Speaker | Time | Text |
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Good afternoon, Rumblers. | ||
Well, we're three seconds away from the afternoon. | ||
Now it's afternoon. | ||
Good afternoon, Rumblers. | ||
How are you doing today? | ||
It is a beautiful day outside of our nation's capital here. | ||
It's low 80s, balmy. | ||
It's a beautiful day. | ||
This is producer Tate here, Tate Brown, holding it down for Tim Poole. | ||
He is out today, unfortunately. | ||
Hopefully, we can get him back for next week. | ||
He's a little into the weather, but he's doing okay. | ||
So, but we got this. | ||
We got this locked down. | ||
We got some big news today, obviously. | ||
The big story is Russia. | ||
I mean, it's been, I was talking to Surge pre-show. | ||
I mean, this special operation started. | ||
I was a junior in college, and it's still going with special operation or whatever. | ||
Anyway, Trump and Putin are meeting in Anchorage today. | ||
They're going to be hopefully coming to a peace agreement, a peace deal, maybe a ceasefire, something. | ||
So, we're going to get into that story. | ||
That'll be a big story. | ||
We also have ICE. | ||
They're expanding their operation. | ||
They're building new detention centers. | ||
We have a story about a detention center in Colorado that's being built. | ||
As well as a few days ago, the story broke. | ||
They're building a massive detention center in Texas. | ||
It would be the biggest in the country. | ||
We do have an update on that, so we will get into that. | ||
And we will be joined by Brianna Morelo later in the day, and well, in 30 minutes, and we'll be discussing a little bit of this, a little bit of that. | ||
We will be discussing the DC federalization a little more as it's sort of we're seeing how it's playing out. | ||
So, we got a lot of good stories today, but before we get into it, let's get into our sponsors. | ||
First up, we got Boonies. | ||
That's right, we got the uncanny. | ||
I wanted to focus on the uncancelable board because this is really cool. | ||
I talked about it yesterday. | ||
We've been talking about it. | ||
This is a logo that was used by the independent skate brand for decades. | ||
It was an iconic, iconic logo. | ||
Last 10 years or so, of course, when cancel culture really kicked in the overdrive, you know, people started saying, Oh, this is racist, this is evil. | ||
They're saying it's like looks like an Iron Cross or whatever. | ||
So, people went hard on it. | ||
They really shamed people for using this logo. | ||
Obviously, if you saw the last election results, cancel culture is really not in vogue anymore. | ||
And so, Tim picked this up, this logo. | ||
Boonies has picked it up, and we now have the uncancelable board. | ||
So, head over to Boonies, grab you a board. | ||
If you're a skater, perfect. | ||
If you're not a skater, it could be a good wall ornament. | ||
Whatever it is, it is a declaration of war on cancel culture. | ||
It's a beautiful thing. | ||
So, head to shop.boonieshq.com, grab you a board. | ||
We also got Casper Coffee. | ||
We got all sorts of coffee. | ||
Look, I've been working, you know, I've been doing a lot of shows here recently. | ||
Energy, you know, you get a little drained. | ||
You need a little caffeine. | ||
Thank goodness for Casper. | ||
There's nothing like it. | ||
Little Appalachian Knights down the hatch. | ||
You're back in the game. | ||
You're locked in. | ||
So, yeah, head to Casper, grab you some coffee. | ||
We got Appalachian Knights. | ||
We got the 1776 signature blend. | ||
Birthday blend, 4th of July special. | ||
Look, we got, just take a look. | ||
We got all sorts of different things. | ||
We got the Ian's Graphene Dream. | ||
This one's really popular. | ||
We were at the live shows these last three weekends, and that was a very, very popular, very popular blend. | ||
So, yeah, head to casprew.com, grab you some coffee. | ||
But with that, let's get into our first story from the Associated Press. | ||
Trump and Putin will meet at an Alaska military base long used to counter Russia. | ||
Let's see, make sure you get my frame right. | ||
Tim's got that down, always being in frame. | ||
Let's read. | ||
In an iconic twist, President Donald Trump, or sorry, in an ironic twist, President Donald Trump is set to discuss the war in Ukraine with Russian leader Vladimir Putin at a military base in Alaska that was crucial to countering the Soviet Union during the height of the Cold War and still plays a role today. | ||
The meeting is scheduled to take place Friday. | ||
Sorry, I was thinking it's Friday. | ||
Today's Thursday. | ||
So, tomorrow. | ||
The meeting is scheduled to take place Friday at Joint Base Almendorf Richardson in Anchorage, according to a White House official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal planning. | ||
Here's some more information on the base. | ||
Obviously, a lot of the military hardware has been deactivated, but the base still hosts key aircraft squadrons. | ||
This is the important bit. | ||
I think this is the crux of why they are meeting at a base of all places. | ||
The leaders meeting at an American military base allows them to avoid any protests and provides an important level of security. | ||
This was From Benjamin Jensen, a senior fellow for defense at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. | ||
Quote, for President Trump, it's a great way to show American military strength while also isolating the ability of the public or others to intervene with what he probably hopes is a productive dialogue. | ||
He said the location means Trump can cultivate ties with Putin while, quote, signaling military power to try to gain that bargaining advantage that makes a second meeting possible. | ||
The irony of Putin visiting American military base that long has and still does aim to counter Russian threats comes as Trump worked to reach a ceasefire deal and deal in a war that he promised during the 2024 campaign to end quickly. | ||
So, yeah, obviously, this is a big, it's a big statement to bring Putin here to American terror, American turf. | ||
I mean, obviously, Alaska is not part of the continental U.S. And obviously, it was a former Russian territory way back in the day. | ||
But it does signal that America is negotiating from a position of strength. | ||
This is a huge departure from the Biden strategy, which was put yourself on your knees and then negotiate. | ||
Obviously, the Afghanistan withdrawal was a good example of why you need to negotiate from a position of strength instead of just pulling the rug out and hoping for the best. | ||
And that is, you know, obviously what Trump is doing here. | ||
So this is interesting. | ||
The rhetoric, there's been some rhetorical shifts in the lead up to this set of discussions. | ||
One, Trump, you know, the critique of Trump and the way he handled Putin, especially in the first term, was that he was too soft, that he was too cozying up was the word they used. | ||
And that is kind of part of Trump's strategies. | ||
He likes to butter up his adversaries a little bit. | ||
Obviously, this worked quite well with Kim Jong-un. | ||
But Trump has taken a bit of a different stance recently with Putin. | ||
Maybe not different, but he's altered his approach a little bit. | ||
He's been a bit harder on Putin. | ||
And so, anyway, we also see a shift in Putin's rhetoric. | ||
This is from NBC News. | ||
Putin praises Trump's, quote, energetic and sincere peace efforts ahead of the Alaska summit. | ||
We'll read down here. | ||
Vladimir Putin sounded positive Thursday on the eve of his talks with President Donald Trump. | ||
Sorry. | ||
On the eve of his talks with President Donald Trump in Alaska, saying he believed the American leader was making, quote, quite energetic and sincere efforts towards peace in Ukraine. | ||
A day ahead of their summit, Putin convened a meeting of advisors to inform you about how the negotiation process on the Ukraine crisis is going. | ||
The Kremlin said this in a readout translated by NBC News. | ||
He said, the Trump administration is, quote, making, in my opinion, quite energetic and sincere efforts to stop the fighting, stop the crisis, and reach agreements that are of interest to all parties involved in the conflict. | ||
These efforts are intended to create long-term conditions of peace between our countries and in Europe and in the world as a whole. | ||
So, I mean, look, Putin's obviously, you know, keen here to get to the negotiating table. | ||
I think from his perspective, Russia feels like they are in a, let's see, let's get there. | ||
They feel like they're strategically in a good position to negotiate. | ||
They feel like they have the upper hand right now at this point. | ||
We will get into that more. | ||
Before we do, let's see what Zelensky is saying. | ||
