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January 22, 2025 49 mins

Human Events on Real America's Voice

Segment A: Trump’s Days of Thunder Continue

Segment B: The Unfinished Business of the J6 Committee - is there a loophole to Biden’s Pardon

Segment C: What Other Policies from the 60s should be repealed or changed?

Segment D: The DOGE Clock is Live and Already We’re Saving BILLIONS!

Segment E: The MAHA Movement vs. Big Pharma and Big Food

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is what happens when the fourth turning meets fifth
generation workfare.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Really a commentator, international social media sensation and former Navy
intelligence veteran, This.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Is Human Events with your host Jack Pisovic christ is.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
President Trump is making good on his promise to and diversity,
equity and inclusion programs in the federal government. People working
these programs are now finding out that they have been
placed on paid leave.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
He's also moving forward with a crackdown on immigration, including
an attempt at ending birthright citizenship.

Speaker 5 (00:39):
At least twenty two.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
States have now filed legal challenges.

Speaker 6 (00:41):
What would a person have to do to get a
visit from Ice for.

Speaker 7 (00:46):
Being the country legally? First of all, I mean there's
nothing in the immigration law says you got to be
convicted of a serious.

Speaker 5 (00:51):
Crime to be removed under the INA, We're.

Speaker 7 (00:54):
Concentrating on the worst first, the public safety threats, and
that's security are threats. And just yesterday, in the last
twenty four hours, is rusted over three hundred and eight
three hundred eight serious criminals.

Speaker 6 (01:05):
Executive order designating the cartels and other organizations to be
foreign terrorist organizations.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
And that's a big one.

Speaker 6 (01:13):
The demonstration in downtown Portland against the new Trump administration
turned tense, as you can see here, leading to a
handful of rask.

Speaker 8 (01:26):
We're talking about a tariff of ten percent in China
based on the fact that they're sending Fenton All to
Mexico in Canada. For Mexico and China, we're talking about
approximately proximately twenty five percent almost terrorsts. Probably February first
is the date we're looking.

Speaker 9 (01:45):
At for also open dialogue with the new US administration
on the Ukrainian conflict. The most important thank here is
to eliminate the fundamental reason for the conflict. That's the
most important, and that's for you settling the situation itself.
Its goal should be long term peace.

Speaker 10 (02:05):
I have to speak to President, but we're gonna have
to find out. He can't be thrilled. He's not doing
so well. I mean, he's grinding it out. But most
people thought that war would have been over in about
one week and now you're into three years, right, So
he can't be he can't be thrilled. It's stopped making
him look very good.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Ladies, you'll welcome to board today'sition few and Events daily
here live Washington, DC. Today is June June June, June June. No,
it's not Juni yet, baby, it is because a little
bit cold here in Washington, d C. No, it is
January twenty second, twenty five and O Domini, day three
of the.

Speaker 5 (02:40):
Days of Thunder.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
President Trump ordering thousands of troops, thousands of troops to
our southern border. As we speak, they are on their way. Also,
a new report from CBS has just come out saying
that US border agents are told to summarily to port
migrant without granting asylum hearings under the Trump edict. This

(03:05):
has come down citing an extraordinary move to close the
American asylum system. The border agents are being told to
allow them to not allow them to cross illegally, do
not allow them to claim asylum, have them go into Mexico.
That has always been the remain in Mexico policy. That
will continue to be their remain in Mexico policy. There

(03:28):
should be zero tolerance for crossing our border illegally.

Speaker 5 (03:33):
It is as simple as that.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
There is no excuse for crossing into the United States
of America illegally. This is our sovereign right as a
United States, our sovereign right as a nation, and we
will defend our borders the same way every country around
the world defends its borders to invasion. The invasion stops.

(03:56):
Now turn back, do not come here. You will be
turned away also. And this has been the question of
the day at seventeen seventy six at Humanevents dot com.
President Trump repealed late last night Lyndon Bain Johnson's nineteen

(04:16):
sixties order on Affirmative Action. It's done, it's out, it's revoked.
What else would you like to see President Trump repeal
from the nineteen sixties. That's the question of the day,
seventeen seventy six at human events dot com. Because I
got a list. I got a long, long list of
things that we can talk about from the nineteen sixties

(04:37):
that can be repealed. And we've already got the emails
flooding in. We'll get to that in a little bit
here on the program today. But when it really comes
down to it, folks, look, if we want our country back,
if we want to get back to the nineteen fifties, America,
Norman Rockwell, America, then you got to repeal the sixties.
The repeal of the nineteen sixties has begun. America's second

(05:02):
founding as they call it, and as we described in
our book, Unhumans, last year is being undone, no more
second founding, only one founding of the United States.

Speaker 5 (05:13):
Only one set of founding fathers.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
And oh, by the way, a ruling just coming out
of the State Department says that US embassies and outposts
and consulates around the world are only allowed to fly
one flag, the stars and stripes of the United States
of America, the American flag. We'll be right back, hey.

Speaker 8 (06:00):
You know that you talk about influencers, These are influences.

Speaker 5 (06:04):
And they're friends of minument.

Speaker 11 (06:06):
Jack.

