Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
I'll head on American Sunrise. The Senate showdown continues. You're
looking at a live picture of the Senate right now
as we get ready to find out what exactly will
happen with a big, beautiful bill and budget reconciliation. Could
we see any more surprises? I think the answer will
be yes. We've got the latest, plus the Trump administration
(00:24):
suing LA over its sanctuary city policies. Will this force
LA to change its liberal stance? We have the latest
and in just hours, President Trump slated to attend the
opening of the Florida Illegal Alien Detention Center. Oh, I'm sorry,
did I bury the lead. It's better known as Alligator Alcatraz.
(00:44):
What can we expect? Those stories? Much more busy Tuesday,
and we start right now in American Sunrise. Good morning, America.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Welcome to American Sunrise. Whether it's culture, we have making
news to share with you politics.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
President Trump is joining us live now from Florida.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
We've got your covering.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
This is what it looks like to be a patriot.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
We have to protect the American family.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
The American dream is still alive.
Speaker 3 (01:16):
I'm David Brody, I'm Terrence, and.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
I'm doctor Gina.
Speaker 4 (01:24):
Good morning, everybody. I'm doctor Gina. We are live from
the Palm Beaches. Welcome to the show. Let's bring in
David Brody, He's in Washington, DC and teammates in our
Denver newsroom.
Speaker 5 (01:34):
Good morning, gentlemen, Marten, Gina, see doctor Gan.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
David, Good morning.
Speaker 6 (01:39):
We're obviously watching and we'll be watching throughout the next
two hours, if not throughout the rest of the day.
The happenings on Capitol Hill as the Senate has been
dealing with this voter rama on different amendments and that
kind of thing to the one big beautiful bill. It's
been going on almost twenty four hours at this point.
Just want to give you some bullet points here. The
Senate is set to reconvene officially in full at around
(02:02):
nine o'clock this morning.
Speaker 3 (02:04):
This morning. Earlier this morning, in.
Speaker 6 (02:06):
Fact, there was a record breaking forty fifth amendment or
procedural vote that again is a new record, and Vice
President JD. Vance is now on Capitol Hill should he
be called on to have to cast the tie breaking vote.
So there's a lot happening in David, all eyes are
on Capitol Hills, specifically the Senate side.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Yeah, and specifically for senators. You've got Susan Collins and
Lisa Murkowski specifically, that are the potential no votes. So
let's just go through the math, right, fifty three Republicans.
You can lose three votes, and then Jadvance comes in
and does the tiebreaker. You can't lose four votes, so
Rand Paul and Tom tillis their nose, So that means
(02:49):
you can only lose one more. They may lose Murkowski.
That would be three if they lose, and then Jdvance
breaks the time and it's okay. But if they lose
Susan Collins, that's four and that's the end of the bill.
So this is a big deal. And the reason this
vote rama Gene has been going on for now what
nineteen twenty plus hours. It should have been done about
twelve hours or so. The reason it keeps going on
(03:10):
is because Republicans are delaying these votes because they're trying
to convince Murkowski and Collins and quite frankly their Senator
Ron Johnson and a few others that I haven't gotten
into that are still a little bit on the fence
and so they need more time. I mean, this is
literally coming down.
Speaker 7 (03:26):
To the wire.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
Gina, Yeah, and the role of Jade Vance is interesting here.
He's actually sort of playing a whip role in addition
to being that tiebreaker as well. He's there, you know,
twisting arms, having conversations, doing the thing.
Speaker 5 (03:42):
Interesting.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
Also, they are starting to throw out some little tidbits.
One thing I noticed is that looks like Senator Ran
Paul could come around. They have shortened the debt ceiling
that he was so uncomfortable with. That's a big one
with him, that's a big one with me. I've been
yelling about the debt ceiling honestly for more than a
decade now, and right alongside him. That's one thing I
think a lot of conservatives agree with him on. Why
(04:05):
do we have this massive debt ceiling?
Speaker 5 (04:07):
Why do we even call it a ceiling? I always
call it a.
Speaker 4 (04:08):
Circus tint because it's not really a ceiling if you
can just blow it up all the time, right, So
I agree with him on that one. Apparently there's been
some compromise along those lines. Apparently there's been some compromise
all with some things with Susan Collins as well. So
this is going to proceed to be very interesting. Lots
of tension, lots of drama as we go into the
(04:29):
rest of this day.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
If I could just quickly address the Rand Paul situation.
So Paul is kind of the fail safe here. In
other words, if they lose Collins and Murkowski and they're
now at four and they can't get the bill, they
can try to flip Rand Paul from a note to you. Yes,
and the way to do that is, Gina, you were saying,
Rand Paul would say, look, I'm not going for this huge,
high trillion dollar debt ceiling, but he would be okay
(04:51):
with a five hundred billion dollar, not trillion billion dollar
debt ceiling much lower. President Trump's not going to like
that at all. He wants the large but if that's
the way to get Ran Paul on board and get
this bill passed, that might happen. So that's something we're
keeping an eye on as well.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
Yeah, and then enter Elon Musk.
Speaker 6 (05:11):
He's out with some tweets about this one big, beautiful
bill today. David says, oh gosh, all right, So here
you have it. Every member of Congress who campaigned on
reducing government spending and then immediately voted for the biggest
debt increase in history should hang their head in shame,
and they will lose their primary next year if it's
the last.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
Thing I do on this earth.
Speaker 6 (05:31):
That's Elon Musk again, putting his fingerprinter, trying to put
his fingerprint on these talks here. If this insane spending
bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day.
Our country needs an alternative to the Democrat Republican uniparty.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
So the people actually have a voice, he writes.
Speaker 6 (05:50):
President Trump also out with the truth social saying Elon
Musk knew long before he so strongly endorsed me for
president that I was strongly against the ev mandateridiculous and
was always a major part of my campaign. Electric cars
are fine, but not everyone should be forced to own one.
Elon may get more subsidy than any human being in
history by far, and without subsidies, Elon would probably have
(06:14):
to close up shop and head back home to South Africa.
No more rocket launches, satellites or electric car production, and
our country would save a fortune.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
It goes on and on and on. Long story short here.
Speaker 6 (06:25):
The feud continues between President Trump and Elon Musk and
the One Big Beautiful Bill and their stances on it.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
Obviously, differ dated.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Go ahead, Gina, because go ahead, okay, Well, can I
just say re real quick that last part of the
tweet was interesting too, because maybe we should have those
look into this. Yeh in terms of what Elon Musk,
I mean, that was like whoa, I mean, okay, here
we go part two, Gina.
Speaker 4 (06:51):
Please, I mean that's a straight up threat and from
the president. And you have two extremely powerful men dueling publicly.
Again it's it's just not where things need to be.
Speaker 5 (07:07):
Unfortunately, it was.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
It was fascinating to me, honestly while things were as
copasetic as they were between the two of them, because
they are both so powerful, so opinionated, so alpha. Uh,
this definitely makes it. Uh, you know, the plot is thickening, Terrence.
I guess that's what I have to say about that.
And you know, meanwhile, oh meanwhile, he is uh hopping.
(07:30):
It looks like in marine one to depart for Florida.
Of course for the big alligator Ali build.
Speaker 6 (07:41):
Head from one. This is I've been working on this
all night. He's heading from one swamp to another this.
Speaker 7 (07:46):
Morning, so.
Speaker 6 (07:50):
That all night you're going to hear it throughout the
next I came up with it all my Seriously, I
was half sleep and I was thinking about, Okay, I've
got to write headlines in the morning, and that popped
into my mind. I mean, rather than just getting up
and writing it down, I was thinking about it all night.
So are you going to hear that over the next
couple of hours? Anyway, Doctor Gina, would you give us
our Bible verse?
Speaker 4 (08:08):
I love to today's Bible versus from Psalm thirty seven
for delight yourself also in the Lord, and He shall
give you the desires of your heart.
Speaker 5 (08:18):
All right.
Speaker 4 (08:19):
The Senate continues working on the Budget Reconciliation Bill ahead
of final vote expected soon. It narrowly advanced to this
stage after just two GOP senators voted against it. Here's
what White House Press Secretary Caroline love It had to
say about the bill.
Speaker 5 (08:32):
Take a listen.
Speaker 8 (08:34):
This is one of the most fiscally conservative pieces of
legislation that has ever made its way through Capitol Hill.
There's two trillion dollars in mandatory savings in this bill.
And not only that, the projected growth that this bill
will bring to our economy. It will be an economic boom.
The Council of Economic Advisors has an analysis that shows
that the bill will generate four point one trillion dollars
(08:56):
in economic growth, and it will cut taxes, putting more
money back into the American people's pockets. That's why this
president wants this bill to pass, and I know he's
busy working the phones and doing what he needs to
do today to make it happen.
Speaker 4 (09:07):
So for more, let's bring in Missouri Congressman Mark Alford,
A congressman, Good morning, thanks for being with us. Lots
of drama over in your end of the swamp. Congressman,
do you see this being done by the sort of
arbitrary but understandable July fourth deadline that the president has set.
Speaker 9 (09:29):
Well, I certainly hope.
Speaker 10 (09:30):
So Independence Day at the White House could be quite
momentous if President Trump were to sign this into law.
I understand the b two pilots from white men are
going to be there at the White House. I'm hoping
to be there if I'm still in Washington. But look,
the President is on a role here, a role for
America a world, a role for peace around the world,
(09:53):
and we've got to get this done. We've got to
get over the finish line. I don't know what the
Senate's problem is I think part of it, a lot
of it has to do with Chuck Schumer trying to
throw a wrench in everything, and some other people with
you know, on the Republican side that have some legitimate concerns.
Speaker 9 (10:07):
I've got a concern that they strip.
Speaker 10 (10:09):
The the Medicaid, doing away with medicaid for illegal aliens
out Right. Who in the world, I don't care what
side of the fence you're on, wants illegal aliens to
have one point four million of them to have medicaid coverage.
It just doesn't make sense. We've got to get our
spending under control. But on the flip side of this, guys,
(10:30):
if we don't get this done, I've been saying this,
You've heard it from every Republican, every conservative, telling the
truth out there to the American people. If we don't
get this done, it's going to be the largest tax
increase in US history. And so we cannot let the
enemy be the perfect, I mean, the perfect be the
enemy of the good.
Speaker 9 (10:48):
In this fight. And we've got to get this over
the finish line.
Speaker 6 (10:53):
All right, Congressman, if you'll stand by very quickly, President Trump,
as we just saw a little while ago, left the
White House, and he's headed for that new illegal alien
detention facility in Florida. It's known as Alligator Alcatraz. Rav
Chief White House Correspondent Brian Glenn is actually traveling with
President Trump. He is joining us now live from Joint
(11:14):
Base Andrews. Brian, can you hear us?
Speaker 11 (11:20):
And now we're here?
Speaker 3 (11:22):
All right, there's Brian and.
Speaker 6 (11:24):
Again, ladies and gentlemen, this is live television. So yes,
I can hear you, Brian. I know it's live television.
You're getting ready to board Air Force one. Take it away.
What's the latest there?
Speaker 12 (11:35):
Okay, so the moments in a few months minutes from now,
President Trump is gonna land right behind me on Marine one.
We're gonna then get on Air Force one make our
way down to Alligator Alcatraz. That is that new detention
center that they're building there in South Florida. He's gonna
participate and I'll kind of a walk around the facility.
(11:55):
He's also gonna participate in a round table discussion about this,
and then he's going to make his way back to
the White House at around two thirty this afternoon. But
we should have President Trump rolling up here momentarily. But
you know, This is one of the things that he's
promised to do as far as the immigration, the ice,
the really getting some of the parting criminals out of
(12:16):
our country. And there's no better place to put them
in South Florida Terrence. Surround it by alligators, perhaps vipers
throwing some snakes, and you've got a pretty secure place.
