Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Hey, everybody, welcome to another great show. I'm David Zeerr.
You'll watch him breaking Point Unreal America's Voice News. One
hundred days of the Trump presidency the second term. So
much has gone on and so many executive orders, and
such a busy agenda for Donald Trump. And how about
closing the border ninety six percent in the first nine
(00:34):
or ten weeks of a second term. How many lives
will he save, whether it's preventing violent attacks or innocent
Americans getting hurt, or how many lives has he already
saved by thwarting the fentinel across the border. How many
billions has he saved already just in social services spending
and preventing more legals from coming in? What would that be?
(00:57):
I mean, we probably spent trillions of dollars when you
add up the toll of sixty years of illegal immigration
plus you know, how much money has he saved the
court system or the prison system? Well, like in California,
where like fifteen twenty percent or so are illegals in California,
Forty fifty percent of the US court system and the
federal level used to be taken up with illegals being
(01:19):
you know, either in court criminal court cases or other
and federal prison populations. And you know, we spent two
hundred billion year just on social services. So how much
money and how many lives has Donald Trump already saved?
Nobody's asking that question in the mainstream media. But we
will tell you the truth. And what about to reduce
(01:39):
strain in the emergency rooms and our medical system. It's
been an incredible first quarter for Donald Trump, and of
course the media is eviscerating him, and the Washington Examiner
had a great article talking about cutting steps in fossil
(02:01):
fuel technology and stuff. I'll get into that later here,
but I wanted to introduce her first guest. She's a
dear friend. I've known her for many years, very talented,
Make America Art Again artist Elena Russepha. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Hi Dave, nice to see you. Good evening, America.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
It's great to see you. And you know, we want
you to tell your story because you had something very
exciting happened recently. And you know, kudos to you because
you've put your heart and soul into your artwork and
especially your magapieces that Donald Trump has put at mar Lago.
But tell us about where he has your artwork.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
Now, oh, my artwork now is in a White House.
It's actually beyond my dreams.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
I was dreaming, you know, somewhere there, very very far,
somewhere in my tip of my soul, that's one day
probably we'll be over there. But when my friends started
to text me and show me sharing with somebody's tweets
that my painting be America dond Trump actually made the
(03:14):
White House, I was shocked.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
Honestly.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
I remember you're telling me five years ago at the
Metropolitan Republican Club, you know, about your paintings and showing
them there and what your aspirations were, and you were
hoping that Donald Trump would pay attention. Not only did
he bring him to Mari Lago, but now it's in
the White House. And that is a bigger meaning for you,
(03:39):
because you know, it's one thing if an artist born
in the United States gets their artwork recognized in the
historic White House, right, two hundred year history in America.
But you have a different story, right, You're coming from
communist Soviet Union.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
Absolutely.
Speaker 3 (03:57):
I was born behind Iron coourtain, as you know, and
I faced all achieves and all right future benefits of
communistic country and when I came to the United States
a while ago, I didn't understand anything about political situation here.
(04:18):
I just wanted to live my American life and chang
my American dream. But slowly, slow I started to recognize
that there is something wrong, especially when it started to
pay attention on Biden administration rhetoric.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
It sounds so familiar for me.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
It was so scary because everything what we heard from
my radical left who fleep rushing fart into communistic Soviet Union,
same exactly words, exactly same narrative.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
Probably they changed it a bit to fit.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
More American people, people who were born in capitalistic country,
but it was exactly the same narrative, exactly the same
offensive politics, exactly a cancelation of your personal amendment and
try to cancel techn amendment.
Speaker 4 (05:05):
They violent all.
Speaker 3 (05:06):
Rights under souls, let's make everybody equal.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
And I hear it from a lot.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
Of academia left academia that they are socialists. They don't
cover them themselves anymore, they don't hire this, call themselves
communists and socialists, and they kind of want this style
of life. But to all what I can advise them,
please buy ticket to North Korea, go live over there
five plus years, get your education like experience over there
(05:34):
living in communistic country to understand exactly how this equality
looks like. Because all people over there are equally poor, rightless,
and miserable. There is nothing like wealthy, smoothie life for everyone.
It's not going to happen when government is uncontrolled in
controlling dictatorship and they just try to pull it democracy,
(05:57):
which has nothing to do with democracy before second, I
just wonder what democracy has to do is constitutional republic
were really yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
When I was there in eighty six, there were tanks
in the street, there were soldiers marching through Red Square
outside the Kremlin. There were no restaurants to go to.
Virtually the food stores had maybe a cucumber and a
pepper on the counter. They didn't have food. The people
I saw the breadlines, and my sister getting married there
and her husband coming here cried for two hours when
(06:27):
he walked into our supermarket here, seeing one hundred brands
of cereal, he thought we were all spoiled. You know,
But you know, it's such an incredible journey because you
came here, you emigrated here out of a communist system.
You're pursuing the American dream. And now you have the
President of the United States recognizing your work. How does
(06:49):
that make you feel?
Speaker 2 (06:51):
I'm ready to fly away like a balloon sweat. I'm
pretty happy.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
And my dream next, my dream is make the same
picture like a lot of people too.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
With mister President in front of my art.