Speaker 5 (06:09):
Jack, he's got a breakdown, all right, folks. Jack Pasovic
back here.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
That's a live shot you're looking at from the Washington
Monument of a frozen Washington, d C. That's been going
on here. But I got to ask you, did you
know that seven banks failed in just the last two
years and your money has twenty percent less personsing power
than it did just four years ago.

Speaker 5 (06:35):
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Speaker 5 (07:33):
All right.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
As we go through President Trump's latest actions, we've also
got to discuss one of his biggest actions. We covered
this in detail yesterday, but of course I wanted to
make sure that we got on our next guest because
she was instrumental in the fight to making it happen.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have investigative journalist Julie Kelly here

(07:54):
on the program Julie.

Speaker 5 (07:55):
Congratulations, Thank you.

Speaker 12 (07:58):
Jack, and thank you again for all your support bringing
this political persecution, abuse of persecution to your audience, not
just here, but especially on social media. So this really
was a team effort to build the grassroots support for
this to happen. But again, have to really commend President
Trump for making such a courageous and compassionate move. This

(08:21):
was not an easy decision to make and he really
deserves all the credit here.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
Well, So walk me through this, and I know there's
a couple of things that people are still looking for.
We had Darren Beattie on yesterday. We walked through how
the narrative was able to be shifted on January sixth,
that it went from the insurrection narrative to the FED
surrection narrative, something that nobody really questions anymore, or if

(08:47):
they do, they realize that clearly the media's lies were
something that just absolutely overtook the situation and the fact
that President Trump in fact had nothing to do with
any of the aggression that came out that day. But
walk me through where things stand right now, because I
understand there's a few pieces now the puzzle that are
still yet to be fit.

Speaker 12 (09:08):
In so Jack, Speaker of Mike Johnson, just announced it
within the last few minutes, reported by Molly Hemingway, the
formation of a select permanent subcommittee investigating January sixth. This
will be moved from the House Administration Committee to the
House Judiciary Committee. Will be led by Representative Barry Laudermilk, who,

(09:32):
as you know, has conducted his own inquiry as in
a subcommittee for the past two years, and he is
really the one who blew the lid off of Liz
Cheney and Cassidy Hutchinson's perjury trap, perjury engagement.

Speaker 5 (09:46):
Also a lot.

Speaker 12 (09:47):
Of interesting aspects of the pipe bomber, who still has
not been identified and charged. And then of course all
the missing Secret Service texts, and the biggest question I
get from people how many FBI informants or informants and
undercover officers from numerous agencies were on the ground involved
in what happened that day and how much they are

(10:11):
culpable for the events of that afternoon.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
So walking through this, I actually hadn't seen that news
just as we were getting ready to go to air. Here,
what is the what is the purpose of the committee
and what is the stated mission of the committee?

Speaker 12 (10:27):
Well, I think they just want to continue their fact
finding that they've been doing for the past two years.
And even though, of course Joe Biden shamefully pardoned all
of the members and the staffers of the j sixth
Select Committee, this isn't just the members who were on there,
but all of the investigators and staffers, including former federal prosecutors,
who did a lot of the interrogation of more than

(10:49):
a thousand witnesses to that committee. They are all exonerated,
but that does not mean that this committee cannot bring
to the public and expose all of the evidence that
they have already found. Continue, as I said, digging into
what that committee did, and more importantly, of course, what
really happened on January sixth, As Darren said, moving from

(11:09):
an insurrection to a FEDCE surrection. And now more and
more Americans suspicious that government actors, the same government and
political actors that try to take down Donald Trump for
years before January sixth, twenty twenty one, collaborated behind the
scenes to foment the events of that afternoon, call it
an insurrection, and use it to permanently destroy the president

(11:32):
and the movement that he created. Of course, it's backfired
in spectacular fashion. But now the tables have turned. As
Mike Davis says, the hunters are now the hunted, and
the people responsible for deceiving the American people and the vindictive,
abusive prosecution of j sixers will have to be held accountable.
And I think this committee will be one.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Part of that.

Speaker 8 (11:55):
Well.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
I think that's fantastic, and of course we do need
to get to the bottom. At the end of the day,
we know that Joe Biden didn't pardon the entire jan
six Committee and all the staff for no reason. He
did so because they are trying to hide something by it.
By the way, in their own words, they say, if
you accept a pardon, then you are accepting guilt. And

(12:16):
even Jamie Raskin, I don't know, Julie Kelly, if you
saw this last night, Jamie Raskin is him and Hawen
a little bit there.

Speaker 5 (12:21):
He's thrown up some caveats.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
He's saying, well, maybe I won't accept the I want
accept it, because here's the thing. When you accept a pardon,
it actually takes away your Fifth Amendment protections. So if
you accept a pardon for something, you can no longer
plead the Fifth on crimes predicated on that are contained
under that pardon because you can no longer incriminate yourself.

Speaker 12 (12:46):
Well, that's very interesting, and Jack, I also will be
curious to see what the four I call lying crying
celebrity cops Michael Fanone, Harry Dunn, Equalina Ganell, and Daniel Hodges,
who are now spread out on CNN and MSN see
with their crocodile tears and their continued false accounts of
their injuries and what.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
They saw that day.

