Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
This is what happens when the fourth Turning meets fifth
generation warfare, A.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Commentator, international social media sensation and form a Navy intelligence veteran.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
This is Human Events with your host Jack Posovic christ
Is King.
Speaker 4 (00:25):
There's also an effort by the media to sort of
say the Elon era is over, and I think that's
actually totally wrong. Now he has obviously a day job,
and he's got to go back to his day job
to run his companies. But the doje effort will continue.
Elon will continue to be an important advisor for both
me and the president, and most importantly, the job, the
job of making the government more efficient, of not wasting
(00:47):
people's money, that has to continue.
Speaker 5 (00:49):
And a federal appeals court has restored the president's reciprocal
tariffs against other nations.
Speaker 6 (00:54):
This comes one day after another panel of judges blocked.
Speaker 5 (00:57):
Them in Trump will be in Pennsylvania for a rally.
This follows a deal for Japan based Nippon Steel to
invest in US Steal. Trump had initially pledged to block
the takeover of the Pittsburgh based US Steel, but now
he says there's an agreement for partial ownership. It's not
clear how ownership would be structured. Today's rally will be
at the US Steel Works in West Mifflin.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
The Trump administration is changing leadership at Immigration and Customs
Enforcement or ICE due to frustrations over the lack of
arrests and deportations.
Speaker 6 (01:26):
Stephen Miller said it out loud earlier this week, in
which he said he expects the administration in ICE to
up its numbers of arrests and deportations to upwards of
three thousand arrests a day. That's certainly a number that
President Trump has focused on. He said he wanted to
see more.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Bernie Carrick, the fortieth Commissioner of the NYPD, has died.
A longtime New York cop and correction officer, kerk took
his position in the annals of New York history as
police commissioner on the city's darkest day, September eleventh.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
Ladies do and welcome on board today 'sition Human Events
Daily here live from Budapest, Hungary. Today is May thirtieth,
twenty twenty five Anno Domini, and today we pause to
honor Titan Warrior patriot. Former NYPD Commissioner Bernie Carrick has
passed away at sixty nine after a private battle with illness.
(02:19):
Bernie Carrick he wasn't just a cop. He was a
force of nature, a man who stared down chaos and
said not on my watch. And got to meet Bernie
many times, and he's always been an incredible force in
this movement, an incredible force for MAGA, and incredible force
for this country. Bernie was appointed by Rudy Giuliani at
(02:42):
the helm of the NYPD in the year two thousand.
New York was already on the men, but he kicked
it an overdrive. Under his leadership, violent crime down sixty
three percent, murders slashed seventy percent. He didn't just police,
He reshaped the city's soul streets, safe for families, for
(03:02):
Americans with dreams us his time as Corrections Commissioner, same story,
he turned one of the world's most dangerous jail systems
into a model of order. It's not a policy that's grit, vision, guts.
Let me tell you something. You think Luigi would have
been able to get that shot off under Bernie.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
No way, guys.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
And then came nine to eleven, a day that broke
America's heart. Bernie was at ground zero within minutes, covered
in ash, coordinating the greatest rescue mission in history, standing
shoulder to shoulder with Mayor Giuliani, steady hand in the storm,
leading fifty five thousand officers through hell itself, who saved lives.
(03:47):
He didn't flinch, he didn't falter. He was there doing
what heroes do, putting others first. That's why Queen Elizabeth
honored him. That's why he earned over one hundred medals.
That's why you're in the NYPD Medal for Honor, and
that's why he was America's top prop and Bernie demand
high school dropout from Patterson, New Jersey, flawed his way
(04:09):
up from nothing, an army vet who served in South Korea.
Father a friend. Rudy Giuliani called him a brother, said
he made him braver, and it said that Eric Adams,
the current mayor former kop himself, actually visited Bernie in
his final hours, calling him a friend to thirty years.
His legacy isn't just medals or stats. It's in the lives.
(04:31):
He saved, the city, he rebuilt the courage he inspired.
Rest easy, Commissioner, Your watch has ended, but your light
earns on.
Speaker 7 (05:05):
Nothing will stand in our way and our golden age
has just begun.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
This is Human Events with Jack Posovic. Now it's time
for everyone to understand what America first truly means. Welcome
to the Second American Revolution. All right, folks, we're back
real America's voice, live on the Salem Radio Network, hour
three at the Charlie Kirk Program. Jack Pasovac here live
(05:30):
from Budapest, Hungary. Going to go very quickly in a
minute to our interview with the political editor of bray
Bart News, Matthew Boyle. But first, folks, listen up, because
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(06:37):
Stop waiting, Wake up, Welcome now back to the program.
It is Matt Boyle. Matt, you're the bureau chief over
there at Breitbart. I've got to ask you for Washington DC,
the big beautiful bill, questions about spending, cuts, questions about doze,
will it pass the Senate? President Trump, Stephen Miller getting
into it with a number of senators on this thing.
