Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:21):
Hello, everybody, Welcome to the Thursday edition of Just the
News and No Noise. I'm your host, Amanda Head, my
co host, and Just the News editor in chief John
Solomon is out on assignment tonight, but as always, I'm
reporting to you from our Washington, DC and the Wiredofishcoffee
dot com studios. Wired Tofish Coffee is the official coffee
of Just the News. We drink a lot of it
around here. And you can go right now to Wireddfishcoffee
(00:42):
dot com and get an amazing ten percent discount on
all of their great stuff, so many great things, mugs, paraphernalia,
all of it. You can use the code just News
at checkout and you'll get that great ten percent. All right,
so we hear. Just the News are closely following the
developments coming out of the Middle East. As tensions continue
to heighten between Israel and Iran, and as the White
House continues to monitor the situation, A massive debate has
(01:04):
broken out between the two sides of President Trump's coalition,
one side seeking to keep the United States out of
any new foreign conflict and the other looking to help
out the Israelis against an Iran that say that they
say is very close to developing a working nuclear weapon now.
There are of course other nuances as well. Some in
government are for regime regime change in Iran, for example,
(01:28):
and are for the use of limited force from the
United States to make that happen, and some some of
those people favor regime change don't want the force US
forces used at all and would rather the Israelis do
it themselves. Now, amid all of that, there's some tough
talk coming from the Iranian side. They're Supreme leader, the
Ayatola Kamani says that his country will never surrender after
(01:50):
President Trump called for it earlier this week, and the
Iotola warned President Trump from entering the war. Even so,
President Trump revealed earlier that Iran had offered to visit
the White House for talk, so something he praised as courageous,
but he also said that there was a big difference
between talking now and a week ago. White House Press
Secretary Carolyn Levitt express that today.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
As for a correspondence between the United States and the Iranians,
I can confirm that correspondence has continued.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
As you know, we were engaged.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
With six rounds of negotiations with them in both indirect
and direct ways.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Six rounds and while we wait and see if President
Trump will authorize a strike against the Islamic Republic. White
House Press Secretary Carolyn Levitt revealed the president's.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
Timetable regarding the ongoing situation in Iran.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
I know there has been a lot.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Of speculation amongst all of you in the media regarding
the President's decision making and whether or not the United
States will be directly involved. In light of that news,
I have a message directly from the President, and I
quote based on the fact that there's a substantial chance
of negotiations that may or may not take place with
Iran in the near future, I will make my.
Speaker 3 (02:59):
Decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
That's a quote directly from the President for all of
you today.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
And the debate within MAGA is not only about whether
there should be a strike. We have clear opponents and
proponents of that, but there is also a debate about
whether the United States should support full blown regime change.
As I said earlier, now we are seeing that play
out on Capitol Hill and in the media. Here's Senator
Lindsay Graham and Congressman timber Chat giving their two cents.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
We've got a chance to end a threat to the
state of Israel forever by replacing this regime was something better.
And I do believe the biggest winner of the iatotal
leaving would be the Iranian people. Take this regime down,
make the world a better place.
Speaker 5 (03:42):
I think that you're seeing on the ground and from
reports I've gotten that there are Iranians that would like
regime change. We just don't have a good record with
a regime change. We put somebody in and it doesn't
seem to always work out for us. I would use
a lot of caution in that area.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
For forty years, I think that the Iranian people have
been looking for that. But all that being said, a
newpole conducted by the Nepolitan News Service shows that seventy
seven percent of respondents believe Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon
would pose a threat to Americans. So President Trump, he's
got a very fine line to walk, but so far
he seems to be managing it pretty well. All right,
I think it's time that we get to our very
(04:22):
first guest of the evening joining us now, as Congressman
Randy Weber representing it in the Great State of Texas, Congressman,
thanks so much for being here.
