Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Hey, everybody, welcome to Breaking Point on Real America's Voice News.
I'm David Zier. We got a jam packed show for
you today. Like I've been saying, you blink for a minute,
you missed twelve stories out there. I had the incredible
opportunity to cover the White House for Real America's Voice
News on July fourth for the epic big beautiful bill
(00:34):
signing and the B two flyover with the F twenty
two's and the F thirty five's flying over in honor
of the B two pilots who were there at the ceremony.
And there were there was talk, you know, because al
Kaita threatened up to fifty pilots in the past that
you know, we can't reveal their identity. But those pilots
were like, no way, we're going to be there. But
(00:55):
it was a really amazing day looking down the South lawn,
over the ellipse to the Washington Monument and up the
approach over the title basin to the Jefferson Memorial. That's
what the president gets to look at when he exits
the Blue Room balcony on the second floor or the
third floor, the Harriet Is Truman balcony developed in like
nineteen forty eight. Just an incredible, incredible inspirational layout of Washington,
(01:21):
d C. Founding fathers really knew what they were doing.
And I want to get into a couple of stories
here quick. But before we do that, I have a
very special guest with us, a new friend, Vincent Butda
known as Vinnie Mack online from Studio six B.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Hi, Vinnie, Yeah, it's good to see you man. Thanks
for having me on. You know I was thanking before
I got here. You and I have so much in common.
You realize all the things that we have in common.
We both come from the six B. We both did
six B. Yes, I had a good background there. We
both are musicians, love to play the piano. We're both chefs.
I hosted a food show. Oh Allie and Greece WO
(01:58):
channel Cool. Yeah, we've got this.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
It's a very common bond.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
Deck bat behind you.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Yeah, you're a little better looking. I'm working on it's Ai.
I think we're talking rather before a little Ai and him,
Saron and Fran in the control room say what you
can do for me? Please listen. I wanted to start
off with this mayor's race. You know, we're new Yorkers
and they're already starting in. You know, Man Donnie is
already scaring businesses out of New York. The Florida Trade
(02:23):
Group using what it's called the unacceptable risk of a
Zooran Mandanmi Donnie mayoralty to entice big Apple CEOs to
move their firms and families into the Sunshine State already
in exodus on the prospect that he might get elected.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
What do you think, Yeah, I mean, that stuff's real.
I've talked to builders, developers and other business people and
they are all saying the same thing that, you know,
start making plans just in case. But the just in
case looks fairly promising, especially in the real estate market
in terms of developers, and I'm seeing a lot of
(03:01):
just hesitation now. They are holding back because they fear,
you know, that election could could change a dynamic.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Yeah, there's no doubt about it. And we'll get into
the economy in a minute. And the prospect that things
are going to take off like a rocket ship once
these rates come down. But the city's a mess. Roberto
Clemente Plaza in the Bronx near Yankee Stadium there by
the Grand Concourse. Fifteen percent vacancy rates twenty overdoses per week,
(03:27):
violent crime, open air prostitution all under mayor Adams. Rape
up twenty percent this year in New York City. Thirty
eight thousand New York As assaulted, felony and misdemeanor assaults
in the city so far this year. Why does he
deserve to be the mayor again?
Speaker 2 (03:43):
Yeah, it's it's such a weird dynamic with this guy,
because he was a terrible mayor for a long time.
Trump gets elected and he starts making some moves, Yeah,
to be a little more reasonable, but.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
To stay out of jail.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
It well, yeah, to stay out of jail, that's a
good move, right, But from de Blasi, where things were
I think at an all time low. Then he steps
in and didn't do many things at all to correct that.
He's still behind the eight ball because the correct the
items he's doing to correct are just too late. Someone's
really got to take a flamethrow to New York City.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
Well, when Adams is running for office, he says, you
see the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor, All
the illegals are welcome to New York. He started this.
He costs the New Yorkers five billion dollars. He also
supported migrants and foreigners, eight hundred thousand of them up
to a New York City area to be able to
vote in local elections. He was pushing for that. Now
(04:36):
he's pushing these charter revisions that are on the ballot,
which are going to have like a rank choice thing
for New York City Council. It will just exterminate the
Republican Party in New York City. Now, I understand that
Trump's got him like Clay, and I understand that he
is starting to do some reforms about a police commissioner
now and Jessica Tish doing a good job cops taking
(04:57):
off the gloves with the protesters and stuff. But again,
Curtis leewa life long New Yorker fighting crime for forty
or fifty years in New York City, has campaign on
the streets in all of three hundred and fifty communities
in New York City. Where Adams is always out of
the nightclubs and his two thousand dollars suits and was
living in Fort Lee. He wasn't even living in the city.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
What do you think, Well, the number one priority as
a New Yorker having lived in New York is safety.
Curtis brings that, you know, as is one of his
number one things because he became popular because of Dinkins
and that how bad the city was before Julianni got
in there, and you would think Adams, as a former cop,
(05:41):
would have a clue about, you know, the safety of
this of the city. So I kind of I'm a
big Curtis fan. So number one, I completely support him.
