Rudy Giuliani - America's Mayor Live (896): President Trump Says US in Serious Discussions with "New" Regime in Iran Aired: 2026-03-31 Duration: 01:37:29 === Outrageous Government Closings (01:51) === [00:00:00] Good evening, this is Rudy Giuliani and this is America's Mayor Live from Palm Beach, Florida. [00:00:08] And again, with the background of Washington, D.C., which has no members of Congress there, despite the fact that they are depriving a large number of federal workers of any pay, in some cases now for over a month, TSA is being paid based on the bold action of President Donald Trump, [00:00:36] who's used an emergency authorization and unused federal funds to make sure they're being paid. [00:00:43] A lot of them were paid yesterday. [00:00:46] Not all. [00:00:47] We have a few people that hadn't been paid yesterday, and they haven't paid everything yet. [00:00:53] But before the end of this week, they should have all of their back pay. [00:00:57] However, the Coast Guard is not included in it. [00:01:01] A lot of the border agencies are not included in it. [00:01:08] I mean, a fair portion of Homeland Security is not included in it. [00:01:14] And the support personnel, and it's the support personnel that handle a great deal of the intelligence that's necessary to our national security. [00:01:23] So this is one of the most outrageous government closings there's ever been for reasons that they don't really have any reasons. [00:01:34] I mean, they say they want these changes in ICE, but they were willing to give them up. [00:01:48] This is all done. === Motives to Hurt Trump (02:44) === [00:01:51] It's hard to even come to this conclusion, but this is all done because they want to hurt Donald J. Trump. [00:02:00] Now, you know, Donald J. Trump is the president of this country. [00:02:04] So there are, unless it's a purely personal hurt, if you hurt him, you hurt the country. [00:02:10] He happens to be running the country. [00:02:12] So if you stop him from an objective that's a completely necessary one, like making sure these agencies are open so that our national security is assured. [00:02:25] Or in the case of the situation right now, where we've got a tremendous influx of people coming up in June for the World Cup. [00:02:34] As Andrew pointed out, my son Andrew pointed out last week when he was on, or earlier this week, sorry, when he was on earlier this week, the reality is that there are 73 games in the United States. [00:02:52] 72 of them as of several days ago had over 1 million requests for tickets. [00:02:59] Now, what that tells you is that these cities are going to be overwhelmed with people from all the various parts of the world that these teams come from. [00:03:12] And therefore, you are bringing into the United States the world issues, the world problems, the world terrorist groups, terrorist groups that really, in some ways, we would not necessarily have to be terribly concerned with. [00:03:25] But we have to when, you know, there's a big stage, a world stage. [00:03:32] These games will be looked at. [00:03:35] I think even the small ones get bigger audiences of the Super Bowl. [00:03:39] And then the big ones do five, six, seven times what the Super Bowl does. [00:03:46] So where do you get an opportunity to operate on literally and figuratively the world stage if you're a terrorist? [00:03:58] So the preparation for it, and I can tell you, having done this work, you know, both in government and the company that I had, a lot of the effectiveness of security in a situation like that is intelligence gathering. [00:04:14] And also knowing how to find the needle in the haystack. [00:04:22] The amount of intelligence you get is so much and so overwhelming that whenever one of these things happen, haven't you noticed you can go back and find five things that they should have known? === Finding the Needle in Haystack (08:28) === [00:04:36] Sometimes it's fair and sometimes it's unfair. [00:04:41] And I'm going back to when I was in government, I would describe it as in each one of these incidents, there's probably that much information from the ground up. [00:04:52] And you got to know just what to look for, which means you have to have excellent intelligence, not just have it, but you got to command it. [00:05:01] You got to understand it. [00:05:03] Your researchers have to understand it. [00:05:07] Your support staff is as important, if not more important, than the people you put out in the field. [00:05:13] People you put out in the field are just only as good as the information they get. [00:05:17] And those people are under tremendous stress right now. [00:05:21] I mean, a lot of them are showing up for work, but not everyone. [00:05:25] This is outrageous. [00:05:27] And this has to be changed for good. [00:05:31] There's no reason why when the government can't agree on a budget that the people who work for the government shouldn't be paid. [00:05:40] We've got the money to do it. [00:05:42] It's only just an accounting issue. [00:05:46] And it doesn't happen in most other countries. [00:05:49] Most other countries, first of all, don't close down. [00:05:52] And second, if they do, like in states, the people who don't get paid if you close down are the legislators. [00:06:00] Instead, our legislators are off, particularly the Democrats, having a great time. [00:06:07] They were found all over the place. [00:06:11] Kimball, Senator Murphy was spotted with. [00:06:15] Oh, well, Jimmy Kimball, yeah, they're good. [00:06:17] Right. [00:06:18] Instead of trying to work on getting the Senate and House to agree by everybody being there and just having to agree, Murphy, who's constantly accusing the president of all kinds of outrageous things, was having a good time out. [00:06:34] Oh, see how happy he is? [00:06:36] Because he's getting paid. [00:06:38] And who knows how much money he has? [00:06:40] I don't know if he came in richer, but by now he's been in the Senate long enough that he is rich. [00:06:47] And there he is with probably the unfunniest man in America, Mr. Jackass. [00:06:56] And then the best one, of course, was Representative Robert Garcia from California, who was the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee. [00:07:07] He was at the Fountain Blue Las Vegas at the casino bar. [00:07:12] His reason, he went to visit his father. [00:07:15] What does his father live at the bar? [00:07:19] Yeah, right, Garcia. [00:07:22] You're visiting your father at the casino bar at the Fountain Blue. [00:07:26] Just exactly what does your father do? [00:07:28] Is he a couprier or is he one of the girls that brings around the drinks or boys that brings around the drinks? [00:07:37] Is he an executive, a security guy at the hotel? [00:07:41] No, he's not. [00:07:42] And you're lying because Democrats lie all the time. [00:07:46] It's like you don't even have to think about telling the truth. [00:07:51] So this is outrageous and it should be stopped. [00:07:56] It really should. [00:07:57] This should not happen again. [00:07:58] We should change this. [00:07:59] The government should go on when these immature idiots that we put in the Congress can't figure out how to make a modest compromise and have a budget that gives half to one, half to the other. [00:08:16] Just go ahead with it. [00:08:22] Is that Murphy right there? [00:08:23] That's Garcia. [00:08:24] Oh, Garcia, okay. [00:08:25] No, we saw Murphy before. [00:08:27] He was with Jimmy Kimball. [00:08:29] Those two guys that are with Murphy, they look like security guys. [00:08:31] What was he causing trouble? [00:08:33] I mean, Garcia. [00:08:37] He was visiting his father, Ted. [00:08:38] You saw his father there, didn't you? [00:08:41] That's amazing. [00:08:42] Yeah, he's visiting his father. [00:08:43] His father was behind the bar. [00:08:47] I'm sorry, Mayor. [00:08:50] Well, the Department of Justice is suing Tampon Tim State for discrimination against women. [00:09:02] Well, how? [00:09:03] Because Tampon Tim, among other things, is a very, very big supporter of men being in women's sports and getting into women's bathrooms. [00:09:14] He is an enthusiastic supporter of people with penises putting dresses on and going into the ladies' room. [00:09:23] He's also an enthusiastic supporter of males boxing with females and beating the crap out of them. [00:09:33] And that's because he is a, he is, until he is asked the questions and answers them and can give answers to the questions of how much time he spent in China and how much money he got from China and just why was he bringing students over to China for 20 years in a row to educate them or indoctrinate them, Tampon comrade? [00:10:00] I mean, this guy is a menace. [00:10:02] Look at him. [00:10:02] You can see it. [00:10:03] Tampon Tim is an out of control, at least, at least suspected a Chinese agent based on his long-term relationship with Red China, his 15, which is what his staff says, or 30, which is what he says, trips to China. [00:10:29] The fact that no one's been able to look at and see how his businesses, which involve sending people to China, were paid for. [00:10:38] How much of them were paid for by the Chinese government? [00:10:41] How much did he make from the Chinese government over the years? [00:10:46] And of course, that led to his saying things about how good socialism was and how China, about a year ago, he suggested that China should be brought in to resolve the Middle East war because they're a force for morality and a force for a decent thinking. [00:11:11] Go tell that to the Uger people that they are intent on eliminating and are in the process of eliminating. [00:11:16] Go tell that to the members of the Falun Gong who are brought in and they rip their bodies open for their kidneys, their hearts, and whatever else they can get out of their bodies. [00:11:27] They don't wait for somebody to be near death. [00:11:31] They kill you and then sell your organs for ridiculous amounts of money. [00:11:42] They have people coming in and out of China on an absolutely continuous basis, Getting organ transplants that are not available except, you know, after a long wait in the United States, and if you pay enough money, you can get it right away. [00:12:05] So China uh, China's been doing this since um, at least the beginning of this century. [00:12:12] They have their, their primary source of organs is the Falun Gong, but they will also use the Ugers. [00:12:20] They will use uh um, they'll use certain, certain Christian