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May 6, 2025 57 mins

Bolling! on Real America's Voice

Segment A: PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP PARTICIPATES IN A FIFA TASK FORCE MEETING

Segment B: REACTING TO THE LATEST HEADLINES

 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:06):
All right, folks.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
There it is the New York Stock Exchange again, four o'clock,
top of the hour. We talk about the stocky thing.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
Bing bing, bing bing bing. They press that button, they
ring the bell.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Those are usually newly listed there sometimes regular listed companies
on the New York Stock Exchange. Sometimes they do charities,
sometimes they do other things. But that's the closing bell.
If it's stock, that means it's our opening bell.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
Now.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Three and ninety took a bit of a hit today.
That's when Peede down forty three, NASAQ one F four
a little bit less, but again four hundred points down.
I keep talking about this. Howard Nick last week, late
last week said that they had.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
A deal, a tariff deal.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Well, we're waiting to see it, Howard, come on show us.
In the meantime, the market will continue to be volatile
and probably slide.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Take a look at gold again. I just love this.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
You know, if there's nothing out, this is not a
gold commercial right now. Sure we have Birch Gold is
one of our sponsors. But I've been talking about gold
from my entire life, my entire television.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Life, my entire investing life.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
Used to be a gold trader, in the pits of
of the New York Exchanges up one hundred and eight dollars,
So gold goes up three point two percent when the
stock market goes down less than one percent. Get the
message here, you need to have diversity in portfolios. Not
good news for the oil though oil jump from fifty
seven yesterday at fifty nine. We want oil prices lower.

(01:35):
Oil price prices lower usually translate into better equity markets,
better life for us because inflation tends to go down.
But my first guest is an air Force veteran and
now congresswoman who is no stranger to our southern border.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
She wants the border wall complete.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
It believes the remains in Mexico policy is the best
way to handle non Mexican asylum seekers and wants to
removal of criminal I legals. Who can can you? Let's
welcome Congresswoman and Paulina Luna really good to be on
with you again. Bring you on apl if I may.
If so, folks understand, we go, we go a long

(02:11):
way back that first time, that first time I had
you on TV and you had this group, this massive
group who totally supported you. Just a very young girl
and like I was, like this, this one's on our
way up. It's just really good to be with you again.

Speaker 4 (02:25):
Thank you, thank you.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:26):
Coming full circle yesterday Christinko tomorrow, I was actually asked
to speak to their group that they.

Speaker 6 (02:32):
Had up at the White House.

Speaker 5 (02:33):
So so obviously supporting President Trump, but definitely have been
instrumental in Hispanic restroots activism. And I'm not stopping even
though I'm in Congress. So it's been fun.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
So tell us, tell us what your you know, your
thoughts on the border. You know there's one issue.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Look, Trump's doing great home, It's doing phenomenally, ninety five
ninety seven percent decrease the number of border crossings. I'm
a little bit concerned about this thousand dollars offer to
self deport to a legals. I'm concerned they'll take a
thousand bucks taxpayer money, go across, turnaround, come right back in.
It's a big concern to me. Your thoughts on everything
they're doing well.

Speaker 5 (03:09):
Look, I think what the administration and what really DHS
is anticipating is that if people are self deporting, obviously
they're going to be put into a biometric system. You
said it yourself. Border crossings have decreased, but Ultimately, it
would be my preference that these people just did the
right thing and left without us having to pay them.
But I think long term they're anticipating that would actually
be cheaper than having to pay essentially the overhead costs

(03:32):
that would for them to be basically sheltered before deportation.
But I will say this, it's so wild air because
up here, you know, you're hearing all these people, literally Democrats,
that are being vocally supportive of a MS thirteen cartel
number who, to be clear, was never a US citizen.
And then they're saying that, you know, this individual is
deserving of due process, which I would say, you know,

(03:54):
the fourteenth Amendment did not apply to illegals entering the
country that were foreign nationals. So you know, this whole
argument and this whole I think propaganda spin that they're
trying to use. And then you saw CNN just yesterday
on Synco to Myo saying that you know, cities across
the country were counseling Synco Demo celebrations because of fear
of deportation. That whole thing in itself is actually a

(04:16):
gross stereotype of what the Hispanic American community is, which
is not predominantly illegal. So I've been a huge advocate
as a granddaughter of immigrants, and then also as someone
who is half Mexican too, basically put out there and say, look,
you are not zoenophobic and racist for wanting border security
and safe communities. In fact, many Hispanic Americans have come

(04:37):
here the right way, where doctors, we're lawyers, we're business owners,
were politicians. We're not these illegals that the Dems try
to box us into. And it's that type of ideology,
and I would say race baiting that they're trying to
engage in and it's not working, which is why you
saw Hispanic young men specifically vote overwhelmingly for President Trump
in this past line.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
Do you, being from your heritage Mexico, our Mexican people,
are they upset with Trump for renaming the Gulf of
Mexico the Golf of America.

Speaker 7 (05:06):
No.

Speaker 5 (05:06):
In fact, I think a lot of people in America,
which first and foremost we might be ethnically and you know,
heritage wise from other places, but we're first and foremost Americans.
I think that that's probably the best thing that we
could have done. You know, you see the very woke
left leaning leftist ideology perspective of their president in Mexico.
But also, this is the same woman who got elected

(05:29):
in a bloody election season. And I'll let people use
their own noggins to assume what they will on that.
But remember, Mexico's politics isn't exactly clean, and so we
were seeing play out here in the United States. I mean,
just look how many judges were arrested over the last
couple of weeks for being corrupt. Do you think that
that doesn't exist in foreign countries run by cartels?

Speaker 2 (05:48):
So Trump said in the last couple of days or
so that he feels he offered help, He offered Schimebaum
Mexican president Shimebum helped with the cartels, and she turned
it down. And Trump says, because she's so afraid of
the cartels.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
Would you agree with.

