 14, I think it's 14 bases in striking distance of Iran should we decide that we've got to take action because they killed an unprecedented amount of people. | |
| I think that you just saw a picture of the carrier group. | |
| I mean, that carrier group is not actually there to attack Iran. | |
| We already have the forces along with Israel to do that. | |
| That's there to protect if these people have the capacity to counterattack. | |
| I don't know if they do, but we got to assume they do. | |
| So that's why it's sitting there. | |
| Now, here's a really, really strange one, and it's really disgusting. | |
| There are a group of nurses in Florida who are refusing to take care of MAGA people. | |
| Let's put this on again. | |
| I want to show you the, I want to show you this. | |
| Before I do that. | |
| Well, you be quiet now. | |
| Nobody's asking you. | |
| That's one of the AI, you know, I don't even know which one. | |
| I fight with them. | |
| I had a whole big fight the other day over Chinese communism. | |
| They said back in the 80s and 90s, they didn't surveil you if you went to China. | |
| I said, you're out of your mind. | |
| They surveilled you. | |
| I mean, they said since Mao Zedong, there's not been a day in which an American goes there and they don't surveil you and try to find out every piece of information you have. | |
| Every time I've gone to China, they failed every test we set for them by putting strings on our clothes and little things inside that were moved. | |
| And they tried women. | |
| I mean, the whole thing. | |
| that's why the minute i heard uh uh when i heard wall say nice things about china i said there's something wrong with this guy a loyal american a normal american will go to china and you get if they're not following you they trust you | |
| Now we may have a government shutdown because the Democrats don't want to fund the Department of Homeland Security because they want to freeze out ICE and the Border Patrol. | |
| If they do that, nobody will be able to get any help for this winter storm that's going on because that includes right integral to that budget is FEMA. | |
| I mean, they're nuts. | |
| And what? | |
| They're going to let people just come in? | |
| I wonder if they do that, if they defund ICE and the Border Patrol. | |
| And therefore, the president cannot enforce the law protecting Americans from invasion if we can use the military. | |
| I think we can. | |
| I mean, it would seem to me, I mean, I haven't looked at it for that purpose, but I've read those insurrection statutes and the interplay between when you can use the military and when you can't domestically. | |
| And it isn't quite domestically if you're stopping people from coming in. | |
| Now, if you can't arrest the ones that are here because they've taken away the ability to do that, and you have to allow Americans to be subjected to their crimes, which are numerous, and you have places that don't, like Democrat cities, that don't do that, I don't know that you can't use the military if the Democrats take away the funding for the agents you have to protect the American people. | |
| We'd have to look at that carefully. | |
| The only one that I can see of the Democrats is Fediman, who says that he rejects calls to defund or abolish ICE. | |
| Although he does, he does he does agree with pulling DHA spending and voting instead on the five other bills. | |
| I don't know how you can defund all of DHS because you want to get at ICE. | |
| I mean, doesn't he want any money for the people in Pennsylvania who have suffered tremendous. | |
| I can't imagine what the losses are with this snowstorm. | |
| This was a terrible snowstorm. | |
| And it covers a lot of the Democrat states. | |
| New York got hit hard. | |
| Massachusetts got hit hard. | |
| We know that, right? | |
| I think Pennsylvania did too. | |
| But the South took a real beating too. | |
| And that's our people. | |
| Oh, and they'd love to do something to the South, right? | |
| Yeah, they're probably. | |
| But this nurses thing really, really disturbs me because, I mean, nurses are special people. | |
| Now, look, I want you to see this. | |
| I want you to see it so you don't think I'm making this up. | |
| I will not perform anesthesia for any surgeries or procedures for MAGA. | |
| It's my right. | |
| It's my ethical oath. | |
| What? | |
| And I stand behind my education. | |
| I own all of my businesses and I can refuse anyone. | |
| Okay, so we got now that we got a male nurse. | |
| Now we got a female nurse. | |
| Meet Lexi Lawler, a labor and delivery nurse at Baptist Health Boca Raton Regional Hospital, just a little ways from here. | |
| She says she hopes Press Secretary Caroline Levitt suffers severe fourth degree tear during childbirth and has medical complications. | |