(07:00):
What's your take on all of it?
Speaker 8 (07:02):
Yeah, well, look, I mean it's a first off, Speaker
Johnson and the House Republicans deserve a lot of credit
for getting this out of the House of Representatives. I
told the Speaker, you know, after it passed, I congratulated
him and told them that it was exciting that they
got it done. As President Trump likes to say under
budget and ahead of schedule, right like.
Speaker 9 (07:23):
So that's the first step here.
Speaker 8 (07:26):
Now there's some things the Senate's going to clean up
on this whole thing, right So, first and foremost, the
House bill blocks medicaid access to rural hospitals. I would
imagine that the Senate's going to clean that up. Senator
Josh Holly, one of the leading America First Senators.
Speaker 9 (07:41):
Is leading the way on that.
Speaker 8 (07:43):
There's some other things that were tucked in there that
the Senate's probably going to clean up. But for the
most part, I would imagine that the bill looks a
lot like what the bill that passed the House is
as it makes it through the Senate. I would expect
because I've spoken to the Senate Majority Leader John Thune
I interviewed about a month ago. He told me that
if the House hit its timeline, and they did by
(08:05):
a Memorial Day, that he believes that the Senate would
possibly be able to get this thing done and off
to the President by about July fourth, which would start
the two hundred and fiftieth year of the United States
of America with a big economic boom.
Speaker 9 (08:21):
So that's the target date.
Speaker 8 (08:23):
It looks like is they want to get this done
by Independence Day, so hopefully the Senate will be able
to rock and roll on this.
Speaker 9 (08:30):
Now.
Speaker 8 (08:31):
I've seen the debate recently the past several days.
Speaker 9 (08:35):
Over whether or not the dose stuff should be in here.
Speaker 8 (08:38):
Now, look, first off, the dose stuff is admirable, everything
that Elon Musk uncovered at the Department of Government Efficiency.
They need to figure out a way to quantify that stuff.
That's a separate debate than the reconciliation, the big beautiful bill.
The reconciliation, they're using budget gimmicks to get around Senate
(09:00):
rules so that way they can get the tax stuff
into law by getting around the sixty vote rule in
the Senate, and they can do it with a simple majority.
To do that, they have to get past the Senate parliamentarian.
There's all sorts of different trickery and things that they
have to do there. That means that they can't do
(09:21):
what are called discretionary spending cuts. They can do mandatory
spending cuts. Steven Miller has made this pretty clear. He's
a president senior advisor in the White House. He's talked
about this, and he's got a long history in the Senate.
I've known Steven Miller, a good dating back more than
a decade.
Speaker 9 (09:37):
One of the smartest people you'll ever talk to.
Speaker 8 (09:40):
But the point is is that the reconciliation stuff, they
have to focus on the mandatory stuff. The dose stuff
is discretionary spending things, so like things like you know,
I'm being over simplistic here, but teaching monkeys how to
blow bubbles or something, right like, that's the stuff that
goes in the appropriations process.
Speaker 9 (10:00):
Separate fight.
Speaker 8 (10:01):
That is the government funding fight that comes after the
big beautiful bill. So they've got to do the big
beautiful bill to lock in the twenty seventeen tax rates,
do the no tax on tips, no tax on overtime,
all that kind of stuff, as well as a lot
of the other things that the President has in there,
like the immigration enforcement, the energy stuff, etc. They get
that stuff through Congress, then they're going to come back.
(10:24):
The government is funded until the end of September, so
then the Congress is gonna in July start the process
really of what's called the appropriations process.
Speaker 9 (10:36):
There's multiple ways you can fund the government.
Speaker 8 (10:39):
You can fund the government through a continuing resolution or
an omnibus spending bill. That's the way Congress has done
it for the last like thirty years. Conservatives of long
belief that we should go back to the way we
used to do it, which was the twelve different appropriations bills.
Speaker 9 (10:54):
The House Appropriations Chairman Tom.
Speaker 8 (10:57):
Cole, he has signaled that they want to go back
to the twelve appropriations bills and that he hopes that
the Appropriations Committee will have them through their committee at
least and maybe even the House by the end of July,
setting up a showdown with the Senate Democrats. But that's
where it's. The appropriations process is where whether it be
(11:20):
an individual appropriations bills or an omnibus or a cr
where you would see the Doge recommendations implemented into law,
because they need to get it to the through the
full Senate with the sixty votes.
Speaker 9 (11:36):
That sets up a showdown with the Senate.
Speaker 8 (11:38):
Democrats and the Congressional Democrats in the House side, but
particularly the Senate because if you do have a funding plan,
let's say, you know, you get close to or a
little over a majority of the Senate Democrats on board,
you're gonna need at least seven if you had all
fifty three Republicans, maybe even.
Speaker 9 (12:02):
Into double digits.
