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November 26, 2025 46 mins

American Sunrise Early Edition on Real America's Voice

Segment 1: COMEY & TISH OFF THE HOOK?

Segment 2: GOING CRAZY FOR CONGRESS!

Segment 3: GOOGLE CHALLENGES NVIDIA

Segment 4: BITCOIN: BUY THE DIP?

Segment 5: UNDERMINING THE MILITARY

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
The head an American Sunrise Early edition. Not knock, who's there?
It's the FBI, and it wants to talk to the
six Democrats who made that military Sedition video last week,
who paid for the video, who wrote the script, and
other questions like that are likely to be asked. If
the FBI doesn't ask them, I've been asking them for days.

(00:24):
Ukraine says it accepts the US created terms of a
deal to end the war with Russia, but now it's
not clear if Russia is on board. Wait a minute,
didn't the mainstream media say the Russians basically dictated the
deal terms to President Trump? Does this mean the mainstream
media isn't always truthful? What? As the Christmas shopping season

(00:46):
is set to kick off for real, a number of
key retailers are now predicting a merry Christmas. Indeed, and
it's not just Walmart this time. General Motors is giving
us more clarification on us where that four hundred and
fifty or five hundred and fifty million dollars is going
in America. No surprise, it's going to make more gas

(01:07):
powered cars and trucks, just like the consumers want. What
a concept and New York Mayor alect Zoron Mamdani keeps
appointing infamous opponents of the police to his top staff positions.
This isn't going to work out well, is it. American
Sunrise Early Edition begins now.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Welcome to American Sunrise Early Edition, the show where faith, freedom,
and the values that built this nation takes centers.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
To your good deeds and bad deeds. That's how we're
gonna judge you.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Join host Jake Novak because he breaks down the stories
that met.

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

Speaker 2 (01:48):
American Sunrise Early Edition with your host Jake Novak starts now.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
I'm Jake Novak. Welcome to this Wednesday, last day before
Thanksgiving here on American Sunrise Early Edition. Thank you so much,
not only for joining us this morning, but all year long.
By the way, we're getting close to our one year
anniversary of the launch of this program. We'll have a
special anniversary show. They'll be tuxedos, they'll be dance numbers,
and there will be some surprise guest stars. And I

(02:20):
don't know if that's going to happen, although I am
trying to get Donnie and Marie so we're trying our best.
What would an anniversary show be without the two of them.
But in all seriousness, we do have a new development
in what I've considered to be the top story for
the last several days in the United States, something that
I know a lot of people have been paying attention to,
but I don't know if enough people are putting enough

(02:41):
emphasis on the severity of the story. Of course, I'm
talking about that video that's six Democrats, most notably Senator
Mark Kelly and Senator ely slock and put out sowing
the seeds of discord, disunity, confusion, mutiny in our armed
forces are active duty armed forces. And now we have

(03:02):
an interesting development in the story because, of course we
now just finding out that the FBI is going to
be questioning these folks. Now, some of you might be
sitting back and thinking, well, what's the question. We saw
the video. Everything's out in the open. No, it's not. Look, folks,
I want to know who wrote the script for that video.
There's only two possibilities. Either it's someone who was working

(03:24):
in the offices of those senators or congress people, which
means that you and I paid for it on our dime,
or it was somebody from an NGO, non government organization,
some anti American pack or some organization like that that
was likely funded by a foreign country. That's also a scandal.
Both are scandalists. But I want to know who. I

(03:46):
want to know who wrote the script. I want to
know who paid for the production. I know, I understand
it wasn't a big Hollywood production costing millions of dollars,
but it was a pretty well produced video. Somebody used
equipment and took their time. They may have farmed out
to some political consulting firm that did it for them.
I don't know, but we have to find out. That's
what the FBI needs to find out. And I promise

(04:07):
you that if they get honest answers to some of
those questions, it's going to get worse for the people
involved in this video. Now, again, I don't know exactly
whether this will lead to people getting prosecuted, people getting
convicted of treason or sedition. But yes, they should be absolutely,
absolutely absolutely they should be. I said it three times.

(04:31):
They should be accused of this at least, and it
should be something that they look into. Let's take a
look at this from a legal standpoint. From the Lawfair
project I have, Gerard Filidi Girard, let's start with the
possible court martial for Senator and Captain Mark Kelly. I
don't know how far this is going to go, but
I don't think that this is a bad idea to
look into this because of what I just said. It's

(04:51):
about discovery. For me, Gerard, I'd like to know who
paid for this video. I'd like to know who wrote
the script, and maybe the only way to really find
that out is to start a process of indictment.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
Well, I think you do need to investigate this. You
do need to know who paid for this, who supported it,
and who else is involved. At the end of the day,
this is a problem because it is bad for the military.
This is a group of members of Congress who are
tweeting soldiers and sailors like incompetent buffoons who don't understand
the law, and when they're substituting their judgment for that
of their commanding officers and military lawyers for that matter,

