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February 18, 2025 49 mins

Just the News No Noise on Real America's Voice

Segment A: REP. BURCHETT TORCHES CNN
Segment B: PREVIEWING CPAC 2025
Segment C: WHEN WILL WE SEE THE JFK FILES?
Segment D: PRESIDENT TRUMP HAS TAKEN A SLEDGEHAMMER TO THE BUREAUCRACY 
Segment E: NEWSOM TRUMP-PROOFING CALIFORNIA?

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Good evening, America.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Justin News, No Noise.
I'm your host, John Solomon reporting too, as always from Washington, DC,
and of course the Wiedofish Coffee dot com studio is
wire to Fish Coffee is the official coffee of Justin News.
Go over there today Wirefishcoffee dot com, wired the number
two Fishcoffee dot Com. Orpoint your camera at the QR code.
If you use the promo code just News, You're gonna
get a fantastic ten percent off on all of their

(00:42):
great cruise and their mugs, including the Justin newse tumbler.
Go check that out. It's pretty cool, all right. Donald
Trump said he would you never get tired of winning. Well,
he keeps winning. Just a little while ago, he got
a victory from an most unlikely source. Federal Judge Tanya Chutkin,
the judge that presided over his criminal trials, who openly
to size the president in public, gave him a ruling

(01:03):
that I think the administration was direly looking for the
judge role. That Elon Musk does have the ability to
fire workers and to access data in CEDERL seven federal agencies.
You see that breaking news alert there from justin News
happened about an hour ago. A big loss for Democrats
and their attorney generals in Blue states. A big win

(01:24):
for the President and his ability to reshape government.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
With Elon Musk by his side.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
On another big win, today, President Trump opened negotiations with
his team led by Marco Rubio in Saudi Arabia with Russia,
the first real meaningful conversations with Russia in three years,
and they came out of it with a lot of progress.
Discussions about reopening Russia a US oil and gas operations
in Russia, restoring diplomats to both countries that had left

(01:50):
the country after the icy relations during the Ukraine Russia War,
and then finally creating teams that will actually start the
negotiating process with Ukraine. Impossible will be bring peace to
the Russia Ukraine War.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
Amanda.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
I know, going into the weekend, a lot of debt
reporters are saying, oh my god, you can't believe that
Donald Trump's negotiating all along with the Russia. That's what happens.
You negotiate with one side the other side, you bring
them together. But now all of a sudden they're singing
a different song, Big wins today for President Trump.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
Yeah, it's like general mediation. Anytime you mediate, you go
to each side first and then you bring them together.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
That's how you actually get to some type of term.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
All right, everybody, So I do actually want to keep
it short and brief today because I have a great
clip that you.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
Are definitely going to want to see.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
But before we get to that, House Oversight Committee Chairman
James Comer earlier today announced the Republicans who will serve
on the task force that is set to declassify federal
secrets like the Epstein and JFK files. Of course, we
already know that Congresswoman Anna Paulinea Luna is going to
lead that task force, but the committee also includes Nancy Mace,
Lauren Bobert, Eli Crane, Eric Burlison, Brandon Gill, and timber Jet.

(02:53):
That seems like a great group that is going to
be digging into the truth and getting things done in Washington,
d C.

Speaker 4 (02:59):
And speaking of.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Congress Member Chat, he was on CNN earlier today and
they questioned him about DOGE and the Trump administration's cuts
to cuts to government. It seems that they are none
too happy about the size of government.

Speaker 4 (03:13):
Going down and down and down. I'm gonna let you
see it. It's the way it's being done.

Speaker 5 (03:16):
The government is trying to claw back several employees who
oversaw nuclear weapons after they were fired.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
The way this is being done is clumsy rather than methodical.

Speaker 6 (03:28):
Again, you're upset about you're attacking the message care not
the results. You talk about nuclear secrets, you had a
nuclear a person who was in charge.

Speaker 7 (03:38):
Of nuclear secrets.

Speaker 6 (03:39):
A man who dressed up as a woman would go
into the airport and steal women's luggage, was overseeing those
nuclear secrets under the Biden administration. And I never heard
y'all say to people about that.

Speaker 8 (03:50):
Again, man, I don't know anything about that.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
I'll be transparent.

Speaker 6 (03:53):
And y'all even talked about, Hey, mosen Bate, we sent
him ten million dollars for circumcisions. I mean, gracious, ma'am, Americans.

Speaker 8 (04:01):
Are point we have.

Speaker 5 (04:02):
We've been covering that late balleries where the money is going.

Speaker 6 (04:06):
You all y'all do is run down Elon mush and
Donald Trump. And you continuously do this, and that's why
your ratings are in the tank, ma'am.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
That speaking of John, I think we should get to
our guest today.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
Well, I'll be darned. Look who just joined US Congressman
Timperture from the great state of Tennessee. Congressman, great to
have you on what in exchange? You know what's the
most amazing about the state? I don't think see then
realizes how biased they sound in that. Why that they
literally thought that was honest, neutral journalism. It wasn't wasn't.

Speaker 6 (04:37):
No, that's what you expect. I mean that, gum, and
I don't know what they expect. And they put me
on there. Other than all the girls in my office.
The phones just lied out from all over the country.
All the liberal wackos start calling them and threatening us
and everything. And I just tell them just just smile
and say thank you and go on because they're not

(04:58):
bless their hearts, they're not going to change.

Speaker 7 (04:59):
And and I share asack am not that's for sure.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
As my dad would say to me when I was
growing up, they are cruising for a reusin and boy,
you always delivered.

Speaker 4 (05:08):
Sarah. I want to hit on.

Speaker 3 (05:09):
Something that I flicked out at the top of the show,
and that is this task force to declassify federal secrets.
There are so many Americans left right and Center who
are very interested to see what will be revealed.

Speaker 4 (05:21):
Who are you going to who and what are you
going to tackle?

Speaker 7 (05:22):
First?