Speaker 3 (07:04):
So I want same picture with you, mister Trump, Please
invite me to White House. It's going to be my pleasure,
my honor.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
Second, a lot.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
Of people asked me if I'm planning to paint something
to replace Hillary Clinton art. So yes, my Millennia, a
free American millennium art piece is ready, So my pleasure
to give it to our beautiful.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
First lady as well. And second gym is to run
art show, solo art show. But you wrote a huge
art show.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
Dedicated to all Americans, dedicated even to a beautiful American
conservative women who never was cheering by some art.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
I would love to create, establish huge.
Speaker 3 (07:46):
Collection and run solo art show in mar Laga and.
Speaker 4 (07:50):
Or Tepital Hill Club first.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
So I would love to please please help me.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
And I know you had you had your artwork at
mari Lago, and you know I was at many events
there and I've seen you work plenty of times. Uh,
when are they going to paint a picture of me?
And where would you put it?
Speaker 3 (08:10):
I would love to take care as soon as you
will be back to us, back to a trail.
Speaker 5 (08:15):
So okay, give me a few.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Weeks, Give me a few weeks and your art piece
will be ready.
Speaker 3 (08:21):
All promise me that it's going to be your back
drop for all your segments.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
Backdrop will be the pizza place, all right? So uh,
and what do you have behind you there?
Speaker 6 (08:33):
I started to work on.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
Alina Habba piece because it's going to be part of
a Free America collection. Over there, we have already a
plenty of patrio, starting of course with our mismerizing presidents,
and we have over there, so probably Steve van and
Cash Patel, our beautiful Rudy Giuliani, we have General Flynn,
(08:57):
Peter Navara, we have ilan mask over there. I was
really first lady in my art collection.
Speaker 2 (09:03):
So the first lady.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
Of course, she is first in michaew election, and Alena
Habbo will be second, and then I'm going.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
To keep going. So I want to bring more ladies
for fighting for this country.
Speaker 3 (09:13):
Because again a democratic narrative during her president's election was
that all didn't like Kamala because she's a woman. No,
I'm a woman and my art now hanging in a
white house.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
I'm an immigrant and my art now it displayed in
a white house.
Speaker 3 (09:30):
So nobody offense here women or immigrants.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
Legally, you gotta do. You got to do one, Christy,
No like bow hunting in South Dakota. All right, So
we're out of time and thirty seconds. Tell our viewers
where they can find your artwork, how can they buy it?
How can they see it and tell us about it?
Speaker 3 (09:50):
Yeah, feel free to reach me out on my website www, Megalangela,
dot gap, same Instagram, Megalangela, same. You can find me
on true social ex LinkedIn elenor usiva. So please feel
free to text me, email me my pleasure in my.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
Way and Magelangelo. You use that on many of the
social media apps. Everybody go check it out. Absolutely, Elena Rooseveah,
thank you so much. It's always great to see you
and I hope to catch.
Speaker 4 (10:23):
Up really, thank you, Thank.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
You best the luck with everything. Yeah, she's a spitfire
and she's been out there. I've been watching her for many,
many years, you know, hoping to get the attention of
Donald Trump because she's very talented and she's done so
many pieces. She really is an extensive art collection, you know,
and it's very exciting stuff. I'm very happy for, especially
(10:48):
coming from a communist country.
Speaker 7 (10:50):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (10:51):
Coming up, I have a great show for you on
congestion pricing in New York City, California, bills, red light camera,
school bus cameras. We've got all kinds of great stuff,
and comedian Fred Rabino. Don't go anywhere. I'm David Zier.
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eight today. Welcome back, everybody. You're watching another fabulous episode
(12:10):
of Breaking Front in Real America's Voice News. Thank you
so much for joining us. I want to bring on
our next guests so much to talk about all over
the United States, the roads, the cars we have with us.
Right now once again Jay Bieber, the executive director of
the National Motorists Association. Jay, what's cooking?
Speaker 6 (12:32):
Oh, pleasure to be back with you as always. Nice
to see.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Always great to see you. So, you know, a lot
happening here. I wanted to start off with what's going
on in California because there's some new bills pending that
will affect the lives of commuters and travelers in their cars,
similar to New York. But we got rid of most
of these, at least in the suburbs. What do you
(12:57):
got going in California.
Speaker 8 (12:59):
Well, in California, there's a number of owners bills, but
the two worst ones are. One is a Senate Bill
seven twenty, which would take away your right to a
trial if you get a red light camera ticket, make
the owner of the vehicle responsible, and basically make the
ticket itself prima facia evidence, meaning that it's assumed that.
Speaker 6 (13:20):
You're guilty when you walk in the door.
Speaker 8 (13:23):
And this is in order to generate more revenue, to
make the programs more profitable, and to get the cities
to keep all the money from from these tickets, whereas
currently they have to divide the revenue between the state
and the cities and that sort of thing. So that's
one bill. Another bill would make school zones active twenty
(13:45):
four to seven at twenty miles an hour on every roadway,
regardless of weather or not schools even in session.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
Yeah, that's completely bonkers. Leave it to California. So I
wanted to ask you, California didn't LA get get rid
of red light cameras many years ago?
