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May 19, 2025 46 mins

American Sunrise Early Edition on Real America's Voice

Segment 1: STOCKS, ECONOMY LOOK STRONG

Segment 2: BIDEN'S CANCER DIAGNOSIS

Segment 3: STOCKS ON A HOT STREAK

Segment 4: THE WAR ON PEACE

Segment 5: THE WAR ON LIFE

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Ahead on American Sunrise early edition.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
The House Budget Committee takes a second run at bringing
the big beautiful budget bill to the full House for
a vote, and this time it does it, but the
bill still faces a very uncertain path ahead. There are
still so many questions about this bizarre and deadly incident
Saturday night. How did this ship lose power and crash

(00:30):
into the Brooklyn Bridge? Why was a vintage Mexican ship
doing a training exercise on the East River anyway? And
is the bridge still safe after this incident? There are
also plenty of questions to ask about a deadly bombing
and palm Spring Saturday. The FBI is calling it an
act of terrorism, but why would anyone want to attack

(00:51):
a place that.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Helps people have babies?

Speaker 2 (00:56):
Finishing the job, Israel launches a major ground defensive INTOGAS
in hopes of clearing out the rest of Hamas and
perhaps freeing the remaining hostages. And this comes as a
new report shows that Iran and Hamas launched the October
seventh attacks simply in hopes of derailing the path to
peace between Israel and Saudi Arabia. It looks more and

(01:19):
more like that deadly effort was for nothing. American Sunrise
Early Edition begins.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
Now, Welcome to American Sunrise Early Edition, the show where faith,
freedom and the values that built this nation takes centers.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
To your good thiefs and bad deaths. That's how we're
gonna judge you.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
Join host Jake Novak as he breaks down the stories
that met.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
He will be letting the public know regularly what we
have found.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
American Sunrise Early Edition with your host Jake Novak starts.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Now, Welcome to a busy morning here on American Sunrise
Early Edition. It has been a busy weekend, it has
been a busy overnight session. We've got a lot to cover,
so I want to get right to it again. I'm
Jake Novak, and this is a Monday. Joining me right
now is Bob Rubin. He is the president of Ruben

(02:16):
Wealth Advisors. And Bob, we have so much to talk about.
First of all, just to talk about you know, it's
amazing to me. Every single election, Bob, we talk about
how the economy is the number one issue for voters,
but then we don't talk about it for the next
four years. And so we have a lot of economic
stuff that I want to hit just because that's where
everyone kind of starts their Monday. Maybe they take a
look at their bank account, maybe they check their four

(02:38):
to one K. But let's talk about what has been
an extraordinary last I'd say six to eight weeks when
the tariff started to hit and we were told that
we were going to have an economic disaster in this country.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
Meanwhile, Bob, listen, the stock market's.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
Going to open lower this morning. We kind of expect that.
But it has been a resilient few weeks for the
stock market. It has been a resilient few weeks I
think for the economy. Well, is this just a case
of over panic and people should have just stayed the course?
Or are we in a situation now where maybe we
need to take a few more weeks to decide whether
we've overcome the worst of it.

Speaker 4 (03:13):
Well, Jacob, morning, and thank you for having me.

Speaker 5 (03:15):
And I'm actually amazed at that the media would actually
lie and try to put them a narrative out there
that isn't true.

Speaker 4 (03:21):
So no, I think that we're just fine.

Speaker 5 (03:24):
Obviously, tariffs are something that the president needed to fix.

Speaker 4 (03:27):
We've been been taken advantage off as a country for
fifty sixty.

Speaker 5 (03:31):
Seventy years, and yeah, it's gonna it's gonna be a
little bit of pain to get there. But listen, we
had many clients that reached out to us, and we
reached out to them that you know, they were nervous,
and they were they were kind of upset about what
was going on. And you know, their market, their funds
are down ten, twelve, fifteen percent.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
But I said, just have patients. That's going to come back.

Speaker 5 (03:50):
And it did, and it's not even it's not even
back to where it's going to be because once the
administration starts announcing some of these trade deals that they're
going to redo, you know, these fifty year old bad
trade deals that are going to be redone for us
in our benefit, the market's going to do nothing but
go higher.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Right And as we said overnight, the budget bill did pass.
It doesn't It passed through the committee. I should make
it clear the Budget committee right now it's going to
go through the ways and means now it's going to
go to the full House.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
May not pass there.

Speaker 2 (04:22):
As we know, there are some Republicans who understandably want
to see much more spending cuts done, especially while we
have a strong economy. But we'll see where that goes.
But I do think that there's a little bit of
relief involved if we can get some kind of a
budget situation going. But at the same time, this next
few days might be a little bumpy, But it's so
important to remember what you just said. We have a

(04:43):
strong economy, we have a tariff regime that is going
to produce trade deals, already has produced trade deals, and
that will be.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
Positive for the market.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
So it's just important not to panic and not to
listen to these people in the mainstream media, especially who
never cover economics, telling you what to do with your money.
That's really like asking a three year old what to
do to clean the bathroom. All right, Bob, the stock
market again likely to open lower today, But I wanted
to ask you a little bit about what you thought
about the fact that, hey, we still have a deficit

(05:13):
that's out of control. We still have inflation that's really
a little bit sticky for a lot of people right there,
again mostly because of the Biden administration's crazy spending and
that infrastructure build the Inflation and Reduction Bill, which of
course increased inflation. Do you see, and this is the
last question I'll ask you about. Basically, pocketbook issues.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
But do you.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
See relief at the supermarket and maybe when people are
going on Amazon in the coming weeks or coming months.