Obviously, there's two parties in this war. | ||
Zelensky was frozen out of these talks. | ||
When the talk was announced, when they said they will be meeting in Alaska, a lot of people did assume that Zelensky would be invited to join them at the negotiating table. | ||
But obviously, Trump feels like he can hash this out directly with Putin. | ||
It is kind of an America-first strategy to bypass the NATO partners who can slow down peace talks and just go directly to Putin to try and negotiate something. | ||
We'll read here from NBC News. | ||
Zelensky meets with UK Starmer as Europe braces for Trump-Putin summit. | ||
Here's the story. | ||
British Prime Minister Kier Starmer welcomed Ukrainian President Voldomir. | ||
Geez, so many consonants in these names. | ||
I mean, what's going on? | ||
I see why Ellis Island, they come in with names like Zelensky. | ||
You got like 15 consonants. | ||
It's just Johnson now. | ||
Your last name's Johnson. | ||
I totally get it. | ||
Anyway, invited Zelensky to London on Thursday, a day before a critical U.S.-Russia summit in Alaska. | ||
Zelensky's trip to the British capital comes a day after he took part in virtual meetings from Berlin with U.S. President Donald Trump and the leaders of several European countries. | ||
Those leaders said Trump had assured them that he would make a priority of trying to achieve a ceasefire in Ukraine when he meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday in Anchorage. | ||
And I think those talks on Friday are scheduled at 3.30 Eastern. | ||
So we'll have to keep an eye on that. | ||
Both Zelensky and the Europeans have worried that bilateral U.S.-Russia summit, that the bilateral U.S.-Russia summit would leave them and their interests sidelined and that any conclusions reached could favor Moscow and leave Ukraine and Europe's future security in jeopardy with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine now in its fourth year. | ||
So to understand why the Americans and Russians just want to go directly to each other rather than try to negotiate with the NATO allies in Ukraine, it's kind of obvious from Russia's perspective. | ||
But from the Americans, I do think there's this fear because Europe kind of put themselves in this position in the first place, like with the dependence on Nord Stream and the Russian energy. | ||
And then now with their green energy policies, they've kind of screwed themselves over. | ||
So, I mean, from Trump's perspective, I think he's kind of just tired of holding their hand through everything. | ||
Anyway, so we can see here, this was yesterday. | ||
France 24 had this report. | ||
Russia makes biggest 24-hour advance in eastern Ukraine ahead of Alaska summit. | ||
The Russian army this week made its biggest 24-hour advance into Ukraine in over a year, just days ahead of a meeting between Trump and Putin in Alaska. | ||
This was according to data from the Institute for the Study of War. | ||
The Russian army took or claimed 110 square kilometers or 42.5 square miles on August 12th compared to the previous day, according to the AFP analysis of battlefield data from the Institute of Study of War. | ||
This is the biggest advance since late May 2024. | ||
In recent months, Moscow has typically taken five or six days to progress at such a pace, although Russian advances have accelerated in recent weeks. | ||
Russia, which currently has full or partial control of over 19% of Ukrainian territory, said Wednesday that it had taken two villages close to Dobropila, Dobrapila, Dobropilia, Dobropila. | ||
The next governor, Vadim Filashkin, said that the region was beginning the mandatory evacuation of families with children from the town of Bilozersky and other dozen other settlements. | ||
We were beginning the mandatory. | ||
So anyway, Russia definitely has put their foot on the gas pedal here with this invasion. | ||
They're aware, they knew that these ceasefire or peace talks were coming up, and they knew that they needed to have leverage coming into these talks with Trump. | ||
Trump, you know, above all else, he's big on chips. | ||
Who holds chips? | ||
If you remember when Zelensky came to the White House and Trump put him through a struggle session, which was fantastic, the big thing was Trump saying, you don't have any chips. | ||
Like, we have the cards. | ||
What cards do you have? | ||
And, you know, Zelensky's like, well, we're not playing cards. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
So, you know, Russia realizes this, obviously. | ||
And I think this is a big key of why they're making such a monster play here. | ||
Pokharvovsk, Pakrovsk. | ||
That's how you say it. | ||
Now, Pakrovsk is, this has been a big goal for the Russians for about a year now. | ||
They launched an assault trying to take Pavrovsk. | ||
They were like 10 miles out about a year ago. | ||
So this has been key. | ||
This is key for the Ukrainian defense. | ||
Let's see if we have, I have a map pulled up here. | ||
So this is a live map of the lines here in Russia-Ukraine. | ||
We can zoom out here. | ||
You can see. | ||
Povrovsk is here. | ||
Povrovsk. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Is right about here. | ||
And what happened to all my things? | ||
Anyway, there's a massive... | ||
Real time. | ||
We do it live. | ||
Anyway, Povrovsk is a very key holding for the Ukrainians. | ||
There's a massive highway that runs in and multiple roads that head out. | ||
There's trains. | ||
It's also that region produces a lot of coal. | ||
And the Russian offensive that took place in December, they made massive gains and it forced the Ukrainians to suspend a lot of exports from the region. | ||
And it did a lot of damage for their steel export. | ||
It was a really rough situation. | ||
Let's see what, why can't I, this would have been so cool, but I don't know. | ||
I don't know what happened here. | ||
Ah, here we go. | ||
Sorry, I was looking down. | ||
Anyway, yeah, yeah, so you can see here the M30 runs in. | ||
This is a major highway. | ||
And Ukraine, they had like 10 years to defend or to fortify against the Russian invasion. | ||
So they had this line here that they had heavily fortified. | ||
And Pakrovsk is pretty much the last stand in that chain of defended, heavily fortified cities. | ||
So this is a really key holding for the Ukrainians. | ||
The Russians broke through in the north a few days ago. | ||
That's what this story is discussing. | ||
We'll read here from France 24. | ||
They'll break it down. | ||
This is why Pakrovsk is so big for Russia ahead of these discussions. | ||
Russian forces on the ground in Ukraine have been closing in on a key territorial grab around the city of Pokharovsk in the eastern Donbass region, which is part of Ukraine's industrial heartland that Putin has long coveted. | ||
Military analysts using open source information to monitor the battles have said that Ukraine's ability to fend off these advances could be critical. | ||
Losing Pokrovsk would hand Russia an important victory ahead of the summit and could complicate Ukrainian supply lines to the Donetsk region, where the Kremlin has focused the bulk of its military efforts. | ||
So, yeah, and the way the Russians and their strategy, they use these really small units. | ||
It's like 12 to let's say a dozen, maybe two dozen, two dozen soldiers, and they launched like a bunch of these and broke here in the north. | ||
And that's what's kind of given them this sort of bowl around Pakorovsk that's really ratcheting up pressure. | ||
So let's read here from the FDD's war journal. | ||
This is covering the advance, because like I said, the fact that this is occurring right before peace talks is not a coincidence. | ||
We'll read here. | ||
Ukraine's first Azov Corp has been tasked with containing Russian advances near the city of Dobropia. | ||
It's what they say on NPR, it's Dobropia. | ||
I listen to NPR, so it's a self-report. | ||
You know, I don't take that too seriously. | ||
I know it's scandalous, but it is what it is. | ||
In eastern Ukraine, the unit announced August 12th. | ||
The situation in that area has deteriorated sharply in recent days, raising concern about the stability of Ukraine's defense there. | ||
The Ukrainian Pravda confirmed that the Azov Corps forces are now fighting near Dobropia. | ||
The area was previously under the responsibility of the Pakarovsk tactical group, which, as the Ukrainians provda, military sources say, was completely failing to hold the defense on this section of the front. | ||
So even the Ukrainian media is reporting that there's a defensive breakdown occurring in this key, key region. | ||
And there's a lot of analysts out there that are predicting that if Pakharovsk falls, Ukraine's going to be in serious trouble. | ||
There's basically, let's go back to the map here. | ||
