All Episodes

May 2, 2025 49 mins

Bolling! on Real America's Voice

Segment A: TRUMP CUTS FUNDING FOR NPR

Segment B: RAPID REACTIONS TO THE LATEST NEWS

Segment C: THE WELLNESS COMPANY IS HERE TO HELP

Segment D: A TALE OF TWO PARTIES

Segment E: THE LATEST WITH STEVE BANNON

 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
That is it's four o'clock, folks. When you see that
and you hear though that bell ring right there, this
New York Stockey Change closing the market for the day,
for the weekend in fact, and we can take a
look at the price. Is a very good day on
Wall Street today, very very nice day. Five hundred and
seventy nine up for the down one and was one
and a half percent NASDAK two hundred and seventy six.

(00:29):
These are great numbers, and there's still a lot of uncertainty,
usually on a Friday, with a lot of things hanging,
especially things like tariffs, and who knows if there's a
trade war going around China what people will get a
little nervous. You'd see that maybe go down the vix
something we've been talking about for a long time. The
vix down to twenty two fifty. I mean that thing
spikes when there's nervousness, it goes down when it's calming.

(00:51):
This is all good gold thirty two hundred and forty bucks.
Here's the one. Here's the oil. I'm sorry, the barrel
oil gold bar ounce fifty eight to forty nine a barrel. Now, folks,
I'm going to tell you during the entirety of the
Biden presidency, I don't think it hit that low price.
I know it's trading eighty ninety one hundred dollars over
one hundred dollars a barrel for most of that presidency.

(01:13):
Because he didn't know what the hell he was doing
with the energy prices, he let him go. He didn't
want to drill, he didn't want to allow companies to
drill offshore on federal lands, and that's why oil prices
were going up during the Biden administration. Trump, we know,
opens these things up for drilling, brings the price of
oil down. And by the way, when that price of
oil goes down, price of everything goes down. A tomato

(01:35):
grown in California sold in New York will go down
because I have to drive the tomato or train the
tomato across the country. That's energy cost. Everything goes down
when oil prices go down. That's all good news, especially
now forty one thousand, because a lot of people do
have money in for own case. Let's bring our Chief
White House Correspondent Brian Land. We'll talk a little bit

(01:56):
about President Trump signing an executive order to cut federal
fund for NPR and PBS and Brian as you know,
let the folks know, we get these little alerts this morning.
There's a whole bunch of them, a whole lot of them,
but this one really really resonated for folks like us
in the media. Tell us what you think, what you hear,
what you know. It did.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Good afternoon, Eric, I actually got the notification on a
flight out of DC last night because all of a sudden,
X just kind of blew up with this executive order.
And it's not surprising because if you remember, just a
few months ago, MPR PBS was brought in front of
the sub Doge Committee about federal funding going to these

(02:38):
two individual companies, and really it revealed a lot of
the corruption, and I say corruption in terms of covering
the news, the biased opinion that they have towards conservatives,
towards this country. One could argue and that federal tax
dollars did not have.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
To continue to go to these organisations.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
And Eric, when you look at I think it's five
hundred and thirty five million dollars a year get placed
to be able to fund these two organizations. Now, also
it's important to point out, Eric, that I believe PBS
government funding only represents sixteen percent of their overall budgets,

(03:22):
so the majority of their operational revenue comes from subscribers, donors,
big foundations. If you've ever watched one of your favorite
shows on PBS and they say this program brought to
you by the so and so Foundation, well those guys
are stroking some pretty sizable checks to get that going.
So President Trump signed that EO saying, you know what,

(03:46):
we don't We no longer need to fund these organizations.
And it's kind of causing a meltdown. They're already threatening
about suing it. Says they violates their First Amendment right, Eric,
how many broadcast companies have you worked four in your career?

Speaker 3 (04:01):
I would imagine quite a few.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
Three or this is I don't know if I don't
really work here. I do the show, but I broadcast
out of here, three Fox, Sinclair and news Max News. Okay,
so let's think about this for a second, Eric, Yeah,
go ahead, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
I was gonna say, what if Sinclair next Star Great
Television TEGNA. Let's say they all got together and say,
wait a minute, they're saying that our founding fathers said
it's our constitutional right that the federal government fund public television.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
That's not the case.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
It was a privilege for those for those two organizations
to get federal funding. It's not guaranteed, it's not constitutionally protected.
So my point being, they should compete like every other
broadcast company that I've ever worked for.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
And that exists.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
And so I say, have fun in the open market,
and we'll let people decide want to watch you.

Speaker 1 (04:56):
And the whole point. Here's the issue, and it's kind
of the same miss you with the universities like Harvard
for example, and Trump pulling, you know, talking about pulling funding,
permanently pulling it and not just holding it back, but
pulling it. When you use tax dollars to fund NPR
and PBS, you're taking money from people who agree with

(05:17):
and disagree with whatever they're putting on the screen. In
this case, NPR and PBS are putting wildly liberal, leftist
stuff up there. I can read some of the things
that Trump, the Trump administration put out. In twenty one,
NPR declared Declaration of Independence to be a document with
flaws and deeply ingrained hypocrisy. This is things that conservative

(05:40):
conservatives like us don't agree. So when you fund these groups.
For example, NPR staff with eighty seven registered Democrats and
zero Republicans in editorial roles. When you fund it with
all the people's money, it should represent all the people's interests.
Content that they deliver should represent that. Likewise, when you
find Harvard with hundreds of billions of dollar, blows my

