Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is what happens with the fourth turning meets fifth
generation warfare.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
A commentator, international social media sensation and former Navy intelligence veteran.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
This is Human Events with your host Jack Pisoviet.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
Christ is Governor Murphy declaring a state of emergency in
New Jersey due to the flash flooding and high levels
of rainfall. And then here drivers in Westchester County. We
are tracking reports of damage, flooding, water rescues. It's happening
across the Tri state area.
Speaker 5 (00:41):
I'm going to call this one in.
Speaker 6 (00:42):
I can't open the dose of non dat.
Speaker 5 (00:44):
You give me a second. We're very pleased with where
we are right now.
Speaker 7 (00:47):
We're collecting about five billion dollars in tariffs a week,
and the numbers are going up. We've collected over one
hundred billion dollars of tariffs.
Speaker 5 (00:57):
Since President Trump took office.
Speaker 8 (00:59):
They industry has now made a commitment to get rid
of all dies with them by the end of twenty
twenty six, and some of them are already taking action.
Some of them already gotten rid of the dies we
now have with this contribution, with his commitment, we now
have about forty percent of the food industry. That's already
made that commitment, and thirty five percent of the food
(01:23):
industry was already had already gotten rid of the dies.
Speaker 9 (01:27):
The days of the United States sending unlimited taxpayer dollars to.
Speaker 5 (01:31):
Defend Ukraine are over.
Speaker 9 (01:33):
President Trump has made a very smart decision and agreement
with NATO which says that Europe and Canada will pay
for the weapons, the United States will manufacture them.
Speaker 7 (01:45):
Very unhappy I am with Russia.
Speaker 5 (01:49):
We're going to be doing very severe tariffs if we
don't have a deal in fifty days.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Well, ladies and Joleen, welcome aboard today's vision of human
Events Daily Today is July fifteenth, twenty twenty five. Anno Dominie, folks.
A ton of information and news coming out of the
White House over the last really twenty four hours. One
of the biggest ones, of course being this idea of
(02:19):
a new weapons packages for Ukraine.
Speaker 5 (02:22):
And so what I wanted to do is get in.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Here for a little bit right off the start and
talk about the situation. Reporter, give a sit rep on
what's going on in Ukraine. There's also new Epstein polling out.
We're going to get to that in just a little bit.
But looking at Ukraine right now, specifically on the specifically
(02:46):
on the ground. When you look at the map, the
real question is what will change, What has changed on
the map, what has occurred in this what we've called
the Lava advance of the Russian military forces in those
easternsing provinces, particularly with a few breakouts, And the question
on a lot of analysts' hands is wel heads, is
(03:07):
that will this change anything strategically for Russia. Of course,
we're seeing the Russian armed forces, they are beginning, they're
continuing this strategy. They're continuing this strategy of what I've
called it the Lava advance.
Speaker 5 (03:21):
Others have called it the Lava advance. It's war of attrition.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
So war of attrition means you steadily grind down the
forces of the other side while continuing your advance, breaking
out where you're able to.
Speaker 5 (03:34):
It is slow, it is devastating.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
What you're seeing is steady pressure, destruction of infrastructure, and
you're going after those reserves.
Speaker 5 (03:44):
So when people look at the map, they say, wait
a minute.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
So when you see this map here, it says, hey,
there's not much change on this map since twenty twenty
two or twenty twenty three. You know, does that mean
that Russia isn't isn't doing anything? Does that mean they've
held off? And I say, well, what are you not
seeing on the map right there? You're not seeing are
the numbers of the Ukrainian reserves, the numbers of the manpower.
(04:08):
So you're talking about Bradley's, you're talking about Hi Mars,
you're talking about matvs, you're talking about strikers, You're talking
about all of this equipment. But here's the point. The
desertion rate. There reports the desertion rate is now at
seventy percent for the Ukrainian military. There are people who
are getting drafted and conscripted in their forties even older.
(04:30):
You're looking at the ages of some of these units
are going higher and higher and higher. And guess what
anyone who can get out is I just saw a
video the other day of a woman who died trying
to prevent her son from being conscripted and grabbed by
these recruiters off the street. The time will tell whether
or not this new technology, these new arms, really are
(04:53):
able to change anything on the ground in Ukraine.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
Stand in our way and our golden age has just begun.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
This human events with Jacksobet, Now it's time for everyone
to understand what America first truly means.
Speaker 10 (05:10):
Welcome to the Second American Revolution, all.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Right, Jack with soobc Heuri are back Lives Human Events
Daily back in Washington, d C. After the turning point
student actions, some who held down there in Tampa, Florida, massive,
massive event, tens of thousands of students, some some what
do they say, lifelong students as well, but you know,
(05:38):
the predominant I would say demographic there was, you know,
was definitely in the college age range and even younger,
even high school as well. And so huge shout out
to Charlie Kirk. He's done it again, folks. Charlie Kirk
has done it again in terms of being able to
hold one of these one of these incredible summits, getting
(05:59):
the students together, getting and by the way, Lively debates
on a number of issues, Israel, Iran Epstein. So many
of these things came up, and I started a little
debate of my own that went pretty viral online regarding
what is an American Interesting folks, this year gold hitting
all time high at thirty eight hundred bucks, and silver
(06:21):
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uncertainty of war, inflation, interest rates, and all the tariff news,
the sky is literally the limit when it comes to
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how do I get involved?