Once this falls, it's basically just a funnel all the way back into the interior of the country. | ||
So this is a very key holding. | ||
The M30 is an essential highway for Ukraine for resupply and vital for if they want to have any chance of securing the Donbass and Donetsk. | ||
So yeah, no coincidence that this is occurring right before peace talks. | ||
Putin, this is strategic. | ||
But the big part... | ||
Ukrainians have launched counterattacks, or not counterattacks, but attacks in general. | ||
This broke this morning, really early this morning, is in Rostov on Don in Russia, southern Russia. | ||
There was massive drone attacks. | ||
You know, some people are saying, well, they're targeting civilians. | ||
It's so hard to tell what's going on over there. | ||
We do know that there was an attack on Rostov. | ||
It was drone attacks. | ||
And we've seen, there's been a lot of discussion over the drone drone attacks. | ||
Like, this is modern warfare. | ||
This is what it looks like. | ||
It's very horrifying. | ||
You're just going about your day, and a drone comes in and just completely decimates, decimates a building. | ||
It's really, really horrifying stuff. | ||
But it's the world we live in. | ||
The Guardian, this was out two days ago. | ||
They covered this talking about the quote, it's a robot war. | ||
We'll see here. | ||
I mean, the FPV videos that we're seeing of these drone strikes are absolutely horrifying. | ||
This has been discussed at Nauseum, but this is what I wanted to discuss here. | ||
Russia has launched a record number of aerial attacks. | ||
The Russian military has deployed more than 1,000 aerial bombs and nearly 1,400 kamikaze drones against Ukraine. | ||
The current record is 728 drones and 13 missiles sent in a single night in July, most directed at the western city of Lutzk. | ||
By autumn, German experts predict Moscow could send 2,000 drones a day. | ||
So that's kind of the big one. | ||
There's a few different expert analysts that are reporting that Moscow could actually ramp up drone strikes. | ||
And so between that and the breakdown on the defensive front from Ukraine, it kind of emphasizes the importance here, if you're the Ukrainians, to negotiate for a deal here. | ||
Trump signaled earlier this week that Ukraine may need to concede territory to get out of this alive. | ||
I mean, this is no longer, you know, this is no longer a controlled situation, right? | ||
Like, this is breaking down quite rapidly. | ||
Some of the things that have been speculated in these peace talks, obviously, is the ceasefire. | ||
Something else interesting is there also could be a huge advantage. | ||
It could be a huge play for the U.S. here that also benefits Russia, hence the direct negotiation. | ||
Is there speculation? | ||
It was in the Daily Telegraph, actually, I think news, yeah, the article talks about it here, so I'll read this. | ||
This is from Newsweek. | ||
Britain's Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that access to Alaska's natural resources, oil and gas, could be up for discussion when the leaders meet in Anchorage on Friday, as well as rare earth minerals in Ukraine and lifting some sanctions on Russia's aviation sector. | ||
So the rare earth minerals, that's been discussed at Nauseum. | ||
There's a lot of rare earth deposits in eastern Ukraine, and there's a lot of speculation that a part of these peace talks is going to be Russian access to these deposits. | ||
Something else that's interesting, though, and that's been discussed is these oil talks, because there's a huge strategic play here for the U.S. in undercutting OPEC. | ||
We have the opportunity to undercut OPEC here. | ||
You know, with some of these, with some of these oil talks. | ||
So we'll get into it. | ||
Here's what Newsmax says. | ||
The Bering Strait separates Alaska from Russia. | ||
Obviously, three miles apart. | ||
Sarah Palin said she could see it. | ||
I don't remember those before my time, but apparently she said that. | ||
As well as being strategically important because of the melting Arctic ice sea ice and expanding shipping routes, could also be a gateway to considerable undiscovered oil reserves. | ||
Alaska's oil and gas exploration leases are concentrated on its north slope facing the Arctic Ocean and in the Pacific facing Cook Inlet connecting the Gulf of Alaska to Anchorage. | ||
In the 1980s, U.S. energy companies drilled into the Bering Sea looking for untapped reserves, but all of those wells have been abandoned and the area is strictly regulated because of environmental concerns. | ||
So there's a lot of speculation that this is the speculation here is that we could offer Russia opportunities to tap into these valuable natural resources in the Bering Strait that would bolster its interest in the Arctic region, which accounted for 80% of Russia's gas production in 2022. | ||
So that could potentially be on the table. | ||
There could be an energy energy deal that we could come to an agreement on, which could undercut OPEC, which would also help undercut China. | ||
So there's more at stake here than just a ceasefire or peace talks. | ||
You know, Russia is kind of keen on getting this across the finish line. | ||
Well, first, I mean, the EU has this massive sanctions package, the 18th package of sanctions. | ||
We could read through all of it. | ||
But, you know, they have a lot of price caps in here. | ||
They have these vessel listings. | ||
So if you know, Russia has the shadow fleet, Which effectively allows them to make imports and exports and circumvent sanction packages. | ||
Here's some estimates here on cargo volume of oil takers departing Russia by location of beneficiaries, beneficial owners, HQ. | ||
And as you can see here, the amount of shadow fleet exports is ramping up. | ||
So the EU with their sanctions package, they're trying to target these vessels. | ||
That's at play. | ||
But yeah, all this to say is the Russians and the Americans would be keen on coming to some sort of energy agreement because there's massive geopolitical ramifications for that. | ||
Also, this is really funny. | ||
This is from the BBC. | ||
U.S. warns of additional tariffs on India if Trump-Putin peace talks fail. | ||
So there's huge implications because if these peace talks fail and there's no energy agreement, which again, it would be kind of a pipe dream to some degree anyway. | ||
Countries like India who have been trading oil with the Russians would get just smacked because Trump and Besson clearly are not playing around about tariffs. | ||
And I don't know how these guys haven't learned their lesson yet. | ||
This is from the BBC. | ||
Treasury Secretary Scott Besson has warned that Washington could increase secondary tariffs on India. | ||
Quote, we've put secondary tariffs on Indians for buying Russian oil. | ||
And I could see if things don't go well, the sanctions or secondary tariffs could go up. | ||
So we already have this 25% penalty on India. | ||
And then the 25% tariffs for buying oil and weapons. | ||
So yeah, if these don't go well, all these countries that are doing business with Russia, specifically India, will get hammered. | ||
Trump will bring that, he'll want to make an example out of someone. | ||
It'll probably be India. | ||
Again, people may be skeptical on this. | ||
They may be saying, oh, we don't want these forever wars. | ||
Obviously, Biden's support for Ukraine was pretty much, there was nothing binding. | ||
It was just a blank check. | ||
I don't think that's what Trump's doing here. | ||
I think Trump has learned lessons from the Biden admin, which is you can't negotiate from a position of weakness. | ||
You need to negotiate from a position of strength. | ||
And you can't just, I mean, look, in agreement, I'm sick of seeing all this money go to Ukraine. | ||
And there's a lot of questions to be asked of what is even the strategic importance of Ukraine. | ||
But I think Trump's doing the right thing here. | ||
He's making sure that we get the best possible deal that we can out of this. | ||
And the way to do that is, you know, you ratchet pressure up. | ||
I mean, this is how he operates. | ||
You maximize pressure on the person you're negotiating with to give you the most leverage possible. | ||
So that's what Trump's doing here. | ||
He's shoring up a position against Russia in the short term so that we could potentially reach a nice long-term arrangement with Russia. | ||
It's a great thing. | ||
Just let him cook. | ||
Just trust him. | ||
Or don't. | ||
That's a discussion. | ||
We'll see what happens. | ||
Anyway, we'll go to the next story. | ||
There's a lot there. | ||
There's a lot there. | ||
I don't know how smoothly I got through all of that. | ||
But yeah, stay tuned. | ||
It's going to be really interesting watching these talks tomorrow. | ||
Like I said, I think it's about 3.30 Eastern is when they're expected to start. | ||
