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September 29, 2025 46 mins

American Sunrise Early Edition on Real America's Voice

Segment 1: COMEY CHARGES ARE ABOUT TRUTH

Segment 2: ILLEGAL ALIEN OUTRAGE

Segment 3: STOCKS GET GOOD FRIDAY FINISH

Segment 4: FIGHTING FOR IRYNA'S LAW

Segment 5: ADAMS STEPS ASIDE

 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Ahead on American Sunrise.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Early edition, America has become a nation divided between those
who commit or enable violence and those who want to
do something to stop it. The latest flashpoint is Portland, Oregon,
but there aren't any real sidelines anymore anywhere in America.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
A battle of another kind.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Is brewing in Washington, DC, as President Trump will meet
with congressional leaders today to discuss what it will take
to pass a spending bill and avoid a government shutdown.
One thing is for sure, the stigma of being blamed
for causing a shutdown no longer packs the same punge
it once did in the polls. Back to the violence

(00:43):
in America. The man who attacked a Mormon church in
suburban Flint, Michigan, yesterday, with shots fired and explosives has
been identified as a forty year old veteran of the
Iraq War.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Police and the FBI are searching for a motive.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
The shooter was killed, as was one innocent victim. In
New York, incumbent Eric Adams drops out of the mayor's race.
But is this a case of too little, too late
to stop Zorn Mamdani from winning? And how on earth
did an illegal alien with a gun charge against him

(01:17):
get hired to the three hundred thousand dollars a year
job as superintendent of a school district in Iowa. Actually
it's easy to understand. Well, his hiring was a secret
for one thing. But there's more to the story. American
Sunrise Early Edition begins now.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
Welcome to American Sunrise Early Edition, the show where faith,
freedom and the values that built this nation takes centers.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
To your good deeths and bad deaths.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
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 (01:52):
He will be letting the public know regularly what we
have found.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
American Sunrise Early Edition with your host Jake no That
starts now.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
I am Jack Novack.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
Welcome to American Sunrise Early Edition. Thank you so much
for joining us. As I said, it's been a very
very busy weekend here in the United States.

Speaker 1 (02:15):
We've got some stories that are still developing.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
We've got a storm in the Atlantic off the Atlantic
Coast that we're watching very carefully. We have the developments
of that deadly shooting and explosive attack on a Mormon
church in suburban Flint, Michigan yesterday that we're watching to
try to get more information on the man who committed
that act. And of course we have a budget bill battle,
government shutdown on the front burner. So many things going

(02:41):
on today helping us get through a lot of it
is right now. Republican Congressman Randy Fine from the state
of Florida. Congressman Fine, I'm sorry to say this, and
this is something we've talked about before, but I'm sorry
to say this, but it really feels very much like
we're in the middle now of a kinetic, physical, violent
civil war in America. And like the Confederacy of old Congressmen,

(03:03):
we have politicians in certain states who are working over
time to block federal authorities, national Guard troops, or FBI
agents or ICE agents from coming in and re establishing
the peace.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
I just have to get your overall take on this.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Obviously, Portland is the flashpoint right now, but there's a
lot of problems across the country in these blue states
where their leaders are not allowing for peace and justice
to unfold.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
Well.

Speaker 5 (03:30):
The sad fact is that I thought you were going
to say Chicago, not Portland, And the fact that there's
multiple cities where you can make these statements just tells
you how bad we are. I think maybe the way
to describe it as a cold civil war where you
don't have troops amassed in the town square firing at
each other, but you've got one side that's clearly engaging

(03:50):
in violence over and over and over again, trying to
stop the government, the federal government from doing its lawful duties,
and frankly, is trying to facilitate the foreign invasion of
people from other countries. So I think we're in a
very terrible place as a country, and it makes me
very concerned about what our future looks like.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Yeah, I mean, it's generally cold, but these sporadic attacks
are picking up. They're picking up, and they seem to
be planned, they seem to be coordinated, and at this
point it's only one group that's firing shots at the other.
And that's really disturbing. Congressman. It feels almost ridiculous to
shift from this brewing civil war, this violence in America,

(04:30):
to talking about elected officials enabling it, and then go
to a discussion about an impending government shutdown. But as
you know, carvon klausevit said that war is politics by
other means, and LBJ said, politics is war, and this
budget shutdown battle with the Democrats basically deciding that they're
willing to shut the government down unless taxpayers like you, you,

(04:53):
and me give illegal aliens pay for their healthcare, seems
like an active war in its own way.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
A political a active war.

Speaker 5 (05:01):
Yeah. I was going to say, their links. Really, when
you're willing to shut the government down in order to
provide free healthcare to illegal immigrants, and frankly, when you're
willing to shut the government down in order to try
to add a trillion and a half dollars of new
debt which will inevitably lead to the country's collapse down
the road, you have to wonder if you're dealing with

(05:22):
people whose goal is to build America or to destroy America.
We passed a non partisan, non controversial, seven week extension
to allow us to finish doing the budget in regular order,
which the Democrats will have the same amount of leverage
over as they do right now. But they're not willing

(05:43):
to let that happen. They want the government to shut
down if we don't continue to give billions to illegal immigrants,
and it's just crazy.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Yeah, And I don't think the Democrats seem to think
this is still twenty seventeen, when they could.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
Get a lot of juice.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
I'll say, from a number of different avenues in America,
just for standing up to President Trump, even if it's ridiculous. Well,
now you need to have a better reason. And as
you describe, there's no reason for them to not vote
for an extension. Now, if they were trying to be
budget hawks, Congressman, if they were saying, hey, we got
to get spending under control and we got to know
we're not going to take this seven week extension, that
would be one thing. But they want to spend more,

(06:20):
so it makes no sense. And I also don't think
people care about a shutdown as much as they did.
This is also not nineteen ninety five, let alone twenty seventeen.
People are not up in arms about shutdowns anymore. I
let's talk about the indict Go ahead, go ahead, Congress,
go ahead.