(06:01):
mind why we would They've got a fifty two billion
dollars endowment. They should be producing content for students that
represents the people that are being paid by to do
this stuff. I just don't understand how it's taken so long.
You know, you talk about Trump's common sense, this is
something that should have been done ages ago.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
I think so too, you know. And we're not saying
that those programs won't exist. They're still going to listen
to All Things Considered on NPR where they whisper for
you know, sixty minutes. You can still watch that, you
can still watch Big Bird, Sesame Street, still watch your
favorite shows. They're just not going to be funded by
US tax dollars. And I think it's also important to

(06:43):
point out that, you know, this goes for any type
of I would say, you know, news organization. They should
not be getting look we don't have the money for
it anyway. Five hundred and thirty five million dollars a year.
That's a lot of money, and right now, since we
have an explosive deficit, I think this these cuts make
financial sense, and it is fighting the cultural war.

Speaker 3 (07:06):
Eric.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
I think to a certain degree, it does force these
companies to tell the truth. And I happen to be
friends with a young lady that works for MPR. I
see her at the at the White House quite often.
She is a very nice person. Have nothing against her
personally at all, and she has every right to work

(07:27):
for MPR, and I hope they pay her well. But
I just don't think American tax dollars should be funding
organizations like this, and especially Eric, you and I are
about the same age bracket. When you and I grew
up watching Sesame Street, watching a lot of shows on PBS.
It was not the same back then as it is now.

(07:47):
They have gone completely in an opposite direction of any
type of common sense.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
Big Bignian Ernie were weren't gay at the time when
I grew up. I'll call me crazy. NPR apologized for
calling immigrants illegals. They apologize for that. NPR in twenty
twenty one era, the children's program that featured a drag
queen named little Miss hot Mess, a drag queen to

(08:12):
children on NPR. I mean, this is it's insane. The
taxpayer dollars are doing are going towards this. Look, it's
the same thing we say, or I would say libertarian
and they would say, you want to be a drag
person and do you want me to do do LGBTQ
do it whatever you want in your private time. Leave
the children out of it. Leave the kids out of it.
And then on top of that, I don't want to

(08:34):
I pay taxes. I don't want my tax dollars supporting
a little Miss hot Mess drag queen talking to the kids.
It's insanity.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
And if you remember in that subcommittee hearing that Marjorie
did a few months ago, they denied that this drag
queen program even made it on air. And then she
in the breaks they pulled a flat screen panel TV
out and cuted it up and said, is this the
video that you claim that did not air, that has
an air date on there. It's it's twisted. It's a

(09:07):
it's a cultural war. And I think we won yesterday
with this executive order. Now here's the here's the kicker here.
Now we have to codify this into law. We need
to have our Congress, have our Senate get together, make
sure that we take all executive orders, not just this one,
but all of them. Let's make sure that when the
next administration gets into office, god willing not for a while,

(09:30):
I would hope that they don't just roll these things back.
So we need to make sure that we make that
it's not budget anymore.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
Let me make a correction on this. It's not that
it goes into law.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
It's that this is not put in an additional budget
in the future.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
That's what's important.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
But as far as executive orders, we just got to
make sure those things legislatively get through and they go
into law, but just not.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Executive So okay, So Friday, Brian, and how playful are
you at this moment? It's a weekend's coming. You know,
I'm olding a serious movie. Worry on this. I have
two things I keep doing. I got three minutes to
do it. So I'm debating which one to do here.
And it depends if you're if you're up for a
little little game or not.

Speaker 2 (10:10):
I am up for a little game. It's on Groover's show.
I said it was free beer Friday. I don't drink
beer right now, and it's it's Friday, but let's go
ahead and have some fun.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
Well, I haven't had a white Claw, but I do
drink white Claw. And this is just water in here,
but I would this.

Speaker 3 (10:24):
Okay, this is by the way, this is Celsius.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
This came would be a lot more fun if this
is white Claw. And here right, mad Dog? Are you ready? So, Brian,
We're gonna roll out a game that I developed one
of the other networks, and I'm gonna bring it here
because it was just way too much fun. It's called Date,
Debate or Deport, and it's a play on the old
thing marry date, Yeah, Date debate deport. So I'm gonna

(10:49):
give you three names, and you have to decide which
one you would date, which one you would debate, which
one you would deport? Can we get? Can we get
the three? Mad Dog? Ready? Here? Here they here? They
are no or her whatsoever? Here it is? Go ahead.
There's ilhan Omar okay, next one mad Dog AOC and
then finally Jasmine Crockett. So your choices are Jasmine Crockett,

(11:14):
AOC and elon Omar you have to date one, debate
one one.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
Go for it, ill Omar the port Okay, Uh, AOC
in trouble on this one.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
I just agree with you on that. I mean, she
basically told America that she was working for the Smalley
government anyway. But guy, okay, so now you've got you're
gonna do that one. Agree on this. So now you
have AOC and Jasmin Krockety, you have to debate one
and UH date and debate one. Which what are you
gonna date?

