Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is what happens when the fourth Turning meets fifth
generation warfare.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
A commentator, international social media sensation and former Navy intelligence veteran, This.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Is Human Events with your host Jack Kisoviet christ Is.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Search and rescue operations are entering the fifth day in
Central Texas, as the death told tops one hundred from
Friday's flash flood. More than two dozen people remain missing,
among them ten campers and one camp counselor from Camp Mystic,
the All Girls camp in Kerr County. President Trump says
he will visit the area on Friday.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
Elon Musk announcing the formation of a new political party.
Speaker 5 (00:49):
From the President on Truth Social saying quote, I'm saddened
to watch Elon Musk go completely off the rails, essentially
becoming a train wreck.
Speaker 6 (00:58):
Over the past five weeks.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
According to DHS, assaults on Immigration Enforcement officers are of
almost seven hundred percent when compared to the same time
last year.
Speaker 7 (01:09):
The ambush and Alvarado, Texas, which appears to be the
most coordinated of all the recent attacks on ICE. That
attack began with at least ten people all shooting fireworks
at the Prairie Detention Center. Around ten minutes later, one
or two of them broke off from the main group
and began spray painting the facility and vehicles parked there.
(01:29):
A police officer arrived, responding to a nine one one call,
and at that point one of the group put apparently
hidden in trees near the facility, opened fire, hitting the
officer in the neck, while another attacker also across the
street fired dozens of rounds that officers. Ten people have
now been charged with attempted murder.
Speaker 8 (01:49):
There will be no amnesty.
Speaker 9 (01:51):
The mass deportations continue, but in a strategic way, and
we move the workforce towards automation and one hundred percent
American participation, which again, with already four million people able
bodied adults on Medicaid, we should be.
Speaker 6 (02:03):
Able to do that fairly quickly.
Speaker 8 (02:05):
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Welcome on board today's edition of Human Events Daily. We're
here live in Washington, DC. Today, of course, is July eighth,
twenty twenty five. Anno domini, and once again we are
told now all the way from the heights of the
United States Attorney General that the Epstein case is closed.
There's no more information on Jeffrey Epstein. Why do you
(02:31):
guys keep asking about Jeffrey Epstein. She says that we
don't need to hear about Jeffrey Epstein ever. Again, you
know what this sounds like. I'm going to tell you
exactly what this sounds like. Pambondi sounds like Hillary Clinton
right now saying at this point, what does it even
matter when she was talking about ben Ghazi? All right,
This is not how you treat the American people. This
(02:54):
is not how you treat basic communications. This is not
how you treat your voters and your supporters. And certainly,
by the way, myself personally, I feel very angry, upset,
used all everywhere you want to yet know, from having
gone to the White House and receiving this binder full
of bologney that was completely publicly available information already that
(03:20):
we were told was new information on Epstein, It wasn't.
We were told that more information was coming there wasn't
you claim that you had the list on your desk,
You didn't, and.
Speaker 8 (03:28):
None of it came out.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
And now when people have the obvious, the obvious response
of asking a question about it, you get in their
faces and you tell them to stop asking. No, you
sound like Hillary Clinton right now, and This isn't what
you promised the American people.
Speaker 8 (03:45):
But i'll tell you someone since we are here and.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
Yesterday we did a huge, huge push regarding amnesty, and
I'll tell you someone that does sound good right now,
and that's Secretary brook Rollins. Because Secretary brook Rollins got
up there and what did she say when she came out,
and she said there will be no amnesty and the
mass deportations will continue and go and look at that
incredible ice raid, the sweep that went through MacArthur Park
(04:09):
there in Los Angeles, California, the largest sanctuary city on
the West Coast and absolute hub of MS thirteen activity.
That's exactly what we want from the AG secretary, from
the entire administration. There will be no amnesty. They are
all going home. They're going home. You can't stay here anymore.
(04:31):
It's done. It's all done. And to all the people
out there in big AG world with the Monsantos and
the GMOs and the rest of it, I'm sorry, I'm sorry,
but you're either going to have to hire American or
go out of business, because frankly, I don't care cut
all the subsidies to anyone who's using an illegal alien
cut them tomorrow.
Speaker 8 (04:51):
I'll be right back, Jack.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
Forsbet, understand what America First truly means.
Speaker 10 (05:03):
Welcome to the Second American Revolution?
Speaker 1 (05:10):
All right, folks, Jack Pasobik here we are back in
Events Daily Washington, d C.
Speaker 8 (05:19):
Folks.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Did you know that in the last six weeks, eighty
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Speaker 8 (06:38):
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Speaker 1 (06:40):
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All right, folks, very excited to bring on now our
next guest. Folks, We've got the great Congressman Byron Donald's
from the great state of Florida, US. Now, Congressman, how
(07:01):
are you doing good? How you doing now?
Speaker 6 (07:05):
Cora?
Speaker 1 (07:05):
I have to ask, do we have an exact count
on the number of alligators that are there at Alligator Alcatraz?
Do they need to be taken care of? Or is
it kind of a fluctuation? How does that work exactly?
Speaker 5 (07:17):
Look, to be honest with you, man, we have no
real idea how many gators are out there. I think
the thing that most people don't know is the pythons.