Speaker 5 (05:40):
Yeah, I mean inflation I read yesterday is down to
the lowest level in five years. So thank god for that. Right,
that's very good. I mean not just six months ago.
My wife came back from going to publics and she says,
I'm I didn't buy some things because prices are just
too expensive. And I mean, now, I don't.

Speaker 4 (05:59):
Ever hear that. I don't hear people talking about prices.

Speaker 5 (06:01):
I mean, definitely inflation is a problem, and we are
we have a definitely lost a purchasing power because of inflation.

Speaker 4 (06:07):
But at the end of the day, inflation is down.

Speaker 5 (06:11):
I think, yeah, there's maybe some at the lower economic
level that is not doing as well, but overall the
economy is doing pretty good, so and I think it's
going to continue to do good. So that's probably one thing.
And the other thing is from the labor standpoint. You know,
we had companies just hiring people just because they needed
people to hire. That's kind of more of a balance

(06:32):
in the labor market right now. So I think we're
okay on that. Also, I think we're going to be
just fine this year.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Well, it's great to hear. You just don't hear enough
people saying that.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Obviously, there has to always be bulls and bears, and
when you only put the bears up there and the
people who are who are being naysayers, then you really
have to have an alarm bell going off, Bob.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
This may not seem like.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
An economic question per se, but I do think this
is about the overall state of our systems in America.
This story over the weekend of the met sick and
tall ship crashing into the Brooklyn Bridge a story that, really,
I mean, it was just shocking for so many reasons.
There are so many questions about this. I don't want
you to do. I'm not asking you for a forensic
examination of what happened on that ship, because frankly, we

(07:13):
still have a lot of questions.

Speaker 1 (07:14):
But it seems like we have things like this.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
We have the air traffic control failures at Newark Airport
and other airports. We have so many road and other
bridge problems in this country. Is there an issue right now?
We just maybe people looking at our overall systems in
America are decades and decade generations of things that just
worked in America because we were we took care of
these things. Is it that the new generation just isn't

(07:37):
as well trained in these kinds of things?

Speaker 4 (07:40):
You know, I looked it up yesterday.

Speaker 5 (07:42):
We have forty three thousand bridges that are rated structurally deficient.
When I read that, I was like, wow, that's forty
three thousand. It's a lot, right, and I'm probably going
over those bridges. And then when I saw that Mexican
ship at the Brooklyn Bridge, I'm thinking that actually knocked
down the bridge.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
Like again, I'm not a.

Speaker 5 (07:59):
Structural engineer, but we definitely have a problem in that
we do not take care of our infrastructure. I mean
kind of going back to Obama, I remember that trillion
dollar shovel ready stimulus package and then the admit it,
well it wasn't sort of shovel ready after all. Well,
you know, we do need to fix our infrastructure. We're
you know this the United States of America. We need

(08:19):
to have our bridge is strong. We need to have
our roads better. We need to have all the railroad
stuff better. This is basic infrastructure. It's important for our country.
If we don't have good infrastructure to affects our productivity.
You know, trucks can't get through, we can't get through,
things fall down. You know, it's not we need to
fix all this stuff. Never mind about the air traffic
control system. Holy moly, on that right, like I'm not

(08:43):
flying into Newark.

Speaker 4 (08:44):
That makes me nervous. I never would have said that before.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
Yeah, and I think it's also obviously this is a
big part of the deficiencies that we've seen for years
at the Department of Labor in the Department of Education,
which did nothing to do with us. In fact, I
remember speaking to the secretary of the Department of Labor
under Oboma and telling them, why aren't you running the
Department of Education. Why don't you guys at least merge
so that we can tell the Apartment of Labor and
Education should really just be.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
The same thing.

Speaker 2 (09:08):
What do we need in America, What skills do we
need in America? And what programs can we encourage the
private sector to create so we can teach people how
to do everything from getting more engineers so we don't
have to import them from other countries and getting people
who know how to fix these systems properly.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
It's really quite a mess.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
Finally, but let's talk a little bit about oil and
gas prices here for a second, because I think this
is another big story, especially since this war has been
going on for a year and a half, this war
between Israel and Kamas, a massive, massive build up of
Israeli troops now in Gaza.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Israel seems to have almost.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Complete control of everything on the ground now in Gaza
as they try to root out the last leaders of Kamas.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Maybe get the hostages for you, but at least end
that war.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
But something I want to ask you about is if
you take a look at the oil prices, oil prices
on October sixth, twenty twenty three, the day before that
horrific attack, actually at ninety dollars in the ninety dollars ranch.
We're in the low sixties right now. To me, this
tells me that that Middle East trip that President Trump
just took, for some people thought it was just kind
of a dog and pony and announcing deals that had

(10:12):
already been made in a lot of ways, that we
have a lot to thank some of our allies in
the Middle East here, especially Saudi Arabia, for keeping our
situation while this major war was going on in other wars,
I wasn't the only war in the region. Keeping our
gas prices in a relatively decent place and going even lower.

Speaker 5 (10:29):
Now, Yeah, it's great. I mean President Trump's Middle Eastern strategy.
He did what I guess no one else thought was possible.
He brought billions in business back to the United States.
And he's continued to building on the Abraham of Courts,
which is amazing. You know, his first foreign trip was
not to Europe. It was to Saudi cutter and what UAE.

(10:50):
We've broken massive arms and investment deals, but the most
important things. He really shifted power away from Turkey, from
Iran in Russia right to Saudi helps Israel, even though
he didn't go to Jerusalem, helps Israel.