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I wanted to get into, of course, the information regarding Epstein,
(07:45):
Epstein files, Epstein list, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker 5 (07:47):
I gave a huge speech, it was the first words.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
Out of my mouth at the Student Action summit over
the weekend, and obviously it just became one of those
stories that I would say, it really took over the
the entire event. So go over the entire summit in
many ways. Of course, there are a few other breakout
moments as well, but this was the story that I
think dominated the headline, certainly dominated the headlines out there
(08:11):
in the world.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
And so we've got a couple of clips.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
President Trump was asked about Epstein a few times just
a few minutes ago. By the way, I want to
also point out Nicky Haley, of all people, NICKI Haley says,
release the Epstein files and let the chips fall where
they may.
Speaker 5 (08:31):
This is why people don't trust government.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
You can never go wrong with being transparent redact victims' names,
but release the rest. So there's nicky Haley. Even a
bird brain is coming up on this one. So she
put that out. Guys, if we have those clips of
the president, I'd like to get his I like to
get that up for everyone right now.
Speaker 7 (08:51):
President, you're going, mister President, your daughter in law said
that there should be transparency in the Epstein case.
Speaker 6 (08:57):
We agree with her, sir. The Attorney General's handled that
very well. She is. She's really done a very good job.
Speaker 10 (09:06):
And I think that when you look at it, you'll
understand that. I would like to see that also, but
I think the Attorney general.
Speaker 6 (09:13):
The credibility is very.
Speaker 10 (09:14):
Important, and you want credible evidence or something like that,
and I think the Attorney General has handled it very well.
Speaker 11 (09:23):
Brief view on the DUKA and FBI review, the findings
of that review.
Speaker 10 (09:28):
The Attorney general brief what the the what subject the.
Speaker 11 (09:34):
Review of the filenal pamp on you, very very quick briefing.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Did she tell you? What did she say about you? Specifically?
Speaker 10 (09:41):
Think she told you and all that her name appeared
in No, No, she's She's given us just a very
quick briefing. And in terms of the credibility of the
different things that they've seen. And I would say that,
you know, these files were made up by Komi, they
were made up by Obam, but they were made up
by from you know, uh we And we went through
(10:04):
years of that with the Russia Russia Russia hugs, with
all of the different things that we had to go through.
We've gone through years of it. But she's handled it
very well and it's going to be up there. Whatever
she thinks is credible, she should release. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
So okay, right there at the very end, I want
to I want to be clear on that. He just said,
whatever she thinks is credible, she should release. Now you're
also seeing that refrain come out now from Nikki Haley.
We also saw I'm told by the way that my
good friend Bennie Johnson just had a sit down with
speaker Mike Johnson, and Speaker Mike Johnson said that we
(10:45):
should put everything out there and has just dropped as
the show began. Appreciate it, Benny for for you know,
you know, account programming. Yes here, I'm for transparency. We
should put everything out there and let the people decide.
Pam Bondi needs to come forward and explain to them people,
let's get this thing revolve. So that's Speaker of the
House Mike Johnson also calling for Attorney General Pam Bondi
(11:12):
to release information as well as President Trump.
Speaker 5 (11:16):
Also, remember at the very end there, so at first.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
He mentions that he's supportive of ag Bondi's role in
all of this, but he also says at the end
that she should release whatever she deems credible. So I
want to put that all out also, by the way, folks,
we were tracking that President Trump was going to be
holding this AI event at some point today, was going
(11:39):
to originally schedule for two to thirty, so we're told
that's now been pushed back to three thirty.
Speaker 5 (11:43):
So that means I got a whole lot more time
on the show today, which is great.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
And we've got a certain amount of time just left
in this segment.
Speaker 5 (11:53):
So I want to go in through a little bit
more of.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
The pulling data that's starting to come out from a
variety of sources on this, because we're really seeing, really
seeing the numbers pour out, and I wonder and wonder
if this is why Speaker Johnson, Nikki Haley, and others,
even the President himself are starting to now call for
(12:18):
more information to come out. We saw so according to
so this is on the idea about the Epstein files,
Jeffrey Epstein. So the Democracy Institute has put out a
poll of fifteen hundred likely voters in that and the
Democraty Institute, by the way, and the National polls will.
Speaker 5 (12:40):
Tell you over there with Raheem Cassam that they.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
Have a lot of credibility with the a lot of
credibility with the right. And it says out of Trump
twenty twenty four voters who believes that no files exist
or no list exists, only twenty one percent of voters
Trump twenty twenty four voters agree with that. For Harris
(13:06):
twenty twenty four voters, only twenty eight percent believe this
is key new voters for twenty twenty four, this is
new voters, only eighteen percent.
Speaker 5 (13:18):
Of new voters.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
So those are those new low prop voters who are
coming into the system getting involved in twenty twenty four
for the first time, only eighteen percent of them believe
that no list exists. When you go to Independence, obviously
a larger group that's twenty seven percent.
Speaker 5 (13:36):
And so you're just seeing this.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
Across the board. As well as as well as with
let's see here coming down. Voters agree versus disagree, Voters
agree versus disagree. You're seeing the exact same thing. Voter
groups agree disagree. Twenty twenty five voters, sixty seven percent
(14:02):
disagree with this decision on the Epstein list.
Speaker 5 (14:06):
For Harris voters, fifty eight percent agree.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
So for the first time you see Trump supporters and
Harris supporters actually agreeing on the same thing. Then when
it comes to new voters, seventy two percent disagree, independent
sixty percent disagree.
Speaker 5 (14:20):
Interestingly enough, it.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Is upper class voters are split forty eight forty eight
agreed disagree. That is the only group for which there
exists a split down the middle is the highest support
for keeping the list secret. Middle class forty four percent.