Speaker 6 (04:30):
Thanks, Amanda. We should appreciate what y'all do.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
Well, thank you, sir, and I appreciate what you do
up on Capitol Hill. And speaking of that, I know
that there is this schism, it seems between Republicans on
Capitol Hill and really all across America. This is not
a Capitol Hill problem. There are people who are squarely
on one side and squarely on the other. How do
we unite Republicans around President Trump when you've got two
very different views of what our involvement or lack thereof,
(04:55):
should look like.
Speaker 7 (04:57):
Well, for one thing, I've often said that, look, number one,
when someone tells you they want to kill you, believe them.
You're talking about a regime that calls America. That's Us, folks,
the Great Satan, and Israel the Little Satan. And look
you know what happened October seventh, twenty twenty three, Amanda.
(05:19):
They had us in a classified room with videos. You
probably know a lot of the terrorists, the killers Hamas, who,
by the way, in their charter, the founding charter of
their very existance, we have the Constitution, they have a charter.
They say they're going to kill all the Jews and
destroy the state of Israel.
Speaker 6 (05:36):
And did I mention when somebody tells you they want
to kill you believe them anyway.
Speaker 7 (05:41):
They brought in there the video because those killers will
war go pro cameras. Let me tell you something, We
sit there for almost forty minutes. We watched those videos.
Hardly anybody walked out with a dry eye because they
killed women, they killed children. Unbelievable what they did. Now,
(06:02):
this Hamasa is, you know, supported by by the Iranians.
And when somebody says they want to carry about to
take them out, I think Americans have to understand them.
I understand what my good friend timber Shad said from Tennessee,
that we don't have a good history.
Speaker 6 (06:16):
With the regime change.
Speaker 7 (06:17):
You may remember that President Ronald Reagan dropped a bamb
and No market off his house in Libya because he
was exporting terrorism and killed how many Americans it was,
but at least he gave up his nuclear weapons and
he decided that you know, this old man's going to
kill me, and so he started playing straight. I think
if Iran understood that America, the strength of America, the
(06:39):
strength of the American people, resolved. Realize that iranans or
a threat to Israel our greatest allay and to us
that dog gone right.
Speaker 6 (06:49):
We're going to get involved.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Yeah, and Sir, I've heard so many people say, well,
President Trump ran on No New Wars. You know, peace
through strength. Iran with nuclear capability weaponry is not peace,
That's not peace. We had Senator Marsha Blackbirn on the
show yesterday. She said, if you give Iran a dollar,
it will go one of two places, either to uranium
or to proxies. And both of those are death for
(07:13):
not only Israel, not only to the United States, but
plenty of other countries too.
Speaker 7 (07:18):
And I started with Senator when she was in the
House before she got demoted to the Senate, and she's
absolutely right. And that's what American people need to understand again,
when somebody tells you they want to kill you, they're
exporting terror. They are the number one exporter of terror
in the country, in the world. Rather that I've seen
(07:39):
in the last I got involved in Republican politics eighty
three when Reagan rent re elections, I've never seen anything
like the Iranian malas in the Iranian.
Speaker 6 (07:50):
The IRGC or in a Regulationary Guard Force, the committee.
Speaker 7 (07:55):
Rather, they are absolutely intent on killing Americans, intent on
exporting terrorism, intent on killing the Israeli population, the Jews,
and also the entire country. People need to realize, you know,
oh it sounds nice. Look we're going to play nice,
We're going to be diplomatic. Blah blah blah blah blah.
(08:16):
You cannot you cannot negotiate with killers. And that's what
we're trying. That's what we're trying to do. I give
President Donald Trump credit. He's a great president and he's
trying to do this as cautiously and as correctly as
he can. Kudos to him. He's going to make the
right decision. We just have to be patient.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
Well, and that's another thing too. I know that there
are a lot of criticisms about the decisions that he
is presumably making regarding our involvement in the war. And
there are a lot of folks out there, including the
Vice President who said, I think he's proven his track
record during his first term bringing troops home, being a
net negative when it comes to troops overseas in his
first term. I think that he has learned some trust
(08:58):
at this point.
Speaker 6 (09:00):
Well, I think he did too. Man.