communities. [00:12:26] They're enemies and um, the Falung are particularly uh from the Chinese point of view because they're very healthy, they have a very healthy lifestyle. [00:12:39] So when you rip them apart, kill them apart and give up their uh heart or kidney or liver or whatever the heck it is you're transplanting, you get a good, healthy one. [00:12:53] That's the country that should be the moral arbiter for uh, for the, for the Middle East, I mean um. === Moral Arbiter for Middle East (11:00) === [00:13:04] They obviously uh agree with the uh pathological murderer, the Ayatollah, and his entire entire, entire regime. [00:13:14] So the Minnesota State high school league is being um, is being sued, and it is, it is um for allowing males to compete in female uh events and also allowing them to use uh uh female bathrooms. [00:13:33] That is being interpreted under the federal civil rights laws as discrimination against women sounds pretty good to me that it is against against um, against women. [00:13:47] I know there's a lot of dispute about how the war is going and we're going to talk to Ali Rez in a little while about the UM, about the MEK and its role in it and the two more people, the two special guest mayor. [00:14:00] I don't know if we'll have well, he raised it tonight but we have uh, dr Masood oh yes, yes. [00:14:06] So then why don't we mention, why don't we mention the names of the? [00:14:08] Uh yes, Masood is going to be on. [00:14:10] You're going to find this really fascinating. [00:14:12] This is a very, very fine man and a man has i'm not going to give it away, but I mean, he's had a history and really really, really understands what's that issue from his own personal life and background. [00:14:27] Dr dr uh, dr Masood Mazami is is uh uh gonna, you're gonna fascinating guests. [00:14:35] So stay tuned for that. [00:14:36] But please uh let's, let's go over the names of the UM and say a little prayer, of course. [00:14:42] So what we are for the MEK members and uh, what we're referring to, of course, are the four. [00:14:47] Two more died to me, remember last night. [00:14:49] There were two that we mentioned, but two more were executed today. [00:14:54] That's right. [00:14:55] So uh, the Iranian regime has announced now the kill, the execution of four Mek political prisoners. [00:15:04] Uh, starting on monday. [00:15:07] Of course, on monday, what we have our the individuals up on the screen. [00:15:14] Uh, these individuals were executed by the Islamic regime. [00:15:20] And who we have up on the screen is that Danishvar. [00:15:26] That's right. [00:15:27] That's right uh, and so we just want to make sure we're getting the right. [00:15:30] Um, he was executed yesterday. [00:15:32] Yes, so these are the two from yesterday. [00:15:35] And then uh so, 58 year old Akbar Daneshvar Kar and 59 year old Muhammad Tagavi, these two individuals uh, the Iranian regime announced that they were executed. [00:15:50] Uh, yesterday was when the announcement came out. [00:15:53] And then today uh, these two younger members, a law graduate, 34 year old Babak Alapour, bring him up, make sure we have the right. [00:16:04] Uh, what a nice looking young man oh, my goodness. [00:16:08] And oh, look at that nice smile. [00:16:11] 33 year old Puya Gabadi, 33 years old, and electrical. [00:16:16] So these, these two are 33 and 34. [00:16:19] Right these are. [00:16:20] These are really young men who were, i'm sure, high-minded young men. [00:16:27] Uh, one's an engineer right, the other's a lawyer. [00:16:30] Uh, that well, they wanted freedom for their country, freedom for, for the, for a civilization that goes back uh, before almost all others. [00:16:43] So this is what the MEK uh is all all about. [00:16:48] And um, when they say there's no one that can replace the ayatollah and they can't the ayatollah announced a year ago that the only organization they really had to worry about was MEK, the only one that could replace them. [00:17:04] Well, they can't. [00:17:06] And uh, maybe it doesn't sit well with the establishment and a lot of the rich interests that have sold out, that have sold out Persia and Iran for over 100 years. [00:17:17] Uh because yeah, they'll deal fairly with everyone, but they're not going to sell their country out to the oil companies. [00:17:23] The way um, the way the uh crooked. [00:17:27] I don't even know what the real name of that family is. [00:17:30] It isn't the Pahavi family. [00:17:31] Pahavi was a name they uh picked out from from uh, Persian history. [00:17:38] But whatever, whatever the family is, the the family so far, the inheritance that uh, that this guy that spoke at Cpac has is um well uh, he has one qualification, to be king, and that is that his father was the king. [00:17:57] So what? [00:17:58] What do we take from his father's reign and his grandfather's? [00:18:02] Well, the most significant things were all the people they murdered and tortured, and even maybe even more significant uh, in terms of what affects us right now, is all the money they stole. [00:18:14] And um, the baby Shah, who's uh talking now, was brought up on that, every bit of food that he ate and all the custom-made clothes and the jet-set life and getting himself named as a prince. [00:18:30] I don't know if he's named himself. [00:18:32] He had some kind of ceremony making himself a prince. [00:18:35] All of it was paid for by the blood, sweat and tears of the Iranian people. [00:18:38] It's all stolen from them. [00:18:40] His father never had a job other than being uh, the make-believe emperor uh, who stole everything that that he could put his hands on, and if he didn't steal it, his wife did, who is very well respected among rich people. [00:18:58] Well, I mean, I think he's had it. [00:19:01] Notice the president's remarks about him. [00:19:03] Well, he's a nice guy, but I don't think he's up to it. [00:19:07] I don't think he's up to the job. [00:19:08] He knows. [00:19:11] Yeah, I mean, it would just be another subjugation of the people of Iran. [00:19:24] General Frank McKenzie, I don't know if we have this, but he was on FaceTime, and he was the head of U.S. Central Command under both Trump and Biden. [00:19:43] And he was asked on Facebook Nation, I think, with their hoping that he would be critical. [00:19:49] You know, the way they go grab the Democrat Obama-type generals. [00:19:55] And General McKenzie kind of surprised him. [00:20:00] I don't think he's getting invited back. [00:20:02] He said, I've simulated this war for many years in many positions at Central Command. [00:20:08] We're further along than we would have expected to be at this point in all the simulations that I've seen. [00:20:15] And we're on our way to a big victory. [00:20:19] Do we have that? [00:20:21] So we have his full interview. [00:20:23] Hopefully he says it up here on the other front because we've given the full interview. [00:20:28] Okay, we don't need to hold it. [00:20:29] But that's what he said. [00:20:30] And it's important because they're doing the best they can to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. [00:20:40] The presses. [00:20:41] I mean, this is an overwhelming route. [00:20:47] And by the time it's over, it's going to be impossible to dispute, but they'll dispute it anyway. [00:20:53] I'm just going to clip. [00:20:54] This is Frank on the show here. [00:20:57] Also, I don't think it'll be a game changer. [00:21:00] Their ability to attack Israel is quite limited. [00:21:02] Yes, they will have the ability to further stop slow traffic through the Bab el-Mendeb going up into the Suez Canal. [00:21:09] We have the ability to go down there and prevent that. [00:21:11] It will require additional resources, but we have those resources, and we can certainly do it if that becomes necessary. [00:21:17] Well, the president has made clear that he needs to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. [00:21:22] His language has been contradictory on some of these points as to who's going to do it and when. [00:21:27] What's the military reality of making it passable? [00:21:32] We're on our way to doing that now, Margaret. [00:21:35] This is part of a plan that's been in existence for many years. [00:21:38] What we're doing right now is we're reducing Iranian ability to target ships in the strait through their short-range missiles, their drones, and other activities. [00:21:47] We do that by maintaining air superiority over southern Iran on a 24-7 basis, looking for where these missiles are and striking them relentlessly. [00:21:55] Once we reduce those to a very low level, then you'll be able to go in, if necessary, sweep for mines. [00:22:00] I'm not certain they put mines in the water yet. [00:22:02] I predict eventually they will. [00:22:04] It's their nature. [00:22:05] But we have the ability to do this. [00:22:08] We're on plan. [00:22:08] I'll be honest with you, Margaret. [00:22:10] I've simulated this many years in many positions at Central Command. [00:22:13] We're a little further along than we would have expected to be at this point in all the simulations that I've seen. [00:22:19] I'm going to guess in your simulations, you looked at what would happen to the Strait of Hormuz, even though the president said no one ever thought of it. [00:22:25] You thought of it, didn't you? [00:22:28] The U.S. military thinks of a lot of things. [00:22:30] We certainly have thought of the Strait of Hormuz, thought of Carg Isle, and think of all those islands on the southern littoral of Iran. [00:22:36] Kareem, the president said the Israelis killed the second-tier pragmatist types that he had thought he might be able to go and negotiate with. [00:22:45] In recent days, the name that has emerged is the parliament speaker, Ghali Baff. [00:22:55] She's just impossible. [00:22:57] I mean, this is an advanced case of Trump derangement syndrome in the second or third stages of pathology. [00:23:08] The reality is that the president mentioned Charge Island in 1980s and said that if they were to hold up oil in the Straits of Hormuz, we should capture and take Charge Island. [00:23:26] And sort of criticizing the presidents for not doing that. [00:23:30] So, of course, he knew we were with the Straits Hormuz. [00:23:36] Well, we have our guests if we want to get. [00:23:41] Yes, I do. [00:23:42] I do. [00:23:42] And then we can do we can do our break. [00:23:46] Want to take a break first? [00:23:47] Let's take our break. [00:23:48] Yeah, so that we take care of business first. [00:23:52] Masood would be very much in favor of that. [00:23:54] He's a very, very smart, practical man, and a great businessman, by the way, as well as a great patriot. [00:24:00] So let's take our break. [00:24:02] Yes. === Dictator vs Family Choice (16:45) === [00:24:05] U.S. Army Major Scott Smiley paid a high price serving our nation. [00:24:10] Scott was leading his platoon in Iraq when a blast sent shrapnel through his eyes, leaving him blind and temporarily paralyzed. 