Speaker 4 (11:03):
Help.

Speaker 5 (11:03):
He even extend an invitation the new Syrian president. What
is in all alshaha? And you know he was a
former KaiA guy. He wants edm to join the Abraham Accords.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
It was bold. It was america first diplomacy and it's working.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
Yeah. And I like the fact that you mentioned that
he didn't go to Europe first.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
I mean, Europe has just become It's made itself so
incredibly irrelevant in so many ways. Especially with the fact
that they saved I mean, I think the biggest example
of that was just several weeks ago, when after President
Trump and Vladimir Zelinsky had that little dust up in
the Oval Office, everyone in Europe said, we're going to
stand up for Ukraine right now, and then they didn't
follow through. They didn't provide the extra money, they didn't

(11:44):
provide that extra support. It just goes to show how
irrelevant they are and we must go and look for
new alliances. And I know there was some, there was
some definitely issues with countries like Cutter.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
I get it, and I believe me. I've got my issues.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
But let's see how this plays out, you know, because
we don't have any other choice. Bob Rubin, thank you
so much for joining us so early on a Monday.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Have a great week. We'll get you back on real soon.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
You too, Jake, Take care bye.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
All right, coming up, Police and the FBI reveal the
stunning motive in this weekend's fertility clinic bombing in Palm Springs, California.
But on second thought, these days, that motive may not
be so shocking after all. I will explain. And here's
something else that isn't shocking. Some audio of a federal
prosecutor's questioning of Joe Biden has now been leaked out.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
You'll hear it for yourself, and it will likely confirm
what you.

Speaker 2 (12:35):
And almost all of us have known for some time
about Biden's mental abilities. American Sunrise Early Edition is coming
right back. Welcome back to American Sunrise Early Edition Special.

(13:03):
Welcome to those who on Getter and Rumble who are
watching and commenting. You're looking at our roofshot here in
West Palm Beach. Well, that's the controller of course, I'm
in New York. That's the control rooms headquarters. That's where
we do so much here at Real America's Voice. Hey,
that's West Palm Beach. But don't forget that is different
from Palm Springs, which is in California, and we had

(13:23):
a very unfortunate story out of Palm Springs this weekend.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Police have identified the man who.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
Carried out a deadly bombing attack on that Palm Springs
fertility clinic.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
It was on Saturday.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
The guy is twenty five year old guy Edward Barkas,
that's his name. He's described as a fanatical pro death believer.
He had a bunch of written and recorded manifestos. In
those statements, he says he was against bringing people into
the world without their consent to spare them from future suffering.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
I've had a lot of suffering in my life that
it's mostly good.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
I would like to have someone else make that decision,
and not a crazy bomber. Barcas is the only person
who died in the bombing. You can see massive damage there,
and you know, one of the things I'm worried about,
and I assume this is the case, although I hope
it isn't. You assume that there may have been some
embryos destroyed, some other building blocks of life destroyed in
that bombing. I mean that is massive damage. For other

(14:14):
people were injured. I don't know the extent of their injuries.
I don't think that's been reported. The FBI has classified
this as an attack on terrorism. David Brody and I
are going to talk about this in a minute at
the end of the show. I think this is really
indicative of some of the places we are in America
and our confused youth. It's really quite sad, all right.
Sometimes it's best to put politics aside and.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Remember we're all human. We got a reminder of that.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
Yesterday afternoon, we learned that Joe Biden has been diagnosed
with what they call an aggressive form of prostate cancer,
which has spread to his bones, but doctors say that
Biden's condition is treatable. Definitely not wanting to make light
of this in any way, but you have to wonder
why we didn't get more reports about this kind of
condition for President Biden while he was president, when he

(14:59):
was in the White House. Hopefully they'll have a good
treatment program for him. He is over, of course, eighty
one years old, so we'll have to see where this
goes for him. But one of the things that this
reminds us of is that these health reports that we
get on presidents that were mandated after FDR died in office,
they're not anywhere near complete. And it's just something to

(15:20):
remember now speaking of health conditions, because I think this.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
Is important as well.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
I don't want the prostate cancer thing, which we certainly
wish the best for President bide for Joe Biden. We
certainly hope he'll do fine, but I don't think it
should overshadow the other issue of the weekend concerning his health,
and this is his mental health the massive scandal that
was the Biden presidency continues to unravel, and more of
the American public who refused to see what most of us,

(15:44):
especially you watching this program shirly saw, are now having
to face that Joe Biden wasn't simply he just wasn't
simply right in the head, folks, well before he took office.
And now we have some more solid evidence of that.
The online news outlet Axios, which is not a right
wing news outlet, got a hold of a four and
a half minute outtake from Biden's infamous deposition with Special

(16:05):
Counsel Robert Hurr, conducted in October twenty twenty three. Listen now,
as you can hear Biden clearly struggling to remember the
year his son bo Biden died, even though he is
trying to use the timing of his death to explain
why he didn't take responsible care of classified documents.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
Check it out.

Speaker 6 (16:23):
And what's happened in the meantime is that.

Speaker 5 (16:31):
As and.

Speaker 6 (16:35):
Tchump gets elected in November of twenty seventeen, by six sixteen.

Speaker 4 (16:40):
Twenty sixteen.

Speaker 6 (16:42):
All right, so afterwently seventeen, that's when you left office
in January.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
There's seber care now.

Speaker 6 (16:56):
Profession Trump has sworn in Krenka looked and seventeen Bo
had passed.