Speaker 5 (06:34):
I said, I think you're right. I don't think they do.
I think the other problem we have is the Democrats
playing to their far left base. I mean, the same
Democratic leaders who just a few months ago said no, no, no,
it's irresponsible to shut down the government have completely flipped
their tune because when they did that a few months ago,
they got so much grief from that far left radical base,

(06:58):
the base that frankly is fomenting the violence in our country.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Yeah, and this would be an act of violence in
its own way.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
Congressman, let's talk about the indictment of James Comy, because
as I showed, and I wasn't the only one, So
many people have showed the open and shut case evidence
against James Comy lying about leaking evidence and stories about
the Russia collusion investigation to the news media more than
once to Congress, And I'd like to get your take

(07:26):
on the way that I'm basically trying to lay this
out to people who are confused about what's going on here.
If we're going to say that the Russia collusion hoax
investigation was a serious crime, and it was. If we're
going to say that all of this caused so much
grief in America, Families broke up, friendships broke up, and also,
most importantly, our intelligence community has lost all of the

(07:48):
confidence that the American people had in it. These are
serious crimes. If we're going to say those are serious crimes,
because they are, and then we're not going to punish
the people who enabled it, then we're lying, and so
very simply this has to happen, This charge has to happened.
This is someone who absolutely made sure that this investigation
went on, made sure a lot of people believed it,
and continued that the real damage that I described before.

(08:11):
I don't see how James Comee can be the only one.
In fact, it's not a question of oh, they shouldn't
have indicted, and the question should be who else because
there were so many other people involved in this, And look.

Speaker 5 (08:21):
I hope you're starting to see the beginning of it.
The real extraordinary thing about the James Comy situation is
the sanctimony with which he lectured us for years about
honesty and government and everything else while he was clearly
lying in an effort to frankly execute it to against
Donald Trump. I mean, the deep state is real and

(08:44):
we're seeing it right here in terms of what these
wacko leftists will do to keep power. The only way
we get them to stop is if we hold them accountable.
And we warned the Democrats when they came after President
Trump there would be consequences for doing it. And James
Comy is only going to be the first to see
what that means.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Yeah, and I think it's it's it's really important for
people to understand the damage done. I don't know too
many right wingers or left wingers who believe the an
intelligence community anymore. And that's scary. I mean, it's just
simply is. And you know, again the left say, well
and now we support them.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 5 (09:24):
Honestly, that's the result of frankly, the Biden four years,
the destruction of confidence in government. Whether it's how they
handled COVID or they handled intelligence. Democrats have weaponized the institutions,
the fabric of our society to make them political. It
started with using the IRS to go after groups they

(09:45):
didn't agree with. All of these pillars of what make
America America, one by one by one they have weaponized
and destroyed confidence in them. We used to believe in
the CDC and the NIH. People used to believe in them,
and they ruined that with COVID, so over and over
and over again, the FBI, the IRS, the CDC, all
of these government agencies have been weaponized by Democrats and

(10:08):
confidence has been destroyed. The only way we solve this
is to go after the people who did it, put
him in jail and say this can never happen again.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Yeah, or otherwise, we need to stop complaining about it.

Speaker 2 (10:18):
If we're going to complain and discuss the damage done
and not punish the people involved just because we're worried
about the New York Times writing a headline that there's
some revenge action going on, then we're not serious. Finally, Congressman,
I want to talk about Prime Minister Benjaminsan Yahi. You
will be meeting with President Trump at the White House today.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
It's going to be a busy day at the White House.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
And this comes off the heels of that UN General Assembly.
It's always a sham here in New York last week,
but was very much punctuated by the fact that there
were several countries recognizing a Palestinian state. I don't know
what state they're talking about. They have no elected leader,
they have no capital, they have no actual function in government.
And of course they did not say, oh, we won't

(11:00):
recognize the state until Hamas is taken care of it
and the hostages are released. They have no preconditions at all.
To me, Thank goodness, President Trump is on the same
page with everyone who is sane in the world, and
that includes Berenjamin Ntanya about talking about how dangerous this
whole recognition trend is.

Speaker 5 (11:18):
Well, what's interesting, though, is we've entered a new phase
in this. You talk about sane versus insane. The problem
we have in many of these countries that have that
have recognized the fakus stand as I like to call it,
is that they now have admitted a substantial population of
radical Muslims that are a meaningful part of their voting base.
So in many of these countries, this is no longer ideological.

(11:39):
This is political where these left wing parties that are
in power have to cater to their mainstream Muslim base
to stay in power. This is the warning to America.
We have got to stop letting people into this country
who hate us, who don't want to share our values
and want to destroy it. Look at dear boris stand,
dear born as stand if you want to see where

(12:01):
America is going to go if we don't take this
stuff seriously. And I think that's what we have to
recognize is going on at the EUB. It's not ideology,
it's politics.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Now, yeah, and it's not really even about Israel.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
It's just an excuse, an excuse for violence and for
a takeover and having more power in the countries that
they go to Congress and Randy Fine got to get
you on a day when we have more good news.
But I appreciate all your commentary and.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Have a good week. Please.