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[00:25:14] There's over 700 premium and classic movies all ready to go. [00:25:18] Plus, they got catch-up TV that allows you to go back and watch what you've missed or want to watch again. [00:25:23] Cut your cable in half and get twice as much for free. [00:25:26] Way more channels for half the cost. [00:25:28] After the first year, the subscription then drops to $57.95 monthly, where you change or upgrade anytime. [00:25:35] Go to QUXNow.com and get yours today. [00:25:38] Use promo code Rudy. [00:25:40] Act fast. [00:25:41] These deals are selling out. [00:25:46] Here we are, pretty much at the beginning of the process here at this pristine, I call it a laboratory. [00:25:53] It's not like a factory. [00:25:54] It's like a hospital. [00:25:56] This is the beginning of the process for roasting. [00:25:59] Jeep green, very good quality. [00:26:01] Most people don't use this quality. [00:26:04] We deal with small farmers because they'd like to know who we're dealing with. [00:26:08] They give us the highest quality, all organic, non-GMO. [00:26:13] You should know all Arabica beans. [00:26:16] No Robusto. [00:26:18] All Arabica. [00:26:20] They're going to go into the roaster, and it'll get roasted for about 20 minutes or so. [00:26:32] Oh, my goodness. [00:26:33] Look at these. [00:26:38] My goodness, you're going to want to specially order these. [00:26:51] is what goes into rudy's coffee welcome back uh to america's mayor live We have with us a very special guest, Dr. Masood Mozami. [00:27:11] Dr. Masood is a is a very, well, there he is. [00:27:16] Masood, let me have you get move to the center a little bit more. [00:27:20] Yes, sir. [00:27:21] A little more. [00:27:22] A little more. [00:27:23] Now the other, go back. [00:27:25] Perfect. [00:27:26] There he is. [00:27:27] He's right in the center. [00:27:28] That's what we want him. [00:27:29] I don't mind him a little bit more to the right. [00:27:34] I was kidding with you, Masood. [00:27:35] Yes, sir. [00:27:36] Masood, tell us. [00:27:38] You know, you and I this weekend had a very, very long and detailed conversation about your history and the way in which you, you know, came to America. [00:27:50] Yes, sir. [00:27:51] How much you love it. [00:27:52] I mean, I would describe it as passionate love for America. [00:27:57] But I'd like you to tell us about maybe even more sensitive area, you know, what preceded that? [00:28:05] Because we're dealing with that right now, that hatred and that terrible, terrible regime in Iran. [00:28:14] And you have, it's way back in your past and you overcame it and you beat them. [00:28:21] But there are a lot of people that are still being subjugated by them. [00:28:25] Yes, sir. [00:28:26] Can you tell us as best you can, your history with that? [00:28:32] Yes, sir. [00:28:33] First, I want to say thank you, Mayor, for all you have done for this great nation. [00:28:37] I'll never forget 9-11. [00:28:39] You were there when the president was on the air and you were right beside President Bush and you give a confidence and you give them the hope and faith that America will overcome this devastating that everyone was scared. [00:28:54] All the businesses shut down, all the airports shut down. [00:28:57] It was a great fear. [00:28:58] Well, I'll never forget your strong voice. [00:29:01] Thank you. [00:29:01] Believing in this nation and say, we will overcome this devastation. [00:29:06] Thank you. [00:29:07] I'll never forget that. [00:29:09] Well, now tell us about, tell us about your personal experience, because there are a lot of people in this country that don't understand the danger that the regime, I call them the regime of terror. [00:29:24] Yes, sir. [00:29:25] Danger they pose to us as well as the whole world. [00:29:29] I mean, it's extraordinary, and you know it firsthand. [00:29:34] Well, in order to clarify it, first, I'm Belest. [00:29:39] I'm Belest first generation American from Iranian descent. [00:29:45] I love this country. [00:29:47] In 9-11, I called Governor Keating and said, I will go anywhere to serve this country. [00:29:52] And again, I'm fortunate. [00:29:55] I'm happy that I was born in Iran, but I was ashamed, disliked the government that we were under. [00:30:02] So when I came to this country, I understood. [00:30:05] I understood about, I mean, I had a degree of understanding what democracy is. [00:30:09] But when really I came in this country, I understood how Belescent is. [00:30:13] But it's human nature that we tend to take things for granted. [00:30:18] Yeah. [00:30:18] But that we get used to it. [00:30:20] If you were raised under the light, you never know what darkness is. [00:30:25] So these people, you know, it's a human tendency, but not shouldn't, should not go to the point that we give up and we let people take away what we have, what we have earned and what the Declaration of Independence and those wise people give it to us. [00:30:43] Now, when did you leave Iran? [00:30:45] About when? [00:30:46] I left, I came in this country. [00:30:49] I came here in 1978, August 15, 1978, in this great country. [00:30:54] But before that, I was a political president under the Shah, king of Iran. [00:30:59] I was political president. [00:31:01] I was tortured. [00:31:02] I know what torture is: broken head, broken. [00:31:06] How old were you then, Masuda? [00:31:07] I believe I think I was around 18. [00:31:10] I mean, you're a kid. [00:31:12] Yes, because over there, when you graduate from high school, you take some core, you 200,000 people apply. [00:31:19] So if you don't get in university, the system will decide what you will study. [00:31:24] And if you don't take what you are from 100,000 people, from 200,000 people, 50,000 people can go to school for higher education. [00:31:33] And then the government decides what you have to study. [00:31:35] And the measure was I was accepted was a geology. [00:31:38] That's the last things I want to do. [00:31:40] I didn't like rock or anything. [00:31:42] But if you don't take it, then you have to go back to the military. [00:31:44] It's a mandatory two years military. [00:31:47] And then after that, your career of higher education is over. [00:31:51] It's not like I want to have another chance or go this. [00:31:54] It's over. [00:31:55] So I decide to go for the military against my parents' advice because they said, take the course, go in education, get your idea. [00:32:03] I went to the military. [00:32:05] And the fact is, my family was from a very prominent family and you know, wealthy. [00:32:12] So we didn't have any problem. [00:32:13] We had everything that anybody could have better than. [00:32:16] But when I went to the military, I realized how brutal they were: dehumanizing, devaluing, discriminating. [00:32:24] You name it. [00:32:25] This was the era of the Sabah. [00:32:28] Yes, under Sabak. [00:32:29] Yes, sir. [00:32:29] Under Sabak. [00:32:30] Although, although probably not as bad as under the Ayatollah, it was, it didn't matter if you're in prison. [00:32:40] It doesn't matter if it's the Sabak or the torture. [00:32:46] Torture is torture. [00:32:48] But there's two after that experience. [00:32:50] Then I came in this country. [00:32:52] I went against Ayatollah. [00:32:54] And then I was not able to go back. [00:32:57] Did you expect? [00:32:59] So you were here when the Shah stepped down, right? [00:33:02] Yes, sir. [00:33:05] Did you expect that theocracy to emerge? [00:33:08] Or did you think for a while that there might be some kind of a democratic government? [00:33:16] No, because my father was connected at the political level. [00:33:19] Very honored man, never embezzled money when they could, because embezzling over there is a way of life. [00:33:24] I mean, that's what it is. [00:33:25] Sometimes people say, well, I'm a very nice person. [00:33:27] I don't take more than 40% cut. [00:33:29] I mean, that's been nice in that country. [00:33:31] You don't take 40% cut. [00:33:33] But my dad, when President Jimmy Carter came in Iran, my dad was in that American embassy. [00:33:40] And at that time, the name of Ambassador was Sullivan. [00:33:46] I remember his name was Sullivan. [00:33:48] So when he came home, he said, all of you guys have to pack. [00:33:52] It's going to be over. [00:33:54] So the decision was made. [00:33:56] But I think God bless President Jimmy Carter was a very nice man, great Christian, but very unwise, very unwise in foreign policy. [00:34:06] He actually took Iran and handed to Muslim extremists and Russia, Soviet Union at the time. [00:34:14] He handed to them. [00:34:16] But there was a period of time when the Shah was first, you can say, overthrown, left, whatever. [00:34:23] It looked like there might be a reasonable government put together. [00:34:28] And then the Ayatollah came and the whole country, the whole country, they had organized it. [00:34:34] Yes, sir. [00:34:34] But Mayor, I can explain it this way. [00:34:36] I came up with three kinds of three types of dictatorship. [00:34:41] I said the whole political system in the world is two leagues. [00:34:45] One is a democratic, one is non-democratic. [00:34:48] Non-democratic, we call them government of the dictator by the dictator for the dictator. [00:34:55] So people do not choose the government. [00:34:58] They become a slave of the government, their position of the government. [00:35:02] They are the object of the government. [00:35:04] So the dictator, whether it's a democratic, whether it's a clergy, whether it is a royal, or whether it is military, they have absolute power. [00:35:14] For example, if the capital was Washington, D.C., that dictator decides what mayor is going to have in Oklahoma, what banker we are going to have, what police chief we are going to have, everything dictated by them. [00:35:28] And all the asset of the oil goes to the dictator account. [00:35:33] Then they take 30, 40% out from Europe in Switzerland, and then he decides how they