Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Ahead on an American Sunrise early edition.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Israel's parliament approves the Trump peace plan, and the ceasefire
in Gaza is in effect at this hour. Now, of course,
the question is will Hamas deliver on its promise to
return the living hostages Monday or Tuesday?
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Karma is a witch.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
The woman who went after President Trump on a never
before prosecuted mortgage charge is now facing a mortgage fraud
indictment herself on a very common charge. But will Letitia
James play the martyr card all the way to an acquittal.
It's day ten of the government shutdown, and everyone's patience
is starting to wear thin. Even the usually very mild
(00:46):
mannered speaker Mike Johnson, he's blowing up a bit at
Chuck Schumer, who will blink first? In Virginia, the one
and only governor's race debate last night between Republican wins
Sears Andmocrat Abigail Spaanberger was a very stark study and contrast.
Spamberger wouldn't go off script. She was robotic while see
(01:09):
her As aggressively went after her. And the front runner
for next year's governor's race in California may not be
the front runner anymore. Social media has now flooded with
recent and not so recent videos of Democrat Congresswoman Katie
Porter being just playing nasty to reporters and her own staffers.
(01:30):
The American Sunrise Early Edition starts now.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
Welcome to American Sunrise Early Edition. The show We're Faith,
Freedom and the values that built this nation takes centers to.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
Your good deeds and bad DEAs.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
That's how we're gonna judge You.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
Join host Jake Novak because he breaks down the stories
that met.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
He will be letting the public know regularly what we
have found.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
American Sunrise Early Edition with your host Shake Nobad starts now.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Welcome everyone.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
It's a no tie Friday here in an American Sunrise
Early Adition. Maybe I should call it a no war
Friday because we do have the ceasefire in effect right
now between Israel and Hamas Israel's parliament coming through and
approving the Trump peace Plan. Now, of course, of course,
we just wait to see if the hostages will be released.
President Trump says it would be Monday, and Tuesday, President
(02:31):
Trump will be heading to the area. Two hundred American
troops of some sort will be going to the region
to monitor the ceasefire deal. I don't think that they'll
really be having to do all that much, hopefully, and
hopefully they will stay very, very safe, and so on
and on down the line. We definitely have something to
celebrate this morning, not the Nobel Priest Prize Committee. However,
they of course decided overnight not to give it to
(02:53):
President Trump. We'll talk about all that as we move on,
but I want to talk about the overall situation here
in America that we are experiencing every single week and
keep our discussion at home as we begin this program today.
And helping me do that is Reverend Donald Easton. He's
the president of CURE, which is the Center for Urban
Renewal and Education. And you know, Reverend Easton. It seems
(03:16):
like every week we meet a new American man, usually
between the ages of twenty and thirty, who's committing another
horrific act in America. Now, the latest example is this
person right here, the twenty nine year old man who
started that fire that really, in many ways is the
greatest single disaster in dollar signs in American history. Luckily
(03:37):
only twelve people died, but one hundred and fifty billion
dollars worth of damage, many many lives ruined. And because
we had Tyler Robinson, the assassin of Charlie Kirk, we
had the Minneapolis church shooting, a church school shooting suspect.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
This is just in the last few weeks.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
Every week it's another I mean, these are the kinds
of people that you're trying to reach, aren't you whatever
anything with what you're trying to work with.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
This is a crisis in America.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
Oh absolutely, And before we get started, thank you Jake
for having me on your show again. It's always a
pleasure to be here with you. Yes, these are the
kind of young men we are trying to reach. You know,
we have a society that has really beaten up on
our young men in our school system is beating up
on them. It's really young men need out lists. Young
men need mentoring, they need guidance, and they need structure.
(04:29):
And when you have a society that doesn't have a structure,
and what I mean by that is just basic things.
When you can say a man can be a woman
or a woman can be a man, that's taking things
out of structure. We need and young men need that
in order to grow up right. You know, young men
can be mistressed as it is. You know, there's a
(04:50):
story once told about these two young little boys that
used to run around the community and be mischievous, and
every time something happened, they knew it. As the two
young little boys, they were brothers, and the mother didn't
know what to do and sent them to a pastor
down the street. Everybody said he knows how to correct them,
and then the young man. She couldn't finally do anything
(05:11):
with us. So she sent them to this pastor and
they were sitting in front of him. The first one,
the oldest one, said you go in first, and the
youngest one that said you go in. So the oldest
one went in. He sat down on him at nine
or ten years old, and the preacher said to him,
where's God? And then he said to him, where's God?
And he got loud, and the young man ran out
of the house. He ran out the church, ran down
(05:32):
to his house, ran in the closet. His little brother
followed him. He said, what happened? He said, God is missing,
and they think we did it. And so we need
God in the young man lives. And that's what's missing
in our society. We need the young man to have
a moral framework to work from. I think it was
(05:53):
John Adamson said ours our constitution is for a moral
and religious people, and it's holly fit for no other.