Speaker 5 (12:25):
Thanks. Happy to be here anytime.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
All right, coming up, how the heck did an illegal
alien from Guyana with other criminal charges on his record
get hired to a high paying job as a school
superintendent in Iowa? Emily Finn and I will kick that
around and later. You know, I'm hankering for some good news,
so at least I'm gonna bring you something beautiful, and

(12:48):
that's this. I will tell you the story behind this
beautiful work of art. It's a nineteen fifty three original Corvette.
I'll explain why it's in the news later this hour.
American Sunrise Early Edition.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
We'll be right back.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
It's a live look at Destined Florida, not Deston for
those of you who have newborns Destined Florida. It's a
beautiful shot that causeway there. Thank you so much for
coming back. Welcome back to American Sunrise Early Edition. It's
a Monday. Thank you, especially to those of you on
the Ghetter Chat, on the Rumble chat, and again you
know you can watch and comment live on x on substack,

(13:35):
a lot of places to do it. And I look
at all those platforms and I love your suggestions.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
Hey, just when you.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Think you've heard it all when it comes to the
illegal alien crisis in America, another story comes around to
top it. And this is this is about the most
one of the most outrageous ones I've ever heard. It
turns out the superintendent of Des Moines Public Schools in
Iowa is none under other than a man named Ian
Andre Roberts. He's an illegal alien from Guyana with weapons

(14:03):
charges against him, and when ICE picked him up last week,
he had a loaded handgun on him illegally. Now joining
me now is a real America's Voice contributor, Emily Fan
And Emily, I want to fload a theory by you
here as to how this all happened. It isn't just
about our open border situation. It's about DEI and DEI hiring.
As I've said for many, many years, if we want

(14:25):
to get more diversity in our professional jobs in this
country and in universities. You can't start when the people
start applying to the jobs or do the universities. You
have to care about people from their original age. So
if you want more African Americans at Harvard, start doing
something in K through twelve to help them, preferably in
K and a nursery school.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
And I don't mean head start.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Yeah, if you want people who are going to be
in the school system hired, you can't just hire them
out of nowhere.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Do something to train people.

Speaker 6 (14:54):
This is outrageous, It's beyond outrageous. And you're right, this
really does start when you're applying to colleges. I remember
the joke what I was going to school was you
just lie on your application, lie and say that you
are a different race or that you identify as something
that you're not, just because you have a.

Speaker 7 (15:09):
Higher chance of getting in.

Speaker 6 (15:11):
And that is definitely not what they should be incentivizing
with these DEI programs. Now, this is really concerning, though.
This is a person who wasn't from this country, has
been ordered to leave, it has been you know, ordered
to deport and it had a loaded a handgun with
him on a school campus. Explain to me where any
of this makes sense, and how many people should be

(15:32):
held accountable for letting this happen as well? You know
how many people did he have to interview with. How
many students saw maybe this isn't right. How many parents
of the students that they came home from school and said, Hey,
mom and dad, I don't know who this person is.
I don't know if he even speaks English. I mean,
there had to have been so many questions beforehand, and
this is an egregious failure of the public school system

(15:54):
in Des moin h I.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
Now you made the point.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
He had an order of deportation against him issued last
year in the summer of twenty twenty four under the
Biden administration. So the Biden administration wanted this guy deported.
Whether they knew that he was working as a superintendent
at De Boinne Schools at that point, I don't know,
but they had his name and his ID and they
wanted him out of here. And again, I have a
newsplash to everyone who's going to get into an argument

(16:19):
today with a family member or a friend who's a
liberal who's all about DEI and Affirmative action.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Headline.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
These schools and these people who hire these folks don't
care about them.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
They are looking to check a box.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
They are legally forced or institutionally forced to hire a
certain type of person if they cared about helping underprivilege
or disadvantaged folks in America, and there are a lot
of them. No one is denying that you don't do
it starting with the college application process. You have to
start earlier, and you need to make a real investment.
You know what it costs Harvard and these other people
to hire somebody like this nothing. It costs them nothing,

(16:57):
and that's how much they care about it. And that's
why we need to get to the bottom. If you
really want to help improve certain groups in this country's
fate and their educational opportunities, you got to start early,
not when they're applying for jobs. Emily, this was a
three hundred thousand dollars year job, and I think three
hundred k a year goes pretty far into Moin.

Speaker 6 (17:14):
I'm going to guess that absolutely, that's a really impressive job,
you know, living in that area of the country.

Speaker 7 (17:20):
I just the story is infuriating.

Speaker 6 (17:23):
You know, we shouldn't let this happen, and we do
need to be taking a much broader look at education
in the United States. If we're letting things like this happen,
it means that we're just turning a blind dye to
the future generations of this country, to the education of
our children. And so, like I said, we just need
to be taking this a lot more seriously and make
sure that, for the love of God, illegals that are

(17:43):
supposed to be deported are not running our school districts.