You know, there's a python infestation out there, and there's
significantly more pythons than there are alligators, no doubt about it.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
Wait, so this is actually it's so funny you mention that,
because this is something I'm a guy from the Philadelphia
area and I've talked about that before.
Speaker 8 (07:41):
But you know, I used to go down to Florida
quite a bit. You know, day is a world.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
We had some family that lived down there, and pythons
when I was a kid were not a thing. But
this is, this is like a new thing in the Everglades.
I've just been reading about this, right. They're like an
invasive species.
Speaker 5 (07:54):
Oh, very real, totally invasive. Their population growth is something
we can't even track. We simply can't track how many
pythons are out there. I think like one python can
have like I think two hundred eggs.
Speaker 6 (08:09):
Any all the time.
Speaker 8 (08:10):
The burn fast.
Speaker 6 (08:12):
I mean, it is a real thing.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
Like, you know, I didn't think we were going to
talk about pythons per se, but we're here. Pythons as
we understand it, the pythons are actually taking out other
wildlife in the glades, like they were just eating it.
Like there's that many. So we have guys out there
that go hunt python. That's what they will do. They'll
go out and take people on python hunts.
Speaker 8 (08:29):
Right now, I'm not even gonna lie.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
I totally went down the python rabbit hole the other
day and I found some this like python hunting Instagram.
Speaker 8 (08:38):
And I was just I was going all the way in.
I was going all the way in. So I don't know,
maybe maybe there's something there.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Go you know, you take the python hunters, but then
you clean up one swamp, but then you go to
d C clean I don't know, or I guess Tallahassee
in your case, maybe there's something there. I'm not sure,
but I had no idea how bad it had gotten.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
Yeah, it's pretty bad. I mean, maybe we need some
pythons in DC. You probably keep people out of it.
Speaker 8 (09:00):
There, Okay, I see, I see. Put the shoe on
the other foot a little bit there.
Speaker 6 (09:05):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Well, when it comes down to it, though, Carson, when
when we look at at everything that Florida has done
and the way that the Florida delegation everyone to put
together this new program regarding illegal aliens.
Speaker 8 (09:18):
You know, I've heard from the liberals.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
I've heard from reporters, they say America doesn't want this,
America doesn't support it. And yet I look at the polls,
and every single poll that's coming up has been deportations, deportations, deportations,
even in states like Florida, California, Texas, states that are
closer to the border of the states that are closer
to the South, they Southern habits here, they.
Speaker 8 (09:37):
Want all of this.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
Is that What kind of response are you seeing from
your constituents and the people of Florida regarding this.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
I think people are happy that this Florida has taken
this very seriously, to the extent that the new facility
was set up to help deport criminal legal aliens and
a lot of the people that Joe Biden let in
over the last four years. I mean, that's that's what's
overwhelmed every city in the country. That's where all the
crime has come from, not in total, but definitely in part.
(10:05):
And so I think people will just want to see
action happen quickly. They don't want to see political statements
that don't go anywhere.
Speaker 6 (10:12):
They want to see this stuff get done.
Speaker 5 (10:14):
That's why, you know, I know there was a lot
of people who were concerned about the spending side of
the One Big, Beautiful Bill, and I'm concerned about the
spending side.
Speaker 6 (10:22):
But at the end of the day, we.
Speaker 5 (10:24):
Had to get Tom Holman and Christy Nome one hundred
and fifty billion dollars in order to start these deportations
and have the manpower, the bedspace, and the logistical capabilities
to start that mission. It's going to be an arduous mission.
It's going to take several years. We're going to have
to be consistent about it. And I think on a
broader level, when you talk about the need for deportations,
(10:47):
it's a real conversation about what is immigration going.
Speaker 6 (10:50):
To be in the United States.
Speaker 5 (10:52):
Are we going to be haphazard how we have been
the last thirty years, depending on if it's Democrats in
control or Republican in control, or are we finally going
to say we're going to have secure borders. We're going
to have one pathway in. You comply with the pathway in,
or you're not allowed to come into the United States.
Speaker 6 (11:11):
And I think that.
Speaker 5 (11:12):
If we are consistent with immigration policy overall and securing
the border, then the American people might be open to
talk about visas and I stress, only then might they
be open to talking about it. So we have to
be consistent. The American people are demanding no less. A
lot of people can't stay here. They can't stay here
and just think that they can live in our you know,
(11:32):
to go to our hospitals, get a welfare, work into shadows,
and think that that's going to support the American way
of life and the things that the American people want
to see happen in the United States. It's just not happen.
And we can't allow that to continue. So there have
to be deportations and we're going to follow through.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
And by the way, that's one of the things that
whenever I go out and talk about this to people,
I always bring up that it seems that people say
they look at and they say, oh, it's it's this
almost a romantic description of Oh, they're coming from such
such hardship, and they're coming to the United States and
we've got to help them, and you know, think of
the you know, the poem on the foot of the
Statue of Liberty and et cetera, et cetera. But then
(12:13):
they say, what about the people who live here? What
about the people that are actually in our cities and
in our towns, and trying to go out for these
jobs and trying to actually go out there trying to
buy a home if you're a first time homeowner, if
you were, or if you're trying to have.