I want him to win. The messaging is always going
to be a problem because they have such a big
machine behind him. Yeah, and the Republicans.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
Have no path, but out of coalition, Giuliani took the
Liberal line.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
Yeah, yeah, there's no path there. So the Democrats have
had a pretty good stranglehold. I am hoping. And what
I kind of see happening here is the Jewish vote.
Now there are Natler and others are like, I can't
even believe they're saying what they're saying. It is shocking
to me. The Jews for this guy. It makes zero sense.
But I am counting on the Jewish vote to turn
(06:22):
and I think they will lean towards Curtis.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
Yeah, we have a little bit of time here. And
so I was with Curtis several times this week at
the Union League Club, the other night in Midtown, and
then I was at the white Stone Republican Club, biggest
turnout ever in the history of the club for Curtis
with Mike Lawler and Mike Lawler and Curtis's speech was
just hands down unbelievable. You know, he's been doing radio
(06:45):
for thirty five years, so he really knows how to talk.
But he's putting his money where his mouth is. Wants
to clean up Rikers Island, wants to move homeless people
to Rikers Island. Wants to protect the black Corrections officers
who are being sexually assaulted in Rikers Island where the
gangs run. These tiers just want to say. Mike Loyler
served in the New York State Assembly, congressman from upstate,
may run for governor back the OBBB for Trump. He
(07:08):
said that Mandami is a very scary guy because he's personable,
he's charismatic, he's charming, funny and a great campaigner. So
how do they win? How does he lose?
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Yeah, we went through this with Obama. We went through
a guy that could speak as well as anybody, and
I think we were just talking about this. People around
me were like, I love Obama, Love Obama. And I
was like, read what he's saying. Don't listen to what
he's saying. This guy the same thing. Yeah, he's very
good public speaker. People are getting swayed. And you know,
there's this this this contingent of younger people who supported
(07:41):
him that really don't have a clue as to what's
happening in the world there. They're so disconnected with Palestine
and with all the big issues and then with all
the small issues in New York. They gravitate to a
guy like this. Yeah, speak so well and and listen.
People are frustrated.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
I have two of my four kids live in New
York City, one with a baby of grandkids there, another
one trying to start a family there. And you know,
they're still paying off student loans at thirty five years old.
The rents are four or five thousand dollars a month
all day long. But these kids don't understand. I saw
the empty food shehelves of Moscow and Leningrad in the
(08:18):
eighty six, you know, and they don't understand that. You know,
my kids do, because you know they're not idiots. But
you know a lot of kids, right, so they're gullible
and they think the path is gimme, gimme, gimme, and
they don't understand the consequences, right, they don't get it.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
I studied in Germany for a year University of Heidelberg,
and we took trips into Czechoslovakia, into Hungary, into all
these communist countries. And what you saw was hey, beautiful
little city. And then you get outside that you got
high rises and lines for food and rations. It's horrible
and the people are not happy. Yeah, you mean, if
(08:52):
you took a happiness test in that lifestyle, it's just
not going to happen. But our kids don't understand that
because they's got this ideal stick view and it's not real.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
And when Germany the reunification of East and West Germany,
unemployment in East Germany was seventeen percent, it was nine
in West Germany something like that. So always the disparity, right,
All right, so we have about a minute left. Tell
us what's going on. Tell us about the six B crew.
What else you're up to?
Speaker 2 (09:20):
Oh man, we got a great crew at six b's.
Everyone knows slick Rick, you know, does our sports and
the man. The outfits he comes out with are absolutely astonishing.
He had a pair of shoes on last Friday that
I think would win an award somewhere. Yeah, maybe Dorothy
and the Wizard of Oz award. I'm not sure. And
Rick Delgado he's focused on this Epstein thing. Man, he's
he's big with these controversies and these conspiracy theories. And
(09:42):
you got Big d who's grounded and you know, barking
a lot of times. And then you got myself. I'm
trying to be like the Scott Jennings, you know, the group,
you know, trying to a little more, you know, keep
things in a more level headed way.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
It's a diverse portfolio. And slick Rick has an economic
you know, development background and create a lot of jobs
on Long Island, bites for his community, got his area seward.
So you know, every one of them have their own,
you know, things they add to the show and tell
us where people can follow.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
You, Yeah, well you can follow six B on just
about every social platform get her YouTube, Facebook, Rumble and
of course on Real America's Voice where we have so
many great shows. We have so much talent on this network.
It is amazing. And you can catch me, Vinnie Mack.
I have my own merchandise out vinidashmac dot com. You
want to take a look at some of the things
(10:33):
I've created. They're pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
All right, Well, thank you so much for joining us.
We'll have you back as things heat up around the planet.
Oh yeah, you can't miss a beat. Here. I'm David Zerr.
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(12:13):
welcome back. You're watching Breaking Point on Real America's Voice
News again. So many incredible things going on. We live
in incredible times in the United States here. I just
wanted to welcome our next guests we have with US
former federal prosecutor, former US marine, and former candidate for
(12:33):
the US Senate from Massachusetts, John Deeton. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
Hey David, thanks for having me. I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
Yeah, so really great to have you. And like we
were saying, you know, you can't put your head down,
you know, you wake up to a whole new world
every day, right with the news cycle and what's going on.
