Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:20):
Good evening, America, and welcome to the Wednesday edition of
justin News. No Noise. I'm your host, John Solomon.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Reporting you guys, always from the Nation's Capital and the
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Speaker 1 (00:29):
You know about this.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Wirefish Coffee is the official coffee of justin News, not
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(00:50):
just News at checkout and you'll be in business. All right,
We've only had seventeen days of the Trump presidency, and
already the world has changed is dramatically. Promises are being
delivered a record pace. Accountability is beating meeted out in today.
A little bit of indication. Just a few minutes ago
over at justinews dot com, we broke the story the
Office of Special Consul, the Whistleblower Protection Agency for federal
(01:13):
employees has concluded that those two IRIS whistleblowers we had
them here on the show A Mann and I did,
Joseph Ziegler and Gary Shapley, that they were wrongly retaliated
against by the IRS by being removed from the Hunter
Biden case and then also getting communications gagging them from
telling Congress and others about what they knew. According to
the OFFSE, that's a major finding. It's rare for the
(01:33):
OC to find that level of retaliation in a criminal case.
We have all the details over at Justice News. We
hope to get the whistleblowers or their lawyers on the
show tomorrow night. But in the meantime, that vindication raises
the question what will the accountability be? What will happen
to the prosecutors and the IRS officials who try to
retaliate and stop the Hunter Biden from getting the justice
(01:55):
he deserved. The letter we just got a hold of
raises that question. We'll see what the Justice Department said. Meanwhile,
the new Attorney General is quick on the job. Pam
Bondi started her job officially day after being sworn in,
and almost immediately she began to have a profound impact,
starting with the fact that she signed an order freezing
all Justice Department funds to sanctuary cities, creating accountability for
cities that won't cooperate with ICE or help get rid
(02:18):
of illegal aliens in the country. And secondly, she's reportedly
considering ordering all of her lieutenants to investigate the Trump cases,
all of them, including the New York hush money case,
to see if any improper politicalization went on inside the
Justice Department and the FBI. Amanda, Now that's accountability, that's vindication,
that's progress.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
I think the sort of things.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Americans are looking for when they've elected Donald Trump in November.
Speaker 3 (02:41):
Yeah, I guess all those potholes that I'm used to
dealing with in Los Angeles are not going to get
filled because the city of LA certainly can't afford to be.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
For it themselves. All Right, everybody.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
President Trump just a few hours ago signed his executive
order to keep men out of women's sports, and it
was received with much fanfare at the White House, with
all kinds of advocates for women's sports invited, including a
friend of this show, Riley Gaines. Here is what President
Trump said moments before signing the historic order.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Take look with this executive order, the war on women's
sports is over.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
I really like seeing all the little ones around him.
That was really nice.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
And speaking of federal funding, the President also warned schools
in America that they will not receive federal funding if
they allow men to.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
Take over women's sports.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
And I also want to get to the topic of
government spending, particularly to continue the conversation on USA, because
there's still no shortage of Democrats who are very upset
with what the Trump administration is.
Speaker 4 (03:44):
Doing in that agency.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
And you know, I would say more, but I saw
this great clip from Senator John Kennedy that kind of
sums up how a lot of folks are feeling.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
So I'll let him say it.
Speaker 5 (03:53):
Some of my colleagues are screaming like they're part of
the prison right, that this is unconstitutional and wrong, and
they're very processed driven. In my opinion, they should be
substance driven.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
By that.
Speaker 5 (04:13):
I mean, the central question here is what we spending
taxpayer money on.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
He always has such great sound bites, and he's also right.
Why is there no outrage over the clearly wasteful spending
from the Democrat side of the aisle. If they're hill
to die on is standing up for US eight and
spending one point five million dollars of American taxpayer money
to advance DEI in Serbia's workplaces, or forty seven thousand
dollars for a transgender opera in Colombia, all things that
(04:45):
US eight is really spending money on, according to the
Trump administration. I don't think it's going to work out
too well for them if that is their hill to
die on. All right, John, I think it's time to
get to our very first guests of the night, one
of our favorite folks.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
That's going on that topic, on the USAID.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Tomorrow, we're going to show how nine million dollars made
from USAID directly into an how kind affiliates and remarkable stories.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
A Justice Department case hasn't got a lot of tension,
and we're going to show.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
If you wonder why Democrats are whinding so much about USAD,
maybe it's because George show Us and his affiliates getting
a lot of money from there. We're going to have
all that tomorrow morning, Steve Richards, we'll have the story
in the site.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
We'll address it tomorrow night. All right.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
We've been talking about cutting spending for a long time.
It was only aspirational as long as Democrats are in
charge of the Senate and the White House. But now
with Donald Trump in the White House and Republic is
a control of both chambers. The spending acts is swinging quickly.
And our first guest tonight has been a champion, a
voice of reason, a voice of common sense and Congress
for a long time, and he's now going to get
(05:40):
his wish. He's going to be able to shrink government.
Joining us now from the great state of South Carolina
is Congressman Ralph Norman, Congress and great to see how
the show.
Speaker 6 (05:48):
Well, great to be with you, John and Amanda.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
I think of all the times we've had a chance
to talk to you, and all of the passion you've
had for cutting government and getting that wasteful spending and
that inflation, those interest rates down.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
You're now going to be able to do it.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
Bring us up to speed on all the products that's
going on behind the scenes in Congress.
Speaker 7 (06:04):
Well, first of all, when President Trump was elected, it
was like a black, black cloud had been lifted from
the American people.
Speaker 6 (06:10):
It was great.