Speaker 8 (12:25):
To compete, you have to compete for space.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
How about I when I when my kid needs stitches,
I don't want to have to wait for three hours
in the er. And people just they just don't talk
about it. They just don't talk about the massive stress
this ten plus million people is putting on all of
our systems. And by the way, that affects you if
you're working class, it affectually. If you're middle class, and
it certainly benefits you if you're in that top one percent.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
Well, I'll give you one example, and you touched on
it a little education. So what let's look. Let's take
a look at the last four years. Last four years ago,
COVID in a lot of blue states, definitely blue cities,
kids were kept out of the classroom for almost two years,
so they weren't allowed in the classroom. So American children
were already falling behind. Then Joe Biden let in last
(13:12):
count one point three one point four million children into
the just children let them into the United States.
Speaker 6 (13:19):
Well, where do you think those kids were.
Speaker 5 (13:21):
A lot of them were in American classrooms spread all
across the United States.
Speaker 6 (13:25):
So now you have a kid in.
Speaker 5 (13:26):
An American classroom who doesn't speak English, who by any metric,
is two to four grade levels behind by at age,
and they're in the same classroom with an American student
and was already kept out of the classroom for two years.
So that kid's already behind. You brought in an immigrant
child who's further behind, putting more strain on that school system.
(13:47):
And so what happens American kids who were poor, white, black, Hispanic,
they're not even having full access to the resources they
need to catch up because we're now having to allocate
resources two children who were allowed into the country by
Joe Biden through illegal immigration. Like that's really how dastardly
this stuff is. And to your point, people have I
(14:09):
think the left wants to promote this romantic view of
people trying to come into the country and better themselves,
but the reality is the drug cartels were making twelve
billion dollars a year trafficking people into the United States.
Speaker 6 (14:23):
You had NGOs who.
Speaker 5 (14:24):
Were profiting, who were literally profiting in terms of getting
more government large as to help support illegal immigration on
both sides of the.
Speaker 6 (14:32):
Border in the United States.
Speaker 5 (14:35):
Who was suffering the most working class people in America?
Speaker 1 (14:39):
Absolutely, Congress who quick break, I'd love to hold you
over there because this is just such an important conversation.
Courts environed. Donald's right here with us Human Events deligorate.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
That you know that you're talking about influencers.
Speaker 6 (15:02):
These are influencers.
Speaker 8 (15:04):
And they're friends of mine.
Speaker 4 (15:06):
Jack Jack, All.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Right, folks, Jack, Psoba Kiria are back. Human Events Daily, Washington, DC.
We're all with Congressman Byron Donald, and we're talking about
this issue of illegal immigration and the fact that President
Trump's big, beautiful.
Speaker 8 (15:28):
Bill has just been passed.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
I was there at the White House when it was
signed on the fourth of July. How fitting was that
the stealth bombers flew over us. I was on war
room at the time, because we're alive and there. I
was there with my wife, my two boys, and we're
all looking up seeing how great they were. And of
course time you tay, she goes, she goes, Now, which
ones are the bombers?
Speaker 8 (15:47):
I said, they're the big ones, baby, those are the
big ones.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
And uh, there's only so much man explaining that I
can do, especially when.
Speaker 8 (15:56):
I'm live on air. But you know, it was it
was a great day.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
But I wonder to get and Byron Donald's on here
because you were one of the chief I would say,
just quarterbacks for this thing all the way through its
passage and the importance of that. And I get, by
the way, I'm totally with all the people who say
we need to do something about spending. I'm totally open.
I think that's a serious argument. I think that's a
serious concern. The issue for me is is that if
(16:23):
we don't do something about the mass invasion ten million plus.
Some people are saying it's twenty Maybe I don't know,
But the point being is if we don't do something
about that first, that'll destroy all of our systems, be
well before any of the debt does.
Speaker 5 (16:38):
Yeah, I think I think you're right. We had to deliver.
We were going to deliver. It's actually interesting through this
whole process in the House, we were dealing with this
for really about seven to ten months to get ready
for the President's signing the bill and doing all the work,
the border stuff, was really not even up for debate,
(16:59):
Like no members challenged it.
Speaker 6 (17:00):
There was no real hard debates on what we were
going to do.
Speaker 5 (17:03):
When it came to securing the southern border and giving
the president the resources that he needs. So that was
the easy part. Where it really got tough was spending.
And then I'll tell you, even though there as Republicans,
it was universal we were going to secure the.
Speaker 6 (17:18):
Border and do what needed to be done to.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
Begin deportations out of the United States at the United
States because that has to happen. It's just the way
it is. The spending pieces is of real concern. We
have a ticking time bomb, if you will, and that's
called the bond markets. What it is costing the United
States to borrow money. The cost of those borrowings continued
(17:41):
to rise because not just the amount of debt that
we have, but it's how reckless our deficits are. And
so even though one big, beautiful bill is done and
we got that, we got that to the President's desk,
he signed it. I watched the ceremony from home. It
was a great ceremony. There's a lot more work that we.
Speaker 6 (17:58):
Have to do in Washington. We got to get.