What's your assessment of Trump's administration thus far?
Speaker 5 (12:59):
Well, listen, I agree with you. You can't put your
head down. Canning take a nap.
Speaker 4 (13:03):
President Trump is known for sleeping maybe two.
Speaker 5 (13:06):
Three hours a night, and boy does he create news
on a daily basis. Starting off with the hundreds of
executive orders the Supreme Court challenges internationally domestically, it's hard
to keep up with the man.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
Yeah, for sure, I'm want to start off really quick
with the Supreme Court decisions. Tell us about some of
the judicial overreach on immigration and what does it mean
to Trump and other decisions.
Speaker 5 (13:36):
Yeah, well, the Trump presidency, David got a major victory recently,
and you know, President Trump was being handcuffed in many
ways by local district court judges so he could institute
a national policy on immigration, and the judge in Rhode Island,
the small estate in the country appointed by you know,
(13:58):
President Obama or President Biden, would issue a national injunction
stopping it in its tracks. And the Supreme Court said
no more of that that. Federal judges now can only
limit and enjoin the president, relate it to the people
in that case and within that district. So if you're
in Rhode Island, you're limited to Rhode Island jurisdiction and
(14:20):
Rhode Island district and the specific plaintiffs. You can't just
say no, I disagree with the president. I'm going to
stop them from doing implementing national policy.
Speaker 4 (14:29):
That's a huge victory.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
So what would it take now for a federal court,
a local federal judge to effect or put a stop
on something that a US president wants to put into effect.
Speaker 5 (14:45):
Well, I think what you're going to look at is
you're going to be looking at the litigation bars. So
the Supreme Court said that there are other avenues for
national injunctions that the Rhode Island judge shouldn't be able
to affect California and what's happening there. And so the
judges themselves a little bit more restrict or a lot
(15:06):
more restricted than they were. But there's this angle now
for class action lawyers to then civilly sue. So you
could have a lawyer for undocumented migrants. It could be
the A C l U or someone like that that
files a class action seeking a national injunction on immigration
policy against President Trump. We're going to see that and
(15:27):
then we'll see another trip to the Supreme Court and
we'll see how that one plays out.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
All right, all right, I'll be a never ending legal
battle for the remainder of Trump's presidency.
Speaker 5 (15:35):
I'm sure lawyers are happy, David lawyers are happy.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
I got some good lawyer jokes if you want. But
all right, so all right, let's talk about Bolsonaro. Trump's
calling it a show trial down in Brazil. Tell us
about the dynamics. I was with Bolsceonnaro years ago when
he came up here first to the United States. Big
Trump fans supporters. Are they being persecuted the same way
(16:03):
Trump was in Brazil?
Speaker 5 (16:05):
Is it a legitimate Well, I got to tell you,
there's a lot of parallels. This guy has been accused
of masterminding a attempt at coupdeta where he was working
allegedly with military officers. It's in the Brazil Supreme Court,
and they have one of his other his former aides,
that basically says he was going to try to poison
(16:27):
you know, the other guy, Lula da Silva. And now
he's being prosecuted. There was a January eighth riot in
the federal buildings sort of I'm familiar six here. He
didn't concede like President Trump. He claims election fraud. So
the problem is, right now, there's just a lot of
(16:48):
finger pointing. You have one guy who allegedly said that, yeah,
he was doing this, and then you've got his public
statements of not conceding and allegedly encouraging folks to riot,
and that's really not enough proof to prove specific intent
to overthrow the government.
Speaker 4 (17:06):
So there's a lot of parallels.
Speaker 5 (17:07):
The real risk is basically courts invalidating, engaging in law fare,
and persecuting you know, politicians. And I think President Trump
is obviously very sensitive.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
Having experienced a similar path.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
Yeah, well, I look at what happened in Romania and
other places too, So it's hard to decipher a fact
from fiction in these cases. You know, with Trump and
J six, we know what happened. I'm a firm believer
it was a setup to avoid five hundred thousand people
standing on the steps of the capitol holding candles basically
while the certification was taking place, and they wanted to
(17:45):
clear out the area. They drew them in, got them out,
and didn't want that ten day review. But things more
complicated in Brazil, right, there's more corruption, there's more issues.
Speaker 5 (17:55):
Maybe, well, yeah, because the guy that is accusing, you know,
Lula da Silva, who's accusing bosonat of all of this.
He was convicted of corruption in twenty seventeen. He spent
a year in prison and just got out because the
Brazilian Supreme Court had tweaked the rules.
Speaker 4 (18:16):
So there's a lot of rhetoric.
Speaker 5 (18:18):
There's a lot of pot calling the kettle black in Brazil,
that's for sure.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
Yeah, all right, let's talk about labor. A little bit
different topic here, but it relates to the courts and
amnesty and other issues. You know, Reagan gave amnesty to
many hundreds of thousands in the eighties, but a little
bit different scenario. We weren't flooded like now. And you
know Trump talking about, you know, maybe allowing farm labor,
(18:48):
hospitality labor to stay in the United States without a
path to citizenship. What's that going to look like?