Speaker 7 (09:01):
That's a good point. But this is kind of unprecedented times.
You're now saying, of course we're on the back, on
the heels of Hamas killing two thousand Israelis. We're on
the hills now, back of the fact that they are
developing the nuclear weapon. They have now sent as you know,
I don't have to tell you, drones and missiles into Israel.
(09:22):
And now we're looking at what you call it, what
you on, a full scale war, a battle, whatever it is, confrontation.
But you know, last time I checked, the Great State
of Israel, our friends, has never exported terrorism, has never
sought to kill anybody else just because they didn't agree
with them. But you're not seeing that out of and
(09:43):
I told Hamani and the Malas they are absolutely intent
on killing people who doesn't agree with them. So I
think it's a bit different now.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Yeah, I think so too. And President Trump put out
a post a few days ago that basically said, Comania
is safer now. But we know where he lives. He
can hide there. He's safe for now. I remember another
story I believe it was about the leader of the Taliban,
where President it reminds me of that map that he
sent of the terrorist house and it was just enough,
(10:14):
just enough to let them know that we know exactly
where you are.
Speaker 6 (10:18):
Yeah, I remember that too.
Speaker 7 (10:19):
Somebody said, Randy, didn't President Trump tell the Taliban leader
he knew where he lived, that we knew where he lived?
And I said, no, he sent him a picture of
his house. Great impetus, man, great impetus.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
Absolutely, Sarah, I want to ask you about one of
your colleagues, Squad member il Han Omar. She claims that
Iron has not attacked Americans. John, and I estimate that
actually a thousand Americans over the last hundred years or
so have died at the hands of the Iranians, including
in war. When you have rhetoric like that from a
(10:56):
sitting member of Congress, and then you look at the
behavior of a lot of these young people wearing kafas
and being violent across this country, I have to say
I'm not really surprised because the role model that these
people have is someone like this who is either peddling
violent rhetoric or she's lying through her teeth.
Speaker 6 (11:14):
Well, I think it's both. Actually to be a truth
with the man.
Speaker 7 (11:17):
Then, looking in Texas, we had a bumper stricker back
in the sixties and seventies when all this Paulican discutchon
went abound Vietnam War and how America should be treating
you know, other countries that are trying to kill us,
say the Communists, for example, are about to take over
the world. Il han Omar reminds me of the bumper
sticker that we had back in the sixties and seventies
(11:37):
Texas and it said America, love it or leave it.
Il han Omar is here about the grace of God
and the grace of the fact that she was able
to get here.
Speaker 6 (11:49):
Be here.
Speaker 7 (11:50):
Now, quit criticizing the United States of American our policies.
If you don't if it's so bad here, if you
don't like it, go to some other country.
Speaker 6 (11:59):
It's just that simple.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
It truly, truly is speaking of that. President Trump had
a very big accomplishment that in the month of May,
especially compared to Joe Biden who had thousands, not a
single illegal immigrant was released into this country. Sir, you
and I were talking about this before we came to air.
I think of the morale of border patrol. I think
(12:21):
of the human aspect of these men and women who
have to protect our country and the shackles have been removed.
They are now able to do their jobs. And you
in Texas, I just I feel like these people have
to feel like they have been liberated, and it is
soul fulfilling for them.
Speaker 6 (12:38):
Absolutely is.
Speaker 7 (12:39):
Because they're protecting Americans, they're protecting Texans.
Speaker 6 (12:41):
And you probably know this.
Speaker 7 (12:43):
The United States of America has about two thousand miles
of border with Mexico and Texan Texas has almost twelve
hundred of millson miles. That's old jobs. The vice chairman
of the Borders Committee, when I was in the legislature,
I've been there. It was bad back then. And Amanda,
I've been there. The coyotes and the druggies are bringing
these people up for drug trafficking, for human trafficking. They're
(13:04):
bringing a lot of these young girls up for that
very reason across the border. And I've been there. They
have what's called rape trees. I've been there and seeing
them with my own eyes. These coyotes they rape these
young girls repeatedly, females, and they'll take advantage of.