Speaker 5 (18:00):
Long term deficits under control. And the reason why reconciliation
is really helpful in that is because you don't have
to even deal with the Democrats. I'll tell you right now,
if it weren't for ten members of the House and
a handful of the Senators, we would have cut significantly
more spending. We absolutely would have, because if we continue
(18:21):
to borrow money at this velocity, it will begin to
increase the cost of capital for every American. And when
I say it cost the capital, what I mean is
what it costs you to borrow money for a home,
what it costs you to borrow money for a car,
credit card rates, if you're a small business, you're working
capital lines of credit, what it costs for you to
borrow money for equipment, etc. The costs will go up
(18:43):
on that, and that begins to create an almost insurmountable
burden on the quality of life and also on purchasing
power in the United States. And at the end of
the day, when you're talking to economics, it's really about
the purchasing power for individuals. How far does their dollar go,
how many goods or services can they buy with that dollar?
And if the cost of our debt continues to ride,
(19:07):
it will have an upward pressure on, frankly, the quality
of life, and it will decrease purchasing power in the
United States. So we have to get serious in Washington.
Glad we got the President's agenda through. We had to
get that done. But spending is a long term issue.
We're going to have to start peeling back that onion
and it's going to take time. Rome wasn't built in
(19:29):
a day. It's going to take time for us to
do it. But we have to be committed to it.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
That's exactly right. And this is the same issue that
Japan ran into it. They call it the Lost Decade
when they're spending just completely blue past their debt to
GDP ratio. And so people go back in the nineteen
eighties and they said, wow, Japan's growth was so huge,
and everybody said Japan was going to overtake everybody, and
they're you know, they're crushing us in the car market. Obviously,
President Trump talks about that all the time. With what
(19:55):
they were able to do with their manufacturers, this is
how we got Toyota and Honda and all the rest
of it. But then what happen and their debt got
so high that I actually just pulled it as you
were speaking. So their current debt to GDP ratio, even today,
even after they brought it down, it's.
Speaker 8 (20:09):
Still two hundred and fifty percent. Ours.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
While it's high, it's one of the high. Ours is
still top ten. Ours is one hundred and twenty five.
Theirs is two fifty. So this is something that, as
you said, a congressman, it's something that if it gets
out of hand once, it's going to take a really
long time to be able to tame that.
Speaker 8 (20:27):
And you know I did. I did like a.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Sea pack Japan, you know, last year, and I remember
I'd say, you go to buy a soda, I say,
what do you mean? This thing costs ten thousand yen
to buy a soda, soa what is that? That's like, oh,
it's like three dollars. And you realize what it does
to your currency. You realize what it does to your
country and your purchasing power if you run into those waters.
Speaker 8 (20:47):
So Japan is it's a real I think.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
Just a just a case study in how this stuff
can get out of control very very quickly, and obviously
something that we don't want to get into. And that's
I think why President Trump is so focused on being
able to grow the American economy through that domestic growth
rather than just government spending in large.
Speaker 5 (21:08):
Ass You're absolutely great, You're absolutely correct on that.
Speaker 6 (21:12):
And I'll add even more.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
What the Democrats were upset about in this bill was
not tax policy. Because let's be very clear, the Democrats
had an opportunity to unwind Donald Trump's tax policy. Nancy
Pelosi was Speaker, Chuck Schumer was Senate Leader, and Joe
Biden was in the White House. They could have undone
all of Donald Trump's tax policy.
Speaker 6 (21:32):
The reason why.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
They didn't is because it's the best tax policy you've
ever had. So they kept it in place. So let's
move off of that, because now that's settled. Donald Trump's
tax policy is the best tax policy.
Speaker 6 (21:42):
The country's ever had.
Speaker 5 (21:43):
Now, when it comes to Medicaid and when it comes
to snap, the Democrats were furious because we did this
thing called work requirements.
Speaker 6 (21:52):
And here are the work requirements.
Speaker 5 (21:53):
It's twenty hours a week, twenty hours a week to
either work, find a job, volunteer, or go to school
twenty hours a week, eighty hours a month. And so
the Democrats were furious just by putting that in the bill,
they were saying, this is going to have people lose
their healthcare and all this other stuff.
Speaker 6 (22:14):
But when you explain the details to.
Speaker 5 (22:15):
The American people, they go, wait a minute, having to
go find work twenty hours a week if you're an
able bodied adult, that's not just common sense, like it
should be thirty hours a week. Quite frankly, if you
really explain this stuff to.
Speaker 6 (22:26):
The American peoples.
Speaker 5 (22:28):
The other thing that we did were eligibility checks. Most
states have an error rate north of ten percent in
food stamps and in Medicaid, meaning.
Speaker 6 (22:36):
There's about meaning there are people who are.
Speaker 5 (22:38):
On these programs who are not eligible to be on
these programs, but they're still on the programs anyway. So
all we said was, well, let's make sure we have
a more rapid eligibility checks. You would have sworn we
were cutting people's arms off by doing that. No, all
we're saying is if you were qualified and you're eligible
to be on this program, you just have to verify
(22:59):
that eligible to be on the program, and if you
don't meet.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
The eligibles, cairesman, we got to run. I know you
got a heart out. Thanks so much for being here
Where can people follow you?
Speaker 6 (23:11):
Everything's at Byron Donalds.
Speaker 5 (23:12):
Go to my website x Facebook, Instagram at Byron Donalds.
Speaker 8 (23:17):
Go follow Byron donald to see this weekend at Turning Points.
Speaker 11 (23:20):
Aas Terrence vaits here with your Real America's Voice. News
Break Texas officials are out with an update on the
(23:42):
still developing situation in the Lone Star State following this
weekend's deadly flooding. The death toll continues to rise and
has now reached more than one hundred people. First responders
are still working and holding out hope of finding survivors.