Speaker 6 (05:25):
Well, you know, of course UFOs are involved in that.
We're spending tens of millions of dollars on something. Y'all
have covered that extensively. The JFK files that happened sixty
years ago before I was even born. I'm sixty years old,
and now miraculously the FBI has found fourteen thousand new
files last week or something, you know, And these agencies,

(05:47):
I think you've got people in them that are crooked
as a dog's leg, which is sad because it just
puts a bad mark on a lot of people. And
you've got Bobby Kennedy's assassination. There's a lot of talk
about that is so, of course is the new HHS secretary,
and he's he's demanded some things and he's put out
some things. I think people ought to listen to. The

(06:09):
assassination of Martin Luther King is another one. And of
course you know the recent files on the island, the
Epstein Island thing. But here's the thing. You know, Lona,
she called me and we were talking and she's all excited,
and everybody's excited about it. I'm I'm just not excited.
I'll believe it when I see it. You know, here

(06:31):
we are sixty years plus into this, deeper in some
of the other issues, and yet we still never get
to the bott Excuse me, I need to see IA is.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
Trying to poison me?

Speaker 6 (06:42):
No, but we got to get to the bottom of
this stuff we've got. That's why people don't trust this country,
and y'all know it, because it's it's about power, it's
about control, it's all the things that Washington's made of,
and they continue on that path, and we've got to
turn up the heat. We've I figure we've got one hundred,
one hundred and fifty days of this before the rails

(07:04):
we start running off the rails, we lose our guts.

Speaker 7 (07:06):
Which is my biggest fear. Is what I told Marjorie
Taylor Green.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
I said, you know, there are problems, not those Marxists
across the aisle. It's the people in our own conference
that we're going to have a problem with. And you
start watching them peeling off because this is going to
affect a lot of people, and these disclosures should be
what every American's for that, gummt. It's your tax dollars.
You ought to know what's in these files.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
Yeah, the American people are essentially the owners, and we've
been denied all the access for so long. You said
something profound I think in the Senate interview, which is
that all that the media has is to demonize Elon
Musk and Donald Trump because they're shining a light in
Neither the media nor their friends in government want that light, right,
they're afraid of It's ironic that media is afraid of

(07:50):
the very transparency we used to argue for how are
Americans processing all this?

Speaker 6 (07:56):
Well, I don't know better rest of the country, but
in Tennessee, Donald Trump's and Elon Musk numbers are going
through the roof and and they're you know, they can't
comprehend the fraud. Today it was there's there's several trillion
dollars that are missing that we'd have no idea where
they went or who got it. And I suspect when

(08:19):
some of those so called twenty year old kids figure
this thing out, a lot of it they're going to
show has come right back around in the pockets and
politicians in Washington and that's why they're trying to get
these these federal lawsuits in place so they can cover
their tracks.

Speaker 7 (08:35):
The number one search subject in Washington, d C. Do y'
all know what it was?

Speaker 1 (08:39):
Last week?

Speaker 4 (08:40):
It was the attorney.

Speaker 7 (08:42):
Criminal defense attorneys.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Yeah, and then and.

Speaker 6 (08:45):
You saw the if you saw the for sale ads,
it's could be a good time to start buying some
real estate in Washington, d C.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
There's a heck of a lot.

Speaker 6 (08:51):
Of people moving out, and I'm glad to see it,
but it's just the start. President Trump said We're going
after education next, and then we're going after the military.

Speaker 3 (09:02):
Defense attorney is also the top search when people find
out that John Solomon is asking questions about it for
investigative reporter, Sir, I want to ask you with respect
to bipartisan support or opposition for what dose is uncovering?
When you consider so many of these people live and
work in Washington, while most of them live around Washington,
but they work in Washington, does it say something about

(09:23):
the partisan nature of the opposition? The fact that Washington
d C went ninety two point five percent for Kamala Harris.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Yes, maam, it does.

Speaker 6 (09:31):
I think it says that they will sell this country
out to keep the money flowing, and they'll do it
every dead come time. They hate our country, they hate
our flag, they ate everything about us. All they like
is that that green hit in their pockets, and that
green is being stolen from the American taxpayers.

Speaker 7 (09:48):
If you can.

Speaker 6 (09:48):
Imagine, we're paying fifty percent if you had state, local,
and federal taxes along with all those those hidden fees
on everything that you buy from beer to gas.

Speaker 7 (10:00):
You know, people have had it.

Speaker 6 (10:02):
And we're sending ten million dollars to Mosembe for circumcisions.
You know, it's unbelievable, and it's just a tip of
the iceberg. Forty million a week to the Taliban, And
we found out last week Rips and Perry, my buddy
out of Scott Perry out of Pennsylvania, found that they're
you know, we're actually sending billions to terrorist groups. There's

(10:25):
a question of whether there's any gold at Fort Knox.
There's a lot of things going on, and people better
start paying attention. But we shows you how close we were,
the cusp we were on of losing this great nation.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
Yeah, that's a great point to remember.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
So I want to start with or go back to
the news that we started the show with Judge Tanya
chucking not exactly a fan of President Trump, but hnding
him a very big win today saying Democrat attorney generals
in the Blue States did not show a reason to
create an injunction and stop Elon Mudge from a Musk
from looking at the dough data or from firing andmployees

(11:00):
at workers and agencies where the president wants.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
To make cuts.

Speaker 2 (11:04):
That's a big win coming from well, a very liberal judge.

Speaker 6 (11:07):
It is unelected bureaucrats, is you know they keep Now
the Democrats are saying that about these unelected bureaucrats, Well,
look at how many people have your records at the IRS,
unelected bureaucrats. We've uncovered it's been reported in the past
that interns, people down to the intern level, have access
to all your data. The IRS has been hacked multiple times.

(11:29):
But guess what's never been hacked before? PayPal and who
owned PayPal, Elon.

Speaker 4 (11:34):
Musk, Congressman.