Speaker 6 (14:04):
Yes, I was responsible for that. Oh wow, yes, yes, so.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
I didn't know that advance. So that's a genuine urect.
So tell us, how did you do that I.
Speaker 8 (14:17):
Made a good argument that the cameras weren't making the
city and the folks in the city any safer. That
the vast majority of tickets were for slow rolling right turns,
like seventy five percent of the tickets were for things
that don't even that don't even cause any danger to people,
and the fraction of a second violation that you can't
see with the naked eye.
Speaker 6 (14:35):
And the city was losing over a million dollars a
year on the program.
Speaker 8 (14:37):
So in most places they generate a revenue stream, but
in the city of Los Angeles, even with the sixty
thousand tickets that they were issuing every year, they found
a way to lose money on it.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
So what about the increase in t bone accidents? Yeah,
that was yeah.
Speaker 8 (14:54):
Yeah, So actually there was an increase in rear end
collisions right for people slam bas. Yeah, and and no
real decrease in t bone collisions from people running red lights.
Speaker 6 (15:05):
So we proved, we proved that.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Wow, because here in Suffolk County, because we suffocate from
the high taxes Suffolk County. But no, but they we
have a great legislature. Now they got rid of red
light cameras. This year, and uh, you know, thank thank
uh you know, it was such a great thanks to
Steven Root, who actually cut down a red light camera
poll a couple of years ago and got arrested. But
(15:28):
he did it for all of us, and yes, I
do right. He really raised awareness. He's a great guy,
and they got rid of them. But New York City,
I have to dedicate one percent of my annual budget
to New York City red light camera tickets. Uh, it's insane.
Let's talk about the school bus thing, because they're not
(15:49):
enforcing school bus tickets by us anymore because so many
people the fines were like five hundred dollars. What's up
in California?
Speaker 8 (15:57):
Yeah, I mean California, they've tried to pass this bill
for school bus cameras.
Speaker 6 (16:02):
In fact, I was just doing an interview with somebody
about this.
Speaker 8 (16:06):
The school bus There's this.
Speaker 6 (16:10):
Company called Bus Patrol.
Speaker 8 (16:11):
They used to be another company that was called Force
Multiplier Solutions. They bankrupted the Dallas County school system and
got run out of town for bribery and stuff like that.
That they rebranded to Bus Patrol and now they're around
the country selling these bus systems claiming that you know,
there's all these violations and that kids are getting killed
(16:32):
left and right, and it's not true, thankfully. Fatalities from
kids is from a driver illegally passing the school bus
is so rare that they don't even really register. There's
maybe in the entire United States, like four every ten
years or something like that. I mean, it's thankfully, very
(16:53):
very rare. But they're issuing millions and millions and millions
of tickets, and this company is making millions of dollars
which they then use to against the you know, the
regular folks. So because it's a it's a money generation thing,
that's all it is.
Speaker 9 (17:05):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
Yeah, So I'm Stephen Ruth, not Stephen Root, I said.
Stephen Root was responsible for starting the debate about the
red light cameras in Suffolk County. Stephen Root was the
actor in Office Space who played Milton red Staple of.
Speaker 8 (17:22):
I thought, I said, Stephen Ruth, I'm telling you that's
what I've.
Speaker 6 (17:26):
Heard, right.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
So, uh, the Department of Transportation is going to stop
funding or stop asking mandates for these road diets. I
know in New York City you could only go like
twenty twenty five miles an hour, and it's it's completely miserable.
I mean, you go to midtown Manhattan now in the
daytime and in the morning, there's no energy there. The
(17:49):
commercial traffic is about half of what it used to be.
Speaker 10 (17:52):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
New York City is not a buzz anymore, takes forever
to get anywhere. What's up with road diets?
Speaker 8 (17:58):
Yeah, I mean, well, first of all, it's bad just
to begin with, but a lot of the congestion that
has happened in the recent years is because of the
policies of the city and the state to make driving
as difficult and as miserable as possible.
Speaker 6 (18:11):
So they're taking away car.
Speaker 8 (18:12):
Lanes, they are you know, putting on these cameras, these
speed cameras, the ticket people for ridiculously low speed limits.
They're lowering speed limits in places and then ticketing people
for that. And then they have these school zone camera
tickets that run twenty four to seven even if you're
nowhere near a school and nobody, you know, nobody's around
for miles.
Speaker 6 (18:32):
So they're just trying to get people to not drive
a car.
Speaker 8 (18:36):
So the federal government recently put out a series of
funding proposed you know, people to put proposals back to
the Department of Transportation, and they said this time around
different than the previous administration. They are not going to
look very favorably on projects that are not truly safe
(19:00):
de oriented that they are not going to not going
to approve projects that are going to take away car
lanes or compare people's ability to get around my car.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
So that's a good, well, pretend to Republican. Michael Bloomberg,
former mayor of New York City, started the misery in
New York, you know, trying to reduce traffic and made
it possible.
Speaker 6 (19:20):
Is he still pretending to be a Republican?
Speaker 1 (19:22):
I know, seventy two million on gun control, I think right.