Working class all the way down at twenty six percent. Folks,
(14:43):
this is a story that when you're looking at the
polling for it is really tells the tale.
Speaker 5 (14:48):
Jack Withsobac King, the Events Daily will be right back.
Speaker 7 (15:00):
You know that you talk about influencers, These are influences
and they're friends of mine. Jack, Jack, all.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Right, Jack Pisowick, we are back live here. Human Events
Daily in Washington d C. But what I want to
do also because we're waiting for President Trumna.
Speaker 5 (15:25):
He was originally slated.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
To speak in just ten minutes time at this AI
conference there in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. That's been pushed shifted to
the right just a little bit. But remember, of course,
the president always is never late. The president is always
on time. But we've got Real America's Voice correspondent Michelle
backus there on the ground in Pittsburgh to give us
an update.
Speaker 5 (15:45):
Michelle, tell us what is going on, Jack, A.
Speaker 3 (15:50):
Bit of breaking in definitely exciting news.
Speaker 12 (15:53):
This morning, we were told that there'd be about seventy
billion dollars worth of new investment here in the Keystone State.
Harverd Centator McCormick just announce a little bit ago that
number actually now ninety billion dollars worth of new investment
here in Pennsylvania. This comes as the AI summit is
happening right behind me. You can see here the rum
is packed as everyone is awaiting President Trump. You mentioned
(16:15):
that he was supposed to speak in just a little
bit that time now getting pushed back as there's only
standing room in this building waiting to hear that announcement
really exciting news for Pennsylvanians, especially including you and I Jack.
Speaker 5 (16:30):
Well, that is huge.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
So is there any idea, you know, what types of
jobs that's going to translate over to. I mean, I
remember being out there on the campaign trail. People you know,
Carnegie Mellon graduates, we're talking about this. People in Southwest Pa,
we're talking about this. Actually went to that event that
Elon Musk held out there and this was a huge
topic of discussion.
Speaker 6 (16:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (16:53):
So it's going to be a lot of data centers
and AI investments. So a lot of investment coming from
other companies poring into the Pittsburgh and ultimately the Pennsylvania
area as well.
Speaker 3 (17:02):
This is an.
Speaker 12 (17:03):
Abundant area for data centers to be built. Again, that's
what's ultimately going to power those AI chips and power
the AI.
Speaker 3 (17:10):
Revolution as well.
Speaker 12 (17:11):
You're going to see a lot of new jobs here
and investment in that sense. There are over sixty CEOs
here for major companies including Larry Fink, black Rock, Blackstone,
Exxon Mobile, you had Google, you also had Meta here
as well.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
It's a pretty big investment you have to consider as well.
Speaker 12 (17:28):
Pittsburgh especially was in the middle of the industrial Revolution.
Now we're seeing another industrial revolution in the AI front,
and a lot of leaders around the country hoping for
their chance.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
To have the Silicon Valley of the East.
Speaker 12 (17:41):
Nonetheless, though, many people saying that it's going to be
right here in Pittsburgh, especially as they look to develop
more AI technology here and build those data centers as
well to house the development needed.
Speaker 5 (17:53):
And Michelle, can you run us down some of the
names or.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Some of the companies that are expected to be there today.
Speaker 12 (18:01):
Exon Mobile, We also have Larry Fink. We have black
Rock and Blackstone. We also had a panel that was
actually moderated by Google Alphabet CEO as well. You also
have members from President Trump's cabinet that are going to
be here, Doug Bergham, even have David Sachs, the cryptos
are that's going to be here, So a long list
of people.
Speaker 3 (18:20):
You have foreign investment as well.
Speaker 12 (18:22):
Everyone has eyes right now on Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. And this
comes especially as you look at the energy rich resources
of this state. I mean, we're the second largest producer
of natural gas in the country behind Texas third and
coal mining abundant lands.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
We're also looking at nuclear capabilities as well.
Speaker 12 (18:39):
This really is a rebirth I would say, of a
city that a lot of areas are run down, dilapidated
after many steel mills close down I'd say in the
mid nineteen seventies. Now there's a chance for that to
pick back up. And nonetheless, it's happening here at Carnegie
Mellon University, which if you know anything about Carnegie Mellon,
it's a stem hub. Extremely smart people coming here, innovating
(19:00):
tech for the future.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
I want to take a look.
Speaker 12 (19:02):
Right behind you, too, Jack, so you can see just
how important this.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
Is because this room.
Speaker 12 (19:07):
Again, the President isn't set to speak here for i
would say another hour and a half, but this room
is packed, standing room only.
Speaker 3 (19:13):
People really getting in. You're early to ensure they have
to see.
Speaker 12 (19:16):
You can see the panel up there, Pennsylvania Energy and
Innovation Summit.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
This also comes hand in hand as Senate.
Speaker 12 (19:23):
Bill nine point thirty nine was introduced by Senate Republicans
to help fast track that AI development and make it
easier for companies to create that development here in the
Keystone State.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
So you know, it's interesting that you mentioned energy, by
the way, because the fact that western Pennsylvania is such
an energy nexus when they talk about AI. One of
the biggest issues that I always here associated with this
is energy generation and the fact that these data centers,
these power centers are going to require so much energy
to be able to be run. And I wonder if
(20:01):
that's going to be part of the topic of discussion.
Obviously Crypto this play is right involved with that, the
same idea, you need these huge data centers to be
able to run this stuff. So I wonder do you
think there's going to be any discussion of that nexus.