Speaker 7 (06:11):
I wish every American could have been in the chambers
when he was elected. No, we're making progress. As each
of you know, reconciliation is once in a lifetime almost
We've never had that since I think since twenty seventeen.
We're coming together on some baseline spending cuts cuts have
(06:33):
been kind of few and far between in Congress since
I've been here since twenty seventeen. We want to pass
President Trump's agenda, which is deportation, fully funding that of
the military, funding that, tax cut and jobs acts.
Speaker 6 (06:50):
We want to fund that.
Speaker 7 (06:52):
And you know, it's just a real relief that now
we're not just talking about it, but we're doing it.
I think the House will have a resolution very soon,
the budget will, and I think I think the American
people are going to be proud of it.
Speaker 6 (07:08):
Is it everything I would want?
Speaker 7 (07:10):
No, But it starts the ball rolling in the right direction,
and I think it's just it's a good time in America.
Speaker 6 (07:17):
Right now, all the way along around.
Speaker 7 (07:19):
But you can't do much if you don't get to
financial house in order. So I think we begin in
the process.
Speaker 4 (07:24):
Absolutely, sir.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
And a part of this is going to take care
of the codification of a lot of these executive orders
that President Trump has has put out there.
Speaker 4 (07:33):
And you know, President Trump has moved.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
With such rapidity that it has pretty much blindsided Democrats.
As soon as they get around to figuring out their
messaging on one thing, Donald Trump has done something else
that they find outrage worthy. Can Congress move with that
same rapidity to codify everything he has done he has
done via executive order so that these things have a
little bit more permanency the next time round.
Speaker 7 (07:54):
Absolutely, Man, I don't see the Republicans, you know, objected
to anything he's done.
Speaker 6 (08:00):
I mean, look what's done for the country.
Speaker 7 (08:02):
You know, look what doche will do for the country,
and what President Trump has done.
Speaker 6 (08:08):
It ought to be codified.
Speaker 7 (08:10):
The tax cuts ought to be five or ten years
that ought to be codified into law. And I can't
think of anything that anybody really would disagree with, and
particularly with the latest thing on the USAID and where
the money went. Follow the money in this country, you'll
follow where the emphasis is.
Speaker 6 (08:30):
And the American people aren't going to like what they see.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
Yeah, I think that's right.
Speaker 2 (08:34):
They are liking what they're seeing right now with President Trump,
though it is moving with a velocity I've just never
seen in my thirty five years here in Washington, Sir.
I want to talk about something else that you champion.
You have been a voice of passion in trying to
stop the fentanyl scourge in this country in your own
home state. Big bus this week in South Carolina showing
the great men and women in law enforcement scoring wins there.
(08:56):
But there's an important piece of legization coming up for
a vote in the House late of this tell us
about it.
Speaker 7 (09:01):
Yes, what it does is makes fentanyl a type one drug.
It puts penalties on it from first offense a minimum
five years up to twenty years. It puts stiff penalties
on those caught selling it, and not only the selling it,
but those that are using it. And what Trump is
(09:22):
doing it to border to stop the flow of fentanyl.
Speaker 6 (09:25):
Is going to be a big proponent of this. But
this is long time.
Speaker 7 (09:28):
It should have been a long time ago, but really
we didn't have We couldn't stop the flow up until now.
And making fentanyl type one drugs, it's easily made. There's
a lot of money that's the gangs were making on it.
And putting these penalties there will make in the term
that they serve when they're caught.
Speaker 6 (09:48):
We'll make them think twice before they do it.
Speaker 7 (09:50):
We not I doubt we get many Democrats, but it's
going to pass the House either tomorrow or most likely tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
That's great, well.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
And sert us.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
A few days ago, the Senate hosted a hearing on
the dangers of fenceanyl. So that makes me think that
there will be a lot of folks on the Senate
side of things.
Speaker 4 (10:06):
Who are amenable to this bill.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
What do you suspect what will happen with the passage
over in the Senate site.
Speaker 7 (10:11):
I think it'll be an easy vote for most of
the Senators, and it's affected everybody man and in South
Carolina and Chester as early as today that they found
fentanyl that would kill, you know, up to hundreds of
thousands of people, and the risk is too high, not
only for the people, the citizens, but it's for the
(10:33):
law enforcement that find it and have to patrol this.
It's a tough, tough job for them. It's a dangerous job.
So I don't think I think it'll sail through both
both chambers. Of course, the President will easily sign it.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Yeah, three pounds of fennyl on that buzz enough to
wipe out an entire city, just remarkable and great work
for the man and women of law enforcement in South Carolina, Sir.
With DEI rescinding, it actually has an impact on anti
Semitism because the two are very connied. But there's a
remarkable moment. I had a person approach me on the street.
I say and say, you know what feels good about
America right now? A lot of change is a meritocracy
(11:06):
is back. We're a country of merit again. The moment
of Di's decision seems to be also the restoration of
merit in America. How's that going to make government, the workplace,
sports better?
Speaker 7 (11:18):
Well, what it's going to do is it's going for
every sector of our economy, any business organization, schools, it's
going to take put if you're not going to be
judged and given a promotion based on the color of
your skin, it's based on meritocracy or merit.
Speaker 6 (11:35):
I was at a banking.
Speaker 7 (11:35):
Committee hearing today and uh I mentioned that same thing
because we were talking about the cost of putting people
that don't really measure up to the job that they're
placed in and giving them automatic raises because you know,
of the ethnicicity is not right.
Speaker 6 (11:53):
It's not right in med.