Speaker 6 (12:28):
There, and put in mosquitos just for good measure. All right,
Brian Glynn reporting for us this morning. There, and Andrews. Brian,
you have safe travels and we'll try to check in
with you later on. Here, let's get back to Congressman Alford,
who is standing by. He's still standing by, guys, all right,
there he is, I see Congressman. Hey, Congressman, So, first
of all, thank you for allowing us to go over
(12:50):
to Joint Base Andrews as the President is getting ready
to part heading to Florida, which I think brings us
back full circle to this one big, beautiful bill because
there's a lot of discussion between you and your colleagues
and others as we watch all of this unfolding the
Senate about the tax cuts that would be reinstalled or
would continue if this bill doesn't pass. But this bill
(13:11):
passing is also crucial for securing our nation's border and
funding President Trump's immigration policies. That's something that we talked
about initially, but I think that conversation is somewhat gone
to the wayside.
Speaker 10 (13:22):
Congressman, Yeah, that's right, Terrence. First off, I don't mind
it all, deferring to Brian Glynn. Secondly, this bill does
finish the wall. It secures the border with the wall,
and it provides bonuses and pay raises to border security,
which they have not gotten the respect they deserve, especially
(13:42):
under Allahanda Mayorcus and President Biden. And so we've got
to get this done for the American people. I'm so glad.
This whole Alligator Alcatra has issue is triggering the left.
You can see it in their eyes. They are they
are freaking out that the President of the United States,
(14:03):
along with Governors DeSantis in Florida, are building a place
to take illegal aliens until we can get them deported. Look,
they didn't like Gitmo. We are putting some money into
Gitmo as well Guantanamo Bay to house illegals there. But
our prison system is broken in the United States of America.
I'm on the Appropriation Subcommittee that oversees the prison system.
(14:26):
We've got real problems with the cheering conditions in our prisons,
and we were looking at some places around different prisons
where we have empty beds in these dilapidated sections that
we could possibly put these illegals until we get them deported.
That wasn't going to work out. So this is a
great alternative to that. It's going to provide a secure
(14:47):
location where if you're an illegal and you want to
go on the run on the lamb, you can end
up a meal for an alligator.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Let's talk a little bit more about the big beautiful
bill that's kind of becoming a headache here obviously in
the Senate and we haven't even gotten back to the
house yet and enter you and your colleagues or I've
already seen that. Chip Roy says he's a no. Eric Burlison,
who's been on the show many times, he's a no.
Speaker 13 (15:16):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
There's others that are known. Trying to think of oh
Andy Harris as well, there's others. So yeah, the freedom
call becuse folks. So I mean, let's just can we
just be like fully honest here, which I guess we
always are, which is there's no way that Mike Johnson
is going to let this bill fail in the House.
In other words, you can get two three, whatever knows
(15:39):
that he needs for that's fine, let those people vote, know,
but he's got to eventually get this bill passed. I mean,
there's just no way that it can fail at this point,
or y'all might want to just pack.
Speaker 7 (15:50):
It up and go home.
Speaker 10 (15:53):
Yeah, I think we need this not This isn't just
for the prison of the United States. This is for Congress.
This is for America. Here's the problem, though, excuse me
losing my voice. When this bill leaves the Senate, it
comes back over to the House, and if we make
any changes to it, then we've got to vote on
(16:14):
that again. And then and then what do we do
the Senate. We've got to have some sort of conference
with the Senate to come out with a bill that
we both agree on. And so that puts it well
past the July fourth arbitrary deadline that the President has
set and us in Congress. Look, I've said all along,
if we don't have deadlines, we don't get stuff done
(16:36):
in the US House of Representatives. So I think the
deadline was a good deadline. I don't know how feasible
it is at this point, but we will keep charging
towards that goal.
Speaker 4 (16:49):
Congressman, I really want to ask, if I'm sorry, Terrence,
I really want to ask.
Speaker 5 (16:54):
I really want to understand for.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
The American people because I look at our chat and
they say really logical things like why do we need
trillion dollar debt ceiling? Why do we need that? Why
is that a thing? When you have, you know, the
president that everyone loves and trust that we've listened to
this whole entire time, that we've all fought for for
a decade or more, you really have to try to
(17:17):
understand why the process is so complicated, why this debt
ceiling needs to be so high, why we can't.
Speaker 5 (17:26):
Cut more spending. Help us just understand.
Speaker 4 (17:28):
Those basics, because I think that's the part that Elon
doesn't understand.
Speaker 10 (17:32):
Frankly, well, two parts to this gena and great question.
You know, I President Trump wants to do away with
the debt ceiling altogether. He doesn't believe we should have
a debt ceiling. It puts too much restriction on what
we need to do in America to grow our way
out of this debt that we're in. And yes, we
can grow, we will grow. We're not going to grow
(17:54):
our way out if we don't pass this bill number one,
because it's coming the largest tax increasing US history. The
tariffs are working, that's bringing extra revenue in. But to
get the economy churning again, to get the interest rates down,
it's going to take this bill to pass. If not,
it's going to be I don't even want to think
about it. The other side of the issue really is
(18:16):
what we're spending our money on. So you know, thirty
forty years ago, a lot less was spent on mandatory spending,
and even before COVID, we spend a lot less. I'm
talking about social security and medicare. No one wants to
address those, especially if you're in the US House of
Representatives get elected every two years. Once you start talking
(18:36):
about it, you don't get re elected, you don't come back.
Speaker 9 (18:39):
We don't keep the majority, so no one wants to
touch that.
Speaker 10 (18:42):
Eventually, we're going to have to find some solutions to
mandatory spending, which is about seventy six percent of our spending.
You can nibble around the edges, okay, on the discretionary
spending as we call it. We're not cutting defense We've
got to our defense to keep ahead of the crazy
(19:03):
wackos like Vatamirin Putin and Jijing Ping and the Mullahs
in Iran. But we have to make cuts to the
programs where we can in discretionary. But we're gonna have
to take a look. Someone is going to have to
take a look at some time, at some point in
our history. How do we address social security to keep
it alive for those who really need it, but you
(19:25):
also start curbing our spending in these areas. I don't
have the solution to that. We're not going to figure
it out in the segment that I'm on today, but
someone eventually is going to have to start talking about it.
Speaker 6 (19:37):
Congressman, from the outside looking in, it's clear to me
that the pressure is on for you and your colleagues
in the House as well as in the Senate to
get this bill passed at all costs. Now, having said
all of that, will ideological differences or concerns within the
bill give way to the pressure, if you will, to
(19:58):
pass this bill and get it on press in Trump's desk,
because otherwise it's a black eye for Republicans.
Speaker 3 (20:03):
In Congress and on Capitol Hill.
Speaker 10 (20:06):
Well, Look, we have one of the greatest deal makers
in the world, in world history, sitting behind the resolute desk,
now on Marine one down to get on Air Force one.
But my point is, if it were any other person,
I'd say give it up.
Speaker 9 (20:27):
We've got Donald Trump now, who's able to, in his own.
Speaker 10 (20:31):
Special way, sell people on the idea that America should
be first, and that this is a way to make
America first, and that nothing is going to be perfect
in a bill. We get that, but hey, this doesn't
have to be the last reconciliation package either. We can
come back for a second and third bite at the
apple with even more reforms in reconciliation, maybe with a
(20:55):
new Senate parliamentarium, which has been the problem.
Speaker 9 (20:58):
I mean, she's the one who, through.
Speaker 10 (21:01):
The bird rule issue, stripped the provision out to bar
illegal aliens from getting Medicaid coverage.
Speaker 9 (21:09):
And I'm pretty ticked about that.
Speaker 10 (21:11):
There's a lot of other issues that this parliamentary dipped
her stuck her nose into, and I think ruled the
wrong way. And I think John Thune, the Senate majority
of leader, needs to get a new parliamentarian, but can't
do it now. Let's wait till this one's done, and
then address that issue.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Congressman.
Speaker 6 (21:29):
You talked about the President being the deal maker, the
big deal maker. He actually spoke on the South Lawn
just a little while ago. Guys, can we take that
all right?
Speaker 14 (21:39):
There?
Speaker 6 (21:39):
He is walking around, that's listening, all right. Apparently we're
not able to hear much there, but the president. Yeah,
we're still not even able to hear much there. Again,
ladies and gentlemen, this is live television. It's all kind
(21:59):
of happening as we're on the air.
Speaker 11 (22:02):
Here.
Speaker 6 (22:02):
President Trump heading to Alligator Alcatraz, which is in Florida.
It's a new immigration detention center, but obviously high on
his mind, and I'm sure even at board Air Force One,
he's going to be watching the happenings there. On the
Senate side of Capitol Hill, as the Senator said, to
reconvene about nine o'clock this morning to continue its debate
(22:22):
and votes on the one Big Beautiful Bill, Congressman, one
last word from you, sir.
Speaker 7 (22:26):
Sure.
Speaker 10 (22:29):
Look, one of the things we were going to talk
about today, I don't think we had time for is
the patriotism in America, the level that's fallen. I sent
you all a text Sarace, I need to get yourself
phone number about a speech that I wrote three years
ago when I was running for Congress called I Believe
in America.
Speaker 9 (22:44):
We have got to read. We've got to.
Speaker 10 (22:47):
Rebuild patriotism in America, and that's one of my goals.
I've told President Trump this, I have hope for America,
and I have more hope now that he's president than
I've had in any time in my lifetime. We have
seen that with a resurgence in military recruitment. Part of
that is Pete heg Seth being a great Secretary of Defense.
(23:07):
But we've got to renew our hope in America. Let's
get this bill passed. This is the first step and
making America great again.
Speaker 9 (23:15):
Let's do it.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
Congressman Mark Alford, great to have you on. We're staying
with us.
Speaker 5 (23:21):
Beautiful. By the way, thank you for sending that.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
You know I don't I don't get poetry very often
before eight o'clock in the morning, So it was a
great day.
Speaker 6 (23:28):
It was you don't have my number, because I'd thought
you were flirting with me.
Speaker 1 (23:32):
If it was great, it was great. Thank you so much.
I was busy read the whole thing all right, Congressman,
thank you.
Speaker 15 (23:44):
More.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
Let's bring in the president of the National Border Patrol Council.
That would be Paul Perez. And by the way, the
reason we're bringing in Paul is because Gina and Terrence obviously,
the Big Beautiful Bill has a lot of border funding
in it and we need to get the latest on that. So,
Paul Forerez, thanks for being here. You know, I'm curious
to get your thoughts about the fight that we mentioned
(24:07):
earlier in the show. We teased it about Los Angeles
and the federal government, because there's a fight between the
feds and the sanctuary cities. But also I want to
I'm curious to get your take about the Big Beautiful
Bill that we've been talking about because it's going to
come down to the wire this week in Congress. Now,
we should point out that inside that bill it's more
(24:27):
than twelve billion dollars for about eighteen thousand or so
new ice and Border patrol personnel, which is driving AOC
and the Left crazy. But I'm curious to get your
take because the truth of the matter is is that
there's a lot of stuff inside this bill that's really
not good. Let's be honest, like for example, legal immigrants
still getting medicaid. That's a problem, big problem. But I'm
(24:49):
curious to get your take because there's some stuff that
is actually very good in the bill.
Speaker 16 (24:54):
Yeah, so I can tell you the twenty eight years
that I've been doing this job on the front lines,
this is going to be the biggest expenditure on border
security funding that we've ever seen. It's going to get
us the tools and resources we need, it's going to
get us additional manpower, and it's something that because of
what Biden did in his administration, we sorely need during
(25:15):
Trump's president. During President Trump's first term in office, he
did everything that he needed to do to give us
to give America a secure border, and he left President
Biden a secure border, and all he had to do
was nothing. And what he did in those four years
was completely decimate what we had as far as a
controlled border. Now, because of President Trump's policies, in just
(25:37):
less than five months, we've been able to gain good
control of the border.
Speaker 9 (25:42):
But we're going to need the tools.
Speaker 16 (25:43):
And resources that the big beautiful Bill provides to make
sure that we have operational control once and for all.
Speaker 3 (25:50):
All Right, here's President Trump on the South Lawn guys,
let's listen. And I think we've got audio.