And I think that's what's missing.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
You know.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
I think another thing that people might suddenly start to
realize is, you know, I don't like necessarily to play
on race all that much. But the three or four
people that I just mentioned at the beginning before I
before I brought to one of the program are all
young white men. And I think that this is now
something that the white community in America, which maybe felt
it was immune from for many years, is experiencing. But
(06:27):
you know, the African American community has been dealing with
this for a long time, the lack of guidance in
their own community, the fact that the politicians abandoned them,
took their vote once every couple of years in a November,
and then ignored them.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
Now you have the white.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
Community experiencing this as well, probably for a generation.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
Now.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
It's something that we've been seeing for a long time.
And there is a political angle to this. And that's
my preamble to talk about Governor Gavin Newsom here here
he is the governor of this state, that had this
worse from a price tag point of view, worse is
ap during American history. And the first thing that he
does is he starts making fun of the fact that
the fire starter is from Florida. Yes, he's from Florida.
(07:08):
Now he was living in California when he committed this act.
He moved to Florida later. The only thing Avenusom is
interested in saying is Haha, this guy lives in a
red state. This reminds me of the way that Democrat
politicians for years have been neglecting the African American community,
taking their vote for granted, making it just about that
and not about these people. And then you get all this.
(07:29):
You get so much sadness, you get so much failure
in a society. Sadly you're not unfamiliar with this, are you?
Speaker 4 (07:37):
Unfortunately not? I know, I grew up in Detroit. I
grew up in the urban community. And it really doesn't
It's not really about black and white as as much
as it boils down to one's moral character. We want
to make it about democratic and Republican and gaven Newsom
has certainly done that, But really it's about what are
these young men being taught what are we teaching in
our schools. I think we talked about on another segment
(07:59):
before the educational system. The moral decline is what's happening.
And it's easy to point to the left of the right,
or black or white, but really it's about the individual.
That's you know, a cure. That's what we talk about,
faith freedom and personal responsibility at the end of the day,
is the individual and not the group itself, but the
individuals within the group. If they if they improve themselves
(08:22):
and the group will improve if if we make it
about the group, the group is not the dynamic that
we want to focus on so much as we want
to focus on individuals improving themselves and they do it
as we believe a cure through faith, freedom and personal responsibility.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
Yeah, you know, I mean, just to bring this back
to what's going on in the Middle East. You know,
they have entire terrorist armies over there where the children
are used.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Young people are used.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Literally really literally because they strap them up with explosives
as cannon fodder.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
That's all there is.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
And now we have American politicians looking at our young
people the same way. This is a great way for
them to you know, they use them to indoctrinate the
stuff you're talking about, the trans stuff in schools. Great
way to get the parents' power away from them so
that the politicians have more power.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
That's all.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
They don't care about the trans rights or they're justed
in power.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
Same thing with the dunking on people.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
They don't care about this, the millions and billions of
dollars worth of damage or the shootings. They love the
idea of how much power they can get from it.
And it's really it's really rough. But rever you know, again,
there are tone deaf politicians that have been really just
not seeing the reality in front of them for a
long time. And I wanted to bring this to the
(09:32):
drug war and the drug scourge in this country because
he had Senator ran Paul yesterday posting this about how
he's upset the President Trump has declared war on the
drug cartels. He says it's not allowed in the constitution.
There we see these boats that have been getting blown
out of the water. Ran Paul is so tone deaf.
He doesn't understand this isn't It was bad enough in
(09:54):
the eighties and the nineties when the drug cartells were
trying to make a buck and get rich off of
our young people. But it's more than that now, Reverend,
they are deliberately trying to destroy our country. This isn't
a lot of the drugs they are selling there actually
isn't much of a profit on them. It's really just
about destroying the country. This is not just like some
drug some drug dealer on a corner hoping to make
(10:16):
a buck. This is about decimating the American population. Again,
something that people who are aware of what's going on
in our urban streets have known for some time.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
Absolutely, it's always been about well, I won't say we
always but it's been about destroying the American culture. First,
if we go back to the urban community, they took
the fathers out of the home, and now they're flooding
our streets with drugs. And then of course they're flooding
our community with illegal immigrants. And this is destroying America.
But in order, I believe it was the first Bush
(10:48):
just say it's time for a new world order. And
in order to have a new world order, you have
to take down the most powerful, the most free country
in the world, which is America. So it is definitely
about bringing down this country. And what President Trump is
doing is trying to save this country, as he says,
he wants to make our country great again. And part
(11:11):
of it is you have justice is required. We serve
a just God, and what that means is when people
do criminal acts, they have to be held responsible for him.
If they're not held responsible for it, you have what
we've been having in our street with Antifa and other organizations.
You have mayhem, you have anarchy. And what President Trump
(11:31):
is trying to do is bring a form of justice
into our streets or responsibility for bad behavior or bad actors,
and it's very much needed.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Absolutely, Reverend.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
I want to finish up by showing you what I
consider to be a really scary moment. Last night, we
had the one and only governor's race debate in the
state of Virginia. Winsinceers, the Republican nominee, versus Abigail Spanberger,
the Democrat nominee.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
And this was the moment in the debate.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Where when sinceris challenged Abigail's Bamberger to finally call for
Jay Jones, the attorney general candidate, who was caught sending
texts about how he wanted to have the leader of
the House of delegates, the Republican leader murdered and his
children murdered, and double down on it later. Wasn't a
drunk text he called the person he texted later to
defend those horrific comments. So here she is talking to
(12:18):
Abigail Spamberger from across the you know, the stage, asking
her why she just won't ask him to drop out
of the race. And I want you to watch Spamberger
and her reaction because it's downright frightening.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
Check it out.