Speaker 7 (11:54):
Schools to promote those over more qualified candidates. Uh and
tsa agent and also the air traffic controllers. Imagine having
the President rightfully brought that out that the DEI could
have played a role in the crashes that unfortunately happened
this week.
Speaker 6 (12:14):
So it's a great day for America.
Speaker 7 (12:16):
The President got the strength to call that out for
what it is, and every call we've been getting in
our office is supporting that wholeheartedly.
Speaker 4 (12:28):
Sir. The President is a masterful showman.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
He always knows what things should look like to catch
the eye of the American people. And today he signed
the No Men and Women's Sports Executive Order. And this
is an issue that Democrats have screamed from the rooftops about,
saying that it discriminates against transgenders.
Speaker 4 (12:45):
But for the American people to have this visual of
all of these.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
Young girls around President Trump supporting him as he signs
this executive order, do you think that changed some hearts
and minds?
Speaker 6 (12:57):
Absolutely?
Speaker 7 (12:57):
And you know, we had Riley Gaines, who is a
tremendous spokesman for this very issue because she was done
wrong and had the strength to call it out for
what it was. And you know, you know, men, biological
men playing in women's sports is not right. It doesn't
you know, it just should not ever even have been
an issue for this country, but it has been. The
(13:19):
Left has promoted it, and yes they're crying. I would
like to do on everything Trump is doing now, but
this one ought to be an easy one to codify,
and it's long overdue because a lot of the women
have been robbed of winning things that they should have
and men should play no part in that. Let men
play in men's sports, women playing women's sports.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
What a great role model Riley Ganes has been for
all young women coming up in the ranks of sports
and just coming up in society.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
She's a remarkable hero.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
So one last question for you, as this reconciliation package
gets firmed up, do you have a target in mind
of how much in fixed spending and discrestion spending might
be able to be reduced in this first whack at it.
Speaker 7 (14:03):
Well, I know the first number that we had that
was proposed, five hundred and fifty billion, was nowhere near
solving the math problem that we have in this country.
I would love to see from two to six trillion dollars.
You know, it's going to be an effort to go
as high as we can from what the talks we've
(14:24):
had today on the cuts, I've been encouraged and I
think we're finally getting getting it down to put it
in writing, and you know, a combination of everybody given
some But you know, Washington has a history of being
easy on spending but not so easy on cuts, and
that's got to change now because of where we are financially.
(14:44):
But I think anywhere between those numbers two to six I.
Speaker 6 (14:49):
Think would be a great day in America.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Yeah, it would be.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
I just want to remind everybody watching, long before doge
was a fashionable thing to be proud of, you were
on the front lines advocating for this common sense cutting
that's now going on. You deserve a lot of credit
for holding that line for a long time. So good
to have you on the show today.
Speaker 6 (15:06):
Thank you a lot, John Man.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
We appreciate you so much. Sure, all right, folks are
gonna take a quick commercial break. When we come back.
We've got a lot more going on, including an extraordinary
story about waste and abuse at USA. It is mind bogging.
The more we learn about it, the more you get mad.
We'll have some of that right after these messages. Hey, folks,
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Speaker 3 (16:31):
Welcome back, everybody to just the News, No Noise. The
waste and abuse of taxpayer money inside USA. It has
been blowing up ever since Elon Musk and President Trump
shed light on it a few days ago. But there's
another group who has been talking about it going back
absolutely years, and that is Judicial Watch and its president,
Tom Fitton. Tom is also the author of the book
Rights and Freedoms in Peril, and investigative report on the
(16:53):
Left's attack on America. Tom Fitton, Tom, greats to have
you back, Thanks for being here.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Thanks Amanda, Thank you John.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
I actually want to start with your book because I
don't think the left is ever going to stop attacking.
But now there is a new fighter in the ring
who is counter punching.
Speaker 4 (17:08):
We were just talking to Congressman Ralph Norman.
Speaker 3 (17:10):
He said it feels like a dark cloud has been
lifted over Washington.
Speaker 8 (17:14):
Your thoughts well, the energy and speed of reform that
President Trump has brought to the presidency, I don't think
the country's ever seen anything like it. I mean, normally
we measure this type of activity in the one hundred days, right,
and he's done more in two weeks. I think, comparable
(17:35):
to the full presidencies of other presidents and those who
have preceded him in the oval office. Certainly, you know,
the first term I thought was consequential, His first two
weeks has been as consequential a presidency as certainly Reagan's
(17:56):
was in terms of government reform and oversight, and the
idea that we're now talking about curtailing in significant ways
the size of the federal employment government officials that work
for the taxpayer. It's first time in forty years going
after USAID, which has been on the list of agencies
(18:21):
that have been particularly pernicious in terms of undermining the
American way abroad, misusing tax dollars to fund the less
advocacy abroad in a way to undermine our national security policies,
our foreign policies, and whatever remains of conservative policies in
the countries in which they're targeting. What a great, great
(18:42):
start to an administration. And there's much more to be done.
Congress as you, as Congressman Norman was noting its way
behind the eight ball on these issues. But the President
makes maken up for it.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
Yeah, he sure did.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
He's dragging the entire institutions of Washington up to the
front line with him.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
It's pretty amazing to watch.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
We're going to have a nice story tomorrow that takes
a look at how nine million dollars of money ended
up from USAID to a gentleman who sent it to
the Elnelzer Front. The Al Qaeda affiliate and band group
in Iraq and Syria. It's a crazy story, but it
shows how bad usad's vetting is. Previously we documented how
USAD funded a lot of those censorship organizations. But the
very first and great work that I ever saw down
(19:23):
in USAD came I think it was eight years ago
when you at Judicial Watch sued in twenty seventeen and
got the record showing a pretty large liberal meta donor
was kind of using USAD for his liberal remake of
the world.