Speaker 6 (19:26):
I mean, I mean, let I make you tell you
a secret. Most people don't know this.
Speaker 8 (19:29):
So there's this these groups out there that are pushing
for all of these laws against drivers. He's funding them.
They get a lot of their funding. There's this thing
called streets Blog, which is this you know, online blog
that pushes all these crazy ideas about you know that
of a drive a car and and everythody should be
on a bicycle, and you know all of the you know,
(19:51):
speed cameras and lower speed limits and all this kind
of stuff.
Speaker 6 (19:54):
They are funded by Bloomberg.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
That's unbelievable. I'm learning so much from you. I always do,
you know, and I'll never forget when Sarah Palin walked
into Seapac in like twenty twelve with a giant, big gulp.
That was a riot, you know, because he wanted to
ban soda in New York City. But his hypocrisy was
he wanted to ban soda in the convenience store, but
not in the supermarket, so like you know, they would
(20:19):
just go to the supermarket to buy it, and the
small businesses would get hurt.
Speaker 8 (20:23):
He is the biggest any state person ever and unfortunately
has a lot of money to throw around to try
to get his way in places.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Well, there's no doubt about that. All right, let's tackle
one more subject here. The last time I had you,
while we were talking about the clean Cars to Waiver program,
where California dealers were going to be punished by manufacturers
by forcing more expensive and more volume of electric cars
on the public and only have those cars available in
(20:51):
the California dealers. But Trump has reversed that, hasn't he.
Speaker 6 (20:55):
Yes, they're trying to they're trying to stop that.
Speaker 8 (20:59):
There is actually coming up a vote soon I think
in the next few days.
Speaker 6 (21:03):
Here, or it's already happened, I'm not really sure.
Speaker 8 (21:06):
But they but this would be to use the Administrative
Procedures Act to prevent California from having this waiver. And understand,
this waiver was put in place for California to come
to the federal government ask for these individual waivers. That
California had a really bad problem with smog and and
(21:27):
this was like in the nineties and the eighties, and
and a lot of that has been cleaned up, you know,
cleaner cars just overall on the roads, you know, better
fuel mileage, all of that kind of stuff, so that
problem doesn't exist as much in California. But they really
want to be the tail that wags the dog of
the rest of the country because they want to impose
(21:49):
their will everywhere. They're not just happy enough to do
it in California and destroy California, they want to destroy
the whole country. So they're the biggest market obviously, so
if they a law that says, let's say the cars
have to meet this mileage standard or this emission standard,
then manufacturers are not going to manufacture cars just for California.
(22:11):
And then for the rest of the country. They're going
to try They're going to have to impose this on
the rest of the country.
Speaker 6 (22:15):
So there's no reason to give California this waiver.
Speaker 8 (22:18):
And I'm hoping that the federal government is able to
claw this back.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
Yeah, And like we were saying, electric cars were flat
for the second year in a row in twenty twenty four,
but there's still twenty four percent I believe of the
population a car population in California.
Speaker 8 (22:33):
Right, they may be, but understand that the vast majority
of these cars are being sold in the richest zip code,
so it's rich people are getting subsidized to feel good
about themselves.
Speaker 6 (22:48):
And here's the thing.
Speaker 8 (22:49):
There really is no evidence that an electric vehicle is
better for the environment.
Speaker 6 (22:53):
And there's a lot of there's a lot of data.
Speaker 8 (22:55):
On this, but just in terms of two emissions, it's
just not it's just not good evidence that we need
to mandate this for everybody when it's not even clear
that electric vehicles, at the end of the run, are
are better for the environment less co two emissions.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Jay, where at a time teleview is where they can follow.
Speaker 8 (23:16):
You, Okay, so you can find us at Motorists Dot
org that's Motorists isplural dot org and you can and
you can go to a website. If you're in California
and you're concerned about these bills that we mentioned, we
have an action page there.
Speaker 6 (23:33):
You can find out what you can do about that.
Speaker 8 (23:35):
It'll pop up immediately when you go on the website,
and you know, contact us, join the organization.
Speaker 6 (23:40):
It's an easily for college a year.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
All right. I'm so excited that you killed the red
light camera program in l A. You say, people a
lot of money. Thank you so much for joining us,
and we'll have you back Jay anytime. Super all right, everybody,
we got more ahead. Don't go anywhere and don't change
that channel. Welcome back to Breaking Point on Real America's
(24:10):
Voice News and the Democratic Party coming apart at the seams.
They're trying to find some traction on the due process issue,
but I don't know if that's the right hill to
die on for them, especially when this guy Garcia was
actually human trafficking people down near the border and it
(24:33):
was established by the court six years ago that he
was MS thirteen. But we'll see where that goes. But
here to discuss the Democratic Party and where they stand
right now is the non woke CEO and host of
The Bill Walton Show. Bill Walton, who formerly served on
the Action and Landing team for Donald J. Trump twenty
sixteen presidential transition team. Welcome, Bill David. Nice to see you.
(24:58):
You're talking with you. Great to see you, to see you.
You're the host of the Bill Walton Show. You have
a distinguished background. You served on a lot of boards
Allied Capital, right, you were.