Speaker 5 (12:29):
I don't understand why you just can't come forward and
say he needs to go. I mean, we're talking about murder.
We're talking about someone's life being taken from them. Have
you nothing to say about that? Are you not going
to address it? Really, you can't go any further. You're
a governor. You're supposed to stand up for all the people.
(12:51):
Are you saying political murder is all right?
Speaker 2 (12:58):
I mean, governor, this is how we get radiizes you
who had Spenberger just standing there like a robot, as
if she wasn't even in the room. She can't simply say, yeah,
fantasizing about murder is wrong and you should drop out
of the race.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
We want to hold people to a higher standard.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Not only does she not address that, she just stands
there like she can't even hear anyone talking to her.
Speaker 1 (13:18):
This is scary, scary stuff.
Speaker 4 (13:21):
That's the first time I saw that clip, Jake, and
that is scary. I've heard what the attorney general candidates
said on the Democratic side about fantasizing about killing his
opponent or his opponent being killed and his opponent's children.
And you mentioned earlier about a lot of what they're
doing is about power. Do you want someone that thinks
(13:43):
that way in power? Is the attorney general of a
state and the person that's running for governor on the
same ticket, the same platform as the person had this
fantasy authority. It's not just fantasy. He put it out
in worlds he texted. And not speak out against that.
That is a scary proposition. Even for the people of Virginia.
(14:07):
I would not recomend that they vote for that attorney
general or that gubernatorial candidate that is not willing to
speak out against that, because if those two getting in power,
that's a scary proposition.
Speaker 6 (14:21):
It really is.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Well, Reverend Donald Lison, let's have a peaceful weekend. Thank
you so much for addressing all these things. We'll speak
to you against sin.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
Thank you, Thank you, jenk thanks for having me. God
bless you.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
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Tax Network USA handle your tax issues coming up. He's
usually very calm, but House Speaker Mike Johnson is getting
testy about this government shutdown. You'll hear it for yourself
when American Sunrise Early Edition comes right back. It's a
(16:01):
live look at Seaside Heights, New Jersey. It's Chiley here
in the Northeast this morning. I want to say, so
when you wake up this early to do this program,
you start getting hungry for pizza pretty early as well.
So we're all looking at the Three Brothers pizza, and
we're hungry for pizza. You're probably looking at thinking about
cornflakes or a breakfast sandwich.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
That's what we want.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Welcome back to American Sunrise Early Edition. It's a Notes
High Friday special. Welcome and thank you to those of
you who are watching on the Getter and the Rumble
platforms X and Substack who are watching and commenting.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
Appreciate your comments. Hey, welcome back.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
House Speaker Mike Johnson has just about had it with
Chuck Schumer and the Democrats voting day after day to
extend this shutdown. Remember it's the Democrats who are voting
for the shutdown. The Republicans keep voting for a continuing
resolution just to keep the government open. We can have
the discussion and the debate another time about all the
spending and how it needs to get under control. And
(16:54):
I'll actually have an important story in a few minutes
for you about the dead in America right now. There's
an interesting way to look at it. But still it's
the Democrats who are voting for this shutdown. And you're
about to see Speaker Mike Johnson get about as agitated
as he gets, at least in public. Listen to this
as how he describes how he's feeling about Chuck Schumer.
Speaker 7 (17:13):
They're desperate. There's a rising Marxist wing in the Democrat Party.
They're about to lect a mayor of New York City.
Chuck Schumer is from New York. He sees a rising
Marxist challenge to himself. And there's one thing that Chuck
shemer cares about more than anything else, and that is
his Senate seat. The guy's been in Congress for forty
four years. He doesn't know how to live life outside
this building, and so he will do anything to make
(17:35):
sure that he keeps that seat. He thinks say, oh see,
he's going to challenge him or some other Marxists. I'm
just telling you the plain truth, and I take no
pleasure in this. I'm trying to muster every ounce of
Christian charity that I can.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
But this is outrageous.
Speaker 6 (17:47):
He's playing games with the American people.
Speaker 7 (17:49):
Real people are being hurt, veterans and troops and everybody
people that rely on these services. God bless America. Do
the right thing and open the government.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
You know, I wonder if Speaker Johnson has one of
those incredible hunk Hulk don't make me angry.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
You wouldn't like me if I'm angry.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
I'm talking about old school Hulk, Bill Bixby Hulk, not
not those other guys, Not Mark Ruffalo. Mark Ruffalo makes
me angry all the time. Actually, So anyway, it looks like,
you know, maybe he's like a superhero in secret when
he gets very angry. But that's about as close to
incredible Hulk anger is you're gonna see from Mike Johnson.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
So you can tell he's pretty agitated. All right.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Let me be blunt, almost as blunt as Speaker Johnson was.