Speaker 12 (23:57):
As of eight am Central time, seven deceased have been
recovered in Kirk County, including fifty six adults and thirty children.
Identification is pending for nineteen adults and seven children, with
one additional person still unidentified at president. Five camp misstic
campers and one counselor still remain unaccounted for. We asked
(24:21):
private boats to stay off the Guadalupe River to allow
search and rescue teams to operate without any interference.
Speaker 11 (24:30):
Meant President Trump just wrapping up a cabinet member about
a cabinet.
Speaker 8 (24:34):
Meeting, excuse me, about an hour ago.
Speaker 11 (24:36):
Even before that meeting, however, the Secretaries of Agriculture, Defense,
Homeland Security, and the Attorney General coming together to roll
out a seven pronged plan to protect America's farmlands and
food sources.
Speaker 9 (24:49):
American agriculture is not just about feeding our families, but
about protecting our nation and standing up to foreign adversaries
who are buying our farmland, stealing our research, and creating
dangerous vulnerabilities in the very systems that sustain us.
Speaker 6 (25:04):
Reshoring and near shoring.
Speaker 9 (25:06):
Our food and agricultural supply chain is essential for our
nation security. In coordination with the White House, the Departments
of Treasury, Defense, Homeland Security, and Justice, as well as
state governors, state agriculture commissioners, local tribal and territorial governments,
today we announced the USDA's National Farm Security Action Plan.
Speaker 11 (25:30):
That plan includes securing and protecting American farmland ownership. That
means limiting and vetting who owns farmland around the country,
especially near military bases and other critical infrastructure. That's a
quick check of your headlines on Terrence Bates. Now back
to Human Events Daily with Jack PASOBC.
Speaker 6 (25:53):
Jack. Where's Jack?
Speaker 8 (25:55):
Where's Jack Worthy?
Speaker 6 (25:59):
Jack? I want to you, great job, Jack.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
Thank you what a job you'd do?
Speaker 10 (26:06):
You know, we have an incredible fic.
Speaker 6 (26:07):
We're always talking about the.
Speaker 10 (26:08):
Fake those are the band, but we have guys and
these are the guys that are forgetting.
Speaker 8 (26:13):
Publishers okay in a world this summer okay.
Speaker 10 (26:17):
Ready, On August sixteenth, you're invited to be a part
of a national movement to revive our culture, to reawaken
the heart of our nation, and to strengthen the conviction
of our children.
Speaker 8 (26:31):
It's called See You at the Library.
Speaker 10 (26:33):
It's a nationwide day when hundreds of thousands of families
gather at local libraries, read stories that reflect timeless values,
and pray.
Speaker 8 (26:42):
For our children and our country.
Speaker 10 (26:44):
At a time when truth is being challenged and families
feel under pressure, this is a chance to stand together.
Invite your neighbors, rally your church, let's show up boldly
in our biggest numbers yet. Find out how to get involved,
and I'll see you at the library.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
All right, Jack Psobacuria are back. Human Events Daily, Washington,
d C. And that was an incredible announcement from our
friends over at Brave Books. And we've got the person
who made that announcement, Kirk Cameron joins us right now, Kirk,
how are you?
Speaker 6 (27:23):
Oh so, what's up? Brother? Great to see you.
Speaker 8 (27:26):
What's going on? Man?
Speaker 6 (27:27):
Hey? Man?
Speaker 10 (27:28):
We are so excited by the way. I love that
intro with Trump. Where's Jack, Jack? Where are you? It's
like where's Bildo?
Speaker 6 (27:34):
There?
Speaker 10 (27:34):
He is there, he is Hey. I want to see
you at see you at the library. We are coming back.
We're gaining momentum. This is getting bigger and bigger. It's
a national event where tens of thousands of children, together
with their parents and grandparents are meeting in the public
square at public libraries, and we are taking back culture
(27:58):
and we're going to be doing it through prayer time,
singing patriotic songs, and story time. Last year we had
three hundred and sixty story hours. This year we're hoping
for five hundred story hours and fifty thousand people across
all fifty states. It's awesome because it's grassroots. It's not
paid for by rich guys or politicians. It's we the people,
(28:22):
and we are.
Speaker 6 (28:23):
Not about a protest.
Speaker 10 (28:25):
We are about a movement of faith and character, and
that's how we rebuild America.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
Well, this is so huge, and I understand obviously we
look we did it last year.
Speaker 8 (28:37):
It was so incredibly popular.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
By the way, I don't know if you know this,
but when you and I did that one last year
and we had passage on Amateuko there and we had
just such a huge crowd down in Northern Virginia that
that was actually the very first event. So when I
got up to do my Brave book the Island of
Free ice Cream, that was my son who came up
(29:02):
and read the book with me. That was the first
event that he ever spoke at publicly, you know, outside of.
Speaker 8 (29:08):
The family, in his entire life.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
And it just goes to show you the power of
Brave books, the power of reading, and by the way,
the power of reading in public in an event like this,
because I could see how it inspired him to want
to share that with the rest of the world and
he was able to do so without any fear of
public speaking or anything.
Speaker 8 (29:31):
That was the first time and you were right there
to see it.
Speaker 6 (29:34):
That was so cool to watch that.