Speaker 7 (17:46):
That doesn't make any sense, Jake.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (17:48):
And finally, I'll just say, I don't understand why these
colleges and these places that are hiring these kinds of
people don't get the message. Their problem is not the
decision to hire them. They decided that already.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
The problem is getting people to apply in the first place.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
The Ivy League schools and some of these job centers
are dying for the applicants and they can't find them,
which is why they end up scraping bottoms of the
barrels like illegal and hiring illegal aliens there instead of
trying to fix the problem at its source, which they
don't do. Emily Finn, thank you so much for joining us.
You'll be with us in the eight to ten am hour.
Thank you have a great entire week, even though I'll.

Speaker 7 (18:23):
Be seeing you the entire tay, it sounds great, so tomorrow, Jake.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
Okay, when inflation jumps, when you hear that the national
debt is over thirty seven trillion with the T dollars,
do you ever think maybe now would be a good
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(18:49):
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Speaker 1 (19:41):
Coming up.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
Speaking of diversification, Americans are less diversified than ever and
that's not good. How much do you trust your broker
or retirement fund manager. I'll explain further when American Sunrise
Early Edition returns.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
It's a live look at New York City.

Speaker 3 (20:11):
There.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
That's the Empire State Building there right in front of you,
getting close to the one hundredth anniversary was built in
nineteen thirty one, about.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
Six years away.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
That's gonna be fun celebrating one hundred anniversary. And that
building on the left, No, it's not curved and about
to fall. It's just a little bit of the curve
of the lens and the camera there.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
It's an interesting a shot there. So don't don't worry.
We're not about to have a major disaster in New
York City. Let's take a look. Speaking of disasters, let's
look at the stock market. You're just kidding.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
The stock market's been very strong this year, and it
looks like we're gonna have another strong open. That was
down overall last week, but we had a strong Friday
to end on a high note, and looks like we're
gonna start in a high note here on this Monday.
Everything up, let's say, and crude oil is down. It
was getting up over there, you know, in that sixty
five dollars a barrel arrangement.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
Now it's back to sixty four. Let's take a look
at bitcoin.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
Now, last time I checked, it was rallying this morning,
and it is, but it's aid one hundred and twelve thousand, even,
about ten thousand dollars lower than it's all time high
from several weeks ago. Direct and indirect stockholdings by the
American people, either a regular stock that you own by
yourself on its own or in a mutual fund or
a retirement plan that stocks in general account for forty

(21:20):
five percent of households financial assets so far this year.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
That is a very very high percentage.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
I was just talking about with birch gold, diversification and
things like that. It's scary to have so much money
in just one asset, which is just the overall stock market.
If the market ever has a major, major cell off,
this could really hurt people, especially if you're nearing retirement.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
This is my usual ad that I give.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
I don't get any money for it, and I don't
know any folks in particular that I'm going to actually
suggest for you, but you got to talk, especially if
you're nearing retirement. You've got to speak to a financial
advisor and let them know. You can't all be in
one kind of asset because if you have bad timing
the markets down when you're trying to retire, you may
not be able to retire.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
So, in other words, not everything into stocks, folks.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
I'm a big fan of stock market, but you can't
have forty five percent all in stocks, Okay, you gotta
split that up into other things.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
And that's actually just the average number.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
A lot of people probably have seventy or eighty percent,
and that's really risky.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Okay, here's a question.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
What happens when an industry suffers very slow or no
growth in entire industry? The answer is mergers and buyouts
because that's the only way to grow when your sales
aren't growing, and the stagnant video game industry. The technology
is amazing in some of these games, but their sales
are stagnant. Right now could soon see one of the
biggest leverage buyouts in all of American history. Silver Lake Management,

(22:43):
that's a private equity firm, and the Saudi Arabian Sovereign
Wealth Fund are getting together to bid for Electronic Arts.
That's the sports that's the video game company that has
a lot of those great sports games like college football
and Madden, the Madden Football games. Anyway, they are working
together and to try to buy it, and it would
value the company at fifty billion dollars. It's a pretty

(23:06):
amazing valuation. But there are some people very worried about
this news because if this buyout goes through, there's a
lot of people who think that this is a sign
that the current executives at EA Electronic Arts are really
worried about the company ever really making a lot of
money again, are looking to get out while the getting's good,
and that could be bad news for that company.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
But boy, these video games are pretty amazing.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
I think one of the problems with these companies is
they've made the games too good. Remember when we were
kids in Atari, you played the game for three weeks,
you saw all it had to offer, and then you
had to buy a new one. Some of these games
now that they have you could play them for years
and not explore all the amazing aspects of it. And
I think that they were a little bit too short
sighted in that you've got to get people coming back
to you all a lot. That's the way it works,

(23:50):
all right now for a possible game changer, or really
maybe a four D chess game, Reports are circulating out
of China that one of the reasons why President Shijingping
has been a little bit more compliant with President Trump
and trade talks lately is because he's looking for something
else in return. The worry among foreign policy experts is
that Shijingping is trying to get President Trump to look

(24:13):
the other way and not push for Taiwanese independence. True
Taiwanese independence, of course, Taiwan is factually independent, but they
are not recognized as an independent country.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
They don't have a seat at the United Nations, and
on and on.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
She wants that to stay that way, and Apparently he's
hoping that if he makes deals with the United States
opens up more of the Chinese markets to US products
and doesn't fight so much about tariffs on his products,
that will somehow allow this to happen.