| I hope you effing rip from bow to stern and never SHIT normally again. | |
| You see word. | |
| This woman delivers babies, terrifying. | |
| Lexi Lawler. | |
| Has she, let's find out and we'll report to you tomorrow. | |
| Did Baptist Health, whatever it is, hospital, did they get rid of this monster? | |
| This is a monster. | |
| I'm just looking at her and saying, my God, I mean, forget it, forget it, forget it. | |
| So there's a whole group of nurses who now, who now, who now refuse to take care of MAGA people. | |
| I remember when I was in the Justice Department, the Associate Attorney General, I had breakfast with Ronald Reagan the day that he was shot. | |
| And then I had a lot of responsibilities for dealing with the Inkley case after that. | |
| And I remember because it's now a matter of our history that Ronald Reagan said, I hope, he either said, I hope you're Republicans to the doctors, or I hope you're not Democrats. | |
| And the doctor said, today everybody's a Republican. | |
| I think some of the doctors were Democrats, but they were just as worried about him as we were. | |
| And Republicans were just as worried about John Kennedy as the Democrats were. | |
| Let's get some. | |
| But there were people rooting for Trump to be killed, and then were really happy that Charlie Kirk was killed. | |
| That is sick. | |
| There's something seriously, morally wrong with us, but only bringing God back into our nation in the way he was intended to be part of it by our founding fathers, which has nothing to do with stopping people from practicing their religion or not the way they want to. | |
| But it means you don't interfere with our free exercise of religion, which the government now does. | |
| We don't bring God back. | |
| We're not going to save this. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I think if we don't stop killing a lot of little babies, it's also not going to do. | |
| We're not going to do well. | |
| It's a heck of a thing to bring up a society that thinks you can wipe out a seven or eight or nine month old baby because it's inconvenient. | |
| I know, I know, health and the mother. | |
| Yeah, they'll tell that shit to somebody else. | |
| All right, I'm just too experienced and I know the world too much for you to sell that one to me. | |
| Nursing hate on the left, partisan bedside manner. | |
| This is an article by, is it Fleming? | |
| The lady's name is Fleming. | |
| I don't know the first name. | |
| Let's see if we can find out because it's a very, very good article and she deserves to have credit for it. | |
| They went into the ER after being spat on by a drug suspect, which had been a routine visit. | |
| I mean, this is filled with. | |
| I mean, we know about how conservatives get debanked. | |
|
Conservatives Under Threat
00:07:12
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|
| We know how they're kept out of law firms and other things. | |
| We know how courts discriminate against them and rule against them no matter what. | |
| But now people let them die. | |
| I mean, anybody, any nurse who does this should have a license taken away immediately. | |
| I mean, she shouldn't be taking care of anybody. | |
| These are monsters who are doing this. | |
| Those two are symbolic that I showed you, but this is going on going on in Florida? | |
| Just last week, three NYPD plane calls to Texas were reportedly hassled by staff at NYU Langone in Combo Hill because the healthcare workers mistook them for ICE agents. | |
| They're going to let ICE agents die? | |
| Of course. | |
| they went into the er after being spat on by a drug suspect one of the one of the detectors heard them say heard the staff say they were ice and that they should seek care elsewhere The hospital later expressed regret for how the situation was handled. | |
| Okay, I like the regret. | |
| I know that hospital really, really, really well. | |
| Have great respect for it. | |
| Fire them. | |
| These people are untrustworthy. | |
| I mean, they let people die for politics. | |
| They're crazy. | |
| I'm telling you. | |
| These people who get like this are crazy. | |
| Well, do you remember the response to some of those big storms we had out in North Carolina? | |
| If you see a Trump supporter sign in the lawn, do not provide it. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| That was a year or two ago. | |
| In Sydney or Australia, these two nurses were sacked because on TikTok, they were bragging that they would love to kill Israeli patients. | |
| I mean, this is a noble profession. | |
| I mean, there's nothing left. | |
| I mean, lawyers, lawyers have been a problem forever, but doctors, I mean, doctors, you'll get the pandemic. | |
| Healthcare administrators are still salt of the earth, right? | |