Speaker 17 (25:54):
Now there's not one at a time. Are you going
to try again?
Speaker 11 (25:58):
Think we're going to get there. It's stuff. We're trying
to bring it down, break it down.
Speaker 18 (26:02):
So it's really good for the country, trying to get
a lot for everybody.
Speaker 11 (26:06):
And it's a big bill and smaller bills would have
been easy, but they wouldn't have been as good.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
I think it's gonna do upgeat.
Speaker 17 (26:13):
And when the alligator out there said, it's the idea
that it's do they just get any or sake?
Speaker 18 (26:21):
I guess that's the concept.
Speaker 11 (26:24):
This is not a nice business. I guess that's the concept.
Speaker 18 (26:27):
If you you know, the snakes are fast, but alligators.
But we're going to teach them how to run away
from an alligator.
Speaker 11 (26:35):
Okay, if they escaped prison, how to run away.
Speaker 18 (26:38):
Don't run in a straight line rug like this, and
you know what, your chances go up about one.
Speaker 11 (26:43):
Percent running good thing. What are you going to talk the.
Speaker 17 (26:49):
Name jog about that punt?
Speaker 11 (26:52):
Well, it's coming here. We're gonna talk about a lot
of things.
Speaker 19 (26:54):
We're going to talk.
Speaker 11 (26:55):
About the great success we had. I mean we had
an incredible in Iran.
Speaker 18 (27:00):
We had an incredible success like really nobody's had in many,
many years.
Speaker 20 (27:04):
That was a.
Speaker 11 (27:05):
Precision war strike. And the word obliteration can now.
Speaker 18 (27:08):
Be used because the Atomic Energy Commission said, you can't
even get into.
Speaker 11 (27:12):
The place it was. It was demolished.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
It was really demolished.
Speaker 11 (27:16):
It was a great, brilliant strike. And how to get
go forward.
Speaker 18 (27:20):
We're also going to talk about Gaza. We want to
get the rest. We've got a lot of hostages.
Speaker 11 (27:25):
Back, but we're gonna talk about Garda.
Speaker 18 (27:29):
He asked them, as you know, and I think in
the end we're gonna have it.
Speaker 11 (27:32):
What do you think, Carolina, Yeah, I think rhyme off.
Speaker 17 (27:36):
He haven't such a hard times condemming the brains worldwide.
Speaker 14 (27:40):
To get the FOTA.
Speaker 11 (27:41):
I think he's terrible.
Speaker 18 (27:42):
He's a communist.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
The last thing we need is a communist.
Speaker 18 (27:46):
I said, there will not be socialism in the United States.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
Tell you him a communist.
Speaker 11 (27:51):
So I think he's bad news.
Speaker 18 (27:53):
And I think I'm gonna have a lot of fun
with him, watching him because he has to help right
through this building to get his money.
Speaker 11 (27:59):
And don't worry, he's not going to run away with anything.
Speaker 18 (28:02):
I think he's a Frankly, I've heard he's a total
nut job.
Speaker 11 (28:06):
I think the people of New York are crazy. If
they go this route, I think they're crazy.
Speaker 18 (28:10):
We will have a communist in the for the first time,
really a pure true communist. He wants to operate the
grocery stores, the department stores.
Speaker 11 (28:21):
What about the people are there? I think it's crazy.
Speaker 17 (28:28):
What happened.
Speaker 11 (28:30):
Nothing? You know, he's upset. He's that he's losing.
Speaker 18 (28:33):
His ev mandate, and he's accept you know, he's very
upset about things. But you know he can lose a
lot more than that. I can tell you right now, Hey,
Elon can lose a lot more than that.
Speaker 17 (28:49):
The fire.
Speaker 19 (28:51):
Work.
Speaker 11 (28:53):
We hope it's going to happen, and we're looking forward
to happen sometime next week.
Speaker 15 (28:58):
The world the hot.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
They want to get.
Speaker 11 (29:02):
Our hostage deck. They want to get the hospite.
Speaker 17 (29:07):
What is the big beautiful bills doesn't pass? You have
to go to be it up by it by item.
I passed the stuff one at a time. Are you
just gonna try again?
Speaker 11 (29:17):
They were gonna get there. It's tough.
Speaker 18 (29:19):
We're trying to break it down, break it down, so
it's really good for the country, trying to get a
lot for everybody, and it's a big bill, and smaller
bills would have been easier, but they wouldn't have been
as good.
Speaker 11 (29:31):
I think it's gonna do again.
Speaker 17 (29:32):
And when the alligator out the set, it's the idea.
Speaker 21 (29:36):
That it do.
Speaker 18 (29:38):
They just get eat an all here or I guess
that's the concept.
Speaker 17 (29:43):
This is not a nice bit.
Speaker 18 (29:45):
I guess that's a concept.
Speaker 6 (29:48):
That was President Trump talking on the South Lawn before
boarding Marine one and then getting over to Andrews Air
Force Base what's formerly known as Andrews the Airsporce Base
now it's joint based Andrews UH and getting on Air
Force one heading to Alligator Alcatraz in Florida.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
A lot to take in. It's a busy day, doctor Gina.
Speaker 6 (30:05):
But I think one of the highlights is that President
Trump's big beautiful bill is being debated and he is
continuing his work.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Whether it gets past.
Speaker 4 (30:13):
Or not right, it's become a big beautiful bill in peril.
And there's a lot of talk behind the scenes, tense moments.
I think inside the swamp today, Terrence, and we'll just
have to keep following it.
Speaker 1 (30:28):
You know, there are a couple of things. First of all,
he's worrying the Gulf of America hat. I thought that
was interesting. Good for him. He also said at the top,
as I'm looking here, and we didn't hear this sound
because we took it a little bit after that, but
he said good morning to everybody, and then he said, quote,
We're going out to Alligator Alcatraz. It's an East coast version.
Should be very exciting. And then I'll be back here
(30:50):
fighting for the bill. He knows there's a fight on
his hands, no doubt about it. I thought it was
interesting that he said smaller bills would have been easier,
but not as good. You want wonder if there's now
some second guessing going on. You know, I always wondered
all along if the smaller bills might have been the
way to go, because this way you don't get all
of this. Gina, you were saying the Christmas tree crap
(31:12):
in the bill, and you don't get one big bill.
You know what that makes me think of. It makes
me think of Omnibus. It makes me think of let's
put all the crap inside the bill, and that's what
we're seeing. We're seeing some crap inside the big beautiful bill,
and this was the reason why some wanted to do
two smaller bills. Look, it is what it is here.
Speaker 6 (31:33):
We are well at the moment, this one big beautiful
bill is turning out to be one big behind headache.
We'll of course have more coverage here throughout the morning,
but now we do have to take a break.
Speaker 3 (31:44):
It's been a long first part of the show.
Speaker 4 (31:46):
We're back in a moment, North Carolina. Welcome back to
American Sunrise. I'm doctor g Thanks for joining us. It
is time now for today's health news. It is sponsored,
(32:06):
of course by the Wellness Company and under the microscope
today some unexpected health benefits about the controversial seed oils.
You've been hearing a lot about this. Thank you RFK
for bringing this to the forefront. So many of us
have been talking about this for so long. Researchers at
Indiana University School of Public Health reports that these oils
(32:31):
have a compound we know this called linilaic acid. This
is common in Omega six fatty acids, and it can
reportedly help lower the risk of heart disease and type
two diabetes. A studies showed that higher linilaic acid in
plasma came with lower levels of biomarkers for cardio metabolic risk,
notably reducing inflammation. Higher levels of this compound also showed
(32:54):
lower levels of glucose and insulin.
Speaker 5 (32:57):
It is the funniest thing.
Speaker 4 (32:59):
You know everything you now you read the bag now,
So this is saying benefits of seed oils.
Speaker 5 (33:04):
I don't know about that.
Speaker 4 (33:05):
I want to see some more studies because all I'm
hearing these days are how bad seed oils are. I've
started cooking exclusively in beef, tallow and butter. I love
butter too, and go a little polladine on you here
and to tell you we just need more butter. That's
what we need anyway. There's a new administration in Washington,
d C. They brought a lot of positive changes when
(33:25):
it comes to fixing our broken healthcare system. The reality, though,
is there's only so much the government can do, and
if we really want to make America healthy again, that
has to start at home with each and every one
of us. That's where the Wellness company comes in. You
see and hear from their doctors all the time on
this network, and you know that they are products of
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your family safe and healthy. The Wellness Company gives you
(33:47):
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Do your part protect the health of yourself and your family.
Go to TWC dot health slash rab today, give it
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Speaker 5 (34:19):
Dot health slash rap.
Speaker 4 (34:20):
Use the promo code wrap that'll save you ten present
for more on the health of America. Let's bring in
the chief of Maternal and Prenatal Health for the Wellness Company,
doctor James Thorpe. Always a blessing to have you, Doctor Thorpe.
The new COVID variant has a nasty new symptom that
has led the media to dub it as the razor
blade throat variant.
Speaker 5 (34:41):
Tell us a little bit about this.
Speaker 15 (34:45):
Yes, there is a new variant MB one point eight
point one, and you know this is I think it's overblown.
I think it's really trying to scare the Americans, you know,
and get them under control again.
Speaker 4 (35:03):
I don't know, get the vaccine right, doctor Thorpe, that's
what they're saying.
Speaker 15 (35:09):
Yeah, it's this new variant nickname nimbus. But quite frankly,
it is important to maintain your health, keep your vitamin
D levels up, keep your medical kits on board at home,
have some ivermectin and some hydroxy cloric when available in
every home you know, as you know, you can't get
(35:32):
these stuff in many local pharmacies.
Speaker 5 (35:35):
That's right.
Speaker 4 (35:36):
Well, it feels a little coincidental a lot of time,
when pharmaceutical profits in some cases are dropping in COVID
vaccine boosters are at an all time low, that this
new scary sounding variant is out there. Do you think
pharmaceutical companies will continue this as I mean this idea
because I hear the public service announcements come up now
(35:59):
on my eighty year television doctors and I just laugh.
I'm like, this just looks like such a money grab.
Now we've won the pr side of this battle. But
what are they going to do in response? I guess
that's the big question.
Speaker 15 (36:14):
Well, I think they They tried to do it with
the airborne in the H five N one, right, and
we got out ahead of them, you, doctor Gina and
the wellness company, we got out ahead of this and
it turned into a big nothing burger, right. So what
they're doing, they're they're they're losing cash, they're losing massive profits.
(36:41):
Every time I look at Pfizer and their ads, Doctor Gina,
I want to vomit. Because the American people have to
remember that they have the largest fraud case in the
history of medicine brought against them. They paid out two
point two billion dollars in two thousand and eight. So
(37:02):
let that sink in. Why in the world, dear Lord,
why would the American people let this? You know, Scott Gottlieb,
this fascist, this liar, this fraudulent individual that goes between
the CDC and now is on the board of Pfizer.
(37:24):
This has to stop. Direct consumer advertising has to stop.
And you know, yes, the American people know it, but
I'm sick and tired of these vaccines being pushed on America.
It makes me sick to see Bobby gas lighted by
these you know Senator Blumenthal as I was gaslighted and
(37:49):
testifying in the United States Senate and doctor Peter McCullough
and others just three just four weeks ago. Today, you
know this has to stop. Bloomenthal is a liar, and
the rest of these congressmen that are paid off and
pushing this false narrative. I don't even think they believe
it themselves.
Speaker 4 (38:10):
Yeah, and just yesterday I saw RFK coming out and
saying that actually the cases of autism increased dramatically with
certain childhood vaccines. I mean, this is something that has
long been suspected. I've told this story many times of
me just sitting in my husband's Senate office in Missouri
(38:31):
doing constituent relations, and moms and dads coming through desperately
saying my child was perfectly fine until I gave them
the ex vaccine.
Speaker 5 (38:40):
In this case, I believe it was.
Speaker 4 (38:42):
I don't want to misquote which one it was that
he was talking about yesterday.
Speaker 5 (38:46):
What do you have to say about this.