Speaker 12 (13:06):
They have been pardoned for a reason as well, because
they lied under oath during that July twenty twenty one
first televised performance of the committee. But more importantly, Jack,
all of them have lied under oath in court proceedings
as witnesses and victims of January sixth, done that under
oath in court rooms for numerous j six defendants, urging

(13:26):
judges to throw the book at these people who allegedly
inflicted these injuries that we now know from video evidence
simply did not exist. I would love to see for
the four of them to go back before the American
people like they did four years ago, talk about their injuries.
Do it under oath and no pardon there's no pardon

(13:47):
for perjury after Joe Biden left office. So I also
urged the new Select Subcommittee to not avoid them because
they're police officers, but because they have been some of
the biggest perpetrators of the lie about January and had
real consequences in terms of excessive prison sentences for j
six ers.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
I think it's exactly right.

Speaker 5 (14:08):
And Julia, let's be clear about what was going on.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
You had these federal officers who were working with the
corrupt committee to lie, to lock up patriots, to commit
perjury on the stand, perjury that was suborned by Liz
Cheney at least in one instance that we know of,
with Kathidy Hutchinson.

Speaker 5 (14:26):
Catchady Hutchinson. By the way, the Hutch the Hutch left
out to dry. No pardon for the Hunch, No pardon
for the.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Hutch because we've always said here on human events from
day one that the Hutch was always going to be
the weak link. The hutch would never stand up under questioning.
That is the one to focus on. And even they
didn't go so far as to give her a pardon,
my goodness.

Speaker 12 (14:55):
I think that they were fearful and there was speculation
that Cassidy Hutchinson was going to flip on Liz Cheney
and all of the committee members and the investigators who
sort of helped her concoct these outlandish stories, especially the
one in the limousine that day, which has been completely
disputed by everyone, including the driver and the other and

(15:18):
how to the secret service detail, so no one corroborated
her testimony. They have completely disputed it. So we know
because of Bary Loudermilk's work that Cassidy Hutchinson and Liz
Cheney were in cahoots using an encrypted chat app to
back channel additional testimony by Cassidy, who then changed her story,

(15:39):
fired her lawyer, Stephan Pasentino, got new pro bono lawyers
from Liz Cheney, and then became what they called the
committee's star witness.

Speaker 1 (15:50):
Oh yes, I think that she should be the very
first witness that they call up to the stand. And
by the way, if she wants immunity, I would even
go so far as to say, fine, give her the
immunity to come out and tell us what did Liz
Cheney do, What did Nancy Pelosi do?

Speaker 5 (16:08):
What did all of the staff do?

Speaker 1 (16:09):
Because once we get that, we can actually expose all
these things, and who knows, who knows, maybe we find
a couple of thing or three that aren't actually covered
by Joe Biden's pardon. Time will tell.

Speaker 12 (16:22):
That's exactly right, because of course this was a huge operation,
not just the committee members and the staff investigators, but
others who weren't on the committee who were promoting the
lies that the committee created. So conspiracy, dare I say,
of course with the media as well. And another thing
is that these hearings went on while JA sixers were

(16:43):
going on trial, including defendants who were being highlighted by
the Committee during nationally televised nighttime performances. Obviously an intent
to interfere with their right to affair trial.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Exactly right, Julie, We're super we're super pressed for time,
but I wanted to say congratulations to you. Thank you
so much, Julie Kelly dot stubstack dot com and Julie,
by the way, you know, for the record, I saw
you coming after me on on Twitter a little bit
there on x I okay, I accidentally bought the cream soda.

Speaker 5 (17:21):
Again.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
It's the label's fault. It is not my fault. I
didn't know what it was. It was totally an accident.

Speaker 5 (17:27):
To be clear, I Jack, I commiserate.

Speaker 12 (17:30):
I accidentally buy Shardonnay all the time, I think, and.

Speaker 5 (17:37):
I have Julie Kelly.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
Never get into a comeback fight with the Irish, folks.
Never get into a comeback fight with the Irish.

Speaker 5 (17:45):
Julie Kelly, go give her a follow you right.

Speaker 4 (17:47):
Jack, And I'm working long hours. I'm always listening to
human events with Jack Pasobic.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
All right, Jack Pasobic, we are back live in frosty
frozen Washington, d C. But President Trump is bringing the
heat over in the White House.

Speaker 5 (18:16):
Folks.

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By the way, guys, when we come up next, I
want to see if we can get one of those
shots of for the next bumper, Let's get the White
House because I want to actually show the heat emanating

(19:33):
from the White House. I want people to see what's
going on inside. I want people to know that their
president is actually in there fighting for them with his
new administration, the entire team all around him. Steven Miller
is in there now as the Deputy chief of Staff
of the White House. We've got so many key players

(19:54):
that are there and deserve so much credit.

Speaker 5 (19:56):
Will Sharp, by the way, who's been on the show working.