Speaker 11 (25:10):
Exactly it was publicly traded private equity fund.
Speaker 1 (25:12):
Yeah. Yeah, so you're at ten billion, a lot of impressive.
You know, you're on the boards of the Heritage Foundation
and other groups as well. Right, yeah, Okay, So let's
talk about the reality for the Democratic Party. You know,
even Bill Maher was warning on his show about three
weeks ago that New York losing two congressional seats, California three,
(25:37):
Rhode Island, Oregon, other Bruce states losing a seat or
two here and there by twenty thirty. The Dems may
have no chance if they don't get there act together.
What do you think?
Speaker 11 (25:47):
I think the odds are high that they won't have
any chance unless Donald Trump fails.
Speaker 5 (25:53):
In what he's doing in this term.
Speaker 11 (25:55):
And I don't think he will, but you know, as
an indication of how desperate they are, Nate Silver, you've
he was, he was the polster that really nailed it
in two thousand and eight. In twenty twelve, I think
he called every single state. And you know, since then
it's been a little more mixed record, but he's basically
been right. And he's now telling us that he believes
(26:17):
Alexandria Ocassa Cortes will be the Democrat nominee in twenty
twenty eighth.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
Hy the women and children, That's all I got to say.
Oh my god.
Speaker 11 (26:28):
Well, you know, you know, she's turned her district into
basically a red light district. It's not a you know,
I don't think she's going to win her own district,
but we would we will see.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
Well, there's streets in her district that have underage prostitutes
walking the streets, asians, uh, legal alliens. Really very very
sad what's going on?
Speaker 11 (26:51):
Well, but she's really not what she's paying attention to.
She's gone on the road, and she's gone on the
road with Bernie Sanders, and I love the name of this.
It's the fighting oligarchy. Oligarchy to her. I got to
pronounce it like Bernie oligarchy, oligarch, and they're drawing big crowds.
I mean, twenty thirty forty thousand people. And I can't
(27:13):
think of any other Democrats right now or in recent
memory they can do that well.
Speaker 1 (27:19):
Speaking of oligarchy, the jet that her and Bernie were
on is fifteen thousand dollars an hour to operate. And
I remember four years ago AOC couldn't afford the apartment
in the Washington Naval Yards in DC, and now she's
worth many millions of dollars. Is that correct?
Speaker 11 (27:41):
Well, she might have been learning from the Bidens. I
don't know, but that is correct. She's up, She's up
from nothing. And she was never as poor and beliegued
as she claimed in her campaigns. But she wasn't doing
that badly. But where she is now is certainly. You know,
it happens to how.
Speaker 5 (28:01):
Do they do it?
Speaker 11 (28:02):
They always end up with a lot more money after
they've been here for a few years than they came with.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Now, is this a concoction of like the Chenk Yugurt types,
the Democrat socialists of America? You know, she auditioned for
that seat to run her brother was supposed to go
to the interview in Brooklyn, and she was a bartender
and the brother asked her to go, and she wound
up getting the part to be the candidate in that
heavily Democrat district in New York.
Speaker 11 (28:28):
Well, she's character, she's charismatic and yeah, you know, I
hate this word, but she's very relatable. I mean, she
tells stories, she empathizes with people. Her political ideas and
her policy ideas are terrible, but you know, she makes
people feel like she's there for them, and she's very,
very good at it.
Speaker 5 (28:47):
And you know the.
Speaker 11 (28:49):
Question, you know, is Bernie out there helping her take
some of his people for twenty twenty eight if he
decides not to run. So I think Nate Silver may
may well be right, But then what are they out
there pushing?
Speaker 5 (29:01):
They're out They're out.
Speaker 11 (29:03):
There Medicare for all, free college tuition, affordable housing, and
of course the rich, the billionaires, the oligarchs, oligarchs are
going to pay for.
Speaker 5 (29:15):
All of it. Well, and you know, so it's it's it's.
Speaker 11 (29:19):
Horrible economics and horrible social ideas. But they're both very
good charismatic speakers.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
Yeah, there's no doubt about it. And you know what's
going on here is, you know, the Democratic Party. You know,
I have more faith in the American people, I think,
because it's good that she's running in twenty twenty eight
now for her, because I think in twenty thirty the
planet's supposed to end. Right, so she has two years
(29:48):
left on her whether she's right or wrong. Right, didn't
she say in ten years we will be toast.
Speaker 11 (29:53):
So there are a lot of those that are passed
their sill by date.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Yeah, for sure, So she's got to run quick. Let's
talk about Dick Durbin and other members of the Democratic Party.
Did the Democrats find some traction with this due process issue?
Speaker 11 (30:12):
No, well, just to recollect the due process. They were
talking about how when Trump sent an illegal alien back
to El Salvador, somehow they didn't fill out the right
form or whatever, and it was a technically due process.
But he's he's not a citizen, and he's an illegal alien,
(30:32):
and he's got a rap sheet that's incredibly long, including
I think he was arrested driving a car.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
Load of Yeah, he was a human trafficker.
Speaker 5 (30:40):
He was a human trafficker, so that you know, so.