| Good old healthcare administrators, they're doing who are sucking up money for non-patients. | |
| Amen. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, Okay, Salman Rushdie, with whom I share a distinction. | |
| We both have fatwas. | |
| And in his case, they actually succeeded in carrying out an attack on him. | |
| In my case, they tried twice. | |
| And there is a new film out called Knife, The Attempted Murder of Salman Rushdie. | |
| It was shot by his wife, Rachel Elizabeth Griffith. | |
| And they actually, to their credit, played it at the Sundance Film Festival, which I would say, okay, good. | |
| And this was the attempt to kill him in 2022 in Chappaqua, New York, Chautauqua, New York. | |
| Sorry, Chappaqua. | |
| That's where the Clintons live. | |
| Chautauqua is in the western end of New York, right on the border of Pennsylvania and Ohio. | |
| And it is a very, very, used to be a very famous place for intellectuals and poets and authors to go and give lectures during this summer. | |
| And it's probably not as famous now as it used to be. | |
| But Rushdie went there in 2022 to give a lecture as a great author, right? | |
| One of the biggest selling books of the 20th century, which earned him a vow to kill him. | |
| And in August of 2022, a 24-year-old New Jersey resident named Hadi Mattar stabbed him 15 times, carrying out the fatwar that go back to 1989 from Ayatollah Khomeini because of the satanic verses, which was deemed blasphemous to Iran. | |
| You know what the Satanic verses are? | |
| They are a description of the part of the Quran in which the pedophile mass murderer, founder of the Islam religion, is having conversations with Satan. | |
| And the Ayatollah doesn't want people to know that. | |
| So they're going to kill Rushdie for accurately describing what's in the Quran, which they do a very good job of hiding. | |
| And therefore, people like the dangerous, very, very dangerous mayor in New York takes the oath of office on a book that tells these people to kill other people, particularly Jews and Christians. | |
| And you'll be rewarded in heaven if you do that. | |
| Is that really a religion? | |
| What, are you doing with a fatwa? | |
| In, um... | |
| Mattar eventually was convicted. | |
| The guy who Heidi Mattar was eventually convicted of second-degree murder. | |
| And he got a 25-year sentence. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Who the hell would want to let him out? | |
| I can think of a couple people who would. | |
| Probably a lot of the Minneapolis delegation. | |
| Oh, they probably take care of them. | |
| Yeah, they do a de-arrest. | |
| They try to get him out of jail, break him out of jail. | |
| Exactly. | |
| So I'm going to tell you, this is kind of cute. | |
| When a nurse tells him that her mother was supposed to attend the Chautauqua talk, Rushdie responds, I think it's okay not to be there. | |
| I would have liked not to be there. | |
| And here he is, just so that everybody can see him. | |
| This is. | |
| Salman Rushdie, yeah. | |
| It's a great book. | |
| I haven't read it in years. | |
| I think I'm going to reread it. | |
| I got to find it. | |
| I mean, I got to reread it. | |
| I remember reading it in 89, 90, something like that. | |
| I remember it was around the time I ran for mayor, I think. | |
|
Halftime Show Controversies
00:10:51
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|
| Well, I had great respect for this man's father, John Doer, who was the head of the Civil Rights Division, Republican, the head of the Civil Rights Division, I think under Kennedy. | |
| And this is his son, and he's a president of the American Enterprise Institute. | |
| And this is an otherwise pretty balanced article about what's going on in Minnesota. | |
| It's somewhat critical of the Trump administration. | |
| Parts of it don't agree with it. | |
| But here's what he says. | |
| And I don't understand this. | |
| Federalism requires that state government be viewed as parallel, not subordinate to the federal government. | |
| Well, do you ever look at this? | |
| Do you ever look at the supremacy clause in the Constitution? | |
| What the hell is wrong with you, John? | |
| Or Robert, whatever the hell your name is. | |
| You're the president? | |
| You're the president of the American. | |
| And you misstate the Constitution like that? | |
| There's a supremacy clause in the Constitution, which answers, it says they're not parallel. | |
| It says if there's any conflict between the two, the federal government prevails. | |
| That means they're not equal. | |
| But the non-enumerated powers are, I mean, it's all reserved. | |
| Absolutely, but there is a lot of, let's not forget about states' rights because, you know, our viewers do value the Constitution. | |
| Well, we better not elevate them beyond what they are. | |
| We'll have another Civil War. | |