Speaker 7 (17:09):
And.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
This is personal.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
There's a lot to unpack here.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
The first thing that came to my mind is something
that I remember seeing years ago. It might have been
in one of a cop movie where they tell the criminal.
It's the reason why you always want to tell the
truth is that way you don't have to remember the
lies that you told in the past and how to
cover for them. Joe Biden is a big example of that.
But as you hear on the audio, Joe Biden is
trying to explain away his careless storage of classified documents

(17:46):
on the fact that his son Bo had died, and
he did die. The problem is he died two years
before he left office as Vice president and took those
documents and put them in his garage. He's trying to
blame his lack of oversight on that, even though Bo
Biden had died two years before. And remember on the
campaign trail when it was still on the campaign, Joe
Biden constantly referred to his son Bo as having died

(18:08):
in Iraq in the Iraq War, which also wasn't true.
It isn't just memory lapses. Here is when you're a
pathological liar like Joe Biden is. And I understand a
lot of politicians are pathological liars. It's a really bad
combination to be a pathological liar and have a memory
problem and try to use a personal tragedy like that
to excuse your criminal behavior. It is a lot to

(18:29):
unpack here again, and we wish Joe Biden the best
with his health right now, but I don't think it
should cover up the fact that we have I think
the greatest political scandal in American history, a president who
was not all there and who knows, who knows who
was running the country. I'd like to know who opened
our borders. I'd like to know who did a lot
of things.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
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ninety eight ninety eight today. Coming up, What does it
mean when a credit agency downgrades a min erica's debt

(20:00):
rating and why is Treasury Secretary Scott Besson not so
worried about it? The answer is when American Sunrise Early
edition comes right back.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
It's a liveshot of New York.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
There you see the East River bridges, the Brooklyn Bridge
is that first bridge you see in between those buildings.
Thank god it's still standing this morning after that bizarre
and I think, actually we're gonna find out it's going
to be just an outrageous incident of that Mexican tall
ship crashing into the bridge. A lot of things went
wrong there, and one of the things that makes me
really worried about that is that, you know, I assume

(20:52):
that all the shipping, the ships and docks on the
East River are controlled by the Port Authority, and that
makes my heart sink because the Port Authority is it's large,
large organization that was created specifically to remove accountability from
elected leaders. So it's people from New Jersey, Connecticut, and
New York on the Board Authority. It's a big committee.
It's all meant so that we can't get any accountability
out of anyone. And I wonder if anyone's going to

(21:13):
be punished for what could have been much worse. Two
people did die, so it was pretty bad.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Anyway.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
Welcome back to American's Sunrise early edition. Let's take a
look at where the markets will begin today. We've got
some red arrows and that is to be expected. I'll
explain why in just a minute, but we've had a major,
major run higher. We've had what I call a melt
up on the markets. We have market days where the
stocks open lower, sometimes sharply, and then they end up
closing higher. There just seems to be a overall impetus

(21:39):
towards higher closes and gains on the stock market for
about four weeks. Now, we'll see if that continues. We're
definitely going to have a lower open though, and look
at the Nasdaq. A one and a half point percentage
drop at the open, that's going to be pretty steep. Now,
let's get to bitcoin. Look at it just for a second.
All the crypto coins there, bitcoins down too, but it's
still at that one hundred and three thousand dollars mark,

(21:59):
so it's really doing strongly as well. And that's not
even a one percent drop at the open for bitcoin. Again,
this could all change in just a couple of hours
after the market's closed. On Friday, the credit agency Moody's
downgraded the US debt rating. Sounds very serious. In other words,
it says, basically, we're not as good. We're not as
good for it to pay back our debts and all

(22:19):
the bonds and the other borrowing.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
That we do. But investors don't seem to be freaking
out too much.

Speaker 2 (22:23):
You know, I can remember a time where a Moody's
downgrade would have sent the markets down by thousands of
points instead of what we're looking at, a two hundred
and ninety point drop on the Dow after so many games.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
It's almost nothing. But another person who.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
Doesn't think it's much is neither thinks that much is
US Secretary Treasury Secretary Scott Besson.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
He explained why he's not so worried over here. Listen.

Speaker 8 (22:44):
I think that Moody's is a lagging indicator. I think
that's what everyone thinks of credit agencies. Larry Summers and
I don't agree on everything, but he said that when
they downgraded the US in two.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
Thousand and eleven.

Speaker 8 (22:58):
So it's a lagging in cater And just like Sean
Duffy said, with our air traffic control system, we didn't
get here in the past one hundred days. It's the
Biden administration and this spending that we have seen over
the past four years. We inherited six point seven percent
deficit to GDP, the highest when we weren't a recession,

(23:20):
not in the war, and we are determined to bring
the spending down and grow the economy.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
And remember in twenty eleven, the last time we had
a downgrade, that actually was just the beginning of a
major market full run that lasted all the way until
the COVID sell US. So maybe this is great news.
But obviously even the markets aren't freaking out. Like I said,
only a two hundred and ninety point loss in the
DAW to open after Moody's downgrade of our debt. That's nothing, okay.

(23:49):
President Trump has a message for Walmart, and his message
is take your lumps on the tariffs. He said as
much in a weekend a Truth social post, reminding everyone
that Walmart made mass of profits last year and can't
afford keeping prices where they are despite their increased wholesale costs. Man,
that really sounds like major, major populism. I mean, when

(24:10):
you hear a president saying that, you assume it's a
maybe it's Elizabeth Warren, but Elizabeth Warren is not president.