Speaker 3 (11:37):
Something that has also been revealed is that when it
comes to payments by the Treasury, some five trillion dollars
worth of payments have been unaccounted for. So I know
one of the proposals that we end the paper checks.
Everything's electronic so you can at least track it. But
even I feel like, you know, you hear these these
incredible stories about a box of paper clips costing taxpayers
ten thousand dollars if we save paper on sending out

(12:00):
the chucks, I feel like that's got to be I mean,
in spades, more than more than ten thousand for paper clips.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
Yes, ma'am. Again, look who's hollering the most. They're the
ones that have the most to lose, and they're the
probably the crookedest ones up there. So these people are
crooked as a dog's leg, ma'am. That's an East Tennessee
Sam saying. But it's that means they're really crooked, and
they're the ones squealing because they know it. And they've
got and you've got two groups, you've got pawns. These

(12:26):
some of these young kids, young liberals that are in
Congress right now, and they think it's great and oh,
I'm going to stick it to Elon Musk and Donald Trump.
They don't even know who they are, you know, Donald
Trump or Elon Musk. He'll probably stub his toe on
a bale one hundred dollars bills tonight as he's crying
over some freshman congressman taking a shot at him. You know,

(12:47):
I just lasts two. Dad comes short. Let's fix this problem.
It can be a bipartison. Think it can be beautiful
and we can come together as a nation. But the
power brokers choose otherwise.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:01):
So last night on the show, we had a Missouri
state senator who wants to create a private ice organization
in his state.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Not privately, but a state run organization.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
Give bounties to people who turn into legal aliens. You
have some unique ideas for dealing with the cartels. Talk
a little bit about one of your proposals that you're
working on.

Speaker 6 (13:17):
Well, it's called the cartail market, and thank you, I
have it right in front of me. Didn't know what
you're going to talk about it, but I'm Cartel Marquee
and Reprisal Appropriations Act of twenty twenty five and what
it does. It creates the presen's ability to hire military
type people to go after cartels out of the country.

(13:38):
And it's actually constitutionally sound and Article one, section eight
it provides for this. They were using the Revolutionary War
in the War of eighteen twelve, and you've got all
these former seals, marine writers, all these other elite commando
type units. These folks are well trained. They can do
it a lot cheaper and a lot. They can get

(14:01):
over the border without the media knowing about it and
reporting where they're going to be, and they can do
their business and get home. These cartels are evil. Three
hundred thousand children. I look at Nieland Stadium in Knoxville, Tennessee,
Big Orange, one hundred thousand people every seven Saturdays a year.
As you multiply by three, that's the number of children

(14:24):
that are in god knows where and what hell they're
in right now. Because we've turned our back on that.
And these men can go stop that in a moment's
notice without a lot of hooplah. They can get it
done and get back before the you know, they ink
hits the pen. And so I think it's a great idea.

(14:44):
It saves a lot of money, it's going to save lives,
and we can end these cartels.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
So much fresh thinking coming from conservative circles. They're leading
with ideas, and that's always when the American people appreciated.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Congressmen's such a great hour.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
Of having the show, You make a smile, you make
us think. It's always an hour to have y'all.

Speaker 6 (15:01):
Well, thank you, Amanda, thank you John. Y'all are wonderful
and I love being on with y'all.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
We love right for our country. We shall thank you sir.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
All Right, folks, guess what the biggest event, a political
event and conservative politics, is kicking off on Thursday morning.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Seapack is there.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Mercedes Sip, the gondam of Seapack is going to join
us right after these messages? Hey, America, are you looking
for a voice that really represents your values? AMAC, the
Association of Mature American Citizens, was created to champion the
needs of Americans who believe in faith, family, and freedom

(15:36):
like you and I do.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
With over two million.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
Members, their mission is simple but powerful, to protect the
interest of all freedom loving Americans, safeguarding social security and medicare,
and advocating for common sense policies. Members gain access to
incredible member benefits, including the award winning AMAC magazine. From
exclusive discounts on travel, insurance, and everyday services to a
strong voice in Washington. AMAC is here to make a

(15:59):
difference in your life and our nation. Joining AMAC isn't
just about benefits regardless of your age. It's about belonging
to a community that stands for timeless American values and
honor of President Trump's first one hundred days in office.
AMAC is offering an incredible deal en rolling a five
year AMAC members like I do for forty seven percent
off normally sixty dollars. Joined today for only thirty two dollars.

(16:21):
Visit AMAC dot us slash just news today to take
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just News. Join AMAC can become part of a movement
that stands for your family and your future.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
Welcome back to justin News, No Noise. Well, it is
that time of year, and that is that CPAC is
just around the corner at are starting tomorrow, and I
know that because I've seen our tech guys running big
equipment and boxes all across our office. It starts tomorrow
and it ends on Saturday, February twenty second, and of
course America's Voice and justin News are going to be
there every step of the way with.

Speaker 4 (16:59):
Complete covers top to bottom.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
So joining us now to discuss what we can expect
from this year's event is SEAPAC Senior Fellow She was
also former White House Strategic Senior Advisor to President Trump.
Mercedes Schlapp, Mercedes, thanks so much for being here, will two.

Speaker 5 (17:13):
Of my favorite people. This is so great, Thank you
for having me.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
This is this time feels different because you know, I've
been to a lot of seapacks, especially compared to four
years ago. As we were just chatting, you know, President
Trump obviously, after the election of twenty twenty and then
February of that next year, you guys effectively launched the
comeback tour. That was when President Trump came out and

(17:36):
really was giving strong indications that he was going to
run again.

Speaker 5 (17:40):
Well, I got to tell you, Amanda, you know, Matt
really took a lot of heat from his own board
members who were telling him to disinvite the president during
that twenty twenty one following you know, that time frame
after j six and President and Matt said, no way,
God disinviting him. We are going to have him here,
We have his back, We're going to admit let him

(18:00):
know how much we love him and support him, and
that we're going to make sure that we get him
going once again. And I thought that was a very
critical moment for President Trump during that speech that he
gave and knowing that he was still beloved by so
many of us, that we were not going to give
up and that we were going to keep fighting for him.