Probably that's why Doug Bergen would be there, just between
the energy and the data creation power that you're supply
(20:21):
that you're.
Speaker 5 (20:21):
Going to need.
Speaker 12 (20:24):
Yeah, that's actually going to be a central point, and
I think it's going to be hit on, especially up
here on this stage.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
But you think about how Pennsylvania's positioned.
Speaker 12 (20:31):
In Pittsburgh as well, we're surrounded by rivers, we have
abundant land, we have the capabilities for nuclear facilities, we
have the capability to use water.
Speaker 3 (20:40):
And also you look at the energy exporters.
Speaker 12 (20:42):
We are the second largest natural gas exporter behind Texas,
one of the largest in the one of I would
say top five to ten in the nation or not
the nation in the world. Nonetheless, though you look at
all of those things coming together, this is a good
area in which you can build those data because keep
in mind, even remember when the CEO of chat GPC said,
(21:04):
stop using manners when you're using the algorithm because it
takes so much energy just for one user to use AI.
So that's why it's going to be especially important to
build out that infrastructure because look, AI isn't going anywhere.
Speaker 3 (21:17):
I think we all know that it's only going to increase.
Speaker 12 (21:20):
So it's an important thing here to adapt and be
ready for it rather than run from it. That's going
to be a key point here that they're going to
be talking about today.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
All right, Michelle, Now I got to ask, because you know,
everyone knows my favorite governor and all of the United States,
probably my favorite politician in the entire world, of course,
is Governor Josh Shapiro, Little Josh Shapiro, five foot three
out of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Got to ask with all of
the focus on Pennsylvania, with all of the corporate innovation
(21:50):
that's there, even some of the corporations I'm not a
huge fan of, like black Rock and Blackstone are there
is Josh Shapiro in attendance.
Speaker 5 (21:56):
Have you spotted him? You might have to, you know,
crouch down a little bit to see him.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Oh you mean your best friend, right, Well, I can
tell you I haven't seen him yet, but I am
told that he is here.
Speaker 12 (22:09):
You also see Senator John Fetterman that is applauding this
and participating as well. And look, John Fetterman got his
start in politics by being mayor Bradock. Braddock is one
of those abandoned steel towns outside of Pittsburgh that was
completely dilapidated once the steel mails left, and he tried
to revamp that and ultimately I don't know how he
got to the Senate, but somehow that shows you where
(22:30):
the Democrats are at. Nonetheless, though I really can't understand
how this couldn't be a bypartisan issue, Center McCormick said
he's welcome to working with anyone on either side because
it's all about bringing.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
The economy and industries.
Speaker 12 (22:43):
Back to Pennsylvania. We have so many opportunities, including.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
Our workforce as well, to do that.
Speaker 12 (22:48):
So really, if you aren't on board with this, I
really can't imagine that you're rooting for your state in general.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
But I haven't seen your best friend yet.
Speaker 10 (22:57):
Jack.
Speaker 3 (22:57):
If I do see him though here today, I'll make
sure to tell him you said hi.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
Please do And maybe maybe Senator Fetterman can pot Jos
Shapiro up on his giant you know, bigfoot shoulders there
so we could look over the crowd.
Speaker 5 (23:09):
Michelle, we got a run. We're just about out of time.
But well, I'm sure real Marcus voice will come right
back to you as soon as it starts. Folks, are
right back Human Events Dale.
Speaker 6 (23:29):
Jack, Where's Jack? Where's Jack? Worriessy Jack? I want to
see you. Great job, Jack, Thank you, what a job
you do. You know, we have an incredible thing.
Speaker 5 (23:43):
We're always talking about the fake.
Speaker 10 (23:45):
News and the band, but we have guys, and these
are the guys you're forgetting.
Speaker 1 (23:49):
Policies, all right, Jack Pacobic Here we are live Human
Events Daily. Now, folks, we are waiting for President Trump
to begin that AI conference up there in Pittsburgh. But
while we do have a couple more interviews that we
snagged while on the sidelines of Turning Point Student Action
Summit down in Tampa, and was very honored to actually
(24:11):
sit down with Senator Bernie Moreno of the Great State
of Idaho.
Speaker 5 (24:15):
Excuse me, the Great state of Ohio. I'm gonna throw
to that now, all.
Speaker 1 (24:21):
Right, Jack Sobakir Human events daily on the sidelines of
the Turning Point Student Action. What an incredible success. And
it's only because of such a great success, because of
the support of so many people out there who have
come to visit. And then also that's what's attracted such
high level and high profile individuals such as our guest
right here, Senator Bernie Morena from the Great State of Ohio.
(24:42):
That's so much thanks to having back on the show, Senator.
Now President Trump. You know they say presidencies, they only
really get, you know, maybe one, maybe.
Speaker 5 (24:52):
Two signature pieces of legislation.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
The Trump tax cuts were the one the first time around.
This time around, it's the big beautiful bill which enshrines
the text cuts, but it goes a bit further. One
of the things that our audience has been really focused on,
like a laser beam, is this ice budget. We say
this essentially twenty x's the ice budget. You've been a
champion for the BBB. Tell us why was it so
(25:17):
important to give ice that funding? The left, of course
went absolutely bonkers, and I said, wow, you guys are
the best salesman for this thing because of how nuts
they went. I said, wait a minute, you guys are
turning ICE into a budget that's, you know, higher than
any law enforcement agency in the country.
Speaker 5 (25:34):
And I said, really, quite frankly, it's it's needed.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
But walk us through some of those deliberations and why
you came out so strongly for it.