Speaker 2 (11:46):
Okay, I'm gonna go ahead and go let's start. I'll
start on AOC. I'm gonna go date on that one.
I don't know what your guest is.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
I'm gonna agree with you. I'm gonna go ahead and
agree with Okay, because I like I've been offering rocket
of debate for for for the time here, I've offered
her let's debate.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
You know what on the debate on Jasmine Crockett, you
wouldn't have to say much.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
Just let her go. She it's gonna be very viral.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
So she's gonna incriminate herself just from her her attempt
at debating.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
You should be fun. But that's my.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Three and important amazing d does it Date, debate, deport,
and we're gonna deport elon Omar, We're gonna date AOC
and then we're gonna debate jazz, Big Crocket. You know.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
Do you know that the radical left is gonna clip
this right now and they're gonna push it out. They're
gonna say Eric Bowling emits on air to wanting to
date AOC, and of course they're gonna include my name
on that as well.

Speaker 3 (12:45):
Then god knows where that goes down.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
I should have preanted it with if there was a
gun to your head or if you're doing a drinking game.
I mean to be honest with you, but it's you know, yeah,
my wife is watching. So anyway, Brian, Brian Glenn, you know,
we always have a good time and and folks, yeah,
we are going to bring this to the show. So

(13:09):
if you rumble, if you want to hit me up
with some ideas, date, debate, deport, I'm all for. I'm
all for, brother, Let's do it. Brian, have a great weekend.
We'll talk to you again next week and safe travels.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
Yeah. Thanks, We'll see you back on Monday at the
White House, thank you.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Okay, brother, all right, before we hit the break, just
wanted to rend you all about the podcast and YouTube
on my YouTube page and the podcast page. You got
to go there and subscribe, you guys. Are Yeah, of
course we put this the show up there, but we
put a bunch of other stuff up there as well.
You need content. Hit subscribe. It's free and you'll never
miss a thing. All right, we'll be back in two

(13:46):
and a half minutes, International falls minutes? Is that ice?

(14:06):
Is that snow still? Now? Come on, mad dogs? Still ice?
Lake's frozen? Lots of lakes in Minneso. Right, all right, folks,
it's July. There's a global summit of bricks Nations in
Rio de Jeneira, the block of emerging superpowers including China, Russia,
India and Iran and many many more. Well, they decided

(14:29):
to meet with the goal of displacing the US dollar
as the global reserve currency. They're calling this the real Reset.
As bricks Nations push forward with their plans, global demand
for US dollars will plummet, bringing down the value of
the dollars in your savings. All this transition won't happen overnight.
The real reset in July again. Coming up soon marks

(14:51):
a pivotable moment when bricks objectives moved decisively from theoretical
possibilities towards an inevitable reality. Learn if diversifying your savings
into gold is right for you. Birch Gold Group can
help you move your hard earned savings into at tax
sheltered ira and precious medals. Claim your free infoKit on

(15:11):
gold by texting my name or Eric, Eric or America
actually to nine eight nine eight nine eight with an
A plus rating with the Better Business Bureau tens of
thousands of happy customers. Let Birch Gold arm you with
a free no obligation infoKit on owning gold before July
and the RIO reset. Very important date, guys, text Eric

(15:36):
or America to nine eight nine eight nine eight today.
By the way, Eric is right in the middle of America.
You can't spell America without Eric. Did you know that? Well.
It's a tale of two parties, one the Democrats who
only want the country's demise, two Republicans who want American
exceptionalism to thrive. And it's the tale of two presidencies.

(15:56):
One president panders to a graduating college class asked for votes.
This is negativity about America, and the crowd hates him
for it.

Speaker 4 (16:05):
Most dangerous terrorists throughout to our homeland is white supremacy.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
Yeah, well, the other president instead gives hope to a
graduating college class. They feel the energy, give the energy back,
give the love back to him, even making the rest
of us hopeful about the future of the country.

Speaker 5 (16:22):
The first graduating class of the Golden Age of America.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
We're in the Golden Age. You watch's the Golden.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
Last night, President Trump gave a speech that's truly significant
against the backdrop of this country's transition. Here are some
of the highlights. There was this notable a moment last
year when Joe Biden gave the commencement speech at Mohouse College.
Remember this one. A small number of graduates turned their
seats away from the stage during Biden's speech, and many

(16:53):
listened with their heads down. Fewer than two dozen of
the more than four hundred graduating students stood up and
applauded the speech. And in between the moments of confusion
thanks to his onset dementia, it was pandering in overdrive.

Speaker 4 (17:08):
I got more and more house men in a white
house telling me what to do than I know what
to do. You all think I'm kidding, know you, you
know I'm not.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
And that's the best thing that's happened to me. Well, now,
remember Joe is still in the race at this point
when he was making that speech. This is before the
debate that got him tossed aside by his own party.
So he's up there trying to get those young black
votes since Poles showed he was hemorrhaging young black voters,
and he thought the way to do that would be
to use the old Obama approach race baiting and division.

Speaker 4 (17:43):
You start a college just as George Floyd.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
Was murdered.

Speaker 4 (17:48):
And there was a reckoning on race. It's natural to
wonder the democracy you hear about actually works for you.
What is democracy if black matter man killed in the street?
What is democracy? Portrayal of broken promises still leave black
communities behind? What is democracy? You have to be ten

(18:13):
times better than anyone else to get a fair shot.
Most of all, what does it mean, as we've heard before,
to be a black man who loves his country even
if it doesn't love him back.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
And well, this is from Joe Biden, who has made
all kinds of racist comments in his fifty years as
an elected official, and yet sells himself as the greatest
civil rights champion ever. And here's the big guy at
Howard University pandering again by stoking racial division.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
The most dangerous terrorist threat to our homeland is white supremacy.
And I'm not saying this because I'm a black HPCU.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
I say wherever I go. No, that's not exactly why
he's saying. You see, Joe had an opportunity to instill
either hope or anger, and in typical Biden, in typical
Democrat style, he chose violence. And how did Howard's students
feel about that? We'll watch. This is the worst graduation
of my life. This is a campaign speech, a campaign speech.