Speaker 1 (24:41):
Something to watch for in the coming weeks.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
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(25:29):
thing you don't want to bring home from work. Legionnaire's disease. No,
I'm not kidding. That's the very severe form of pneumonia
that spreads from bacteria in HVAC systems. HVAC systems was
first discovered in the early nineteen eighties.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
By the way, it can be deadly. It's no joke,
and that's.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
Exactly what happened at GM's Tech center building in Warren, Michigan.
Two people at that tech center came down with legionnaire's disease.
They had to scrub the entire hbacys system, scrub the
whole building. They've been working on it. The good news
is GM says it will reopen starting on Wednesday. But
that is a very scary situation. Should not happen, So

(26:10):
they're working on how it happened and certainly stopping it
from happening it again. Well, I've been telling you about
this cyber attack against Jaguar land Rover in Britain.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
And how severe it's been.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
I've been talking about how they haven't built one new
car off their assembly now line now in more than
a month.

Speaker 1 (26:26):
So you knew this was happening.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
The UK government is bailing out Jaguar and land Rover.
They're giving them a two billion dollar loan. I don't
know if that's going to be a loan that they
actually have to pay back, but they're trying.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
To help them just stay afloat while they fix this problem.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Now, the reason why I keep reporting on this is
not to dunk on Jaguar Land.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
Rover all that much. That's not necessary, but.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
To remind everybody that we better have all of our
ducks in a row at our auto companies. If they
have a successful attack like this at GM or against
Ford or Chrysler or Jeep, that's going to be a very,
very big blow, not just to those companies but to
this country. So I'm hoping that our cybersecurity experts are
studying exactly what happened to Jaguar lan Rover, finding out

(27:07):
exactly where they made a mistake with their defenses and
not copying it, because that two billion dollar loan that
they're getting from the UK government's probably going to get
bigger and I don't know if they're ever going to
get that money back. All Right, I'm asking you now,
have you ever heard of the broken windows theory of
law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
It goes like this.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
It tells the local police forces and cities where there's
vandalism literally broken windows or graffiti or things like that,
to arrest the people responsible, even though it's technically only
a misdemeanor. And why because those people tend to be
either already committing more serious crimes or are on the
way to doing so, and this is your last chance
to scare them straight.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
This is a big part of the theory that helped
New York City.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
Get back on his feet with William Bratton or the
police Bratton the Police Commissioner, and Rudy Giuliani. They started
to implement this policy in the mid nineties and it
turned things around quickly. Well, the city of Memphis is
thinking of doing this, but with speeding. Now, let me
ask you someone at two or three am who's going
seventy miles in a thirty five zone. I think there's
a chance that they're also a criminal doing other things

(28:10):
much worse. Well, the Memphis police thinks so too, and
they are going to be stepping up their night patrols
in Memphis for speeders.

Speaker 1 (28:16):
Obviously, there's a lot more that needs to be done.
The National Guard is going there as well, But this
is not a bad idea.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
Anybody up, let alone speeding at two or three am
on a kind of regular basis, I'm thinking there's a
good chance that person's a criminal, either coming from a
criminal act or on their way and maybe has a
pretty big record.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
So the Memphis street patrol.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
Is going to be stepped up, all right, now for
that thing of beauty that I promised you. What you're
going to be looking at now is an original, one
of the original three hundred corvettes made by Chevrolet in
nineteen fifty three. It's in the news because it recently
came to be owned by that guy named James Sheen.
He's a home builder in Arizona. He's become a celebrity
of types in the car collecting world, especially the corvette world.

(28:57):
He has a pretty big corvette collection, but this is
now the jewel in his collection. And the reason why
he's in the news as well as all of that,
is because the Wall Street Journal gave him a nice
piece of real estate in the Weekend Journal, writing about
how he got this corvette, how he got into the
business of well it's not really business as a hobby
of collecting corvettes, and how he's created a corvette club
that is now expanding all over the country.

Speaker 1 (29:20):
And check that out. It is a really nice piece
of work. I wonder how much it costs to fill
up the tank there.

Speaker 2 (29:25):
I don't think they have a very big tank, so
I guess he has to fill up a lot.

Speaker 1 (29:28):
But that is a very pretty car. Okay, coming up.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
The story has been out of the national news headlines
for the last couple of weeks, but please don't forget it.
The murder of Ukrainian refugee Arina Zaruska. It's still big
news in North Carolina, and we're about to talk to
a North Carolina leader trying to do something about it,
making sure it never happens again. American Sunrise Early edition
will be right back. It's Monday, September twenty ninth. Here

(30:04):
this morning's top stories. America has become a nation divided
between those who commit or enable violence and those who
want to do something to stop it.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
The latest flashpoint is Portland, Oregon.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
But there aren't really any sidelines anymore. Speaking of violence
in America, the man who attacked a Mormon church in
suburban Flint, Michigan, yesterday, with shots fired and explosives has
been identified as a forty year old veteran of the
Iraq War. Police and the FBI are searching for a motive.
He turned the gun on himself, we think or he

(30:37):
killed he died some hour. Still looking for all the details.
The shooter was killed, and so was one innocent victim.
In New York, incumbent Eric Adams drops out of the
mayor's race.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
But is this a case of too little, too late
to stop Zoran Mamdani from winning?