Speaker 8 (12:03):
It just depends on the actual vote numbers that you
have in the end of Democrats in the Senate to
vote for this in the end. So that's the fight,
right Like, So, if you want to see the dose
stuff implemented, and I think a lot of people out
there do, you've got to really lean on the Appropriations
Committee guys, and particularly in the House, because that's where
this part process is going to start. So Tom Cole
(12:25):
is the chairman of that committee. He's from Oklahoma, He's
been a longtime House Republican, an interesting guy. He really
likes the process and the nitty gritty of the House
of Representatives and views himself kind of like that, like
a protector of the rules and the like a Dean
of the House.
Speaker 9 (12:41):
Et cetera. But the real fight is going to be with.
Speaker 8 (12:46):
Those guys like John Rutherford and Mike Simpson and these
other members of the Appropriations Committee. They're the ones who
are going to decide if Elon Musk's work makes it into.
Speaker 9 (12:58):
Federal law or not.
Speaker 8 (12:59):
Right, So, do the House Appropriations Committee members go for this,
and then if they get it into the House bills
and they pass them out of the.
Speaker 9 (13:08):
House, the various cuts that dose recommended.
Speaker 8 (13:12):
Then they have to go through the Senate as well,
and that's an even tougher process.
Speaker 9 (13:17):
But the but the so the question is is do.
Speaker 8 (13:20):
The Republicans have uh, particularly these Appropriations Committee guys. So
I mean I would literally say that the person or
persons who are responsible for whether or not DOGE succeeds
are the House Appropriations Committee Republicans, right like so John
(13:40):
Rutherford comes to mind, congressman from northeast Florida, total establishment
guy by the way, And uh, you.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Know, folks, folks, this railroad deservative explain, this is where
you need to put the pressure if you want to
see those DOGE cuts in like we all do. That's
where the pressure needs to be. And that's what Matt
is explaining to us here. It goes through the appropriations process. Matt,
I know you got to run. I wish we could
hold you on for longer because you're a wealth of
(14:10):
information on this. Where can people go to follow you
who want more information on this?
Speaker 8 (14:15):
Yeah, just go to brightbart dot com. Our team is
working around the clock. And also I'm on excet mboil
one and uh yeah, and Jack, I'm happy to come
back soon and talk more about it.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Let's get him back on when I'm I'm back in
the States and you're around. We're gonna have to do
an entire episode on how to make the Doge, but
it's permanent with Matt Boyle and probably a few other
things as well. This is Jack Pasobic. We are live
from Budapest, Hungary. You America's voice Dale Radio quick Break.
Speaker 9 (15:14):
There's a violation of the agreement.
Speaker 10 (15:16):
Yeah, can you give us an update to the latest
ceasefire agreement that Israel has agreed to.
Speaker 9 (15:22):
But I'm still still considering.
Speaker 7 (15:24):
Well, they're very close to an agreement on gossip and
we'll let you know about it during the day or
maybe tomorrow. And we have a chance of that. I
think we have a chance of making a deal with Ronalds.
They don't want to be blown up. They would rather
make a deal, and I think that could happen in
the not too distant future. That would be a great thing,
And we could have a deal without bombs being dropped
(15:45):
all over the Middle East.
Speaker 9 (15:46):
That would be a very good thing.
Speaker 11 (15:48):
They can't. We want them, we want them to be safe.
We want them to have a very very successful nation.
Let it be a great nation. But we can't have that.
They cannot have a nuclear weapons. Very simple, and I
think we're fairly close to a deal with.
Speaker 9 (16:04):
Question for you.
Speaker 12 (16:06):
You you said just now that you look forward to
being a friend and advisor to the president.
Speaker 3 (16:10):
So do you expect to continue advising the president.
Speaker 12 (16:14):
And Dove informally or are you going to sort of
shift your bobes entirely to your companies.
Speaker 13 (16:21):
Well, I expect to continue to provide advice whenever the
President would like advice. I mean, I'm yeah, it's I
expect to remain a friend and an advisor, and certainly
if there's anything the President wants me to do, I'm
at the president service.
Speaker 10 (16:41):
You said that there was a trillion dollar promise FORCUS.
Speaker 13 (16:44):
Yes, I think we do expect over time to achieve
the trillion dollars.
Speaker 14 (16:47):
But what have you found in your time here?
Speaker 10 (16:50):
Was the biggest roadblock to getting those cuts?
Speaker 14 (16:52):
Was it the cabinet, or was in Congress or something else?
What was the biggest roadblock.
Speaker 3 (16:57):
From your work?
Speaker 13 (16:58):
It's mostly just a lot of work. It's it's really
not any anyone personal Congress. It's going through really millions
of line items and saying just each one of them
makes sense or does not make sense. Obviously, at times
when you cut expenses, those who are receiving the money,
whether they received whether they were saving that money legitimately
(17:19):
or not, they do complain. And you're not going to
hear someone confessing that they received money inappropriately. Never, They're
going to always say that they received money appropriately for
an important course.