(19:23):
You got this white man here Howard. What is going on?

Speaker 3 (19:26):
I would have given a better speech. I did give
a better speech at my high school graduation. High graduation.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
We could have somebody who actually did something good for something,
something good. Everyone knows that Joe Biden did nothing good
for the black community. And these students saw right through
a divisive race bating. Truly kind of disgusting, right, which
brings us to last night. You can feel the excitement
right when President Trump was called to the stage, roll tiede.

(19:53):
It was patriotic, it was exciting, it was palpable. Yes,

(20:21):
I'm shaking the ex shabment's hand. That's the University of Alabama, tuscalos.
You can feel the difference, right, You could see the
difference between the Biden address in Trump last night. They
respected him last night. They love him. And here's an
example of why.

Speaker 5 (20:36):
First, if you're here today and think that you're too
young to do something great, let me tell you that
you are wrong. You're not too young. You can have
great success at a very young age. You're all very
young in America. With drive and ambition, young people can
do anything. Go out and fight right from the beginning,

(20:57):
from the day you leave this incredible university.

Speaker 3 (21:00):
Go out and.

Speaker 5 (21:01):
Fight, Fight tough, fight fair, But go out and fight.
You're gonna be very successful because now is the time
to work harder than you have ever worked before, push
yourself further than you have ever pushed yourself before, find
your limits, and then smash through everything that's inspiring.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
Let's stop for a moment and recognizing the significance here.
The University of Alabama, not Harvard, not Yale, not Notre
Dame or Georgetown. The president is from New York, Why
not any of those institutions. That says so much already.
And what did President Trump choose to do with the moment?
He inspired them. He inspired them to be a part
of our national renewal. And he showed confidence in those youngsters,

(21:44):
those young men and women who are going to go
out and be the next leaders of the free world.
And he pretty much nailed the MAGA movement in a
single sentence, didn't he.

Speaker 5 (21:54):
Borders are not racist, speech is not violence.

Speaker 3 (21:57):
America is good.

Speaker 5 (21:59):
Terror sabad men can never become women. Police are not criminals,
and criminals are not victims.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
The tale of two presidents, one instilling anger and fear,
another instilling hope and wisdom. You see, it's not just
the fact that Joe Biden couldn't even manage to stay
upright at a graduation boom. It's what he chose to
do with the moments when he was speaking, the chance
to speak to the future of America, the future of
our companies, of our government. Because Joe Biden clearly chose

(22:29):
those moments not just to pander, but to be angry.

Speaker 4 (22:33):
Never forget America as the strongest when we lead not
only by our example of our power, but by the
power of our example.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
There's a clap for that. Whereas President Trump didn't chide them. Instead,
he instilled hope and trust in these graduates to make
the media, journalism trustworthy again.

Speaker 5 (22:55):
To the journalism majors, of which I've had a lot
of problems with. I must be honest, I'm not sure.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
I like them, No I do.

Speaker 5 (23:03):
I do, But you're really leading a everything because we
need a great and free press.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
We need a brilliant press. They're like a watchkeeper.

Speaker 5 (23:12):
They're very important. Then you can go out and take
it down a new track.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Desperately need a new track. Because here's the thing. Despite
the example we just showed of how Joe Biden used
the moment to push the race narrative and get angry
and political at these graduations, that's all forgotten by the
legacy media quote you know, Labama commencement speech. Trump mixes
in the political. I mean he is the president. Yes,
he talked about men playing in women's sports. Yes, he

(23:38):
talked about the economy. These graduates are the future and
they're going out into the world. You would expect the
president of the United States to talk about those things.
But he didn't incite anger in violence, he didn't poop
all over the country. He used the moment to remind
these kids that, even though it didn't it did seem

(23:59):
hopeless at time, it's looking good. It's looking better for
America again, which is exactly what they needed to hear.

Speaker 5 (24:07):
The last four years were not good for our country,
but don't let that scare you.

Speaker 3 (24:12):
It was an aberration.

Speaker 5 (24:14):
We're run by people who truly at that time four
years we were run by people that didn't have a clue.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
They didn't have a clue.

Speaker 5 (24:24):
I'm trying, and I'm trying to be nice when I
say it that way.

Speaker 1 (24:28):
See the difference here is whereas Joe Biden pushes for
their votes by pandering so obviously empathetically or scolds them
to clap for him, he never showed that he valued
and respected those folks. And that's the obvious difference, not
just that Joe Biden was weakened the Bernie's and President Trump,
on the other hand, is energetic, loocid, funny, but as
always he was genuine and respectful. Like I said, it's

(24:50):
a tail of two parties and two presidencies, one that
relishes in the destruction of America, and one that exudes
hope for our present and our future. Two and a
half minutes, we'll.

Speaker 3 (25:02):
Be right back.