Speaker 2 (30:56):
And President Trump will meet with congressional leaders today to
discuss what it will take to pass just a regular
spending bill and avoid a government shutdown, the same kind
of spending bill of Democrats were in favor of just
a couple.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Of months ago.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
One thing is for sure, the stigma of a government
shutdown is no longer such a big problem for anyone
in the polls. American Sunrise Early Edition continues now. Welcome
back to American Sunrise Early Edition Special. Welcome to those
of you very active on the ghetter chat and you
can also watch live, not only on Ghetter, but on Rumble.

(31:32):
You can watch on an Amazon Firestick. You can watch
on x either live or later in the day if
you save the link. You can watch on substack and
comment on all of these places. I'm watching, I'm watching
what you're saying, and I'm reading it and sometimes sometimes
actually a lot I learned from it. Joining us now
is attorney and candidate for the US Senate from.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
North Carolina, Republican Don Brown.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
Don Before I get into the issues that are specifically
affecting your state alone, I have to ask you about
things like Portland, where there's been anti ice riots and
attacks on federal agents. President Trump was trying to send
troops there. I think it's going to happen, but the
governor of Oregon, mayor of Portland are pushing back on him,
and you even have Actually, this isn't that different from

(32:15):
what's going on in North Carolina. You have local politicians
there who are pushing back on the rule of law
and any kind of real help coming from the Trump
administration to get things done. I just feel like we're
in a civil war here in America. This reminds me
of Confederate leaders, who were people who eventually became Confederate leaders,
blocking federal troops from trying to keep order in this country.

(32:37):
I wish I mean, I'm not trying to be hysterical here,
but I don't know what else to call it. It's
becoming kinetic. People are dying literally. I wonder if you're
as alarmed as I am.

Speaker 4 (32:49):
Pretty much alarmed.

Speaker 8 (32:49):
You've nailed it on the head there and say literal
civil war on the streets. The president of the United States.
First off, you go back to the pream with the Constitution.
One of the goals in the our preamble, and go
look at the preamble when you want to revisit the
goals of the government is to ensure domestic tranquility. The
President of the United States says the authority to send
in the National Guard to these these cities where domestic

(33:12):
tranquility and rampant crime have taken over, with or without
the request from the local authorities. There's plenty of historical
president you look into the Insurrection Act, and when Americans
constitutional rights, the liberties are being threatened, the president can
go ahead and send in troops. It's been done historically.
President Eisenhower did it to integrate the University of Arkansas

(33:34):
when he sent in one hundred and first Airborne. Actually,
and President Kennedy in integranted the University of Michigan sent
troops in. Excuse you, I meant to say University of Mississippi,
not Michigan sent troops in when James Meredith is being
pushed away, and so the president has the authority to
do it.

Speaker 4 (33:50):
And these local leaders who are soft on crime and
pro crime and.

Speaker 8 (33:54):
Just want to kiss up to Antifa and all these communists,
left wing groups that are intent on unraveling simpl society.
They're not relevant. So I'm going to encourage the prison
to do what he needs to do. And we saw
what's happened in Washington, DC already with the crime rate
dramatically dropping. That's what it's going to take to try
to get some of these out of control blue cities
under back into a situation where folks can walk the

(34:17):
streets so that I how worry about being mugged or murdered.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
And also federal agents being able to carry out their
legal duties to find violent illegal aliens and things like that,
and to deport them without worrying about some militia attacking
them in the streets. Now, don Brown, let's talk about
something called UNA's Law.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
It's meant to put an.

Speaker 2 (34:39):
End to some of the worst practices that led to
her murder on that commuter train in Charlotte by a
man who had been arrested fourteen times and was still
out on the streets, all caught on tape. I haven't
just convicted the man. There it is, you can see
it right there. This is not a question of this
is not a murder mystery. Sadly, this is we know
exactly what happened here. Now, we had that law passed

(35:03):
in the North Carolina legislature, but I got to tell
you your Governor Josh Stein, who made some comments after
the passage.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
He was very very murky on it. I don't think
he's gonna sign it.

Speaker 4 (35:14):
How about you, Well, it doesn't appear to be the case.
He has ten days.

Speaker 8 (35:18):
I do commend the Republican North Coronin General Assembly for
signing the law. The idea jakes to try to stop
this revolving door practice, this pre trial revolving door practice.
We have an animal like the animal that killed this
poor young Ukrainian immigrant who had fourteen prior simply coming
in and was released on the no cash bond type

(35:39):
of situation. The law is designed to cut that down
and eliminate it for multiple offenders. There's just plain common sense.
A North Caroline in General Assembly, Stein is sitting around,
he's made comments. You know, he is a soft on
crime governor, like the previous governor, Roy Cooper. I'm going
to beat in the Democrat in the Republican United States
Senate race. Season going to be a Democrat nominee. They've

(36:01):
been soft on crime, and Cooper will probably either sit
on it or veto it. I do think there probably
are the enough votes in the general Simmy to override him.
The North Point of House is one short, one vote
short of being veto proof anyway, and the general Assimney
has overridden eight out of twelve gubernatorial vetos last month,

(36:22):
and I think that will probably happen. But the fact
that he's even hesitating is a stark commentary on the
reason this young lady got killed. Anyway, he goes back
to Democrat soft on crime policies.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
Yeah, and it also goes back to how the DNC
has staffed up every Democrat elected official from mayor on
up in this country, and so their staffs work for
the DNC, they don't work for their titular boss. Josh Stein,
if he has anyone who's actually working for him, would
tell him, what's the question. Of course you're going to
sign this. But they're getting calls from DC, They're getting

(36:54):
calls from Soros, and that's who runs these offices. This
is happening here in New York too. Kathy Hochels approval
rating would be.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
Thirty points higher.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
If she actually had someone working for her and for
New York.