Speaker 13 (25:40):
Yeah, I know, absolutely, Well, look you got it. We've
got to remember because it's hard to uh, because we've
probably put that in a pass what happened during Biden.
So during Biden, you had millions of people that came
across our border and Jack as you know, to come
across the borders pretty darne easy. You've come across the border,
we don't send you back. They didn't send you back
during Biden. Across the border. You raise your hand, you
(26:01):
claim asylum. We gave you an airline ticket, we gave
you housing, we gave you healthcare, we gave you food,
like getting the lottery. So it's so easy to get
people and millions of people now to get people out,
it's really, really, really hard one to get one human
being out of this country with all the due process
that the Democrats expect. It takes multiple people to do it,
(26:25):
tons of hours of man time that translates into costs.
We had up until the Big Beautiful Bill, we had
five thousand ICE agents.
Speaker 6 (26:33):
Tell me how five thousand.
Speaker 5 (26:34):
People across the entire country, the entire United.
Speaker 6 (26:37):
States of America, we had five thousand ICE agents.
Speaker 5 (26:40):
So it's poor, impossible.
Speaker 6 (26:41):
Twenty million people, So tell me how you do that.
Speaker 5 (26:45):
We have cities with larger police forces than that.
Speaker 13 (26:47):
By the way, the Capitol Police has more than five thousand.
I'm sure they do, right, So it's impossible. And then
make it even worse these sanctuary cities when they arrest
and illegal rather than say hey, this guy's in our jail,
come get them so that one person can go get
that one criminal, they would set that person free.
Speaker 6 (27:05):
So now you need a team of people.
Speaker 13 (27:07):
And cars and back up and investigations to go get
that one person.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
Well, and when you take out and that's that's the
ICE detainer. When you take that out of the system,
what you're doing is you're you're drastically increasing the risk
to those agents and quite frankly, possibly to anyone else
in the community where they might be living because you
don't know if someone's going to be armed, you don't
know in many cases they are.
Speaker 5 (27:30):
You don't know what is going to be facing those agents.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
And we just saw uh, you know, a couple of
days ago here in Los Angeles where they were taking
shots at ICE agents conducting an enforcement activity. So it's
so much safer, by the way, even for the individual
being detained in a situation like that than to put
them in another situation. And yet these these sanctuary cities,
which and by the way, my hometown was turned into
(27:54):
a sanctuary city in Pennsylvania years ago, and it's it's
just completely been been lost, so completely lost. So I
see what this does to towns, but it's also something
where you're seeing the effect on the officers as well.
Speaker 13 (28:08):
Yeah, and let me just we have to remember why
this matters so much. Yes, it's not just that you
have people that broke into our country. That is offensive enough,
but it's driven up our home prices, driven up our
card prices, our insurance prices, made our cities dangerous, and
it lowered drastically American wages.
Speaker 6 (28:23):
So we have to reverse that.
Speaker 13 (28:24):
So we got to do is also remember that human trafficking,
sex trafficking, child trafficking, and drug trafficking are money laundering.
Is now all one criminal enterprise that's hiding behind front
companies and what looks to be legitimate businesses. That's really
hard for ICE to go after. So we had to
(28:45):
give them the resources. It's going to take a while,
but it's the most important thing we got going. But
here's the good use. There's nobody else coming in. The
faucets stopped, the bleeding has ended. We've had zero paroles
into America last month, zero jackets.
Speaker 6 (28:58):
Do you imagine if I was on.
Speaker 13 (28:59):
Your show last year a year ago, I said, right,
Trump is going to get it so that not one
human being is released in America.
Speaker 6 (29:06):
So that's impossible, said, we'll send it.
Speaker 5 (29:07):
I mean, I'm sure he'll do a lot, but you
know he's not gonna get this zero.
Speaker 13 (29:10):
This's not it's not impossible, or bring encounters down by
ninety five percent right in the first six months.
Speaker 6 (29:17):
And that's before we gave him the money.
Speaker 13 (29:19):
Now, with the money, we're gonna as Hockeen Jefferies would say,
we've turbo charge yaffort.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Say you have Iceland steroids, Yes we are, Yes, yes,
we are yes selling the bill and to your point,
to your point as well on on how it's become
one enterprise is Gavin Newsom.
Speaker 5 (29:36):
I'm sure you saw Gavin Newsom when when.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
They conducted this raid out in California and they were
going to I turned out it was a cannabis for
a couple of cannabis farms and they were going after
the workers, and Gavin Newsom said, hey, you can't use
tear gas down there.
Speaker 5 (29:51):
There's kids in there.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
H Wait a minute, what are what are miners doing
working on a field cannabis field? Okay, it's legland, California, whatever,
But the point is why are their miners working there?
Speaker 5 (30:03):
And it turned out the miners, I believe because I
saw DJs put out that they turn out to.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
Also be illegals. And I think that speaks to the
truth of what you're saying. This is an operation.
Speaker 5 (30:13):
Well.
Speaker 13 (30:13):
Also, by the way, as somebody who's a legal immigrant
to this country from South America, imagine they say, well,
who's going to pick our crops? That's the same argument
that was made during slavery Jackuess, Right, Look, they say, well,
Americans won't do this work. They don't finish the sentence.
They won't do this work for that wage and those
working conditions, right, because yes, we don't allow fourteen year
(30:35):
olds to go work ten hours a day in this country.
And that's a good thing, right. Ironically, we're the party
that protects workers rights, worker American workers ability to earn
an income. But when you're competing with people who are
willing to basically get starvation wages, that's not what we
don't want to turn America into.