Speaker 1 (19:59):
You see him right there in the photo, working on
all the executive orders, the pardons that are coming up,
the pardons that are yet to continue. Now we have
the March for Life coming up on Friday in Washington,
d C. March for Life not canceled due to weather.
I should note, but talk about that some other time.
But I wanted to get to I wanted to get
to the heart of the matter. Repealing the nineteen sixties

(20:24):
is today's question of the day, and I wanted to
get to your emails because some already came in. This
is a good one from Steve Smith. He said, the
Refugee Act More, which actually came from Reagan, legalized thirty
years of socialist criminal invasion. Why it's an unconstitutional delegation
of cleanery power immigration authority to unaudited, unelected foreign offshore

(20:48):
corporate lobby groups like the UNHCR. Disgusting, get it out.
The nineteen sixty five Heartseller Act. That's from Caleb. He writes,
this act began the end of America. Brennan writes in
again talking about the heart Seller, this is the mass
Immigration Act. So this is the Immigration Act of nineteen
sixty five. This was something that was passed by really

(21:12):
came from Ted Kennedy and listen to this. It just
basically got rid of all the caps. It got rid
of everything that was going on in terms of capping
immigration from within the Americas, prioritizing individuals, making it Legalks.

Speaker 5 (21:28):
Folks, get rid of the act, get rid of the Act.

Speaker 1 (21:30):
Whatever you need to talk about it. This is from
Kevin in Michigan. He writes Trump should repeal the Johnson Amendment,
the law that restricts the churches from engaging in political speech.
It was only put in place and called what it
is because pastors during lbj's political campaigns were calling him
out for having Soviet Front groups fund his political campaigns.

(21:54):
What Soviets being involved in the US government. Parish that thought,
this is a gross violation of the First Amendments religious
freedom and free speech protections and needs to be gotten
rid of immediately.

Speaker 5 (22:04):
I love that.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
Let's see, do we have any others coming through? Okay,
that's all they sent me so far. But keep them coming,
keep them coming. We will show the best ones. Remember
seventeen seventy six at humanevents dot com. What else would
you like to see repealed from the nineteen sixties, and
the nineteen sixties are to put a point on it.
That's something when you talk to the left, they say

(22:29):
the nineteen sixties were the second founding of America, the
second founding of America. Why do they say that, Well,
it's because in the nineteen sixties you had a cultural revolution,
a soft cultural revolution in the United States, and they
want to blanket and put it under just the Civil

(22:50):
Rights Act. And the Civil Rights is great, but keep
in mind, there's more than just that. You had the
feminist movement, you had the environmental movement. First Earth Day
comes up, and I think nineteen seven, you have the
counterculture movement that's going around all there. Hey, free sex,
free drugs, do whatever you want. All the cultural shifts,
and you have a ton of you have a ton

(23:12):
of these judicial interpretations coming out during that time through
the court in the nineteen sixties. So you have all
of this cultural change. These cultural changes didn't exist when
the United States was founded. And that's why so many
conservatives when they go out there and I remember this
are in the Tea Party days especially, and I was

(23:32):
a Tea Partier, and I would go to the events
and I would bounce around. It was great Tea Party
and the nine to twelve project. Oh yes, all of it.
You see, people would say constitution, constitution, constitution, constitution. You
hear that from Republicans, you hear that from conservatives here,
from libertarians all day long. The problem is, we have
all of these unconstitutional laws, or I would even say

(23:55):
extra constitutional laws that were laid on by LBJI action,
the Great Society Program, massive massive immigration expansion in nineteen
sixty five. These were legislative policy decisions that did great transformation.
They conducted great transformational value to our country. And when

(24:18):
I say value, I don't mean necessarily in terms they
made it better. They enriched our country, is what they
always say. Let's cut the crap. We've been living through
this regime ever since. The contradictions are heightened on every side.
We know that there are problems with the way our

(24:39):
country works. And the only way to get back to
the original America, the only way to get back to
Norman Rockwell's America, the only way to get back to prosperity,
the only way to get back to an America that's
not built on debt, slavery, as we talked about again
and again that happened post war. To repeal the nineteen sixties,

(25:02):
maybe not everything from the sixties, but that's what we're
going to go. That's where we're going to put our focus.
Look at this, by the way, the nineteen sixties is
also when they moved what a lot of Section eight
into the major cities.

Speaker 5 (25:14):
That's when you saw we've covered.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
On this program again and again and again how the
nineteen sixties really saw the death of cities when so
many people were forced to flee their homes, so many
people were forced to leave their homes in cities, leave
their homes in neighborhoods because of the people that they
were moving into. You had crime, you had Section eight,
you had drugs, and then eventually you even started having

(25:36):
illegal aliens placed there. Look at this. This is from MVG.
They say, I think it's she need to revisit divorce laws,
particularly child tax exemptions on single mothers who received child support.
Also need mandatory paternity testing, need to repeal nineteen sixties
free love legislation in order to prioritize family. I think

(26:01):
that's exactly right. Get rid of the free love, legislation,
priority for families, Priority for families. That's what it's all about.
Family first. If you want family first, you've got to
focus on this. It's really that simple. And so there's
so many of these. And here's something I want people
think about. The nineteen sixties saw a cultural movement that

(26:23):
enacted legislation. So if we if the Trump movement, if
the Maga movement, with the Maha movement, are cultural factors
that will actually be able to put our thumbprint on
the scales of history, then that must include judicial, legislative