Speaker 6 (13:20):
Them and then they hang their underwear.
Speaker 7 (13:22):
And stuff in a tree as a trophy to show
what they've done. I tell you what Our border is
now more secure under our great President Donald Trump. We
need the border wall build continued. We need a lot
of work done. The border patrol is in a good place.
President Trump has done his due diligence to promise to
protect the American the Americans, and you're now seeing the
(13:43):
agency that's charged with the responsibility of doing that actually
getting some backup, actually getting to work because they know
that President Trump's got their back.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
Absolutely, sir. Speaking of immigration, I want to stay on
that for a moment, because it sounded like through a
eat last week that President Trump wanted to let up
on the deportations, at least with respect to a few industries.
But that doesn't sound like that's happening at all, because
Tom Home and his borders are says that. I mean,
he has consistently said that he wants to ramp it up,
(14:15):
he doesn't want to slow it down.
Speaker 7 (14:17):
Well, I don't know what the difference there is, but
I do know this Texas is an agricultural state to
some degree. You know, we're the second largest economy in
the United States, second only in California, And if we
were country, we'll be the I think eighth and the
largest country in the world. Based on our economy. We
do have agriculture, you know, we do have those who
want to come over and work for us. They actually
(14:40):
come back and forth. I've got in my District fourteen,
we've got a bunch of rice farmers, We've got cotton farmers.
And I've been down there and toured those facilities. And
they have immigrants that come across and they work the season.
Then they go back to Mexico, for example, and they
make a good believe it or not, they make a
good They make a good wage, like anywhere from fourteen dollars.
Speaker 6 (15:01):
An hour to eighteen dollars an hour.
Speaker 7 (15:03):
And the guys I talked to said, look, we don't
have health insurance for them, but we pay to an
insurance policy. But we pay for their dental, We pay
if they have to go to the emergency room, we
pay for their problems. Because they're good workers, they're family people,
they're hard workers. They come here, they do a job,
(15:24):
and then they go back across to make They're not
over here to kill us. They're not over here to
take advantage of us. So yeah, Texas is an aggregarian
economy in some regard. So I think that what Trump
is intending to do is to continue those who want
to be here and do the right thing, even if.
Speaker 6 (15:42):
We are way over our quota.
Speaker 7 (15:44):
I don't know, I agree necessarily without raising our quota,
but I think that's what he's aiming at.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Yeah, I think that's probably spot on. Congressman Randy Webber
from Texas, thank you so much for being here tonight.
We'll see you soon.
Speaker 6 (15:54):
Thank you, Amanda. We love what y'all do.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Thank you, sir. Likewise, all right, everybody, next, how can
President Trump continue to counter the deep state? We're going
to talk to a man who until recently was at
the heart of the Department of Justice, Aaron Rice, about
that and much much more, including his campaign for Attorney General.
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Speaker 1 (17:38):
Welcome back everybody to just the news, No noise. President
Trump has been doing a lot to take down the
deep state and largely stue to people that he has appointed.
And if you've been following the reporting here at Just
the News, we have been highlighting everything that the Trump
administration is doing to shine light on the deep state.
And the latest example, well, the FBI suspected a Chinese
plot to rig the twenty twenty election in favor of
(17:59):
Joe Biden. And they were told by a confidential human
sword that the CCP was sending out fake driver's licenses
to the United States in order to create thousands of
fraudulent mail in ballots for former President Joe Biden. So
after the FBI sent out that report to other federal
intel agencies, then asks those agencies to destroy the intel.
So much for the narrative that the twenty twenty election
(18:20):
was the most secure in history, right, Chris Krebbs, All right,
So what else is going on in the government and
what can we the people do to stop it? Joining
us now as a man who may have the answer,
former Assistant Attorney General for the Department of Justice, and
he is now running for Attorney General of Texas to
continue the fight against the leftist agenda. Aaron Rights Aaron,
thanks so much for being here.