Speaker 4 (24:17):
Much to it.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
Again, to me important to remember that we are now
in a ninety day pause with any tariff increases with China,
and China's the biggest of them all when it comes
to especially places like Walmart. So of course President Trump
could have added that they haven't had any major increases yet,
at least from their China originated merchandise, and of course
some other countries as well are making trade deals. If

(24:40):
Walmart has to eat some price increases on their end
for a little while while the tariff thing has worked out,
it'll work out really well with them with their customers.
Actually pretty good marketing idea President Trump is giving them.
I wouldn't mind being the CEO of Walmart and doing
a commercial to saying we're going to keep our prices
where they are for at least a few months while
we ride this out with the American people. That would
actually help their businesiness quite a bit. But hey, nobody

(25:01):
listens to my marketing advice, but they should. If you
listen very closely today, you just might hear the rare
sound of rich Wall Street stockholders crying and whining. Okay,
actually that's not such a rare sound. They cry and
wine all the time, but it will be a higher
pitched wine today at the JP Morgan Chase Investor Day,
because shareholders are very upset that CEO Jamie Diamond is

(25:24):
apparently not shaming changing any of his plans to set
down to step down. Diamond first mentioned last year that
he planned to step down within five years. Now we're
at that four year mark and he has said he's
not leaving. This is a little bit of an inside
baseball here, but I love this. You know you've been
a good CEO when you announce that you're leaving and
the stock goes down. I can't tell you, however, how

(25:45):
many times when a CEO announces he's leaving or he
gets fired and the stock goes up. That's the ultimate insult.
So you got to give it to Jamie Diamond. The
stock is not only going well. People are worried about
the fact that he's leaving, but they got four years
to worry about it, and there's still very upset about it.
So that just goes to show how popular a CEO
he's been. Okay, ladies and gentlemen, start your engines. It

(26:18):
is Moving America sponsored by artilleryte Company artillerytcode dot com.
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(26:41):
Com promo Code America's t for twenty five percent off
your first order. GM really, really, really doesn't want those
California that California timetable for eliminating gas powered cars to survive,
because remember, it won't just be California, other states will
have to comply if this happens. None of the major
car makers once that timetable to go into effect. But GM,

(27:03):
according to the Wall Street Journal, is lobbying Congress the
hardest to get those California mandates killed off. Now the
Senate is set to vote on those mandates as soon
as next week. Remember that California mandate says that by
twenty thirty they're going to stop making all gas powered cars,
allowing them in California to all new ones.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
That, of course, is ludicrous.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
The electric car a vehicle market is really just about
ten percent of the market. That's a significant chunk, but
it's nowhere near the other ninety percent. You can see
why GM is freaking out about this. This is not
just about politics. This is about an absolutely unwarranted and unrealistically,
most importantly unrealistic guideline that will send the costs for everyone.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
Through the roof.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
You will not be able to afford a car in
America if this thing goes through. I don't think the
Senate is going to turn a blind eye to what
GM is saying. The question is how quickly they can
put a stop to these timetables.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
They are outrageous. All Right? You know something.

Speaker 2 (27:55):
All the talking about the Honda Nissan merger collapse is
going is still going on.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
There hasn't been this.

Speaker 2 (28:02):
Much talk about a breakup since Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez.
But this is one new comment that I think is
actually worth mentioning. I think it's pretty wise. It turns
out a new report says that a Kiyo Toyota with
a D. He's actually the CEO of the Toyota company.
It's a family owned situation even though it's a public company.
But Akiyo Toyota apparently had some very wise advice for

(28:24):
Honda and Nissan when they first announced that merger before
it fell apart. He talked about how at their news
conferences and their public statements, they were talking about synergies
and factories and cost savings. They forgot to talk about
the darn cars. That's why I like to show cars
on this program. Toyota said that he really wanted them
to talk more about cars, and he was willing to
help them get that merger to go through. I guess

(28:46):
he felt like it would be better for the Japanese
auto industry overall, but it didn't work out. They should
have listened to a Kiyo Toyota talk about cars, not
about your corporate synergies. Again, this is an emotional purchase
for a lot of people, and they need to remember that.
You know, these Moveing America segments don't always offer me
the chance to bring you a heartwarming story, but this
is a happy exception. Two years ago, Kia dealerships across

(29:08):
America started a special program for veterans. It was called
the Kia Veterans Technician Apprenticeship Program Kia VTAP. It's called
and it has dealers connecting with former military technicians to
work at Kia service centers, but it also fax tracks
them to become getting what's known as the Master Technician

(29:29):
certification that's not easy to get, and this fast tracks
them to get it. So this program has been going
on since March of twenty twenty three. The results are
in now that more than two years have passed, and
apparently it is working fabulously.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
It is saving the dealership's money, they.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
Are getting more reliable employees, and it is doing major,
major good things for the veterans who sign up for
this program. So I really urge a lot of other
automakers and their dealers to follow in the footsteps of this.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
This is great news. I like to have a heartwarming story.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
Okay, here's a story though that will maybe put a
smile on your face as well. What the duck is
going on here? Apparently there is a tradition in America.
I didn't know anything about this until this weekend. Is
apparently a tradition in America where jeep wrangler owners leave
rubber ducks on the hoods of other jeep wranglers as
a sign of solidarity. Hey, whatever promotes togetherness is okay
with me. And now Hurts is getting in on this

(30:19):
thing as part of a special promotion at Hurts. If
you rent a jeep wrangler and you find a rubber
duck that they've put in the jeep wrangler. You can
get some discounts or other upgrades from hurts and not
exactly saying what those discounts are, but hey, good luck,
I didn't know this thing. Apparently you put the lair
it is you put ducks in the dashboard. I hope
that's safe. By the way, I could be hit that brakes.