Speaker 1 (25:18):
Key West, Florida. Was it the southernmost southernmost point of
the United States. I believe that I'm not mistaken. Beautiful, beautiful.
It's really cool that pier right there. Every Sunday afternoon
as the sun sets, there's a like a wild party
that goes on there, just a whole heck of a
lot of fun. That's a hike. It's a ike. It's
a good you know, three hours from the point where

(25:38):
you hit the keys and end up in Key West,
along that long long ride, and there's a seven mile
bridge which is just stunning to drive over. All right, folks,
welcome back. My next guest says he may have the
solution to combating some cancers. Let's bring in chief of
Maternal and Maternal and Paternal Health at the Wellness Company,
doctor James Tharp. Doctor t's really good to have you.

(26:02):
The McCall Foundation covered a fascinating new study that shows
it ivermectin, particularly when used in concert with bezidol. I
believe I'm saying it right, is showing promise and combining
combating some types of cancers. Can you tell us about it?

Speaker 5 (26:19):
Sure?

Speaker 6 (26:19):
Well, what I can say is that over the last
several years there seems to be several different sources suggesting
some anecdotal evidence that this ivermectin, which as you know,
has been a miracle drug with regards to treatment of

(26:43):
COVID nineteen, but it also appears to have some efficacy
against not only COVID nineteen, but also against parasites and
also stunningly against some cancers. Now, to be clear, there
aren't randomized, double blinded, placebo controlled clinical trials proving this.

(27:09):
But by the way, there are none proving efficacy of
any of the vaccines that the United States FDA and
government have on your schedule. So, but these reports are anecdotal.
They're observational studies from around the world showing that indeed

(27:30):
ivermectin in combination with my bendazol sometimes fen bendasol, which
is a related drug, have some very significant efficacy in
treating some advanced cancers when traditional therapies have been abandoned.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
So and DOCTU. I remember this whole discussion about ivermacdine.
It was cheap, it wasn't expensive, and Trump like the
idea of exploring it, and then the left went app
As soon as Trump likes something, left went apoplectic about it.
So why are the pharmaceuticals Is it because they're so cheap?
They push back on things like the possibility that ivermectin

(28:14):
may actually be useful. That's absolutely right.

Speaker 6 (28:17):
Remember ivermectin, you know, one a Nobel Prize essentially if
you will. It's a very, very safe. I don't think
there's another drug in my forty five year career that
has such a strong safety profile. Very I don't know

(28:41):
of any side effects from it. It has an incredible
safety range and it is very effective. So yes, the
left went nuts. The same thing with hydroxychloroquin now you
know with the wellness company are providing this. Of course

(29:01):
it's not marketed. We're marketing it as a anti parasite,
as a parasite plans. But I think that everybody knows
that from reports all around the world, many different countries,
it appears to have some significant efficacy against cancers, and

(29:25):
people are using it off label for treating or preventing.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Cancers very quickly. Docta. Just a couple of seys, What cancer,
what type of what types of cancers? Are? Are the
uses rivor make than you talking about?

Speaker 6 (29:39):
Well, I think doctor William macus has up in Canada,
has reported efficacy against a wide variety of different cancers,
including breast cancer, including bobble cancer, including pancratic cancers, many
different advanced cancers.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
Wow, good, good, great. I appreciate your time, doctor James
Thorp Uh, awesome, awesome information. We'll keep an eye. Thank
you for joining.

Speaker 6 (30:05):
Us, Thanks for having me. Have a good day, and.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
You too, sir. All Right, Jen Saki just dropped one
of the most radical and I would call dangerous conspiracy
theories about Donald Trump. Listen to this absolute madness.

Speaker 7 (30:18):
What I've found is that whenever he's trying to do
something that seems a little weird, shiny ballish I'll call it.
I mean something like renaming the Gulf of Mexico to
the Gulf of America or going after Greenland he wants Greenland,
He's doing something even worse behind the scenes. And so
one of the lessons I've learned is you have to
read all the fine prints, and you have to follow

(30:41):
the threads of stories, because if not, you're going to
be focused on talking about Greenland while he is trying
to get the personal data of Americans, put them on
the cloud, sell it to China, go to the homes
of undocumented immigrants who are paying taxes, whatever it may be.
That's what's happening behind the scenes while he's talking about
Greenland and the Gulf of America.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Now, while you were not on you know, in the news.
That's one of the reasons why I wore my Golf
of America shirt. Refuge Jensaki. By the way, I have
some really cool information about who used the Gulf of
America last night, yesterday, this morning, I'm sorry this morning
on CNBC Real Important Bernie Sanders Chuck Schumer, Well, they
may be radical Democrat dinosaurs, but apparently that doesn't mean

(31:23):
they always see eyed. Aye. Here's Bernie with Caitlin Collins
the Less talking about the lack of unity on the
left when Chuck Schumer says they're united.

Speaker 8 (31:33):
We press Senator Schumer about this last night in terms
of what is the strategy coming from Democrats.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
On the hill.

Speaker 8 (31:39):
Do you guys have a cohesive message in how to
deal with Trump? One hundred days in. This is one
part of what he had to say in response to that.

Speaker 3 (31:48):
Calcus is united.

Speaker 9 (31:50):
You know, look at this the Republicans on this upcoming
reconciliation bill, which sets the funding for the whole government.
They're fighting with each other. Compare that to the Democrats
were totally united. We're totally united in my caucus.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
What Democrats like right now is a vision for the future.