(05:26):
who are there to explain what lawful and unlawful orders are,
they're creating a substantial risk of disorder in the military
and that's not what we need. So there needs to
be an investigation. We need to see how this came about,
who else is involved, and who's paying for this messaging,
and we basically want to make it clear that this
is unacceptable and needs to stop.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Yeah, beyond just the legal stuff, I would urge any
member of the military who was kicked out of the
military for not getting the COVID vaccine to walk up
to at least Slakin's office or Mark Kelly's office and say, Hey,
I disobey an illegal order. Will you help me now?
Can you get me back into the military, Can you
get me all my back pay? Can you do all

(06:07):
those things for me? Let's see how far they get
with that, and of course they won't get anywhere, and
that will end any illusion that these people are on
the side of any military a member of the military
who was questioning an all awful order, Gerard. Let's go
to another situation that happened just the last couple of days.
We had the indictments thrown out against Tis James and
James call me all because of Lindsay Halligan not being

(06:28):
apparently again this is according to one judge appointed to
the US attorney position properly. But this isn't the end
of the story.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
Is a gerard, It's not the end of the story,
and this is almost certainly likely to be appealed. The issue, though,
is that the judge does have some good grounds for
seeing this. What black Little law is, what process has
been is that a US attorney is appointed for one
hundred and twenty days, and within that time period, the
Senate has to confirm or not confirm them. In this case,
because the one hundred and twenty day period passed, it

(06:57):
would have been up to a district court judge to
a point, the acting US attorney in the Eastern District,
not President Trump. So ultimately, I think there is a
legal basis for this decision, but it does need clarsification.
It can be appealed, and if the appeal is successful,
then the indictments come back. Unfortunately, if the appeal is unsuccessful,
then call me the statute of limitations Van and he

(07:18):
will not be held accountable for his actions.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
You know, jer I wonder if you'll just indulge me
for just a minute, because I like to recommend books
on this program, especially when they're short. I recommend a
lot of long books. Sorry about that, but I have
a short one to recommend, and it's called Leak by
a guy named Max Holland, who is an expert on
the history of the FBI, and he really gets into
the truth about what really happened in Watergate. And when
I read that book, it was the early days of

(07:43):
the first Trump presidency, and I just couldn't believe how
the FBI and the leadership of the FBI hasn't changed,
or at least at that point, hadn't changed a bit.
The entire reason why the American public learned about what
happened at Watergate was because of a jealous, upwardly mobile
and spiteful number two man at the FBI named Mark Felt,

(08:04):
who went by the name of deep Throat during that
whole period, who was angry that he wasn't made the
director of the FBI, and so he leaked out all
this information about Nixon and Watergate, hoping that the President
would see it think that the real head of the
FBI was responsible, fire him and put Mark Fell at
the head. If that sounds like a twisted tail, then
you don't know your FBI. James Comby is just another

(08:26):
guy like that who decided what information got out what
didn't get out and it was all about improving and
advancing himself and there's nothing that's changed now. As a lawyer,
what are the basically, what are the legal powers that
the president might have against a bureaucrat within his own
executive branch who does stuff like this. It feels like

(08:48):
they're almost powerless when you have a power hungry person
like this, who has so much information at his or
her fingertips.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
I think at the end of the day, you've identified
the actual problem and whether we want to call it
the deep state or in green failures within these departments,
the president needs to clean house. Komia was investigated five
years ago. That investigation was killed by the Biden administration,
and that adminisation was killed it because it has loyalists
within the Department of Justice who don't want to do

(09:15):
anything other than follow the left wing party line. That's
the real danger here. This prosecution was rushed at the
last minute because the Department of Justice is it's infiltrated
to the point that it does not equally enforce the law,
and that is the essential problem here. The president needs
to clean house cash Ptel needs to clean house, Pambondi

(09:36):
needs to clean house and get rid of the people
in there that are preventing justice from happening and instead
weaponizing the legal system as they did against President Trump.
So they need massive personnel changes. There need to be
consequences for people who leak, for people who don't follow orders,
or for people who sabotage investigations that are proper in
order to score political points where their political masters in

(09:59):
the White House under other administrations.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
Yeah, and I think one of the things that just
really makes me nauseous, and this is true of people
who I might agree with politically. Also, these career politicians
are career bureaucrats who somehow get lionized by the public
if they're the opponents or the enemies of someone that
they don't like. I mean, James Colemy, the same person
that the liberals and the Democrats were going nuts about

(10:22):
in October of twenty sixteen when he made his famous
press conference about the Hillary Clinton emails, and they were
just blaming him for Hillary's loss. Suddenly now, oh, he's
a boy scout. He's the greatest guy ever. I mean, honestly, folks,
these people please stop calling them public servants. They're not
public servants. They want you to be their servants, and

(10:43):
I just think people need to understand that. I want
to bring my last question now to the issue of
New York City because Zorroon Mamdannie, the mayor elect, keeps
appointing people who are clearly interested in dismantling the police department. Now,
I could make this next question about political theory. We
could talk about Toms Hobbs, We could talk about all
the great political theorists of the sixteenth and seventeenth century

(11:04):
and talk about how leaders who put their own people
a danger lose their legitimacy as leaders. But from a
legal standpoint, if a neighborhood or a community suddenly stops
getting some of the basic protections that they pay for
with their taxes or they expect in the social contract
with their government, what legal avenues do they have. I mean,
if the cops stop walking the beat or stop patrolling

(11:25):
my neighborhood, can I sue New York City for endangerment
of my life?