Speaker 5 (18:56):
Yeah, well, there's a lot of tension because his Agricultural
secretary come out now and said that there will be
no amnesty at all, and that if you know, it's
it's pure black and white issue.
Speaker 4 (19:07):
You're either here legally or you're not here legally.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
So I do think, David there's a little bit of
tension in the administration obviously, and President Trump himself in
June paused ice raids on farms forty percent of agricultural workers.
It comes out to about eight hundred thousand here in
America who work, you know, picking vegetables and fruits in
(19:32):
that neighbor. So, you know, the problem is the five
year old who was brought here by his parents illegally,
who's been here for twenty years, maybe even served in
the military. Should there be a different test than you know,
the twelve million that came through Biden's open door.
Speaker 4 (19:49):
During his presidency.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
And there's a little bit of tension going back, and
I think there's going to be a middle I spent
a lot.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Of time with farmers, you know, in dozens of states
around the country during the Trump campaign, and the farmers
are hurting, and you know, forty seven thousand farms a
year go bye bye. They can't. They're not producing kids.
Kids go to college and never come back. The legacy
costs the diamonium phosphate, the fertilizer costs a double triple,
(20:19):
especially with COVID and the supply chain problems and inflation.
Legacy cost health insurance stuff like that. Is Trump offering
this because he knows they're in dire straits.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 5 (20:35):
And you look at if that group of individuals, the
eight hundred thousand and forty percent were to you know,
get up and leave in one day, the supply shock
that that would cause America grocery prices, all of those things.
But I agree with you. I think you see attention
in the administration. You have some folks who want this
(20:57):
black and white white rule, and then you, like you,
President Trump has met these farmers. He's been in Iowa,
he's been in Nebraska, in all those places, and he
knows the impact that's going to have, and so I
think he's gonna find a middle ground.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
I really do.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
Okay, what are the issues we have two minutes? What
other issue is captured your attention? Anything else that you're
worried about for you know, for the Trump administration, any
pitfalls anything.
Speaker 4 (21:26):
Well, I'm really worried.
Speaker 5 (21:27):
I was glad to see that decision by the Supreme Court, David,
because we've you know, when you lose the courts, we've
already lost the country's lost faith in our federal agencies,
whether it's the FBI, the Department of Education, We've lost
faith in Congress. They don't do their job, whether you're
sitting in the House or you're in the Senate. And
(21:49):
so if we lose faith in the judicial system because
of law fair because of the things that are happening
in Brazil, if they start happening here, then that could
be the last best of democracy of our constitutional republic.
And so that was a big decision. I'm happy about
that decision. I think we're going to see another Supreme
Court decision on the substantive issue of whether birthrights citizenship
(22:13):
should continue the way it has for the last two
hundred and fifty years, or whether we should take a
different path.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
When will birth right citizenship really be addressed, do you think?
Speaker 4 (22:24):
I think in the next year.
Speaker 5 (22:26):
I think the decision on the federal judges was on
President Trump's executive order on birth rights. They didn't rule
on the underlying issue and gave them that big procedural win.
But we're going to see the underlying issue get back
to the Supreme Court in the next year. And when
you look at it, when you look at it, it
was meant to give freed slaves citizenship rights. It wasn't
(22:50):
necessarily meant to encourage illegal immigration where you rush to
have a child in American soil and then claim all
the protections.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
Yeah, if I'm not mistaken, there's only thirty six countries
are so in the world that on our birthright citizenship,
so they're definitely not the majority of countries. All right,
thank you so much for joining us. Where can I
viewers follow you big?
Speaker 4 (23:12):
Follow me on exit? John E. Deaton one, Johnny Deaton one.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Thanks, all right, We really appreciate you coming on. Thank
you John. All Right, everybody, when we come back, I
got more for you. I've got a search and rescue
operator down in Kerr County in Texas, and then I've
got doctor Ken Gray to talk about food dyes and
other things and compliance from American companies and the states
versus the federal issues that are going on with that.
(23:39):
I want to thank you everybody for watching Breaking Point
today on Real America's Voice News, and don't forget to
turn in for all of our coverage this weekend, and
we'll be right back with more. Do not go anywhere.
I'm David's here. Our hearts go out to all the families, people,
(24:17):
their loved ones who've been lost in the floods. You know,
a lot of activity going on around the country and
natural disasters are part of our life here in America,
and you know, the media is trying to craft this
narrative that somehow this is Trump's fault and it's really despicable.
But one of the greatest honors in my career here
(24:40):
at Real America's Voice is to be able to work
with people like Ben bur Kwam in the field for
many years. He's everywhere. This stuff's got to take a toll.
He's got three young daughters. I've got four kids and
four grandkids. Everybody thinks of their own when they hear
about tragedies like this, but here to discuss this with
us as a gentleman I met many years ago, had
(25:01):
him on the show before from Texas. He's the Bexar County,
which is San Antonio area and the GOP vice chair
for that region. And search and rescue operator volunteer Kyle Sinclair.