(30:39):
Really hard to get ducks all over your face. But anyway,
this looks like a cute little tradition. Okay, coming up,
there were so many business and investment deals announced during
President Trump's recent Mid East trip that it's hard to
keep track of them all.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
And that's just the Saudi Arabian deals I'm talking about.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
But we're about to get an expert assessment of all
when American Sunrise Early Edition comes. Right on American Sunrise
Early Edition. As we continue, the House Budget Committee takes

(31:16):
a second run at bringing the Big, Beautiful Budget Bill
to the full House for a vote, and this time
it succeeds, but the bill still faces a very uncertain
path ahead. It's time for more phone diplomacy. President Trump
is about to call Vladimir Putin to discuss an end
to the war in Ukraine. Following that phone call, President

(31:37):
Trump will speak to Vladimir Zelenski and several members of NATO.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
Good luck everybody.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
There are still so many questions about this bizarre and
deadly incident Saturday night. How did this Mexican tall ship
lose power and crash into the Brooklyn Bridge. Why was
a vintage Mexican ship doing a training exercise on the
East River in the first place?

Speaker 1 (31:59):
And is the edge still safe after this incident.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
And finishing the job, Israel launches a major ground defensive
Indigaza in hopes of clearing out the rest of Hamas
and preparing a pathway to perhaps freeing the hostages. American
Sunrise Early Edition continues now, welcome back to.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
This Monday and American Sunrise Early Edition. I'm Jake Novak.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
Thank you so much to those of you on Getter
and Rumble, especially who are watching and commenting and commenting
with some fervor. I might add, thank you so much
for that. Remember, watching the news is no longer a
passive exercise. Don't expect that anymore. Television news broadcasters, all right,
joining me now, definitely make sure we don't just gloss
over what was really a historic trip for President Trump

(32:50):
in the Middle East is Old Glory Bank President, CEO
and co founder Mike Bring. Mike, I want you to
focus on just Saudi Arabia just for the first part
of this and all the deals that were announced there.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
It seems like there were some significant deals that.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
Go beyond just oil and defense, because usually when we
talk about Saudi Arabia, Mike, that's all we're talking about.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
We're talking about oil and weapons. This went beyond that,
didn't it.

Speaker 7 (33:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (33:15):
You know, there's really two types of politicians in the world,
and we always talk about this. There's politicians who want
to make a deal and there's politicians who want to
make a point. And unfortunately, the last president we had
just wanted to make points. And Trump is about making deals.
And he just did a world wind tour through the
Middle East and brought home to trillion dollars worth of

(33:35):
deals and estimates of one point two trillion dollars in
Saudi And we just have to thank him for doing
these type of deals, and it's really what he does.

Speaker 7 (33:46):
He's a transactional president.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
Yeah, you know, I was really struck by I thought
one of the biggest deals was this AI chips deal
that Nvidia is going to be allowed to send eighteen
thousand of those AI chips to Saudi. And it just
reminded me that before the Koshogi thing, before some of
the other things that kind of derailed the progress for
at least a little while that Saudi Aria was making,

(34:09):
that was the goal there, to make it into this
tech hub in addition to an oil and gas hub.
And I wonder if you feel like that might be
able to get back on track right now.

Speaker 7 (34:19):
I do.

Speaker 9 (34:19):
And folks who continue to cast a stone about Koshogi,
what's the rumor that the Clinton's probably disposed of more
political dissonance than the Crown Prince did. And I've done
deals in Saudi, have been there, and they are a company.
They are a country that loves the West, loves America,

(34:39):
and wants to do deals with us. And so this
is what's going to happen. He is going to get
us back on track. And there is so much dollars
in Saudi for them to invest in America that it
just takes the political will to look past that incident,
which by no means a small incident. And Trump is
able to do that again makes deals, not points.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
Yeah, I think that's important.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
I want to get to the bigger picture of the
region because we've talked about Saudi Arabia, because I think
that America's friends and enemies can see where this is going.
This is a very very interesting report that came out
of the Wall Street Journal. Now, for somebody like me,
and I think a lot of our viewers, this is
not a surprise. We kind of knew this the day
after October seventh, but now we have the documents to
prove it that the entire October seventh attack was meant

(35:28):
to derail the burgeoning piece between Israel and Saudi Arabia,
and you have to say it failed.

Speaker 1 (35:34):
I talked in earlier in the program.

Speaker 2 (35:36):
You know, Mike, crude oil prices were in the ninety
dollars range on October six, twenty twenty three.

Speaker 1 (35:43):
They went down after that attack. They are now down
in the low sixties.

Speaker 2 (35:47):
That has a lot to do with Saudi Arabia making
sure not to do the things that used to do
in the seventies or in the eighties when Israel was
in trouble. They did the right thing there. They didn't
try to take advantage of it. In a negative way.
And I think people need to understand everything that you
just said about Saudi Arabia. The opposite is true of
course of Iran, who funds Comas. They're not only not
interested in peace, but I don't really think they're interested

(36:08):
in any kind of financial dealings either. Sure, they like
selling oil so they can have the money to do
what they like to do, which is foreign terror proxy wars,
but they're not looking to build any of the countries
or the groups that they're funding. They're not looking to
do anything other than using them as human cannon fodder.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
Isn't that the case.