Speaker 8 (32:09):
I'm assuming you're.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
I think Douglas guy was light, not the other guy.
But the guy was odd last.

Speaker 8 (32:13):
So I mean, it's not right. You believe you're right.
Senator Schumer's wrong here.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
You need an agenda. Did you hear You're not united
around what I think? The two of them, mister millionaires
and billionaires and Chucky Schumer, that time for them to go.
I mean term limits, folks, those are two prime examples.
Nancy Pelosi term limits. Ms McConnell term limits. My man,
just time. Just hang it up, all right, guys, don't

(32:38):
forget the podcast, and this show airs on the podcast
but also on our YouTube page. Go there. Subscribe to Spotify,
Apple YouTube. Subscribe it's free. You get this content and
a bunch of other stuff. Always really want to have
you catch everything we do. And now, by the way,
they send you some information some of new stuff too.

(32:58):
That's not only on this show as well. So think
about that. We'll be acting two and a half minutes now,
mad this is really cool. Come on, let's tell the

(33:19):
folks what this is. Active volcano? Active volcano. Yeah, I
don't even know what it is. Well, what's you try?

Speaker 4 (33:27):
Kila la Hawaii?

Speaker 1 (33:30):
Okay, cool? Kil Hawaii. The reason why I asked you
to do it because I just was tongue tied on
on some drugs I've never heard of. I knew ivermactin
and hydro chloroquin, but that other dry I'd never heard
of me and I got pretty pretty tired up on
that one. So look, this is what we do, folks.
It's it's we just have fun. I mean, won't worry
about we don't, right dog? Right, mad Dog? Can we
get the control room cam on? It's there they are?

(33:57):
Where's your hat? I thought you're gonna wear the hat?

Speaker 3 (34:00):
S right here?

Speaker 2 (34:00):
Sorry?

Speaker 3 (34:01):
I put it aside.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
It kept falling on, kept falling off. We have no
string underneath it. There's Ben, There's Drew, there's Matt in
the back. There they are and that's mad dog right
up front. Okay, what's this. We're giving out awards for corruption.
That's great, that's right. It looks like one of the
most corrupt institutions in America continues to reward itself pat

(34:24):
itself on the back for lack of journalism. So that's
sixty minutes interview with Kamala Harris, the center of President
Trump's lawsuit against CBS, well has received, drum roll, please,
an Emmy nomination. I'm serious. Are these the most delusional,
self unaware people ever? They really circle the wagons, don't they.

(34:47):
So first they're giving out awards for finally recognizing Biden's
obvious decline into dementia last weekend at the White House
Correspondence Association dinner watch.

Speaker 10 (34:56):
The judges said Thompson's aggressive reporting on President Biden, especially
leading up to and after the Trump Biden debate, revealed
the president's cognitive decline was impacting his ability to do
his job information the White House tried to do.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
She says with the smile that the award acceptance, which
is somehow supposed to absolve and entire industries cover up.

Speaker 11 (35:20):
I say this because acknowledging errors builds trust.

Speaker 12 (35:25):
And being defensive about them further erodes him.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
Oh my gosh, should have done better, says Alex Thompson.
I love how he makes it sound like they just
kind of missed the mark a little bit. That word
better doesn't really do it, Alex. Sorry, better doesn't cover it,
not even remotely. Better doesn't cover it because you, you media,
you clowns in that room, actively covered up what we

(35:53):
the rational saying half of America saw with our own
eyes and heard with our own ears. President losing his
facilities in real time, couldn't remember people's names, calling out dead,
people falling, and you said he was fine. But now
now the interview that's at the center of President Trump's

(36:13):
high stakes lawsuit against CBS News is an Emmy nominated program,
but not just that. Sixty Minutes and all of its
BS journalism Glory also landed several Emmy nominations, which were
announced on Tuesday. Get this, the interview is nominated for
you can't make this up. You cannot make this up.
The reason why Trump is suing CBS for the Kamala

(36:35):
Harrison interview is because they edited it. They selectively edited.
They took an answer that she was asked the question.
She fumbled it badly, and they took an answer to
another question and they edited right onto the back of it.
That's what they did. Guess what stopped stop stop rowling prompter.

(36:55):
Guess what happened. The Emmys decided that editing massively edit
that Trump is suing them for CBS deserved an Emmy
for the Best Editing. I can't make this up. Election
interference at its worst, folks. You need very fancy editing
to try and make Kamala Harris look even remotely intelligent.

(37:17):
So yeah, that might be the one award that kind
of makes sense. Here, here's just a little taste of
that superb editing that they're referring to. By the way,
watch this.

Speaker 3 (37:28):
But it seems that Prime Minister net and Yah, who
is not listening.

Speaker 13 (37:32):
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted
in a number of movements in that region by Israel
that were very much prompted by or a result of
many things, including our advocacy for what needs to happen

(37:53):
in the region.

Speaker 3 (37:54):
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanya, who is not listening.

Speaker 13 (37:58):
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for
the United States to be clear about where we stand
on the need for.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
This forday did. They took a bumbled answer and they
cut it, threw it away, and took an answer to
something else she answered and put it on to the
answer to that. That is not even journalism. That's just
outright lying propaganda BS. I'm sorry, there's just no other
way to frame it. That's state television propaganda. That's some
Cuba style Stalin style propaganda dished out to influence voters

(38:26):
in a major presidential election just a few weeks leading
up to that election. That's it. That's not the First Amendment.
That's not protectable. That's not free speech. That's election interference.
I mean, we all know she was an idiot anyway.
But for those watching those interviews making their voting decisions
based on what they heard and saw on CBS, that's lying.