Speaker 10 (30:52):
That.
Speaker 6 (30:53):
So, look, this is a dirty little secret of the Democrats.
Speaker 13 (30:55):
They want a cheap labor for their multimillionaire donors and
the party's over.
Speaker 6 (31:00):
We're going to restore law and order in this country.
Speaker 13 (31:02):
We're going to stop allowing people to come into this
country illegally, and the message's going to be very straightforward.
We'll eventually catch every illegal in this country and to
port you. That's the message. So either you do it
voluntarily and.
Speaker 6 (31:13):
Maybe with a big m maybe we give you a
path to come back in in some sort of legal way.
Speaker 13 (31:18):
But if we put hands on you and to pour you, you,
your family, anybody ever know will never be allowed into
this country again.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
Well, in one of the economic forces that you just
touched on in comparing to slavery. There's a big actual
similarity here because if you go back in time, the
cotton gin was invented before the ant eradication of slavery
in the country, but the reason it wasn't so rapidly
and widely deployed in the South was because they of
the laborers they had. It disincentivized industrialization of that process.
Speaker 5 (31:49):
So we have these what do we need any machines for?
Speaker 1 (31:52):
You're seeing the same thing now with automation, because we
have so many just there's tomato pickers and all sorts
of machines.
Speaker 5 (31:59):
I see.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
You can go to any farm show you'll see all
this stuff. But there's a disincentivization that goes on. And
you're from the business world, you get this. They said,
what do I need all that? Because that's a capital
cause now that you don't want to incur and you
don't have to if you have this massive chief labor force.
Speaker 13 (32:12):
Yeah, if you can bring a bunch of illegals here
that work for starvation labor and then hand those people
off to the taxpayer and say you take care of them.
You cover their healthcare, you cover their education, you cover
their housing. And then there's Americans going, hey, I'm on
me right, Like Springfield, Ohio, a town of twenty thirty
thousand people.
Speaker 5 (32:30):
How is Springfield doing well?
Speaker 6 (32:31):
Look, it's going to be doing a lot better now
that we're going to get rid of the Haitians.
Speaker 5 (32:35):
So I give it.
Speaker 13 (32:36):
Are our numbers a time of fifty to sixty thousand people,
eighteen to thirty thousand Haitians coming to that community, of
which maybe maybe five hundred hid jobs. Maybe, And by
the way, those five hundred jobs belong to America's first right.
But now what are the other eighteen twenty thousand people
doing jack They're on government welfare services.
Speaker 6 (32:53):
That's for American citizens.
Speaker 13 (32:55):
Like, how insane is it that you're an elected official
that you swore an oath to protect defend this country
and the people in it, and you're giving away our
money to people who broke into this country. How many
people would you house in your uh in your home
that broke into your house?
Speaker 5 (33:10):
Not a single one? Let us, of course not.
Speaker 6 (33:12):
It's insane.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
Well, and they and then and they play these games,
and they'll they'll talk about, oh, you know, and and
the Bible says love.
Speaker 5 (33:18):
Your neighbors as if that's all the Bible says. Think
there's a little bit more to it there, you know.
And by the way, I said, here's here's what I say.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
You know, if someone comes here truly, truly and from
the Christian perspective, Christian I'm a Catholic, right, And if
someone comes and they're truly starving, of course you feed them,
some mother taught me. But if someone shows up hundreds
of people, thousands of people and demands to be fed, no, no,
that is that is not charity. That is that is forced.
(33:46):
That is not something we're compelled to do in any way.
And it's and at the end of the day, it's
a question of and And actually senator former Senator uh
jd Vance had Vice President Vans had this the diatribe
about this of how even to the clients, talked about
how when it comes to duty, you have a duty
to your family, you have duty to your community.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
As a senator, you have duty to your constituents.
Speaker 6 (34:08):
First, well, look, you have a family. Of course you
have to take care of them.
Speaker 13 (34:12):
So how insane would it be if you allowed your
kids to starve literally and be homeless, but you took
care of people who broke into your home.
Speaker 6 (34:20):
It's just so illogical. And they say that that's compassion
It's not compassionate.
Speaker 13 (34:24):
It's actually very cruel to Americans and by the way,
very cruel to the migrants also.
Speaker 5 (34:29):
And I said, I said this on stage when I spoke.
Speaker 1 (34:32):
I said, look, you know, if we're going to talk
about anything, it's got to be after the American people
are made whole.
Speaker 5 (34:38):
American people have to.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
Be made whole first, and the mass deportations continue.
Speaker 5 (34:42):
This is so key. And meanwhile, by the way, when we.
Speaker 1 (34:45):
Look at President Trump's economic plans, talk to us a
little bit about So the CBO right was of course
emerged as one of these big opponents. You're going back
to the legislation saying it's going to tank the economy,
it's going.
Speaker 5 (34:59):
To destroy everything.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
You got tariffs on one hand, you got the BBB
on the other, it's going to destroy everything.
Speaker 5 (35:04):
One week after the big beautiful bill is signed, and
I was at the White House, we got to see
the B.
Speaker 6 (35:09):
Two is the car.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Course, I wasn't gonna go down. But then when I
heard the B two, guy said, I brought the kiss. Okay,
we're going to go see the B twos.
Speaker 5 (35:15):
You'll appreciate this. My wife goes, so, which one to
the B twos? Because the baby, you know, it was
and and and, but thee that all of a sudden
they come out. I said, we have a surp plus.