Speaker 8 (18:20):
And look what he's been able to do. Like we've
been through such.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
Dark times in our movement during those four years, not
only the MAGA movement, but just America in general under
this leader list of Joe Biden and his administration. And
now we get to celebrate and celebrate the victory. With
that being said, and you all know this, we got

(18:44):
to keep working hard every single day because the left
will regroup, the Left will try to continue to destroy
everything that President Trump is working on, and so we
have an obligation to make sure that President Trump succeeds
so that America can succeed.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
Such a great point, I want to turn to another
moment of a favorite Seapack moment of mine, because everybody
is now used to calling Tulci Gabbert the dn I,
but back in twenty twenty two, the Republicans weren't sure
what to.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
Make of her.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
She had just run for Democratic president. You gave her
a form at the Reagan Dinner. I was there that
night when it started people were a little nervous and hesitant.
By the end of that speech, your defense of freedom
was so extraordinary. You realize that a new conservative was born.
Remind us how important it was. That was another moment
where Seapac had a well, take a few arrows to
make a big courageous move.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
I know, and we love like undiscovering I mean discovering
or unraveling these superstars. And I think for Tulsi Gabbert,
it was a conversation that Matt had with Tulsi that
Matt was saying, well, you know, I have a lot
of people mad at me because I invited you, and Tulci.

Speaker 8 (19:44):
Said, yeah, I have a lot of people mad at
me too for me going to speak at seedback.

Speaker 5 (19:48):
And look at where we are today, really truly where
she understood that her party had abandoned her, that her
party turned on her, that her party basically called her
a traitor and a Russian asset. I mean, how disgusting
is that for someone who has served our country honorably
and is just a brilliant woman and just someone who
I respect greatly. And I'm so glad that President Trump

(20:10):
picked her for d and I and to head that agency.

Speaker 8 (20:16):
And also I want to add Robert F. Kennedy Junior.

Speaker 5 (20:19):
We invited him to speak at Seapack to just a
smaller group of our investors, and even some of our
big investors were saying, I don't know, I don't like this.

Speaker 8 (20:30):
I don't think I want to meet him.

Speaker 5 (20:32):
And then he spoke to the group and he literally
they were like, Okay, I don't agree with him on
climate change, but I can agree with him.

Speaker 8 (20:39):
And all these other things.

Speaker 5 (20:41):
And so I really feel that Seapack and I think
really Matt just has an eye for it. He sees
where the movement is going. He knows what we need
to do to expand this movement. And it's why John
and Amanda we're seeing this movement expand and basically explode internationally,
where we have foreign leaders coming to speak at Seapack.

(21:02):
We have delegations from different countries representing the conservative movement
in these different countries coming to Seapack because they want
to basically be inspired by what has been created here
with the MAGA movement, take it back to their countries,
get their members elected, and make sure that we fight
the communists, fight the wokeism, and stop the you know

(21:26):
and make sure that they protect their freedoms. I mean,
that's really the big call, the call to action that
we have here in America but also across the globe.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Well, and Mercedes is not just about bringing world leaders
to seapac here in DC. I know we're all used
to attending this seapack but there. It started as seapack
outpost all over the world, but now they have exploded.
You guys having seapac renferences in other places across the globe,
talk to us about those, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (21:53):
You got you guys got to come with us. I mean,
we got to do a rab like movement over there.
Because one of the things that we find in these
other kind is that they have the problem with the fake.

Speaker 8 (22:02):
News, right.

Speaker 5 (22:03):
They can't get just simple, clean, you know, truthful news
to the masses, and so like, even in Poland there's
a great organization media organization called Republica. And guess what
the federal what the government's doing. They're trying to shut
them down. They're trying to censor them. So they have
to fight so much of this government censorship and this
you know the fact that because they're you know, center right,

(22:26):
that they're being they try to silence them, and so
it is something that not only happens here in the US,
but happens across the globe. And then when they're able
to see, you know, media organizations like REV and social
media influencers and podcasters being able to break through and
get information to the masses. I think that's a huge
victory and the victory and that's why they're inspired by

(22:47):
what they're seeing here in the US and want to
take it back to their countries.

Speaker 8 (22:52):
And so, you know it's going to be remarkable.

Speaker 5 (22:54):
We have our Seapack International Summit that we're opening up
the conference with tomorrow, where we have delicate and leaders
from a number of countries, where we do these kind
of common share the best practices, what can we do
to help each other, how do we network, how do
we make sure that they know that they have allies
here within the US. And then of course we go

(23:14):
straight into the conference and our very own Vice President,
Jadie Vance was just announced he's opening up our conference.

Speaker 9 (23:21):
So it's going to be huge, just huge.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
Luckle.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
You're Steve thought that's going to be a fun one,
especially after last week's speech in Europe that was amazing.
You've got a great theme, America's back on track, and
I want to ask what that is going to kind
of message to the masses. And then secondly, who do
you think is our biggest surprise? Man, who do you
think people be most surprised will be on stages here?

Speaker 8 (23:42):
Oh that's so interesting. Okay, Well let.

Speaker 5 (23:44):
Me start with America back on track. I think, first
of all, we are in the celebratory mode. I think
we're seeing President Donald Trump just dominate in terms of
ensuring that he's moving quickly to implement his agenda, his
America First agenda that we know is going to provide
support and relief to American families and also bring peace

(24:05):
to the world. And look, he's been handed a lot
of very complicated problems that were really ignored that really
did Biden administration just failed time and time again.

Speaker 8 (24:15):
And I remember President Trump telling us, look, I don't
know if we're going to have enough time to turn
this around.

Speaker 5 (24:19):
And that's why I think President Trump is working with
such haste to turn things around. And you're seeing that
positive impact and you're seeing the broad support of the
American people for him.

Speaker 8 (24:29):
Now, the biggest surprise I can't really say.

Speaker 5 (24:32):
But I think there's going to be a lots of
different surprises. So I think we're going to see an
incredible mix of cabinet members who are going to be
joining us, in addition to actually, you know, business leaders
that have really impact and shaped so many of our industries.

Speaker 8 (24:48):
And then of course, you know you're.

Speaker 5 (24:50):
Talking about the social media influencers that have been in
such an important role in basically helping to secure this
victory as well. But you know what, I tell you
my biggest what I always love about Seapack, and you
too will agree, it's the people.

Speaker 8 (25:06):
It really is the people.

Speaker 5 (25:07):
It's the grassroots activists who literally come, they take it
all in, they learn, they go back to their communities
and their networking.

Speaker 8 (25:15):
In the process.

Speaker 5 (25:16):
Sometimes they even find a spouse, which is just amazing
to me.

Speaker 4 (25:18):
I love it, and.

Speaker 8 (25:22):
I'm telling you we have.

Speaker 5 (25:23):
Had engagements at Seapack, happening and marriages.