Speaker 5 (06:03):
That assessment, I would say, yeah, that's accurate. In fact,
the last couple of years have been some of the
bloodiest ever reported. You'll see actually in a lot of
these tourist destinations. You know, young people, specifically, if you
have kids, don't pay for your college kids to go
down to Mexico to party for spring break. Okay, that's
probably the worst thing that you can do a little bit.
Outside of some of these towns, you're actually even seeing
murders and some of these resort destinations. But Mexico, for

(06:24):
the most part, is exactly what you would expect in
a second world country. They are definitely still tied and
embedded with the cartels. And it's interesting because you have
on the complete polar opposite, you know, President Bukelea, who
we will be meeting with actually in a couple of days.
We are going down there. This is not taxpayer funded.
I'm going down as the chairwoman of the Al Salvador
Caucus to help up shore up foreign relations. Remember, China's

(06:47):
still very active in South America. And what's interesting is
you have bukele who's anti China. Pro America has taken
El Savador from one of the deadliest murder capitals of
the world to one of the safest in the Western hemisphere.
And I would argue that is the model of what
Mexico should even be. So it's really sad because even
dating back into the sixties, I remember hearing my dad
tell stories about how my grandfather would bring them there

(07:08):
for entire summers to see our family, and it was
way different than it is now. So I would never
set foot in Mexico unless I was on official business,
and I would encourage Americans until they get their cartel
situation under control, don't send your kids.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Interesting. Yeah, fascinating and what an interesting.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Idea to have to take the Bukelli l. Salvador model
and apply it with to Mexico where clearly the cartels
certainly have influence, if not control of the country.

Speaker 1 (07:34):
The fascinating, It's a great idea.

Speaker 5 (07:36):
Well's just if I can add in there, Eric too.
What's been interesting is I have heard rumors that there
are organizations in Texas. It's not uncommon to hear that
local officials, specifically on these border towns, even sometimes politicians
or people running for office, do have ties to cartels
or cartel sympathizers. And so it's incredibly important for voters,

(07:56):
especially if you see shady behavior, if you're realizing this,
if you're here it happening in your border towns, make
note of it and report it to the DOJ, because
we cannot tolerate corruption in any form. This is not Mexico,
this is not a third world country.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
Should Trump do you think Trump should direct Pete hexath
in defense to enter Mexico, sovereign country to tamp down
some of the cartel violence.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
You know, I don't speak on behalf of the administration,
and I would say that any act of that would
obviously probably involve Congress as well, because that's a sovereign country.
What I would say is that his better option would
be to completely destroy, which to my understanding, they're actively
working at destroying some of these cartel tunnels. And then
also to make sure that you have military on our

(08:40):
southern border. If you have people, coyotes, cartel running, if
they are shooting at our troops, then you need to
treat them as an enemy combat And there's no way,
shape or form where there should be any illegal crossings.
Remember though, they don't just go over the land, they
go under it as well as well as water cross
We need to make.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Sure I've been in those tunnels and honestly there are
thousands of them. Well, as we always do, we have
to break into the President Trump in the Oval and
he's not in the Oval office, but he's making some announcements.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
I think you guys are going to hear it.

Speaker 2 (09:08):
And we will bring up the show will come return
after the comments man.

Speaker 4 (09:13):
Thank you JD FIFA President, Johnny Infantino, FIFA Senior Advisor
Carlos Cordero, and CEO of Fox Sports Eric Shanks was Eric?

Speaker 3 (09:27):
Where's Eric Shanks? Hello? Eric, you're a pretty good scene.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
I'm looking for you at this day where you should
be at this table? Hi, Eric, along with members of
my cabinet, Scott Besant, Pam Bondi, Howard Lutnik, Sean Duffy,
Christine Ohme, Rouss the Vote, Deputy Secretary Christopher Landau, Deputy
Secretary Steve Feinberg. I also want to welcome two of

(09:55):
my very good friends, Bernard Arnault and Alex Arnault. It's
the ownly little company around the world. One of their
smaller companies is Tiffany, and Tiffany made the beautiful trophy
and I guess it's around here someplace, not this one,
the other one, wherever it may be here it is

(10:15):
behind me and it's really a work of art.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
But I want to just welcome Bernard and Alex. Where
are you? Where are you? Okay? Good?

Speaker 4 (10:25):
They have no lack of cash. I know that they're
great and they're great people. We've been friends for a
long time. Thank you very much for being here. It's
great honored to have you both. We're also joined by
Senators Shelley Moore, Capito and Todd Young.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
Where are they? Where are they? Hi? Shelley? How are you?

Speaker 1 (10:43):
Hi?

Speaker 3 (10:43):
Todd? How you doing?

Speaker 4 (10:44):
You're getting a younger looking Todd. Don't tell you he's
pretty young to start off with.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
Right, Ah, you too, she said, she said, what about me?
What are you too? Even more so Todd? Right, that's
very cute.

Speaker 4 (10:58):
Representatives David Lahue good and Brian's style.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
Thank you very much, Thank you very much, Fallis, thank
you good.

Speaker 4 (11:06):
FBI director Cash Mattel, who's doing a fantastic job.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Thank you very much. Cash, appreciate it.

Speaker 4 (11:13):
And our executive director Andrew Juliani just got the post
and he's going to be great. I know him for
a long time. He's he's a highly competitive golfer, which
I mean really good, and he's also a highly competitive
person and.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
He loves what we're doing.

Speaker 4 (11:27):
So I want to congratulate you and your family and
your father, your great father, who's the greatest mayor in
the history of New York. So I want to congratulate
the family. It's a big it's a big post. You
better do well, Andrew tell him is my golf game?
Okay too? Let's you know what to say. Well, he's

(11:48):
a smart person. That's why I pointed him.

Speaker 3 (11:50):
Together.

Speaker 4 (11:51):
This group will help plan the biggest, safest, and most
extraordinary soccer tournament in history. And that's what it's going
to be, Johnny. In my first term, I negotiated the
return yearn of the World Cup to America, and now
my second term, I'll have the honor of hosting the
World Cup for the first time of any president in
more than thirty years. And remember, we also have a

(12:11):
few other events. I must tell you that. We have
the twenty twenty eight Olympic Games. We have the two
hundred and fifty year Celebration of America.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
That's a big one. I don't know. Maybe that's the biggest.
I don't know. That could be the biggest. But that's
going to be unbelievable.

Speaker 4 (12:28):
It's going to be essentially todd That's going to be
a year long celebration. We have the G twenty and
that'll be in December of twenty six.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
We have the G.

Speaker 4 (12:39):
Seven used to be the G eight, by the way,
and that's in twenty twenty seven, and that's a lot
of action we have going for the next four years,
three and a half years. It's truly it's going to
be amazing for the country, I believe. Starting this June,
the United States will host the twenty twenty five Club
World Cup, which will feature thirty two elite soccer clubs

(13:02):
from all over the world competing in sixty three matches
across eleven American cities, including Cincinnati, Ohio, Charlotte, North Carolina, Charlotte,
North Carolina, Los Angeles, California, Nashville, Tennessee, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 3 (13:19):
So we have.

Speaker 4 (13:20):
It in eleven American cities all over and these are
great cities too, and they like soccer more and more.
I guess some of those cities specifically, they.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
Really love it.