| Amen. | |
| That's what the Civil War was all about. | |
| The states could have slavery and the federal government couldn't tell them not to. | |
| So we had a civil war. | |
| And Lincoln, Lincoln really developed the concept of a union. | |
| We're a union. | |
| I mean, yeah, there are states' rights and the states' rights are really important. | |
| But in the areas that are given to the federal government, the federal government's supreme. | |
| Yeah, like the state doesn't have the right to take your liberty away. | |
| For example, slavery. | |
| Yes. | |
| Right. | |
| Exactly. | |
| So, okay. | |
| And we're going to have the FIFA here shortly. | |
| My son Andrew is in charge of the security for it. | |
| I sent this to him this morning. | |
| A gunman opened fire at a soccer field in central Mexico on Sunday, killing at least 11 people and wounding 12 over soccer. | |
| Unfortunately, there are criminal groups trying to subjugate authority, something they are not going to achieve. | |
| The mayor said Scheinbaum came out of a hole in the ground to say something. | |
| Sorry, Cordia, but I don't know. | |
| You got to prove to me that they don't control you. | |
| I don't buy it. | |
| Tim Walz wrote a pathetic op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal, and it's only the Rupert Murdoch hatred of Trump that allowed them to publish this piece of crap from a guy that appears to be a communist agent. | |
| And then he makes the claim that they turn over all of the illegals in the Minnesota, let me see, because here's the, in the Minnesota prison system. | |
| Yeah, they do. | |
| But they don't turn them over from all of the jails and Prisons that are part of the counties and the cities like Minneapolis, because they're sanctuary cities and they have executive orders and laws that prohibit it. | |
| And now we're having a dispute because the federal government says there are 1,360 of them. | |
| And our Tampon guy here says there are 260. | |
| Who do you think is telling the truth? | |
| I have a pretty good idea. | |
| And then he says, in recent weeks, mass agents have abducted children. | |
| Well, that was proven to be untrue. | |
| Way to worry about abducted children now after they were abducted and brought to this country and abused. | |
| Yeah, there are 300,000 missing. | |
| Yeah, whatever. | |
| Because of Biden, 300,000 kids missing. | |
| I think they found a certain number of them, but not all of them. | |
| Daylight and a lot short. | |
| I have repeatedly appealed to President Trump to lower the temperature. | |
| Yeah, the guy who calls ICE Nazis, Gestapo, that's lowering the temperature, Tampon. | |
| How do they elect this? | |
| I don't know. | |
| The guy lied about his military record. | |
| The guy's got a whole situation with Red China that looks like he's a spy. | |
| He says moronic things. | |
| If he isn't a massive crook, he's the most negligent governor in the world with a $9 billion fraud going on under his nose. | |
| And then he changes the flag of his state to look like a pathetic foreign country that is completely corrupt. | |
| If he wasn't paid for it, what the hell did he do it for? | |
| Why would you change the flag to look like Somalia, where it's very hard to find an honest person there? | |
| Well, we know the honor. | |
| It's a lot easier to. | |
| I mean, it's a very short list. | |
| Well, we got to get your opinion, Mayor, before we go on a few things. | |
| Okay. | |
| Bill Belichick will not be a first ballot Hall of Famer. | |
| There's a selection committee of 50, mostly members of the sports media. | |
| Well, they're going after him because of his wife. | |
| That's ridiculous. | |
| Of course, the guy should be a first ballot Hall of Famer. | |
| People are up in arms. | |
| He won more Super Bowls than anybody. | |
| And I got to include the two he won with the Giants. | |
| He's the eight-time Super Bowl winner. | |
| Nobody even close to that. | |
| And everyone's up in arms, even people that say they don't like Brady. | |
| They can't believe it. | |
| And there's people who don't like Brady or people who do not like him. | |
| Even people that don't like him or, you know, were why would people who don't like Brady? | |
| I mean, they want him in the Hall of Fame. | |
| I'm sorry, Brady. | |
| Belichick. | |
| Yeah. | |
| This is all about Belichick. | |
| Sorry. | |
| So it's ridiculous not to put Belichick in the Hall of Fame. | |
| But the whole NFL is ridiculous. | |
| Do you think there's some of that because he is a big Trump guy? | |
| Oh, 100%. | |
| 100%. | |
| And Trump not going to the Super Bowl has them all pissed off. | |
| Meanwhile, they have two animals that are going to perform during the human animals that are going to perform during this halftime. | |
| Banana, banana, banana. | |