Speaker 6 (25:15):
How are you, sir, I'm good. Thanks for having me on, Dave.
It's good to see you again.
Speaker 1 (25:19):
Yeah. Tough tough week, right.
Speaker 6 (25:22):
Yeah, I mean it's it's it's one that I've never
experienced in b NFC and so you know, I couldn't
sit back and had to volunteer and help out where
I could, so I was glad to be a part
of it.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
Yeah, so you're going, Yeah, you're about what two three
hours away from the site when you're home.
Speaker 6 (25:40):
No, San Antonio actually, surprisingly is about an hour to
an hour and a half actually from Camp Mystic or
Mystic Camp, that one that everybody talked about, me National News.
Speaker 7 (25:50):
So it's only about an hour from San Antonio.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
You know, the tragedy is one thing, but you know,
as Ben Berkwhan was saying this morning, you know, they're
trying to craft this narrative the media that and thread
it together, you know. And then you got Bill Nye,
the science guy, saying that fossil fuels caused this. You know,
this has happened before. It's not the highest amount of
(26:14):
rain they've gotten in regions in Texas history. Truly a
tragedy here. What was your experience on the ground there
and how did you cope with that? Yeah?
Speaker 7 (26:27):
I mean I went yesterday.
Speaker 6 (26:28):
I mean I'll be back out again at it probably tomorrow.
You know, it's something that you can't experience on video
or pictures, The reality of walking.
Speaker 7 (26:37):
Into an area that has you.
Speaker 6 (26:39):
Know, shirts and debris thirty feet up, it has trees
knocked over.
Speaker 7 (26:46):
That is it's a heroin experience.
Speaker 6 (26:48):
And then you start seeing all the first responders and
people helping out, the cadaver dogs, the fire departments, the
police departments, the Texas Wardens, the Texas DPS, emergency management.
Speaker 7 (27:00):
At a level for the state of Texas, and for
me it was interesting. We worked. I was on a
chainsaw crew.
Speaker 6 (27:05):
Right, and the one thing I didn't realize is how
compacted all this stuff is and how strong the mother
nature was and you're looking for people and it's painstakingly right.
Speaker 7 (27:17):
I'll give you example.
Speaker 6 (27:18):
We worked on a ten foot section about six feet
high and it took a chainsaw.
Speaker 7 (27:23):
Somebody at the pickaxe and a show.
Speaker 6 (27:25):
It took us forty five minutes to uncompact a ten
foot section. Wow, and to do painstakingly cutting to pull
it away so you can actually see what's under there.
Speaker 7 (27:34):
And we worked on several areas.
Speaker 6 (27:36):
The area that I worked on yesterday they found two
bodies yesterday, they found two bodies the day before, so
we know there's one hundred and seventy ish people that
are still missing in that area.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
Wow. It's a tremendous number and Kirk County. You know,
as Ben pointed out, you know, these guys have given everything,
and the police officers and the team and law enforcement
down there, they really have been working non stop and
it's not really fair how the media is presenting this.
But I wanted to add the Austin Firefighters Union has
(28:09):
called for the no confidence vote against the Austin Fire Department,
where the Austin Fire Chief may have denied additional emergency personnel,
refusing to send help even in advance of the storms.
I guess saying he wasn't going to be reimbursed money
from the state. Do you know anything about this?
Speaker 6 (28:32):
Yeah, I mean just from what I'm hearing on the
news and developing it. I've further from several sources that
I listened to and follow as well, you know, back
to your comment earlier. They are about President Trump. I
find it interested in that the Democratic side. Obviously, it
is obviously Democrats that are going that blame game right now.
And I think the reality is is that we need
to come together as a nation, we need to come
(28:52):
together as a state, we need to come together as people,
as human beings, because there are still one hundred and
seventy lost so roles and families that have been destroyed,
and the finger pointing is ridiculous, the politicalization of this.
I know of doctors in Houston that have been fired
for the politicalization of this real time. So right now,
(29:15):
right now, this is search and recovery to find lost
souls in humans so that families can get closure.
Speaker 7 (29:20):
That's number one. Number two. Once that's done, then you
start fixing what happened.
Speaker 6 (29:24):
And I know Governor as called a special session to
address particularly flooding funding. But I think President Trump has
done a phenomenal job of sending Christy Nome Secretary Nome.
Speaker 7 (29:35):
She came down within a couple of days.
Speaker 6 (29:37):
I think President Trump and the First Lady will be
in Shuset meet Kerrville tomorrow. I think that's leadership. Right
During the floods of Biden, Biden didn't show up.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
No, well he didn't and East Palestine either, and Hurricane Helen.
The response was insulting, but that led to Trump's victory
in North Carolina, part in part because two percent of
the the early voters. There was a two percent increase
in early voting from those twenty six of the twenty
eight emergency disaster areas. People were really pissed.
Speaker 7 (30:09):
Off, but they should be.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
And without getting into all the politics of it. You know,
in Katrina, you know, they came down on George W. Bush.