Speaker 4 (13:32):
And next summer we'll host the official twenty twenty six
World Cup tournament, where forty eight national teams will compete
in seventy eight matches right here in the USA, and
that'll be something very, very different and very special. These
events will attract millions of passionate fans around the world,
including my son. I have a son that loves soccer.

Speaker 3 (13:56):
Baron. Nobody's ever heard of Baron, right, have.

Speaker 4 (13:59):
You ever heard of Baron? He's a good soccer player too.
He's a little tall for soccer, but that's okay. And
over one billion viewers is going to have one of
the big I guess, one of the biggest viewerships of
any sport at any time. This will be a once
in a lifetime opportunity to showcase the beauty and the
greatness of America, and we can't wait to welcome soccer

(14:20):
fans from all over the globe. I don't know if
I'm supposed to say soccer or football, because every time
I say.

Speaker 3 (14:26):
Soccer, Baron and Eric say, you're really saying it wrong.

Speaker 4 (14:30):
It's supposed to be football, but we know it more soccer.
These events will also generate tens of billions of dollars
in economic activity for local businesses and create thousands and
thousands of jobs.

Speaker 3 (14:44):
For American workers.

Speaker 4 (14:45):
I've directed my entire team to do everything within our
power to make the World Cup and unprecedented success, and
that's what it's going to be.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
We're going to make sure of it.

Speaker 4 (14:54):
The State Department, the Department of Homeland Security, in every
part of the US government will be working to ensure
that these events are safe and successful, and those traveling
to America to watch the competition of a seamless experience
during every part of their visit.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
It's going to be very special.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
Together, we will ensure that the twenty twenty six World
Cup will be the best run soccer tournament the world
has ever seen. This is going to blow every other
tournament you did. You're going to you're going to say
how terrible a job you did in the past, because
this is so much better, Johnny. This is going to
blow them all away. I don't want to insult my

(15:32):
other friends from other countries, but we're going to blow
them away, right. So now i'd like to introduce and
he has been.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
A friend of mine.

Speaker 4 (15:39):
We fought very hard to get the event, and I
think before the media came in, I said that I
was very disappointed because I got the event, Johnny.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
I think we can say that strongly.

Speaker 4 (15:49):
And then I said it won't be in my urn
and I won't be able to see it, and then
bad things happened with the election, and now we do
see it. So I just repeat that because for the
press to hear I'm sure they're thrilled to hear it.
But I'd like to ask FIFA President Johnny Infantino.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Really one of the most powerful men in sports.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
It's amazing because you've done such an incredible job with soccer,
followed by Vice President jd. Vance, then Secretary Christin Nole
and Secretary Sean Duffy to say a few words. So Johnny,
and then we'll go in that order. Thank you very much. Everybody,
Thank you.

Speaker 8 (16:33):
Well, thank you, thank you very much, mister President, mister
Vice President, members of the cavernet, members of the task Force,
the White House task Force for this incredible event or
events actually which will be happening here in America in

(16:54):
the year to come. We were, actually, mister President, so
happy that the World Cup twenty two they six will
take place in the United States, in Canada and New
Mexico that we thought will actually bring another World Cup
as well here, so you get two World Cups in
the next year. The new FIFA Club Cup. This is
the trophy of the new FIFA Club worll Cup.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
Kid you nursu.

Speaker 4 (17:17):
He said that in the United States, Canada, Mexico.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
That's where's supposed to be.

Speaker 8 (17:26):
I had an interrupt, Well, seventy eight games will take
place of the World Cup in the United States out
of the one hundred and four games. But the Club
World Cup this year is a new competition will take
place in the United States in the eleven cities of the
United States.

Speaker 7 (17:45):
It's new. It will make history.

Speaker 8 (17:48):
In two hundred and fifty years when they will celebrate
the two hundred and fifty years anniversally of the FIFA.

Speaker 7 (17:55):
Club World Cup. Well, they will speak about this meeting.

Speaker 8 (17:58):
They will speak about the United States of America, because
it is a big event.

Speaker 7 (18:02):
The thirty two.

Speaker 8 (18:03):
Best club teams in the world, with players from over
ninety different countries will come here for the first time
in history to compete and you'll see who is the
real world champion in club football. And this happens before
the World Cup of course next year. So in forty days,

(18:26):
bit less than forty days, on the fourteenth of June
in Miami, we will open the FIFA Club World Cup
opening game, the final on the thirteenth of July in
New York, New Jersey, and in between sixty three top
games of the best players of the best clubs in

(18:46):
the world who want to win this trophy aircrafted by
Tiffany and I'm thinking as well the Arnul family for being.

Speaker 7 (18:56):
They are in soccer as well.

Speaker 8 (18:57):
Now in Paris they've just been vote it to the
top division.

Speaker 7 (19:02):
So congratulations for that.

Speaker 8 (19:04):
Actually, mister Present, soccer or football, maybe we can clarify
that here.

Speaker 3 (19:10):
I'll do it.

Speaker 7 (19:10):
Let me give it a try if I may so.
We basically everyone outside.

Speaker 8 (19:17):
Of this beautiful country, we call football a game we
play with our feet.

Speaker 4 (19:22):
Right, that's why we call it. Makes sense, It makes
sense in.

Speaker 8 (19:27):
This beautiful country you call football again, you play.

Speaker 7 (19:31):
With your hands. So I don't know who's right.

Speaker 8 (19:34):
But the important, mister Presdent, whether we call it soccer
or football, is that we have funds great that we enjoy.
And that's what THEFA is about. FIFA is I say
this as well to all the media present, because everyone
else knows it. THEFA is an official provider of happiness
to humanity. And in the next year we are providing

(19:55):
happiness to humanity from the United States of America, and
that's why we are happy to be here. So we
have the Club World Cup this year, we have the
World Cup next year, United States, Canada and Mexico. Of course,
one hundred and four games, mister President, one hundred and
four super Bowls in one months, we'll have six billion viewers.

(20:21):
The final alone will attract between two and.

Speaker 7 (20:23):
Three billion viewers.

Speaker 8 (20:24):
This is, I know, fifteen twenty times more than the
Super Bowl. The entire world will focus on the United
States of America, and America welcomes the world. I'm very
happy to say that, mister President, because I know you.
I've had the meetings with several members of your cabinet
as well. You have established this task force. America will

(20:48):
welcome the world. Everyone who wants to come here to enjoy,
to have fun, to celebrate the game will be able
to do that in the host cities, in the eleven
cities all over the country, in all these fan festivals
that we will create. We have ten million tickets for sales,
or anyone who doesn't yet have a ticket go on

(21:08):
FIFA dot com slash tickets. Ten million tickets, three and
a half million for the club World Cups, six and
a half million for the World coming. How do we
measure success, mister President, Well, in many ways.