Speaker 10 (29:36):
And what I love about this Jackus is turning out
to be something so much bigger than just reading books.
I mean, I'm not sure the last time that many
parents took their kids to a library to read books
to them.
Speaker 6 (29:47):
But it's bigger than that.
Speaker 10 (29:49):
It's actually an opportunity to win back the culture as
people who love God prioritize family and are grateful for
this country, and the other side is advancing their values
every single day. So if we don't stand up and
fight for our values now, we won't have the freedom
(30:09):
to live for them later.
Speaker 9 (30:12):
Right.
Speaker 10 (30:12):
It's like Reagan said, if we ever forget that we're
one nation under God, will be a nation gone under.
And so we must take advantage of opportunities like this
to teach our children this and get them to love
the things that God loves and hate the things that
He hates.
Speaker 1 (30:30):
It's so simple, and by the way, the left already
understands this intrinsically. This is why you and I have
talked about this before and in previous years when we've
done the library event, where every library you go to,
almost every library doesn't even matter how small your town
is in some cases, because wherever your local Communist is,
(30:50):
I always joke about this, wherever your local Marxist is,
they target your library. Why because they understand that libraries
are nodes of information, so they're nodes of influence, and
when you walk in what's the first thing you see?
You see that table, and everybody knows what table I'm
talking about. And you've got ibramex Kendy and you've got
Wokeness and DEI and CRT and all this complete nonsense
(31:11):
and gender stuff that has nothing to do with just
the basics of reading, the basics of learning.
Speaker 8 (31:19):
But what are they doing.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
It's an operation, a cultural psychological operation where they are
going to kill them when they're very young, when they're impressional,
and they're saying, we want you to have our culture.
We want you to think this about these topics, and
we are directly going into program your children. Guess what
if you're just dropping your kids off and saying, hey,
have fun at the library, Well that's the first table
(31:41):
they're going to see, and maybe they're going to pick
up one of those, and they're doing.
Speaker 8 (31:44):
It over and over and over.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
So that's why I've always commanded Brave Books and your
work and tried to be a supportive as I possibly can,
and I strongly encourage everyone to get involved with this
because you do need to take back the culture through libraries.
Speaker 8 (32:01):
And it's local. And guess what, there's one in every community.
Speaker 10 (32:04):
That's right, and just go to see you at the
library dot com and you can find the story hour
that's going to take place near you.
Speaker 6 (32:11):
Be part of see you at.
Speaker 10 (32:12):
The library with tens of thousands of people all across
the country.
Speaker 6 (32:15):
It's going to hit the news.
Speaker 13 (32:17):
Jack.
Speaker 10 (32:17):
I'm sure it's gonna be talking all about it because
he's going to be there.
Speaker 6 (32:19):
Go to see you at the library dot com.
Speaker 10 (32:21):
Find a local library near you that's participating, or sign
your library up for it, and we'll show you how
to do all of it. There's the map on your
screen right now, and it's just spreading and it's growing. Remember,
somebody is going to capture the future for your children,
and I believe it's those who lean in and do
(32:42):
the hard work of reading stories to them when they're little.
So if you and I show up and we stand
with truths, love and conviction, we can and will reshape
the narrative.
Speaker 8 (32:56):
It's so important, you know.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
And I was floored by the way lilast year and
we saw the big one that we were doing.
Speaker 8 (33:02):
But then I took a minute to look at them up.
Speaker 1 (33:04):
And I said, oh my gosh, Because even as we
were driving from where we live to where this event was.
We must have drove past almost a dozen of them
just in and the area we're at. We live in
the DC areas, not exactly a conservative bastion, but there
are pockets of conservatives, of Christians and just people who
love America, which by the way, isn't political at all,
(33:27):
even though they've tried to make it political, where people
are saying, we want to do this, and we absolutely
want to be there. And guess what if our tax
dollars are going to fund those libraries, then we ought
to have just as much say as what goes into
them as they do.
Speaker 8 (33:40):
And I'm looking at the numbers. Great year.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
So the goal is five hundred story hours by August sixteen,
so August sixty, screw that.
Speaker 8 (33:48):
Around, write it down right now.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
And currently there's one hundred events in thirty seven states.
I want to see fifty out of fifty, we're all
with thirteen more states. If you're in go look at
the map right now. And if you got if your
state's not covered, guess what, you just became the captain
for your state.
Speaker 6 (34:07):
That's right. If you are sick and tired of all the.
Speaker 10 (34:11):
Negativity and you say, like, when's our team going to
get off the defense, get on the offense, and start
putting some points on the board. Here's an opportunity for
you to be one of those heroes and one of
those one of those legends that our children will take
lessons from. Show up on August sixteenth. It's easy and
it's effective. Be a part of what we're doing all
(34:31):
the way across the nation and sing songs, pray and
read stories on August sixteenth.
Speaker 6 (34:36):
Go to see you at the library dot com to
find out how.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
That's absolutely perfect Ballaray Kirk. I have to also commend
you because we were joking a little bit in the
break but prior to coming on, I was saying that,
you know, it feels like I see you all the
time because we've always got you on in the house
because my kids can't stop watching the Adventures of Iggy
and Mister Kirk, and it's it's been kind of rainy lately,
so I get him, I give him a little a
(35:02):
little more lenient on the TV time when I can't,
you know, throw him outside, and and we my kids
love it.