Speaker 3 (11:30):
Unfortunately, you are not likely to succeed unless you're a
member of a minority group that has protections under the law,
and you're making an argument that it's a civil rights
violation that he is targeting your group for exclusion or
for differential treatment. At the end of the day, and
this is the really sad part, it's nearly impossible to
sue a government, whether it's to police the city, the state,

(11:51):
or the federal government to do its job. That's the
political question. So if he defers policing, if there's no
cops on the beat, if garbage isn't being picked up,
well that's all appropriate political action. And that's why it's
so important who we vote for. On the other hand,
if you can prove that animus and maybe with Mom Donna,
you can look at the people. He's surrounding himself with

(12:11):
people who hate all sorts of minority groups, whether it's
Jews or Asian Americans or even African Americans in some cases.
When you are surrounding yourself with people who blatantly hate
other minority groups and then you cut policing, that is
gut for action.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
Well, I'm just hoping that the PBA listen. I did
local news in New York for years, the PBA, back
when I was doing it in the late nineties, the
Police Benevolent Association, the big police union, they were on
TV every day complaining about something, and that's when Giuliani
was mayor where are you guys, because you guys need
to be ready to go because we're in serious trouble
if the police are dismantled in the way that this

(12:48):
guy apparently is going to do it. Gerrofility from the
law Fair Project, thank you so much for joining us.
Have a wonderful Thanksgiving.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
Pleasure Bank, and happy Thanksgiving to you.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
Thank you coming up. Hey, it's not just almart anymore.
A growing number of other retail chains have been reporting
good sales and predicting a hot, a hot Christmas season.
I'll have some new names that you need to know.
And check out this deranged woman. No, she's not just
a protester. She's running for Congress and you know what

(13:18):
she might win. Emily Finn is not deranged, and she's
gonna help me tell that story next when American Sunrise
Early edition comes right back. That's a live look from
the torch looking down at the rest of the Statue

(13:41):
of Liberty there. That is such a great shot unless
you have vertigo, and they have some problems with it,
the Great Statue of Liberty. A lot of people give
up when they're walking up the steps of the statue.
It's so many steps, but I think it's a great workout.
It's worth it. You don't get to walk all the
way onto the tour anymore. I don't think that's been
true for sixty or seventy years. A little dangerous and

(14:04):
a little bit difficult to keep the structure in sound
condition when people were doing that. Sometimes I think it
was a commercial somebody did in nineteen seventy six with
a kid walking on there. But other than that, you
can only go to the crown. But it's worth it.
It's really amazing. Hey, welcome back to American's Sunrise Early
Edition on this Wednesday before Thanksgiving, Thanksgiving Eve, whatever you
want to call it. Thank you so much for joining us.

(14:25):
Thank you for joining us on all the platforms where
you can watch the show live and simultaneously comment live,
just like we were having a real conversation in the
old days when people talk to each other. It's really nice.
So I appreciate all of you who are doing that.
Aften Ben, No, that's a real names. Aten Ben sounds
like like something you rub on your face after you shave,

(14:46):
something like that. But anyway, that's her name, and she
is the Democrat nominee in next week's Yes, there's a
special election next week to fill a house a spot
from the state of Tennessee. Now, that district that she's
running in includes the city of Nashville. Lovely city, by
the way, But this is how Aften feels about Nashville.

Speaker 4 (15:04):
Check it out.

Speaker 5 (15:05):
Things.

Speaker 6 (15:05):
I've been heavily involved with the Nashville mayoral race because
I hate the city. I hate the bachelorettes, I hate
the pedal taverns, I hate country music, I hate all
of the things that make Nashville apparently.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
In make city to the rest of the country.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
But I hate it.

Speaker 6 (15:21):
Yeah, I'm not girl at the airport that all these
bachelorettes are giddy walking out and there and they're two
toned colored pant hone pink shirts and they walk out
and I'm like, oh my god, Nashville so loud.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
All right? Joining us now is Emily Finn. Emily, you
sent me another video. But wait, there's more. Aft It
isn't just a hater of the people she's trying to represent.
She's also not all there. Check this out. This is
from just a couple of years ago, when Afton decided
to make a reasoned and strong argument against Governor Bill
Lee of Tennessee.

Speaker 4 (15:53):
Check this outre will.

Speaker 1 (16:08):
Okay, sorry, that was completely a necessary Emily Finn. I
don't know why she's running for Congress. She had a
great career ahead of her as a car alarm I
had to understand. Please, but you know what, I want
to run this by you. I actually don't know if

(16:28):
this is going to hurt her. Who I want to
know who is going to be taking off work in
the beginning of the Christmas season to go vote in
a special election this coming Tuesday, in the first week
in December. This is the kind of person they might
vote for, the kind of crazy people who have time
on their hands to vote on a day like that.
I'm actually not sure this is going to hurt her.
I wish it did, but I'm not sure.