Speaker 7 (21:21):
Of course, full stadiums is.

Speaker 8 (21:23):
One of that. The economic impact is another one of that.
And their secretary these two World Cups will bring almost
fifty billion in economic output to the United States of America.
They will create almost three hundred thousand jobs in America
for the celebration of two World Cups, which will bring

(21:47):
the world to the United States. A few million fans
will come, a few billion will watch it from home,
but everyone will be happy and everyone will be celebrating
how the United States of America will put up the
best events ever that the world has seen, not just
sport events, but the best events.

Speaker 7 (22:09):
We are here for that. We are here to work
for that.

Speaker 8 (22:11):
We are here to work all together as a team
to celebrate the United States the two hundred and fiftieth
anniversary as well to celebrate the world and the World
Cup around a soccer ball or a football, and to
make sure that everything happens as well, as you said.

Speaker 7 (22:31):
As a president, safe in a secure environment.

Speaker 8 (22:34):
So we have, and the world has of course full
full an entire confidence in the United States and in
all the partners, in all the agencies to make sure
that we will bring to the world something that they
have never seen and they will probably never see again.

Speaker 7 (22:58):
Thank you very much. We are here for that, and
I'm looking forward to these two World Cups.

Speaker 9 (23:03):
Thank you, President, well, thank you mister President, and thanks
to this incredible group that we've assembled. I'm proud to
be the vice chair of this for a couple of reasons.
First of all, the last time the President had me
around a national or international sports trophy was the College

(23:25):
Football Playoff National Championship and I almost broke it, and
so I appreciate the President giving me a second chance here.

Speaker 7 (23:31):
But as all of you know, soccer is a.

Speaker 9 (23:34):
Sport of incredible grace and finesse and beauty. These are
three things that have nothing to do with politics, and
so we're thrilled to have the FIFA World Cup in
the United States of America. I think that you'll see
the very best of the United States of America, both
in athletic competition but also in hospitality, something our boss
knows quite a bit about.

Speaker 7 (23:52):
And so we're excited to have you. We're excited for.

Speaker 9 (23:55):
This event, and we will do everything at the government
level to make this thing as successful as we can.
And I will say before I turn it over to
the next speaker that of course everybody is welcome to
come and see this incredible event. I know we'll have
visitors probably from close to one hundred countries. We want
them to come, we want them to celebrate, we want
them to watch the game. But when the time is up,

(24:17):
they'll have to go home. Otherwise they'll have to talk
to Secretary now, who will turn it over to now.

Speaker 10 (24:24):
Well, thank you, mister President. Thank you so much for
dreaming big dreams and doing unprecedented things. Your entire life.
You have stood for doing things that other people thought
they couldn't do and accomplishing unprecedented events and achievements.

Speaker 7 (24:39):
And so this is one of.

Speaker 10 (24:40):
Those events that I think is going to be remarkable
and will stand the test of time as the world's
greatest sporting event ever held and conducted. You are honoring
us by agreeing to be the chairman of this event.
The Vice President has greatly honored us by being the
vice chair. And also we have a remarkable leader in
Andrew Giuliani who stepped up and will be the executive

(25:01):
director of making sure that we're not just conducting and
hosting people from all around the world, but that we're
also doing it safely. You have tasked our department, the
Department of Homeland Security, with making sure these events are
safe and secure, and it will be a challenge, but
one that we welcome because we know that America is
in a place where we invite people to be a

(25:23):
part of our livelihood. We want to expose all of
the American people to the wonders of this sport. And
I believe that the old proverb that says, what you
see with your eyes, you carry with your heart is
what will happen when we host this event. Carlos has
agreed to step up and be a senior advisor as
well to the task force, and his knowledge and expertise

(25:45):
has been incredibly valuable in all of the meetings and
organizational efforts that we've already put forwards. So, sir, you know,
as all of us do that have participated in sports,
that there's something that happens when you're involved in competition,
You spend time with people, You relax, you are out
there enjoying success but also recognizing failures and challenges and

(26:08):
overcoming them. There's a bonding that happens among people. And
I believe that's what you are doing is creating an
opportunity for the world to become a friendlier place. We
will welcome over two million visitors that will come here
from other countries. We will have ten million different tickets.
Twenty two million people will interact with these activities, and

(26:29):
it is an opportunity to have people bond with each other,
to create a friendlier world where we will be able
to do business, We'll be able to enjoy their visits here.
We will take care of their documentation and travel documents,
and it will go smoothly, and we will make sure
that they can come and enjoy and bring their families
and friends and make memories together. It's going to be

(26:51):
incredibly special. So thank you for leading at an unprecedented
time and doing so with big visions for the future.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
Thank you for doing this Arch christ you appreciate it. Sean,
thank you, mister President.

Speaker 11 (27:09):
Eleven US cities, seventy eight games in the US, and
I think you said it's just like seventy eight Super
Bowls next summer in the US, So.

Speaker 7 (27:19):
This is massive.

Speaker 11 (27:20):
Mister President, thank you for putting together the task force.
You know that great events don't happen unless you have
great planning and starting well over a year in advance,
putting your team together to make sure this.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
Event goes off without a hitch. I thank you for that.

Speaker 11 (27:35):
As part of the DOT again, we're going to move
a lot of people around the country.

Speaker 3 (27:39):
A lot of American.

Speaker 11 (27:40):
Spectators, but a lot of foreign spectators are going to
come into the country, and security and safety is key.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
We're going to work with Homeland.

Speaker 11 (27:47):
And Christy to make sure we secure our airspace around
these events. We're moving people from city to city and
from hotels to the fan festivals, to the stadiums. Making
sure we have enough transtation whether it's trains and buses
in the cities that host this great event. We're working
through that as well as making sure our airlines and

(28:09):
our airports are ready to facilitate the travel throughout the country.
And so this is everyone working together. But I think
is great, mister President. I have to imagine this was
part of the plan. You're like, let's bring in the
World Cup in the year of America's two hundred and
fiftieth birthday. So not only is America going to celebrate
our two hundred and fiftieth, We're going to bring in
millions of people to celebrate with us. I know, State

(28:32):
and Homeland and DOT and all of us are going
to work together to make sure it is seamless travel.
We want everyone to come to America. We want everyone
to spend a lot of money in America.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
By the way, as part.

Speaker 11 (28:44):
Of the DOTS two fifty celebration, we're going to encourage
everyone to go on a road trip, mister President, to
celebrate our great country.

Speaker 7 (28:51):
And so if you're coming to see some.