Russia has brought the majority of their cabinet with them. | ||
I saw some Russian commentary accounts were not happy that virtually their entire government is in anchorage right now. | ||
But we'll see how they go. | ||
I'm optimistic. | ||
I think that there'll be a favorable peace deal coming out of it. | ||
It'll probably take a few rounds, but we'll see. | ||
Anyway, here's the next story from the post-millennial. | ||
ICE to open new detention center in Colorado as agency ramps up illegal immigration arrests. | ||
U.S. ICE plans to open up a new detention center in Colorado as the Trump administration ramps up immigration enforcement operations. | ||
The new 1,250-bed facility will open in Hudson, about 30 miles north of Denver. | ||
The federal immigration agency told Fox 31 that it has run out of room at its current bed processing center in Aurora, resulting in the need for a new facility as ICE agents increase the arrests in the sanctuary state. | ||
Right. | ||
So yeah, ICE has been looking to add roughly 1,000 beds in the location of the Denver Field Office, which operates in both Colorado and Wyoming. | ||
ICE has not confirmed its new Hudson location, but U.S. representatives were reportedly told about the matter earlier this week during a site visit with the Aurora facility. | ||
So look, this is the thing. | ||
We need more beds. | ||
Trump has said before, although, I mean, the goal obviously is mass deportations. | ||
That's what was demanded at the RNC. | ||
We saw the signs. | ||
The priority, obviously, the first, if you really have to get people out, the first people you are going to target is criminals. | ||
And, you know, unfortunately for the left, there's a lot of criminals in this country. | ||
We need a lot of beds. | ||
We're seeing this. | ||
And now, with this injection of cash from the Big Beautiful Bill, we can make this happen. | ||
So we have this. | ||
This is from NBC. | ||
You probably may have saw earlier in the week the plans to open a new facility in El Paso or near El Paso at Fort Bliss. | ||
This is from NBC. | ||
Trump administration hits hurdles as it builds a key immigration detention facility. | ||
Later this week, the Trump administration is set to open a sprawling new immigration detention facility at Fort Bliss in Texas that is slated to eventually become the largest in the nation. | ||
The opening comes after a month of setbacks, including two investigations into a possible improper bidding, two canceled contracts, and most recently a death on the construction site. | ||
The facility, which will open with capacity to hold 1,000 people as part of an immigration and customs enforcements move, moves to more than double the space it has nationwide to detain immigrants as the Trump administration pushes for more arrests and the agency prepares for a historic influx of cash. | ||
This was a quote from a ICE official. | ||
It's safe to say all ICE field offices are looking for more ICE detention space. | ||
Like the quote Alligator Alcatraz camp that Florida has to build, has built to detain immigrants. | ||
The facility at Fort Bliss is a temporary soft-sided temp structure. | ||
ICE is increasingly leaning towards building that kind of detention space rather than brick and mortar facilities. | ||
This was a quote from a former DHS official. | ||
You can't build a brick and mortar newly built facility in probably less than two years. | ||
In order to expand detention capacity, the ICE needs money. | ||
And though the Republican Tax and Spending Act, known as the Big Beautiful Bill, provides $45 billion for that purpose, those dollars have not yet started to flow. | ||
This was an interesting piece here. | ||
Homeland Security Secretary Kirsty Noam, who, you know, ICE is under her purview. | ||
There's a new guideline at ICE that requires any expenditure over $100,000 be personally approved by her, which may also slow new construction, according to a private printis and industry executive. | ||
So that's pretty interesting with Kirsty Noam. | ||
I think there's a downside to that. | ||
Obviously, it will possibly slow construction, as this private prison industry executive points out, but it will cut waste. | ||
And ICE is going to need every dollar from that big beautiful bill to get mass deportations across the finish line. | ||
So yeah, this is going to be great. | ||
You know, it's good to see ICE ramping up the bed, the number of beds, because that's an indication that we're just getting started. | ||
People have been concerned that deportation numbers are a bit low. | ||
Obviously, Stephen Miller has tapped into the base. | ||
He knows what the base wants, and he knows that the base wants mass deportations. | ||
And I think these are encouraging signs. | ||
I mean, this facility at Fort Bliss is going to be absolutely massive. | ||
And obviously, it's very close to the border. | ||
So it is clear that Stephen Miller and Kirsty Noam and the team is still very keenly very keen on executing on mass deportations. | ||
And yeah, so the last two or three shows I've done, I've kind of blackpilled a little bit. | ||
You know, I read like, you know, stuff about Zoomer, Zoomers not doing well, not matriculating properly. | ||
But I want to come here to the white pill. | ||
Look, ICE is cooking here. | ||
They got some stuff in the works. | ||
There's still three years of Trump left. | ||
Just trust the process. | ||
Don't panic. | ||
He's got this. | ||
Just trust him. | ||
So anyway, let's get to this next article. | ||
If you are watching on Tim Cast News, we're going to conclude the segment here at 4 p.m. | ||
We will have the interview on the Timpool channel, the Culture War channel. | ||
So head over there to watch. | ||
Thank you for watching. | ||
We'll see you in the next segment. | ||
With that, for those still live, we're going to move into the interview portion. | ||
I do want to read this story from the post-millennial. | ||
The Trump admin is Trump admin to ask Congress to extend federal control of DC cops past 30-day limit. | ||
President Donald Trump stated his intention to extend the federalization of the Washington, D.C. police force, telling reporters on Wednesday that he will be asking Congress to pass a crime bill on the matter, extending it beyond the 30-day time limit. | ||
Trump said he would be seeking long-term extensions from Congress via a crime bill that would allow him to continue his efforts on cracking down on crime in the nation's capital. | ||
The bill will pertain initially to DC, but serve as a very positive example for other areas of the country, the president said during a press briefing at the Kennedy Center. | ||
So I want to bring in Brianna here. | ||
I want to have a chat with her. | ||
We're going to discuss specifically the federalization of D.C. What this could look like, maybe if there is applications around the country. | ||
We'll have to see. | ||
So we're going to try and grab her here. | ||
I got producer Surge in the building today. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Yeah, do you want me to grab it real quick? | ||
So let's see. | ||
Boom. | ||
So we're going to bring her in. | ||
We're going to have a chat. | ||
It's going to be a great time starting. | ||
And all righty. | ||
Brianna, how are you doing? | ||
You're live. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
Thank you for having me. | ||
I'm excited to be on. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So first of all, do you want to tell the viewers who you are, what you do? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So my name is Brianna Morello. | ||
I am an independent journalist. | ||
I have worked at several media outlets over the years, mainstream media outlets, and I am proudly a corporate media reject. | ||
And I love that title at this point because I think the corporate media has been wrong on so much. | ||
And thankfully, those in the independent sphere have been accurate. | ||
And so, yeah, I host a show on Rumble at 7 p.m. Eastern Time on Thursdays. | ||
And yeah, I've been doing pretty well on my own. | ||
So I'm excited about that. | ||
I love that. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Well, we were reading this story before you came on about the federalization of the DC police force. | ||
Obviously, this has been all over the news. | ||
A lot of the mainstream outlets are finger wagging Trump. | ||
They're saying, no, you can't do this. | ||
This is authoritarian. | ||
But we see story after story of people in D.C. being brutalized, being victims of violent crime. | ||
And so from a lot of Americans' perspectives, we're just happy to see that something's being done about this. | ||
What is your perspective on the federalization of the DC police force? | ||
Yeah, what took so long? | ||