Speaker 7 (16:46):
If this woman does truly still win, then I have
absolutely zero faith of the voters in the Nashville area.
I mean, this is one of the craziest political campaigns
I have ever seen in my entire life. And she's
trying to double down video out and she's trying to
say like, oh, it's okay, I didn't really mean it
that I hate Nashville. It's like, no, read that back,
read back the script, because you doubled down so many

(17:08):
times about how much you hated this city. And I
think the only reason she hates is because she's not
getting invited to the bachelorette parties. If she's screaming and
yelling and being a rattic like that. Wow, I am
really concerned for Nashville. I hope that everyone in that
area gets out and votes for Van Epps, that he
is the only hope to be able to save that
city from someone who literally hates them. She would be

(17:30):
working from within to try to tear them apart.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
Yeah, but you know it just it's again, and if
she wins, it'll be another example of what I often
call Democrat voter suppression. You know, when they have these
special elections or primaries, which is a real big problem
in the cities. The primary elections on a weekday like Tuesday,
people aren't aware of it. It's absolutely who gets to vote.

(17:56):
The crazies and the unions, the municipal unions, who not
only get the day off to vote it's a holiday
for them, but they're often paid on the side to
go and get out the vote and get out the
other crazies. Now it's in red state. I don't know
why this election was slated for that time. I have
no idea whether there's been enough publicity for it. The
only publicity i'm seeing he is making fun of this

(18:16):
woman and all the crazies who have free time. Next
Tuesday may actually be triggered today. I think I'll vote
for that woman. That she's just like me. This is again,
this is voter suppression. More of evidence, Emily, that we
should be having our elections on national holidays and make
it a national holiday so that everyone can vote, not
just the human car alarms like Afton Ben.

Speaker 7 (18:36):
I think we can all get on board with that, Jake.
If this woman does truly make it to Congress, the
one thing is one thing is for sure, we're gonna
have a lot to talk about if she actually is
a is a lawmaker in this country.

Speaker 6 (18:47):
Wow, just a crazy story.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
In the meantime, the next time I park in a
Dice Dice neighborhood, I'm gonna put Afton Ben on the
hood because she's got a very Really that's a good alarm.
She and Rosie Perez scream. Carl White scream yeah, all right, Emily,
thank you so much for joining us. We'll see in
the eight to ten am hour.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
All right. Hey, it's the one time of year that
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(19:26):
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(19:48):
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(20:08):
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That's three times for full details coming up. If you
only watch and read the mainstream media, you've probably given
up on Christmas or just about settled for that lousy
tree that Charlie Brown bought in the Charlie Brown Christmas

(20:30):
Remember that little thing? But good grief, don't let those
grinches win. I'm mixing my cartoon metaphors. I've got more
of the real Christmas season picture for you just ahead.
American Sunrise early edition will be right back. So we

(20:57):
just had one of our viewers on the Getner Chat
say that it's snowing by her in Wisconsin. Can't get
that shot up in time, but we do have snow
on the ground in snow Vermont. How about that. Obviously
a lot of parts of the country is starting to
get some winter conditions. It's not I know, I know,
it's not officially winter until what it's December twenty first.
But some parts of the country you get snow on

(21:18):
the ground pretty early. So there you have it in
beautiful Stow, Vermont, and I hope for the ski resorts
up there, especially that they get plenty of Stowe in Vermont.
It's not always a done deal there with snow and Vermont.
A lot of the ski resorts have had to close
a lot of trails in recent years. So hopefully they'll
have a good year a sickle Look at where the
markets are going to begin today, speaking of good years,
and it's a lot of green there, very very modestly green.

(21:39):
But still over the last three trading days Friday, Monday
and Tuesday, we have had major, major rallies on the market,
especially on the Dow, for a number of reasons, not
the least of which being that the markets looked at
their selling in the early part of last week. I's like,
ye know, I think we went overboard there. Also, you
have continuing gains and gold very solidly above the forty
one underd dollar per ounce level. And look at crude oil. Now,

(22:02):
crude oil is right there at the fifty seven dollars
a barrel level. As I said of the last few days,
you got to look at the crude oil price and
see where it's going to let us know whether we're
getting peace for sure or not between Russia and Ukraine.
And it's pretty dead. Flatly, we got a six cent
move on oil. So what does that tell you? I
tell you that the traders don't know either. The last
couple of days they were more confident about it, but

(22:24):
they're holding right here now. They're waiting and seeing, and
that's what you should do too. So if you have
a politician or someone who pretends that they know what
they're talking about on the news, saying they know one
way or the other about this piece deal, don't listen
to them, because the people with real skin in the
game millions and billions of dollars on the price of oil,
are telling you right now, at that three cent number
you see at the bottom of your screen, that they

(22:45):
don't know either. Let's take a look at bigcoin right now,
still struggling to get back to the ninety thousand dollars mark,
and yeah, there it is, eighty six thousand, still on sale,
still forty thousand dollars below where it was at its
all time high. Just a couple of months ago. So
there you have it with bitcoin.