Speaker 11 (28:54):
Soccer, not football or football or soccer, go on a
road trip see America. Don't overstay at visa, don't stay
too long, but when you come, actually see this great
country that we're going to celebrate over the course of
the next year. And again we welcome everyone. This team
is going to work fullheartedly together to make sure these

(29:15):
events go off without a hitch and we're all able
to celebrate the great athletes from around the world, forty
eight countries coming in to compete in our great country.

Speaker 3 (29:24):
Thank you, mister President, Thank you very much. Sure thanks you.

Speaker 4 (29:30):
Would you have any questions of these great people or
anybody around the table.

Speaker 3 (29:35):
Please see you. Please go ahead.

Speaker 6 (29:38):
Minister of Canada, O.

Speaker 12 (29:43):
Canada here today and with him and with also the
President of Mexico.

Speaker 6 (29:47):
There's been some recent tensions between them and the United States.

Speaker 13 (29:50):
Are you worried about any problems with that joint partnership
as co hosts of the World Cup next year.

Speaker 4 (29:55):
No, I don't see any tension either. We'll get along
very well with both. Just going to pay a little
more money, you know. They just they get away with
things that they shouldn't be and they understand. We had
a great meeting today actually with the new Prime Minister
is a terrific guy, and we had a very long
session with j D and Marco and everybody and it

(30:18):
went very well. No, we had a very great meeting
and no tension. We want to do what's right for
respective peoples and that's what's going to happen. And also
with Mexico, I think the relationship is really very good
with the President of Mexico, as you know probably heard,
and we're going to have a very good relationship with

(30:39):
regard to FIFA. I have no doubt about it. Johnny
would know better than anybody, but you understand. I mean,
I think the relationship is very good. Thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (30:47):
Question.

Speaker 14 (30:48):
Yeah, please, will be the level of interaction cooperation with
Canada at Mexico as it relates to next year's World Cup.

Speaker 6 (30:58):
Are you already talking to them?

Speaker 3 (30:59):
Are it's total complete?

Speaker 4 (31:02):
We talked about it even today at our meeting with Canada,
and the level is total. It's going to be perfect,
going to be beautiful. They're very excited about it. Yeah, Please.

Speaker 15 (31:16):
The applications for people around the world to want to
come to the United States for the Cup.

Speaker 6 (31:21):
If I made just a second question for maybe mister.

Speaker 15 (31:23):
Duffy, Secretary Duffy, is there anything long lasting transportation wise
that Americans can expect from infrastructure being built for the.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
World time so well so with Christy in terms of
the applications.

Speaker 10 (31:35):
Absolutely, this summer by hosting the Club Championships, we're processing
those travel documents and visa applications already and working with
Carlos and Johnny and their team to make sure that
they're done timely and being proactive of it. And that
is obviously going to be a precursor to what we
can do next year for the World Cup as well.
So it is all being facilitated. We appreciate the partnership

(31:57):
that we've got on all of this with the State
Department as well, and I know we've got the Attorney
General and cash at the FBI too interested in being
a hall hands on deck to make sure this goes smoothly.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
Thank you, Sean.

Speaker 11 (32:13):
Yes, so basically these are going to be short term needs,
so we're gonna have to bring in you know, buses
and additional forms of transportation. Most Miami doesn't have the
capacity with their transit system to carry all of the
people who are going to go from hotels and restaurants
to stadiums and the fan center, so we're going to
have to manage those assets, bring them in from around

(32:34):
the country to move people, but they won't be needed
their long term. So again I don't foresee you know,
long term changes.

Speaker 3 (32:41):
This is a.

Speaker 11 (32:42):
Short term push of folks coming in to see great
soccer matches and then they'll go home.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
Okay, yeah, Please question.

Speaker 6 (32:53):
About your thoughts on Madison Square Garden.

Speaker 12 (32:56):
The Transportation Department recently took over the refurbishment at Pens Station,
and I was wondering if you have an opinion on
the proposal to move as a square garden to allow
for a more classical train station to be built to
move it.

Speaker 3 (33:10):
That was thought of years.

Speaker 4 (33:12):
Jim Dolan's going to have something to say about that,
and I've not heard of any recent plans.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
They tried to do that for years.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
They've tried to move it, but I think Jim probably
likes his location sitting on top of all the trains.
I can't blame them necessarily. There's not too much of
a move. They are going to do something with Penn
Station will be involved and that will work with the governor,
and we'll be involved with that very much. Okay, thank you, Yeah,
please go ahead.

Speaker 16 (33:41):
For more than six hundred million dollars in federal funding
for security, do you support that?

Speaker 3 (33:46):
And perhaps Secretary of Noman can Land owned security.

Speaker 4 (33:50):
Yeah, yeah, I support, I support really whatever that takes,
and any money that's spent will make up manyfold in
terms of all of the economic development. These events, especially
what we're talking and you have FIFA and then you
have the Olympics, and these events, if properly done, make
a tremendous amount of money and prestige. I think is

(34:12):
a greater allure and prestige for our country and for
the cities where they are. It's going to be amazing. Yeah,
but we're going to not we won't hold back at
all on security, most importantly, thank you.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (34:24):
Please.

Speaker 17 (34:28):
First question, is there any reason you haven't referred to
Mark Carney as governor as you did the Trudeau And
the second question you said earlier that you don't help
to sign any trade deals. Of course, is there any
country you expect to sign a trade deal with this week?

Speaker 6 (34:42):
As Secretary, vest And has.

Speaker 4 (34:43):
Indicated, well, we're looking at a lot of them. We're
talking to a lot of them right now. I think
I don't want to bore people with that, but I
give a very long definition this morning in the Oval Office.
We have we're in very very good shape. This country
has never been in better shape and are doing great.
We were being ripped off by every country in the

(35:05):
world virtually, and now we're not being ripped off anymore.

Speaker 3 (35:07):
It's very simple, very very simple.

Speaker 4 (35:09):
As far as calling him Governor Carney, now I haven't done.

Speaker 3 (35:12):
That yet, and maybe I won't.

Speaker 4 (35:14):
I did have a lot of fun with Trudeau, but
I think this is a this is a big step up.
It's a good step up for Canada. I watched, I
watched very closely. I thought he did really terrifically in
the debates. I like him, you know, he's a nice man.
We get along very well. We had a great meeting today,
really good. I think the relationship is going to be
very strong.

Speaker 3 (35:35):
Thank you.

Speaker 18 (35:37):
Yes, Russia is banned from playing the next World Cup.

Speaker 6 (35:42):
What's your position on this?

Speaker 3 (35:43):
Say it again, Russia.

Speaker 6 (35:44):
Has been banned from playing the next World Cup. What's
your position.