Speaker 8 (25:26):
So I love it. I'm like total matchmaker. I think
it's fantastic.

Speaker 5 (25:29):
So I think like the key is is that that
they can go back to their communities, feel empowered, run
for office, help get involved in elections, and knowing that
the fight is not done. We are just starting this fight.
We are just starting to make sure that we keep
America great and make sure that the American families have
what they need to basically raise healthy children in safe

(25:54):
environments so that you know, we can continue to you know,
basically enjoy the of this great country. So those are
to me the moments that I love is being with
the people, being with you all, and being able to
you know, connect and stay connected. In the Seapac family.

Speaker 3 (26:12):
One of the best places to find a spouse's church,
but second best is Seapac. All right, so all of
you youngins out there who are single, come to Seaback,
We're saying before we let you go. Speaking of youngins,
we have seen this traditional family marriage values movement really
taking over gen Z.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
How does that play into the Seapac theme?

Speaker 3 (26:33):
And you know these people who are coming up in politics.

Speaker 5 (26:36):
Yeah, I gotta tell you, it's so interesting. I've been
doing some segments with just top conservative leaders who with
hit them and their spouses. So I did this with
Jack Pisobic and Tanya Pisobic. I also did this with
Terry Shilling and his wife Katie Shilling, because I feel
that if we need to understand that the family is
the foundation of our society. If we can have stable

(26:58):
and healthy families, families that are centered on Christ, centered
on God, that are willing to basically fight against the
evils of the outside world, we're going to make it.
We're going to be able to build strong communities, strong families,
and really strong churches.

Speaker 8 (27:16):
And I mean, and that's what you want to see.

Speaker 5 (27:18):
That is, those are the ingredients of like healthy societies.

Speaker 8 (27:21):
Especially in Western civilization.

Speaker 5 (27:23):
And this is why you cannot allow the government to
step in and you know, try to indoctrinate your children,
because what are they trying to do.

Speaker 8 (27:31):
They're trying to divide and conquer.

Speaker 5 (27:34):
And our goal is to make sure that that family
unit stays intact with God in the center of it.

Speaker 8 (27:40):
And I think that watching.

Speaker 5 (27:41):
This movement, and now that I have two college kids,
and I really believe guys, my two college kids, I
think they're going to be married in the next two
or three or four years. I'm like freaking out because
I'm like going, I mean, they'll be graduated by then.
But like I would have never thought about getting married
at twenty one. I was like, career, career, career, career, Well,
the reality is you with a lot of emptiness if

(28:02):
you don't have these fulfilling relationships in your life. I'm
not saying everybody has to get married, but finding these
fulfilling relationships in your life are critical in really having
true joy and true happiness.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
Well for your two kids and all the other college
a's kids out there who are not married.

Speaker 4 (28:18):
Everybody come to Seapack.

Speaker 3 (28:19):
And everybody else that's right, tickets absolutely, everybody.

Speaker 4 (28:24):
Seapack dot org for tickets.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
Seapack Senior fellow, Mercedes Laps, thanks so much for joining us.
All right, everybody coming upack with the break. More on
those JFK files that President Trump ordered to be released.
When are we going to see them? What is it
going to look like? Organizationally, stay with us after that, after.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Them, Welcome back in America. Transparency is breaking out all
over DC, something that we're not used to here. I
like being shigned on things that used to be secret.
One of the first big bounties that we're likely to

(29:01):
get is the next set of documents for the JFK
assassination records. Joining us right now, someone who studied it
for years, and hopefully we can help us explain how
the FBI found fourteen thousand documents.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
Sixty years later. He's a lawyer.

Speaker 2 (29:14):
He's one of the great researchers on this topic. Larry Schnaff, Larry,
great to have you on the show.

Speaker 7 (29:19):
Hi there, good to be here.

Speaker 2 (29:21):
All right, you've sued the government many times, You've tried
to force so much of the transparency that we're just
about to get. What do you think will be the
big surprises in what's left and about to be turned over?

Speaker 7 (29:33):
Well, we have two issues in front of us.

Speaker 10 (29:35):
There's what's in the JFK collection, which is the records
that were transferred to the National Archives during the nineties
when the Records Review Board was tasked with scouring the
government for records. But the real story is what's not
in a collection, because we discovered this week there were
twenty four hundred FBI records which are about fourteen thousand

(29:58):
pages that Piers showed up, which calls into question the
good faith effort that was done. Was there a good
faith ever done in the nineteen nineties to find.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
All these records?

Speaker 7 (30:10):
And in fact, when the Records of View Board.

Speaker 10 (30:12):
Went out of business in nineteen ninety eight, their job
wasn't done. There were still records to be searched for,
including records of the CIA. Records that are in the
possession of the JFK.

Speaker 7 (30:25):
Library is the RFK Family Trust.

Speaker 10 (30:28):
Bobby Kennedy took records out of the White House within
an hour after the president was killed, and we haven't
seen those.

Speaker 7 (30:35):
We don't know what they say.

Speaker 10 (30:36):
There's sealed tapes of Corlis Marcello where he allegedly confessed
to being behind the assassination.

Speaker 7 (30:42):
Those tapes are been sealed and haven't been released.

Speaker 10 (30:45):
And we have FBI records obviously now that we found
out there's.

Speaker 7 (30:49):
Also records we discovered recently the.

Speaker 10 (30:52):
Existence of them. They're not in a collection, but we
learned that the CIA did its own investigation the weekend
the assassination. They went to Miami with trying to They
were interviewing exiles and Cubans to see if anyone was
behind the assassination.

Speaker 7 (31:05):
We've never seen those records results, so.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Much to look forward to, Larry.

Speaker 3 (31:09):
When it comes to the concealment of this information, many
Americans are at least suspicious over the fact that the
government was involved to some degree. Is the main concern
with the concealment, The fact that if that concealment goes away.
If there is transparency, then those suspicions will be affirmed.

Speaker 7 (31:30):
So it's a couple of things.

Speaker 10 (31:32):
The immediate explanation that Mike Pompeo to President Trump in
Trump one point zero was that he had to protect
the names of people in these records, claiming that they
relieve if we made promises that people in the nineteen
sixties who were under cover for US, and then we

(31:53):
reveal their names now, that they would not be able
to get new people to go under cover for US
now because they can't trust our promises.