Speaker 11 (30:43):
They've They've picked the wrong they picked the wrong candidate
to be the to be the victim here, and they're
not gaining any traction at all. So I think this
one's probably going to go away, you know, as soon
as some next newsy thing comes up.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
Now, Dick Durbin was a a staple, uh in the Senate.
U what is the impacts of him retiring? Is he
getting out because he's he's a writing on the wall?
Is it just that he's old?
Speaker 5 (31:10):
Well, he's eighty and but in the Senate that's not old.
Speaker 11 (31:16):
They tend to they tend to want to they tend
to want to check out going.
Speaker 5 (31:24):
To their last rule call vote. But you know, he
Dick Dick was.
Speaker 11 (31:29):
Not much less radical than the AOC. And so it's
not the ideologically that he's leaving.
Speaker 5 (31:36):
I think it probably is just age.
Speaker 11 (31:39):
I think he also knows is a safe seat in
Illinois that they're they're sure to fill with another Democrat
and probably somebody younger.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Let's hope it's not J. D. Pritzker. You know in
Illinois that he's he's uber radical, he's got a ton
of money, we'll see. I don't know if he's even
considering that Uh, all right, what are some of your
other concerns? We have two minutes left. Well, you know,
what else do you think is going to happen going
forward here?
Speaker 11 (32:08):
Well, I think that we're here a lot on the
people for President story. But it's three and a half
years before the next election, so I think it's just
that people like to have a competition, like a sports contest.
The one of the most interesting candidates in my mind
is Steven Smith, who's with ESPN, and he's interested in
(32:32):
jumping in and I think he would add a he'd
added to mention that they need I mean, if you
look at the list of the Democrat candidates, they're so
called self self identified or identified by others. We've got
Gavin Newsom, who it's hard to see who's the worst governor.
Speaker 5 (32:49):
JB.
Speaker 11 (32:49):
Pritzker or Gavin Newsom, you know, given what's happened with
both California. Yeah, yeah, Well, you know, I knew JB.
Pittzker when he's a kid. I mean, I was a
banker and J. Pritzker who was all he was the
true oligarch. He created the Pritzker fortune and I was
his one of his deal bankers. And it was fascinating
(33:12):
to work with him, and I remember JB in the
office as this chubby little boy. He's only gotten chubby
or as the years go on. But I had no
idea he'd be filled with so many bad ideas because
Jay was actually a pretty good guy.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
I wonder if Pritz got anything to do with the
Hyatt making us wear masks at the twenty twenty one.
I think it was Sea Pack in Orlando. We were
all miserable down there doing that. But you know, so, Okay,
Bill Walton, we have twenty seconds. Where can our viewers
follow you?
Speaker 11 (33:46):
Well, you follow me at the Bill waltonshow dot com website.
You'll find about two hundred and fifty very interesting conversations
with a lot of household names, well not household names,
but policy household names, so.
Speaker 5 (33:58):
That sort of thing.
Speaker 11 (33:59):
Depth in depth conversations, but we try to keep them
lively and hopefully you learn something when you spend some
time there. And of course we're also on YouTube and
Rumble and all the other major podcast platform.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Wonderful, Bill, thank you so much for coming on. I
hope you're talking again real soon.
Speaker 5 (34:15):
Okay, great, David, All right.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
Thank you guys. I will be right back with more.
We always love seeing Maria from Switch to USA. How
are you.
Speaker 12 (34:24):
I am doing very well. I am so pumped that
we are here in Long Island.
Speaker 4 (34:28):
Thank you.
Speaker 9 (34:29):
Yeah, it's great and I see you everywhere.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
I saw you in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania, Wildwood, New Jersey.
Speaker 9 (34:34):
Is there anyway you don't go?
Speaker 4 (34:36):
There is nowhere we don't go?
Speaker 9 (34:38):
Absolutely right.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
You've been a supporter of a real America's voice breaking
point for some time.
Speaker 9 (34:43):
Now tell us about Switch to USA.
Speaker 12 (34:45):
Well, Switch to USA is the mom and pop American manufacturer,
and we are the parallel economy for all of your essentials.
And you never know when you might need another supply chain.
Wink Wink so all.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
Made on American soil by American factory workers.
Speaker 12 (35:03):
Aimen to that. We have to rebuild our economy and
we are doing it.
Speaker 9 (35:08):
Where can our viewers find you?
Speaker 12 (35:09):
Please come to switch the number two USA dot com.
Speaker 9 (35:15):
Switch to USA dot com. We love Maria, so great
to see you.
Speaker 4 (35:19):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 13 (35:19):
David, We love you too, Thank you everyone awesome, Thank
you Maria.
Speaker 14 (35:34):
We all want to make a difference in our country
and make change, but we don't all have the ability
to do so a lot of people are busy. They
can't join school boards, they can't get on borough council,
but they can change where they shop. And it's just shopping.
It's that simple.
Speaker 15 (35:50):
We're gonna link arms and we're going to shop right
here at this American factory. They make the products and
they're all natural and they're good for us and they're affordable.
Everything made here in the USA.