Speaker 4 (35:48):
I didn't know that, is that right?

Speaker 7 (35:52):
Banned for the time being from playing.

Speaker 3 (35:55):
But we hope that he's the boss. I'm not the
boss on the hope.

Speaker 8 (35:59):
We hope it's something happens and pie's what happened, and
then we be readmitted, so that.

Speaker 3 (36:06):
That could be a good incentive. Right. We want to
get them to stop. We want them to stop. We
want the.

Speaker 4 (36:12):
Five thousand young people a week are being killed.

Speaker 3 (36:17):
It's not even believable.

Speaker 4 (36:19):
The Russian soldiers and the Ukrainian soldiers mostly also people
in towns every once every two weeks.

Speaker 3 (36:26):
Horrible things going on over there.

Speaker 4 (36:28):
So we're gonna get that war stopped, Okay.

Speaker 13 (36:33):
Talking about all of the events that will be happening
here in the US over the next few years.

Speaker 6 (36:37):
You mentioned the G seven and you said it used
to be called the G eight.

Speaker 13 (36:41):
Yeah, as the host country, you can actually invite Russia
to the G seven plus one.

Speaker 6 (36:48):
What's your thinking on that right now?

Speaker 4 (36:50):
Well, Russia used to be a member of what was
called then the G eight, and I don't think I
was really in politics at that point, but I know
that President Obama didn't like it, and they voted Russia out.

Speaker 3 (37:04):
And I say, if they didn't vote.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
Russia out, which I thought was a very foolish decision,
because it's a group of.

Speaker 3 (37:12):
People sitting around the table.

Speaker 4 (37:13):
I've done it many times with them and you get
to know them, and I say that if it was
the G eight, if Russia were in it, I think
you probably wouldn't have this ridiculous, deadly war going on
right now. I thought it was a very bad decision.
It was headed by Trudeau, by the way, and Obama.
They were the ones that really fought hard to get
Russia out. I think if Russia were in, you wouldn't

(37:34):
be They threw them out, and because of that, maybe
millions of people are dying.

Speaker 3 (37:42):
Millions, you know, millions.

Speaker 4 (37:43):
The numbers are far greater than you think, but millions
of people are dying. If he was sitting around the
table with other people, seven people hammering him and saying
let's not do this, you would I think you wouldn't
probably have had the problems that you've had.

Speaker 6 (38:01):
To get Russia back into this group.

Speaker 4 (38:04):
No, I think it's I think it's not good timing.
Now now, right now, it's we.

Speaker 3 (38:09):
Missed that gate, didn't we? Huh?

Speaker 4 (38:10):
We missed that gate with another great decision by some
people that shouldn't have been making decisions.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
Yes, go ahead, as.

Speaker 16 (38:20):
The president should people who have taken part in, for example,
protest protests across the world be concerned about being able
to join the World Cup and watching here in the US.

Speaker 4 (38:32):
Well, I don't know what you mean by that, but
people that have taken part in protest, I think people
are allowed to protest.

Speaker 3 (38:38):
You have to do it in a.

Speaker 4 (38:41):
Reasonable manner, not necessarily friendly, but reasonable. Otherwise spam will
come after you and you're gonna have a big problem.
You're gonna have a big problem, right fan, she's doing
a good job too. Well, my whole team here is
doing a fantastic job. We're very proud of them. So uh, yeah,
you have to protest job, Thank you?

Speaker 3 (39:02):
Go ahead?

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 16 (39:05):
Do you support Israel's plan to conquer Gaza if Hamas
doesn't agree to a deal during your visitor?

Speaker 4 (39:12):
These are very strange questions, are I never like when
they read them off a machine. Who's sending you that
question to you? And let's not talk about that. Now
we're talking about the World Cup, go ahead, what else
anything else? I think we're pretty well set. I want
to thank everybody, and we're going to make this tremendously successful.
And you can see Johnny's a very enthusiastic man. He

(39:33):
has got great enthusiasm and that's one of the reasons
that you've had such success over the last number of
years that you've been there.

Speaker 3 (39:39):
Amazing.

Speaker 4 (39:40):
He's like, he's like somebody that just woke up on
Christmas morning as a young child and saw those toys
under the tree. And that enthusiasm really plays very well,
I have to say. And you've done a fantastic job
as the head and we're going to do what we
have to do, and thank you very much. Thank you
everybody very much. Appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Well, that was pretty cool. The East room again, very
very big room.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Usually see them standing at a podium once in a
while we'll see something, but a day is you know,
just across the table with some cabinet secretary as president
of FIFA and whatnot.

Speaker 1 (40:24):
But I found it very interesting.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
The questions all sent, A lot of them centered around
the meeting with Prime Minister Carney from Canada, earlier in
the day in the oval, and Trump said he seemed
to like him, and then there was a good back
and forth. He said, I haven't called him Governor Carney yet,
which is really funny, he said, but maybe this still
still happen and still still waiting to hear. And again

(40:49):
they came out of that meeting earlier in the day this,
this is fine, this is whatever.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
FIFA Okay, soccer, yeah, soccer.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
But the earlier meeting was very very relevant to me,
at least because they came.

Speaker 1 (41:00):
Out of the meeting.

Speaker 2 (41:00):
They didn't get a tariff deal, but it was definitely
discussed the either side. They both said, be long and
winding road, according to Prime Minister Carney or Governor Karney,
whoever you want to call them, anyway you want.

Speaker 1 (41:13):
To call them. So interesting, interesting time in DC. Right now,
all right, folks. Is July.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
There's a global summit of bricks Nations in Rio de Janeiro.
The block of emerging superpowers including China, Russia, India, Brazil
and Iran, our meeting with the goal of displacing the
US dollar as the global currency.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
They're calling this the Rio Reset, as.

Speaker 2 (41:36):
Bricks Nations push forward with their plans, global demand for
US dollars will decrease, bringing down the value of every
single dollar in your wallet, in your savings account, in
your household. While this transition won't happen overnight, the real
reset in July marks a pivotable moment when bricks objectives
moved decisively from theoretical possibilities towards.

Speaker 1 (42:00):
In inevitable reality.

Speaker 2 (42:02):
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(42:22):
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Speaker 1 (42:37):
Do it today, all right.

Speaker 2 (42:40):
Gavin Newsom has really really confused me, especially lately. The
California governor spent weeks taking notable steps away from.

Speaker 1 (42:49):
His radical party.