I mean, I feel like President Trump should have done this day one. | ||
The reality is normally I would say, yeah, the federal government shouldn't get involved, but these local governments have intentionally failed their citizens and they fail to keep them safe. | ||
And so right now, we do need the federal government to step in because I was just in D.C. a couple of weeks ago. | ||
And the reality is, is I didn't go out at night because I know exactly what happens. | ||
You know, we went out to dinner one night and as soon as I leave to get into an Uber, there's a homeless man who sadly is not well and he is defecating on the side of the street right in front of the restaurant. | ||
And it's like, is this how you want to live? | ||
And the reality is, is no, nobody wants to live that way. | ||
Now, you mentioned the corporate media and how they're trying to push back and trying to say, oh, this is so bad. | ||
They love government. | ||
Now all of a sudden they don't love the government. | ||
They don't love the government getting involved. | ||
It's obviously foolishness. | ||
And the reality of it is, is we need a safer DC. | ||
We need safer cities all over the country because I'm from New York City. | ||
I don't go back to New York City because guess what? | ||
New York City is a cesspool. | ||
And it's because of bad politicians, not just mayors. | ||
There's states, there's city councils that are all involved in all of this. | ||
And they've intentionally failed their people. | ||
They pushed radical beliefs like criminal justice reform and eliminating cash bail. | ||
And now we're still struggling with the aftermath of all of that. | ||
So kudos to President Trump for getting involved and pushing our federal government to go out in these streets and make these arrests because the local officials weren't going to do it in the first place. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, above all else, kind of like you hit on, I think it's just embarrassing the state of DC in New York. | ||
I mean, because when you go to New York, you go to D.C., you meet a lot of foreign tourists. | ||
Specifically in D.C., you meet a lot of foreign dignitaries. | ||
And it kind of feels like a bit of a humiliation ritual that these local officials are imposing on the American people, where there's just homeless people everywhere, like you were saying, defecating. | ||
I mean, it looks like Bourbon Street everywhere you go. | ||
And the crime's completely out of control. | ||
People are getting jumped left and right. | ||
From my perspective, it feels like a bit of a humiliation ritual that they're putting us through. | ||
Yeah, it really does. | ||
I mean, when I was walking around, I mean, I literally just went in D.C. just to get my nails done. | ||
And just simply walking there, I interacted with, well, not willingly, interacted with two homeless people who came up to me. | ||
And sadly, I mean, these are people who just need mental help. | ||
I mean, there's no other way to say it. | ||
The reality is a lot of these people, they have really just don't have, whether it's they don't have family that cares for them or they have completely gone missing. | ||
Their family doesn't Know where they are. | ||
The reality of it is it's now our job, our duty, if they're an American citizen, to step in and help these people out and not just let them sleep on the streets because that is not humane. | ||
And Democrats constantly do that and they say that's humane, but it's not. | ||
You know, over the last few years, we sat here and watched cities like San Francisco create like these self-injection sites. | ||
So if you were somebody struggling with drug addiction, you were going to inject yourself in a safe area as if that's even a thing. | ||
And the city officials were paying for it with your taxpayer money. | ||
And so we sat here and had to watch that and pretend like that was acceptable behavior and acceptable for our government to take our taxpayer money and put that towards. | ||
So again, I would love to see after Washington, D.C. is completely purged of its high crime, its homeless crisis issue, and other crises that they're dealing with, then for us to move into other cities because the reality of it is places like New York City. | ||
I mean, I think New York City is pretty much done because I think Madani is going to win that one. | ||
And I think that's the kiss of death at that point. | ||
But other major cities, and you need New York City hit rock bottom too, by the way. | ||
I know a lot of people are hoping that that's not the case, but the reality is New York City has hit rock bottom because everyone else, every other major city and all these other people who continue to support Democrats without knowing the policies that they're actually supporting, need to learn that lesson the hard way. | ||
And I think that's what we're going to get with Madani. | ||
But other major cities, we do need federal officials to step in and to take over. | ||
Because again, I mean, I was in Austin. | ||
I've been, you know, discussing it and covering the murder of Jamie White, the Infowars reporter, who was brutally murdered. | ||
And it was due to a car theft at first. | ||
They were trying to steal his car and then they shot him. | ||
And the reality is, that's what's happening all across our country, but specifically in Austin. | ||
I mean, the police over there, it's not really their fault because they have a really liberal prosecutor, Soros backed, Soros funded, who doesn't actually prosecute crime according to the laws and how they're written. | ||
And so he has more empathy for the suspects than the actual victims of these crimes. | ||
And so when they're catching 14, 15 year olds stealing Kia cars and then just driving off and just crashing them intentionally, taking these joy rides and just doing whatever they want with them, we wait until they kill someone to intervene and actually put them behind bars. | ||
But even that, it's not safe. | ||
You know, we've covered these cases several times. | ||
I've covered these cases several times, and they'll be charged with capital murder at first. | ||
So it looks good in the headlines. | ||
But then a couple of weeks down the line, a couple of months down the line, they drop the capital murder charge. | ||
And in these cases, these cases I've been following, they hit them with like aggravated robbery. | ||
And they don't do any time in prison. | ||
And that's just because they're kids. | ||
And again, the prosecutors have more empathy for the suspects rather than the victims. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, it seems like in a lot of these cities, the police, when you speak to the police officers, they know exactly what to do to put an end to the insanity. | ||
It's the DAs and these bureaucrats that are installed at the heads of these police departments that basically just handcuff these police officers so they can't do their jobs. | ||
I mean, you speak to your average NYPD officer is like a total patriot when you speak to them. | ||
Like these are guys that they know exactly what they do. | ||
They know exactly how to prevent crime. | ||
They do it for a living. | ||
But I mean, they're totally restricted by the ridiculous policies that are imposed on them from above. | ||
Yeah, it's sad too because the NYPD was such a well-respected law enforcement agency. | ||
And then the BLM movement completely destroyed it to the point where most of their officers, sergeants, lieutenants, they all filed for retirement super early to get out of the agency because they saw that it was going to hit rock bottom. | ||
And now what's happening right now is they have just such a low standard for their hiring practices where they're bringing on board a lot of people who wouldn't have been qualified 20 years ago to be law enforcement officers. | ||
Because again, nobody wants to work in these liberal cities because it's low pay. | ||
You're treated like garbage and the city doesn't respect you. | ||
You know, the guy who's going to be elected mayor very soon. | ||
And again, I'm very confident he's going to be elected a mayor. | ||
Madani is someone who literally wanted to get rid of police, wanted to get rid of law enforcement. | ||
And that's a complete change because Eric Adams was once a member of the NYPD. | ||
So you're going to see a drastic shift. | ||
And again, they're not going to be able to pull in their best prospects into agencies like the NYPD. | ||
And especially, I know you mentioned it earlier in the show, ICE, ICE is giving out like $50,000 bonuses. | ||
So if you're someone who's a respectable member of law enforcement who want to do their job and also get some type of compensation in this, you're heading to ICE next. | ||
You're not going to stick around for the NYPD. | ||
Yeah, I mean, especially with ICES, there's like a mission involved. | ||