Gold is up around forty percent this year. Crashing through
that four thousand per ounce mark.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
You saw it.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
That's not speculation, that's reality. And if a portion of
your savings isn't diversified.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
Into gold, you're missing the boat. Here's the facts.
Speaker 2 (18:42):
Inflation is still too high, the West dollar is still
too weak, and the government debt is insurmountable. This is
why central banks are flocking to gold. They're the ones
driving prices up to record highs. But it's not too
late to buy gold from Birch Gold Group and get
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(19:27):
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with Perch gold coming up. Ferrari had its worst day
ever at the stock market yesterday.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
I'll explain why. Hint.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
It comes down to two little letters, and I bet
you can guess what those letters are. American Sunrise early
edition will be right back. Look at the east side
(20:06):
of Manhattan, looking at the East River, and look at
that sunrise reflecting off the East River. By the way,
they call it the East River, but it's still just
the Hudson River. Listen, you get New Yorkers angry when
you argue about this.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
It's still the Hudson.
Speaker 2 (20:21):
It becomes the Hudson after Manhattan again. Anyway, east River,
that's the Brooklyn Bridge, that first bridge that you see
there if you can squint your eyes in between that sunlight.
Beautiful shop this morning. Thanks to the controller for finding that. Hey,
let's take a look at where the markets are going
to open this today. We had a pause. All the
major industries were down yesterday, but it looks like they're
going to rebound this morning, at least modestly so and
(20:42):
gold still soaring, although gold did get under four thousand dollars,
no ounce a little bit yesterday. But are you see
it's back there?
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Above that. And look at crude oil.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
We're down at the sixty dollars handle for crude oil
a barrel. That's because of the peace steel between Israel
and Gaza, not a huge drop down. The actual the
war between Israel and Tramas didn't actually drive oil prices
that much higher over the last couple of years. Actually,
on October sixth, the day before October six, twenty twenty three,
the day before that terrific attack by Tramas, oil was
(21:13):
at the ninety dollars barrel level. So actually oil prices
have gone down a lot since that war started, but
the fact that it's over now or the ceasefire is
in place driving prices lower again. And let's take a
look at bitcoin. It was so close to the all
time high yesterday. I think it's taken. It's pretty much
where it was yesterday one twenty one six. The all
time high is about one twenty five, so we're very close.
Speaker 1 (21:37):
Hey, folks.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
Our national debt, of course, it keeps growing thirty seven
thirty eight trillion dollars. But Treasury Secretary Scott Besen is
reminding all of us that there's a different way to
look at the debt. Once in a while that you
have to do. It doesn't mean that our debt isn't scary,
But he's noting that our deficit to GDP ratio that
is our reading for this year compared to how much
(21:58):
the economy is growing this year year, is actually really narrowing.
In other words, we don't owe as much as when
you compare it to how much our economy is bringing in.
This is the argument for people who say we have
to grow out of this debt. Make so much money
for our economy that people, even if they're paying low
tax rates, are putting enough money into the government to
pay for our spending. Now, this is significant because the
(22:20):
economy hasn't been shrinking.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
Folks.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
If you've been watching this program, you know that we
had a very big growth spurt in the second quarter
of this year, very very strong. So if the deficit
to the economy is shrinking, that means that the deficit
is actually not as big as we thought. Again, I'm
trying to give you a little bit of a ray
of sunshine here about this. The economy is strong and
our deficit to the size of the economy is not
(22:44):
as big, so we can grow ourselves out of the
worst of it. We can't grow ourselves out of the
debt completely, but we can do some good damage to
the debt.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
And that's good, all right.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
President Trump is reportedly going to exempt generic drugs, generic
pharmaceuticals from all those farm school sutical tariffs that he
has in place. Remember he's trying to get the big
drug companies to make the drugs here in the United States.
That would absolutely crush the generics who make them in
some cheaper places.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
So there you go.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
And that's a shot of Teva, which is the big,
big generic pharmaceutical.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
Giant in the world.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
Their stock went up very nicely on that news yesterday
that it looks like President Trump's going to exempt the
part of the generics. Remember, he wants to get prices down,
so a tariffing the generics wouldn't help that. Hey, I
know what you did last summer America or this summer America.
Speaker 1 (23:33):
You smoked a lot of pot.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
Probably not those of you watching this program, maybe some
of you, but the pot smoking situation this summer must
have been through the roof. Because till Ray, which is
a big cannabis grower, reported really good numbers for the
July through September period profits and revenues till Ray shares
were of twenty two percent on that news. Till Ray
(23:56):
is a very volatile stock. If you're investing in it,
make sure you don't put your whole house on it.
But apparently the pot sales and the cannabis growing was
really really good this summer. We'll have to see what
that means. Maybe people were depressed. Po's not the answer, folks.
For some people. There's some conditions where it helps, but
I don't know if it helps for depression. Okay, ladies
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(24:54):
for twenty percent off your order. It was not a
good day for Ferrari Yesterday. Ferrari shares had their worst
day ever since Ferrari came to market. Ferrari, by the way,
has the greatest stock ticker symbol I've ever heard.