Speaker 7 (32:01):
So that was the official excuse that was given.

Speaker 10 (32:04):
I think I don't think there's a smoking gun that
says here's.

Speaker 7 (32:08):
How we're going to kill President Kennedy.

Speaker 10 (32:10):
But I think there's a lot of documents there I
could sort of add some flavored for historians to kind
of put the pieces together as to what was suspected,
what leads they had and didn't look for.

Speaker 7 (32:22):
And obviously the reason.

Speaker 10 (32:25):
There was this warrant commission was as much to assure
our allies in Europe that we were not a banana republic.
The allies in Europe were convinced that Kennedy was killed by.

Speaker 7 (32:36):
A right wing conspiracy. And this was as much.

Speaker 10 (32:39):
For foreign consumption as was for domestic consumption.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
Fascinating, that amazing.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
Obviously, these fourteen thousand pages twenty four hundred records in
the FBI probably weren't at the dispose of the Warren Commission.
What does that say about the last most relevant time
we did a review that maybe we didn't have all
the evidence that either, well.

Speaker 10 (33:03):
We know there are records that are in the possession
of the federal government that were not transferred to the Archives,
which they were required to do under the Act, and
the FBI and the CIA dragged out. This has been
the CIA's mo from the beginning. Angleton, who was the
head of the Counterintelligence basically said we're going to wait

(33:25):
out the Warren Commission. And then they waited out the
Household Assassinations Committee, and they waited out.

Speaker 7 (33:30):
The Records Review Board.

Speaker 10 (33:32):
So they just they know there's a clock running, and
they just delay and refuse to cooperate, and eventually the
body goes away. Now, the National Archives entered into an
agreement with the CIA and the Records Review Board in
ninety eight when it went out of business. They were
going to continue to pursue these outstanding requests that the
ARP had made and they never followed up.

Speaker 7 (33:53):
And that's why we suit the National Archives.

Speaker 10 (33:55):
The Mary Farrell Foundation which I which I represent with
other council we sued the President, Biden and the National
Archives for failing to pursue these record searches and that
that litigation is ongoing. And then I had also sued
the National Archives after the Trump President Trump went out
of when he was when Biden took over the final

(34:17):
what really happened? What was the real story behind the
Trump postpones? Because President Trump said two days before the
October twenty fourth, twenty seventeen deadliner, release the records. He
said on Twitter, I'm going to release the records, and
then suddenly he changed his mind, and we just wanted
to know what happened, and as it turns out, the
National Security Council hijacked the process. And you know, you're
supposed to show to hold a record back, you have

(34:40):
to show there's an identifiable harm to national security, that
it is such gravity that it outweighs a strong public
interest and disclosure what possible national security grounds could there
be sixty years later? That's so important and the National
Security Council just basically took their position that it in
the public interest to hide these records. Now, the good

(35:02):
news is President Trump has fired about one hundred.

Speaker 7 (35:05):
And fifty people in a now Security Council.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
So.

Speaker 10 (35:09):
Maybe a lot of the people that were resisting disclosure
are now gone, and we're hoping that he will hit
that his order is not only going to result in
the release of the records that are in the collection.
But I sent the letter to the White House Council
David Warrington the order was issued, asking him to make
sure that they search for all the records that are

(35:29):
still in the federal possession, not just those in the collection.

Speaker 3 (35:32):
That's a great point, Larry, before we let you go.
This obviously was sixty years ago. There are still people
living who were directly connected. They would be in their eighties.
Are there people still living who have a very vested
and direct interest in this not going public.

Speaker 10 (35:48):
Well, there's more of an institutional incentive because there would
be embarrassment to the CIA and the FBI and the
Secret Service if the truth came out. But there are
some individuals that perhaps are aware of things that happened,
and their names have been withheld, so we can't interview

(36:08):
them while their names are redacted. And if the policy
that the government's been using is we don't release their
names until they die, but that's.

Speaker 7 (36:15):
Not what the statue says.

Speaker 10 (36:15):
A statue says you have to show there's an imminent
harm to them, right, and so they're hiding these names.
We find out about them if they die, we can't
interview them. So there are people there may be witnesses
who are never never interviewed, or there may be people
that let's say in the mafia or the low levels
of the CIA operations, or in the Cuban exile community

(36:37):
that might have.

Speaker 7 (36:37):
Some knowledge that haven't been talked to because we don't
know who they are.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
So important.

Speaker 2 (36:41):
Well, you've been relentless in your pursuit of the truth,
and I hope this final mission will get us the
answer is that we've long been denied. Larry, what a
great honor to having you in the show. Thanks for joining
us tonight.

Speaker 7 (36:50):
Thanks for the opportunity.

Speaker 2 (36:51):
Yeah, great discussion. All right, folks, we are going to
take a quick commercial break when.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
We come back.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
Brother Jeff has taken a sledgehammer to the bureocracy and
this isn't going overwhelm with something here and Watchington and
we'll talk much about that in the next block.

Speaker 3 (37:12):
Welcome back to just the news known noise. The Trump
administration has been ruffling some feathers. Ah, that's a euphemism
here in Washington, and to his voters that is a
breath of fresh air because it is exactly what his
base wanted. But to politicians and the media, it's not
so welcomed. All right, So with us to discuss some
of the reasons why the entrenched Washington elite are so
upset with the president is investigative columnists at The Daily

(37:33):
Signal Tony Kennet, Tony, great to see you, Thanks for
being here.

Speaker 8 (37:37):
Good to be with you both.

Speaker 3 (37:38):
Oh boy, Doge is revealing a lot of waste, fraud
and abuse. Chief among that is, you know, sending off
payments to foreign countries for DEI measures and trans operas
and all manner of crazy things. When it comes to
Democrats getting back on track and supporting what actually matters
to their base, are they any closer than they were

(37:58):
after the election?