Speaker 7 (36:25):
You're hun to say, right, Jacob.

Speaker 9 (36:26):
In fact that that article talks about how there was
a meeting, I think it was to get approval from
their capital partners, so that Sinowara wanted approval from Iran
to go forward with this attack. And it was October second.
The attack occurred on October seventh. So don't anyone think
that in those five days they planned this attack. The

(36:46):
attack had been planned, it had been practiced, it had
been worked out. They just needed to get permission from
their capital partner, Iran, and that is who has been
funding this and it backfired. There's no way that Sineoir
thought that with Biden office, he would allow mit Yahoo
to attack and go into Gaza and do what he did,
because there's one thing we know about terrorist leaders. They

(37:09):
love life more than principle, they love power more than principle.

Speaker 7 (37:14):
And it's certainly backfired on him, and he's gone.

Speaker 9 (37:17):
Now we believe his brother's gone, and Hamas is basically eliminated,
and with Trump in office, they're not coming back.

Speaker 1 (37:25):
Yeah, there are a lot.

Speaker 2 (37:26):
I mean, there have been a lot of positives for
Israel as a result of this terrible gambit by Hamasa
and then Peesibolah. Both of them are very, very weak,
and at least one of them is almost completely gone.
So those people who died, not only the soldiers, with
the civilians, I don't think they died in vain.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
At least we can hold on to that.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
Now we've got Saudi Arabia. We discussed Saudi Arabia on
one side once to do deals in the United States.
We have Iran on the other, and then in the
middle we have that country Cutter. And I want to
address some of the criticisms when it comes to President
Trump's flirtation with that country and the accusations that maybe
he and riched himself in the process. Of course, that
was the focus of the SNL sketch this weekend. Let's

(38:05):
check it out.

Speaker 10 (38:06):
I did very well on this trip, got a lot
of cool stuff. The Katoris gave me a four hundred
million dollar plane.

Speaker 7 (38:13):
Can you believe that?

Speaker 10 (38:15):
And people said that was some sort of bribe. Not true,
not true, because they haven't asked for anything.

Speaker 3 (38:20):
In return, well not yet, all right, so it's a
pre bribe.

Speaker 7 (38:26):
It's a pre bribe.

Speaker 10 (38:27):
But now people are saying I should really be flying
in an American plane. No thanks, Sonny, have you seen
what's going on with our planes?

Speaker 2 (38:38):
Of course, like the counter argument of this, and by
the way, that guy does a decent impression. You gotta
give me. He's much better than Alec Balwin. But you
got the counter arguments. All that is that while every
other politician in DC has become rich while in public service,
President Trump is still I think probably the first president
since George Washington to actually have lost net worth ever

(38:58):
since he became president in January twenty seventeen.

Speaker 1 (39:02):
But what are your concerns?

Speaker 2 (39:03):
Do you have concerns about Cutter or you to think
that this was actually the right move. Try to bring
them in, maybe give them one more chance, because again
we know that they've got a little bit of a
spotty history to say.

Speaker 7 (39:13):
The least they do.

Speaker 9 (39:15):
And you're right, well, Saturday Live hasn't been funny in
forty years. James Austin Johnson does a fabulous impression and
we got to give them props for that.

Speaker 7 (39:23):
So you listen.

Speaker 9 (39:24):
I went to a public school, but even I learned
early on always take the money. So I have absolutely
no problem with Trump taking the money for the country.
Now should he ever be able to fly this personally
known and it's not even really realistic that after his
office run he would And so here's my view on this.
He should take the plane, but never fly as air
Force one.

Speaker 7 (39:44):
And I'll say why in a second.

Speaker 9 (39:45):
But he should give it to Homeland Security and allow
them to use that big, beautiful plan from Kutar to
fly illegal criminal gang members offshore and instead, and then
he should never fly for Air Force.

Speaker 7 (40:00):
And here's why, in my.

Speaker 9 (40:01):
View, we are a country of the greatest country in
the history of the world.

Speaker 7 (40:05):
Boeing is an American company.

Speaker 9 (40:07):
That plane was made in America and it would make
us look weak if we had a fly a plane
given to us as our most important plane, air Force one.
You know, as I say, among private aviations poser's charter.
But the real guys and gals own their own plane.
So we should never fly as air Force one, as
it makes us look weak and small. But absolutely take

(40:28):
the money and use it the fly criminals offshore to
Elsavador or wherever they're taking them.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
You know, I think I had some of the viewers
in the Getter chat a couple of days ago who
said the same thing. So you're definitely have your hand
on the pulse of the people. Only have about thirty
seconds left. I'm sorry to have to cut this short,
but I wanted to ask you just quickly. I know
that you have some strong opinions about the proposed Bank
Secrecy Act. Can you tell us quickly what some of
the problems are with this act?

Speaker 9 (40:54):
Yeah, well, it's the Bank Snooping Act because there's nothing
about secrets, and it's been.

Speaker 7 (40:58):
Around for a while.

Speaker 9 (40:59):
It's money laundering Act, and it does anything but keep
your secrets safe. And and so I've got a great
podcast out there at PSL where I talk about that
but that is the act that Congress empowered banks to
snoop on customer transactions and then report to the government
certain ones.

Speaker 7 (41:17):
And it was the worst act and it continues to
get worse.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
Yeah, you know, I misspoke, of course, it's not the
proposed I was, you know, and I was wishful thinking,
and it's been in effect for a while. You're exactly right,
but it is definitely it needs to be. It needs
to be reformed. Let's let's agree on that. Mike Ring,
than so much for joining us. Have a great rest
of your week. We'll definitely have you back on. Thank
you so much for all your insights.