Speaker 2 (42:50):
He backtracked on some of his insane liberal stances. He
launched a podcast and even sat down with a few
Republicans to I don't know, make him seem like he's
down the middle, including Bannon and Charlie Kirk. We all
know that Newsom's probably gonna change his public image another
ten to twelve times before officially launching his inevitable White

(43:10):
House bid, but his latest transformation show him blast his
own party, among other things, calling the Democrats two woke.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
Listen. We lost.

Speaker 19 (43:19):
We lost the popular vote and we lost the electoral vote.
We got crushed and we need to be humble about that,
and we need to have some grace and we need
to understand why. Was it because of the incumbency penalty?
Was it because of inflation? Was it because of interest rates?
Was it because of immigration? Was it because we were
too quote unquote woke? Was it because of the issues
with Israel?

Speaker 1 (43:40):
Was it all of the above?

Speaker 19 (43:41):
I think we are going through that forensic we need
to understand. At the same time, we also have to
push back against the white.

Speaker 1 (43:47):
Waters and headwinds of the Trump administration.

Speaker 2 (43:50):
I mean, so it wasn't one thing, Gavin news So
it was all of them. It was the border, it
was crime, it was woke, it was inflation, it was
everything you talked about.

Speaker 1 (44:02):
It wasn't one thing but that whitewater.

Speaker 2 (44:05):
Whitewater pushing pushed back against the whitewater. I don't know, folks.
Sounds like a dog whistle to me. And you know
what I'm talking about, wells. Gavin Newsomen continues to change
his image. Letitia James in New York can't stop herself
from snapping right back into character every time she thinks
about Donald Trump, the man she tried and so miserably

(44:26):
failed at incarcerating. Here's a clip from her weekly meltdown
about Trump.

Speaker 20 (44:31):
And you want me to sit in my seat and
stand idly by and allow this craziness to happen. You
could come after me if you want. But you elected
me to stand up. You elected me to use the law.
You elected me to go to cart You elected me
to continue to challenge this administration. You elected me to

(44:54):
stand up for the least of God's children. You elected
me to continue fighting on and I will fight on.

Speaker 2 (45:02):
Yeah, folks, I just want to break here here for
a second. There was an attack Pakistani. India have been
going at it. There was a terrorist attack. Pakistan attacked India.
They've been going back and forth. I'm now reading from
some friends' international reporter friends that there's some heightened, elevated
fighting going on between Pakistan and India.

Speaker 1 (45:21):
We will continue to keep an eye on that.

Speaker 2 (45:23):
But in the meantime, jas and mccrockett keeps running that
running mouth of hers, and while it's certainly getting her
booked for interviews on all the toxic mainstream left leaning
progressive networks, it isn't doing her public reputation any favors.
She's proven Trump's low IQ point ten times over and
continues to try and tell blatant lies about the President

(45:44):
with no factual support. Here she is fear mongering on
CNN with the one, the only Jake, the snake.

Speaker 21 (45:51):
Tapper wearing the heck, did you just pull this number
out of your back pocket, saying that they're costing us
approximately one hundred million dollars, sorry, not one hundred million dollars,
a million dollars for each undocumented person. The only numbers
that we have show that we receive approximately one hundred
billion dollars in tax revenue from undocumented people, so much

(46:12):
so that they decided that they want to go to
the irs and get the irs to help them as
they go and seek these people. You know why, because
they've been working and they've been doing the jobs. Then
now they want to roll back child labor protections and
make sure that poor children are the ones that are
doing those jobs, because now we're going to have those vacancies,
if we're going to have jobs left at all, as

(46:32):
we continue to endure the grind of this failed experiment
around this terrible war.

Speaker 2 (46:39):
You know, if someone said you had to spend the
rest of your life on a deserted island with one
of those two, either Letitia James or Jasmine Crockett.

Speaker 1 (46:46):
Which would be I think I would just maybe end
it right there.

Speaker 2 (46:51):
Even after months of displaying her ignorance, Jazzy Jasmine Crockett
is still baffled by the fact that anyone could ever consider.

Speaker 1 (46:57):
Her to be low IQ.

Speaker 2 (46:59):
Jake Tapper asked her about Trump's evaluation of her mental abilities,
and here's how she responded to that.

Speaker 21 (47:04):
One response, the fact that you just got done engaging
in a conversation where we have a president of the
United States who has no idea about the oath that
he just took. On January twentieth, tells me everything that
I need to know. He didn't even have good sense
enough in that same interview to say something as simple
as yes, I will follow the Constitution, you know, the

(47:26):
thing that actually derived from the oath that he was
supposed to take. And he supposedly took an oath, which
there's a lot of people that point out that he
never put his hand on the Bible, even though he
acts as if he could somehow be the pope. But nevertheless,
that oath specifically says that you will defend the Constitution.

(47:46):
So the idea that you are now taking the Constitution and,
as I said at the DNC, putting it through a
paper shredder is a problem. And I think that this
should not be partisan. This should be right versus wrong.
A lot of the things that this administration is doing
they don't have anything to do with partisan shit. This
is right versus wrong, and right now they are consistently wrong.

Speaker 1 (48:08):
So the shit, what is she talking half the time?
You have no idea, which the other day she's talking.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
About chairs, chairs, I have no idea what she's talking about.

Speaker 1 (48:17):
Have at the time.

Speaker 2 (48:17):
Do you help me out here? Hit me up on
the chats. I'm on all the chat, rumble chat, Hey,
what's up?

Speaker 1 (48:22):
Rumble chat? What's up? Web TX Mourning Joe Scarborough. I
love this one.

Speaker 2 (48:27):
I love this one because I know Joe and Mika
very well. They used to be nice. I don't know
they've lost their mind. They really have a bad Trump
derangement syndrome, really bad. Morning Joe Scarborough just handed out
a totally unwarranted compliment. He's identified an individual that he
believes is quote, one of the most articulate, exciting people.
Exciting people, says Joe Scarborough. The Dems have the offer. Well,

(48:50):
here's the clip. Listen closely to find out who Morning
Joe is so infatuated with.

Speaker 7 (48:57):
Rev.

Speaker 22 (48:57):
Nobody ever said that Congress was a meritocrasy. I understand
that AOC may be more progressive than a lot of people.
I also understand that she's one of the most articulate,
exciting people in the democratic fields. He goes out with
Bernie Sanders and yeah, she just draws so many People's

(49:17):
very good, very effective in hearings.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
Mika married to Joe.

Speaker 2 (49:23):
Here's Joe say she's exciting, articulate, He's neither one of them.

Speaker 1 (49:29):
Well, maybe Joe's got a little fang for the AOSA.

Speaker 2 (49:31):
Huh, hey, mad dog, do you have that picture of
the fight the oligarch AOC with her I believe it's
her new husband fight the oligarch AOC who says rich
people are bad. Wealthy people Elon Musk is horrible for
making a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (49:46):
Matt, do you have that picture? By chance?