Speaker 6 (19:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (19:37):
So George Soros has the Open Side society foundations and organizations,
and he's not only active here in the United States,
put in other countries, and conservatives in these other countries
are disturbed about his advocacy for left wing values, and
he's often been able to partner with the State Department
USAID to advance these values. And we've exposed how government
(20:02):
money was sent either to U in partnership with sources,
fund sources operations directly, or groups he supports in countries
like Macedonia, Albania. And I tell you, you know, it's
it made. It doesn't take a lot of money to
sway policy in a country like Albania. Or Macedonia, and
(20:24):
of course the UH.
Speaker 9 (20:26):
They're able to.
Speaker 8 (20:26):
Leverage the money any any of.
Speaker 6 (20:29):
These left wing groups.
Speaker 8 (20:30):
It's not just Soros, it's the whole, it's the whole
transnational left. They leverage US AI D money UH to
lend credibility and political power to their advocacy for the
radical left in these various countries.
Speaker 9 (20:47):
So they get the.
Speaker 8 (20:47):
Rubber stamp of approval and and the task of support
of the US government through US A I D moneys
and the spigot has got to be turned.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
Off, Tom and there they're There are other initiatives that
USA paid for, and that of course is with taxpayer money.
And it's not necessarily to the extent that it's terrorist organizations,
but it's you know, we mentioned this at the top.
Speaker 4 (21:09):
Of the show.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
Forty seven thousand dollars to Serbia to institute DEI initiatives
are a million and a half and then forty seven
thousand to Columbia for a transgend or opera. Pull back
the curtain for US because I'm trying to figure out
why people in that agency have those desires to fund
those things in other countries. Is it one of these
things where the initiative gets snuck in there and it
falls between the cracks before anyone can figure out it's there.
Speaker 8 (21:32):
It's a plaything for the radical left. And you know,
they pretend to be in favor of civil society, and
they're a different nition of civil sid society means groups
that are advocating for this extremist usion of these extremist
views on.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Culture and such.
Speaker 8 (21:50):
The issue about that program in Ireland, why is a
development agency? Forget about the nature of the program, some
crazy play Why is Ireland getting development money from the
United States? And I tell you foreign aid. The idea
of government to government aid, you know, outside of military aid,
(22:13):
is suspect.
Speaker 9 (22:15):
But for the United States to.
Speaker 8 (22:16):
Be intervening in other countries to advance this radical cultural
agenda or political agendas that try to institutionalize the neo
Marxist approach and governance, I tell you it's better. It's
more of a way to make enemies than to gain influence.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Yeah, that's a really great point.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
One thing we learned today from many federal agencies, not
just USAID, was that there's quite a racket going on
in the legacy media with federal agencies routing millions of
dollars in subscriptions and places like Political for Political Pro
while the New York Times we found a large amount
of money there. The fact that that's getting highlighted, and
I think Carolyn Levitt said at the podium, we're not
(23:00):
buying new subscription anymore. That's out the door, reckoning in
a dirty little secret that the media kind of kept
in the American public this whole time.
Speaker 8 (23:08):
Well, when you see just was the thirty seven descriptive
subscriptions to Politico Pro, which evidently was I don't know,
twenty thousand dollars a year percription subscribscription. Yeah, that's one agency.
You think they're not doing it at Labor, you think
they're not doing it thej or any of these other agencies.
Speaker 2 (23:29):
Eight million to Political We tracked across fourteen agencies today,
eight million dollars from just fourteen agencies.
Speaker 8 (23:36):
And Politico is down to the dumps in terms of
their ability to function as a business. This goes back
to the issue I was talking about. The Left depends
on federal monies to fund a lot of its operations.
They don't need the money, but they rely and depend
on it. Why else would they threaten violence in order
(23:58):
to keep the money flowing unless there was a personal
interest in it. And USAID is just one of them.
Labor Department, big funder of the labor, the labor left,
Energy and Environmental Department agencies they are promoting as funding
the environmental radicals. DOJ has been notorious for sending money
(24:21):
to allied leftist groups.
Speaker 6 (24:24):
So there's a lot.
Speaker 8 (24:25):
Of cleanup in Aisle six for Elon Musk to do
for President Trump when it comes to funding the left.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Yeah, he's got a big bucket in the mob. I'm
pretty sure.
Speaker 3 (24:34):
Before we let you go, speaking of funding the left,
newly sworn in Pambondy, Attorney General. Pambondy is working very
very fast. She has directed the DOJ to withhold funding
to sanctuary cities. I've lived in sanctuary cities. I happen
to know that they don't give a hoo to beans difference.
They don't care at all about the illegal immigrants. So
if they are not getting the money from the federal government,
(24:55):
does the funding dry up and then the sanctuary city
itself drives up?
Speaker 5 (25:00):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (25:00):
The big question is if legally is that going to
hold up. The Trump administration tried to push back on
that previously in the first term, and they were unsuccessful,
largely if there are government officials who are obstructing law
enforcement investigations, and obviously there has to be criminal investigations
(25:22):
that will go on. And this is where Congress needs
to step up and step in and make it clear
that local officials who engage in the sanctuary city obstructions
lose more than just Justice Department enforcement dollars. These are
grants by the Justice Department for policing and such. There's
(25:44):
a lot of other money that flows to the states
that should have more strings attached as it relates to
immigration enforcement.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Top Justice Department official today just announce that they are
looking at a sheriff in northern New York for possible
criminal prosecution because he did release someone who's on a
retainer who is a violent offender. Made the Feds go
get them and catch them again. That's the sort of
thing that might send a big shockwave through the.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Sounds like Trump is daring them to resist, go do it.