Speaker 13 (35:27):
Oh yeah, it wasn't a three point four trillion dollar deficit.
It's actually if we actually cut it by four hundred billion.
You mentioned being off by three point eight trillion dollars,
but here's the headline.
Speaker 6 (35:37):
Look this bill, it's more about that.
Speaker 5 (35:39):
Let's talk about it.
Speaker 13 (35:40):
First of all, we defunded a planned parenthood amazing. Think
about that for a second, for one year. But it's
a start. A billion dollars we took out of their budget.
Number two child tax credit twenty two hundred dollars. If
it hadn't been for the bill, that would be zero.
We preserve this standard deduction, no tax on tips, no
tax on overtime, no tax on Social Security. This is
the first bill that I know of that actually goes
(36:02):
to putting American workers hole correct giving them the opportunity.
So the number, by the way, this will blow your mind.
The average Ohio family of four will get seventy five hundred.
Speaker 6 (36:14):
Dollars in our pocket as a result of this bill.
Speaker 13 (36:16):
What we got, what we took away was seventy five
hundred dollars subsidies for millionaires to lease electric vehicles.
Speaker 6 (36:22):
So I love it and buy land and Democrats.
Speaker 13 (36:25):
You could get a check for seventy five hundred dollars
for the federal government if you lease an electric Porsche,
it leads to electric rolls Royce. That's a true story.
People on social media, that's not true. I'm like you say,
check it. Seventy five hundred bucks for somebody leases six
hundred thousand dollar rolls Royce. This is now seventy five
hundred dollars for working Americans that, due to Democrat policies
(36:46):
over the last four years, couldn't afford to go out deed,
couldn't afford groceries, couldn't afford rent, couldn't afford across.
Speaker 5 (36:51):
Senator, I know you got to run before you go.
Ask you a tough question.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
Do you think there's an appetite in the Senate, in
the Congress in general for another big bill on you know,
coming through at all? Do you think that that President
Trump has the capital Do you think it's possible are
we going to see that before midterms.
Speaker 6 (37:09):
One hundred percent. Fact, I call it the second big
beautiful Bill. I already have a name. Okay, we're going
to get it done. We're going to get the tariffs
in the legislation.
Speaker 13 (37:17):
So for the next president, we're going to make some
of these working class programs lasts a.
Speaker 6 (37:23):
Little bit longer. We're going to do a lot of
great things. Look, we have to. We got to turn
this country around.
Speaker 13 (37:29):
It's an honor to be there serving along our great
vice president, our great president.
Speaker 6 (37:33):
By the way, a year ago tomorrow, this could have
been a whole different deal.
Speaker 1 (37:37):
Amen, Senator Bernie Moreno, thank you so much for joining us.
All Right, folks, So that was our sit down with
Senator Bernie Moreno. And I really do want to point
out something that Senator Breno said there. Look, Ohio is well,
they're on a border state unless you consider their their
(37:59):
you know, water board order with Canada across the Great Lakes.
But he pointed out that even in a state like that,
even in a state like Ohio that's so far away
from the southern border, illegal immigration is still a massive
issue for them. And five thousand, only five thousand ICE
agents nationwide, smaller than the police force of major cities,
(38:21):
smaller than the capitol police force. Was all they had
for the deportation operations for twenty million, at least twenty
million people. It was a joke. It was ridiculous. So
right now ICE has the ability because what do we do.
We just twenty xed the ICE budget. Now we have
the ability to go and conduct more and more of
(38:44):
these critical deportations. I'll be right back, Jack Pisovic with
Erica'donalds from AFPI to an update on education even SMA,
All right, JACKISIBE are very excited to have once again
(39:06):
here on the program, Erica Donald Dereka, thank you so
much for being here in person.
Speaker 5 (39:10):
I think for the first time you've had you in person.
Speaker 1 (39:13):
And that's what's so great about doing events like this
where you can actually get people together and realize that
we all share these interests and we're all working on
different aspects but getting towards the same goal.
Speaker 11 (39:22):
Yes, and it's great to be in Tampa and a
turning point with all these excited patriotic.
Speaker 5 (39:27):
Yan tru forward Are you right, not at all?
Speaker 11 (39:29):
But this is actually my hometown ives in Tampa, and yeah,
we live about a couple hours south.
Speaker 5 (39:33):
Okay, that's that's great.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
My brother has moved here now, he came down a
couple of years ago, just fell in love with it.
Speaker 3 (39:39):
Hey, it's the great state of Florida.
Speaker 5 (39:41):
I mean, what's not all? I completely agree? I want
to you know, we have you on talking about school
choice so much.
Speaker 1 (39:46):
This this Supreme Court case that just came down regarding
which which really opts into a sort of educational choice
element regarding LGBT studies.
Speaker 5 (39:58):
Tell us how big of a victory is that.
Speaker 11 (40:00):
Well, the Mood case, the one that you're referring to,
now allows parents to opt their children out of objectionable
content in the schools. It's shocking that it even had
to go to the Supreme Court, but they made the
right decision and allowing these parents, for religious purposes to
opt their children out of what was LGBTQ content in
reading lessons. It wasn't a separate health lesson, but it
(40:23):
was infusing this ideology throughout the core curriculum. Parents wanted
to opt out. The school district said, too many parents
are opting out and it's disrupting the school day.
Speaker 3 (40:33):
This is what they said.
Speaker 11 (40:35):
Our that is why they stopped them from opting out,
and parents sued. And these weren't you know, Maga parents.