(38:48):
That's BS. And they're nominated for an Emmy for it.
Don't forget the executive producer resigned over this. This program
has been declining into oblivion into disgrace for years over
its obvious political leaning and bias, its false reporting, and
disgusting moments like this one, when Leslie Stall felt the

(39:09):
need to defend who who oh, the terrorists hamas.

Speaker 3 (39:14):
They were beating me and starving me. Do you think
they starved you or they just didn't have food.

Speaker 1 (39:19):
Now, So, on top of already handing out awards for
failing in their field, failing the American people about Joe
Biden's mental state, these people are giving out awards for propaganda,
dangerous propaganda, covering up for an inept president. That's a
brand new low, even for these clowns, for that crowd.
This is some Soviet era of stuff right there. And

(39:40):
they're now rewarding themselves, patting themselves on the back at
failing at their jobs and then doing the bare minimum
once it was so very clear, very very clear, that
the cat was fully out of the bag and could
no longer be covered up, that Joe Biden was permanently
gone of it, lost in the woods. And only then,

(40:04):
only then did they even try to do their jobs,
or even now they're saying they missed the mark a
little bit. Award worthy, award worthy? Are you out of
your freaking minds giving yourself an award, an Emmy award
for editing into propaganda? You people are disgusting, You're horrible people.

(40:27):
Even though the entire world knows the truth about old
Joe Biden's sleep decline and steep decline. Jasmine Crockett still
feels she needs now to lie about.

Speaker 12 (40:39):
It, implication being those people I think he has made mistakes.

Speaker 14 (40:43):
Listen, I'm gonna tell you this. You know, people try
to talk about the mental acuity of Joe Biden, and
as someone who was able to interact with him, I
never questioned his mental acuity. But come on, now, come on,
like you are crashing the economy, we are talking about record.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
Chuck Todd took Crockett's sentiment a step further. Here's Chuck Todd.
I remember he's at NBC for a long time. Here
he is defending the media's coverage of Biden's decline to
Russell Brand, who absolutely lit him on fire. Listen to
this exchange.

Speaker 15 (41:17):
This is not a media failure. This is a failure
of the Democratic Party. And I just sort of sort
of the virtue signaling that some people have done to
try to say that the media missed this story. They
didn't miss this story.

Speaker 12 (41:29):
It wasn't like the government was feeding false information to
the media. The media was actively participating. Remember, don't you
remember Rachel.

Speaker 1 (41:39):
Maddow going Joe Biden. Pretty.

Speaker 12 (41:41):
You know he's older, but he's smarter. This is the
best version of Joe Biden. Don't you remember Morning Joe Scarborough.
He's as sharp as a tack. Don't you remember that
spy of headlines and clips of everyone.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
Going Joe Biden.

Speaker 12 (41:54):
He may look old to the untrained eye, but if
you hone in under Byknock, you'll see he's got a
firm and mighty rampant like Genghis Cod.

Speaker 1 (42:08):
I don't know, man, I can't see it.

Speaker 12 (42:10):
I'm seeing an old guy baffled talking about com pop
and sniffing a child on the head.

Speaker 1 (42:16):
What are you guys? Over Watch it. We'll be back
in two and a half minutes. Monument Value Utah, I
don't know if you care about. I'm gonna do one

(42:37):
of those four wheeler things in Utah and the desert
it was premazed, pretty beautiful. I'm about climbing in Utah.
They have some massive peaks to climb. It's an awesome place,
all right. As always, my favorite time of the day
of the show when I get to spend a few
minutes with the one and only uh Stephen K. Bennon
and as I've called him. I've named him the spirit

(42:58):
animal of Maga and spared Animal, not Chris Como, who
took my nickname for Steve Bannon. But anyway, Steve, how
you doing, brother?

Speaker 3 (43:07):
You good?

Speaker 11 (43:09):
I'm doing great and you've taught you just showed my
favorite place in the United States of America, Monument Valley
where John Ford made all the Great Westerns, many great Westerns.
There the I think the greatest story ever told, the
story of Christ's life was made there and Goulding's Goulding's
I guess Goulding's Ford of Golding's Ranch is they're the

(43:30):
famous hotel right underneath the cliffs in Minud Valley. If
anybody gets a chance to go, Eric it is the
most amazing site in the United States.

Speaker 1 (43:38):
It's a beautiful, beautiful part of the country. There's there's
some hiking places we can you know this. I think
it's called Angels Landing on one of the Zion's Peak
or Zion National Park and some of the other ones
Bryce National gorgeous, gorcious place to walk in and you
know you have to you have to be in shape
to get to the top of those And by the way,
bring a lot of water because they don't tell you that.

(43:59):
And a lot of people fall off the size of
these clips. I don't if you realize that. But it's
it's it's it's it's not for the beginners. Let's put
it that way. Hey, you know I saw this this
more Actually a friend of mine sent me this. Uh
my friend Susan and Frank were watching CNBC and they said, Bowling,
did you see this is amazing? The Shell company ceo,

(44:21):
the oil company Shell, right. Well, watch notice how he
refers to that body of water off our you know,
southern southwestern south Watch.