Speaker 1 (25:11):
Their stock ticker symbols are ACE Race. I love that.
Speaker 2 (25:15):
But they didn't love how they did yesterday in the
stock market. Again, they lost fifteen percent in one day,
and it was because you guessed it, because of EV's
Ferrari had promise that within a couple of years they
would be selling forty percent of their sales would be
electric vehicle sales. A couple of days ago they said,
wait a minute, not enough demand for that. We're going
(25:37):
to scale that back. We're not going to do that now,
it'll be a lower number. Investors didn't like that news,
not because they love EV so much, but because Ferrari
basically has thrown a lot of money down the toilet
on this forty percent goal. They wasted their time and
their money on this ridiculous goal. People don't want electric
Ferrari's not in large numbers. Maybe ten percent of you,
(25:58):
that's the most. And so this is a lot of
money that they wasted in R and D and other
stuff on something that's not going to happen. So the
investors punished Ferrari. Learn your lesson about this everybody. GM
maybe not learning this lesson. They're gonna roll out the
all electric Chevy Bolt again. They're going to bring it
back in twenty twenty seven. Now, this of course is
different from the Ferrari story because it's gonna list for
(26:19):
under twenty seven thousand dollars. That's the goal for this.
So they're going for the low cost market, not the
Ferrari people. Okay, so maybe it'll work for them. That
is still a couple of thousand dollars more though, than
the Nissan Leaf, which will continue to be the cheapest
all electric vehicle on the market. But as you learned
on this program a couple of days ago with that
video I showed you of the salesman from Florida, the
(26:39):
Nissan Leaf is the hardest car to sell in America.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
It is ugly.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
People don't want to buy it, even if you give
them a great deal, even if they've had bad credit
and the dealer ignores it, they still won't buy a
Nissan Leaf. So maybe the Chevy Bolt will come in
and get some of those buyers. Another GM story for
you here. You know that temporary shutdown at GM's Factory zero,
that's what they call it Factory zero. So it's in Hamtramck, Michigan. Well,
now it's not so temporary. It was supposed to reopen
(27:05):
on Monday this Monday, not so much. Now GM says
it's going to stay closed at least through the end
of the year. Factory zero is where they make the
GMC Hummer ev YEP, and it's also where they make
the Cadillac Escalade IQ. Just not enough demand for these vehicles.
If I owned a sweet twenty eighteen Porsche nine eleven,
(27:26):
I'd be really sad to find out that it had
been burned down to the ground to burn to a crisp.
Speaker 1 (27:31):
But I'd be really sad if.
Speaker 2 (27:32):
Someone had the video evidence showing that I was the
one who burned it. That's what happened to Brazilia watching
surveillance video here of a guy burning his own Portion
nine eleven.
Speaker 1 (27:43):
Why did he do this?
Speaker 2 (27:44):
Well, according to Brazilian police, he did it because he
owed a lot of taxes.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
On the vehicle, couldn't pay them.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
He was hoping to have the car destroyed, collect the
insurance money for it, and maybe out of that pay
not only.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
The taxes, but get himself another car.
Speaker 2 (27:58):
Well, he got busted, and I think he deserves it
for destroying a beautiful piece of art like a portion
nine to eleven.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
What a jerk.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
I think they should throw them in the slammer and
throw away the key. All right, Speaking of Moving America,
I have a big event to tell you about.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
I want you all to know. Take a look at.
Speaker 8 (28:13):
This two and a half centuries of honor, courage and commitment.
This Saturday, Real America's Voice presents America's Marine two hundred
and fifty Uncommon Valor, a two hundred and fiftieth anniversary
salute from the founding a Ton Tavern to today's Marines
(28:35):
defending freedom worldwide. Witness a historic tribute to their service
and sacrifice. Coverage begins at five pm Eastern, hosted by
Steve Bannon, Benny Harmony, Brian Glenn, and Jack Posobi wants
(29:00):
to join us for this one sin a generation salute
only on Real America's Voice.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
That he saw it Saturday. That's tomorrow, everyone tomorrow from
five pm. Starting at five pm, this incredible tribute to
the United States Marine Corps two hundred and fifty years.
A big special here on Real America's Voice.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
I hope you'll join us.
Speaker 2 (29:28):
You get a lot of reminders between now and five
pm tomorrow, but I hope you watch it. Hey, coming up,
it's the end of the Israel Gaza war and it's
a big win for President Trump. But who else wins
and who loses? We'll dig into that when American Sunrise
Early Edition continues. It's Friday, October tenth. Here are this
(29:58):
morning's top stories. Israel's parliament approves the Trump peace plan,
and the ceasefire in Gaza is now in effect as.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Of this morning.
Speaker 2 (30:07):
Now will Hamas deliver on his promise to return the
living hostages on Monday or Tuesday. It's day ten of
the government shutdown, and everyone's patience is starting to wear thin.
Even the usually very mild mannered speaker Mike Johnson is
blowing up a bit at Chuck Schumer, who will blink
first in all this?