Speaker 3 (17:30):
Naturally, that's what you'd expect. But so we just got
to go.
Speaker 7 (17:35):
You know that you talk about influencers, these are influencers
and they're friends of mine.
Speaker 9 (17:41):
Jack, break down.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Our folks, Jack Cvic were back here. Real America's Boys.
Salem Radio Network want to bring on now Libby Emmons.
She's the editor in chief of the Human Events and
the post Millennial, where the post Millennial has been far
and away the lead outlet reporting on this massive confrontation
(18:09):
between Christians, Antifa and the mayor of Seattle. Libby, thank
you so much for the coverage. Of course, the great
Katie Davis Court, who is doing incredible field journalism down there,
and you walk us through what the post Millennial is
uncovering and what the current status of this story has been.
Speaker 12 (18:27):
Yeah, So, Katie and Ari Hoffman, I got to give
shout outs to them for doing great.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
Every story great.
Speaker 12 (18:34):
On Tuesday night, there was a protest outside City Hall
where Christians showed up to demand the resignation of the mayor,
Mayor Bruce Howell, who had sided with Antifa during In
the aftermath of protests on Saturday, and the whole thing
there really got a.
Speaker 14 (18:53):
Little out of control.
Speaker 12 (18:54):
So some Christians the group called Mayday USA their staging
events concerts Christian concerts in five cities I think across
the country.
Speaker 14 (19:03):
Antifa showed up.
Speaker 12 (19:04):
This was in cal Anderson Park, which of course you
know was the site of the Chaz occupation in twenty
twenty during.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
Ours in cal Anderson Park.
Speaker 12 (19:18):
Yeah, cal Anderson Park, So yeah, the concert was held there,
and Bruce Harrold came out and said that this far
right rally was held intentionally in cal Anderson Park to
antagonize the LGBT.
Speaker 14 (19:32):
Community and our trans neighbors.
Speaker 12 (19:35):
In fact, it was later revealed that the Mayor's office
had recommended cal Anderson Park as a place to hold
this concert, and the organizers had originally suggested Pike Street
by the famous Pike Place market, and they were denied
a permit.
Speaker 14 (19:50):
For that location.
Speaker 12 (19:52):
And the Yeah, the mayor's office literally recommended the park
that Harol then said was an affront to trans neighbors
and the GBT community.
Speaker 14 (20:01):
So that's insane.
Speaker 12 (20:02):
In response, I think twenty three people were arrested on
Saturday from Antifa from that counter protest on Tuesday.
Speaker 14 (20:10):
This is something Katie Davis Corr was covering at city Hall.
Speaker 12 (20:13):
Pastors and Christians went to protest Mayor Bruce Harrell, you know,
religious discrimination, all the rest of it, in addition.
Speaker 14 (20:20):
To the complete and total hypocrisy.
Speaker 12 (20:22):
And there were more people arrested on Tuesday night in Seattle,
and Katie was out there covering it.
Speaker 14 (20:30):
That was absolute madness as well.
Speaker 12 (20:33):
Since then, it's been revealed that Bruce Harrel was arrested
in nineteen ninety six for brandishing a firearm and a
pregnant woman in a casino parking lot over a parking space.
Speaker 14 (20:46):
Yeah, the current mayor of Seattle.
Speaker 12 (20:48):
In his former life, I guess, as some kind of gambler,
a gambler with a gun in his car.
Speaker 14 (20:55):
I think that was in Utah. Yeah, so that's a
little nuts.
Speaker 12 (20:59):
Also, his former police chief, who he appointed in twenty
twenty two, is suing him for wrongful termination and all
kinds of other things, lack of due process and termination
in that case, and also saying that the mayor was
trying to get him to fire people without due process.
Speaker 14 (21:16):
So there's an awful lot unfolding with this guy. I
don't know how Seattle just keeps getting the worst leadership
in the country. It's pretty shocking.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
Well, and we saw with Mayor Jenny Durkin. The problem
is not the police, and so many people say oh,
or blaming the police, blaming the police, or blaming the
residents of the business owners being there with my brother
when the various car lots were being assaulted and attacked
and fires were set and guns brandished by ras Simone
(21:52):
and others during the Chaz incident. And the issue is
of course that people keep voting for the same far
left politicians over and over again, even though it's been
demonstrably proven where these policies lead. And unfortunately it's also
(22:12):
because the main Seattle Times, of course, will lie about
these things over and over and over and only ever
tell the truth until the very bitter end. And that's
why we need outlets like the Post Millennial and the
great reportage of Katie Davis Court or hopping at so
many others tell the actual story.
Speaker 14 (22:36):
Yeah, that's one hundred percent true.
Speaker 12 (22:38):
I really have a lot of respect for the reporters
that go out into the street and cover this stuff
from the ground.
Speaker 14 (22:43):
It's where you.