| Bad bunny. | |
| It's more of a bunch. | |
| Bad bunny. | |
| And what is the other thing? | |
| Green Day. | |
| Green Day. | |
| But Green Day is actually a band. | |
| So it's probably closer to four of however you characterize them. | |
| I actually didn't mind. | |
| Do they really do music or is it? | |
| It's easy. | |
| You could call them rock stars. | |
| You could call them rock stars. | |
| Yeah, they can just give me a headache. | |
| Look, I haven't looked at a halftime show. | |
| I don't think I ever looked at any of them, even when they were like Patty Page or whatever. | |
| Who the hell wants to watch a halftime show? | |
| Patty Page? | |
| I don't know. | |
| She was a singer. | |
| The two the Super Bowls I was at, one of them, they put out the lights, you couldn't see anything. | |
| And you had to put on a 49ers. | |
| You had to put on a thing. | |
| You had to put on a, you know, never mind. | |
| I'm sitting there thinking that, you know, if this were New York, everybody would get robbed at this point. | |
| I think it was, I think, I think it was in, well, it was in New Orleans, I think, or something. | |
| Yeah, well, maybe all the new Super Bowl will be in the metaverse. | |
| And then they all made, they, uh, it all, they all, because of the stupid show, they uh extend the halftime. | |
| And you just want to get back to the game. | |
| You don't want to watch these ridiculous, asinine performers. | |
| If it's a good act, like they've had good acts in it. | |
| They have Bruno Mars was pretty solid. | |
| He's like kind of like just a straight, standard pop star, good dancer. | |
| The foggies know who he is. | |
| Bruno Mars, does he come from out of space? | |
| No. | |
| Is that why he's Mars? | |
| No. | |
| Does he look like chocolate? | |
| Mars Bar? | |
| No, but be careful because I mean, I mean, you know, he's multiracial, but he's, you know, kind of like I have no idea. | |
| I'm not saying this because I'd have no idea what his race is. | |
| What about the Janet Jackson Super Bowl halftime show? | |
| I don't remember. | |
| With Justin Timberlake. | |
| Remember, the FCC had to find them after the wardrobe malfunction. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I didn't watch that either. | |
| Okay. | |
| Well, when the Super Bowl, when I watched the Super Bowl either in person or I think during the two Super Bowl, the two Giant Super Bowls against the Patriots, I just talked to the people around me and we discussed, I turned around and we just talked. | |
| There's one in which I fell asleep that I was at during the halftime show. | |
| I think the one in New Orleans, I fell asleep. | |
| Wait, let's do an. | |
| Okay, how about an orchestra? | |
| Maybe like the Trans-Siberian Orchestra or something. | |
| That would be a show. | |
| Wouldn't that be? | |
| They just have like the ordinary marching band and the band. | |
| See, a band, a highly skilled band. | |
| The regular amount of time. | |
| Oh, but then they can't have those extra million-dollar commercials so that the anti-American NFL can pull in all that money. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Do we know? | |
| Okay, stay tuned for tomorrow. | |
| We'll figure out how much Super Bowl commercials are going for. | |
| If you know, put it in the comments. | |
| I'm way off, probably. | |
| They're probably a lot more than a million. | |
| I'm going to guess it's probably like six and a half. | |
| The only thing, only thing really, really interesting that I found out from Andrew is, I mean, one of the early games in FIFA draws more than the Super Bowl. | |
| And they're raking in more money than they get 20 times the audience that the NFL gets. | |
| Yep. | |
| Good luck getting tickets. | |
| You need to get tickets. | |
| You have to sell your Palm Beach house to afford some tickets. | |
| I mean, you got to get a loan from the Mexican cartels. | |
| Yep. | |
| They'll all be there. | |
| What? | |
| The cartels? | |
| Yeah, they're going to be going. | |
| Oh, the cartels love it. | |
| I mean, people who go are so rich, they don't even know what football is. | |
| They just show up so that they can be seen. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
|
Why We Pray For Interference
00:14:46
|
|
| I guess what's her name won't be there? | |
| Huh? | |
| T Swift? | |
| Loser. | |
| You know who I mean. | |
| Travis Swift. | |
| Yeah, Travis Swift won't be there. | |
| Travis Swift can't boo Kelsey. | |
| Didn't she get booed last year? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the president got appointed and she got booed. | |
| I don't know about this one's going to be near San Francisco, right? | |
| Yep. | |
| Yeah, but they don't do football, those losers, the booers. | |
| Well, the people that have the money to go probably aren't even football fans. | |