have to be divided. [00:35:40] But dictators are not dangerous by nature because they harm their own people. [00:35:47] But then another category of dictator is government of the dictator, by the dictator, for the dictator, is when the dictator has a blind ambition. [00:35:56] Like Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein, we have even Hitler, whether Mussolini. [00:36:03] The reason they have a blind ambition, they think beyond their border, ideologically, financially, or expansion of their land or things. [00:36:13] So one thing I learned about those people, when they get defeated, they fill the suicide, Hitler suicide, Saddam Philippe, Gaddafi Philippe, Mussolini got hanged. [00:36:26] So they do not fight to the end. [00:36:28] So as soon as they leave, the whole system collapse because they never, they love the country, but not to the point they want to put their life for their people. [00:36:37] So because the people is their object, is for them. [00:36:40] But another type of dictators, we have government of the dictator, by the dictator, for the dictator is what we have right now in Iran. [00:36:49] The leader is a political leader, but the most important and the most dangerous is he is a spiritual leader. [00:36:58] He's a religious leader. [00:37:00] That makes him more dangerous. [00:37:02] Yes, yes. [00:37:02] That makes him more dangerous. [00:37:04] Yeah, because now everything is justified by a higher authority than anything. [00:37:13] Exactly. [00:37:14] So when I was growing up, my father used to, we had a lot of debate with my father. [00:37:18] My father said, you know, there's three questions people usually ask you. [00:37:21] Well, I came from a Jewish family, but he said they asked you, are you a believer? [00:37:27] I said, what do you mean believer? [00:37:29] It means do you have a faith? [00:37:30] Are you atheist? [00:37:32] Means you don't believe in a God or higher power, like Russia or China. [00:37:36] Are you agnostic? [00:37:37] Means are you doubtful, whether you believe or you don't. [00:37:40] You are kind of undefined. [00:37:41] But my father said, we have to ask another question after this Ayatollah came in. [00:37:46] He said, when people ask you, are you a believer? [00:37:49] You say, yes, I believe in God. [00:37:51] Then you need another question. [00:37:52] And that other question is, what God, what does your God represent? [00:37:58] The Christianity faith, my experience, is love, compassion, forgiveness, helping neighbors and neighbors. [00:38:08] Over there, their God doesn't represent compassion and love. [00:38:14] Their faith, their God represents violence, is mixed, not become more dangerous, not mixed with the communist ideology. [00:38:23] A lot of people ask me, how can these two extremes be combined together like a fire and water? [00:38:29] Because 1960s, in order for them to achieve, they came together by necessity. [00:38:36] But God knows when they achieve their objective, they may fight each other. [00:38:39] So their God is not a God of love. [00:38:42] Their God is not God of generosity. [00:38:45] He's not a God. [00:38:46] Is the god of hate if once you become Muslim, you cannot defy being a non-Muslim because you're subjected to be killed when you are a woman, you have zero, zero rights, children, no rights. [00:39:03] Men's have double rights. [00:39:05] If my parents died, I get twice inherited than my sister. [00:39:09] Then, leader, the political leader, but also religious leader, he's representing the God that he believes in. [00:39:18] Questioning is death sentence. [00:39:22] And also, I mix them with the communist ideology because the fundamental is they believe the end justifies the mean. [00:39:31] I want to make it clear for a lot of Americans who are born in the light and we grew up in the darkness. [00:39:37] The end justifies the mean. [00:39:39] So, what does it mean? [00:39:40] If they go into war, they can put their bomb, the most dangerous weapon, in mosques, churches, a school, hospital, and neighborhood. [00:39:50] Why? [00:39:51] Because they want to maximize the killing. [00:39:55] And they justify that as serving God. [00:39:59] Yes, sir. [00:39:59] Yes, sir. [00:40:00] And they want to have 70-something virgin. [00:40:04] Yeah. [00:40:05] You know, they can use the children. [00:40:07] Five years old can be married, forced to get married beyond their choice. [00:40:14] And then the government dictate what is your outfit, how you have to dress. [00:40:18] If the woman's cover their face, I have no problem. [00:40:21] That's their choice between them and their family. [00:40:23] But they mandate you. [00:40:24] They have a police that monitor you. [00:40:27] So my mom didn't have to. [00:40:29] She was from a very prominent, wealthy family, but she used to go with a group of ladies in the public bus and pull the cover up or put their hands, whatever the ladies do, they painted or something. [00:40:44] They would get arrested. [00:40:45] My mom got hit so much in the head that she lost one of her eyes. [00:40:48] And now she has Alzheimer. === Silent Killings Without Mercy (16:15) === [00:40:51] Oh my God. [00:40:52] I am blessed. [00:40:54] My mom is blessed because many young people from elementary to university student, they were killed. [00:41:03] They were killed in silence with no mercy. [00:41:06] They take people publicly, they hang them on the whatever they call them, that device. [00:41:12] They hang them and swing them around in the public. [00:41:14] You know, the number, when I first heard the number a few weeks ago, they killed just recently during the podcast, right? [00:41:24] Originally, they said 15,000, then 20,000, then 30, and now who knows? [00:41:30] That was only in four days. [00:41:32] And their own people. [00:41:34] Four days. [00:41:35] Yes, sir. [00:41:36] How do you kill? [00:41:36] 30,000 people in four days. [00:41:38] And that's what I'm saying. [00:41:39] I'm trying to give a wake-up call. [00:41:41] God bless Mr. Trump for his bold vision and determination. [00:41:45] They kill their own people when they get a nuclear weapon. [00:41:48] Yes, yes. [00:41:49] You think they're going to hold hands in Kumbaya and coexist with you? [00:41:54] Yeah. [00:41:55] You cannot coexist with the cancer. [00:41:58] 9-11 was real. [00:42:00] You were there. [00:42:01] 9-11 was real, but they came up with the most primitive technique. [00:42:05] No, if you, if you, if you, if you think about 9-11, the four people who ran it. [00:42:14] Yes, sir. [00:42:14] We don't know how many knew that the end result was going to be their suicide. [00:42:19] We're not sure. [00:42:20] But we know that the four people who ran the operation on each one of the planes, for two years, they trained in order to kill themselves. [00:42:29] Yes, sir. [00:42:30] They had to go through extensive training to learn how to fly a complicated plane. [00:42:36] And they learned it in America. [00:42:38] Yeah. [00:42:39] So they spent two years here in America. [00:42:42] They saw a beautiful world, right? [00:42:44] Yes, sir. [00:42:45] Yet they remain focused on when we accomplish this mission, we're going to be dead. [00:42:53] Absolutely. [00:42:54] And they were so, I consider it brainwashed that they, like a robot, they just went right straight ahead to that mission. [00:43:03] And it's not dangerous. [00:43:06] There's nothing that's dangerous. [00:43:07] When American soldiers go in the war for necessity, most of our war really is, I call it, preemptive strike. [00:43:14] Means we know they're coming. [00:43:15] We know they have a plan. [00:43:17] They already told you we're going to hit you. [00:43:19] So, Mr. Trump, what he's doing is a preemptive strike. [00:43:22] You cannot wait for them. [00:43:23] And then, because 9-11, we are not going to have 9-11 anymore. [00:43:27] We are going to have 10,000 times worse than 9-11. [00:43:29] So, he did a preemptive strike. [00:43:32] Yes. [00:43:32] He's arming before they want to pull the gun on our head. [00:43:36] But they have no value for life. [00:43:39] That's what I'm saying. [00:43:40] American soldiers, when they shoot, they dock their head, they want to come back home. [00:43:44] They bomb themselves and they run to you. [00:43:47] So I want to share with this American, I have value. [00:43:50] We all have a value for humanity, regardless of race, culture, nationality, gender. [00:43:55] But the fact is, some ideology does not blend with Western ideology, period. [00:44:02] Coexisting, you cannot coexist with extreme Muslim, with the Muslim extremists mixed with the communist ideology. [00:44:12] I don't understand. [00:44:14] When you say the Muslim extremists, Masood, obviously that doesn't describe other Muslims. [00:44:20] There are plenty that aren't, but they don't, there seems to be a reluctance to speak up. [00:44:27] In other words, let's assume that the extremists are a much smaller, but still a very powerful group. [00:44:35] Yes, sir. [00:44:36] But the ones who are regular people have to be the majority. [00:44:41] But the problem I find is they should be standing with us against the extremists. [00:44:52] They shouldn't be standing with. [00:44:55] You know, I prosecuted the mafia, right? [00:44:57] Yes, sir. [00:44:57] Yes, sir. [00:44:58] I used to have Italians telling me when I did that that I was being disloyal to Italians. [00:45:05] And I said, just the opposite. [00:45:07] Yes, sir. [00:45:08] I'm cleaning up. [00:45:11] I'm cleaning us up. [00:45:12] We're no different than anybody else. [00:45:14] We have a lot of great people, a lot of good people, and we got some really bad people. [00:45:19] Yes, sir. [00:45:20] Everybody has that. [00:45:21] And if you get yourself defined by the worst people in your group, because you won't stand up against them. [00:45:29] But my answer, but do you all respect, Mayor? [00:45:32] This is the difference. [00:45:33] When I left the country, 95%, 96% of the Iranian, they were Muslim. [00:45:39] But I grew up among moderate because we had two branches of Muslim. [00:45:43] One, we call them Shia, one we call them. [00:45:46] You know, the Shia branch has extremists. [00:45:49] They call them Hassan and Hussein. [00:45:52] The Hassan brand is more moderate. [00:45:54] I grew up with some of them in that neighborhood. [00:45:56] They talk, they never question what is your faith. [00:45:59] They share food. [00:46:00] Even they call their son and daughters Mary. [00:46:04] They call