Speaker 12 (22:44):
Can really see what's going on, and it's not the
kind of coverage that you tend to get from the
major news outlets that hang back and you know, put
on their makeup and stand on the sidelines a couple of.
Speaker 14 (22:55):
Days later, you know, with their with their mic and
their camera guys.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
So I have a lot of appreciation marking the post
millennial after you bookmarks Human Events Dot as well. Shout
out by the way to front Lines Jonathan Choey. He's
been out there as well from the TPUSA team. Great guy,
great colleague, great man to have in the fight. Will
be right back, Jack pasobc and Libby Emmons. I'm live
in Budapest, Hungary, which he's home in the United States
(23:21):
of America. Real Americus Voice, Salem Radio Network, right back.
Speaker 9 (23:47):
He's got a company that does that.
Speaker 7 (23:48):
He's got so many different companies, Starlink as an example,
he saved a lot of lives, probably hundreds of lives
in North Carolina. I don't even know if you remember,
but I called you. They needed Starlak in North Carolina
and I didn't know what.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
The hell star Link was. I said, what is it?
Speaker 7 (24:05):
Who owns it? He said, do you know Elon Musk?
I said, you happen to know the gentleman. This was
before his government stay, and they said, we really need
it because North Carolina was literally became an island. There
was people had no communication, they had no access to anything,
and they were dying. And I call up Elon and
you can't get it because it's our success was very
(24:26):
hard to get and he had so much of it
brought over there and they told me it was unbelievable.
Saved a lot of lives. So, you know, he's just
done a lot of things. I don't think, frankly, I
don't think he gets credit for what it's done. But
he's and he's a very good person too. If he
wasn't a good person, if he wasn't it, but he
did the same things. You know, I probably maybe speak differently.
(24:48):
He happens to be a really good person who loves
the country.
Speaker 10 (24:54):
Bill, you had indicated this week that there was some
things you didn't like about what had passed in the House.
Which changes do you want to see? You had also
indicated there are things you didn't like about the bill.
What would you be suggesting you push senators to change
their version.
Speaker 7 (25:09):
Well, I'll tell you I'll go first.
Speaker 9 (25:11):
It's an unbelievable bill.
Speaker 7 (25:13):
It cuts your deficits, it cuts you know, it's.
Speaker 9 (25:15):
A huge cutting.
Speaker 7 (25:16):
But there's things i'd like to see, maybe cut a
little bit more. I'd like to see a bigger cut
in taxes. It's going to be the largest tax decrease
or cut in the history of our country. I'd like
to see it get down to an even lower number.
I was shooting for a slightly lower number. I would
have liked to have done that. But with all of
(25:37):
that being said, when you look at the tax cut
and the fact that the original tax cut which made
us us we had the most successful four years in
the history of our country the economy, and this is
going to be even better. And you see that by
the reports that came out just yesterday or tonight, I
guess they were released this morning at eight o'clock. You
see the kind of numbers where somebody that's a pro
(25:59):
is like, whoa, I haven't seen numbers like this since
I've been doing this.
Speaker 9 (26:03):
You know, these are Jack. Where's Jack? Where's Jack?
Speaker 8 (26:09):
Where is he?
Speaker 15 (26:11):
Jack?
Speaker 11 (26:11):
I want to see you.
Speaker 7 (26:14):
Great job, Jack, Thank you.
Speaker 6 (26:16):
What a job you do.
Speaker 9 (26:18):
You know, we have an incredible thing.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
We're always talking about the.
Speaker 7 (26:20):
Fake news and the band, but we have guys, and
these are the guys should be getting.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
Policieski, all right, folks are back. Jack Bezobak Heir live Budapest, Hungary.
Want to go now to a clip of me and
my talk earlier today, Seeback Hungry.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
Well, good morning everybody. Wow.
Speaker 16 (26:38):
Uh, it's been two years ago. We've talked last time
two years already.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
And remember and I remember the last time I was
here in Budapest, I said, and many people weren't sure
about this at the time, and it's it's incredible to
be here every time I speak.
Speaker 3 (26:53):
But I said here two years ago that Donald J.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
Trump will return as president of the United States of America.
And I'm here to report back that yes, not only
has he returned, he won the popular vote. He won
seven out of seven of the swing states. He won
the electoral College, the Senate, and the House of Representatives
and survived two assassination attempts when he did so, So
(27:17):
I think he's outperformed all of our wildest expectations. Well done.
Speaker 16 (27:22):
And back two years ago, the main topic of the
discussion was common sense. Yes, and as we see, common
sense probably started to come back to the United States
to the high time that it comes back in Europe.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
To Europe.
Speaker 16 (27:37):
But my idea for today's discussion was and is a
little bit different now, okay, and that is, but common
sense is bumping into it anyhow. So it's how you
experience the walkway of governance actually on a thing coming
to the lights, your president, those who started to take
(28:00):
positions in the administration president Trump.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
President Trump has common sense and wokeness has nonsense.