Speaker 15 (38:49):
I'll tell you I'm in southwest Missouri right now at
an undisclosed location, a very large hospital doing high risk obstetrics.
I had three patients yesterday same thing, sudden onset, complete
change in their child after the vaccine. And you know,
these people are waking up and for doctors and legislatures
(39:13):
and physicians to gaslight these patients, that is such an
awful breach. This is such, this is going to be
This is so offensive to our creator and they will
be judged for this. They continue to push these poisons
for profit, and it's absolutely an abomination. I hate to
(39:38):
see Bobby Kennedy getting gas lit. You know, he says
he's on Tucker Carlson and what is he says, Well,
Tucker asks him, what's your opinion on the vaccines and autism?
And he says, well, my opinion is irrelevant. I mean,
this is how how horribly he attacked from every which
(40:02):
side that he can't speak what he knows to be
true or there'll be an onset of attacks, maybe even
physical and personal attacks on him. So I feel for him.
You know, Bobby stays strong and courageous.
Speaker 4 (40:19):
Well, I'll tell you I was on a phone call
yesterday with all of the MAHA people out there. I
brought my own team of influencers and the people I
knew in media we are going to have his back,
doctor Thorpe, on all of this stuff. I wanted to say,
I looked it up while we were talking. It was
my son Bo Lowden that posted it actually, and it
was a CDC cover up revealing that one thousand and
(40:43):
thirty five percent increase in autism from the hepatitis B vaccine.
Speaker 5 (40:51):
Are these are the words?
Speaker 4 (40:52):
And that was in that Ticher interview that you're talking
about doctor James Thorpe from the Wellness Company.
Speaker 5 (40:57):
We thank you.
Speaker 4 (40:57):
We thank the Wellness Company for continuing to bring us
the unvarnished truth that we really can't get any place else,
along with the medical kits that can save us from
the Rockefeller medicine system. Thank you so much for being
with us. Keep saving life.
Speaker 15 (41:11):
Thanks Scott, have a blessed fourth of July.
Speaker 5 (41:14):
You too, God bless you, my friend.
Speaker 4 (41:17):
Coming up, Southern States are coming together to reform higher education.
Speaker 5 (41:20):
Will the efforts work? Reassess next On American Sunrise.
Speaker 13 (41:32):
It's almost Independence Day and all of America will be celebrated.
Speaker 22 (41:36):
But here in real America's.
Speaker 13 (41:37):
Voice, we want to celebrate you every day from June
thirtieth through July fourth, We're giving away a handcrafted, a
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Scan the QR code to opt in for your chance
to win and receive future RAB promotions from.
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Our hearts for your home, use co rev for free shipping.
Speaker 1 (42:13):
And welcome back everybody to American Sunrise. You know that
feeling when your coffee actually does what it's supposed to do.
Clears your head, it lists your energy, it doesn't leave
you crashing an hour later. Well, that's what good coffee
is supposed to feel like, and that's what you get
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(42:38):
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they are offering a free starter kit. You get three
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saying merch, I sound so hip, including a Matt Black tumbler,
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(42:59):
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then seventeen seventy five covers the rest. Whether you drink
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that'd be kind of a that'd be a problem. But
it's less than a dollar a cup for coffee quality
that you won't find in most stores.
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So here's what you do.
Speaker 1 (43:21):
You head to seventeen seventy five coffee dot com slash
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still available. And by the way, let me just say
here it is. I've got it. Oh, I don't want
to put my fingers over the seventeen seventy five coffee.
We get this and the coffee it's phenomenal. As a
matter of fact, I'm flying right now. Let's send it
over to Emily. Emily to you.
Speaker 25 (43:42):
All right, David, you are certainly caffeinated this morning, so
now it.
Speaker 26 (43:46):
Is time to stay awake, not woke. And who is
awake today?
Speaker 25 (43:49):
Concerned educators and residents of southern states. They're banding together
to set up their own accrediting body for higher education. Florida, Texas, Georgia,
both Carolinas, and Tennessee. They've all set up a Commission
for Public Higher Education, aiming to offer high quality, efficient,
and academic excellence. The states say this is in response
(44:10):
to woke ideology on various college campuses. Here's what Florida
Governor Ronda Santis had to say.
Speaker 27 (44:16):
We are, in fact establishing a new accreditor for higher education,
and we're calling it the Commission for Public Higher Education.
So this endeavor will introduce a new accreditor into the marketplace.
It'll upend the monopoly of the woke accreditation cartels, and
it will provide institutions with an alternative that focuses on
(44:38):
student achievement rather than the ideological fads that have so
permeated those accrediting bodies over the year. Now, this commission
is a consortium of higher education systems from several states
offering a new accreditation model. And again, we care about
student achievement, We care about measurable outcomes, about efficiency, we
(45:01):
care about pursuing truth. We care about preparing our students
to be citizens.
Speaker 7 (45:07):
Of our republic.
Speaker 26 (45:07):
We want to know what you think. Let us know
on rumble or getter, hop on and let your voice
be heard. Coming up.
Speaker 25 (45:13):
The left has continued to go after Christians, but are
the attacks working?
Speaker 26 (45:16):
We dissect next on American Sunrise.
Speaker 28 (45:32):
God Bless the Us.
Speaker 23 (45:37):
In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth.
Speaker 6 (45:46):
Welcome back to American Sunrise. It is now time for
our moment of faith, brought to us by Lee Greenwood
and the God Bless the USA. Bible in focus today
new anti Christian attacks that are backfiring. The Blaze lays
it all out in this new piece, which claims the
left's new favorite target has become Christian nationalism. They're just
(46:06):
trying to silence Christians who don't go along with the
left wing agenda. They actually cited the case of Minnesota,
where a man of faith whose name is Vance Bolter
was accused of killing a state lawmaker and injuring another.
The legacy media seized on that narrative of the background
of this alleged shooter as a preacher. For more, Let's
(46:27):
bring in pastor, author and filmmaker cl Bryant. Pastor Bryant,
good to see you.
Speaker 21 (46:31):
So thank you so much, Terrence, glad to be with you.
Speaker 3 (46:37):
So I'd like to take a step back.
Speaker 6 (46:39):
First of all, I think to kind of set the
platform for this conversation. Do you see there being an
attack on faith in this country at this point?
Speaker 29 (46:47):
Oh, certainly there is an attack on faith, and we
should expect that as Christians. Matthew twenty four and I
believe it's twelve that says that they, because iniquity shall abound,
the hearts of many shall wax cold. And that's what
we're seeing now. And it is an attack on Christianity.
And I want to say this about the nationalism of Christians.
(47:12):
I love America more than any other nation on the
face of this earth. Everything I love is here, and
so my love of God and country is here. So
I guess that makes me a nationalist in the sense
of the word. And I'm certainly a Christian and I
thank God for that. And so it is the common
(47:35):
sense of our identity in this country that is under
attack as well, Terrence.
Speaker 21 (47:42):
It's our identity.
Speaker 6 (47:44):
You know, words are powerful, and I think sometimes you
can redefine a word Christian nationalism. When I look at
that term, I kind of see it with pride as
a Christian, because I think there should be a nationalism,
There should be this community of Christians that come to
the other no matter where you are, and have a
nationalistic idea, have this this pride if you will.
Speaker 21 (48:07):
And absolutely, and if we lose.
Speaker 29 (48:09):
That in our young people, if our young people are
brainwashed and that's bleached out of them, then America will
truly go away. And we are to occupy until Christ comes.
And He has claimed a great victory for us over death,
(48:30):
hell and the grave, and he has given us the
strength to suffer the tribulations and and do the tribulations.
Speaker 21 (48:37):
That this life does bring to us. And so we
must occupy. We must hold the ground until He comes.
Speaker 29 (48:46):
And we must expect also the slings and arrows that
come along with being a Christian. It's not a journey
for anyone who is faint of heart. It is one
who is a follower of Christ. And He was bold
in every aspect of himself, even to the resurrection from
the dead.
Speaker 6 (49:06):
And that's why our Bible says you should gurd yourself
in the whole armor of God. So I'm curious to
get your perspective. I was reading the other day and
this point struck me that the best way to fight
back against these current attacks is to be more christ
Like in our community, to really stand up and to
(49:26):
embody the values of Christ in our everyday interactions.
Speaker 3 (49:29):
Speak to that. How do you see that.
Speaker 29 (49:32):
It is important that we be Christians and not act
like Christians actors or act like Christians, but human beings
who are blood bought in Jesus Christ and our disciples
of Christ are individuals within themselves, and every one of
us is to let that individual light shine and that
(49:55):
men will see what God has done for you and
glorify Him for what he has done. But now what
we have turned it into is look at me type
of thing, Look at what I do the type of thing,
and instead of what I am doing to advance the
Kingdom of God, Christians must come back home to that
(50:19):
type of principles.
Speaker 21 (50:21):
It's love your neighbor truly as yourself.
Speaker 29 (50:24):
But defend the land, the property that God has given
to us as Americans, because it is a land that
has been bought with blood. And I want to wish
everyone a very happy Independence Day this coming forth of July.
Speaker 6 (50:41):
Pastor Bryant will have to leave the conversation there. You
gave us a word though on this Tuesday morning. We
appreciate it. God bless you.
Speaker 3 (50:49):
Bless you as well, my friend.
Speaker 6 (50:50):
We're back with the second hour of American Sunrise in
two minutes.
Speaker 1 (51:04):
Coming up on the second hour of American Sunrise, Capitol Hill,
Trump's big beautiful Bill and the mad dash to get
it to the President's desk by July fourth. The question
at this hour, what are the odds that it's delivered
by the deadline. We have a quick moving story and
the very latest ahead. Also keep America safe again. President
(51:27):
Trump headed down to Florida today, not to stop at
mar A Lago, but to take a tour of the
new Alligator Alcatraz for illegals. That biting story is ahead
and some of Idaho's finest ambush too murdered in cold blood.
It's a tragic travesty. They were lured into fighting a
(51:48):
fire to save others. The details on this disturbing story
and the shooter is ahead, as the second hour of
American Sunrise starts right now. Good morning America, US.
Speaker 2 (52:01):
Welcome to American Sunrise.
Speaker 3 (52:04):
Well, it's culture.
Speaker 2 (52:05):
We have breaking news to share with you.
Speaker 3 (52:07):
Politics.
Speaker 1 (52:08):
President Trump is joining us live now from Florida.
Speaker 3 (52:12):
We've got your couple.
Speaker 1 (52:13):
This is what it looks like to be a patriot.
Speaker 3 (52:16):
We have to protect the American family.
Speaker 2 (52:19):
The American dream is still alive.
Speaker 3 (52:22):
I'm David Brody, I'm Terrence, and.
Speaker 5 (52:24):
I'm doctor Tina.
Speaker 1 (52:29):
Welcome back, everybody to the second hour of American Sunrise.
I'm David Brody, coming to you from the deep State,
that is DC, where we can't get anything done up here.
Let's bring in doctor g in West Palm and t
Bates in our Denver newsroom. Look, good morning to both
of you. And you know, we've been talking about the big,
beautiful Bill and all of the machinations going on in
Congress at this hour literally, but the sidebar which is
(52:53):
kind of becoming the main attraction sadly now is President
Trump and Elon Musk, which we also talked about there
now in round two of this war, and we mentioned
that at the top of this. I want to read
something real quick President Trump. When we showed him some
of his comments coming out of the White House this
morning before he left for Florida. Here are some comments
(53:15):
he made right before that. So a reporter had asked
him specifically Are you going to deport Elon Musk? Was
the question, and Trump said, quote and he wasn't smiling
when he said it, quote, We'll.
Speaker 19 (53:29):
Have to take a look.
Speaker 1 (53:30):
We might have to put Doge on Elon. You know what,
Doze is the monster that might have to go back
and eat Elon. Wouldn't that be terrible? He gets a
lot of subsidies. Meanwhile Elon Musk, Gina is saying that
he's going to back Tom Massey in his Republican primary fight.
Of course Trump is going against Massie. So look this
round two is far worse than round one. Gina.