(26:44):
and executive actions. That's how it will be reflected. And
I don't just mean the territorial expansionism, which I totally support,
with the exception of time of Canada. By the way,
don't expect don't expect Canada to become part of the
United States and not into it. Well, look, we need
to reflect our movement's values. And President Trump has been

(27:05):
doing exactly that. He's giving you your country back. He's
giving you your country back in the ways that he
can and in the ways that he is possible to
do so through these new actions, and these new policies. Look,
suspending foreign assistance for ninety days, reinstating Cuba as a
state sponsor of terrorism, ending Catcher, Belase national emergency the border,

(27:27):
directing military to the border, pausing offshore wind leases, terminating
the EV mandates, abolishing the Green New Deal, ordering federal
workers back in person. By the way, as a message
to the federal workers out there, if you are a
federal worker and you have a problem with showing up
to work, then feel free to stay home. In fact,

(27:50):
you can stay home as long as you like. You
can even stay home indefinitely. What else, Freezing federal hiring.
Restore the federal death penalty. Jokrzar Naiev. It has been
far too long that this murderer has been allowed to
live on death row from the Boston bombing. Get it done,
President Trump. Ending Biden's racial equity programs. I'm reading from

(28:14):
a list here, rolling back and rolling back Biden's orders
on trans and LGBTQXYZ plus fifty seven forty eight withdrawn
from the WHO, withdrawn from the Paris Climate Accord. Okay,
finally getting some more emails in here. Repeal the nineteen
sixty eight Gun Control Act. We've got that from David John.

(28:39):
Emails us in from Delaware says, repeal the nineteen sixty
two angle, the Vitale US Supreme Court decision which declared
public schools prayer unconstitutional. It took prayer out of our
public schools. Well, there you go. You see it's very simple, folks,
it's very simple. Your movement must have judicial, legislative and

(29:03):
executive actions that reflect upon it. Those will affect all Americans,
every single one. Remember, this is what the left understood.
They understood the power. They completely abrogated Congress for the
longest time, and they said, all we need to do
is control the presidency and control the courts, and we'll
be able to get whatever we want done.

Speaker 5 (29:22):
And we'll do so through lawfare.

Speaker 1 (29:24):
That was actually the original meaning of lawfair because legislation
didn't work. Now we have a chance to actually start
turning all of this back. And I want to be
very clear about what's going on. This is a counter revolution.
We are counter revolutionaries. We are restoring the true purpose
of America. We are restoring the true purpose of what

(29:46):
made this country in the first place, what made it great,
what made it prosperous, what made it one of the
great powers on the world. And truly the number one
country on the planet. That is what we are restoring.
We are not doing new things. We are restoring tradition
and restoring the original American movie. Right back, Jack Pisobekunstan.

Speaker 5 (30:30):
Okay, Jack, where's Jack? Where's Jack?

Speaker 6 (30:35):
Where is he?

Speaker 5 (30:37):
Jack? I want to see you. Great job, Jack, Thank you.
What a job you do. You know, we have an
incredible thing. We're always talking about the fake news.

Speaker 8 (30:47):
And the bad but we have guys, and these are
the guys that are forgetting publishes.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
All right, Jack Pacovic back Washington, DC. Look at that
beautiful shot of the White House. Just go look at
that right there. Everything that's going on, he guys, get
the shot back up, Get the shot back up.

Speaker 5 (31:03):
Look at that shot. This is it's so beautiful.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
You look at this thing and you realize what's going
on inside that building. Right now, the boots are on
the ground. Patriots in control. Patriots have taken up position
inside our White House. Finally, after four years of the
long night, and at long last, we have a chance
to actually restore this country and its principles and its

(31:29):
ideals to the American people. Someone who has been fighting
tirelessly as well for that is Senator Roger Marshall from
the great state of Kansas, who joins us now, Senator
how are you?

Speaker 5 (31:42):
Jack? Is great to be with you, and the Calvary's here.
We are the Calvary, We're the.

Speaker 6 (31:46):
Modern day Patriots, and we got the Colonel of the
Cavalry there back in the White House in charge, and
we're running like the wind.

Speaker 5 (31:54):
So it is just a glorious, colorous week here in DC. Well,
it really is. How did you enjoy the festivity, Senator.

Speaker 6 (32:02):
Well, I feel like I've first of always been wandering
in the desert here for six years in the minority.
Our country in one of the darkest moments, but we
can see hope now. I think most importantly is there
is hope across the nation. One of the most optimistic
inauguration speeches that I can recall.

Speaker 5 (32:19):
You don't have to go back to a Reagan.

Speaker 6 (32:21):
Type of speech, but you know, it's tough times out there.
So it was great to see President Trump say We're
going to go to places that roads can't drive us to.
We're going to go not just to the movement, We're
going to go on to Mars And I think those
just those are just some figures that I figuratively speaking,
but there's an incredible opportunity.