I mean, the NYPD, you're just walking on eggshells the whole time. | ||
You're just assuming you'll get fired if you like do your job too well. | ||
You have to stop too much crime. | ||
Oh, sorry. | ||
But with ICE, there's like a mission involved. | ||
You're Like retaking your country. | ||
There's kind of like a reconquista kind of theme going on. | ||
If you look at their Twitter, you might make an edit. | ||
Like that'd be pretty sick. | ||
So it's a no-brainer. | ||
If you want, you would join ICE. | ||
It'd be awesome. | ||
One thing you're kind of hitting on with the Momdani thing, to me, I do think this is why it's crucial that Trump does get involved here and does put his foot down and set the tone with the situation, especially around crime, is because cities like New York, it's not, they're not an isolate, they're not isolated from the rest of the United States. | ||
I always see New York as just 10 to 20 years ahead of the rest of the country. | ||
And what happens there will start trickling out into the rest, which makes sense. | ||
It's our largest city. | ||
If anything, it's just a representation of how our elite operate. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Do you get this sense that Mamdani is just kind of a glimpse into America's future if we don't do something about that? | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
unidentified
|
It is. | |
Well, because we sat here and we watched Joe Biden's open border policies for many, many years now just destroy our country. | ||
You know, I moved to Dallas and I was very unaware of the issues we were having here. | ||
But we've sadly imported people from countries that hate us and don't respect Western beliefs and actually want to destroy us. | ||
And so they've started building compounds all over all over the state of Texas. | ||
I'm talking about the Muslim compounds that are popping up. | ||
You know, I've been reporting on these because it's very, very concerning because again, you don't see them. | ||
They stay in there, like the one, the most well-known one is the East Plano Islamic Center. | ||
And they've got about 400 acres that they've legally purchased. | ||
So you can't seize the land back. | ||
But the reality is, is they build up these huge walls. | ||
I just passed one in Frisco, this Islamic Education Center, and it's got huge walls, which again, you don't see with any Christian schools. | ||
They don't build these massive walls so you can't see what's going on in it or you can't see who's in it. | ||
But they want to live by themselves. | ||
They don't want to come out. | ||
They don't come out. | ||
They don't want to coexist with us. | ||
And we're allowing them just to buy up land all around our country. | ||
So what you're seeing right now in New York City, for an example, Madani, they sent all of their Muslim followers in New York City a warning and kind of like an alert that Allah wants this man elected and it's their duty now to get him elected. | ||
And when you put that out to such a loyal religious following, they're going to go out there and vote for him and make sure he gets elected. | ||
So I want everyone at home to understand this. | ||
We're watching it in Minnesota. | ||
We're watching it here in Texas. | ||
It's happening in Florida too. | ||
Don't be fooled. | ||
The reality of it is this, is our country is transforming and it's not transforming for the better. | ||
Now, listen, all religion, I respect all religion, but we're dealing with people who do not want to coexist with us, who want to cause us harm. | ||
If you look over, like you saw, well, how you said New York City, when we look at New York City, that's the future for the rest of the country. | ||
Just look to Europe. | ||
Look to the UK. | ||
The story yesterday that was coming out, the UK is now baiting their female police officers to run around and get catcalled. | ||
Well, who's cat calling them? | ||
It's not British natives. | ||
It's likely the Pakistanis they've imported. | ||
And then the government's ignored thousands of girls and women who have come forward to say that they were sexually assaulted. | ||
So again, that's our future if we don't stop this. | ||
And unfortunately, law enforcement in the UK is too afraid to sit there and speak out the truth on this issue because, well, they know that these people are very violent. | ||
I was watching BBC as they're covering protests. | ||
And the reality is, is you see a guy who's walking around with a weapon and the BBC reporter is trying to stir the camera away so that you don't see the guy walking behind her with a weapon. | ||
This is a major issue. | ||
And again, I live here in Texas. | ||
I just had an incident and I don't know his exact religious following, what religion he was, but I could tell you that there was a man who appeared to be Middle Eastern who followed me into my apartment complex stairwell and tried. | ||
Well, he was chasing me because we have the footage now to prove it. | ||
We'll be releasing it soon, but he was trying to come after me. | ||
And so, again, this is something that we're seeing all across the country where women are going to have a very tough time if we keep importing people from countries that hate us. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, well, that's that's what you see with all these politicians, right? | ||
People are scratching their heads like, how does Elon Omar keep getting re-elected? | ||
How does Rashida Tlaib? | ||
And then you look at their constituency and it's like mostly foreign or the generation after a group of foreign-born people. | ||
And it's like, well, when you change the composition of the country, you shouldn't be surprised when those newcomers start to want to bring a little piece of home with them. | ||
And so it's like that, you know, there's this desperation to stop Mamdani. | ||
Like, let's just, everyone get by in Cuomo or everyone get by. | ||
We're holding the line here. | ||
And from my perspective, I'm like, well, you're just kicking the can down the road an extra, you know, four years. | ||
Okay, congrats, you bought yourself four more years. | ||
You're going to have the same exact problem where there's just going to be another, I mean, whatever you want to call them, Marxist, Muslim, whatever. | ||
All I know is it's not American and whatever it is hates America. | ||
And so for me, I'm like, well, we got to get to the root of the issue. | ||
And I do see Trump's ICE operation as the key linchpin of that operation. | ||
Basically, what I'm saying is you get mass deportations. | ||
You won't have to worry about these Elon Omars types anymore. | ||
There's not going to be a constituency for her outside of these obscure far leftists. | ||
But yeah, and you're seeing it everywhere. | ||
Like you talked about in Dallas. | ||
I mean, it was the Dallas area, but it was about the giant monkey statue or whatever. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I mean, it's like, what's going on? | ||
Even if these people, like if the people coming were entirely peaceful, whatever, I don't want giant monkey statues in Dallas. | ||
Like that sounds, that sounds horrible. | ||
But like we were talking about earlier with the corporate media, they almost want you to feel bad that it's, they're basically saying it's not valid. | ||
It's not a valid concern to be concerned about the culture of your country changing. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And here in Dallas, for an example, I mean, it's a beautiful Christian city and the suburbs are beautiful Christian suburbs. | ||
And that's what it's founded on. | ||
You drive around and you know that this was founded, this place was founded on Christianity values. | ||
And the reality of it is we're importing people from countries that don't like us. | ||
And so, yes, we could coexist. | ||
And, you know, I'm not saying that like we're, we are a melting pot as a country. | ||
And the reality of it is, is, yes, it's okay to coexist with others, but the people we're bringing in don't want to coexist with us. | ||
And, you know, mass deportations sound quite lovely, but a lot of these people were legally brought into our country. | ||
You know, I can give you another great example. | ||
When Joe Biden failed with the Afghan withdrawal, we brought in hundreds of Afghan refugees without vetting them. | ||
And what you saw instantly on military bases were sexual assault reports coming forward. | ||
Now, I've tried to follow through with a lot of these reports to see specifically there were prosecutions that followed afterwards, deportations that followed. | ||
And still to this day, under the Trump administration, they won't even answer those simple questions. | ||
Now, if you're wondering specifically, what am I talking about? | ||
All you have to do right now, if you're at home, is just look up the, it was in New Mexico. | ||