Pretty great tactic. The book again, Everybody is Rights and
Freedom's in Peril and investigative report on the Left's attack
on America.
Speaker 4 (26:17):
Everybody, go check it out, go buy it. It is
a brilliant book. Judicial Watch.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
President Tom Fitton, thanks so much for being here tonight
and after the break, are we actually going to see
American boots on the ground in Gaza or is this
just a.
Speaker 4 (26:29):
Negotiating tactic from President Trump? We'll see.
Speaker 10 (26:31):
I'll be back.
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just News. Join AMAC and become part of a movement
that stands for your family and your future. Welcome back in America. Yesterday,
(27:54):
right here on this show, you got to watch live
that incredible news conference between President Trump and Israeally I
Minister Benjamin Nittnia, who lots of news in it, everything
from Abraham Accord's two point zero We're suggested, to a
US renovation project of the Gaza strip and so much more.
I thought we turned to one of the great security
experts in this country to get some thoughts and just
(28:14):
played out Yesda and elsewhere in the world as well.
Joining us now the vice president of the Lexican Institute
International Security analyst, Rebecca Grant.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Rebecca, great to have you on the show.
Speaker 4 (28:24):
Glad to be here.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
All right.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
I want to start with the big one that all
the media was going nuts over this morning. Trump says
to the US, so taking over the Gaza strip, level
of site rebuild.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
It tell us the backstory what's really going on here.
Speaker 11 (28:37):
I watched that live last night and wow, I didn't
see that coming. But remember Trump's number one goal is
to have peace and prosperity in the Middle East. I
think there are a lot of things going on here.
Probably the number one issue is that he wants to
put some American capital down and use that to help
(28:58):
others in the region. Described them as the nations of
great wealth, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, hash of my Kingdom of Jordan.
Try to get a focus for the redevelopment and reconstruction
of Gaza. I think that's a medium term game. Short term, remember,
there's another phase of the cease fire deal to be
negotiated starting next week. He wants to make sure, how
(29:20):
Maas knows America is still very interested in what's going
on in Gaza, and big picture, he wants to see
the Abraham Accords with more countries signing on, and particularly
that Saudi and Israel deal. A lot of moving pieces here,
but you've got to agree with them having Hamas in
charge of Gaza. They had their chance and it just
(29:41):
did not work.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
No, I certainly didn't, and to what you were saying,
it actually looked like Natanyahu was a little surprised when
he said it as well.
Speaker 4 (29:49):
So I think there was a little bit of shock
all around.
Speaker 3 (29:51):
I want to ask you about what if we take
President Trump at his word last night and things move
in the direction of what he actually stated. There are
some what one point eight million people living in that
small area and it is completely devastated at this point.
Speaker 4 (30:07):
But what happens to those people?
Speaker 11 (30:10):
That is really such a good question, and you know
some of them are in refugee camps at this point.
We know that neither Egypt or Jordan has been willing
to take additional refugees. You know, I think what we're
really looking at here is somebody's got to go in
and police and secure the Gaza Strip.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
And that's been the big question all along.
Speaker 11 (30:31):
Would that be the Palestinian authority, you know, they want
to do it, would it be something else, would it
be Israel? And so you know, unfortunately we can't have
the un come in and do it. They've been completely useless.
So to me, this is Trump saying, yes, America is
willing to take a leadership role here, and then what
I think he wants to see is get this place
(30:53):
cleaned up and then let the Palestinians who live in Gaza.
You know, people of Gaza kind of continue to live
live in Gaza, but they can't.
Speaker 4 (31:01):
Do it right now given the condition of the country.
Speaker 11 (31:03):
So I think he has this more almost idealistic view
of trying to improve the place, knowing that it's going
to take American leadership to get other international players on
board and do the huge reconstruction project that that place
is going to need, along with the humanitarian aid to
start at the beginning.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
Yeah, taking a seven year disaster and turning it into
a ten year opportunity for everybody. That optimism kind of
goes through all of his foreign policy.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
It's very interesting.
Speaker 2 (31:30):
I want to ask you real quickly about Abraham Accords
two point oh. Saudi Arabia the most obvious, As you mentioned,
the President mentioned Cutter several times in the news conference
last night. Is Cutter one of those other countries that
you could see a closer Israeli relationship with now that
these Hamasis file were really negotiated through Cutter.
Speaker 4 (31:49):
Oh?
Speaker 11 (31:50):
Absolutely, Saudi Arabia Cutter, and I think President Trump has
several others in mind. You know, really we want to
see everybody in the Abraham Accords in that region. That's
the old only real solution is to get the economic
prosperity up and going to the point where people have
a stake in that and can you know, kind of
put down the weapons and stop the fighting because business
(32:11):
is going well. So I would say absolutely with Gutter.
I would really expect to see major movement with Saudi Arabia,
who was so close to getting into that process before
October seventh, twenty twenty three.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
Good point, Rebecca, I want to ask you about how
this could contribute in a different way to the Abraham Accords, because,
as we have seen from the brilliance of the original
Abraham Accords, when you even when you have better former
rivals or enemies, when you open up the lines of
trade and you have purchasing and selling between these countries,
that's what kind of starts to rebuild the relationship. I
(32:44):
know Gaza is not its own country, but if Gaza
turns into a lucrative, viable region of Israel, does that
contribute to any of these future possible relationships.
Speaker 11 (32:55):
Well, a better economic solution there is key, and this
was partly. You know why this is Lucy.