him Jesus, Moses. [00:46:06] They call that kid. [00:46:06] They're married together. [00:46:08] But you remember, 92% of Iran used to be 95%, they were Muslim. [00:46:15] These people stood up against the radical of their own government. [00:46:18] Guess what happened? [00:46:20] 45,000, 50,000 people got killed. [00:46:22] Yes, of course. [00:46:23] What I'm saying is, what I'm saying is, I always say God helped us. [00:46:29] God give us sufficient wisdom and courage. [00:46:34] Be able to tell the difference. [00:46:36] If you are not able and willing to tell the difference between brass and gold, we will end up with the brass with the price of gold. [00:46:44] There are millions of Muslims right now in they are in the Malaysia, Malaysia. [00:46:50] They are not radical Muslim. [00:46:54] If we can, if we get, because anytime people get scared and panic and frightened, we have a tendency to overgeneralize. [00:47:01] Not all dogs bite, but we have to have sufficient wisdom and courage to understand the difference between Muslim extremists and moderate Muslims. [00:47:10] Now they don't come because they get killed. [00:47:13] Even in Iran, if you are not the branch of their, if you are not the branch of their Muslim Shia, they kill you. [00:47:22] They kill you. [00:47:22] Simple as that. [00:47:23] There's no negotiation. [00:47:25] But the difference is this. [00:47:27] If they want to have a Sharia law, number one, Muslim extremists, if they support Muslim Brotherhood, Muslim extremists, if they use non-profit organization as a care organization, [00:47:43] Muslim Brotherhood, if the Kellerji declare America and Israel as a big Satan, small Satan, or Kellerji declare that we have to go get after American and we have to fight them and kill him, they're all Muslim extremists. [00:47:58] But if we cannot tell the difference, we open an open border, all you can eat buffet. [00:48:03] Come on in, we feed you, we pet you, we do everything you want. [00:48:06] So we don't know the difference between brass and gold. [00:48:09] Well, Masood, we have to go, but I have to ask you one more question. [00:48:12] Yes, sir, yes, sir. [00:48:13] So you, you, you, uh, your childhood was in Iran. [00:48:17] Yes, sir. [00:48:18] How did you turn out like this? [00:48:20] I come from a very open-minded family and I grew up in the political valley. [00:48:24] But then when I was tortured, one of the conditions for me, by all the possibility, I should be killed. [00:48:29] By all the possibility. [00:48:30] In the military, you don't urinate in Iran flag. [00:48:33] It's a death sentence. [00:48:35] The reason that I stay alive because they couldn't, they thought they want to find out who I'm connected. [00:48:40] And I was not connected. [00:48:41] I was an independent operator. [00:48:42] So when my parents found out after a year and a half to two years, because my father, top general, he knew I was really, but they released me conditionally and I went to Israel because we've had a very close relationship with the ambassador of Israel in Iran. [00:48:57] They used to come to our home. [00:48:58] So I went to Tel Aviv University. [00:49:01] Wow. [00:49:02] Well, we got to talk some more. [00:49:04] Yes, sir. [00:49:04] This is a fascinating story. [00:49:06] And my listeners, I'm sure, are very, very well informed by this because we just don't know enough about the whole background of this. [00:49:16] I mean, the Americans don't. [00:49:17] And a lot of it has been kept from them. [00:49:19] So it's really wonderful that you've come on. [00:49:21] And thank you. [00:49:21] It's an honor. [00:49:22] Thank you, Mayor. [00:49:23] Thank you for all of you. [00:49:24] And God bless your beautiful family. [00:49:25] Yes, sir. [00:49:26] Thank you. [00:49:26] We'll talk some more. [00:49:27] Yes, sir. [00:49:28] Yes, sir. [00:49:28] Thank you, sir. [00:49:30] I told you he would be terrific, right? [00:49:32] I told you he would be terrific. [00:49:34] And that, you know, that's you have to hear a lot of those things, not all we've said to you, but you've got to hear it from people who lived it and people who put their lives on the line for it. [00:49:46] And what he's telling you has been the situation in Iran, I don't know, going back to the beginning of the last century. [00:49:58] And there's an opportunity. [00:50:00] There's an opportunity now. [00:50:02] And it may not, who knows, it will come along again soon. [00:50:07] And the opportunity is to crack this thing open. [00:50:10] And we've gotten, I mean, I don't have enough of the inside information to tell you how close to the goal line we are, but I know we're pretty darn close. [00:50:24] And the worst thing is when you got to kick a field goal. [00:50:28] I hate to use that analogy because human lives are involved here. [00:50:32] You kick a field goal, people are going to die. [00:50:33] You got a touchdown, it's all over. [00:50:36] And a great nation emerges because there are a lot. [00:50:41] I'm not going to say, I mean, Masood is an exceptional man who's been enormously successful here. [00:50:46] And we'll have you get to know him better. [00:50:48] You'll find out what he is. [00:50:51] He's a doctor of psychology. [00:50:52] He's an enormously successful both scientist and businessman. [00:51:01] So he's not the average person, obviously. [00:51:03] But I'm telling you, the Iranian people, and I've had a lot of experience with them since 79, 80. [00:51:14] The Iranian people are exceptional people. [00:51:17] Exceptional both in terms of intellect, but also they're philosophical. [00:51:26] They think. [00:51:28] They're deep. [00:51:30] And it's a shame what's been done to them. [00:51:36] Well, and it's quite a resource for America. [00:51:44] So the U.S., the U.S. did take out. [00:51:53] So we want to get you up to date because we're talking about ending the war, but you've got to get there to end it. [00:52:00] And the U.S. took out a major, major facility in Isfahan. [00:52:11] Now, I don't know if you can see, I may have a good picture of that. [00:52:18] And the reason I want to say this is this is an area that we hit the first time. [00:52:24] This is an area that we hit. [00:52:28] I think that's it right there. [00:52:29] There it is. [00:52:30] If you put it up now, you'll see it. [00:52:34] I think you can see up in the corner there some of the rockets. [00:52:41] Now, when we were showing you the cluster bombs the other night, I don't know if you remember that. [00:52:46] When we were showing you the cluster bombs that Iran uses, you see one-tenth of that here, one-tenth of that there, one-tenth of that here, one-tenth of that here. [00:52:56] This is a bomb. [00:52:59] I don't know how big that is. [00:53:00] It looks like taking a whole complex. [00:53:03] And this thing went down, you know, 100, 200 feet into the ground because this is one of the places that I mentioned earlier where we're not sure if there's any enriched uranium left behind, Isfahan. [00:53:23] The other is closer to Natanz. [00:53:26] And then there's the Black Acre, I think it's the Black Acre Mountain, which is a new facility. [00:53:34] And we've seen them digging there. [00:53:37] We've seen them putting things there, but we don't know exactly what's there. [00:53:42] But here, this is the place where we weren't certain that we took out everything. [00:54:00] It sure looks like we took out everything here with this hit. [00:54:05] And I want you to, when they talk about who's winning this war, who's losing this war, who's really doing the damage, Iran wasn't able to do that anywhere, what you see there, that kind of bombing. [00:54:20] I'm not even sure Israel can do that. [00:54:22] These bunker buster bombs are extraordinarily powerful. [00:54:27] You know, they're just a little short of an atomic bomb, and they don't have the residue effect of an atomic bomb. [00:54:34] They don't leave behind uranium that can, If you're in the wrong spot and you're downwind, it can kill you. [00:54:46] One of the things, people are wondering, well, what is holding Iran together? [00:54:52] They're getting hit like this. [00:54:54] I mean, we're just showing you one, and this, albeit a really, really big one. [00:54:58] So you cut that in half or cut it in a quarter. [00:55:01] That's going on all over Iran. [00:55:03] Today, going on all over, whether it's the United States or it's Israel, we're hitting them every place where we can degrade them as a military. [00:55:12] And in fact, according to the Israelis, and I think the Americans do, we're in the last couple of days of our trying to take them apart as a military. [00:55:23] And we're beginning a phase where we're going to degrade and destroy their economy. [00:55:34] We know the obvious part of that is focused on Hormuz and the area along there, but it's really focused around the whole country. [00:55:44] The idea there is to make it easier for the MEK and the dissidents to take over. [00:55:54] They have arms, but they don't have a massive amount of arms. [00:55:58] They have numbers, but they don't have, we're not sure really what the numbers are. [00:56:02] And the numbers will increase dramatically as soon as they can have some very public victories in taking over various headquarters and places like that, because the regime was very, very successful into frightening people back behind closed doors. [00:56:29] When you kill 30 to 50,000 people, many of them in the streets all over the country, people are going to think twice before they take an effort like wanting to take over the militia headquarters or a guard headquarters. [00:56:53] Now, there are some in different parts of Iran that have been taken over, but not anywhere near what you would need to have an overthrow of the government. === Mass Killings Stop Militias (14:48) === [00:57:06] But I predict that that's going to happen quick when it happens. [00:57:10] That doesn't build, you crack through a homicidal, suicidal regime. [00:57:20] It just, you don't do it. [00:57:25] You don't do it in discernible stages. [00:57:29] All of a sudden, you wake up one morning and they're out and the good guys are in charge. [00:57:34] That's the way it'll happen. [00:57:37] Like, think of it as when we first heard that the Berlin Wall was going to come down or that the Soviet Union was over or it's like, my goodness, how the heck did that happen? [00:57:55] Or just recently, Assad, Assad, Assad was impossible to displace. [00:58:02] He was impossible to