Speaker 4 (23:01):
All right.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
Here's another reason why I'm so happy to talk about
the markets this morning, and that's because of Google. As
you know, one of my long term frustrations in news
lately has been the story about how Nvidia a great company.
By the way, I got nothing against Nvidia as a company.
They make the chips that power some of the most
intricate AI systems in the country. But Nvidia is a

(23:23):
boring company to talk about and to show you on
the screen because it just makes chips. There's really nothing
exciting about it. At least I have Google getting into
the mix now. The markets were actually very intrigued this
week so far by the fact that Google is now
making AI chips that are competing with Nvidia, and Meta,
the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, says that they're

(23:45):
likely to buy some more Google chips instead of in
Nvidia chips. So now I have a little bit of
a sexy story. Now we've got real competition going. Google
has a few more interesting pictures for me to show,
and I'm a little bit happier. Thank you, thank you,
thank you. That's my holiday gift. I just don't want
to talk about it in video all the time. The
fact that they're having big competition and Google's in it
now and good old American ingenuity is at play. That

(24:07):
makes me happy.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Now.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
There are plenty of things to be concerned about in
our economy, folks. As you know, I'm a huge, huge
person talking all the time about how our housing situation
isn't good enough in this country, and that's a huge
part of our economy. But if you're going to be
one of these people like in the mainstream media that
every single day now for the last month, have been
leading with stories about how bad our economy is, at
least be honest and talk about what you would have

(24:30):
to consider in your opinion to be the exceptions to
the rule. Of course, they're not going to do that,
so I'm going to do it. We got yesterday a
number of retail chains telling us that not only was
their July through September quarter good, but they're expecting the
Christmas season, which is now underway, to be very very good.
They include Coals. Coals was supposed to lose money in

(24:50):
the summer, they made money instead, and their stock jumped
big time. Yesterday, Best Buy saying the same thing, made
more money than people expected, and they're expecting a strong
Christmas Yeat Abercrombie and Fitch because they own Hollister. Now
there they are on the screen said Hollister is making
them big money and they're expecting that to continue through
the Christmas season. And last week Gap, which owns Banana

(25:12):
Republic and Old Navy in addition to Gap, said the
same thing again, not saying that we have an aplus
economy going on here right now, but if these retail
chains are doing well, then there's a lot of good
things going on in the economy. Also, if you're going
to report about the economy, you've got to give people
the full picture. I'm trying to do that for you here.
You know, I complain and worry about the housing costs

(25:33):
and mortgage rates on the show. I'm not all perfume
and roses about the economy either, but I'm going to
tell you the truth about some of the good things.
And these retail chaining numbers yesterday were very interesting, better
than even I expected. Now, of course, after tomorrow the
official Christmas shopping season begins, and I just want to
make this clear before we get into the Thanksgiving holiday
and everything else.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
Like that.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
Between the end of Thanksgiving and Christmas Day, on this program,
I'm going to be paying even more attention to how
everonet is shopping and how the economy is going. But
before I do that, just want to give this disclaimer.
Of course, I know and you know that Christmas and
this time of year and all the holidays and New
Year's not all about shopping and money. Okay, I get it.

(26:14):
It's one of the reasons why I think It's a
Wonderful Life is the quintessential American movie because and not
giving anything away at the end of the day, it
lets everyone know that it's not all about money. It's
about friendship, it's about community, it's about religion and belief
and all that kind of stuff. So I am certainly
not all about money, folks. I do a business segment
on this program because that's a big part of our lives,
but at the end of the day, I know it's

(26:36):
more than that. So anyone going to be watching this program,
and I hope you do between now and the end
of the year, don't come at me with the materialistic stuff.
I'm just trying to give you a picture of the economy.

Speaker 4 (26:45):
Don't worry.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
I have my priorities straight, all right. One of my
other priorities is cars and trucks. So ladies and gentlemen
start your engines. This is Moving America sponsored by Artillery
Tea Company artillerytcode dot com. Use promo code RAV for

(27:10):
ten percent off your order. Artillery T is all natural,
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for ten percent off your order. Hey, full disclosure time.

(27:31):
On Monday, I told you about the five hundred and
fifty or so million dollars GM was investing in some
of its supply chain factories, like the metal sheet factory
in Pharma. Well, now we know exactly where those investments
are ultimately going to go. They're going to go for
more gas powered cars and trucks, specifically the Chevy Silverado,

(27:52):
the GMC Sierra, and Cadillac Escalase. Thank you very much,
GM for listening to your customers and not Biden administration
officials who to you to go all electric and we're
basically going to kill your company. That's what's going on
right now now. Yesterday I also told you about the
thirteen thousand dollars that wasn't a typo. Thirteen thousand dollars
annual average insurance costs for young men in Toronto, Canada,

(28:16):
who are between the ages of eighteen and twenty six.
That's the average that they're paying just for car insurance.
My goodness, well, this is coming to the United States.
It's already getting close to that for some young men
in big cities. And this is another reason why self
driving cars are going to get more and more popular
in this country, whether you like it or not, because
here's what's going to happen. Whether you like it or not.