Speaker 16 (44:30):
Of course, done responsibly, of course, And what we see
is a move much more towards pragmatic regulation, which I
think is important. At the same time, we're starting to
see some of that filter back straight into our own business.
There was, for example, a recent decision in the Gulf
of America around the co mingling and a particular part

(44:51):
of the basin.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
Ah, hear that Golf of America by the Shell ceo.
I love that guy, right, How good is that?

Speaker 11 (44:58):
What the Dutch a old Dutch Shell accent saying golf rolling,
Golf of America just rolls off the dunk. Hey, on
a Friday. I'm getting tired of winning already.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
Yeah. I broke out the Golf of America shirt just
just in honor of that royal Dutch shell CEO acknowledging
what we already do. It's a Golf of America.

Speaker 3 (45:21):
Yeah, Golf of America. Unbelievable.

Speaker 11 (45:24):
Hey, I drink your milkshake right there in Golf of America.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
Shake.

Speaker 3 (45:30):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (45:31):
He asked me about the NSA, and we saw that
Ruby is going to handle the NSA and the State
Department Secretary of State. There's some rumblings which I think
I would love this. This idea is you know, I said,
maybe I don't bring wit coffin make Ruby of the NSA,
but I like this idea. Better bring put Rubio back
in Secretary of State in the State. He's doing a

(45:51):
great job there, Stephen Miller for NSA. What do you
think of that?

Speaker 11 (45:57):
Stephen Miller look is an exhordinary individual. I just think
that given everything we have to accomplish on the policy side.
Remember he's head of the I think the Domestic Policy Council.
Plus he's Deputy chief of Staff for policy. That means
every vertical is reporting to the Steven and in addition,
he's essentially Holman's partner on the border, and it's Steven

(46:21):
is not just sealing the border, which Stephen with Homan
and the President did in sixty days, it's also the deportations.
I'm just afraid of loading up just too much on
one guy. Steven Miller is so valuable to us on
what we're trying to accomplish in the first couple of years.

Speaker 3 (46:35):
I just think he stays there.

Speaker 11 (46:37):
My recommendation is just keep Rubio for a while. It's
more important to restaff the NFC now and get the
neo cons out, and then we're all this parlor game
about who's going to be the new NSA. I think
it's just more palace intrigue, which keep Stephen Miller exactly
where he is, keep the mandate exactly what he's got.

Speaker 3 (46:55):
The guy's killing it.

Speaker 11 (46:56):
There's so many massive issues out there. Keep Rubio, re
staff under Ruby, get a great deputy under Rubio, you know,
a great deputy that's america first deputy that can run
the that can run the joint, and let let Rubio
just be a safe pair of hands for a while,
and let's figure this out in the fall. You know
when when the Russia deals farther down the road. We've

(47:19):
decided not to bomb the Persians. We've started, you know,
we stopped the oil coming out of Persia. All these
things we can do now. I just think you get
another NSA guy, it's more palace intrigue. It's not he's
going to restaff. I just think there's other ways to
do it, and Miller's too valuablehere.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
He it was very quick. If there were an organizational
chart and I wouldn't even know what it looked like,
Miller would be above the NSA. Currently the NSA.

Speaker 11 (47:47):
Look, the NSA has two hundred and fifty two I
think still two hundred and fifty two billets. It had
two hundred ninety two and Flint took over. The NSA
is way too big. It's got to be. It's you've
got to downsize that you have to take because we
were there. Two thirds of the NSA of excuse the
NSC people are secundered from other agencies, and I think
half of those have to be sent back immediately. A

(48:09):
ton of those people are not President Trump people. It's
the same problem we had the first time. Obviously, Mike
Waltz did not get on top of it, Mike was
given a lot of guidance about what to do, particularly
about personnel. You saw the personnel. It was just, I
mean horrific. Look Bowling. You know the Financial Times of London.
We talked about the Morning show, the Financial Times of London.
Trump ditches Waltz after Maga Wrath builds against National Security

(48:33):
Advisor and the whole articles.

Speaker 3 (48:35):
About Laura Lumer.

Speaker 11 (48:36):
Now, you know, the Financial Times of London does not
give Laura Lumer on the front page unless there is
a huge staffing problem that still exists that's got to
be dealt with. You've got to get these particularly people
are already government employees that are there secundered from the
Defense Department, from the Intelligence Community CIA, from Justice Department,
from DHS, they all got to go. You clean that

(48:58):
rats nest out, you start restaffing under a really smart
deputy to Rubio, and then later you get some of
these other big deals.

Speaker 1 (49:06):
Done, some of these sanctions done, and you know, you know,
there's there's one other guy who's available who will make
a lot of sense because he's he's freaking smart. You know,
he's really smart. You know, I think his name is
Stephen Keith Bannon or Kevin. That's actually King, that's actually King.

Speaker 3 (49:26):
You know it's Kevin.

Speaker 11 (49:27):
Now I've got I've got a full time job, a
babysitting you late in your show on Friday afternoons.

Speaker 1 (49:33):
You want one of these shirts, I get you one
of these shirts. We wear Golf of America.

Speaker 11 (49:37):
We're gonna put no hang on. We're gonna the only
reason I didn't wear it the other day you had
the wrong size. You had like an extra large.

Speaker 1 (49:45):
No, that was Stephen Bannon. Is my spirit animal shirt
which I gave you, And I gave Cuomo, that nut
job who stole my idea. I gave him one too.
It
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.