These were Muslim parents and Protestant parents. They were religious
parents from that community in Maryland were saying that they
wanted their children to be able to opt out from
those lessons. I say, this is actually a bigger issue,
and it does give rise to what I think will
(40:56):
ultimately be a Supreme Court case. If a parent and
can opt out of individual lessons because it doesn't align
with their ideology, or their religious beliefs, or their values
at home, why can't they opt out of the entire system,
which we know is completely infused with left wing ideology
and anti religious bias.
Speaker 1 (41:15):
So is there any language in this ruling and in
this opinion that would lend itself towards that this is
now precedent?
Speaker 11 (41:24):
It is precedent, and the Supreme Court was very careful
to be narrow in its ruling. However, it does make sense,
and I think we can very easily demonstrate that teachers
when they are off script or through if you look
at what the Teachers' Union does in their trainings, it
is absolutely infused with political and left wing ideology. And
I know that are a lot of parents that are
(41:45):
concerned that it's not just in the curriculum, but it's
actually normalized in public schools, this left wing bias, the LGBTQ,
the gender ideology, and so many parents now are demanding
the ability to opt out, but not just to but
be able to take those funds with them and choose
the education that they believe as fit.
Speaker 1 (42:04):
It goes, it goes all the way back down to
the teacher schools, because you know, I always tell people,
you know, you're worried about the school you know, the schools,
but it's it comes.
Speaker 5 (42:12):
Down to or think about it. When you were in college,
who are the people that you knew that were going
to teaching.
Speaker 1 (42:17):
School like it was always the leftist it was always
like the far lefties that you knew, the lefties and lefties,
those are the ones that were going up.
Speaker 5 (42:24):
To be teachers.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
This is an issue by the way that you know,
I think at some point we're going to have to
address on the right because we.
Speaker 5 (42:32):
Need some kind of response to that well.
Speaker 11 (42:34):
And that's why in the schools that I have started,
several classical schools here in Florida and states around the
staff country, we do not hire graduates from teacher colleges.
For the most part, we hire that w math majors,
Science majors, History majors, English majors, and that's we used
to that a training program that helps them to teach
in a classroom. But I would much rather, even as
(42:55):
a parent, have someone who is seeped in content expertise
and then teach them how to teach that passion of theirs,
if they're passionate about history, rather than someone who's been
indoctrinated through a teacher college and really doesn't even know
mathematics themselves to teach.
Speaker 6 (43:08):
My children and hasn't worked in the public schools.
Speaker 11 (43:10):
Obviously, only a third of our children in America are
reading and doing mathematics proficiently, so we need to do
something different.
Speaker 3 (43:17):
We can start there, like you said, with where we're
sourcing our teachers.
Speaker 11 (43:19):
But next up, and thanks to the One Big Beautiful Bill,
we're taking a huge step on being able to enactul
choice across the country and bring free market competition so
that parents are going to have multiple high quality options.
Speaker 1 (43:32):
It's funny you mentioned about about students in this country,
because so my wife comes from Eastern Europe originally and
she kind of started her degree there, but then she
finished it here and she had a gap with ceter
let's get into all of it. But she had some
of the credits and transfer over. So she had to
take some American math classes at the college level. And
(43:52):
she goes into the class because she's.
Speaker 5 (43:54):
Got to get the credit. And she goes in. She's
real and she comes to me. She says, sweetheart, like,
this is what you're teaching at a college level. She said,
back home in Eastern you're a fool. This is what
we teach to like freshman high schoolers. This is you know,
not kids. But this is basic stuff and you're teaching
it in college. She said. It doesn't make any.
Speaker 7 (44:13):
Sense to me.
Speaker 11 (44:13):
It has been dumbed down. It's why dual enrollment is
so popular, because high performing high school students. We're actually
outsourcing high school math to the community colleges and to
the university, allowing them to duel enroll and get college
credit because the high school mathematics courses are not challenging
enough for our right as students, and they have to
move on and do college work. But that college work is,
(44:34):
as you said, more like high school level. What our
children should be learning in high school, and they're not. Unfortunately,
even in grade levels like tenth grade level mathematics, our
students are not at a tenth grade level when they
graduate high school. When we talk about our test scores,
we're usually testing at a tenth grade level, not a
twelfth grade level, where we say a third of our
(44:55):
students are doing math officially right.
Speaker 1 (44:57):
And then so those are going into college, then you
want to take anything with stem They've You've basically got
to start at the beginning.
Speaker 5 (45:03):
They're total. You're behind anyone who's already coming ahead of that.
Speaker 11 (45:07):
Yeah, And that's why we have to completely reform the system.
I mean, people say that I want to destroy public
education because I promote school choice, that I promote the
ability to vote with your feet and take of funding
with you, And I say, I'm not trying to actually
destroy public education, but I am trying to destroy the
monopoly that the government enjoys in public education. Because the
monopoly is what is lowering the quality for everyone. It
(45:30):
does that in any industry, why wouldn't it happen in education?
And we're not getting the innovation and the quality and
the access that we could have in a free market system.
So thanks to President Trump, the school choice president, we're
going to have a lot more opportunity for that in
the future.
Speaker 5 (45:45):
Eric Donalds, where can people go to follow you at.
Speaker 11 (45:48):
Eric Donald's Erico with a K no C on Twitter,
on all social media, and Ericadonalds dot com if you
want to get in touch with me, but definitely follow
what we're doing because there are a lot of great wins,
especially in the Trump and iministration, that are empowering parents
to choose the education that's best for their children.
Speaker 5 (46:04):
God bless thank you so much, Thank you,