(28:36):
Self driving cars are still safer than humans. They really are.
I'm not saying I love them. I do absolutely want
them to be available, especially for disabled people in America
who were promised by their local governments that they would
have rides whenever they need them, and they never come.
And self driving cars have unchained disabled people who have
been chained in their homes for years metaphorically anyway, that's

(28:58):
another story. But it's gonna happen real soon, folks. And
this is my prediction. Insurance companies are going to come
to people and say, your premium is gonna be this
if you're not in a self driving car, but your
premium is going to be a lot lower if you
do drive a self driving car. And that's going to
be a real rubber hits the road moment for a
lot of people, and they will choose to say, Okay,
I'll go with the self driving car because I can't

(29:20):
afford thirteen thousand dollars a year just in car insurance.
This is my prediction. I'm not really coming down hard
one way or the other on the insurance companies whether
they're gonna do this, but I want everyone to remember
about that. Okay, coming up, Thanksgiving is a capitalist holiday, folks.
I'm going to explain why with our next guest when
American Sunrise Early Edition comes right back. It's Wednesday, November

(29:54):
twenty sixth. Here this morning's top stories. Not knock who's there.
It's the FBI, and it wants to to the six
Democrats who made that Military Sedition video last week, who
paid for the video, who wrote the script, and other
questions like that are likely to be asked. I've been
asking them. Ukraine says it accepts the US created terms
of a deal to end the war with Russia, but

(30:16):
now it's not clear if Russia is on board. But
wait a minute, didn't the mainstream media and the Democrats
say that the Russians are the ones who dictated the
terms to President Trump in the first place. Doesn't that
mean that the mainstream media isn't always truthful? The hell
you say? As the Christmas shopping season is set to
kick off for real, a number of key retailers are

(30:38):
now predicting a merry Christmas. Indeed, and it's not just
Walmart this time. And New York Mayor Alex Zoron Mamdani
keeps appointing infamous opponents of the police to his top
staff positions. This isn't gonna work out well, is it.
American Sunrise Early Edition continues now. I am Jake Novak.

(31:04):
Welcome back to American Sunrise Early Edition this Wednesday before Thanksgiving.
Thank you for carving out a little bit of time
before you carve out your turkey. See how I did there?
See what I did there? To join us this morning?
Joining US right now is a friend of this program
and tell us State CEO Jason Dusseau, And Jason, first
of all, we're happy you're here in the US and
not that foreign country of Canada for Thanksgiving, because let's

(31:26):
face it, Canadian Thanksgiving is lame. They do it in October.
It's nothing, It's nothing. How could you blow a holiday
like Thanksgiving? And we'll talk about that in just a
second a little bit more. But listen, I can plain
a lot on this program about how much I feel
forced by the news media to talk about the news,
not really the news media, I don't really listen to
the rest of the media, but how I feel much

(31:48):
forced by the actual news in the markets, to how
I feel forced to talk about Nvidia. I just complained
about it in the last segment. It's a great company.
I got nothing against it, but it's so boring to
talk about. But I got something sexy now. At least
Google is challenging in video and the markets really took
notice of this. Are we finally getting in the AI
space some real competition instead of just one stock dominating

(32:11):
the whole market. That's never healthy?

Speaker 4 (32:13):
Is adjacent?

Speaker 8 (32:14):
Well, absolutely, I mean competition is important, and to be
able to see these superscalers move from customers and to
become competitors and suppliers is obviously fantastic for the market.
It's going to lead to lower cost, faster innovation, and
of course access to AI compute. In my opinion, AI

(32:37):
compute is the new oil, and as many competitors you
can get in there, the better. And video was the
big boy in the first wave, but there's a lot
of other players that are entering, including Google, Meta Intel
and a number of other smaller innovation companies that are
coming out.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
That's right, I mean, listen, I always use, of course,
the definitive source and the most knowledgeable source about what's
going to happen with AI and that of course are
the original two terminator movies. And as we know, sky
Net had no competition, and if only sky Net had
had some competition, maybe they would have been a nice
terminator who would have come in and like, you know,
take it out your garbage and done your yard work

(33:15):
or something. I don't know. Skynett just needed some competition
and that would have been wonderful. All kidding aside, Jason,
the mainstream media is not funny, does not make you
feel good to watch their programs. And by the way,
the mainstream media that keeps bashing the economy and telling
everyone that you're going to go broke and you have
no money, has anyone actually told the people who are
doing those programs that they have advertisers and that after

(33:37):
they say that doom and gloom, that advertisement comes on
asking people to spend their money. Has anyone sort of
figured out the disconnect there, Hey, you're gonna go broke
and you have no money, and now buy this car.
I mean, I don't understand how that works, and I
wonder these big stations aren't working. Look, you and I've
talked about this. You're barely giving the economy right now
a passing grade. And I absolutely understand that I'm a

(33:58):
little bit slightly more optimistic than you are, but we
both agree that it's passing. It's doing okay. And yesterday
we got this news from Cohl's, from Dick's Sports, from
Abercrombie and Fitch via Hollister a few other Best buy
that they're doing great and they're expecting great sales.

Speaker 3 (34:15):
Now.

Speaker 1 (34:15):
Again, that doesn't mean everything is rosy, but don't you
have to include the good news? With the bad I mean, come.

Speaker 4 (34:19):
On, yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 8 (34:23):
You know, the economy is always changing, and this current
administration inherited a lot of issues. Inflation is sticky because
of structural issues. We have decades of under investment in energy, shipping,
and domestic manufacturing, all three of these pain points the
current administration is focusing on. We need to give them
a little bit more time. But it is improving. I mean,

(34:45):
the inflation numbers in the US have stayed sticky, above
below the average around the world. And you never know,
we might be getting a two thousand dollars check in
our pockets in the new year to help us out
through this assessed as well.