Speaker 4 (53:54):
I just I detest this something. It's everything wrong with politics,
you know. I know for some people they're like, ooh, popcorn.
Speaker 5 (54:02):
This is exciting.
Speaker 4 (54:03):
For me, this is what Republicans do. And I looked
back at my old posts on Twitter, David. For the
first time I posted about how I hate that when
Republicans have any success, we circle fire while they circle
wagons every single time. The first time I tweeted that
(54:23):
was in twenty seventeen. So that tells you, like, this
is something that has been on the mind of people
and the Tea Party, the people in Maga for such
a long time, and this is one of those things
that you just it's so predictable.
Speaker 5 (54:40):
Terrence is so predictable, Like, let's hold it.
Speaker 4 (54:43):
Together, folks, Let's hold it together because we have so
much more in common to fight for, right we mostly
if you look at what most of us agree on,
it's about ninety percent of what we believe.
Speaker 5 (54:54):
Terrence.
Speaker 6 (54:56):
Yeah, I'm really not this self involved, doctor Gina, but
I believe I said early on that I was cautiously
optimistic about the relationship between President Trump and Elon Musk,
and that I thought it was going to be a
challenge for them to coexist.
Speaker 3 (55:13):
And now my thoughts are coming true.
Speaker 6 (55:16):
Yeah, they're not working together, but you've got two personalities
that are now at odds, and I just think the
country doesn't benefit and it's a sad state of affairs.
But let's get to the headlines of the day, because
I could go on for another twenty minutes on that
President Trump is actually leaving the DC swamp today, headed
to the real swamp of the Florida Everglades. He's going
(55:36):
to be braving mosquitos and humidity for the opening of
a new temporary migrant detention center. This is the President,
leaving the White House about an hour ago getting on.
Speaker 3 (55:46):
Marine Force one.
Speaker 6 (55:48):
Florida's a new compound of heavy duty, tense trailers and
temporary buildings will turn an old airfield in the Big
Ciphers National Preserve into a holding site for people in
this country illegally who are in the deportation process.
Speaker 8 (56:02):
The facility is in the heart of the Everglades and
will be informally known as Alligator Alcatraz. There is only
one road leading in, and the only way out is
a one way flight. It is isolated and surrounded by
dangerous wildlife and unforgiving terrain. The facility will have up
to five thousand beds to how'se process and deport criminal
(56:24):
illegal aliens.
Speaker 6 (56:26):
Florida State Attorney General describes the site as perfect for
holding it legal immigrants because, quote, if people get out,
there's not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons.
By the way, since President Trump took office, at least
seventeen thousand people have reportedly been placed in federal immigration detention.
The face off between the Trump administration and Harvard University
(56:48):
continues as the administration's investigation into the university finds that
Harvard failed to protect Jewish students from harassment. A federal
task for sent the Ivy League school a letter on
Monday saying that it violated civil rights laws requiring colleges
to protect students from discrimination based on race or national origin.
Investigators found that Harvard was a quote willful participant in
(57:12):
anti Semitic harassment of Jewish students, faculty, and staff. The
letter goes on to say, quote failure to institute adequate
changes immediately will result in the loss of all federal
financial resources and continue to affect Harvard's relationship with the
federal government. This is the latest intensification in the White
House's battle with Harvard, which has already cost the university
(57:33):
more than two point six billion.
Speaker 3 (57:35):
Dollars in federal funding.
Speaker 6 (57:39):
Now to new information about Sunday's deadly ambush.
Speaker 3 (57:42):
Of firefighters in Idaho, the.
Speaker 6 (57:43):
Town of Kurdlane continues to mourn the two firefighters who
were killed. Investigators say the twenty year old who pulled
the trigger as they responded to put out a wildfire
had been spiraling in recent months. He was reportedly living
out of his car after moving out of an apartment
that he shared with the roommate earlier this year. The
guy also recently shaved off his long hair. We're told
(58:06):
investigators believe the accused shooter acted on his own and
killed himself before police were able to arrest him. In
the meantime, the Kurda Laying Fire Department, which lost two
veteran battalion chiefs in that attack, is now adding a
police escort to every call of response to no matter
how routine. That's a quick check of your headlines. We'll
have more headlines coming away shortly. But now let's get
(58:28):
you over to David.
Speaker 1 (58:30):
Okay, t Bates appreciated, turning our attention now back to,
of course, Capitol Hill. The Big Beautiful Bill and the
mad Dash should get it to the President's desk by Friday.
What are the odds of that happening? Joining us now
with insight into all things is Steve Kruber, of course,
host of America's Voice Live here on RAV Steve, I
mean you can talk about the Big Beautiful Bill. I
(58:51):
mean it's just changing by the second, by the minute.
But this Elon Musk Trump thing, this is bad and
this isn't just a made up media story in terms
of all they're just trying to get them to fight. Uh,
this is this, this is a problem. This is a problem.
We need to acknowledge that.
Speaker 30 (59:11):
Let's start with the office pool July fourth, fifth, sixth,
excuse me one.
Speaker 19 (59:19):
Better now good? Uh?
Speaker 30 (59:23):
Over under on the on the on the fourth of July.
I think it's gonna be over. I don't think they
get there by the fourth of July. The Elon Musk
Donald Trump back and forth is it's it's unsightly, it's unnecessary.
Speaker 19 (59:38):
I wish it would go away. Is it really a
big problem?
Speaker 30 (59:41):
Probably not, except that you know, Donald Trump makes it
a decent point in so far as how much money
does Elon Musk get for his cars, for his rockets,
for all the things that he does from government subsidies.
That's a legitimate point. It's also a legitimate point the
government spends too damn much money. Elon's not wrong that
we spend too much money. And then we've got not
(01:00:04):
that Democrats was spine to actually say no, illegal aliens
should not get you know, Medicaid benefits, among so many
other things.
Speaker 19 (01:00:12):
One point four millions.
Speaker 30 (01:00:12):
Stay on there because you couldn't muster seven Democrats to
do the right thing for the American people, while we're
thirty seven trillion dollars in debt.
Speaker 19 (01:00:19):
Give me a break. It's insanity.
Speaker 30 (01:00:22):
You know, we got three, but you needed seven and
so a million and a half. Illegals continue to get medicated,
and that's just one example. They're getting snap benefits, they're
getting free housing, they're getting benefits from New York City,
the state of California, the federal government.
Speaker 19 (01:00:36):
The list goes on.
Speaker 30 (01:00:39):
The Good news is I hope that this ruling for
the Supreme Court on Friday means that Donald Trump could say,
you know, no more of this in an executive order
and couldn't be stopped by a federal district judge that
was way out of their lane. We'll see where this
ends up. There's so much to talk about here. The
big beautiful bill, I don't know if it's big anymore.
I don't know if it's beautiful. I don't know how
much you're going to get across the finish line. My
chief complaints with John Thune to I'm not going to
(01:01:01):
kid yet. Look, fune could have gotten rid of the parliamentarian.
All I to do is replace her or ignore her.
He's not required a listener. This is something that was
put in the nineteen thirties. It's not constitutional. The parliamentarian,
who is she to decide one person gets to the
side for three hundred and thirty five million people, what we.
Speaker 19 (01:01:15):
Spend, don't spend, do or don't do. That's not how
it's supposed to work. Unelected Harry Reid.
Speaker 30 (01:01:21):
The ghost of Harry Reid wearing its ugly head thirteen
years on.
Speaker 19 (01:01:25):
It's pretty frightening.
Speaker 5 (01:01:27):
Steve.
Speaker 4 (01:01:27):
President headed our way to one of my favorite places
in the world, which is the Florida Swamps.
Speaker 5 (01:01:34):
It is as we speak.
Speaker 4 (01:01:36):
This is not to stop this time at his Mar
A Lago mansion, but to take a tour of Alligator
Alcatraz for illegals. Now the building is taking place as
being constructed, I guess, on an abandoned airfield, and we'll
be able to house about three thousand illegals with criminal
records when fully completed. Ron Destantas touted this complex and
(01:01:57):
this speed at which you could start actually operating. Take
a listen to this, Steve.
Speaker 31 (01:02:02):
The state of Florida is all in on President Trump's mission.
And obviously you have ice operations, but that's not enough,
and so there needs to be more ability to intake,
process and then deport. So this answers that this is
going to be able to have more than three thousand illegals.
Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
It can be processed through here.
Speaker 31 (01:02:21):
We've got a massive runway right behind us where any
of the federal assets. If they want to fly these
people back to their home country, they can do it
one stop shop.
Speaker 5 (01:02:33):
Steve, this is going to be interesting.
Speaker 4 (01:02:36):
Do you think that, I mean, this is really reminiscent
of the original Alcatraz right. Do you think this is
going to have any deterrence factor?
Speaker 30 (01:02:47):
No, but it'll be effective as a holding facility. The
term factor no, because criminals are criminals. Alcatraz was not
a deterrent either. But once you're there, you're there because
where you're going to go doesn't matter if there's alligators
or not.
Speaker 19 (01:03:01):
It's a swamp.
Speaker 30 (01:03:02):
Where are you going to go on a swamp for
mile after mile after mile, there's no place to go,
no place to run.
Speaker 19 (01:03:07):
So once you're there, you're stuck there.
Speaker 30 (01:03:09):
And I wonder if people like kill Braill Garcia, you
know it would it would help us sidesteps some of
the oh the land mindes that Democrats put in front
of us every day to protect this country because they
don't care about the country. They care about power and money.
That's true of some Republicans too. You may have noticed,
but maybe a brail Garcia could have gone there instead
(01:03:31):
of l Salvador and then you would have had no
issue with where he was spirited off to. And for criminals, look,
we're talking about child molesters, murderers, violent criminals. Put them
there and then we'll decide where they go in their procedures. Next,
we'll give them due process from their jail cell right
(01:03:51):
there in the middle of the Everglades, in the middle
of that swamp.
Speaker 19 (01:03:54):
Right.
Speaker 30 (01:03:54):
I think it's personal, and I think it's perfect, but deterrent.
Speaker 19 (01:04:00):
Look, a lot of these folks have already committed the crimes.
Speaker 30 (01:04:03):
They're already on the list of people that Tom Holman
and Christy Nome want taking off the streets of America,
which they should. While Democrats sit behind their gated communities
and say no, no, no, let them stay here.
Speaker 19 (01:04:15):
I'll tell you what.
Speaker 30 (01:04:16):
Let them stay in your gated community and not in
my neighborhood.
Speaker 19 (01:04:19):
How about that.
Speaker 5 (01:04:22):
About?
Speaker 6 (01:04:23):
Hey, Steve, top of mind for me this morning, and
I'd love to get your perspective because, first of all,
I respect it. It seems to me that at the
moment senators are kind of dealing with this conundrum of
ideological differences in the one big, beautiful bill or passing
it just in order to get a legislative victory.
Speaker 3 (01:04:43):
Do you see it that way? First of all?
Speaker 6 (01:04:44):
And second of all, should ideological differences see too the
legislative victory?
Speaker 3 (01:04:51):
How should they go about this? How do you see this?
Speaker 19 (01:04:55):
You know, I see a lot of problems here.
Speaker 30 (01:04:56):
Look, it would be nice if you could have of
senators that saw the reality of the fact that America's
thirty seven trillion dollars in debt.
Speaker 19 (01:05:05):
But instead what do you have?
Speaker 30 (01:05:06):
Yeah, people like Chris Murphy, the senator from Connecticut, saying, man,
look what mom Donnie did in New York, we should
do more of that. Seriously, this is the Democrats have
taken socialism.
Speaker 19 (01:05:16):
And communism and then moved it mainstream.
Speaker 30 (01:05:18):
So how are you ever going to how do you
make a deal with somebody on the other side of
the aisle who actually believes that what Mam Donnie is
promising in New York with free supermarkets and free childcare
and free buses and free handouts and everything else. How
do you make a deal with that side of the aisle?