Speaker 1 (37:05):
But that's not the case.

Speaker 9 (37:06):
Don.

Speaker 2 (37:06):
This weekend, speaking of North Carolina, marked the one year
anniversary of the Hellene The Hellene storm caused massive flooding
in western North Carolina. Can you tell us how that
recovery process is going. I know there's still a long
way to go. There isn't there there is.

Speaker 8 (37:22):
I was in North Kinta over the weekend, both in
McDowell County and then came down to Kataba County and
remember to mark the one year anniversary.

Speaker 4 (37:32):
There's still a long way to go.

Speaker 8 (37:34):
This is another indictment on Democrat administration's failure to act.
I mean, the federal government under Joe Biden did not
send the military in that storm came in on the
twenty seventh September. We didn't see any US military presence
until October third, Absolutely ridiculous. It has been Christian groups
and charitable groups and civilians on the ground working with

(37:55):
first responders that have provided most of the help, and
a lot of progresses been made. We've got a long
ways to go. The Democrat governor of North Colina, Roy Cooper,
withheld money from eastern North Carolina Hurricane Matthew years ago.
So the eastern and western parts of the states get
the short end of the stick.

Speaker 4 (38:12):
The federal government.

Speaker 8 (38:13):
The Democrat governor was off in New York apparently on
a fundraiser when this thing came down the pike, and
there's a lot of you know, hostility among the locals
towards the Democrat reaction. But keep north western north Colin
in prayer. It's been a year, but there's people still suffering,
people still homeless, people who still haven't rebuilt, and we.

Speaker 4 (38:34):
Got a lot of work left to do.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
Yeah, not to make it all discouraging, as you mentioned,
there's been people who've been helping out people, the faith
based groups that have done it. For those who who
haven't seen the story about how Amish people have come
and built tiny houses for tons of the folks who
were dehoused by the storm and the flooding, please read
up on that, just to get some encouragement. In addition
to the fight that has to go on here all

(38:58):
right now. I wanted to carve out some time here
to talk about specifically your Senate race. You're going up
against Michael Wattley for the Republican nomination for the Senate,
and it looks like Roy Cooper, the former Democrat governor,
is definitely going to be the Democrat nominee. And this
is all to replace Tom Tillis, who probably is just
he's in the top three of the most least popular

(39:19):
Republican senators among Republicans because he's governed so much like
a Democrat. Honestly, that's why he's not running again. Why
the voters are going to go for an actual Democrat.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
I don't know. How is the race.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
Going and what do you think will be the big
issues that could turn this election in North Carolina next year?

Speaker 8 (39:37):
Well, the race is gonna be going better if A
Watley would had the courage to debate me. He's already
turned down one debate request set for set from the
Azo County Republican Party. In the primary, the issue is
going to be elected integrity. Watley claims to be the
king of election integrity, yet he got elected by a
cell phoned vote or re elected as state chair and

(39:58):
that's caused a lot of division party. Medical freedom is
going to be an issue. I have been a champion
of medical freedom of fought against Fauci's jab took it
to the Federal Court into the Fourth Circuit. Whatley pushed
a JAB when he was chair of the North Care
Republican Party, and then Walley endorsed Tillis in March after
Tillus tried to tube the nomination of my friend Pete

(40:19):
Headseth and tubed the US attorney nomination in.

Speaker 4 (40:23):
DC.

Speaker 8 (40:24):
And so therefore these are going to be some of
the issues we're going to be discussing as we move
forward into the primary. We're going to win the primary,
and then I'm going to chase Roy Cooper all over
the state and prosecute him. I'm the only former prosecutor
on the Republican size actually ever send anybody to prison.
I'm going to remind Roy Cooper of his record, how
he shut the state down, destroyed North Kind's economy during COVID,

(40:46):
imposed unconstitutional companies. The last time I saw my dad alive,
Jake was looking through the glass of a nursing home
from the outside of a cold court. There employment North
Conry was standing on the grass of my sister. He
separated dying in Mayor Bericans, dying North Carolinians from their
family members during COVID.

Speaker 4 (41:03):
We're gonna remind him of that.

Speaker 8 (41:04):
We're finally we're gonna remind him of how he commuted
the sentence of fifteen murderers on New Year's Eve before
he stepped out of office. We're gonna chase him out
of the state. We're gonna take him down. I'm gonna
prosecute the case against Roy Cooper and we're gonna beat him.
And I'm looking forward to it.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
Well, I'm looking forward to following that election because it's
gonna be an interesting, interesting battle, one of the more
interesting Senate races coming up next year.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
Don Brown, thank you so much for joining us. Have
a great rest of your week.

Speaker 4 (41:30):
Jake, thank you so much. Appreciate you.

Speaker 1 (41:32):
Sure.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
Coming up, David Brodie and I will discuss whether in
New York City now has a chance to dodge a
terrible outcome now that Eric Adams has dropped out of
the race for mayor.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
I don't know. American Sunrise Early edition will be right back.