They rescued eighty five thousand people in the first week
of Katrina. They warned everybody that there was going to
be like up twenty eighteen foot surge from Lake Poncetrain.
They told everybody to leave. There were fifteen hundred buses
(30:32):
I think sitting in yards across the city with Mayor
Naggin's and Governor Kathy Blanco, and you know, it's always
the blame game on a Republican and so but we'll
see how all this unfolds. But there's no way to
predict this stuff, right because yes, you can have emergency
control measures, but it's such a vast region, right, and
(30:55):
then you only have to be off a little bit
on the map, and then you're calculations are off right
where the rain's gonna fall. This is not an easy thing, right.
Speaker 6 (31:05):
Yeah, My understanding is not like that's not my everyday job.
My expertise is hostile administration. That's that's what I am
as a hospital administrator. But experience with this and working
with those teams, I think, you know, there's a lot
of people that and I've heard videos and seeing pictures
of it that people, you know, got so accustomed to
the the alerts that they got on their cell phones.
They had cell phone coverage issues in that area, and
(31:26):
their rainfall in that area was not expected.
Speaker 4 (31:28):
Right.
Speaker 6 (31:29):
I've heard them talk about cloud seating. There's been all
sorts of stuff that has.
Speaker 7 (31:33):
Been such an talked about.
Speaker 4 (31:35):
Yeah, it is.
Speaker 6 (31:36):
I mean, just the reality for me is again somebody
you know, I can sit on social media and be
a social media warrior, or I can start blaming other people,
but the reality is for me is for me, it
was take my political hat off as the vice chair.
Speaker 7 (31:48):
Of the Republican Party in Bear County.
Speaker 6 (31:50):
I'm an hour away and I can get off my
ass and I can go help.
Speaker 7 (31:54):
And that's what I decided to do. Like you said earlier,
I have.
Speaker 6 (31:57):
A blended family of eight kids, and it broke my
art to hear that, right, and I wanted to hold
my kids a little bit longer and a little bit
harder and continue doing that. But this community has rallied together.
They have absolutely I saw I was with a group
of probably fifty sixty people yesterday and the majority of
them are volunteers, not from the community. Volunteered drove up
(32:20):
on their own time, using their own money, using their
own tools, and their hearts sweat to find and rescue
any individual they can. And that's what it should be about.
That's what Texas is about, and that's what this nation
should also be about. So it's difficult, yeah, and you
can start listening to the experts of the rain and
(32:41):
the alert systems and there'll be more time for that
and it will come out.
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Yeah. I mean it's the same anywhere. You know, losing
one of my best friends in nine to eleven, everyone
in my life lost people, and New York came together
and we're a diverse bunch.
Speaker 7 (32:55):
In New York.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
You know, there's a lot of people from all races
and religions here and people came together, and I think
that's the American story, right, So we put that aside
while we deal with these big issues. And then so
all right, Kyle Sinclair, I want to thank you for
coming on. Where can people follow you? We have twenty seconds?
Speaker 6 (33:14):
Yeah, I'm on multiple platforms, so Facebook's a big one. Right,
Kyle Sinclair and then I'm on X which is Kyle
Bear at excusan Medvice GUP Vice Chair.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
Thank you for giving your time to this effort and
I'd like some updates, so stay in touch.
Speaker 7 (33:29):
Please absolutely thanks for having me on, David, Thank.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
You, Kyle, everybody. I will be right back. I've got
great stuff ahead and you're watching Breaking Point on Real
America's Voice News. I'm so excited to have Maria from
Switch to USA dot Com with us switch the number
two USA dot com. She's been a longtime supporter of
the show and we're so grateful. Maria. How are you.
Speaker 8 (33:52):
I'm well, Thank you for having me, David, and I'm
very excited to be here and let everyone know what's
been going on.
Speaker 1 (33:59):
Yeah, so tell us about Switch to USA American may
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Speaker 1 (35:16):
All right. I tell our viewers how they can get
involved and how do they find you.
Speaker 8 (35:20):
Oh, please come to switch the number two USA dot com.
Either myself or my family and team will answer your call.
Please schedule an appointment, so expect to hear about the details.
You get to pick and choose if you want to
be for wellness or both. We'll sign you up and
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by yourself, and remember this is a patriot mission and
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Speaker 1 (35:48):
All right, Maria Lynn, I'd love to see you and
go to the bottom of the screen there, switch to
USA dot com and get it today. Thank you everybody,
(36:08):
Welcome back. Thank you for joining the Rap family. You're
watching Breaking Point in Real America's Voice News covering the
White House last week on July fourth for the bill
signing and the B two flyovers. Really an historic day
in DC, and I love the energy that DC has
these days. I've been going down there for about forty
seven years. I haven't seen it like this in a really,
(36:31):
really long time, so it's kind of encouraging. You know.
They just got to address the crime problem down there.