Speaker 1 (35:01):
That's right, you're talking about the tariff rebate that President
Trump is hoping to send to American taxpayers. But just
just one second here, Jason, I want to recreate a
phone call that's going on right now at Warner Brothers
Discovery with David Zaslov and GM. Hello, mister Zaslov, this
is GM. I don't think we're going to be paying
for any more commercials on CNN. Oh why is that?

(35:23):
You just told all the viewers they can't afford our products? Oh,
I mean, really, these people are. I mean, you just
there should be an absolute prize for the morons who
decide to do this. Do they not know they have advertisers?
I just don't get it. All right, Jason, let's talk
bigcoin right now. Because the bitcoin price I would show
it every day on this program, we're about forty grand

(35:44):
below that all time high. Is this? You know again?
I feel like this is it's already been. This has
happened a couple of times. We've had these ups and downs.
Is this a by the dip moment for bitcoin?

Speaker 8 (35:58):
Well, I'm never going to give anyone at this investment advice.
I personally believe in bitcoin. I'm a long term investor.

Speaker 5 (36:06):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (36:07):
You know, bitcoin is one of those very interesting you know,
I call it a commodity. Interesting commodities in the way
that it's new and there's a lot of haters out there,
and it is going to disrupt the central banking system.
Uh And because of that, you've got you know, there's
a rumor that's been going around in the in the
bitcoin community talking about Jamie Diamond and JP Morgan and

(36:29):
a lot of bitcoin supporters actually closing their chase accounts.

Speaker 5 (36:33):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (36:34):
So, you know, again, there's so much fear that's been
built into bitcoin of you know, is this real?

Speaker 4 (36:44):
Uh?

Speaker 8 (36:44):
And you know, obviously it is. Now you're getting the
institutional support, getting the banks, you're getting large companies using
it as egic investment.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (36:54):
It's a much different store of value than it's ever
been before. And also, you know, if you follow charts,
and you know, you can go onto YouTube and just
put in bitcoin charts, you'll see that it does exactly
this before it hits new all time pies. So Bitcoin's
here to stay. It's here forever. The central banks are

(37:14):
going to have to get used to it. People are
interested in actually owning their own money, and the future
is decentralized. So again, I'm a very long term supporter
of bitcoin, and currently I believe that you should always
be mining bitcoins. But certainly today you're getting at the discount.

Speaker 5 (37:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
Yeah, I'm really glad you put it in those terms,
because whenever bitcoin has a dip like this, I get
comments from people saying, I told you it was all
phony and it's not worth anything and it's going to
go away, and I just like, listen, it may take
a long time to recover. Maybe it'll maybe it'll maybe
won't even hit that high again. But it's not going away.
Stop with this nonsense. I mean I heard this during
the Internet boom too, the dot com boom.

Speaker 5 (37:53):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (37:53):
No, one's going to be using the Internet. It's going
to be the CBE radio of the nineties. I mean,
come on, it's not going away. The value of it
is inherent, people, get it again. Doesn't mean you have
to bid it up to one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars or a million bucks. That's a great debate to have,
and that's what makes markets. You need bulls and bears
for a market to work, but you don't need bulls
bears and doomsayers who say it's all going to end.
If you believe in the doom sayers, then just you know,

(38:16):
just go get a safe room and sit there. Honestly,
that's what you need. Lastly, Jason, I want to take
go back to Thanksgiving just for a second, because this
is an important message that I think I hope everyone
shares it, which is why I've been saying it for
the last two days on this program. This is day two.
Thanksgiving is an incredibly important capitalist holiday. Yes, it is

(38:36):
a day of thanks but if you know your history.
The Pilgrims the first year that they got here to
what it became the United States got here to America,
got to North America, they lived in a collectivist farm.
Everyone just was. There was no personal property. That's why
they almost starved. Not because they couldn't figure out how
to do farming. It's not like Europe is great for
farming all the time. They knew of hardship, they knew

(38:59):
of cold weather, they knew about all that kind of stuff.
It's not like it's what do they think. They didn't
come from Florida. They came from They came from Britain. Okay.
It's in case you didn't know the weather in always
great over there. Okay, they knew that, Okay. But after
that they gave everyone their own parcel of land that
they owned and were responsible for, and suddenly they had
a surplus. Jason Capitalism, since even before the times of

(39:22):
the Pilgrims, has been the greatest anti starvation program in
the history of the world. That's why we're making progress
with getting people fed in this world. I hope everyone
remembers that. Any thoughts on that.

Speaker 8 (39:35):
You know, yeah, there were some thoughts, and I'm very
disappointed because I was hoping to surprise you this morning
with that story. Oh gotcha. You're exactly right. Thanksgiving is
a capitalist holiday. And you know, the most obvious, of course,
is Black Friday. But maybe a less obvious story, which
you just did very well describing, is that you're exactly right.

(39:58):
In fact, the Pilgrims almost starved your one because of
community farming. Uh and through private ownership and families farming
for themselves. It was very early example how self responsibility
uh and uh an ownership creates and drives prosperity.