Speaker 3 (28:08):
That's right.
Speaker 16 (28:08):
But the thing is we here in Hungary in Europe,
as a matter of fact, see that whenever a conservative
right wing government comes and starts talking common sense and
start working for the people, they immediately start denying everything.
So the name of the game is whatever we do,
and this is the Hungarian experience for.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
The past fifteen years.
Speaker 16 (28:28):
By now they say no and paraphrasing one famous phrase,
their way and their approach to governance is not of
the people, not by the people, and not for the people.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
Ah, yes, well, we had an issue. So and I
had the opportunity to speak with great Leader Prime Minister
orbon here just yesterday in an interview that will be
released later today, and I asked him about this question, because,
as it turns out, we were not sure exactly who
was the president of the United States the last four years,
(29:07):
because we were told that it was Joe Biden, and
it turns out.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
That his brain was not quite capable all the.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Time, and instead he was using this auto pen to
sign his documents, and we're not entirely sure who was
in control of the autopen So to take your phrase
and this classic phrase and turn it around, instead of
having the government of the people, by the people and
for the people, we had the government of the pen,
(29:36):
by the pen for the pen.
Speaker 16 (29:39):
What's your finding of the essence of the democratic way
of governance and the angos of the so called civil
society behind it, which obviously in brackets has nothing to
do with real civil society.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
So this is the George Soros model of government, where
when they say it's an open society, what they actually
mean is that it's open for the bureaucrats and the
plutocrats and the technocrats, and it is open to all
manner of special interests other than the actual people of
the nation itself, because it serves the NGOs, it serves
(30:14):
the Soros level, it serves the bureaucracy level, the special interests,
the corporate level, the multinationals.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
But it doesn't serve the people.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
And so when you have these governments like the one
that we just experienced in the United States for four years,
this was not government of the people. So of course
this raises many questions for democracy. Who is actually representing
the people, who has been elected by them, who has
been empowered by them?
Speaker 3 (30:40):
So sovereign rights.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
Of the leader should derive from the people in a democracy.
This is the basic philosophy of a democratic government. However,
if that sovereignty instead is given away to say courts,
as we've seen in the United States, academia, unelected experts,
unelected bureaucracy, well then you don't have a democracy at
all anymore. What you have is an oligarchy, and an
(31:04):
oligarchic where a system whereby in the faces change at
the top, but the actual power structure never changes. I
would argue that unfortunately, this system of the pen by
the pen for the pen isn't just happening in the
United States, or it was happening in the United States.
(31:25):
We see this across Europe as well, in many not
this country, by the way, but in many countries in
Western Europe you see the exact same problem, where they
change chancellors or they change prime ministers, but the policies
don't change. They keep allowing for a war in Ukraine,
which is unwinnable at this point, it was unwinnable from
(31:45):
the start. To continue, they keep escalating the war towards
nuclear confrontation with Russia, and they continue the mass importation
of migrants from the Third World, illegal migrants in many cases,
economic migrants, and others. And when you change the nature
of the people, then you change the country itself. If
you replace the people of Hungary, then it would no
(32:07):
longer be Hungry. If you replace the people of Poland,
it would no longer be Poland.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
If you replace the people of.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
America, would no longer be America. And yet for those
in power, this seems to be their specific goal.
Speaker 16 (32:18):
How do you think it's possible to deconstruct what's being
built for the past couple of decades by now.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
So in the United States we're facing the same issue.
In Europe, obviously there's many issues as well. We don't
have a European Union structure like most of Europe does now.
The UK, of course pulled out in the Brexit situation,
and yet you notice, even though the people of the
UK voted to leave the European Union, I don't think
the leaders of the UK have actually listened to them,
(32:46):
and so they still keep trying to make these secret
deals to stay in in many ways, and I certainly,
by the way, support the efforts of Nigel Farage, who
will be the next Prime Minister of the UK, in
order to complete.
Speaker 3 (32:59):
The Breggs situation and sever that.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
In the United States, it's it's a complicated process, but
it's simple. The issue is that sovereign the sovereign power
of the United States, which should be installed in the
elected representatives. So the people of have chosen the president,
the people have chosen the House, the Senate, that's our Congress.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
And then those that go and employ the judges.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
The problem is is that sovereignty has essentially leaked out
like a boat with a leak in it, and so
the sovereignty has leaked into these other institutions NGOs, universities,
media corporations, which are receiving taxpayer dollars. And so this
tax money which is flowing, yes from Soros to some extent,
(33:43):
but the major goal of what he does is to
bring taxpayer dollars to these institutions, which then become the
lifeblood of what I call the enemies of the republic,
the enemies of a small are republican government. And so
what we must do then is to sever this link,
sever it and cut it off. And you're seeing that
(34:05):
now with President Trump in his direct efforts against the
Ivy League universities, against Harvard University banning foreign students because
this is a major source of income for them, but
all federal dollars that are going to these engines of
the anti in philosophical terms, you would call it anti
(34:27):
democratic institutions. This link must be severed. And this is
why you see so much anger from them when he
goes after this. Actually, there are some issues, some of
the woke issues trans issue. He knows there was not
much response when Trump cut the trans programs. They were
not upset about this. Why they're more upset about the money.