You know, a staffer was killed the other day, a
congressional staffer or the other week, so they really got
to work on that. But I want to bring our
next guests in here and following RFK Juniors Make America
Healthy Again initiatives to phase out synthetic food dies and
(36:54):
other and ask major food manufacturers to voluntarily eliminate these
things from the food supply. We have doctor Ken Gray
with us, a holistic physician and food therapy expert and
co founder of vel Health. Welcome to the show, doctor Man.
Speaker 3 (37:09):
It's great to be here with you, mister Siah. Thank
you for having me.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
Yeah, I really appreciate you coming on so much to
talk about so many issues out there, and one of
them is the health of our children. And you know,
I grew up in the seventies and eighties. I wasn't
allowed to have drunk food in the house. Maybe a
little a couple of devil dogs, you know. But you
(37:33):
know what's the difference between our diets today and say
fifty years ago.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
Well, you know what's the difference between our diets and
what's the difference between us right we you know, when
you look back being raised by stronger individuals most of
the time and having you know, stronger genetics. We fast forward.
We've come through the microwave generation. We've come through the
asked food. Here's a can, open that up, heat that
(38:03):
up on the stove, here's a microwave dinner. And I
think that's taken a toll. A lot of things have
taken a toll on our abilities to bounce back from
you know, what used to be just basic little things,
little cold here and there, you know, little dysfunctional digestion.
Things have gotten a lot worse. So I would say
(38:27):
there's a combination of issues that we're looking at now.
Is not only are we trying to become better, but
we're trying to eat better because food over the last
fifty years has changed. We're also respecting how food affects
our health and well being. So, you know, I think
we're seeing part of those growing pains with this shift
(38:50):
in the food dies which I believe you wanted to
talk about today.
Speaker 1 (38:54):
Yeah, yeah, for sure. And before we get to that,
maybe thirty seconds are microwaves day.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
I won't go that far. I mean, it's not a
preferred approach in my home. And you know you mentioned
something about you know, for instance, you weren't allowed to
eat too much junk food. Neither was I and I
think that's a testimony to our parenting, right. So when
you look at the technology of the microwave, I wouldn't
recommend it as a regular way to heat up your food.
(39:26):
I like putting stuff in the stove or in the oven. Yeah,
I'll just basic adding heat rather than you know, making
the molecules and the water and all this stuff jump
around and dealing with you know, the side effects of.
Speaker 1 (39:38):
That artificial dies link to behavioral changes in kids, inflammation,
nipponic conditions. How dangerous are they?
Speaker 3 (39:47):
I think there's a real danger. And I'm gonna say
this not as a physician or an expert or anything,
but I'm gonna say this as a as a parent.
I'll tell you a quick story, real quick. I have
a daughter that's now about to be eighteen, and when
she was in daycare, we thought she had contracted handfoot
mouth disease, which generally you know, kids can get. It happens,
(40:08):
and and you're dealing with that for a week, right, Well,
these symptoms and these rashes and her general disposition went
on for way more than that, and so her mother
and I we just tried to figure out all sorts
of different ways to deal with this, and we were scared.
(40:28):
Of parents. It doesn't matter if you're a physician, whatever
expert you know you are. When it's your child, you're helpless,
you feel hopeless, and you want to do everything you
can to fix that issue because you're coming from a
parenting perspective. So we did a lot of trial and
error we tried different things, We've took her out of
the daycare, don't you know, it turned out to be
(40:50):
that whenever we put her back in one of the
snacks we used to give like most parents, which we
thought was healthy. I'm not going to go with the brand,
but I will say they look like fish, right. They
were a fish snack, and this fish snack had a
dye in it that we learned that she was very
allergic to, and that same die was also in ketchup.
(41:12):
That same diye was also in anything that used red
and so once we stopped feeding her foods with that,
she never had those problems again. Now she was a
kid that had to have mustard instead of ketchup. She
did natural snacks. We looked at the ingredients. From that
point on, we realized there was a real issue in
food and we had to and you know, we had
(41:34):
to just respect it.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
Here we are sure. I know that the Mars brands,
which is one of the biggest candy makers in the world,
they're refusing to move dies out of their candy products, saying, hey,
we've been using these things forever. Yeah, you know what,
what do you think that ultimately the states may act
(41:58):
on this. If the federal government can't, what do you
think you know?
Speaker 3 (42:04):
I can't speak to what states will do. I'm not
I'm not into politics. I'm a healer, and I will
say this. Watching the trends, which is what we can do,
is citizens, you and I. We can see that more
and more people are looking at ways that we can
do better for ourselves and our families. And that means
(42:26):
what are we going to spend our hard earned money
on as Americans? Right now? When it comes to going
to the supermarket, I know those aisles are looking a
lot more natural, a lot more or less preservatives, a
lot more or less dies, and all of those sort
of things. But at some point, those companies that do
not get on this, you know, movement of change, are
(42:50):
going to be the minority and the majority are going
to be the companies that are respecting the need for healthier,
less processed, less additives, less toxic food, because that's neverly
what we're talking about. We're talking about removing toxins from food.
Unnecessary yeah, got it, no go finish, Yeah, unnecessary toxins.