Speaker 11 (38:00):
Are they any closer than they were after the election? No,
In fact, they're further away. And it's bewildering to see
because the line seems to be, well, actually, there's a
lot of waste and fraud, and it's a good thing.
I'm not really sure that telling the public as CBS
in sixty minutes did well. It was just thirty eight
billion dollars of spending in twenty twenty three for USAID. Yeah,

(38:21):
and that was spending that didn't go to the victims
of hurricanes Milton and Helene, the wildfire survivors of Maui
or California. I mean, there are a lot of Americans
who could use some national development. I don't think that
we need to be focusing so heavily on international development
while those are still untaken care of.

Speaker 2 (38:40):
Yeah, Tony, you've done some great work. Your columns are brilliant.
And I think this alliance that we have between the
administrative state, the news media that likes to protect the
administrative state, who often know their sources, and then nngo's
you get money and then make sure that the whole
thing stays together, the secret stays together. The busting of
the non profits and non governmental organizations, exposing them for

(39:03):
their middle man role in this that seems to be
one of the big themes that Elon and the President
are beginning to develop.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
How big a player.

Speaker 2 (39:10):
Are these nonprofits in the government machinery.

Speaker 11 (39:13):
Oh, they're a massive player. In fact, they are somehow
wedged into every single piece and function of the government bureaucracy.
And they masquerade as all kinds of things. They pretend
to be charitable organizations that are just out here to
do the common good. And by that, I mean they're
spending tax payer money which is allotted by Congress to
do specific things. They're then taking that using it in

(39:34):
entirely different methods for entirely different reasons to advance causes
that are not what Congress outlined those funds for. And
then when you press them on it, you say, hey,
we're just the insert name here charity. We love working
for the American people. And in this case, it's actually
Guatemalan gang members who are trying to gain illegal access
to the United States, like the so called church charity

(39:56):
was helping, and they weren't helping anyone at all.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
The rallying cries against what is happening that I hear
from Democrats is that it is breaching American citizens private data.

Speaker 4 (40:08):
But as Elon Musk has brought up.

Speaker 3 (40:09):
He's like, I used to be a PayPal I had
access to all sorts of information, not to mention now
at Tesla, your Tesla vehicle has all sorts of information,
maybe even biometrics.

Speaker 4 (40:18):
Is it a trustworthy.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
Process to allow someone like Elon Musk again and an
elected bureaucrat to have this?

Speaker 7 (40:24):
Can I ask you.

Speaker 11 (40:25):
Guys a question. This is something that maybe I'll be
able to solve later on tonight when I'm broadcasting. If
Elon Musk had your social Security number? He has, you know,
he has your social number?

Speaker 1 (40:33):
Right now?

Speaker 7 (40:34):
What's he going to do with it?

Speaker 4 (40:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (40:36):
Really, I mean I really want to relate it. I mean,
what is exactly He's the richest man on earth. What
is he going to do with my social Security number?
And he doesn't. Again, he owned PayPal, He had my
number for finance and my bank account numbers long since.
If he wants to audit some member of Congress, or
he wants to audit some bureaucratic process like the Social
Security Administration wasting billions of dollars on the dead and

(41:00):
not even on the care of their grave sites, but
on mysterious finances disappearing into the ether. Yeah, I say,
audit it twice as hard, twice as fast, and I'm
here for it all the way.

Speaker 2 (41:09):
Yeah, I think that's exactly right. I don't think people
are really that concerned. And by the way, these scare
tacts aren't resonating with the American people. The polling shows
and particularly young people actually kind of like what Elon
Musk is doing. It's really fascinating. Weere will Congressional Republicans,
not always the most courageous of crowd, end up in
shrinking this beginning to see some people starting to.

Speaker 1 (41:32):
Yelp a little bit, Oh, we're going to cut that.
Wait a second.

Speaker 2 (41:35):
Will Republicans take advantage of this once in a lifetime
opportunity to shrink government and shrink the power of return
the ownership of the government back to the American.

Speaker 11 (41:43):
People, Well, they won't do what it is that I
would prefer, which has burned several of these agencies to
the ground. Sorry, I'm ahoosier that Ron Swanson libertarianism comes
out every once in a while, but I will say
that I do think you're going to see a lot
of Congress members do more than is expected. And that's
because I believed that the greatest power of the Department

(42:03):
of Government efficiency wasn't just to participate in audits, but
was to focus all of the United States. Iire on
individual Congress members who are refusing to represent their constituents
and to do what they were elected for. We saw
this during the early confirmation process. That's worth its weight
in platinum.

Speaker 4 (42:21):
Yeah, I agree, Tony.

Speaker 3 (42:23):
I want to ask you about this, this plea from
Jim Acosta for mainly legacy news organizations to get together
boycott the Trump administration.

Speaker 4 (42:31):
What does that even look like for them?

Speaker 11 (42:33):
I mean, it looks like quitting CNN because they shoved
you to the middle of the night. This is like,
I can't sorry. Jim Acosta brings a smile to my face,
because if there's someone that I really want running the
rallying flag, it's the guy who couldn't even figure out
how to handle things in the first Trump administration. Now
he's back to show vote again. And I would rather

(42:56):
put scissors directly through my computer screen than listen to
Jim Acosta.

Speaker 2 (43:00):
I think Margaret Brennan is starting to move up the
back on that listem and I moved.

Speaker 1 (43:05):
Up that list too.

Speaker 3 (43:06):
You have the media so spun up in circles that
you have Margaret Brennan telling people that free speech was
the reason why the Holocaust happened.

Speaker 4 (43:12):
It's quite unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (43:13):
I mean, their heads focus coming out there is and
their hair is on fire. But what's new Tony Kenneth,
thank you so much for joining us.

Speaker 4 (43:18):
We're going to have to have you back on again
very soon.

Speaker 11 (43:21):
Thanks guys, what a great reporter.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
All right, everybody, we have one more segment coming up
after this, so Stigarna, we'll be back on your side.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
Welcome back, everybody.

Speaker 3 (43:40):
We've had a guest for this final segment where we're
going to slide in some confirmation news.

Speaker 1 (43:44):
Yeah, two big moments.

Speaker 2 (43:45):
So just a few seconds ago, the Senate advance cash
Betel's FBI director nomination for a final vote as early
as Thursday, and he could be FBI director on Friday morning.
Forty eight forty five are pretty tight vote there. We'll
keep an eye and see what that means for the
final vote. And then shortly after that he sent it
confirmed formally Howard let Nick to be our Commerce Secretary.