Speaker 5 (32:38):
There's hope back in America once again.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
Well, I think that's right because President Joe Biden and
his team put hard times on America. But President Trump
and his team, along with JD. Vance, are going to
restore good times yet again. Senator, I wanted to ask you,
and I'd certainly be remiss if I hadn't regarding the
status of the nominees. I saw, of course, as a
vote earlier regarding Pete Hegsath with the full Senate fifty

(33:04):
three senators voting on that, that's not the formal confirmation vote,
but it is certainly a good sign.

Speaker 6 (33:12):
Yeah, I'm optimistic that Pete's going to get across the
finish line. What I love about Pete is he's going
to address two of the biggest problem the military has.
One is recruiting and number two is the morale in
the military. When Pete was stopping by my office, he
happened to meet my young son, who just got back
serving in the Army in Poland for nine months.

Speaker 5 (33:32):
He and Pete said down they would still be talking.

Speaker 6 (33:35):
If I didn't see, Hey, Pete, maybe you could talk
to the Senator for a moment. So I think that
Pete's going to really relate to those younger folks in
the military are war fighters as he calls them, as
opposed to them focusing on the military industrial complex. So
I'm excited about his ability to recruit, and I'm excited
about his ability to address the morale in the military

(33:55):
as well. So those are great things I think he'll
get across the finish line.

Speaker 5 (34:00):
Well, it's certainly right.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
And those troops that we have stationed in Poland, that's
of course a force that Zelenski has been calling for now,
asking for two hundred thousand NATO troop Comanact. There's some
sort of peacekeeping forest. Look, Senator, I think with yourself
having a son who's actually serving there, prepared to potentially
have to go to war against the Russian State, I'm

(34:21):
not sure exactly if US troops being added to the
situation is really something that's going to get us to
the peace that we've been talking about for so long
in these forever wars.

Speaker 5 (34:31):
Yeah, you couldn't be more right.

Speaker 6 (34:32):
We have over one hundred thousand troops in Europe, and
I would ask why we have some across eighty countries
we have, I think some eight thousand military bases.

Speaker 5 (34:42):
Do we need all those?

Speaker 6 (34:43):
It's time for the European Union to step up and
do what they need to do. America needs to take
a step back and do what President Trump has said
he's going to do, and that secure our border. You know,
we just met with Steven Miller over the lunch hour yesterday.
They arrested three hundred and fifty criminal e that was
day one, and the national troops are already on their
way down there, our National Guard, our federal military is

(35:06):
on their way there. He's President Trump declared it an
emergency situation so he can mobilize some of the military
to go down there. Our focus should be on our
own borders. Europe needs to take care of their own problems. Look,
we can be a partner, but we need to focus
on our own borders right now.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
And Senator, we're just also getting breaking news here that
moments ago, the US debt clock, which of course everyone
is familiar with usdetclock dot org, has a new addition
to it.

Speaker 5 (35:36):
Can you explain that to us, Senator? Well, the doge
clock is up.

Speaker 6 (35:40):
We're part of the dogecocus up here, but it looks
like the debt the clock had a baby, and it's
the Doge clock. And already President Trump has saved America
eight billion dollars in counting. Again, meeting with Steven Miller
over the launch hour, we were discussing just this, what
else can we do to remove waste, fraud, and abuse
from the federal government. There's incredible opportunities and it's been

(36:03):
enjoyable to work with the Bake as well as elon
lots of opportunities. And now we just got to put
that pencil to the paper.

Speaker 5 (36:10):
And get her done.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
As they say, Senator, let's talk about some of the
other nominees.

Speaker 5 (36:14):
Now.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
One of the ones that I know has been getting
a lot of talk is Tulsea Gabbard. There's been some
questions regarding this, and look, Lieutenant Colonel Gabbard, this is
what I've been trying to understand is with some of
your colleagues, they're saying, oh, you know, we're not sure.
We keep getting these questions about how you know, they're
not familiar with her background. I say, she's been in

(36:36):
the military for almost twenty years. She's a lieutenant colonel.
She actually outranks Pete hegseth at least in terms of
a military scale, though I suppose Pete might be able
to change that if he wanted to. With the In
short order, here, what are you hearing as regards to Leucanna,
Colonel Gabbert.

Speaker 6 (36:53):
Look, I think this she'll get across the finish line,
but she needs to have a good appearance there.

Speaker 5 (36:58):
In front of the committee.

Speaker 6 (37:00):
What most people, some people are criticizing her for is
what I love about her. I love the fact that
she's an outsider. She's not a spook, she's not a spy.
She's not afraid to let America see more of what's
going on. Look, there are some things that are classified
that for our national security's sake, we shouldn't.

Speaker 5 (37:19):
Let everybody know about it.

Speaker 6 (37:20):
But a lot of the things that these spies keep
under wraps are not that would not compromise national security.
As a former congress person herself and I served a
couple of years with her, she understands how frustrating it
is when someone from the Pentagon says, well, we need
to do such and such, but we're not going to
let you see the intelligence surrounding that.

Speaker 5 (37:42):
You need to go back no further than COVID.