displace. [00:58:03] He had the support of Hezbollah, which was by far the most effective and most lethal of the Iranian proxies. [00:58:13] He had the support of Iran. [00:58:15] Israel was tied up in another war. [00:58:17] How were they going to be able to deal with him? [00:58:19] And when it happened, he just ran out of the country so fast. [00:58:23] The only thing he didn't leave behind was a lot of money because they know how to steal. [00:58:30] That's what's going to happen here. [00:58:33] The crack is going to get open. [00:58:35] They're knocking on the door and they're going to take over. [00:58:39] And the group that has the only discernible group that is out there with a concerted effort and concerted to the extent that they're losing lives is the MEK. [00:58:52] There is no other group that at least the people know about. [00:58:57] And there's no other group that the regime has targeted. [00:59:01] They target the MEK and they curse them every week and have been doing that for 40 years. [00:59:10] Lebanon, which has been horribly raped by Iran, the regime of terror and Hezbollah. [00:59:23] And you talk about Christians being killed. [00:59:27] I mean, they slaughtered Christians, Hezbollah, and the Iranians slaughtered Christians in Lebanon, slaughtered them. [00:59:37] The government of Lebanon has now thrown out the Iranian ambassador. [00:59:42] About time. [00:59:45] I mean, beautiful, beautiful country. [00:59:48] I've never been to Lebanon. [00:59:50] I've looked at it over the border from Israel and from Haifa, but I've never been there. [00:59:58] I want to go there. [00:59:59] I want to see it. [01:00:00] But I'm told that a lot of it is now destroyed. [01:00:05] And that was one of the countries that had a very, not a majority, but a very strong Christian community. [01:00:14] That goes back to the early days after Christ. [01:00:20] These are the places that St. Paul and St. Bartholomew went and converted. [01:00:26] They didn't do what Muhammad. [01:00:28] Saint Paul did not have an army. [01:00:32] He had given up being a soldier, remember? [01:00:36] He got knocked down. [01:00:39] He got knocked down to Damascus, I think, and on the road. [01:00:44] And Jesus said, why are you persecuting me? [01:00:48] Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? [01:00:51] And named him Paul and sent him to Peter. [01:00:54] And Peter and Paul got together and they went on the road mostly, well, at first together and then separate. [01:01:04] And Paul is the one who converted that whole part of Asia Minor. [01:01:12] There were Christian communities there, big, strong Christian communities there, way before Muhammad came along. [01:01:21] And the Muslims have, the Muslims have at times, you know, attempted to genocide against them, and as they did with the Zoroastrians, who obviously weren't Christians, and they've diminished them greatly recently, the Christians in Lebanon. [01:01:42] But many of these Christians communities still remain the Coptics in Egypt. [01:01:48] There's a Syrian, both Latin church and a Syrian Orthodox Church. [01:01:57] All of this is the doing of Saint Paul, who's a saint that both the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church and the Episcopal Church share. [01:02:06] And I would imagine most of the Protestant denominations who recognize saints, I mean, Paul preached Christianity and he created the biggest religion in the world. [01:02:20] And it was not created by conquering armies. [01:02:23] It was created by preaching the word of God, the word of Jesus Christ, and by example, by the example of people who loved each other and people who died for their faith. [01:02:38] You know, it's very, very discouraging when I hear the language and the encouragement to hate and therefore to do violence against our ICE agents. [01:02:56] Our ICE agents are police officers. [01:02:58] They're just like police officers. [01:03:01] You saw the one that we featured the other night at Kennedy Airport who saved the little baby. [01:03:05] There was another one that day, I think, in Washington who did the same thing. [01:03:10] These are good men and women who are trying very, very hard to protect us against maybe the worst invasion in our history. [01:03:21] We've never really had an invasion. [01:03:23] I guess the War of 1812, the British invaded. [01:03:30] And of course, on 9-11, we were invaded for a morning. [01:03:36] But this invasion over four years of it could be 20 million people. [01:03:42] It could be 25 million people. [01:03:45] And we have no idea how many of them are terrorists, how many of them are criminals, how many of them are human traffickers, how many of them are drug dealers. [01:03:52] All we know is that a lot of them are. [01:03:54] Not all, but a lot more than used to be the case. [01:04:02] So the other day, you may or may not have read this. [01:04:08] This happened back in my city, well, my city of my life. [01:04:16] And this was a Honduran illegal who was running around because New York City violates federal law and gets away with it by not reporting illegal aliens to the federal authorities so that they can be deported from the country and under Trump put in prison. [01:04:45] If you reported them under Biden, it probably didn't make any difference. [01:04:48] You didn't even pick them up and you just parole them. [01:04:52] But now, if somebody had called the Immigration Service since Trump has been in office and said, we have this guy named Baron Hernandez. [01:05:06] He's about 33, 34 years old. [01:05:11] He's been deported four times, four times. [01:05:17] He's committed any number of crimes, at the time that he murdered Richard Williams, a U.S. Air Force veteran, and a Vietnam veteran, 83-year-old Vietnam veteran, and Lexington Avenue and 63rd Street. [01:05:39] He threw him and another gentleman, John Penna, 30 years old. [01:05:46] He just threw them both on the tracks. [01:05:55] John Penna was injured. [01:05:59] I don't know how seriously, not fatally, and I think possibly he's out of the hospital by now. [01:06:05] But the much older man, but a man with a great record of serving his country and a man who was just the quintessential grandfather in his family and living out the best part of his life that he earned after years and years of hard work and dedicated service to his country during the Vietnam War, his life was snuffed out by a man that shouldn't have been here. [01:06:34] I mean, it's one thing to be murdered by somebody that has to be here because they were their citizens. [01:06:42] It's another thing to be murdered by the extras who get in. [01:06:47] And do not believe these people who tell you that the illegal aliens are less criminals than the American, the Native Americans or Americans. [01:07:05] There was an argument that could be made for that. [01:07:08] Back, back, back, when I used to do this immigration work, I was in charge. [01:07:13] Immigration Service used to be in the Justice Department. [01:07:16] And when I was Associate Attorney General, it was under my jurisdiction. [01:07:21] And back in those days, or when I was the mayor, and I virtually knew how many illegals there were in my city. [01:07:31] I probably had most of their names. [01:07:35] Now, I couldn't get rid of them. [01:07:37] I couldn't get rid of them because the federal government didn't have the resources to do it. [01:07:40] Federal government could only deport three or 4,000 a year. [01:07:44] So no matter what I did, I was going to end up the year with 397,000 illegals in a good year. [01:07:57] So what I did, it wasn't just my idea. [01:08:00] I worked this out from the other side when I was U.S. attorney with Ed Koch. [01:08:05] What I did was, in both situations, on the federal government side, on the city side, we tried very hard to focus and use those spots that we had to get rid of them for the worst cases. [01:08:19] And in doing that, I was pretty certain, and the surveys showed that, that although, of course, there were criminals among the illegals, but they weren't as heavy as the criminals among our own population. [01:08:31] And of course, it was a time of New York City having record murders, record crime, record crimes. [01:08:38] Just to give you an example, you know, last year, what the heck was there? [01:08:41] 400, 500 murders. [01:08:43] So when I took over as mayor, there were 2,200 murders. [01:08:47] And then just extrapolate that to all the other crimes, okay? [01:08:52] Now, when they say that, when the New York Times and the lying liberals say this, that the illegals are less criminal than the Native, whatever you want to call them, the legitimate Americans, it's not true with this group. [01:09:11] This is a totally unique and different situation that we've never faced before. [01:09:19] There was always at least some degree of difficulty in getting in. [01:09:24] And therefore, a large percentage of the people who got in, even under the lax policies of the Democrats where they were paroled here and paroled there, at least there was a check of them at the border and a record of them in most cases. [01:09:41] Now, just the opposite under Biden. [01:09:43] At some point, it became ridiculous to even have records. [01:09:49] 12,000 people lined up to come in. [01:09:54] First of all, in most cases, it wouldn't have done any good to try to vet them. [01:09:59] The country they came from wouldn't give you the information. [01:10:01] So we see a lot of these criminals come from Venezuela. [01:10:07] You think Maduro was going to give us information? [01:10:10] You call up Venezuelan police and say, I've got Pedro Hernandez here with me. [01:10:17] He's, yeah, I come from there. [01:10:19] Tell me his criminal record. [01:10:20] Go to hell. [01:10:21] Boom. [01:10:23] Honduras now would be responsive. [01:10:26] But you think back during the Biden era, they'd be responsive? [01:10:28] You think Biden people would call? [01:10:30] Of course not. [01:10:32] So very quickly, all of the illegal operations get to know that there's no vetting, there's no risk. [01:10:43] So they send you, it generates in the minds of the people who run these operations, the head of a drug organization, the head of a human trafficking organization, terrorist groups, the Chinese government, the Venezuelan government. [01:11:00] It generates in their head, like send them everything. [01:11:06] And they did. [01:11:07] And they're here. [01:11:09] And we're doing, and the president and his administration are doing