Speaker 4 (33:01):
We've been looking for all along.
Speaker 11 (33:03):
There was a great deal of trade and people going
back and forth for jobs between Israel and Gaza at
one point. We want to see that happen, and I
think Trump is right to give some hope and say, yes,
there are economic possibilities here.
Speaker 4 (33:16):
The whole region.
Speaker 11 (33:17):
Wants to do more in artificial intelligence, more in tech
as well as this typical type of trade. And this
is just a great, great possible way forward. And he's
really got to get the other countries involved for political
as well as economic reasons.
Speaker 1 (33:34):
Yeah, great point.
Speaker 2 (33:35):
Even in Gaza, it is about the economy so often,
and that's something that gets lost in all of our
conversations here, Rebecca.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
One last quick question for you.
Speaker 2 (33:42):
The President, working with Marco Ruby, put really tough sanctions
back on Iran in Cuba today. Are those regimes possibility
of falling under this president? Could there be enough pressure
applied to finally topple regimes that have been an isore
to their people and a scorge to the world.
Speaker 11 (34:00):
Oh, wouldn't that be nice? But they really do seem
to hang on. I'm hoping the maximum pressure on Iran
will lead them to stop doing this nuclear enrichment. That's
really backed up by our US military and Central Command
as well with Cuba. Who knows what that deal is
going to take, but we know that maximum pressure sanctions
on Iran have been effective. Of course, their big back
(34:22):
door is their trade with China, and China has been
keeping Iran in the fight essentially, so Trump will have
to take that on as well.
Speaker 2 (34:29):
Yeah, great, good point, Rebecca. What a great honor to
have you on. We're going to get you on a
lot more often. We love the work you're doing and
get the Lexigan Institute so great to join.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
Have you joined us today, Thanks so much, Thank you
so much. Really enjoyed it. Yeah, that's great conversation.
Speaker 2 (34:42):
All right, folks are gonna take a quick commercial break.
When we come back, we're going to ask this question.
Our kide could be confirmed, our k juniit could be
confirmed as early as tomorrow. As AHHS secretary, what's he
going to jumpstart? How's he going to get make America
healthy again? Right away? Where does that movement begin? I'm
going to try to answer some of those questions for
you and have this commercial break.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
Hey, it's a new day in America and a new
administration in Washington, d C.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
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Speaker 1 (36:26):
Welcome back in America, everyone who watches this show.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
No.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
A couple of years ago, I embarked on a mission
called make.
Speaker 1 (36:29):
John Healthy Again. I had to get it in Jabe.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
I had to get my fatty litter less fatty and
a little less sluggish, and I got some incredible health
from my good friends at Pure Health Research. Now RFK
Junior is about to take on a much bigger mission
making America healthy again. We thought we returned to Pure
Health Research, who helped me so much to get some
insights from where that's going. Joining us right now one
of my favorites, doctor Holly Lucill. Doctor good to have
you back on, right back at you.
Speaker 9 (36:52):
Thanks for having me, Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
This is going to be an exciting week.
Speaker 2 (36:57):
I think RFK will be confirmed as early as tomorrow,
and i'd certainly Friday at the latest. He's going to
hit a running start. He's been thinking about this for
a long time. What does make America healthy look like
six months from that way, where do we start the process?
Speaker 12 (37:10):
Listen, I think just what your show says, our healthcare
system has been a lot of noise, a lot of noise,
and it's time to turn that down and actually get
to business and getting people healthy again. I think RFK
has the finger on the pulse as as we joked
about about what really matters, and I think he's about
to take on some big, big, big things like farmer.
(37:32):
You know, my parents were both pharmacists. I came from
two pharmacists and so well versed in the here take
this approach. But guess what the hear take This approach
is not working in our country. We have one of
the worst healthcare systems out there, and our outcomes for
people it's chewing.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
I just realized that the acronym still works with my name.
Make Amanda healthy again.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
Hey, look at that.
Speaker 4 (37:54):
That's what I've been trying to do.
Speaker 5 (37:56):
Holly.
Speaker 3 (37:56):
I want to ask you, because you know, for all
of the things that AREFK Junior can do at HHS
going forward, Americans have still enforced a punishing effect on
our bodies, especially when it comes to toxins, and our
liver has gone into overdrive, and I know Pure Health
has a formula that is specifically for that, so that
as we are looking forward to making healthier decisions in
(38:17):
the future, we can help to kind of alleviate some
of the junk that we've done in the past.
Speaker 12 (38:22):
Absolutely so, Yes, So we're thinking about liver health formula.
Speaker 9 (38:26):
We've talked about that before on this program.
Speaker 12 (38:28):
And one of the things I love about Pure Health
Research is the way that they formulate their products, right, combination,
synergistic formulas that work.
Speaker 9 (38:35):
Together in order to get the job done.
Speaker 12 (38:38):
Our livers five hundred different functions a day, and it's
just an organ that's so important.
Speaker 9 (38:43):
Right.
Speaker 12 (38:44):
All of our organs are theig raid, all of them,
but I would say that the liver needs the most
support because of what you said, Amanda, the toxins and
the hidden toxins, right, the high fructose corn syrup, the
way that the food industry has really seduced our children
and our palettes to just addict, you know, more and
more of the bad stuff. So with the actions that
(39:06):
are going to be proactive with this administration, I think
we've got some reactive actions to take to clean this
up and fix it. And so I would say that's
where liver health formula comes in.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
For sure, that's really great.
Speaker 2 (39:20):
When I started on my journey and now when I
listen to broad riftenning, there are three things that really
are targets. Sugar sugar, sugar, we've got to get that out.