Speaker 2 (49:47):
Can we can we show the folks that picture we
have that.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
I know it's in there somewhere. I'm trying to look
for the picture.

Speaker 2 (49:54):
All right, Well, maybe we'll do it after this. With
this quick comment, seems like dictator is the Democrat. It's
buzzwork word of the week. Here's Chucky Schumer name calling
the toddler that he is like the toddler.

Speaker 23 (50:07):
Is one of the traits of the dictator, Madam President.
One of the traits of the dictator is someone hostile
to all forms of guardrails and accountability, who doesn't want
to hear any dissent. Well, the Constitution is the ultimate guardrail,
and Donald Trump thinks he doesn't need to obey it.
Donald Trump is the embodiment of what the founders feared,

(50:28):
someone hostile, a president hostile to the rule of law,
scared of debate, scared of opposition. He can't stand the
idea of something restraining his power.

Speaker 1 (50:40):
Dictator. That is a wild, wild, wild narrative.

Speaker 2 (50:44):
That dictator narrative has already made it onto our college campus.
Is Unfortunately, this is what the Democrats do. Hold on, second, Prompler,
this is what the Democrats do. They come up with
a theory, a word, an idea. Inflation is transitory. It
wasn't it was all BS was never transitory, but they
latch onto that word transitory, even though it's so.

Speaker 1 (51:04):
Now it's clear.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
That they've come out with the new assessment of Trump
that they're all going to start using.

Speaker 1 (51:09):
Watch over the next couple of days, you'll hear dictator, dictator, dictators.
So dictator is their new work. Unfortunately, the students using
this term, that's a bad idea.

Speaker 2 (51:18):
But the educators who continue to push the radical political
beliefs onto our students who would be much better served
getting an actual education. Here's an NYU professor who's clearly
giving her students much more than they're paying for their
parents are paying for.

Speaker 18 (51:33):
In other countries that have experienced this kind of democratic
backsliding or full on transition to authoritarianism. Have we similarly
seen a rollback of the safety net, maybe to spend
more money on propaganda like military parades.

Speaker 24 (51:52):
Honestly, the speed at which this is happening and the
kind of concentrated push to do this it does doesn't
have any parallel in situations where leaders came to power
through elections. If you look at the early Putin or
the early Orbon or Aired one, they didn't move at
this speed. This rexamples more after there's been a coup.

Speaker 1 (52:14):
Dictator. She says, Okay, here's that picture. It wasn't in
the system. We quite make ya. You can see that.
See you fight the oligarchs. You can see that. She's
sitting in.

Speaker 2 (52:22):
A very expensive Manhattan apartment with Florida ceiling windows.

Speaker 1 (52:27):
It got to be ten, fifteen, twenty million dollars.

Speaker 3 (52:31):
Easy.

Speaker 1 (52:31):
You see that.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
You see that's our dictator. She fight the oligarchs. She's
an oligarch. She's become an oligarch. All right, folks, don't
forget my podcast and YouTube. It's on YouTube, it's on
everywhere you get your podcasts as well. Make sure you subscribe,
just like you'd hit the subscribe button.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
It's free. It'll aways be free. We have the show obviously,
but also.

Speaker 2 (52:54):
Well you watch the show anytime by doing that, and
also a bunch of other unique ten Sometimes they use
language I'm not allowed to say words I'm not allowed
to use on cable television. I hope you do that.
Subscribe now, don't miss out. We'll be back in too,
and effens Now back in my youth, Sloppy Joe, I

(53:24):
would so it's Key West, right, and he went to
Rollins College and Winter Park, Florida, And we once in a.

Speaker 1 (53:29):
While drive down to the Keys and Sloppy Joe.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
Apparently, Sloppy Joe's was Ernest Hemingway's favorite bar. He used
to hang on in the in Key West all the time.
That place is to this day so much fun. They
have live bands all day, all night. That thing's usually
wide open, packed with people on any beautiful night of
the week.

Speaker 1 (53:50):
You gotta love Sloppy Joe's.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
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Tax Network USA help before the IRS makes the best

(54:59):
next the next move, before they bust the move. So
to smooth folks, Okay, Jazzy Jasmine Crockett, let's talk about
Let's let's show the sound bite that I think will
continue to resonate, especially the Jazzy Jasmine wants to become
the Democrat nominy for president and twenty eight watch.

Speaker 4 (55:18):
And you know what I can't name. I can't name
one Democrat. I mean, I look at the Democrats. They're
in total this array. They have a new person named Crockett.
I watched her speak to the other day. She's definitely
a low IQ person. Uh, And they said she's the
future of the party. I said, you have to be kidding.
I don't know what they're going to do. And I

(55:38):
really believe in the two party system because it's good
to be challenged. It's really good to have a two
party you know, it's good you being challenged is okay,
it keeps you sharp.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
I don't know what they're going to do.

Speaker 2 (55:50):
Yeah, the challenged are right, she's challenged, all right. I
think she's I agree with Well, I'm not true.

Speaker 1 (55:55):
I agree.

Speaker 2 (55:56):
You know, we've been asking this question since I don't know,
I guess since we've been doing the show on REV.

Speaker 1 (56:02):
Who do you think has a lower iQue?

Speaker 2 (56:03):
Do you think it's Jazzy Jasmine Crockett. Do you think
it's AOC Do you think it's elon ilhan Omar from Minnesota?
Do you think it's Aela Presley from George Who do
you think has the lowest IQ on the Democrat side?
Let me know, hit me up on one of the chats.
Take that skycam again. Here's another picture. This is a

(56:25):
new one. See this one. I'm gonna read the story.
This is amazing Jazzy Jasmin Crockett Democrat Rep. Democrat Rep.
Jasmin Crockett accused of abusing her power at an airport
after she cut passengers the line in wheelchairs. Passengers were
in wheelchairs and she cut the line.

Speaker 1 (56:43):
Democrat Rep.

Speaker 2 (56:44):
Jasmine Crockett being blasted on social media for jumping ahead
of two passengers and wheelchairs while taking a flight out
of Hatsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport over the weekend, taxpayer
funded police escort, cutting everyone in line, even making disabled
people wait. Can you believe the audacity of this woman?

(57:08):
Does she have no sense, no common sense whatsoever. You
got people waiting in line who are in wheelchairs. Let
them go first.

Speaker 1 (57:16):
All right, folks, the war room is up next.

Speaker 2 (57:19):
We will see you again tomorrow. Have a great night,
and we'll see you in first thing in the morning. Now,
the first thing the
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