miracles and getting rid of them. [01:11:19] And when you think about, oh, the harsh tactics being used in this and that, these are not harsh tactics. [01:11:26] They're not. [01:11:29] They talk about the two things that happened in Minneapolis as if they weren't just. [01:11:33] They were both totally justified. [01:11:37] The second one was a planned de-arrest. [01:11:42] Yeah, yeah, dearrest. [01:11:44] There is a concept, a process that's online. [01:11:51] That's what the guy was involved in. [01:11:53] He was involved in a dearst. === Justified Harsh Tactics (08:19) === [01:11:54] He'd do it all the time. [01:11:57] And that's why you see, we'll go over that sometime and I'll do the training for you if you want. [01:12:04] So three or four of these people who are paid by the sources of this world, like this guy was, who got killed, carrying a gun with him to interfere with law enforcement. [01:12:15] I mean, you're asking to be killed. [01:12:19] And what his job was, was to try to help the guy who was under arrest, who was a sexual predator, to see if he could get free. [01:12:28] So the lady comes up first, gets one agent away. [01:12:34] And then he comes up, he gets another agent away. [01:12:37] You'll see he's like discussing things with him, but the number of people around the perp are reducing and reducing. [01:12:44] And then another person was supposed to come in. [01:12:46] You can see him over on the side. [01:12:49] But before that, the whole scrum happened and the shooting happened. [01:12:53] And of course it all blew up. [01:12:57] He completely caused that. [01:13:00] The ICE agent who shot was reacting to a gunshot in the middle of a scrum where he had every right to assume that one of his co-officers was just shot. [01:13:14] And he didn't have time to go look because if he went and looked, he could have gotten a bullet in the head. [01:13:19] Or another one could have gotten shot. [01:13:21] That is an absolutely, completely justifiable shooting. [01:13:26] And when these Democrat traders go around saying that this wasn't an assassination or a murder or all they're going to do is get some poor ICE agent murdered. [01:13:40] These people are not Nazis. [01:13:42] These people are not anything but legitimate law enforcement officers doing a very, very tough job with a particularly really bad brand of criminals. [01:13:52] And I'll tell you what, I went over their records, particularly the Minnesota people. [01:13:57] Man, they really draw perverts. [01:14:00] You get four out of every 10 as some kind of a sexual deviant. [01:14:04] I mean, serious one, like children or beating up women. [01:14:11] Well, this guy, this guy, it's Baron Bayron, B-A-I-R-O-N. [01:14:24] And he, again, He was ordered, deported four times before Trump, of course, under the come into the United States and rape us Biden administration. [01:14:40] And all of a sudden, he's on the subway track. [01:14:48] There were two people there, an old man and a young man. [01:14:52] And there's a cell phone footage of it. [01:14:54] I don't know if we have it. [01:14:56] And he pushes one and then the other. [01:15:00] And I think Mr. Williams landed on his face, which may have actually rendered him unconscious. [01:15:08] This is post-view of the actual accident. [01:15:10] This is him after. [01:15:12] was that afterwards that's in there that's that's That's the animal right there. [01:15:21] That's the illegal alien that's only in this country because we didn't have a, we had a president who was an operative of the Chinese, Red Chinese government. [01:15:32] And, you know, at some point, I did an interview today with my good friend and the great columnist Miranda Devine, which will be on our podcast next week. [01:15:43] And we talked about that. [01:15:49] So Kirsten Fleming, who also writes for the Post, congratulations. [01:16:06] Mr. Williams, who was a prostate cancer survivor like I was and am, was a resident of Roosevelt Island. [01:16:20] And he was happy. [01:16:21] He was having a good life. [01:16:23] He was, yes, he was 83, but he was apparently very sharp, very much with it. [01:16:31] Probably had a number of nice years left for his grandchildren. [01:16:35] And he dies with a train running over him. [01:16:41] but somebody that doesn't belong in this country shouldn't be here mayor mondan hasn't said a word about this He hasn't called the family to ease their burdens. [01:16:59] And he's real worried about Hamas. [01:17:02] And he was very worried about that guy who basically caused fires and did everything he could to create violence against Jews at Columbia, had him over for dinner. [01:17:14] But he can't call this family and tell them he's sorry or offer him whatever help the mayor could offer. [01:17:21] I used to do that. [01:17:22] I wasn't the only one. [01:17:24] Gee, I didn't make it up. [01:17:26] I mean, mayors before me used to do that. [01:17:29] You don't sympathize with this guy. [01:17:34] You don't sympathize with this guy because you actually like this as a communist and as a Muslim, a supporter of Muslim extremism. [01:17:43] It creates the chaos that you want to destroy our country. [01:18:03] Just after William's assault, Diane, now Diane is the daughter, I think. [01:18:11] I'll have to go back and look. [01:18:13] Just after Williams' assault, Diane said she reached out to the governor, mayor, MTA, NYPD, and the Manhattan DA. [01:18:21] Ugh gods. [01:18:23] Nothing from these animals. [01:18:25] Nothing. [01:18:27] Because they don't care. [01:18:31] They're probably, they know they caused this. [01:18:35] This never had to happen. [01:18:36] Other murders, you know, somebody's here, someone's a juvenile delinquent and they kill somebody. [01:18:42] That's not, obviously, that's not the mayor's fault. [01:18:44] And that's not Biden's fault. [01:18:47] They're here. [01:18:49] It may be the mayor's fault if the mayor put him out, put him out of jail like he's trying to do now from Rikers Island. [01:18:55] And, you know, everybody in Rikers Island is a pretty damn dangerous criminal because we don't put anybody in jail anymore. [01:19:02] He starts letting people out from Rikers Island. [01:19:05] We're basically talking about the same garbage as this, which is why people are leaving New York. [01:19:11] It isn't just the taxes. [01:19:15] You look at the mayor and you say, can you protect me? [01:19:18] And you say, no, he's working for the other guys. [01:19:21] He's working for the, he's working for the he's working for the Beyron Hernandez from Honduras, who has had, who has been deported four times and according to Kirsten, has 15 criminal charges. [01:19:40] actually that comes from the department of homeland security i mean and the country is annoyed at the president because of his of the way he's handling uh he's being too tough on the illegal aliens I mean, people could say it's not being tough enough. [01:20:02] You can't be too tough. [01:20:06] They're killing people like Mr. Williams, or almost killed Mr. Pender, too. [01:20:12] What about them? [01:20:13] Who's protecting them? === Digital Casino Addiction (09:06) === [01:20:14] Oh, my goodness. [01:20:28] Well, the social media cases, I want, before we finish, I have to describe this to you. [01:20:39] This is known as Digital Casino. [01:20:46] And this comes from a book that is, I don't know if it's just out or it's been out, but it follows well after the two social media cases that were, you know, that the juries decided that Meta and Google were responsible for the depression and the horrible situation of this young child. [01:21:09] And then there was another case. [01:21:10] There were two of them. [01:21:13] And the way they get around the immunity law that they have is they get around it because they say this wasn't the content that they were suing about or bringing a criminal case about, or I don't know if it's a criminal case or civil case by the Attorney General, but it's the way in which the platform was created. [01:21:37] And they created the platform to specifically addict young people. [01:21:44] So here's part of the proof that Nicolleen Ducleff in her book, Dopamine Kids, was able to uncover. [01:21:58] So betting apps, like if there's an app, if there's like an app that does, well, I guess, you know, I'm very unfamiliar with how these betting apps work, Ted. [01:22:20] But can you actually Mimic the machines at? [01:22:28] Can you actually mimic the machines in Las Vegas and at casinos on online? [01:22:33] You can now okay, so I don't want to say you know, so they, so they're there. [01:22:39] Basically you can't. [01:22:39] I don't want to say there might be some. [01:22:42] Well, according to this book, it sounds like you can and uh, so those are um, slot machines right right, I don't know if they call the same thing. [01:22:51] If they're on here well, probably call something, but it operates the same way. [01:22:55] So here's, here's what uh, she uncovered from it, from an expert, a couple of experts. [01:23:02] Let me see if I have the expert's name. [01:23:04] I don't know that I do, but she uh, if you, if you want to read up more on this. [01:23:08] The name of the book is Dopamine Kids by Mick Mikarine. [01:23:14] Mick Mika Ellen, Ellene M-i-c-h-a-e-l-e-e-n, which sounds like a beautiful Irish name, but then the second name is Duclef D-o-u-c-l-e-f-f. [01:23:31] So Micarine Mic Ellen Mikaleen Uh is the best-selling author of Hunt Gather Parent. [01:23:39] Her new book, Dopamine Kids, offers a five-step guide pack prack with practical, science-backed strategies that shows you how to raise confident, happy kids while breaking the cycle of overdependence on screens and Ultra-processed foods. [01:23:56] She RFK Jr. [01:23:58] Like her author, her research culminates in a four-week plan to create screen-free sanctuaries that protect conversations focus, sleep and adventure. [01:24:12] So she had a young child who was about seven the name she uses is Rosie I don't know if she's the right name of her kid or not and and she and her husband wanted to keep the child away from too much social media. [01:24:27] But a little bit, a little bit, a little bit, and the kids started to really love it, and every time they took the social media away from the child, after a short period the child would have a like a tantrum. [01:24:39] Uh, when the timer that would put a timer on so that she would get uh, you know, a short amount of time to be online. [01:24:49] When the timer went off, an entirely