Speaker 1 (30:29):
In Virginia, the one and only governor's.
Speaker 2 (30:31):
Race debate last night between Republican Winsome Seers and Democrat
Abigail Spamberger was a study in very stark contrasts. Spamberger
would not go off stripped. She was basically robotic at times,
while Sears aggressively went after her, and Karma is a witch,
I said, which the woman who went after President Trump
(30:54):
on a never before prosecuted mortgage charge is now facing
a very common mortgage fraud indictment herself. But will Letitia
James play the martyr card all the way to an acquittal.
American Sunrise Early Edition continues now and welcome to this
(31:14):
no Time Friday. Here an American Sunrise Early Edition, October tenth.
That's my sister's birthday. Happy birthday, Marianne joining us now
to talk about another I think a good piece of
news really overall, or at least in the in a
net category, is the piece in the Middle East or
the ceasefire between Israel and Almost to be more specific,
(31:35):
he is a really important voice on the Middle East
and defense tech. By the way, Jordan hersh she's a
senior counsel counselor at Volunteer Technologies and Jordan first, I
want to get to the big picture here. I hate
when people get too into the nitty gritty too soon.
I feel that the ceasefire deal is a win for
the good guys in general, starting with President Trump. I
(31:59):
know that there are some people who have some reservations
about this. What's your net outlook on all this? How
do you feel about this right now?
Speaker 6 (32:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (32:07):
Well, first, good morning and good morning to everyone listening.
And I think there's a lot of reasons to celebrate
this morning. Bottom line, is Amas gave up its leverage
and Edral did not, and there's a lot to worry about.
There's a lot to work out. It's the Middle East,
after all. But if you look at what happened, Amas
has given up the hostages or is God willing going
(32:27):
to give up the remaining hostages and the bodies of
those who had died in Gaza, And in exchange, Israel's
going to withdraw partially from Gaza. It's going to remain
in all the key corridors, It's going to remain on
the Philadelphia corridor, and if things go south, the Israeli
army is still present. I think that is a major victory.
What comes from here, there's a lot to work out.
We don't know how the disarmament process is going to work,
(32:50):
what the Arab countries are going to do as far
as rehabilitation and a political transition. But phase one is
really important. One of the major goal of this war
for Israel was the return of the hostages, and it
appears that we are on the verge of Israel accomplishing
that goal with help from the United States.
Speaker 2 (33:11):
It's going to be a bittersweet moment, and that's really
an understatement. When those hostages come back, especially the ones
who we know we've seen in videos, who are absolutely emaciated,
I don't know, they may not even be able to walk.
They when they are turned over, they may end up
coming through in wheelchairs. I'm bracing myself for that. How
about you.
Speaker 9 (33:32):
Yeah, I think there's a lot of talk of what's
gonna happen when the media goes into Gaza and sees
but in a lot of ways, we've seen that for
two years, and it's not to underestimate the devastation. Gaza's
a broken and rutch place, and that is Hamas's fault,
of course, for having launched this runeous war for itself
and for its people. But what people haven't seen, except
(33:54):
for when Hamask got extremely arrogant and started publishing the
videos of some of the hostages looking emaciated. As you said,
we have not seen the condition of the hostages that
have been there now for just over two years, and
I think it's going to be very bracing and a
very difficult thing for us, and let alone for Israelis
and for the families of the hostages.
Speaker 6 (34:13):
Hopefully they will be able to recover.
Speaker 9 (34:15):
With time, and many of the hostages have already been released,
have been able to do so and start getting their
lives back on some footing, whatever that might be.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
We're talking to you, Jordan, Herscham Pollantier Technologies.
Speaker 6 (34:28):
Jordan.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
Just before the ceasefire deal was announced, you wrote this
piece for a tablet magazine about the difference between June
Israel and October Israel. Can you generally tell us what
you're talking about there?
Speaker 9 (34:42):
Yeah, So this is something I thought about during the
Twelve Day War in June, and I was glad to
have a chance to write about it on the anniversary
of October seventh. I realized that historically, if you look
at some of Israel's wars, some of Israel's greatest successes
happened in June. Of course, we think of the June
nineteen sixty seven war. We think also now of the
(35:03):
Twelve Day War from this past June, but there have
been other incidents like the bombing of the Osiric nuclear
reactor in Iraq in nineteen eighty one, the Dog Fight
over Lebanon with Syrian miggs in nineteen eighty two, in
which Israel did not lose a single plane to almost
one hundred Syrian losses. And in October, by contrast, you
(35:23):
have the Yunk four War.
Speaker 6 (35:25):
Of course you have October seventh.
Speaker 9 (35:26):
But also really the earnest start of the Second Antifada,
the Noachshoun Waksman disaster from nineteen eighty four. And what
are these two historical moments really represent. They're not just
moments on the timeline, but I argue that they really
represent two different strategic paradigms. June Israel is proactive and
(35:47):
strong and competent, and also at the same time deeply
humble about what it knows and does not know of
its enemy intensions. And October Israel is more complacent, I
believe in its own sense of permanence, and it is
a risk averse, which puts it in situations like p
(36:08):
four or ten to seven, where it's not really anticipating
what's going to happen next.