Speaker 1 (36:14):
Hey, guys, welcome back. You're watching Breaking Point, Real America's
voice news US energy policing of the Trump very very
excited about this. The Interior Department is helping increase oil
production in the Gulf of America by one hundred thousand
barrels per day as per Trump's executive order to wan
leash American energy, Offshore drilling in the Gulf will tap
(36:37):
multiple reservoirs at once at higher pressure levels, boosting output
by ten percent. And the Interior Department said that a
twenty twenty three study from the University of Texas found
that over the next thirty years there's going to be
an increase of sixty one percent more oil that can
be produced over the next thirty years. And the Washington
(36:58):
Examiner is saying that Trump has announced steps for leases
and permits on federal lands that would normally take one
to two years. He's going to get it down to
fourteen to twenty eight days. Talk about cutting red tape,
and he's not going to do it for wind and
solar projects, but he will do it for a few
clean energy products projects. I'm sorry, but I want to
(37:23):
get right to our next guest. Very very funny man,
funny looking too, Fred Rabino, the King of Brooklyn. How
are you?
Speaker 4 (37:33):
I'm well, thank you, he said, I'm funny looking.
Speaker 1 (37:36):
Did you did you give me walt hands before? Instead
of jazz hands?
Speaker 7 (37:43):
You put your elbows in almost touching, and then you
wave at shoulder length.
Speaker 1 (37:50):
We got to do that. That's like the towel dance,
but for a Democrat. Oh wow, Okay, well listen, it's
time for a little humor because we're also stressed out.
The mainstream media throwing everything at Trump right.
Speaker 7 (38:07):
Everything is everything is Trump's fault, but he's It seems
like the more he does, the less credit he gets
and the more.
Speaker 4 (38:16):
They blame them.
Speaker 7 (38:17):
But don't they realize everything they've blamed them for they
got caught doing.
Speaker 4 (38:22):
I would stop, stop already, stop the morgane thing, the election.
Speaker 7 (38:32):
Interference, everything. I can't think of one thing they didn't
get caught doing that they accused him of.
Speaker 4 (38:40):
It's so stupid. These people are really stupid.
Speaker 1 (38:43):
It's projection, Fred, It's projection.
Speaker 5 (38:46):
You know.
Speaker 1 (38:46):
My mother used to say that to me. She'd be like, no,
you'd make a great defense lawyer. And she wasn't even Jewish,
you know, it's unbelievable.
Speaker 4 (38:55):
But she was saving up to be Jewish.
Speaker 1 (38:58):
Well, you're from Brooklyn, right, Brooklyn. You're a very diverse community,
You've got great pizza, you've got a large Jewish community,
You're you're, you're, you're very popular over there. How do
you do it in Brooklyn?
Speaker 4 (39:11):
Well, I do it from the side. No, I'm like,
bro up, will you listen?
Speaker 7 (39:18):
Uh? We I grew up in the biggest concentration of
Italians outside of Italy, all Roman Catholic, and next to
Burrow Park, the biggest concentration of Jews outside of Israel,
and we all got along. It was fantastic and all
of a sudden, Uh, whenever people scream racism, that means
(39:41):
like the racism really isn't there, and but they're trying
to interject it into your community.
Speaker 4 (39:47):
So we never had that. We always got along fine.
Speaker 7 (39:50):
And it's very sad what's happening on the campuses of
the universities. And I can tell you right now, in
my day, my Jewish friends would have came up to
me and said, let's go, let's get on the train.
We'll go in a Columbia university and that would have
been taken care of him probably two while.
Speaker 1 (40:11):
Yeah, there's no doubt they're protesting again at Columbia by
the way, Okay, Michelle Obama, right, she's complaining that only
seven percent of the therapists and the clinicians and psychiatrists
are people of color, so our children don't know to
go into this career. And like Taraji p Henson said,
(40:34):
the comedian actress, she was complaining she couldn't find a
clinician for her son because she needed a black guy.
Is that racist?
Speaker 7 (40:45):
Listen, all she's been saying lately is that she's breaking
her silence. Now, yeah, this woman hasn't stopped talking for
fourteen years. Do you understand that in order to actually
be at some point, you have to stop talking.
Speaker 10 (41:04):
She hasn't fourteen years, She hasn't stopped talking she's been
on a podcast, she's been on all kinds of talk shows,
she's been all over fourteen years. I've never seen a
first lady talk so much and at the end of
(41:25):
it say, I'm gonna break my silence. Does she know
what that means? Does she know what? To break your silence?
You had to be silent at one point? Please, It's
like drinking. I say, oh, I'm breaking.
Speaker 7 (41:39):
My sobriety every day, so point you gotta be sober
to break it?
Speaker 1 (41:46):
All right, So talking for fourteen years, you obviously met
my wife. Okay, that's all I'm gonna say. So, does
that mean that I have to fire my Chinese neurologist
because he's not a white European dude.
Speaker 7 (42:00):
Don't find never never fire your Chinese anything.
Speaker 4 (42:04):
They're the best at everything. Is that racist?
Speaker 7 (42:07):
Because I've always seen Chinese are the best at everything?
Speaker 5 (42:11):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (42:11):
Have you ever seen a homeless Chinese guy?
Speaker 9 (42:14):
Never?