(44:08):
He'll be sworn in as early as tomorrow. Two more
very important pieces of.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
The President's leadership team.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
He's much kind of so a team and place you're
going to be writing about this Throgercide quickly.

Speaker 1 (44:17):
Trump has been moving, but a big moment.

Speaker 4 (44:20):
Absolutely absolutely all right.

Speaker 3 (44:21):
Before we head out for the evening, I want to
get to the state that I just left to come here.
Of course, many in the state of California lost their
homes a few weeks ago due to the devastating fires
in and around Los Angeles, but California Governor Gavin Newsom
seems more concerned.

Speaker 4 (44:35):
With what is going on in Washington than his own state.

Speaker 3 (44:38):
He recently approved fifty million dollars in funding to trump
proof California.

Speaker 4 (44:42):
I don't know what that means. Actually I do know
what it means. It's for legal defense.

Speaker 3 (44:45):
But he should have been doing fireproofing instead of trump
proofing his state and things might have turned out a
little bit better. So we're going to bring in the
chairwoman of the California Young Republicans, Arianna Austen Maacher.

Speaker 4 (44:55):
Arianna, thanks so much for being here.

Speaker 9 (44:58):
Thank you so much for having me.

Speaker 12 (45:00):
Yeah, Newsom's goal is not to help Californians. It's to
stay in the national media and be a headline and
a common name for households across America.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Really interesting, there's a fascinating fingure on. We had Rich
Barris the Polls Round last night, and he said that
gen Z voters are flocking to Donald Trump and more
excited about Donald Trump than anyone else in politics right now. Also,
Elon Musk tell us a little bit about the dynamic
among young people, young Republicans and what's going on right now.

Speaker 12 (45:32):
Definitely, Republican legislators in California are forcing issues that matter
at the state level. So we're talking about the passing
of Proposition thirty six, which helps with crime, which Newsom
did not support, and wildfire management. You obviously mentioned the

(45:52):
wildfires here. Newsom opposed over one hundred and fifty million
dollars in twenty twenty three by cutting funding, and now
he's actually begging for federal aid to help with this
wildfire management. So Republicans are trying to fight for these
issues that are not political in nature. They appeal to

(46:17):
everybody here in this state, and we're hoping to carry
that momentum into twenty twenty six.

Speaker 3 (46:22):
Absolutely cool, Arianna, I agree with you that Gavin is
obviously trying to keep his name in the headlines. But
considering the issues that California has had major deficit issues,
not to mention the wildfires, it seems like his name
has been in the headlines for not so great reasons.
Do you anticipate him moderating at some point so that
he can maybe find some middle ground for the rest

(46:45):
of America?

Speaker 9 (46:47):
I do not, actually.

Speaker 12 (46:49):
I mean, he's spending fifty million dollars in taxpayer money
for legal defense of illegal immigrants, even those with the
criminal record.

Speaker 9 (46:59):
Funds are being keeven to far left nonprofit to.

Speaker 12 (47:02):
Exploit our political system right now, and he's ignoring legal
immigrants who have been fighting for a pathway to citizenship
for years. He doesn't care about the California citizens or
the voters here. He cares about his twenty twenty eight
presidential run.

Speaker 3 (47:22):
Well, we shall see how that goes for him. Arian Ozenmoker,
thank you so much for being with us tonight.

Speaker 4 (47:27):
We'll have you back on It's More California News.

Speaker 9 (47:31):
Thank you so much for having me.

Speaker 3 (47:32):
Absolutely all right, John, I want to highlight something that
popped up today in my news feed because President Trump
signed an executive order on IVF and I know that
this is somewhat of a touchy issue, especially in Catholic
and Evangelical circles. But what I am seeing and hearing from,
and this is a cultural thing too, because you have
a lot of women of my generation who who were

(47:54):
sold the story that you should prioritize your career over family,
and a lot of time times these women lean left
and now they are finding themselves in a place in
life where they want to have children, but their biological
clock is fighting against them. So I think this might
be a really interesting issue that President Trump might bring
some folks from the other side on.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
It's definitely an instinctal issue, right. He got this during
the campaign. He saw the blowback during the campaign of
some Republican states trying to limit IVF and stepped into
the void at your home state of Alabama. And I
think he balanced the issue great for the election. I
think here, all he's trying to do is show us
and compassion. Why should it cross twenty thousand if it
can be made cheaper. So he's trying to help families

(48:35):
who want to have families or more children to get
it in a way that's cost effective. And you know
he's fighting inflation. This is an unusual inflation fighter, but
I think it's one that's very personal to families you're
going through the struggle. I bet you it's a winner.
No matter what the evangelical pushback is on this or
Catholic pushback, I think it's a winner.

Speaker 4 (48:52):
More babies. Who's a lot more babies? All right, So
you mentioned this at the top of the block.

Speaker 3 (48:58):
Cash Betel onto the step the final vote on Thursday,
but for this round it was forty eight to forty five.

Speaker 2 (49:04):
Yeah, it makes you wonder if some people have sat
out the vote because they voted in a larger number
for Howard LATINEK. No matter what it is, if they
get a simple majority vote, they've got it, and it'll
be very interesting to see where that ends up.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
But I think Cash.

Speaker 2 (49:17):
Hotel's on his way to being nominated, being confirmed, and
the FBI about to be reformed in a way that
we can't imagine. Maybe we won't have sixty years from
now fourteen thousand pages of documents with help from us
again six years now.

Speaker 4 (49:29):
Won't that be nice? Won't that be nice?

Speaker 3 (49:31):
Although I do kind of feel like, especially with respect
to the JFK stuff, it's like we just keep on
getting kicked and then we come back for more. And
every time we think it's going to happen and it doesn't.
So I'm with Larry sometimes it can be all right, everybody.

Speaker 4 (49:44):
That's all the time we have for it this evening.

Speaker 3 (49:46):
But we will see you back here at six pm
Eastern tomorrow night, and then we will see you at
six pm Eastern from ceback on Thursday and Friday.

Speaker 4 (49:53):
Grinstentfield is going to take you to the next ballanty.
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