Speaker 8 (35:08):
They absolutely love it, and they love the stories. They
love Iggy.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
And it was funny because I remember that they've they've
had the opportunity to meet you a couple of times, but.
Speaker 8 (35:18):
I don't think they've quite put together that.
Speaker 1 (35:20):
You're the same guy that they see in the TVs.
Speaker 8 (35:23):
I'm like, no, that's really him.
Speaker 6 (35:25):
I know, I know the feeling.
Speaker 10 (35:27):
I remember the first time I met Henry Winkler, who
played the Funds in Happy Days, I lost my mind.
He was my hero growing up. I didn't understand why
he didn't have a lot of jacket and wasn't riding
a motorcycle. You know, he could snap his fingers and
two pretty girls would come over and dance with him
anywhere he was.
Speaker 6 (35:44):
And that just that doesn't happen so well.
Speaker 10 (35:46):
That part when when kids see me now, they're wondering
where Iggy is.
Speaker 6 (35:49):
You know, they don't really care about mister Kirk. They
want to know where idiot is.
Speaker 1 (35:52):
Yeah, exactly, they say, way, where's where's Iggy is? Shouldn't
he just pop out of your pocket?
Speaker 6 (35:58):
That's right, you think that he would.
Speaker 10 (36:00):
And I got to be honest with you, it's hard
for me to believe that he's not real. And I
hope no kids are listening to this, but that puppeteer
brings in your life, like you can't believe expressions on
his lifeless face. Just look at him right there. He's
so adorable and endearing. Kids absolutely fall in love with him.
And I'm really happy that parents are letting the kids
(36:23):
watch the show.
Speaker 8 (36:25):
Now, what kind of response are you seeing?
Speaker 1 (36:27):
And tell people, by the way, if they want to
get access to the show, how they can see it.
Speaker 10 (36:31):
Yeah, the response has been tremendous.
Speaker 6 (36:34):
It's a runaway hit. You can see this several different ways.
Speaker 10 (36:38):
If you're a part of the Brave Books Book of
the Month club, you get free access to it. You're
gonna be able to see that Angel Studio app right
next to the chosen You're going to be able to
see this at Pure Flicks if you have a subscription there,
and you can go to their own streaming platform, Brave Plus,
on your smart TV or your mobile device Brave Plus,
(36:58):
so it's.
Speaker 6 (36:59):
Easy to see.
Speaker 10 (37:00):
The first few episodes are absolutely free, and then if
you sign up with a subscription to any of the
things I just told you about, then you get all
of the seasons for free. And we've done ten episodes
in the first season. We've got the second season already
locked and ready to go and we're talking about a
third season.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
Well, that's that's just absolutely incredible and I love watching
it with We do have Brave Plus. And what's great
about Brave Plus is that people think, oh, it's just this, No,
it's not just this, and we've Chef Rule is on
there and he's been on the program as well talking
about this with us. It's just a cool show. My
wife loves watching that, you know, seeing it and seeing
how you know you can you can make healthy stuff
(37:39):
for your family without having to break the bank or
out having to go to some exotic you know, food
suppliers or anything.
Speaker 8 (37:45):
Just normal stuff you can find around.
Speaker 1 (37:47):
But you know, just make different choices when you're going
around the shelves and they and what else I love
about brath Plus is when you do it. We do
it through the subscription model, so we get the book
every month, which is great.
Speaker 8 (37:58):
Thanks are always waiting for the next one it comes in.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
So they checked, they checked the mailbox like you wouldn't believe.
Speaker 8 (38:03):
They're always waiting and they I need to I can't
go into a while.
Speaker 1 (38:09):
Yeah, they can tell when they've been when they've gone
a while because they know that hey, something's late.
Speaker 8 (38:13):
Something's late, and.
Speaker 1 (38:14):
Then I gotta I gotta get on the phone, and
I'm like, Trent, what's going on, man, what's going on?
Speaker 6 (38:18):
You know?
Speaker 10 (38:19):
But that's right, goes the packaging because it's so unique
with the characters. I'm just telling you, I love how
Brave Books pumps out these pro god pro America books
every single month, and then of course those books get
read too Iggy.
Speaker 6 (38:34):
In the middle of the.
Speaker 10 (38:35):
Episode of Kirk Kids, Kirk, They're immersed in this whole universe.
Speaker 1 (38:40):
We gotta run, we gotta we got a break coming
up for Kirk. Thanks so much for stopping buying. Hey,
I'll see at the library.
Speaker 6 (38:46):
Okay, bro see you there.
Speaker 8 (38:48):
Rock and Roll back, folks. Jack was so big.
Speaker 13 (39:02):
Jack is a great guy. Everybody's talking about it. You'll
get it, thanks Brett. Right from a full and around.
Speaker 14 (39:18):
They said gen Z would stay silent, that we'd back down,
that we'd forget what's worth fighting for. But this generation remembers,
we remember truth, we remember freedom, and now we rise.
Speaker 6 (39:32):
This is more than a conference.
Speaker 14 (39:34):
It's a call to action to reclaim the future, to
ignite a movement that cannot be ignored. Student Action Summit
twenty twenty five, featuring the boldest voices in the fight.