Speaker 4 (40:19):
UH.

Speaker 8 (40:19):
So you know, but Thanksgiving, of course, isn't always It
isn't just about economics.

Speaker 4 (40:23):
It's about getting together with your family.

Speaker 5 (40:25):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (40:26):
It's about supporting your community and most importantly, uh, feeling grateful.
You know, we all have something to feel grateful for
in some positions, like myself, I have so much to
be grateful for. And I'm very grateful to be in
the US uh this week and uh and sharing a
meal and time uh and and watching some football with

(40:47):
my with my family and my parents and and my
brother uh and and so yeah, it's it's a very
important holiday. And and and as you said, a very
capitalist holiday.

Speaker 1 (40:57):
That's right, and the best thing is that capitalism talk
the pilgrims that they had to get rid of those
belt buckles on their hats. I'm so glad that that change,
Jason to so thank you so much for joining us,
and have a very happy Thanksgiving.

Speaker 4 (41:08):
Happy Thanksgiving, Jake, thank you.

Speaker 3 (41:11):
Hey.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
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Do the seditious six Democrats think they're even original? They're not.

(42:35):
The effort to sow seeds of doubt and defeat in
a nation's military are nothing new. In fact, this plot
was part of the great novel and movie Doctor Shivago.
Comrade David Brody and I will explain when American Sunrise
Early Edition marches right back. It's a look at Chicago, Illinois.

(43:12):
You can see the traffic getting started there. That's Lake
Shore Drive, or LSD as some people call it. Don't
drive on that drive while you're on LSB please, although
believe me, I've had a number of people driving near
me on the Lakeshore Drive who appear to be on LSD.
Beautiful day there, and the Chicago has got that unique
situation where the best beach in town is right kind
of like on the fifth Avenue of Chicago. It's an

(43:33):
interesting set up there for the five and a half
minutes of the summer when it's warm enough to go swiming.
They're just kidding, they have warm summer. Welcome back, hey, folks.
When I first saw that video made by the Democrats
Seditious six trying to get discord and confusion going in
the military, it reminded me of something. It took me
a few days to remember what it was reminding me of,
but then it came to me and here it is,

(43:55):
courtesy of the great director David Lean and the classic
Alec Guinness. Check this out out.

Speaker 5 (44:06):
I was ordered by the party to enlist. I gave
my name as a Petron. They were shouting for victory
all over Europe, praying for victory to the same God.
My task, the Party's task was to organize defeat. From
defeat would spring the revolution, and the revolution would be

(44:27):
victory for us. The party looked to the conscript business,
most of them wearing their first good pair of boots.
When the boots wore, I'll they'd be ready to listen.
When the time came. I was able to take three
battalions with me out of the front line. The best
day's work I ever did.

Speaker 1 (44:48):
Of course, that's the great Doctor Hivago, one of the
greatest movies of all time. Comrade David Brody, this is
exactly the Bolshevik playbook infiltrate the military, make them confus used,
use their confusion and maybe they're maybe they're dissatisfaction with
something going on in their life, to sow the seeds
of discord. This is an old playbook. And I love

(45:11):
remembering that from that movie because that's exactly what the
Bolsheviks did. That's how they took over the Soviet Union,
and that's how became the Soviet Union, and that's how
communism was really born throughout the world, and the hundreds
of millions of dead stemmed from that tactic. That's why
this is no joke. What's going on here with these
six democrats.

Speaker 9 (45:27):
Great point, and you know you don't often get an
omar Sharief reference, So thank you.

Speaker 4 (45:34):
I appreciate that.

Speaker 1 (45:35):
Let me just say, when movies.

Speaker 9 (45:36):
Go over three hours, y, I don't know what Doctor
Zivago clock's in at, but it's it's long. You're kind
of starting to lose me a little bit. I'm just
gonna be honest. But it's great, don't get me wrong.

Speaker 1 (45:48):
Right, people Binge watched suff for ten days now these
days three hours is nothing?

Speaker 4 (45:53):
Come on?

Speaker 9 (45:53):
That is actually a good point. But they could have
made it a mini series or a limited series. I
think that would have helped me out, just from an
ADHD standpoint. All right, so a couple of things, well,
actually one main thing.

Speaker 1 (46:05):
How about a movie called Rules for Radicals?

Speaker 9 (46:07):
I mean, right, isn't it out of the same playbook
if you think about it, right, I mean, this is
what the liberals do, and we saw it. Honestly, you
could make the argument, not even make the argument's true
what they did with George Floyd and how they took that,
and you know, it's always about just getting the masses
worked up and involved. And there's no doubt about what
they're doing to here with this situation regarding the.

Speaker 4 (46:31):
Quote illegal orders.

Speaker 1 (46:32):
But this is I would suggest even.

Speaker 9 (46:34):
Far more dangerous based on the fact that we're talking
about the military. Now, you're getting the Uniform Code, Uniform
Code for military justice involved in terms of that aspect
to it, and that raises a whole host of issues
and that's why Pete Hegseth is involved.

Speaker 1 (46:50):
Now, Yeah, all right, listen, Join us tomorrow same time,
seven am for Bo Davidson Special Giving Thanks and American Centrise.
The Big Show starts now.
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