| Right. | |
| A lot of them aren't. | |
| They're just there for the party. | |
| They're using their campaign cash because a number of Democrats use campaign cash to go to the Super Bowl in LA and it was just so distasteful. | |
| You think anybody contributes money to those guys? | |
| Shift, I think 60 grand of his campaign cash on Super Now that's someone checked that, but that's he gets away. | |
| He gets away with uh, he gets away with everything, that pencil neck, he gets away with everything. | |
| He's the senator of California. | |
| What are they doing? | |
| He's a scary, he's a scary looking guy. | |
| Well, before we, before we, uh, before we close out, I want to say a prayer for Gregory Bovino, and I hope he has a resurgence of his career because I think the guy gave everything he had. | |
| And hey, you know, I think he had to be done, but I don't think it's strange. | |
| I don't think it's his fault. | |
| I really think the guy tried really, really hard to protect us. | |
| And I know this whole situation with trying to get Chris De know him is disgusting. | |
| She's probably doing one of the best jobs in the cabinet. | |
| Alex pretty like Renee Goode before him was clumsily interfering with federal agents doing their job, egged on by leftist propagandists. | |
| That's a pretty, I mean, I know they died and I feel very bad that they died, but just because you died doesn't mean you're a saint. | |
| I mean, bad people die too. | |
| Renee Goode was trying either negligently or on purpose to kill a human being. | |
| Unless you're a complete moron, maybe she was, I don't know. | |
| You got to know if you drive a two and a half ton truck into a mere human being, which she was doing, you're going to do serious damage to the human being and probably kill them. | |
| She released her automobile to do that. | |
| The other guy brings a very sophisticated $2,000 weapon with ammunition ready to take on enough ammunition to take on the entire ICE group, is involved in a deliberate rearrest scenario, which he had done a week earlier, which nobody will tell you about. | |
| So he was engaged in trying to obstruct the execution of federal law against a serious criminal. | |
| And he had a weapon with him, although he did have a license. | |
| He had a weapon with him. | |
| And he got killed. | |
| I don't know if he told me what he was going to do. | |
| I would have told him, you think you take that weapon with you, you may get killed. | |
| Right? | |
| If it was your friend and he came to you and he said, I have very strong feelings about ICE. | |
| And I'm going to go and I'm going to try to interrupt Interrupt a federal arrest. | |
| That's probably not a good idea. | |
| That's not a good idea. | |
| It's not a smart thing to do. | |
| Why don't you go and get bail for the guy afterwards? | |
| Why don't you go raise money and get bail for the rapist after so he can come out and I don't know, you want him to rape again? | |
| Or this guy was a used to assault women, I think. | |
| So, but he didn't assault enough women while he's here. | |
| He got a quota. | |
| I would say, hey, jackass, now, unless you would like to get yourself killed, I don't think I would be part of a rearrest scenario with these agents who probably are pretty hyped up because everybody's yelling at them, screaming at them, and making them feel like they're going to kill them. | |
| I think you may get yourself killed if you do that. | |
| I think that's what I would tell any human being or a friend. | |
| I don't see that they're clumsily interfering. | |
| They weren't clumsily interfering. | |
| She was trying to kill him, and he was acting out a scenario he was trained to do. | |
| I'm sorry they died. | |
| It's always terrible when we lose a human life. | |
| Who knows? | |
| They could have been reformed. | |
| They could have been straightened out. | |
| They could have been real contributors. | |
| I mean, people go through phases in their life and they're denied that, but it's their fault. | |
| Not the federal agents who are just doing their job and just leave them alone and let them do it. | |
| They're trying to protect us. | |
| Hey, maybe they're not trained as well. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But they're trying to help us, and these people are trying to hurt us. | |
| It's hurting us to try to interfere in the arrest of a rapist or a guy who's assaulting women. | |
| It's hurting us. | |
| It's helping us to try to arrest such a person. | |
| Unless you're screwed up in your head or brainwashed by communists, the Post is glad to see that Kristi Noem was elbowed aside. | |
| Jeez, maybe you should be elbowed aside. | |
| This is sad, really sad. | |
| And so let's see. | |
| Let's see how this works out. | |