Food additives, some of these dyes and other things, and
preservatives that now other countries are never allowed into their
food but we do. And then all of the process
of food that we take in because it's easier and convenient,
(39:41):
but often not healthy for us. Whether you're just taking
care of your own health, they're trying to deal with
the country. Those seem to be three big enemies that
need to be tackled. Talk a little bit about the
sort of remedies you have that can help us get
started on that journey.
Speaker 12 (39:56):
Absolutely, So, first of all, thinking about a company like
Pure Health Research, no non so formulas, non GMO, no
artificial chemicals, no fillers, no preservatives.
Speaker 9 (40:07):
Right. So if you go to their website, pure.
Speaker 12 (40:09):
Health Research dot com and you look at any of
their products, right, there's about forty plus and you'll see
the ingredients and each ingredient has a clinical study. Right,
So we're still following the silence science, even though this
is more of a natural based approach and there are
many different formulas.
Speaker 9 (40:24):
We talked about the liver Health.
Speaker 12 (40:26):
Formula, but also one of the things that helps flush
out toxins is our limph our limp system. So one
of the best ways that I love is getting a
good e flarage lymphatic massage. But also they have limb
system support that's really great. And then another thing sugar,
sugar sugar, as you mentioned, and RFK as well. Their
amazing bestseller is the blood sugar formula. There is probably
(40:50):
not a patient that walks through my door, okay, or
my computer when we're working remotely that does not have
slightly a metabolic issue meaning high hemoglobin A one's what
does that mean your average blood sugar over three months?
Speaker 9 (41:03):
Right, So the proof is in the pudding.
Speaker 12 (41:06):
You can take a fasting glucose and you might be fasting,
but you might have worked out or what you ate
the night before or drink the night before. It could
show there that hem a little bit eight one c
when it starts creeping up five point six five point seven,
five point eight, and I see it all the time.
We have to get our blood sugar down. So another
best seller for them is their blood sugar formula.
Speaker 3 (41:27):
I want to sneak in one more question because that
reminded me of something. I have been experiencing something, and
the more I talk about it to people, the more
I hear that they are experiencing the same thing. And
it is that it's like an extreme sugar crash. I
eat sugar and then within ten minutes it is like
I can sleep right away, just a hard and fast crash.
I know that sugar crash has happened, but is it
(41:49):
normal to have that kind of crash?
Speaker 4 (41:51):
What does it mean?
Speaker 12 (41:52):
It means that we are living in a modern day
where there's compounded, confounded, chronic stressors.
Speaker 9 (41:59):
So now we're pulling in the whole idea of our
adrenal system.
Speaker 5 (42:02):
Right.
Speaker 9 (42:03):
So sure, if you're healthy.
Speaker 12 (42:04):
You're young, you grab that Halloween candy, you can go
and run around and you're not going to crash at all.
Us as older people, our adrenal glands, right, So what
goes up must come down. And the more we have
stress on our nervous system, on our paras or our
sympathetic nervous system, so that cortisol release that is where
(42:26):
we get less blood sugar stabilization, and so that's where
we start to see it a little bit more. And
that's why one of the most important things when you're
dealing with adrenal insufficiency or just kind of like being overworked.
And look, if we had a more natural relationship with stress,
we would have to move to get out of it. Right,
So a car is coming, oh, a polar bear is coming,
(42:48):
or the locusts are coming. They're going to eat our crops,
we would have to move. So that burns off our cortisol,
It burns off our catecholamines that have been initiated because
of the stress. But these days, you know, you're sitting
on a plane going back to DC, and you're sitting
in front of a computer getting an email or or
watching the confirmation hearings.
Speaker 9 (43:09):
We're just sitting here being stressed and we're not moving enough.
Speaker 12 (43:12):
And so one of the biggest things to care for
adrenal insufficiency is to eat smaller meals more frequently throughout
the day and have protein with each meal, so.
Speaker 9 (43:21):
It stabilizes a blood sugar.
Speaker 12 (43:23):
So it's kind of like chicken and egg, but the
blood sugar issue that you're talking about Amanda and the
adrenal insufficiency.
Speaker 9 (43:29):
They kind of go hand in hand.
Speaker 2 (43:31):
Pretty amazing, and a great thing is it's all solvable.
That's really what's great. And over the last year, doctor,
you have done so much to put us on the
course of understanding how we get ourselves out there, and
we're going to be fever grateful for that.
Speaker 1 (43:42):
Thanks for joining us again tonight. It'd be great to
have you, all right.
Speaker 9 (43:44):
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we're gonna take a quick break. When we come back,
We're going to wrap up from a very busy.
Speaker 10 (44:21):
Day of newsdef the messages.
Speaker 3 (44:33):
Welcome back to the final segment of the show. You know, John,
I want to reflect over the last I guess two
years when we were all trying to follow the details
of these investigations into President Trump and trying to keep
them all straight in our head, between DC and Florida
and Georgia and New York and all of the subsidiaries thereof.
And now those who will finally be looked into. I
(44:53):
think it's a big move.
Speaker 2 (44:55):
They'll have a common origin point. They're always somehow tied
to the Justice Department of the Biden regime, and I
think that that is what Pam Bondi's order is going
to get us to.
Speaker 6 (45:05):
Right.