Speaker 6 (37:45):
The aspiring, and that our own national intelligence agency kept
us separated from information that they needed to know, even
kept information from President Trump that he needed to know.
So I think she'll be a breath of fresh air.
She's going to bring more transparency. She's going to lean
towards giving America more information as opposed to less. Yeah,
she's going to get some questions about her. She doesn't

(38:06):
fit the prototype that they've been looking for up here.
But look, seventy seven million people voted for President Trump
and said they wanted change. Tulci's going to be one
of those change agents, and I think that's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
Look, at the end of the day, this is what
the American people voted for. This is the mandate, and
delivering on that mandate, whether it be Tulca Gabbert with
the others, and President Trump of course, campaigned to the
American people on this promise. People are saying, oh, he's
bringing in all these outsiders, Say who wait, wait a minute, No,
that's specifically and explicitly what he said he would do

(38:42):
on the campaign trail.

Speaker 6 (38:44):
Yeah, that's exactly right, son, He's doing what he said
he's going to do. Isn't that surprising to everybody up here.
I'm excited for RFK Jr. Another game changing type of person.
He may be again one of the more controversial picks,
but there's not a person more outside the box than
an RFK jor. Bobby and I had several conversations developing
a personal relationship. Again, this guy's a rock star. I

(39:08):
think what the press is underestimating about Bobby is that
there's an army of people out there that are supporting him.
And these folks, to be honest, it's a lot of
young women that care about their children and their children's health.

Speaker 5 (39:22):
I met them on the campaign trail.

Speaker 6 (39:24):
These are the women that didn't want their children to
be vaccinated by the COVID and now they've kind of
caught win and found a person a champion in Bobby
Kennedy Jr. So I'm excited about his nomination, but I
think it's so important that your listeners, at least if
you support Bobby. I don't know how you feel about him, Jack,
but I think he's going to be great for America.
He's going to focus on making America healthy again. And

(39:47):
when he comes up for that nomination, hearing your Senators
need to hear from your listeners and say.

Speaker 5 (39:52):
We support this guy. Don't listen to the legacy media.

Speaker 6 (39:55):
I think that there are hundreds of thousands of people
out there supporting his nomin a nation someone is going
to look out for the health and well being.

Speaker 5 (40:02):
Of their children, especially well. I think it's exactly right, Senator.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
We've got a quick break here and and and yes,
I am certainly a fan of the of Maha and
my my wife is actually big in the Maha moms
and is uh sort of working on that that burgeoning movement.
But we've got a quick break. I'd love to ask
you about it after the uh after the break and
when become right back.

Speaker 5 (40:24):
We're going to get into.

Speaker 6 (40:25):
All of that.

Speaker 5 (40:25):
Maha arrives in Washington, d C.

Speaker 10 (40:28):
At the right back in midst.

Speaker 11 (41:03):
Jack is a great guy. He's written that fantastic book
and everybody's talking about it. Go get it that. He's
been my friend right from the beginning of this whole
Viere and blevent and we turn around this make our
country to get all.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
Right, Jack Pisobok, we are back live alright shot from
National Harbor. They are the National Harbor. Ferris Wheel frozen Washington.
You see the frozen Potomac that you could see, yes,
which which George, George Washington, after chopping down the cherry tree,
he threw a quarter across a coin across the across

(41:40):
the Potomac there, But it's frozen, so I guess you
could easily just skip it across. Today, Senator Marshall, when
we left, we were talking about talking about the Maha movement,
talking about RFK and and and all of this coming forward.
And one thing that I've just got to ask you about, though, is,
look at the Maha movement is as great as they
are and is as truly noble as I believe this cause,
is that they're.

Speaker 5 (42:02):
A little new to when it comes to Washington DC.

Speaker 1 (42:05):
And I think that even though they were able to
have this huge victory with this red Dye three situation
with the FDA, there's still going to be a bit
of a learning curve when it comes to finding out
how Washington d C actually works. Because we had Mike
Pence come out last week and pose categorically opposed RFK Junior.

Speaker 5 (42:23):
But at the end of the day, what it.

Speaker 1 (42:24):
Really is all about is the billions and billions of
dollars that are behind the status quo, whether it's pharma,
whether it's big food, whether it's big ag. There's so
many people making so much money off of the current system.
That's what they're going to be up against.

Speaker 5 (42:42):
Yeah, yeah, Jack, You're absolutely right.

Speaker 6 (42:43):
So think about the military industrial complex and its impact.

Speaker 5 (42:47):
On the Pentagon's budget.

Speaker 6 (42:49):
Well, you also had this, I'm going to call it
this food industrial complex as well, and I'm talking about
the people that make the ultra process food which about
eighty percent of a mamericans cavaries are coming from those.

Speaker 5 (43:01):
Types of food.

Speaker 6 (43:02):
So anything that's in a package that they're adding salt
to it, that they're adding sugar to it, is probably
in that realm of what I would call ultra processed foods.
There's three or four companies that control control about ninety
percent of that market. But to your point, I was
meeting just recently with Casey Means continued to talk with
doctor Mark Hyman. I think those are a couple of

(43:23):
the insiders of Bobby's arsenal of advisors talking about just
this that this swamp is very real and it's easier.
You can't come in and do things by field. It
takes an army to get things across the finish line.
And I think again that's this is why it's so
important that this is a grassroots efforts and that grassroots
you mentioned your wife is doing something as well. But

(43:46):
I think that there's caucuses like ours. I'm the CoA
chair of the Make America Healthy Again Caucus to put
wind beneath that efforts. Looking forward to doctor Marty mcerrey
coming on board with the FDA and doing his process
sober over there on the FDA on the food side
of things. So it's going to take an army of
us to get this done. And I'm going to die

(44:06):
try and I've been trying to do this as I
was a freshman medical student working on this topic and
I'm so excited to put my teeth right into it now.