(34:49):
If you can follow the money and sever this connection,
cut off all of it from them, then you can
really really break away their power structure. And on the
other side of that, in the United States, we have
the issue of these district judges have gone completely radical
and their decisions to countermand the executive. This is a
complete abrogation of their constitutional duties.
Speaker 3 (35:11):
They are stepping on the rights of the executive.
Speaker 16 (35:14):
The United States has long standing and very strict laws
on transparency, especially with the special regard to money coming
from abroad. And you see the voices the screams coming
out of Hungarian politics and European politics when the Hungarian
government and the Hungarian Parliament is trying to make political money,
(35:37):
who is talking transparent? You know, by Hungarian law, it's
strictly forbidden for political parties to receive any kind of
foreign money, full stop. When we started to introduce new measures,
which is requiring the very same actually from so called
civil society and anyone who is dealing with public affairs,
(35:58):
you see this outcry. One element is that you have
to have stricter rules and transparency rules installed on the
ground and very obviously it's an institutional process, but you,
as an experienced influencer and the user of the social media,
is it the way out of this kind of deadlock
or fading kind of democracy that you speak talk to
(36:21):
the people directly, and that is through social media.
Speaker 1 (36:24):
What is through social media and social media has been incredible,
and I'm very supportive of everything that Elon Musk has
done to free speech across the Internet through his purchase
of X. You mentioned about the money, the foreign money
that goes from NGOs, the civil society programs. If you
have a civil society program in your country, you must
(36:46):
shut it down immediately. You must shut it down, you
must ban it, you must take all of its assets
and completely dissolve it. Because this exists only to undermine
the will of the people, to undermine governments, and to
serve this transnational, trans global agenda. These are the greatest
threats to actual democracy in our nation.
Speaker 3 (37:07):
We see this.
Speaker 1 (37:08):
They support illegal aliens, they support the flow of illegal
migrants across our southern border.
Speaker 3 (37:14):
They support the up ending of the rule of law
throughout our states.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
If you remove these civil society programs, what you're doing
is you're taking away their ability to fund these revolutionary
programs and what we're actually seeing with these civil society programs.
They have the nicest names in the world, but what
they are in essence are a form of neo Marxism
to serve as a way to destabilize countries, destabilize the
(37:40):
rule of law, and agitate for an irregular form of
revolutionary governments.
Speaker 16 (37:47):
Well, as always, it's very easy to talk to you
and with you about these issues because we well straightforward,
what do you suggest is going to be the agenda
for the upcoming say, in the United States, we already
see the first obstacles emerging or trying to emerge in
face of the President's effort. And what's your estimation of
(38:10):
European democracy for the upcoming months.
Speaker 1 (38:12):
Well, I certainly hope that the populist nationalist revolution that
has been headed by President Trump in the United States,
you see populist nationalists in Poland, and of course the
great leadership of Victor orbon I hope that it spreads
across all of Europe, whether it's IFDA in Germany, whether
it's Nigel Faraj in the UK and so many Robert
(38:33):
Fitzo and Slovakia who came and spoke here just yesterday.
I hope and pray that the People's parties are able
to take back national sovereignty, national identity, and remind the
people of Europe of the essential truth of our people,
that Jesus Christ is our king, and that God must
(38:54):
return to the very center of our way of life.
Jack is a great guy.
Speaker 7 (39:12):
He's written that fantastic book, everybody's talking about it, Go
get it.
Speaker 1 (39:16):
And he's been my friend right from the beginning of
this whole beautiful event.
Speaker 16 (39:20):
And we're going to turn it around and make our
gusty ready to get him.
Speaker 4 (39:23):
Amen. At Turning Point USA, what we are doing every
single day, we are dedicating ourselves at our staff, at
our students, and our activists for a full revival of America.
Speaker 17 (39:37):
Get ready to launch into the future of freedom. At
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we're bringing in the biggest voices in the movement, featuring
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Speaker 13 (40:28):
When I'm working long hours, I'm always listening to Human
Events with Jack Pasobic.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
All right, folks, we're back here Human Events Daily Live, Budapest, Hungary.
We have a very special guest joining us live in studio.
Speaker 3 (40:40):
It is the.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
Lovely Tanya Taye Pasobic. What's up, sweetheart?