different child emerged. [01:24:53] She reverted back to a toddler screaming, crying and running around uh the house uh, shrieking. [01:25:01] One night she shriveled up into a fetal position and, and the mom who wrote the book said I felt like I was depriving her of something that was very, very enjoyable for her. [01:25:14] But then as she did her research, she realized it was just the opposite, that she was interpreting Rosie's conduct incorrectly. [01:25:22] And one of the plaintiff's attorneys at the trial last week proved that Instagram and YouTube designed these apps for kids using the same things they use for digital casino, video-based slot machines. [01:25:45] use tricks to hold people's attention. [01:25:51] So um, for 24 36, even 72 hours. [01:25:57] What they, what they? [01:25:58] What they do is they create uh cues that make it look like you're getting close to winning. [01:26:11] They, which are artifices they're they're, they're fake, but uh, you know it'll. [01:26:20] Maybe it's three apples, right? [01:26:22] Three apples come up. [01:26:23] So it almost looks like you have three apples and it'll say you came very close. [01:26:27] So now you stay for another two hours. [01:26:29] It's the same way in a casino that used to, maybe they still do, pump in oxygen at one in the morning, make you come awake. [01:26:37] All of a sudden, you get this false high. [01:26:40] Well, apparently they did the same thing for children. [01:26:44] So the meta people and the Instagram people and the YouTube people would figure out why the child was so interested in being on social media. [01:27:01] And what are the possibilities? [01:27:05] Are they seeking a sense of belonging, of friends, because they're a bit isolated and they want friends? [01:27:12] Do they want a sense of adventure? [01:27:15] Do they like adventure games? [01:27:17] Do they like exploration? [01:27:19] Are they looking to be made happy because they're in a state of depression? [01:27:25] So what they do is every so often, in order to keep the kid on for ridiculous periods of time, like seven or eight hours, right? [01:27:37] They put in an encouragement to stay on. [01:27:41] Like, you stay on and you're going to meet a whole group of new friends. [01:27:47] So you stay on. [01:27:49] Or you stay on and you're going to see the most exciting adventure you ever saw in your whole life. [01:27:55] Then they give you something, but it isn't the most, there's something missing in what they give you. [01:28:02] You know, you see these friends, but you can't quite hook up with them. [01:28:06] So you stay on some more. [01:28:09] And eventually, if they do that often enough, they hook you. [01:28:12] And these are deliberately contrived and worked out based on the data that they collect about the child. [01:28:21] And it's all collected to keep them online longer and longer and longer and longer. [01:28:28] And that's the basis of the liability: that this is not about free speech. [01:28:35] It's completely about sucking people dry for everything they can get, keeping them online as long as they can, because you get paid for the number of people that are online and you sell things to them. [01:28:48] But at the same time, you ruin these kids, destroy them. [01:28:52] They don't have any family life anymore. [01:28:54] They don't have friends anymore. [01:28:59] They don't know how to look at a watch and figure out what time it is. [01:29:05] So she calls it digital casino, but it's a very, very sophisticated process of sucking you in, of addicting you. === Privatizing Security Concerns (04:39) === [01:29:20] I mean, in the case of drugs, you get addicted because of the substance of the drugs. [01:29:27] Here, they create the addiction, which is why if they can persuade a court of that, it seems to me you've got a pretty good distinction from content and the cases will be upheld. [01:29:43] And yeah, there's the danger that lawyers, unscrupulous lawyers, I mean, this is just America, right? [01:29:50] It's also a country in which men are not angels, right? [01:29:54] We do have a fair number of crooks. [01:29:56] So you put out something like this and you are, you are, I mean, there's a lot of objections to these cases because they say all the unscrupulous lawyers are going to bring phony lawsuits and every kid's going to bring a lawsuit. [01:30:10] Well, you are going to have some of that. [01:30:12] You are. [01:30:12] I mean, just unless you'd like to clean up the legal profession, which I'd love to do since they kicked me out of the two bar associations, about which I'm very honored. [01:30:21] I mean, both of them were left-wing machines and crooked as hell. [01:30:25] The one in New York sits by and watches the most crooked judicial system in America just go on and on and on and participates in it. [01:30:37] So, I mean, it is possible that the lawyers will abuse this, but also on the other side, there'll be a lot of very, very legitimate cases that maybe get these impossibly horrible acting and totally amoral idiots who create these games, who have no values, no morals, and no decency. [01:31:04] Kind of get to them the only way you can by making them pay. [01:31:09] So we allowed the Russian tanker to go through the Cuba because they're, you know, it's one thing to put a lot of pressure on them. [01:31:20] It's another thing to kill everybody in Cuba, which would be horrible. [01:31:23] Because hopefully they're going to come around and it'll take a long time to rebuild it. [01:31:33] I've talked to a lot of Cuban Americans who, of course, want this to happen, but one particularly knowledgeable and prominent one told me, don't expect that you're going to have the same thing in Cuba as in Iran. [01:31:46] Iran has kept a fair number of very well-educated citizens who haven't been able to get out. [01:31:59] As I said, only 20% support the regime. [01:32:01] You got 80% against it. [01:32:02] Whereas Cuba, probably the people left behind are heavily brainwashed. [01:32:08] So it's going to take a generation or two. [01:32:10] The young ones probably are the ones to count on because they're tired of it. [01:32:15] Same thing in Iran. [01:32:19] There's an article in the Free Pest that the Post, the Post pointed out today, written by Judge Glock, and it argues for privatization of the airports and even the security at the airport. [01:32:41] Over 80% of commercial airports in Europe use private screening. [01:32:46] 20 U.S. airports do. [01:32:48] Canada contracts it out. [01:32:50] And Canada and Britain have privatized air traffic control. [01:32:58] Germany and Australia use government-owned companies. [01:33:01] They're sort of half-government, half not. [01:33:06] And about 75% of passengers in Europe use privatized airports. [01:33:11] I was extremely in favor of privatization and attempted and got really, really close to privatizing LaGuardia and Kennedy. [01:33:20] And then Mayor Bloomberg didn't follow through on it. [01:33:22] But we have built a report for it. [01:33:27] It was a shame. [01:33:29] Now, I would have to think more about privatizing the security. [01:33:34] I was in the security business and, of course, would have loved to get the contract. [01:33:39] But there's no doubt the airport in general should be privatized. [01:33:43] It should be put on a profit-making basis. [01:33:48] Well, we're going to have to let you go to sleep. [01:33:52] I guess, Mayor, there's so much we've still uncover. [01:33:55] And I thought maybe we were going to have a special announcer from the president tonight. [01:33:58] What tomorrow night at 9 p.m. === Pray for the President (03:28) === [01:34:00] What's that for? [01:34:00] The president's going to be making some updates on Iran, so we will be on the air for that. [01:34:05] Okay. [01:34:05] All right. [01:34:06] We'll be at Cape Canaveral. [01:34:09] We'll talk about it after 6:30 in the morning or at night? [01:34:13] 6.30 p.m. is the space. [01:34:16] And there is. [01:34:21] There's a bunker under the ballroom. [01:34:24] Also. [01:34:24] There's so much news. [01:34:25] The bunker in the library. [01:34:27] Yeah. [01:34:27] Okay. [01:34:28] We'll cover it all tomorrow. [01:34:29] Thank you very, very much for. [01:34:31] Thank you very much for joining in. [01:34:33] Grace, would you like to come and say goodbye? [01:34:37] You want to go say goodbye? [01:34:41] Come on, baby. [01:34:42] No? [01:34:45] All right. [01:34:45] Well, thank you very much. [01:34:47] Pray for the people of Israel. [01:34:48] Pray for the people of the Ukraine. [01:34:50] Pray for the people of Iran. [01:34:56] And pray for the President of the United States. [01:34:58] God bless America. [01:35:11] Our place dashed on down our crash on. [01:35:13] And together they took and they bolted out whip guitars around the bonfire just singing and clapping. [01:35:20] Man, what the hell happened? [01:35:22] That someone spelled out, some were hellbound, some they fell down, some got back up and fought back as the mountain. [01:35:30] And their kids were happy. [01:35:32] It's our purpose to bring to bear the principle of common sense and rational discussion to the issues of our day. [01:35:40] America was created at a time of great turmoil, tremendous disagreements, anger, hatred. [01:35:46] 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. [01:35:58] 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. [01:36:18] He explained their inherent desire for liberty, for freedom, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, the ability to select the people who govern them. [01:36:31] And he explained it in ways that were understandable to all the people, not just the elite. [01:36:38] Because the desire for freedom is universal. [01:36:41] The desire for freedom adheres in the human mind and it is part of the human soul. [01:36:48] This is exactly the time we should consult our history. [01:36:52] Look at what we've done in the past and see if we can't use it to help us now. [01:36:58] We understand that our founders created the greatest country in the history of the world. [01:37:02] The greatest democracy, the freest country, a country that has taken more people out of poverty than any country ever. [01:37:10] All of us are so fortunate to be Americans. [01:37:15] But a great deal of the reason for America's constant ability to self-improve is because we're able to reason. [01:37:22] We're able to talk. [01:37:23] We're able to analyze. [01:37:26] we are able to apply our God-given