Speaker 2 (45:06):
We know the Justice Department in the White House, we're
talking to the Atlanta prosecutor. They know we were talking
or sent one of their prosecutors to New York for
the hush money case. When the US Justice Department decided
it wasn't worth, it wasn't merited to bring criminal charges
against President Biden in that stormy Daniel's case. And then
of course we know that the Justice Department and the
White House sicked the FBI on the national archives that
(45:28):
begin the COSTUMID records case, knowing full well that Joe
Biden had a similar and maybe even worse because he
had shared classified.
Speaker 4 (45:35):
Intelligence and he wasn't the president.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
Yeah, yeah, he was a vice president right, it was
actually a former he was in his own man. I
think that this investigation will answer the questions that we've
been denied for a long time. And I think there'll
be a common thing, which is there'll be a few
people in the Biden White House and the Biden doj
that we're driving all of this retaliation, and then when
(45:58):
Donald Trump run, they probably engage in the cover up
to get rid of the evidence before Donald Trump got
back into office. I think that's a big thing. I
want to touch on oneing something else similar because I
think a lot of people were really bummed out when
Joe Biden pardoned. People like Anthony Fauci said, we take
our accountability way today. Alan Wilson, the South Carolina Attorney General,
began a criminal investigation into COVID and its origins and
(46:21):
other things. Testimony, other stuff that may have misled the
residents and citizens of South Carolina. It's a backdoor way
to potentially bring prosecutive or other accountability to people who
are involved in the pandemic. Keep an eye on that.
I think Ken Pax in Texas and Alan Wilson are
going to lead the charge. But I think a lot
of people thought, well, it's over with, and we kept
saying no, there's simple things and there's also state laws.
(46:43):
I'd keep an eye on what Alan Wilson and what
Ken Pax are going to do in those two states
as a possible way for people like Anthony Fauci other
to face some form of accountability, to certainly face some
fourth of a truth commission, which is what we.
Speaker 1 (46:54):
Need to get to the bottom of what really happened.
Speaker 3 (46:56):
In that Yeah, and with a pardon, I mean that
kind of who's the Fifth Amendment aspect of a conversation
or a testimony.
Speaker 2 (47:04):
It does are a federal but they can claim self
incrimination in the staycase if they're facing state charges. Remember
the federal part only covers federal law, That's right. Yeah,
So Anthony Fauci if or anyone if let's say they
were facing state charges they could claim the Fifth Amendment,
but that would mean they're facing criminal prosecution. I don't
know where that's going to go, but I just want
to remind people that Republicans good Serves have been much
(47:25):
more innovative about getting around some of the foot in
the street trip ups at Joe Biden left for Donald Trump,
and this is one of those. So I know you've
been watching really closely what Marco Ruby has been doing.
Speaker 1 (47:37):
Well. He's often a really great startup secretary Stable, it
really is.
Speaker 3 (47:39):
And I know that there were a lot of people
who were a little skeptical about his his adherence to
President Trump's agenda as Secretary of State, but boy, he
is doing a bang up job when it comes to
these deportations to Cuba and Haiti and now Guatemala has
announced that they are going to increase their deportations by
forty percent.
Speaker 2 (47:56):
You know, I think they're also going to take Aren't
they going to take resident Citiens or other countries even
to take them there?
Speaker 1 (48:02):
Yes, which is a huge problem.
Speaker 2 (48:04):
It solves a huge problem by for the Trump advistay
where to put some of these people, and then they got
a place to put them.
Speaker 4 (48:09):
Yeah, yeah, if they run out of a room at Gemo.
Speaker 3 (48:10):
Yeah, I was gonna say, I can't remember what I
was going to say.
Speaker 4 (48:14):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (48:16):
You know what is we were talking a moment ago
about what's innovative with this administration. You know what is
not innovative the idea that men should be in men's
sports and women should be in women's sports, and it
shouldn't cross over and President Trump, you know, like we
were talking about today with Congressman Norman. Just the visual
of President Trump surrounded by all of those those women
and those little ladies supporting him in signing this this
(48:39):
executive order.
Speaker 4 (48:40):
I think it speaks volumes.
Speaker 2 (48:41):
He saved their sports and I think that there's no
other way to say it.
Speaker 1 (48:44):
And he did that.
Speaker 2 (48:45):
And Raley Gaines is that hero that every young girl
should look up to. Too much on times, Hollywood has
given us anti heroes the last ten or twenty years,
people we really shouldn't look up to and we actually revile.
Speaker 1 (48:56):
Rally Gaines is a hero.
Speaker 2 (48:57):
She stood up for what she believed that she stood
up for all women, and it came to the consequence
for a while, but she prevailed. When Donald Trump put
pen on that paper today and to anyone who knows
Raley Gaines, she deserves a salute, a big salute tonight.
Speaker 4 (49:09):
And you know what was great about this.
Speaker 3 (49:11):
It emphasized the fact that President Trump stands for women
when the left likes to talk about how they are
the party of Champanegue championing women.
Speaker 4 (49:18):
Donald Trump is the one who put pen to pad
and actually did it. He did it because he was surrounded.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
By promises, made, promises delivery.
Speaker 3 (49:25):
And I'm going to have an article about that coming
out somewhere.
Speaker 1 (49:27):
That's we see.
Speaker 4 (49:28):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (49:29):
By the way, your article today is trending all day.
What a great piece of I love it.
Speaker 4 (49:31):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (49:32):
So good to have you watching.
Speaker 4 (49:33):
I'm just it's good to be here. It's a little cold.
I got to get us this cold weather California. Yeah,
that's true.
Speaker 3 (49:39):
All right, everybody, thanks so much for being here with
us tonight. We will see you again tomorrow night, same time,
same place that six pm Eastern on Real America's Voice,
We're at Sinfield is going to take the microphone and
take you through the next hour seem