Speaker 15 (40:44):
Thank you for having me on.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
Oh yeah, well, we we've made it. Whenever we're in Budapest,
I always have you on the show, and it's become
like a you know, kind of a tradition. So we're
here again and I have you on again. And you
had a really interesting yes yesterday. And we've been sort
of going around Budapest and we're doing Seatback Hungary, but
you've also been spending some time with the kids, and
(41:06):
I try to poke in and out when I can,
when I can sneak away. But you had something you
said about how Budapest under Victor Orban's government, they're talking
about the family policies pro family, and you were saying
how Budapest and Hungary in general are extremely family friendly.
Speaker 15 (41:23):
Well, that's correct, and what I hear from many young
couples is that they're holding off having children is because
having a child is so expensive, starting from all the necessities,
I mean, forget about all the entertainment. So it came
to a pleasant surprise to me when we went to
the local zoo, by the way, the oldest in Hungary
(41:46):
and once the oldest in the world, so really amazing.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
Experience, like museums and the zoo combined. I've never really
seen something like that, and so the.
Speaker 15 (41:57):
Entrance ticket price was so cheap.
Speaker 1 (42:00):
Computer playgrounds too, I'm being.
Speaker 15 (42:02):
Told the very many playgrounds.
Speaker 1 (42:03):
By our Human Events Daily junior producer. Do you want
to come over here, junior producer, Let's get our junior
producers over here. Come on, junior producers. He come on
all the way in. Come on, and even bold producer
Bulldog is here as well.
Speaker 15 (42:18):
So it was so cheap for a family of four
to visit at Louis in Hungary. We paid about forty
five dollars for four of us, which was amazing, really
good surprise.
Speaker 1 (42:33):
A little some fights with the monkey bars earlier earlier
this week. But but aj U won, right, you want
that fight now? Let me ask you boys, and jack
jackets here as well. It was it was very cheap.
But Jack Jack, let me ask you. Did you have
a great time at that zoo? Oh?
Speaker 3 (42:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (42:52):
What did you like about the zoo?
Speaker 8 (42:54):
So?
Speaker 1 (42:57):
So?
Speaker 15 (42:57):
I like the giraffe, then museums. I looked like that
exercise thing when the skeleton was doing it like it
was like there's.
Speaker 1 (43:06):
A thing where there was a It's it's so interactive.
It's hard to explain. But it's an interactive museum set
up in Budapest where you even have we even have
the ability to uh ride a bike and hands on.
So he was riding a bike and there was a
skeleton attached to the bike, riding its own bike, and
you could power that skeleton right and it would move
(43:29):
when you moved. Pretty cool. Aj What did you like
about that zoo?
Speaker 15 (43:34):
Do see these bulls and that zoo?
Speaker 1 (43:37):
The bulls at the zoo? Yeah, the African bulls. That
was pretty cool, wasn't it? And the tigers and lions,
and did bulldog have a good time at the zoo?
You guys might remember this is the bulldog Atto from
Praeger you kids, and AJ takes him absolutely e freewhere.
Speaker 15 (43:54):
It's probably the most traveled bulldog in the world.
Speaker 3 (43:56):
He just calls him bulldog.
Speaker 1 (43:58):
So so, dear, tell me a little bit else as
a mom, right as Amaha Mom, you've been talking about
how it's so family friendly here and have you really
experienced that in terms of park child facilities, everything you've
been seeing around town, Well.
Speaker 15 (44:13):
I really have. And something I haven't really noticed to
you haven't had a chance, is that yesterday we went
to the island here and the island had this incredible
dancing fountain and they had some music plane. We saw
so many kids just running around enjoying the music, dancing,
(44:36):
having fun, being outside with their parents, being outside, just
enjoying the beautiful weather, strolling, and it really gave me
that sense of how incredible it is that places like
this exist the right in the heart of the city.
You can just walk off, enjoy a beautiful day with kids,
do all the fun activities and don't have to break
(44:59):
the bank.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
Chi you know, always nice, see your travel.
Speaker 15 (45:02):
Very big part of raising chicks.
Speaker 1 (45:04):
Jack Jack, let me let me ask, let me interview you.
Do you think do you what's up, Doc. Do you
think Budapest is a good city for kids?
Speaker 5 (45:12):
Ye?
Speaker 1 (45:13):
Yeah, But do you have a lot of fun here?
I ad do you have a lot of fun in Budapest?
Speaker 15 (45:18):
Yes?
Speaker 16 (45:20):
Cool?
Speaker 1 (45:20):
Super cool? Wow, So Budapest was super cool, so incredible trip.
I want to say thank you again to Seedback Hungary
and all of the all of the folks there who
organize this. From the Posso family to all of you
and everyone watching around the world, thank you very much
for watching. Make sure your like and subscribe with Jack Jack.
(45:43):
Do you want to say like and subscribe?
Speaker 7 (45:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 15 (45:45):
I said, can you like it?
Speaker 1 (45:47):
Suscrab Human Events Daily. Wherever you get your podcast, make
sure you share this email US seventeen seventy six at
human events dot dot com human events dot we don't
give out the real emails directors, so coolly, gentlemen. As always,
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