Speaker 2 (41:59):
It's a live look at the Capitol Building in Washington, DC.
A lot going on in Washington today, getting up against
that government shut down deadline. President Trumble. We'll be meeting
with congressional leaders to talk about that. Also, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin in Tanyahoo will be visiting at the White House,
and usually he makes a call to Congress as well,

(42:20):
so I assume he'll be there as well. Busy day
in Washington, d C. Welcome back to American Sunrise Early Edition.
I'm Jake Novak. It's a Monday. I hope that you were,
you know, at least had some of your eyes open
over the weekend, because it was a very busy news weekend,
and that included yesterday's news that current New York City
Mayor Eric Adams is dropping out of the race for

(42:41):
re election, leaving it now basically a three man race,
but most people in the polls would say it's now
a two man race between Zora and Mamdani and Andrew Cuomo.

Speaker 1 (42:50):
David Brody joins us now.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
David, I really think this is a case of too little,
too late. But even if this had been done earlier,
the problem is, we have a great city like New York.
You can make all the jokes you want millions and
millions of people. There are some really really great people here,
and we just keep getting represented. Our choices seem to
continue to be just incredibly below the quality of your

(43:13):
average cool New Yorker.

Speaker 1 (43:14):
I don't know what's going on here.

Speaker 10 (43:16):
Well, mom, Donnie makes Ed Koch look like Maga at
this point. I mean, I mean, that's how bad this
has gotten in New York.

Speaker 9 (43:24):
And you know you're from New York. I'm from New York,
I'm from Jersey. You're from Jersey. That sounds, wasn't it.
Joe Piscobo, didn't he say that?

Speaker 1 (43:31):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (43:32):
Uh so obviously there are major problems. Look, I've done
the math. You've done the math. You look at the
look at the polls. I mean, could it technically happen
if Sleiwa and uh now Adams is out and Sleiwa
gets out and okay, I've done the math. Yeah, maybe
Cuomo beats them by a percentage point or two, but
come on, that's pine the sky. And I don't really

(43:53):
think it's gonna go down, uh analytically and statistically that
way at all. I think you'll still get some some
crossover or maybe a percentage or two from Eric Adams.

Speaker 9 (44:01):
And even if not, people stay home.

Speaker 10 (44:03):
The point is is that I still don't see even
if everybody got out, and including your mother and my mother,
there's just no way at this point that.

Speaker 9 (44:14):
Mom Donnie loses.

Speaker 10 (44:15):
You know, what's interesting here is that he has tried
to dial back some some of his rhetorics, some of
his positions.

Speaker 9 (44:23):
Oh this just did. He's still anti Israel, he's still
anti Semitic.

Speaker 10 (44:27):
But beyond all of that, we still know about the
city owned grocery stores that he's not back down.

Speaker 9 (44:32):
For him, he still wants thirty dollars an hour minimum wage.
I mean, you just go down.

Speaker 10 (44:35):
The list, universal pre k or excuse me, not pre k,
all of childcare, universal childcare, and others. So you know,
he's tried to at least dial some of that back,
but that just shows you how radical he is that
in liberal New York he's actually had to dial some
of this back.

Speaker 9 (44:52):
I mean, that should tell you everything you need to know.

Speaker 4 (44:54):
Jake.

Speaker 1 (44:55):
Yeah, well he didn't dial this back.

Speaker 2 (44:57):
Over the weekend, he said that he's willing to spend
one hundred million dollars of additional taxpayer money to provide
illegal aliens with lead, with lawyers and other legal support
to fight deportation, taking the citizens taxpayers money.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
And there's a lot of poor people in New York
who pay taxes.

Speaker 2 (45:13):
Okay, and take their money to help the people who
are here illegally continue to take the resources away from us.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
You know, this is like and it's.

Speaker 2 (45:25):
All, this is like, this is high way robbery and
the And it's amazing to me that this is that
he felt, you know, comfortable enough to push that.

Speaker 1 (45:34):
That tells me he knows he's winning.

Speaker 2 (45:35):
He wouldn't say that if he didn't think he had
this thing in the bag.

Speaker 10 (45:38):
It makes me think of Chicago with a lot of
the protests at city council meetings, you know, where it
was Lori Lightfoot and then the current mayor as well.
Uh you know, basically, you know, you got a lot
of these protesters, I say protesters. They literally showed up
at city council meeting say wait a minute, hold on,
many within the African American community saying hold on for
a second, waitlegal immigrants or getting benefits that should go

(46:01):
to us.

Speaker 9 (46:03):
So anyhow not I wonder I.

Speaker 10 (46:06):
Believe that type of thing will probably end up happening
to mom Donnie. And look, as you know with Eric Adams,
I mean that was one of the big things.

Speaker 9 (46:15):
It wasn't just crime, it was that illegal.

Speaker 10 (46:16):
Immigration push and the Biden administration that really got Adams
to turn so so I think that could be the
inflection point that really kind of does in Mamdanmi.

Speaker 9 (46:28):
Three things, three inflectioning points. I'll be quick. Wait, I'll
be quick. Israel, immigration and safety, you put them all together.
I think it's a cauldron, and I think it's brilliant
in the city.

Speaker 1 (46:40):
It doesn't look good, simple as that.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
But what does look good is the next two hours
because you have American Sunrise with David T.

Speaker 1 (46:46):
Bates and doctor Gina.

Speaker 2 (46:47):
I'll be joining in the nine am hour and American
Sunrise Early Edition. We'll be back tomorrow at seven am.
I will be taking attendance.

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