Charlie Kirk, Secretary, Pete Hegsa Tucker Carlson, Steve ben Brett Cooper, Secretary,
Christy no Riley Gaines, Brandon Tatum, Jack Pisoba, Laura Ingram,
(39:55):
Meghan Kelly, Greg Gutfeld, Tom Homer, Congressman Byron Donalds, Russ Brand,
Savannah Christli joined thousands of students, future leaders and freedom fighters.
Speaker 6 (40:06):
This is the Battleground of ideas. This is the Student
Action Summit.
Speaker 14 (40:12):
Register now at SAS twenty twenty five dot com. When
I'm working long hours, I'm always listening to Human Events
with Jack Bosopic.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
All right, folks, jacko Sovic back live here at Human
Events Daily.
Speaker 6 (40:30):
Now.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
I know that earlier on the program, I had to
express my extreme displeasure with Attorney General Bondi's comments and
really her attitude in attacking anyone who asks questions about Epstein.
These people aren't asking questions for no reason. They're asking
questions because you told them that you had the answers.
(40:54):
Now what forced you to say all of these things?
Speaker 8 (40:57):
You did? And you went on TV night after night
after night.
Speaker 1 (41:01):
You invited people into the White House and acted like
you had troves upon troves of information. You personally handed
me a binder that said phase one of the Epstein files,
as in, there's going to be two, three, four, and
however many more. Now you're saying there's nothing, So don't
sit there and say it's case closed when your own
(41:23):
actions are what led to this point simple as that
you said this is worse than Hillary.
Speaker 8 (41:28):
This is worse than Hillary on Bengazi.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
However, I do need to talk about something very important
that happened over over the evening after the show ended
yesterday and breaking earlier this morning, that the Department of Justice,
which I completely support, by the way, completely support in
terms of this, filed a criminal complaint against ten people
(41:51):
an individualized Antifa cell that planned out and ambush at
an IC detention center in Texas.
Speaker 8 (41:59):
On fourth of July. Of course, each.
Speaker 1 (42:02):
Individual of this cell has been charged with three counts
of attempted murder of a federal officer and three counts
of discharging firearm during and in relation. So, at approximately
ten thirty pm, just read from it, approximately ten thirty
seven pm, a group of ten to twelve people wearing
all black allegedly shot up fireworks towards the center, vandalized vehicles,
(42:23):
the facility itself, which included spray painting ice.
Speaker 8 (42:27):
Pig on a car.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
And by the way, we're showing the mugshots right now,
just look at this. Look at this group, an absolute
collection of mongrels. Just look at all these mongrels up there.
And I tell people, again and again, I wrote the
entire book about unhumans, the Secret History of Communist revolutions
and how to crush them, And I said, this is
all based in envy.
Speaker 8 (42:50):
It's all based in envy. People who are bitter at
their lot in life.
Speaker 1 (42:54):
People who are bitter, who don't like the fact that
they were born, who hate themselves, who hate life, who
hate God, and then decide.
Speaker 8 (43:02):
That they have to turn back against it.
Speaker 1 (43:05):
And by the way, there's two ways, okay, there's two
ways to respond to, you know, envy or those types
of feelings to say I want something better for my life.
Speaker 8 (43:16):
There's two ways to respond to that.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
One way can be motivating to say, hey, I was
born working class, but you know what, I can see
people have a better life, and I'm going to work
hard so I can move my way up. All right,
that's the first way motivation. The second way is look
at those people, those smug richie riches. I'm going to
(43:38):
tear them down. I'm going to tear down them and
the society that created them. This is how you create communists.
So you could be an American or you can be
a communist, but you can't be both, all right. The
American dream is inaccessible to communists because communism is a nightmare.
But it's also a tactic. And what are the tactics.
(44:00):
We always see them here attacking ice, attacking federal agents
trying to go after them.
Speaker 8 (44:05):
This motley crew of mongrels.
Speaker 1 (44:08):
Just so disgusting just you look at them and they're
they're like these twisted, deformed creatures. It's it's unbelievable when
you when you really look at it and you can
see the hatred and resentment just oozing out of the
pores of their faces. That when when this is done,
and this is Alvarado, Texas and.
Speaker 8 (44:31):
This isn't going to stop.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
Defendants were dressed in black military style clothing on foot.
Additional firearms, magazines containing ammunition, radios, twelve sets of body
armor were found in a search of vehicles. Two AR
fifteen style rifles ballistic best a helmet in the car.
But folks, if you don't understand by now the domestic terrorists,
(44:56):
the street assassins and all the rest are being activated,
then you I haven't been paying attention. The rise of
the Unhumans is here because Democrats and the left have
completely lost at the ballot box. They're losing in pulled
after poll. They've lost political power. So what are they turning.
Speaker 8 (45:15):
They're turning to feral power.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
They're turning to street power because that is the way
they think that they can shake down the system.
Speaker 8 (45:24):
And done it again and again.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
Luigi Maggioni and Zora Mamdani Kami Mamdani are in the
same city.
Speaker 8 (45:32):
You think that's an accident. No, it's not. It's a playbook.
It's a textbook, and I've written it. It's called Unhumans.
You can go to Unhumans.
Speaker 1 (45:42):
Book dot com and go check it out for yourself.
Came out exactly one year ago. Ladies and gentlemen's always
you have my permission.
Speaker 6 (45:49):
The Sure
Speaker 4 (46:01):
Students school students, Student students, school students