I mean, the historic failures of socialism slash communism are
(01:05:38):
very well known and they don't care. So I don't
know how you bridge that divide. And then you look
at the Republicans. Tom tillis, he's lost, he's gone. He
might as well declare himself a democrat. Honestly, he's made
a lot of complaints, but he attacks.
Speaker 19 (01:05:54):
The whole thing and then says, I quit. I'm gonna
take my toys and go home. Good Tom, see you later.
Speaker 30 (01:06:00):
The good news is for North Carolina, we will get
a conservative in place of him, because I think that
North Carolina is following the lead of Iowa and Ohio
and Florida. It's not a swing state anymore. Look at
North Carolina's elections of the last few cycles. North Carolina
has become a red state. That's good. Tom tillis goodbye.
Don't let the door hit you, as they say. But
as far as getting a deal with these democrats, I
(01:06:21):
don't know how you do it. These people embrace zoron
the moron.
Speaker 19 (01:06:26):
I mean, how do you deal with that? Sorry, that's
about it.
Speaker 30 (01:06:32):
Fit If the shoe fits kick yourself with it. I mean,
come on, the guy's terrible. The guys are awful. Eric
Adams is going to win. I think, I hope. I
actually I'm rooting for Eric Adams. Think about that, right,
that's worry. I mean, look, it's the biggest city in America.
What happens to New York matters to the rest of us.
But a lot of people may not think so, But
it matters to the rest of us what happens there
(01:06:53):
to some extent.
Speaker 19 (01:06:55):
And this Zoron guy, he's not even he's your Ganda.
Speaker 30 (01:07:00):
He doesn't even identify as an American accrd to his
own mother. And people like Chris Murphy are like, hey,
we need to be more like this guy.
Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
Really, I mean, we've got to We've got to go.
We're going to anchor jail. You're coming with us at
this point, So thank you for being here, Steve.
Speaker 19 (01:07:15):
Yeah, we got a god bless America, un.
Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
Cornbread in America. Steve Bruber, All right, Coming next to
Social Security about to go broke. New CBO estimates say
the agency may be insolvent by the end of twenty
thirty three. So is there anything policymakers can do to
keep the program sustainable. Lol, and if it happens, what
happens to all of us. We're coming back on American
Sunrise in a moment busy Tuesday.
Speaker 25 (01:08:02):
Welcome back to American Sunrise. I'm American Sunrise contributor Emily Finn.
It's great to have you with us this morning. Time
now to drain the swamp in this morning, we are
flushing out anyone standing in the way of finding a
solution to the Social Security problem. The headline from Just
the News social Security may be insolvent by the end
of twenty thirty three, CBO reports data predicts highlighting urgency.
(01:08:25):
The director of Policy Analysis at the Tax Foundation, Garrett Watson,
has said that Social Security is on a rapid path
to insolvency by mid twenty thirties if policymakers do not
take action to make the program sustainable.
Speaker 26 (01:08:39):
Ugh, that looks a little terrifying there. We want to
know what you think.
Speaker 25 (01:08:42):
Let us know on Rumble or get her hop on
and let your voice be heard. Coming up before the
market opens, We've got info you'll want to hear when
it comes to your dollars and common sense. Jake Novak
joins us with his take on your wallet and the
financial week ahead. As American sunrise continues.
Speaker 13 (01:09:06):
It's almost Independence Day and all of America will be celebrated.
Speaker 22 (01:09:10):
But here, in real America's voice, we want to celebrate here.
Speaker 13 (01:09:13):
Every day from June thirtieth through July fourth, we're giving
away a handcrafted, a hand paint at Hardwood flag to
one lucky RAB viewer. These beautiful flags come from your
American Flagstore dot com, where ten percent of every purchase
goes to your American Flag Foundation. Scan the QR code
to opt in for your chance to win and receive
future RAB promotions from our.
Speaker 23 (01:09:31):
Hearts for your home. Use code RAB for free shipping.
Speaker 3 (01:09:42):
Welcome back everyone.
Speaker 6 (01:09:43):
We're getting ready for the opening bellow to New York
Stock Exchange is going to ring here in just a
little bit Long Island, New York that you just saw there.
As you can see, not starting off so hot and
pre market trading. All three major indices are down right now.
They're in the red. However, gold, silver, and crude oil
are up right now. We'll of course continue to monitor
all of it for you and take you to New
(01:10:05):
York for the opening bell there at the New York
Stock Exchange here. That's going to happen in short order.
But now let's get you over to David.
Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
All right, T Bates appreciate it. So are you heading
out on the road this July fourth week? And everyone
well be prepared for a pleasant surprise. Ooh, that's a tease.
We'll join us now to talk about that more American
Sunrise Early Edition host and the man behind Jake's takes
on substack.
Speaker 7 (01:10:27):
That would be Jake Novac.
Speaker 23 (01:10:28):
There we are, Jake.
Speaker 11 (01:10:29):
Hello, So I.
Speaker 1 (01:10:30):
Assume we're talking about gas prices. Am I wrong? Am
I right? It's imprompter, So.
Speaker 32 (01:10:35):
You're right, I'm gasoline prices for this summer will be
lower than they've been in four years, for any summer.
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
And give me a moment. I know I want to
hear you wax poetic. We've got Tom Holman given a
ress conference real quick. I was told to jump in
because here he's coming to the mic stand by Jake's take.
We're going to get Tom Holman's take here as he's
moving to the microphones. Here, we're assuming he'll talk like
he always as. If not, Jake, I guess you'll talk
hold on here we goes. Well, it doesn't work right,
(01:11:11):
I'm just gonna do it all right. Well, that was
the shortest press conference in television history. Jake, back to
you and your take. No, Tom home and take, please
continue where you left off. Sometimes he talks, sometimes he doesn't.
Speaker 24 (01:11:32):
Always leave the audience wanting more.
Speaker 32 (01:11:34):
Tom Holman following that rule very well, we definitely want
more from it, all right, But no, I want to
say that gasoline prices for this summer will be the
lowest they've been for a summer.
Speaker 24 (01:11:42):
In four years. We're at three dollars.
Speaker 32 (01:11:45):
And seventeen cents a gallon, down another penny overnight. That's
the national average. I know a lot of you are
paying less, a lot of you are paying more. Hey,
in California, David, the average price for a gallon of
regular four dollars and fifty nine cents, So you're paying
a buck forty two more a gallon in California. And
a new gas tax is going into effect today, as
(01:12:05):
if they're not already paying that much. So of course
it matters what state you live in, So try to
fill up somewhere other than California.
Speaker 24 (01:12:11):
That's my advice.
Speaker 1 (01:12:13):
Yeah, And here's another piece of advice, because I was
just in California two weeks ago in Lake Tahoe six
dollars and seventy five cents for gas in Lake Tahoe.
So whatever you do, please don't fill up in Lake Tahoe.
Just a quick little pro tip here on American Center.
All right, Jake, let's talk a little bit about Jerome Powell.
(01:12:33):
He's on his way out. We all know that Trump
was looking for a replacement his term ends in May
of next year. But that's not happening. What do you
think is going to happen? Scott Bessett, the Treasury Secretary, says,
you know, if he needs to do it, he'll step
in and be FED chair. What do you see happening here, sir?
Speaker 32 (01:12:50):
You know it's interesting the different and new way is
to put pressure on Jerome Powell. President Trump's coming up
with a lot of new ideas. So we know President
Trump's in publicly bashing him in a way that no
resident has bashed a FED chairman in the past. But
last week he introduced a new tactic saying he might
you know again, reportedly saying that he might appoint a
shadow FED chair, someone who isn't exactly the FED chair,
(01:13:13):
but someone who would speak to the news media, speak
to Wall Street and say would he or she would
do if they were in charge of the FED. So
we learned yesterday that one of those people could be
Scott Bessant, who's currently the Treasury Secretary. I assume he
could play the role as shadow FED chairman even while
he's still the Treasury Secretary, where he's getting a lot
of high marks from people across the board. So maybe
(01:13:34):
that's one idea, but that will put a lot of
pressure on j Powell. I mean, the idea here David,
as he alluded to, is to get him to step
down before May of next year. He's got eleven more
months or I guess now ten more months. That's the
idea to see if there's enough pressure to put on it.
And you know, there's a good there's other things going
against him right now. You know, he went to Congress
last week and promised that the new FED headquarters didn't
(01:13:55):
have a lot of lavish, lovely parts, lovely amenity is
in it, and it turns out it does.
Speaker 24 (01:14:01):
And so now there are people saying he lied to Congress.
Speaker 32 (01:14:04):
I mean, honestly, he may see resignation as his only way.
Speaker 24 (01:14:07):
Out really soon. You know, listen, I have mixed feelings
about him.
Speaker 32 (01:14:11):
All I can say is his fellow central bankers, especially
in Europe, have been cutting rates really aggressively all year,
while he hasn't, and that's making it really hard for
anyone to continue to support him right now.
Speaker 1 (01:14:23):
Well, why exactly, we keep hearing it's because of all
of the tariff uncertainty. Is that the whole story exactly?
And why in the world would he not do that
and help spur the economy by cutting interest rates?
Speaker 32 (01:14:36):
Well, you know, if he had been consistent David and said, hey,
I'm not cutting rates because inflation is still a problem
in this country, and if he had kept very consistent
on that state, on that position, I'd really defend him
because I actually think inflation is too high still in
this country. I think President Trump's done an amazing job
to get it relatively under control, but still we've got
(01:14:56):
a long way to go. But the problem, David is
last year around election, he cut rates twice. Now he
says it wasn't for partisan reasons and to help Kamala
Harris's campaign, but it looks bad because inflation was much
worse back then.
Speaker 24 (01:15:10):
So why did he cut rates then?
Speaker 21 (01:15:12):
And not.
Speaker 24 (01:15:12):
Now here's the that's the problem, David.
Speaker 32 (01:15:14):
This is where he's really in trouble, and I don't
think it passes the smell test.
Speaker 24 (01:15:18):
He may not have been literally trying to help Kamala Harris,
but what.
Speaker 32 (01:15:22):
He was doing was making it clear that he's not
really being consistent about the inflation pressures and cutting rates,
and that is a huge problem.
Speaker 24 (01:15:29):
You got to be consistent.
Speaker 32 (01:15:31):
And most of the FED chairmen love him or hate
them in the past, and there was one woman, Janet Yellen.
They were at least consistent in their policies pretty much. Again,
not always, but a lot more consistency than we're seeing
from j Powell.
Speaker 24 (01:15:41):
And that's where he's in big Jo.
Speaker 1 (01:15:43):
Not to put you on the spot, we got about
twenty seconds or so, but you got any names for
FED chair the people that you might like to see
in that position. I don't know if anybody comes to mind.
Speaker 32 (01:15:52):
Well, I know someone who's dying for the job, and
that's Larry Kudlow, who I used to be his executive
producer for years. I don't know if he's still eligible
for the job he's go up there, but boy, he
wants that job.
Speaker 24 (01:16:02):
I can tell you that right now.
Speaker 32 (01:16:03):
Other than that, a lot of people, really good people
out there, would want it.
Speaker 19 (01:16:06):
Definitely.
Speaker 1 (01:16:07):
Jake's takes every day here on the I call us
the late edition American Sunrise. You're, of course the early edition.
Thank you, Jake. I appreciate it. Where do people go substack?
Speaker 3 (01:16:16):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:16:16):
Jake's takes? Is that how they go?
Speaker 24 (01:16:19):
Jakenovak dot substack dot com.
Speaker 32 (01:16:21):
I got little short podcasts on business in the general news,
every diet.
Speaker 1 (01:16:25):
All right, appreciate it, Jake. Time to head over to
t Base in Denver. Opening bell time sponsored by AMAC.
Speaker 33 (01:16:31):
The Association of Mature American Citizens is the conservative voice
for Americans fifty and older. AMAC is fighting for the
values that you hold, dear, and joined today together we
can write the course of America.
Speaker 6 (01:16:46):
Were less than a minute away from the opening bell
at the New York Stock Exchange. The applause is about
to get under way, and then we'll wait for the
bell to ring. You can kind of hear the applause
on the back. Ralliant is at the podium. They're applauding,
they're getting their day in front of the camera, and
then momentarily we're going.