Speaker 6 (36:12):
And I argue that these two historical streams sort of
revolve around.
Speaker 9 (36:16):
Each other throughout Israeli history, and the good news is
that I argue that I think we've entered that Israel
has entered a June moment, and the piece really breaks
down what we can expect from an Israel that has
entered a June moment.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
Jordan.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
Much of the world, especially Europe, attempted to appease the
Islamist masses in their own borders, inside their own borders
during this war by trying to distance themselves between from
Israel politically, and some even took the extra step of
promising not to buy any more Israeli defense tech. Denmark
found out the hard way you can't do that. Just
(36:54):
this week they said, yeah, we're actually going to have
to buy some Israeli defense tech because that's the best
out up there for certain things, especially missile defense and
things like that. Look, you're generally in this sector as well.
Palentered does a lot of defense tech as well. This
is like, it's like that old joke or the old
meme that said, hey, you want a boycott Israel, then
(37:15):
you need to give up your cell phone, your laptop
and a bunch of other things.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
This is just to me the reality here.
Speaker 2 (37:23):
And I guess now that the Seaspire is in place
sheepishly and quietly. I expect more European countries to backtrack
on some of these boycotts that they tried to execute.
Speaker 9 (37:33):
Yeah, well, I would say reality still gets a vote.
I give great credit to President Trump in particular for
weathering really a flood. And you saw this over and
over again on social media. We entered a moral panic
every three weeks, and the flood is what I think
some of the European leaders became subject to, particularly last month.
(37:53):
And now their actions last month looked a lot different
in life of President Trump's diplomacy that achieved the sea
fire and hopefully something more over time. And when I
say reality still gets a vote, I think if.
Speaker 6 (38:05):
You look at the results of the war, if.
Speaker 9 (38:08):
You paid attention only to social media and elite media
and certain dignitaries across the world, you would think Israel
was isolated. You would look at the boycotts from the
European countries and others. You would look at the walkout
from the United Nations. But what's happened in the last
week is really the entire table flipped over. Now it's
the Maas that's isolated. And I think the Israeli defense
(38:30):
tech is just an example of the fact that Israel
is one of the I think a dozen countries in
the world whose actions actually matter. It's on par with
all of the great powers, and you can't really say
that about many of the other countries that were supposedly
involved in what.
Speaker 6 (38:46):
Happened here to wrap up the war.
Speaker 9 (38:48):
So I think Israel the surface level looks like isolation,
looks like it was becoming a pariah, but that's quite
unlikely to happen. I think it is an absolute necessity
for country, and I think you will see countries begin
to roll back some of the seemingly symbolic moves they
made over the last several months. I think we'll see
them again, but I'm not too worried over the long
(39:10):
term because I think, as I said, reality gets a vote.
Speaker 6 (39:13):
The reality is.
Speaker 9 (39:13):
That Israel is one of a dozen countries who really
matter in the world, whose decisions will affect global affairs,
and that's not going to change anytime soon. I think
in many ways, Israel's now in a unipolar moment in
the Middle East, and the hard part will just be
managing that for them.
Speaker 2 (39:29):
Jordan, real quick, last time you joined us on this program.
We were talking about Pollenteers, amazing program for college age Americans.
They cannot go to college instead do this incredible. I
would just call it maybe an apprentice program that you
have a pollateer. And you know, when you see how
this war has ended up, and you see how much
(39:49):
this war somehow, because it doesn't make sense considering the
size of the country, somehow permeated the campuses of every campus,
elite campus in America and really seemed to distract so
many students from what they're there to do. And now
with the result of the war being that this pro
caamas element on campus, they're the big losers here. They
(40:10):
wasted their time. Some of them even got expelled from
these schools for what for a terrorist army which has
now basically been having to surrender. I wonder if you've
got to be patting yourself on the backup, Palenter, if
for having this kind of an option and showing this
to the parents in the coming years and saying do
you want your kid to do this or do you
want it to come over here?
Speaker 1 (40:29):
It's got to feel good for you, guys.
Speaker 6 (40:32):
Yeah, Look, program's going really well. We're very excited about it.
Speaker 9 (40:36):
The fellows have performed very admirably both and the kind
of seminar curriculum that we put together for them and
in the real work that they are doing for customers.
And I think to go back to the reality gets
a vote. They are doing real work on behalf of
real partners of ours and changing the way the world
works through our software, and that's quite a bit different
(40:57):
from what their peers can say on college campuses. So
I think we're very proud to be able to give
them that opportunity, and they are making a real difference
at pounds here. They are right alongside our engineers who
have been there for five, six, seven, eight, you know,
sometimes over a decade, and that's something that very few
eighteen year olds can say.
Speaker 6 (41:16):
So we are indeed very proud. It's only the beginning.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
Well, I hope that we continue to get more options
for all of our students, the elite students who are
great in the regular classroom, the ones who are really
good with their hands and can actually make things happen
all over the spectrum. We need more choices for our kids,
that's for sure. Jordan Hirsch, thank you so much for
joining us.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
Have a great weekend.