(43:12):
There's no necessary toxins, but these are definitely unncessary because
what are we doing when we are a company saying
this is what we have done for years, and it's
coming from generations of well, we've got to sell it.
It's got to look brighter. They're going to respond to blue,
They're going to respond to this color. You know what
are we saying. We're saying now that are people that
(43:36):
you know, shallow, that they're going to put the color
and the attractiveness of food before the actual health and
well being of their bodies. That's the question we're asking.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
Yeah, there's no doubt about it. We only have a
minute left. I wish I can get into autism and
stuff with you. You know, I think the spectrum has
been broadened, so there are more diagnoses, not just because
it's more autoism, but it's because they've really defined it better.
Sure difference, but there also may be an increase In
less than a minute, Is there a link between diet
and autism at all?
Speaker 3 (44:08):
There's a diet between I mean, there's a link between
diet and the foods we consume in every disease, not
just autism. So we're just not sure about it from
a scientific perspective on where that link is. But we're
learning that, you know, the body holistically needs good nutrients
or else it's going to suffer. And that means our
nervous system, how our brain functions, how our organs function,
(44:31):
all of it. It needs good nourishment or otherwise it's
going to suffer.
Speaker 1 (44:36):
Where can people follow you, doctor Ken Gray.
Speaker 3 (44:39):
Well, doctor Kengrey dot com, velhealth dot com. It's a
wonderful app. It gives you a lot of alternatives, a
lot of wonderful suggestions for food for free. And you know,
it's part of the new need for us to be
able to self manage and be aware and also integrate
holistic foods, diet, fitness, you know, everything from acupunctures become
(45:05):
more popular in how to treat naturally. But we're learning
these things right, We're all learning together, we're sharing together,
and I think the companies, the governments, we're all trying
to get together on this.
Speaker 1 (45:15):
Always in education. I would love to have you back.
Thank you, doctor Ken Gray for joining us.
Speaker 3 (45:21):
Oh you've been a pleasure. Thank you for having me.
Speaker 1 (45:23):
Thank you so much, and everybody, we'll be back with more.
Speaker 9 (45:26):
I want to thank Raf for giving me the opportunity
to spend the fourth of July at our nation's White
House on the South Lawn for the beautiful bill signing
and the epic F twenty two, F thirty five and
B two flyovers.
Speaker 7 (45:39):
And I interviewed this Uber driver.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
Most of the Uber drivers around the country I spend
time with. They're Trump supporters. Check this kid out from Ethiopia.
Speaker 7 (45:47):
He's right on the money.
Speaker 10 (45:48):
Where did you come from Ethiopia? Yeah, a lot of
Ethiopians in DC for many years. I remember going back
forty years.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
Vome.
Speaker 7 (46:01):
This is like the community do You had a lot.
Speaker 10 (46:03):
Of famine there and stuff, right, so, and then you
had the Marxist Communists come in, right, Colonel Magistu And
I remember live.
Speaker 1 (46:13):
Aid that the Soviets came in. I think took all
the food they raised, yeah, which was crazy.
Speaker 3 (46:19):
And then when that was happening, I guess the Prime
Minister or something had like a mercy for his dog.
Speaker 7 (46:25):
That's crazy, right.
Speaker 2 (46:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
You know the whole thing is, you know there's millions
of people who are online legally to come in the
United States, and you know, the Democrats just opened the
flood gates to change the census so they can add
more congressional seats, and they just flooded the country for
four years, you know, and it's not fair to them.
Speaker 10 (46:47):
No, it's not because.
Speaker 7 (46:48):
They're coming here's and they miss up their lives.
Speaker 1 (46:50):
They thought their life to come here. They thought they
could have game like Romont just wait the bot in
their life as in the case.
Speaker 2 (46:58):
And on top of that, that's that's nation is very
crazy and they're just never trying to get rid of
this man.
Speaker 4 (47:04):
Yeah twice.
Speaker 7 (47:06):
It's just crazy.
Speaker 10 (47:09):
And then this comeback story is the thing like I'll
see is like something that guenders is.
Speaker 7 (47:14):
Honestly, how is it legal that somebody cannot sto profuse?
Speaker 3 (47:18):
It's still to be.
Speaker 4 (47:18):
Good in a coupleist it's New York City, they do
whatever they want.
Speaker 7 (47:22):
No, I'm just thinking this shouldn't that be legal?
Speaker 8 (47:23):
Though?
Speaker 1 (47:24):
It's like when you're in a capitalist country that is
following the capitalist system, you.
Speaker 7 (47:28):
Want to bring a whole like you know, different you
and impose it. I don't know how there isn't like
That'm awesome.
Speaker 1 (47:35):
Well, it's a free country and it's the price we pay.
It's great socialism until you run out of other people's money.
Speaker 7 (47:43):
Definitely, you can.
Speaker 4 (47:44):
Spend all the money you want, as always it's not yours,
right or.
Speaker 8 (47:47):
Until you're paying needs, the people that are paying attacks
start leaving your state.
Speaker 1 (47:51):
Thanks for watching Breaking Point on Real America's Voice ar