Speaker 7 (01:17:05):
To hear the bell ring.
Speaker 6 (01:17:06):
And they're getting idea of what the market's are looking like.
Pre market trading not looking so hot on any of
the three major indices. So you heard the bell there ring,
So let's get an idea of what things are looking
like now. And just like that, the Dow and S
and P five hundred remaining down. The NASDAC went up briefly,
but as you saw, it fell back just moments ago
(01:17:27):
as we were on the air. So we'll continue to
monitor that throughout the day. Gold, silver, and crude oil
all remaining pretty high. Gold up more than two full
percentage points, almost three points three percentage points.
Speaker 3 (01:17:39):
So we'll continue to monitor all of that for you
throughout the morning.
Speaker 6 (01:17:42):
Coming up here on American Sunrise, a story that must
be heard as Independence Day approaches. Pride in America remains
near record lows, while Republicans continue to express more pride
in the United States than Democrats, and Independence the results
of a shocking new survey ahead.
Speaker 13 (01:18:08):
It's almost Independence Day and all of America will be celebrated.
Speaker 22 (01:18:12):
But here, in Real America's voice, we want to celebrate you.
Speaker 13 (01:18:15):
Every day from June thirtieth through July fourth, we're giving
away a handcrafted hand paint at Hardwood.
Speaker 22 (01:18:20):
Flag to one lucky RAB viewer.
Speaker 13 (01:18:22):
These beautiful flags come from your American Flagstore dot com.
We're ten percent of every purchase goes to your American
Flag Foundation. Scan the QR code to opt in for
your chance to win and receive future RAB promotions from
our hearts for your home use code RAB for free shipping.
Speaker 4 (01:18:46):
Hi, Welcome to the American Sunrise. I'm doctor G. Thanks
for joining us this morning. It is time now to
take on the political pulse of America the beat today
as we approach the fourth of July weekend Independence Day,
a new Gallup poll finds America can pride listen to
this is at a record low, and who is dragging
those numbers down well Democrats, of course.
Speaker 5 (01:19:05):
The latest survey.
Speaker 4 (01:19:06):
From Gallup fines Republicans are far more likely to take
pride in the US of A. Currently fifty nine percent
of Republicans and only thirty four percent of Democrats say
they are extremely proud to be an American.
Speaker 5 (01:19:19):
When we compare those.
Speaker 4 (01:19:20):
Numbers to twenty years ago, all political groups, including even independents,
are seeing some kind of decline an American pride. Uh
Kaida sad and not what we want to hear as
we go into Independence Day, right, Emily, I.
Speaker 26 (01:19:38):
Mean this kind of makes sense, right.
Speaker 25 (01:19:39):
Democrats, how can they take pride when their president over
the past four.
Speaker 26 (01:19:43):
Years was asleep at the wheel? What do they have
to take pride?
Speaker 25 (01:19:45):
And of course Republicans are way more proud to be American,
way more excited to celebrate Fourth of July weekend because
the guy leading our party is delivering on all of
his promises and making America better for all of us.
Speaker 5 (01:19:56):
Gina, Yeah, no doubt about it.
Speaker 4 (01:19:59):
All right, So for more I think we are going
to bring in American Oh yes, American, sorry, rather political analyst.
He is founder of the Caldwell Institute. He is author
of the new Trump endorsed book The Day My Brother
Was Murdered, And most importantly, he's an amazing person and
an incredible friend. Gianno calledwell, good morning, Giano, thank you
(01:20:23):
for being on the show with us.
Speaker 19 (01:20:26):
Tell it.
Speaker 5 (01:20:26):
We want to talk about your.
Speaker 4 (01:20:27):
Book absolutely in just a moment. But I'm curious whether
you think that the things that President Trump is doing
directly impact things like the reason why you wrote this
book about the brother that you lost to violence in
the very first place.
Speaker 7 (01:20:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:20:48):
I gotta tell you, first and foremost is an honor
to be with you, two ladies. You're an inspiration to
all of us. I gotta tell you this president, President
Donald Trump, has been a law and order president. He's
appointing people like Pam Bonnie to be our Attorney general,
who joined us on our border, the car Well Institute
for Public Safety when we launched. This is a group
(01:21:08):
of people who believe that we need to get the
country back on track. We've largely been lost over the
Biden years, and it has been a complete collapse of
safety in many cities around the country. If you just
look at Los Angeles just a few weeks ago, the
ice protests, the rioting, the looting, the things that their governor,
Gavin Newsom has encouraged. And I say he has encouraged
(01:21:30):
it because he didn't want to repeal Prop forty seven,
which reduced penalties on criminal activity, and that's throughout the
state of California. He did not want to repeal that,
but the voters did, and they did this past election.
I got to tell you, this president has made sure
that criminals know that they no longer have a standing
in the United States of America, and that's why he's
(01:21:51):
deporting many of those folks that came over the border illegally, terrorists, rapists, murderers.
Speaker 7 (01:21:56):
Many folks that we would not want in our country.
Speaker 25 (01:21:59):
He's doing a great job, really well said there, Giano.
You know, it's funny because I think about California. I
think about this is where I met you for the
first time when your book Taken for Granted, came out
and met you at that book signing there, and California
has just gotten so much worse over the years since
that time, with all these crazy liberal policies. Now, I
do want to talk about your new book about your
(01:22:20):
brother Christian. It was actually just endorsed by President Trump.
President Trump wrote on truth Social that it is a
tragic story and yet one in which so many or
so much rather can be learned about violent crime in
America and how to stop it. Gee, I am just
so proud of you for turning a tragedy in your
family into something that is really helping people and making
(01:22:41):
a difference. Tell us more about what inspired you to
write this book, walk us through what happened to Christian
and the work that you're doing now.
Speaker 14 (01:22:49):
Absolutely, and I'm honored to have President Trump's endorsement of
My book is titled That Day my Brother was Murdered,
My Journey through America's Violent Crime Crisis, and then it
talk about what happened to my brother, because on June
twenty fourth, twenty twenty two, my life changed for everyone.
My innocent, teenage baby brother, Christian, was murdered in the
city of Chicago, and since then I've been out for justice,
(01:23:10):
not just for him, but families across the country. That's
why I established a Caldwell Institute for Public Safety, which
goes after those George who was funded progressive prosecutors. I
call them political prosecutors because that's exactly what they are.
They refused to enforce the law fairly, They refused to
lock up criminals, They let them go out.
Speaker 7 (01:23:28):
They believe in no cash.
Speaker 14 (01:23:30):
Bail, many of the things that have taken our country
to the brink in multiple cities. This book The Day
my Brother was Murdered, My Journey through America's Violent Crime Crisis.
I examined that very day my brother was murdered, where
there was one hundred and fifty people across the nation
that was murdered. People like James from Philadelphia, who was
an army veteran who couldn't sleep often, so at one
(01:23:50):
or two in the morning, he would often go to
a park in his neighborhood because he couldn't sleep. And
on that day, June twenty fourth, there were teenagers, some
even ten and eleven years old, in the park and
he said, what are you all doing out here? You
need to go home?
Speaker 7 (01:24:02):
And what happened? They beat him to death for the
traffic home. Or people like Catherine.
Speaker 14 (01:24:07):
Catherine was a mother, a wife, a grandmother, sixty four
years old, a chemical engineer leaving home in Texas on
a day from work June twenty fourth, when a gunfire
broke out on the highway. She ended up losing her
life because a drug deal went wrong. There's so many
stories in this book that are tragic, and we already
(01:24:27):
know how bad it is. Your audience knows how bad
it is, But what do we do about it? I
talked to people for solutions, people like John Walsh from
America's Most Wanted, people like Sean Hannity, people like doctor
Drew Pinsk on how the mental health crisis is contributing
to the crime crisis. I've talked to Faith leaders, educators,
because we have to do something about this. It happened
(01:24:49):
to my family and it's quite unfortunate. Obviously, I just
don't want to see this happen to anyone else. So
I came up with a blueprint of how to solve it.
Speaker 5 (01:24:58):
And you, of.
Speaker 4 (01:25:00):
Course are going to be coming here and doing an
event in Palm Beach.
Speaker 5 (01:25:04):
I'm going to help you with that. I'm excited about it.
Speaker 7 (01:25:06):
I'm super excited.
Speaker 26 (01:25:08):
Yes, it is good.
Speaker 4 (01:25:09):
But talk to us a little bit about what prompted you.
You were in Los Angeles, you took note of the
politicians there. You said, I'm going to go to a
red state where the politicians are.
Speaker 5 (01:25:20):
Different a difference. What sort of a difference has that
made to you?
Speaker 4 (01:25:24):
And I also think, Giano, I want to ask you secondarily,
when you talk to people left us to probably assume
you're on their side, right, we all think that, you know,
if you've encountered gun violence, if you're a black man
living in America, all the things you go in this box,
how do you talk to us about how you gently
prompt them into your current spiritual status of being a
(01:25:52):
conservative living in a red state and the difference that's
made in your life.
Speaker 14 (01:25:56):
Absolutely, And you know what, I grew up in Chicago,
lived in DC, lived in LA, and I live in Miami, Florida.
Now this is my first time actually in a red state,
and I was driven here because of COVID.
Speaker 7 (01:26:10):
In LA, they treated us like prisoners for two months.
Speaker 14 (01:26:12):
Making decisions not based on science but based on politics,
and moving to Florida honestly is the.
Speaker 7 (01:26:18):
Best thing that has happened to me. We are in
a red state.
Speaker 14 (01:26:22):
We do have a great, fantastic governor, somebody who's strong
on policy, who's informed, and we got a lot of
cool people here in Miami. They happen to be conservative,
but they're very cool. The politics aren't in your face.
So when I meet people who do assume because I'm Black,
that maybe I'm a Democrat, or they start with the rhetoric,
I correct them immediately and gently tell them about the
(01:26:43):
policies of the Republican Party, many in which I think
the African American community support. But the Democrats have been
masterful with their lives about the Republican Party.
Speaker 7 (01:26:52):
And that's why it's so important for Republicans to go.
Speaker 14 (01:26:55):
Into those communities like Donald Trump did in the bronx,
where people don't want you there, where you're not, where
you're talked about negatively, because it's harder for people to
try to demonize our party when they've had an opportunity
to meet people within our party, and more often than not,
that does not happen. So we got to go into
every community where the Democrats are, whether it be on
(01:27:16):
the South Side of Chicago.
Speaker 7 (01:27:18):
Or in the Bronx.
Speaker 14 (01:27:19):
We need to go and speak to every individual and
tell them about the good of our party.
Speaker 7 (01:27:23):
They're seeing the results. Donald Trump has helped that.
Speaker 14 (01:27:25):
We're seeing growth with African Americans in the last election, Hispanics,
every group that you can imagine.
Speaker 7 (01:27:31):
But after Donald Trump leaves office, we have to continue.
Speaker 14 (01:27:35):
And that's what I want to press upon our Republican
friends alike across the board. We have to follow the
Trump plan to get these minorities into our party.
Speaker 25 (01:27:45):
The work is absolutely going to have to continue. And
you're right, Giano. Sometimes it's just taking that first step
of having a conversation and opening up the communication.
Speaker 26 (01:27:53):
So walk us through a more The Caldwell.
Speaker 25 (01:27:55):
Institute is doing to help with these types of things,
to help with public safety.
Speaker 26 (01:28:00):
More about what your organization is.
Speaker 7 (01:28:01):
Doing yes, absolutely so.
Speaker 14 (01:28:03):
We got involved in the George Cascne races.
Speaker 7 (01:28:06):
You know, George Coscone was heavily funded by George Sores
last year.