Speaker 6 (41:39):
Thanks so much.
Speaker 2 (41:39):
Shake coming up, David Brody and I will discuss this
whole Latitia James thing. It's about karma, and it's about
the entitled political class. It's also about arrogance. American Sunrise
Early Edition will be right back.
Speaker 3 (41:55):
This Saturday from two to five pm Eastern. Real America's
Voice brings you in the exclusive special event AMAC presents
Boot Camp for Patriots. Give me Liberty or Give me Death.
You're invited to a pivotal gathering of leaders, experts, and
patriots coming together at a time when America stands at
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Speaker 10 (42:16):
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(42:41):
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presents Boot Camp for Patriots this Saturday from two to
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Speaker 2 (43:00):
Beautiful Morning in America across much of the country. Right
here in the northeast. And this is not a shot
of the northeast, right here in the northeast of Chile.
Speaker 1 (43:07):
This morning.
Speaker 2 (43:07):
Had to turn on my heat. I hate turning it
on before November. I'll probably end up meeting the air
conditioning a.
Speaker 1 (43:13):
Little bit later. But there you go.
Speaker 2 (43:15):
Welcome back to American sunrise Early addition, it is a
no tie Friday. David Brody never complies with no time Friday.
And that's okay. This is not like a mask mandate.
I'm not going to make anyone do it. But anyway,
I want to talk about the Letitia James indictment because
there's something about it that I want people that I
think is indicative of.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
A larger strategy.
Speaker 2 (43:36):
All those people who went after President Trump went in
these ridiculous indictments, these conjured up cases and things like that.
I'm talking about people like Jack Smith, I'm talking about
people like Fanny Willis, and I'm talking about Letitia James,
even Alvin Bragg as well. Something you'd have to notice
about all those people I just mentioned, they're not even
the B team, David, They're the C team Jack Smith.
(43:58):
Before this whole Trump thinks started, had one of the
most embarrassing moments in the history of prosecution in this
country when a nine to nothing decision in the Supreme
Court slammed him down in his attempt to nail the
then governor of Virginia. Fannie Willis not exactly the greatest
light in the darkness. Letitia James. These people were set up,
(44:19):
I think by the DNC because they knew they were expendable. Listen,
for whatever you think about the Democrats, they do have
some great lawyers out there.
Speaker 1 (44:27):
These ain't want any of them.
Speaker 2 (44:28):
The people I just mentioned, and Letitia James was set up.
They set her up for something that she knew she
could take a fall for it.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
Now she is.
Speaker 10 (44:35):
When you say set up, explain that a little bit,
because you would think that the DNC would want these
prosecutions to go forward, and so obviously they did. So
what are you saying. Are you saying that they were
expendable in what sense?
Speaker 3 (44:47):
I mean?
Speaker 10 (44:47):
Ultimately, wasn't it all about getting Trump?
Speaker 6 (44:50):
No?
Speaker 2 (44:50):
What I mean is they knew that the best lawyers
out there wouldn't touch those cases with the ten football
and so yeah, so I should clarify they they got
the people who they could get to do this dirty
work and because they knew they didn't really have any
reputations to lose.
Speaker 1 (45:08):
There you go, that's.
Speaker 10 (45:10):
No, that that makes no, that makes a lot of
sense obviously. And yeah, you would think, let's look at
Letitia Letitia James for a second. So she she knew
about the alleged there it is alleged bank fraud that
she was committing back then. And I say, she may
not think she was committing bank fraud, but she knew
darn well what she was doing on that mortgage statement.
(45:32):
We assume I'm sorry, I have to do the alleged
and assumes The point is is that she knew what
was going on in her own life. And so you
would think that like maybe there would be a discussion
to say, hey, you know what, we're going to go
this route, but I'll just letting you know there are
a couple of skeletons here and you should just know
about it.
Speaker 6 (45:51):
And maybe they did.
Speaker 10 (45:52):
And to your point, you know what, so what because
they got to get someone to take the case and
she was the one. So I don't know. All I
know is that you look at Fannie Willis as well.
You mentioned her I mean the boyfriend's situation. Listen, if
you're gonna go after a very popular president of the
United States, Sorry MSNBC, but he was very popular, especially
(46:15):
with the magabase, you better dot your eyes and cross
your t's. And they didn't do any of that. And
now karma is a oh sorry, don't fill in the blank,
or maybe fill in the blank, because the truth of
the matter is which here it is by the way,
which yes, look, I'm sorry. Let me go to a
Bible verse instead. This is what it says in Proverbs
(46:36):
verse thirty one. In Proverbs one, they will eat the
fruit of their ways and be filled with the choices
they have made. I believe that means be careful what
you wish for.
Speaker 2 (46:47):
Yeah, listen, we're all sinners, but if you're actually committing
the sin that you're accusing someone else of doing at
that moment, don't get into.
Speaker 1 (46:53):
The prosecution game. All right?
Speaker 2 (46:54):
American Sunrise, the big show coming up. I'll see you
on Monday.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
On early edition,