| You got to be positive. | |
| And you got to, and I think in defense of the president, and not defense, but I mean, explanation for the president, he had to reshuffle the deck. | |
| You know, it just wasn't working. | |
| There's a time in which you can just keep doing the same thing over and over again, and it's ridiculous because it isn't going to work. | |
| So he had to reshuffle the deck. | |
| And I really do believe that my friend has the wisdom to understand that's what happened here, and that these people are good people. | |
| And this is just part of what they have to, I would look at it that way. | |
| I mean, it's just part of what you have to go through in order to help the country. | |
| Because somehow we got to deal with these maniacs. | |
| And we got to figure out a way to deal with them so that we minimize the loss of human life, whether it's theirs or more innocent people. | |
| This isn't good. | |
| It's a good thing for anybody to have this happen. | |
| And they're very hard to reach. | |
| They're very hard to talk to. | |
| I don't know what's happened to Democrats. | |
| I used to be able to have terrific conversations and great compromises with them. | |
| I don't know what's happened to them. | |
| It's like hatred has taken over. | |
| Or maybe if you want to get spiritual about it, the satanic spirit of the party of slavery has reemerged and taken them all over. | |
| I mean, after all, it's a pretty disgusting political history they have. | |
| They go from slavery to corruption to tantamount. | |
| What they're doing in American cities since Roosevelt, certainly with the great society, is tantamount to slavery. | |
| One of the reasons I changed is I saw that up close. | |
| Well, let's pray that this works, at least in the short term, in calming things down so that they don't burn down the city of Minneapolis anymore. | |
| Anybody else loses their life. | |
| Let's also hope that the Department of Homeland Security continues their good work of removing these massive number of criminals, unknown number, that came into this country under the Democrats who allowed this invasion. | |
| And I will tell you as a matter of fact, that this group that they allowed in of anywhere from bare minimum 12, 13 million to 20, 22 million were disproportionately criminal. | |
| And it stands to reason it would be because when you open the doors like that, this is a perfect opportunity for the terrorists, for the cartels, for the other drug dealers, from the human traffickers. | |
| All of a sudden, America becomes the biggest human trafficking place in the country under Biden. | |
| Thank you. | |
| That's another record you set, jackass. | |
| Well, President Trump is doing everything he can to fix it and trying to make, it's like a, you know, changing a play at the line of scrimmage when you know it's not working, when you know it's not working. | |
| So you got to change it. | |
| And some guy's got to be taken out and somebody else has got to be put in there. | |
| We've got to be adult enough to understand it. | |
| And we do. | |
| And let's just pray. | |
| Let's just pray that it works. | |
| Somehow God enters into their mind or heart, sir. | |
| Now, since the communist ones are atheists, it's going to be hard for God to get in. | |
| I also wish, I really pray and wish that my church would go back to its very, very profound understanding of the evils of communism, which I grew up with. | |
| We used to pray every Sunday for the demise of communism. | |
| We don't do that anymore. | |
| Probably really necessary now, just like it was then, because they're threatening us. | |
| And so are a large number of the Islamists. | |
| They want to take us out. | |
| So let's pray to God for the strength to deal with that in a humane and decent way. | |
| Maybe they can be converted. | |
| Maybe they can be changed. | |
| But until then, we've got to protect ourselves. | |
| So let's pray for the people of Iran and the people of Israel and the people of Ukraine who are in the middle of it in the most serious way. | |
| There are a lot of other people who are in Africa, all the Christians that are being slaughtered, both Protestant and Catholic, are just being slaughtered by Islam. | |
| Pray for them. | |
| for somebody who recognizes it beyond just Donald Trump and pray for Donald Trump. | |
| Not that he's, of course he needs it. | |
| We all need it. | |
| He's doing a great job, but he's a man and he needs all the help and strength that he can get. | |
| So dear God, you know, favorably look upon him and give him the wisdom that he's going to need to get us through one of the worst times in our history. | |
| So that's why very, very fervently we 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. | |
| We are able to apply our God-given common sense. | |
| So let's do it. | |