Speaker 7 (41:37):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (41:39):
All right, coming up, the story has almost been buried
because we did have a very busy news weekend, but
David Brodie and I will discuss what that bombing attack
at a fertility clinic and Palm Springs tells us about
where we are in America.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
Right now, we'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (42:14):
There.

Speaker 2 (42:14):
It is the Brooklyn Bridge, that's the first bridge to
the left of the building on you're right, still standing,
thank god. After that ridiculous incident this weekend, the Mexican
tall ship crashing into it, Hopefully no real structural damage.
This is an American Sunrise early edition. I'm Jake novac Hey.
Police in the FBI say a twenty five year old
man who bombed the fertility clinic in Palm Springs this weekend.

(42:37):
He did it because he was literally against the idea
of life itself. Sounds crazy, But David Brody, if this
isn't the latest example of so many of our problems
in America, I don't know what is. I mean, look
at that, you know, one of the things that really
I just thought about last night. I don't know why
didn't think about it earlier. There were probably some embryos
and other things that were destroyed.

Speaker 1 (42:56):
I mean, that's a lot of damage.

Speaker 2 (42:58):
But you know what, I think we've gotten to a
point now where the most basic of life's lessons aren't
being taught or at least being sent out to our children.
This guy said he bombed according to his manifestos and
things like that.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
And I want to say his name, I don't need
to give his name. No, Apparently he.

Speaker 2 (43:16):
Didn't think that being born was a good thing because
that subjects the children to suffering in life that they
didn't have a choice in wanting to live or not.

Speaker 1 (43:25):
I mean, are we really at a point now? I
think it is.

Speaker 2 (43:27):
Some people in America have decided that they are actually
against the idea of life. I don't even want to
talk about abortion here for a second. That's not what
I'm talking about. I'm talking about the idea of actually
going through your life having children in the first place,
if you can. And they don't see the positives of
taking a breath.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
It's just so sad.

Speaker 2 (43:45):
But maybe we need to get back to those kinds
of basics in America with our kids.

Speaker 11 (43:49):
Well, those back to basics begin with the Bible. I mean,
it's very simple. This is the anti biblical view.

Speaker 1 (43:56):
Whether it's Old.

Speaker 11 (43:57):
Testament or New Testament, it is the Bible, and it's
very The.

Speaker 7 (44:00):
Bible is very clear.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
God's word is very clear that.

Speaker 11 (44:02):
He wants folks to pro create. I mean, he wants
the family structure to continue to grow.

Speaker 1 (44:11):
He's very clear about that in the Bible. And he's
very clear about that. He decides when.

Speaker 11 (44:16):
Life begins and ends your life, Jake, my life, and
everybody else's life. So for this guy to come along
and say, hey, I'm not a big fan of, you know,
creating life in certain situations, X, Y, and Z whatever,
all of his anti nibiles views. You know, that's just
anti biblical. So really that kind of goes to the
point of what you're trying to make here, which is

(44:37):
that that's where we're living today in this type of
society and anti biblical society. And listen, let's just be
very clear, just because President Trump's on the scene doesn't
mean that all of a sudden, everything's hunky dory.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
It's not. It's not.

Speaker 11 (44:48):
And anybody thinks that just because an administration comes along
and now everything's going to be.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
Just fine is kidding themselves.

Speaker 11 (44:55):
Trump is not the savior, and by the way, to
be clear, no one's suggesting he is. But at the
same time, I think sometimes we're like, oh, it's a
new day in America.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Everything's great.

Speaker 11 (45:05):
No, okay, the policies are better, for sure, but there's
something much darker and deeper going on, and I think
that has to be addressed. And you know, look, this
is ultimately at the end of the day, God's gonna
God's gonna rain judgment on America. And you know, everybody
that doesn't follow.

Speaker 2 (45:24):
Him, yeah, well, I mean, you have to believe in
a higher power.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (45:28):
I understand people who who don't want to talk about
any specific specific religion.

Speaker 1 (45:33):
I get that.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
But with lack of a belief in a higher power,
and lack of belief that you are given life an opportunity,
even if you are very disabled, God forbid or things
like that, you still have so much that you can contribute,
not only to others, but even just to yourself, to
your own the enjoyment and the appreciation of life. You know,
you talked about the Bibles. You know, be fruitful and
multiply in the Hebrew. It's peru uruvo.

Speaker 1 (45:55):
It's in the Bible.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
And I don't think it's necessarily You don't have to
necessarily be a fervent religious person in any of the
major religions to understand that. You could make a cynical argument, yes,
there's a lot of pain in life, but honestly, what's
the point unless you actually are going to look for
some of the positives. Otherwise it is just despair and
then you have complete chaos and people blowing up fertility clinics.

(46:18):
This is the example of where you go when you
promote a message in the world that says, no, life
is mostly about suffering and we should be sad in
that case, then why not blow up fraternity fertility clinics.
This guy probably thought he was being a saint in
doing that, and that's why you have to reiterate the obvious.
David Brody is going to be joining us with Tea
Vates and Doctor Gina for the next two hours the

(46:40):
American Sunrise Show. As I said, a very busy weekend.
You need to watch the next two hours just to
catch up with it. I only scratch the surface, but
I am Jake Novac. This has been American Sunrise Early Edition.
I'll be back tomorrow to try to pick up all
the extra stuff we've got to do.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
See you then,
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