Speaker 14 (01:28:12):
We got involved in media ad buys, all kinds of
media things on the ground there in Los Angeles. Fully
got behind Nathan Hawkman, who is now the District Attorney
of Los Angeles County, a law and order candidate, one
in which Los Angeles desperately needed. So for those people
who were rioting and protesting recently in Los Angeles, and
(01:28:33):
they may have thought, they may not even have known
that George Gascone isn't there. They just know that it's
been soft on crime, which is an ideology in and
of itself. Those folks are finding out the hard way
that it is not happening in Los Angeles. They're going
to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
We're now looking at races like Larry Crausner in Philadelphia,
Alvin Bragg in New York City, and many others across
(01:28:56):
the country. This is our first year and we just
made one year, and we're expanding beyond just drawr stores,
fund prosecutors, political prosecutors to gubernatorial races and mayor races.
Speaker 7 (01:29:08):
So we encourage.
Speaker 14 (01:29:09):
Everyone to go join us at Callwell Institute dot org.
Support our efforts, look at our resources and if you
know anybody who's experienced violent crime and they need help,
we have resources there for them. Manuals written by prosecutors
and police chiefs on how to work with prosecutors and police,
how to deal with it from a mental health standpoint,
written by doctor Drew Pinsk How to get press coverage
(01:29:31):
for your family, a manual written by myself. Again, that's
at Caldwell Institute dot org. Support our efforts there, and
you know, I encourage people to follow me on social
media at Giano Caldwell on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
Speaker 4 (01:29:44):
The day my brother was murdered. That is a Trump
endorsed book. Uh, Giano, I have to believe that you
carrying on Christian's legacy the way you have is going
to inspire millions of people before you're finished. We know
we can get your book just about everywhere. I think
(01:30:05):
it's very easy to search things these days and find it.
Speaker 5 (01:30:09):
In the one minute remaining.
Speaker 4 (01:30:11):
Tell us quickly your favorite story from a reader so far.
Speaker 14 (01:30:17):
You know I'll say what has been a heartbreaking, eye
opening story. In the book My Day was Murdered, My
Day with the the Day my brother was murdered, My
journey through America's violent crime crisis is Baby Cecilia. Cecilia
was five months old on June twenty fourth when her parents,
her mom and dad, were in the front seat of
the car, her baby brother, three years old, right next
(01:30:39):
to her, and they thought they heard fireworks.
Speaker 7 (01:30:43):
Come to find out the baby was shot.
Speaker 14 (01:30:45):
And these are situations that I think, really for a
lot of people, provide the kind of empathy that is
needed as we look through these situations and we search
for answers.
Speaker 7 (01:30:55):
This can happen to anyone at any age.
Speaker 14 (01:30:57):
All races of the people are covered in this book
because I wanted people to see this as a national issue.
It's not just you know, those folks over there, but
this is something that can impact all of us and
we have to do something about it. And it starts
with ensuring that soft on prime policies are repealed and
we have a strong law and order centrist focus when
(01:31:20):
we got to when we come to our policy making.
Speaker 4 (01:31:22):
Absolutely well, Giano, thank you so much for your heartfelt
a book that I know will bless so many And
thank you for being with us here on American Sunrise
this morning. We'll look forward to seeing you when you're
in Palm Beach with your event.
Speaker 7 (01:31:37):
Thanks for being here, Thank you for having me.
Speaker 5 (01:31:39):
Absolutely all right.
Speaker 4 (01:31:40):
Everybody, a new poll breaking down how the right feels
about the Trump administration strikes on Around's nuclear facilities.
Speaker 5 (01:31:46):
The numbers may surprise you.
Speaker 4 (01:31:48):
Right back with that and more as American Sunrise continues
after the break and later also Toto, guess what. We're
not in Kansas anymore. There's no place like home except
when it's lifted off the ground and a massive tornado.
Look you, guys, Florida woman sharing her story after a
scary storm turned into a scene straight out of the
Wizard of Oz. You don't want to miss this. We'll
(01:32:10):
be right back.
Speaker 13 (01:32:20):
It's almost Independence Day and all of America will be celebrated,
but here, in real America's.
Speaker 22 (01:32:25):
Voice, we want to celebrate you.
Speaker 13 (01:32:27):
Every day from June thirtieth through July fourth, we're giving
away a handcrafted, a hand pain at hardwood flag to
one lucky rab viewer. These beautiful flags come from your
American flagstore dot com, where ten percent of every purchase
goes to your American Flag Foundation. Scan the QR code
to opt in for your chance to win and receive
future RAB promotions from our Hearts for your home use
(01:32:47):
code RAB for free shipping.
Speaker 19 (01:32:56):
Let's spill some tea.
Speaker 6 (01:33:01):
Let's bill some tea is sponsored by Artillery Tea Company.
Artillerytco dot com is the website. Use the promo code
America's T for twenty five percent off of your first order.
Artillery t is all natural, it's whole leaf. The tea
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(01:33:21):
and a portion of your purchase goes to help veteran
and first responder charities. Again, here's the website, Artillerytco dot com.
Just use the promo code America's T for twenty five
percent off of your first order. All right, let's send
things over to Emily Finn.
Speaker 26 (01:33:36):
Now, all right, thank you, Terrence. It is time now
to spill some tea and in the cup.
Speaker 25 (01:33:41):
Today, a new poll finds the majority of MAGA supports
President Trump's airstrikes destroying Iranian nuclear facilities, despite divisions among
prominent MAGA influencers debating if the attacks truly do support
President Trump's America First agenda. Seventy percent of those within
the MAGA movement say that they strongly support the strikes.
That's compared to forty nine percent of those who identify
(01:34:03):
as a supporter of the Republican Party. Rather than the magabase.
Let's bring in David Gina and Terrence for more here.
You know, sometimes there's really loud voices, but seventy percent
is undeniable. I mean, that's a huge majority of the
magabase that was supporting the president on this.
Speaker 6 (01:34:19):
Terrence no, absolutely, And I think most Americans, if they
really dig deep, they want to keep the country safe,
and they realize that Iran was a threat to our
national security, both by Iran having a nuclear weapon and
then with the sleeper cells still in this country, and
so a message needed to be sent. But now I
think the bigger issue, Doctor Gina is making sure we
(01:34:42):
don't rest on our laurels and think, oh, okay, just
because we've done away with Iran's nuclear arsenal, that this
issue is settled. The reality is Iran cannot be trusted,
and so even beyond diplomacy, we need to be on
guard for whatever Iran might have in store.
Speaker 4 (01:34:59):
Well in sleepers cells we know and just rogue individuals
even and running around America who sympathize with Iran and
with a radical Islamist ideology. And so all of those
things are scary, and you're right to is they don't
go away, and we have to be vigilant. But you
(01:35:20):
know the number that this number strikes me because earlier
in the show where we talked about less than fifty
percent of people feeling patriotic about America, and you look
at this number, seventy percent of MAGA supports I Ron
stars and I keep wondering where the disconnect is.
Speaker 5 (01:35:35):
David, what's your analysis on that.
Speaker 1 (01:35:38):
There's a couple of things going on here. First of all,
I think when we hear Tucker Carlson and Candae Owans
and others, those are always the loudest voices in the room.
They have the biggest megaphones, and I think we get
distorted because the reason this number doesn't surprise me at
all for two reasons. One, these were surgical strikes. MAGA
(01:35:59):
is not pure isolationist. They don't want forever wars, but
they're not pure isolationists, unlike like Tucker and Candice Owens. Secondly,
this is Israel. This has to do with Israel. I
know it's a wrong, but it's Israel, right. It has
to do with Israel. And so the reason that's important
is because if you really go back to there's a
lot of folks in MAGA that are new to politics
(01:36:22):
or former Democrats or Independents or people that couldn't care
at all, and then Trump has kind of inspired them.
But there's also a big part of the magabase as
well that used to vote for George W. Bush, that
used to vote for all this type of stuff. So
they're more of the traditional Republicans that became MAGA. You know,
(01:36:45):
I guess I would be in that group, right. I mean,
I'm a boomer, and I'm not a boomer. I'm gen
X actually, but I'm almost a boomer who was voted
for George W. Bush. You know, I was trying to
kind of Republican type deal and then realized that MAGA
is a much better way to go. But I'm still
kind of a traditional guy. And so I think you're
(01:37:05):
gonna see a lot of folks within MAGA in that
bubble and that's why you have seventy percent of MAGA
believe in that, because once again, if it was boots
on the ground, that number would be five percent, ten percent.
But that it's not boots on the ground, it's surgical strikes,
it's Israel. You put all those together and I think
you've got seventy percent. Makes sense to me.
Speaker 25 (01:37:23):
Yeah, yeah, definitely, definitely. We want to know what our
viewers think as well on all of this. Hop on
to rumble or get her and let your.
Speaker 5 (01:37:29):
Voice be heard. Coming up.
Speaker 25 (01:37:30):
It looks like a scene out of the Wizard of
Oz and almost gone with the wind. You have to
see the moment and e F one tornado in Florida
lifts an elderly woman's home off the ground. What's more,
she survived the onslaught to tell her tale. She'll tell
us how she did it next, as American Sunrise CONTINUESHI.
Speaker 5 (01:37:57):
Welcome back to American Center, I signed back to she thinks.
Speaker 4 (01:38:00):
Joining us today, it's time to get to our sunny
side up in the pan Today. A seventy six year
old Florida woman now speaking out after video footage of
her home being lifted off the ground quite literally from
a massive tornado has gone viral.
Speaker 5 (01:38:15):
Take a look at your screen.
Speaker 4 (01:38:17):
Deborah Mettler says the EF one tornado in Largo, Florida,
was like something out of a movie. Her mobile home's
Wizard of Oz moment was all caught on her neighbor's
ring camera, and Metler was inside her home for the
entire experience.
Speaker 5 (01:38:30):
Her home was off the ground, you guys, for literally
fifteen second.
Speaker 4 (01:38:34):
Can you even imagine this swoolling around at one hundred
and ten miles per hour before slamming back down.
Speaker 5 (01:38:39):
To the ground.
Speaker 20 (01:38:41):
It was really kindled to like a Wizard of Oz experience.
I didn't realize I was actually up in the air.
I was too busy doing some resaults and getting thrashed
from one side the room through the wall to the
other side. I ended up back here in the bedroom.
(01:39:02):
I had been in what was a family room and
stepped out, which was good because it's no longer there
at all. So i'd stayed in that room, I don't
know what would have happened to me.
Speaker 4 (01:39:12):
Oh my goodness, you guys. God must have a purpose
for her life. Metler's neighbor says she is stunned that
the seventy six year old was able to survive this
scary situation with only a couple of bruises. You guys,
having grown up in the Midwest, tornadoes.
Speaker 5 (01:39:27):
Are not that unusual.
Speaker 4 (01:39:30):
And then moving to Alabama, where I started my broadcasting
career on the ground as a tornado moved through and
killed hundreds of people, you guys might remember that that
is seeing the aftermath is just always stunning to me
and beyond what you.
Speaker 5 (01:39:46):
Can even conceive. I think, I can't imagine.
Speaker 4 (01:39:49):
I've never heard a story like this in all those
years and all those tornadoes.
Speaker 1 (01:39:53):
Yeah, and my thoughts are thoughts are two words, holy crap,
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 5 (01:40:00):
Definitely that's it.
Speaker 1 (01:40:01):
That's all I got.
Speaker 25 (01:40:02):
Oh yeah, that is a really scary situation. I was
doing a little bit more research on the story, and
her neighbor is the one who was way stressed out,
and she was like, oh my god, I can't believe
she survived this.
Speaker 26 (01:40:12):
This Metler woman.
Speaker 25 (01:40:14):
She is so calm after going through something like this,
and I'm sure that she's just thankful to be alive,
thankful that she still has whatever is left of her
belongings in her home. But wow, I give her respect
for staying as calm as she is after all.
Speaker 4 (01:40:27):
Of that absolutely old news spin on Calm in the store. Right, Yes,
you guys, here's the big news. I actually was able
to make bread in the chat. We've been talking about
this for weeks and I have not been able to
do it. But I finally did it, so I'll share
it with you guys when you're here. Great show today,
you guys, how good children love your God.
Speaker 5 (01:40:45):
You go boldly. Now make it a great day. War
Room up next,