There was a woman who was a service member on that military base who claimed to have been sexually assaulted by a group of Afghan men that we brought into this country. | ||
Now, I wanted to know what happened to that service member. | ||
I wanted to know if she's still serving. | ||
I wanted to know if she ever saw justice, if those men who she alleged were a part of this were ever deported. | ||
But unfortunately, no one will give me those answers. | ||
This was investigated by the FBI. | ||
And under our new leadership, which is Director Cash Patel, I've reached out several times. | ||
I've actually also submitted a FOIA request, and they won't give me any information about that case. | ||
And it's not just that. | ||
There were also children who were allegedly abused on these military bases. | ||
And then a lot of these individuals are just released into our country. | ||
So we have a massive, massive issue here. | ||
And I'm really worried that even mass deportations, I hate to be the black pill here, but even mass deportations won't actually fix this issue. | ||
We need to admit that we don't have a lot in common with people that hate us. | ||
And it's okay to sit there and say, listen, I want you to thrive, but from your country, not in our country. | ||
We should not welcome these people into our country. | ||
They hate us. | ||
And we have to accept that. | ||
Nope. | ||
The reality is there's a lot of people around the world and they don't like us. | ||
They don't like America. | ||
They don't like what we stand for. | ||
We've been involved in many wars that we shouldn't have been in in the first place. | ||
And so we now have to deal with those ramifications. | ||
And mass deportation is great, but it doesn't really resolve all the issues, I think. | ||
I totally agree. | ||
I mean, we've seen the Trump officials and the Trump admin have flirted with the idea of re-migration, which could look like denaturalization and deportation. | ||
And to me, that's, I mean, that's the step you're going to have to take because we have birthright citizenship on the books. | ||
We'll see if the Supreme Court decides to address it or not. | ||
But the reality is with birthright citizenship, you have people that can just rock up and they're born here and there's something magical about the soil. | ||
It turns them into an American. | ||
But every single value that they hold does not align with traditional Christian American values at all. | ||
And yes, so from my perspective, I mean, I think I agree. | ||
We do need to go a step beyond mass deportations if we truly want to nip this problem in the bud. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it's so crazy that we even have to have this argument. | ||
I need people in this country to wake up. | ||
I mean, I'm like, do you not see what's going on in the UK right now? | ||
Do you not see what's going on in Germany and other European countries right now where they are literally, their women are being sacrificed to these men who they've brought in from all different places who just cannot assimilate. | ||
And that's just the reality. | ||
And it's not that we don't want these people to thrive. | ||
We want them to thrive in their countries. | ||
But again, they just don't have any goals to actually contribute and to be able to be coexisting with other people and other religions. | ||
You know, you're watching all these protests popping up all around the country, the pro-Palestine ones, and those people hate us. | ||
I mean, they're literally burning the American flag. | ||
What more do we need to sit there and say, okay, you shouldn't be here because you are a threat. | ||
You hate this country, you hate the people of this country. | ||
And as our federal government is your only job, your only duty to protect the American people. | ||
And when you're unable to do just that, we've got a major issue here. | ||
Even if you guys remember on New Year's Day, that he was an American Muslim man who went to into that, well, drove his car in New Orleans and ran over all those innocent Americans who were celebrating. | ||
You know, he belonged to a mosque, and allegedly that mosque in Texas put out a message to all of its members saying, Do not speak to the FBI if the FBI comes speaking to you. | ||
I mean, that doesn't sound like people who want to, number one, coexist with us. | ||
And number two, if they really had nothing to hide or if they really wanted to help those who lost their loved ones during that terror attack, they would have more than willingly been willing to help us out, but they don't. | ||
And we see this time and time again. | ||
So I think it's a great thing what President Trump's doing right now. | ||
It's going to be difficult because right now, and this is why Democrats flooded our country in with millions and millions of legal aliens. | ||
I don't even believe the current numbers. | ||
If you ever traveled around the country to all these different cities, you see that Costco, you see it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it's like, what's going on? | ||
I think it was, I think it was Cernovich who posted that he was somewhere in a rural area and he thought it was like a mom-pop shop and he walked in and it was like owned by immigrants and it wasn't like, and it was just completely different from what it was during the last previous owners. | ||
The reality is, is, you know, the United States is transforming and it's transforming rapidly to where we don't know if this transformation is going to be a good thing or a bad thing. | ||
And, you know, defending our American values, I have no issue with that at all. | ||
And I think people need to start standing up for that issue and stop being so afraid of being called a name. | ||
I don't care what names you call me. | ||
It doesn't matter to me. | ||
I want to make sure that Americans, women, children are safe in this country. | ||
And that should be all of our top priority right now. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And I mean, like you said, the UK was, I mean, that's the direction we're going. | ||
I mean, granted, the UK geographically is like the size of Oregon. | ||
So they're going to feel they're going to feel the effects. | ||
I think that actually could be a bit of a detriment for the United States. | ||
I think since people, you know, the majority of people are in suburbs. | ||
We're kind of a spread out people. | ||
We don't really know what's going on in the interior and like New York City and DC. | ||
People are kind of in the dark. | ||
I don't think people realize how bad things are getting in these cities. | ||
And that's why I'm so thankful that Trump's bringing light to it. | ||
This crime. | ||
I mean, Los Angeles, I think, was a huge wake-up call with the Los Angeles riots as you saw just thousands of people on the streets waving foreign flags. | ||
Presumably, the majority of these people were probably born in Los Angeles. | ||
And you're sitting there thinking like this is so much different from the pitch when you're growing up of what immigration looks like, where people are getting off the boat and they're kissing the ground and they're so thankful to be in America. | ||
And I mean, this did occur, versus now where people are coming and they're like, oh, no, actually, this was like sovereign Mexican territory because we controlled it for like 20 years or whatever. | ||
And they're waving these foreign flags. | ||
They're waving flags of like Guatemala. | ||
I'm like, what could, what could we possibly learn from Guatemala? | ||
The place is a dumb. | ||
So it's like, I think Los Angeles is a huge wake-up call for Americans. | ||
And I think it's reflected in polling as well. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And someone just told me it was Matt Walsh who tweeted that out, by the way. | ||
But I think when I was referring to the story about the restaurant that's now owned by immigrants, but I kind of want to piggyback off of that. | ||
I think it's so crazy because we're allowing these people to fly foreign flags on our land. | ||
I mean, that's not, that's not an attack. | ||
And they're attacking law enforcement. | ||
They're doing all these other violent acts. | ||
I mean, if that's not alarming enough, I don't know how much longer we have to sit here and wait. | ||
They should be labeled as domestic terrorists. | ||
These aren't protesters. | ||
These aren't peaceful protesters. | ||
These aren't people who really truly believe in our constitution and the values that come with just that. | ||
These are people who hate us. | ||
And we need to accept the fact that these are people who passionately, passionately, and passionately hate us. | ||
And so time and time again, I just sit here and watch these videos. | ||