Speaker 5 (44:15):
Well, I think that's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (44:17):
Also, Ja Bodicharia for ni H is going to be
a fantastic, fantastic pick and and and and and so
Senator when it when it comes down to it, when
you've got the Maha movement, but you've also got you've
also got the the Maga movement, and the Maga movement
is a little bit battle hardened, shall we say, over
the last after the last eight years, certainly after the

(44:39):
last four years, to to say, you know what, stick
with us, guys, stick with us, and I think we'll
we'll be able to get through this.

Speaker 5 (44:47):
But you know, don't you know, we want you to
be able to spread your wings.

Speaker 1 (44:51):
We want you to be able to really go through
the entire federal government.

Speaker 5 (44:55):
But just understand that.

Speaker 1 (44:57):
This is uh, this is this is enemy battlespace, and
when you were in enemy battlespace, you must conduct yourself accordingly.
And I think that's something that we all have certainly
learned when it comes to the nomination process. But as
we start going in and finding these different pockets around
the federal government, the malfeasans that's in there, just the
very basics. I mean, look, Anthony Fauci, a former head

(45:23):
of the National Institute of Health and the infectious disease side,
is going and getting a federal pardon on his way
out by Joe Biden. You must realize there is something.
There are a lot of people who wanted him to
get that pardon. So there's something going on and they're
very very powerful players here.

Speaker 6 (45:43):
Yeah, I think most important it was a pardon for
a crime he's not been charged with, so America is
wondering what is the crime. Certainly he's partially responsible for
the death of a million Americas, and his research dollars,
which he chose, was he handpicked. We taught China how
to make the code virus. Research done at the University
of North Carolina is where.

Speaker 5 (46:03):
This all started.

Speaker 6 (46:04):
Figuring out how to put a protein spike on a
covid virus and then developing humanized mice to do the testing.

Speaker 5 (46:11):
We even sent them the mice.

Speaker 6 (46:12):
So in many ways, Fauci is responsible for the death
of a million Americans. Think about the Biden family as well,
their pardon again for crimes they haven't been charged with.
The good news is we have ran Paul over here,
who's the new chairman of the his Gag Committee, and
those people are going to lose their Fifth Amendment rights.

(46:32):
So I think as we try to bring them forward,
maybe that we can get some more information out of them. Again,
let's learn from our mistakes. Certainly I want to focus
on the future, but we need to hold those people
accountable as well, and.

Speaker 1 (46:46):
We do need to hold them accountable, and it's more
than just by the way, Francis Collins is someone else
I'd put right on the top of that list. I mean,
this was Fauci's boss over there.

Speaker 5 (46:53):
He didn't get a pardon.

Speaker 1 (46:54):
By the way, someone who and what I'm just going
to say, it's senator When Francis Collins, he goes on
all all these Christian networks and talks about how Christian
he is and how much he loves the.

Speaker 5 (47:04):
Lord and I'm on fire for the Lord.

Speaker 1 (47:05):
And he's got a guitar and he's playing his little
songs and he oversaw all of this. He oversaw everything
that Fauci did and tried to play it off because
you know, he's memorized a couple of Bible verses and
people never seem to question.

Speaker 5 (47:18):
Him on it.

Speaker 6 (47:19):
Yeah, I think there's sins of commission and sins of omission.
I don't know that Franc's doctor Hollis was sitting there
actively cheering on Fauci, but he turned his head. But
one of the things that problems with the anlying problem
with Fauci is he was there for forty years and
accumulated so much power.

Speaker 5 (47:36):
It wasn't just his own grants.

Speaker 6 (47:38):
He was overseeing all the nih grants and really matching
them up with Department of Defense grants, the Gates Foundation grants,
Clinton Foundation grants. And that's one of the reasons we're
pushing for term limits, not just on senators but also
on schedule left employees up here that worked for the
federal government so that there would never be another doctor
Fauci again. And I hope that's something we can get

(48:00):
across the finish line here in the next four years.

Speaker 1 (48:05):
Precisely, Senator, where can people go to follow you for
all the latest of the work that's coming out of
your office.

Speaker 6 (48:11):
Look, I think Twitter is still a great place X
excuse me, at Roger Marshall MD. At Roger Marshall MT
is a great place to go. Certainly, our website Marshall
dot Senate dot gov has all of our social media
as well. But I do think we try to get
more and more out just through X and that's a
great place to start at.

Speaker 5 (48:29):
Roger Marshall MD.

Speaker 1 (48:31):
Thank you, Senator, appreciate your tireless efforts for the American people.

Speaker 5 (48:35):
Ladies and gentleman has always had my permission to.

Speaker 11 (48:37):
Lay shore

Speaker 8 (49:00):
Was
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