Speaker 1 (42:14):
Well, half of you know, down to half of Brooklyn
now by Spimoni gardens, that's all Chinese and Korea now too, right, Yes.
Speaker 7 (42:24):
It is, it's all. It's almost all Asian now. But uh,
you never see an Asian homeless guy. Never, never because
they have a great work ethic, they're very good people,
they have a good family life, and it's fantastic. But
this first woman, everything is racial.
Speaker 4 (42:44):
I kick listen.
Speaker 7 (42:46):
I can't remember any quotes from a first from all
the first ladies combined, all the first ladies we've ever
had combined. Maybe I remember one quote, maybe like just say.
Speaker 9 (43:03):
No, that was it?
Speaker 6 (43:06):
Yeah, Well, Ell Obama's.
Speaker 4 (43:08):
Got like ten. She's like, America was never great. I'm
ashamed of America. I go low, they go high. My
husband's in the middle. What else did she say?
Speaker 1 (43:20):
Let me just tell you right now that this show
has probably three times as many viewers as Michelle Obama's
first podcast did, So I feel better about myself.
Speaker 4 (43:32):
She's breaking her silence.
Speaker 1 (43:34):
Yeah she is. And well, listen, let's go to the pope.
All right, God rest his soul here. But a lot
of I'm Catholic, a lot of Catholics in my family
thought he was a you know, progressive, leftist, social justice
rainbow Marxist climate change agenda pope instead of a religious figure.
(43:56):
What do you say?
Speaker 7 (43:58):
He seemed different than all the other popes, right, he
sees he didn't he say gay marriage was Okay, well
I think he didn't.
Speaker 1 (44:08):
He said he would like give communion or they would recognize,
you know, gay couples, but he did. He did it.
He said they did it out of like charity, So
he didn't like fully commit to that. But you know,
he was radical. He gave five hundred thousand dollars to
illegals near the US border. You know, Catholic Charities is
(44:29):
an NGO funding illegals through the a Darian Gap from
Panama up to the United States. It's unbelievable.
Speaker 7 (44:37):
Yeah, a lot of conservative Catholics were very disheartened by
what he did, and I didn't like that he came
out and I mean a couple of months before he passed,
he was saying that if you build a wall, it's
a moral you know, and and America shouldn't be building
a wall.
Speaker 4 (44:56):
Meanwhile, at the Vatican, for a thousand years.
Speaker 7 (44:59):
There's been forty foot wall completely around the Vatican.
Speaker 16 (45:04):
Machine guns and machine gun and you know what, for
a thousand years, the wool worked because there's not been
one Mexican pope for a thousand years, So wolves work.
Speaker 1 (45:15):
You know. You bring up some really really good points here,
But I covered Trump at the Al Smith dinner in
the city for the Network in Manhattan, and Catholic charities
ran and Trump was very involved with Catholic charities and
Fred Trump, his father, very very generous with the Catholic
Church and Catholic charities. And Trump said at that to
(45:37):
a seventy percent liberal audience, he said, your wives and
their boyfriends will all be voting for me. He says
to the audience, I had.
Speaker 4 (45:44):
None of that.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
And he said, it's the first time I thought that
men could menstrate. When I met Tim Waltz, very funny guy.
What do you think about Trump?
Speaker 4 (45:54):
You know what?
Speaker 7 (45:56):
I know that they crawled up every hold that he
has looking for something against him. You know what, they
never came up with. They never came up with a
charity that he said no to.
Speaker 4 (46:11):
Yeah, go try and find that. You won't find it.
Anyone who came to him.
Speaker 7 (46:17):
Black College's women issues, even things he wasn't quite aligned with.
Speaker 4 (46:24):
He gave.
Speaker 7 (46:25):
He gave.
Speaker 4 (46:26):
So this guy has a heart of gold. And I've
never seen a charity.
Speaker 7 (46:31):
Come forward and say, when we ask the money for Trump,
he turns us away.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
You gotta go. I covered the documentary at Mari Lago.
The man you don't know, and if you want to
see a great movie about his charitable side, which is amazing,
go get the man you don't know. Fred. We only
have about thirty seconds. Tell of You is where they
can follow you, and you have any dates coming up
after May third that people can see you.
Speaker 7 (46:56):
I will just go to Fredrabino dot com.
Speaker 4 (46:59):
I will have have links to my podcast that I'll
be doing.
Speaker 7 (47:04):
I'll be on WABC Radio Friday mornings four thirty am
doing a weekly wrap up. So Fredrabino dot com watch
my podcast every Tuesday afternoon at noon and.
Speaker 4 (47:19):
Tune in to WABC and listen to me live.
Speaker 1 (47:23):
Well, we will do that, and everybody, we can't have
Fred back because he's too funny. So thank you so much.
We'll see you real soon. Fred always a blast.
Speaker 4 (47:34):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (47:35):
I have a great one. Okay, everybody, thank you so
much for watching Breaking Point today. Thank you for joining
the RAF family. Go on the rav chat. We're on YouTube,
We're on Facebook. We're on the Getter chat. Go to
at real am voice on Getter. We're on Rumble, join in,
join the discussion. We'll see you next time and