And I have no idea why we even allow it in the first place. | ||
And then we allow all these foreigners to run for public office. | ||
Why are we doing that? | ||
Why are we allowing them to run for public office when they come from countries that have not been able to have a successful formed government? | ||
You know, Somalia is a great example of that. | ||
You know, they changed their state flag. | ||
And we're sitting here watching this. | ||
This is the United States. | ||
We're sitting here watching is state flags are being changed. | ||
And they're sitting here. | ||
We have the politicians who are pleading their alliance to the country that they're not living in because it was such an awful place to need to seek refuge here in the United States, but they'll tell us that the U.S. is evil, white men are evil, but then they will sit there and not go back to their own country. | ||
It's because they hate us and they know if they mass migrate here through our refugee programs that they could destroy us from within. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, and I don't think many Americans realize that this is really there's a timer going on. | ||
I mean, I think people always assume that there's a lot more time to fix these problems than there actually is. | ||
I think people are under the impression that things aren't as bad as they actually are. | ||
Now you're finally starting to see like Matt Walsh, where you're seeing these anecdotes where you're like, okay, you would expect to see this sort of activity going on in LA or New York. | ||
But yeah, when you're in like, what, Omaha, and then everyone's speaking Arabic and you're just thinking like, okay, well, there might actually be a problem here. | ||
Yeah, I don't think people realize that we kind of might be out of time. | ||
Like we might need some drastic action here to save to save things because I mean, if this is just the beginning of like if Mamdani is just the beginning, which is, you know, a foreign Marxist taking over our biggest city, like we might be cooked. | ||
So yeah, I think that's I think that's a big thing that Americans need to realize is that there's an hourglass, there's sand in that hourglass and it is rapidly running out. | ||
I was talking to Connor Tomlinson yesterday and he was speaking on the situation in the UK. | ||
And that's absolutely petrifying because the Brits don't have the spirit like Americans do. | ||
Like Americans will never feel defeated. | ||
We always have this spirit of like, there's still a chance, there's still time. | ||
I think the Brits are maybe a bit more nihilistic. | ||
But that could be a judgment for Americans. | ||
In some ways, I don't think Americans realize how bad things are getting. | ||
And I mean, I don't think you elect, to be fair, I don't think you elect Trump if you don't have any semblance of that. | ||
I think people do know that something's wrong. | ||
But yeah, well, and the crime, I mean, the crime thing, that's another indication that people are finally getting sick of it. | ||
They're tired of not being able to walk around our cities. | ||
I mean, I was in Dallas recently and I was really horrified because, you know, Texas really is pitched as this promised land. | ||
And I was horrified to walk around in downtown Dallas past 8 p.m. | ||
And the situation was ridiculous. | ||
There's a lot of like zombies walking around basically. | ||
Isn't it crazy? | ||
It's one of the most beautiful places I've ever been to. | ||
And I actually wanted to move here 10 years ago. | ||
So I was like, I can't do it. | ||
It was when I was working in sports. | ||
I was going to, I was going to work at the NBA team down here in Dallas. | ||
And I was like, I want to move here so, so bad. | ||
And I loved it at the time. | ||
And then I was like, okay, now that I own my own stuff, I could just pick up and go to Dallas. | ||
And I moved here and it wasn't the same Dallas it was 10 years ago. | ||
And I'm like, what the heck happened? | ||
It's been a rude awakening. | ||
I mean, even just going to the suburbs, they have the most beautiful suburbs, the most beautiful suburbian neighborhoods that we have in the country here in Dallas. | ||
And they've all been infiltrated. | ||
And a lot of these people who are moving here are being funded by countries that hate us. | ||
It's so crazy to me. | ||
I was warning people. | ||
I was like, you guys, I personally got offered a trip to Qatar, an all-paid, inclusive vacation to Qatar, if I were to post about it on social media. | ||
And obviously, if I were to ever do that, my audience would know that I'm full of it. | ||
But I'm like, this is what they're infiltrating. | ||
And Americans are selling us out. | ||
I don't know how else to say it. | ||
They're selling out our communities. | ||
They're selling out our people. | ||
And they're allowing these people to infiltrate through the financial means. | ||
And I know that these pieces of land that they're purchasing, they're lying to the buyers. | ||
I mean, my aunt actually owned a farm in New York and she sold her farm and had no idea that that farm was going to be then turned into a mosque. | ||
I mean, this has been going on for years. | ||
And they lie to you when you make the sale because, again, they know you won't turn them over if they tell you the truth. | ||
But you got to do a little bit more digging into this. | ||
You know, I also sat at a lot of these. | ||
I'll give you an example. | ||
Collin County had a public hearing for the East Plano Islamic Center. | ||
And so I went and attended and I'm sitting here watching as it's all unraveling. | ||
And I'm like, this is so strange. | ||
There's nobody of Middle Eastern background that's in this room right now. | ||
It was just a room full of white people. | ||
And why was that? | ||
Because these people, these Middle Eastern people who were looking to build up Epic, had hired white attorneys, white PR people to represent them so that it looks like it's just fellow Americans looking to expand in our land. | ||
And again, you don't see these people because they stay inside of their facility. | ||
They're 400 acres. | ||
They very rarely come out. | ||
And, you know, when you do see them, though, you only see the men. | ||
The videos they post online, there's great reporting being done by Amy Mech on X, the Rare Foundation. | ||
She sits here and goes through all the Footage and she pulls things up, and you could see that they're like, Oh, look how beautiful it is. | ||
We do prayer here, we do dinners here, and it's all men, it's no women. | ||
unidentified
|
You can't find the women in any of these videos. | |
Yeah, this is not America. | ||
When you sit here and you say women can't sit there and pray with you, that women can't sit here and pray with you. | ||
That's not America. | ||
Yeah, yeah, that's real. | ||
I mean, yeah, I very worried. | ||
I think Trump's got some things in the works, so I guess we'll see. | ||
But thank you so much for joining me. | ||
We're running out of time here. | ||
Where can people find you to hear more? | ||
Yes, you could find me on Rumble, the Brianna Morello show. | ||
It's every Thursday at 7 p.m. Eastern time. | ||
You can also find me on X, Brianna Morello, and the Independentnewsroom.com. | ||
We have a free newsletter you guys can join for exclusive stories sent your way. | ||
unidentified
|
Awesome. | |
Well, Brianna, thank you so much. | ||
This was a lot of fun. | ||
We'll have to chat again sometime. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Take care. | ||
All right. | ||
Well, that was Brianna Morelo. | ||
That was great. | ||
We got into a lot of different topics there. | ||
Yeah, we'll see. | ||
We'll see what the ice. | ||
The ice thing, I mean, she makes a good point. | ||
There's a lot of work. | ||
There's a lot of work that we got to do. | ||
But, you know, what are you going to do? | ||
What are you going to do? | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
That was like the sopranos. | ||
He comes in. | ||
What are you going to do? | ||
It's so true. | ||
We got to do something. | ||
So, yeah, we're cooking. | ||
There's some things operating with the beds, the bed expansion. | ||
That's a good sign. | ||
But yeah, thank you for watching. | ||
Holding it down, doing our best here. | ||
But thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks for tuning in. | ||
You can find me on Twitter or sorry, you can find me on X and Instagram at RealTate Brown. | ||
We'll be back tonight for Timcast IRL. | ||
I think it's going to be a fill cast tonight as well. | ||
And we have Terrence Williams coming on. | ||
That's going to be a lot of fun. | ||
So you want to see that. | ||
You'll want to be there. | ||
Yeah, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern. | ||
Come hang out. | ||
We'll see you there. | ||
Thanks for watching. |