Speaker 10 (18:41):
Happy to be here, Manadanks.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Absolutely all right. So I know you've seen this CCP
story sending drivers licenses to the United States so that
people can get that mail in ballot they can vote
for Joe Biden. But an unprecedented move, after this intelligence
was spread out across different intel agencies, they said, nevermind,
delete it, trash it, shred it, whatever it takes. Burnett,
(19:05):
how disturbing is it to you that number one that happened,
and number two they basically tried to cover it up.
Speaker 11 (19:11):
Yeah, it's, first of all, it's totally disturbing, but it's
also utterly unsurprising. I know there were many of us
that were working deeply on election integrity back in October,
November December of twenty twenty, in and around the presidential election,
who were saying that, of course, these sorts of things
are happening. And you'll remember all the way back then
(19:33):
the gas lighting of the Democrats and the mainstream media
and the establishment saying calling us all conspiracy theorists, that
they were crazy. We were getting canceled for questioning the
outcome and the manner in which the presidential election was managed.
All the while forgetting that back in twenty sixteen, all
of the Democrats and Hillary Clinton were all saying that
(19:54):
was a stolen election, and so really they're just projecting
their own sort of insecurities on the right.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
But I will tell you.
Speaker 11 (20:01):
That back in the fall of twenty twenty when I
was first with Attorney General Ken Paxson is his deputy,
after that fraudulent election came through and all the mainstream
media was calling the election for Joe Biden, President Trump
went around the country looking for a champion to file
a lawsuit to challenge the constitutionality of that election, and
(20:23):
that case eventually became known as Texas Pennsylvania, which Attorney
General Packson, me and several of my colleagues led in
the United States Supreme Court challenging the constitutionality of how
several states ran their election. And so we provided all
kinds of evidence, and bottom line is here we are
in the year twenty twenty five, and a lot of
(20:44):
what we were saying five years ago actually turned out
to be exactly what we were saying, and now it's
coming to light. So I'm shocked. I'm disturbed, but I'm
not surprised.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
Yeah, you know of all of the dire moments during
the twenty twenty election, I actually remember at the most,
I remember that decision from the Supreme Court that basically
passed on it. I was sitting in a place here
in DC called Joe's with my good friend Ben Burkwam,
who also works at this network, and I remember checking
my phone and seeing the news from the Supreme Court
that they had basically cowered and it was absolutely heartbreaking.
(21:17):
But speaking of your predecessor, Ken Paxson, I was thinking
about this when I found out that we were having
you on, because you know, being the Attorney General of
Texas is it's a huge role and a huge responsibility,
but an immense amount of power. If the State of
Texas sues backpage dot Com, the EPA Pfizer that carries
(21:38):
a ton.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Of weight, it's a huge amount of weight.
Speaker 11 (21:41):
And look the I worked for Attorney General Packston for
three years. After him, I worked for Senator Cruz as
his chief for two and then that culminated.
Speaker 10 (21:50):
In President Trump bringing me aboard.
Speaker 11 (21:52):
The Justice Department. When he nominated me in December of
twenty four, he called me a quote maga attorney, a
true maga attorney, and a warrior for the Constitution. And
so when I was with Paxton for three years, I
saw up close and personal what kind of courage, what
kind of metal, what kind of man, what kind of
character it takes in order to preside over the country's
(22:17):
largest and most powerful conservative Republican law firm in the country.
There's a reason why folks know who Ken Paxson is
around the country because it's not just a B team
state office. The Texas Attorney General's Office is a national figure.
It has major national impact on shaping the state of lawfare,
law and order, and justice in our country.
Speaker 9 (22:39):
And so when I'm stepping out now.
Speaker 11 (22:40):
As a candidate for Texas Attorney General, one of the
things I want to communicate to Texans and to folks
around the country is, look, you've got The next Attorney
General has to have the battle scars to prove that
he's been in the fight, that he knows what he's doing,
that he's got the courage and the medal and the
(23:00):
stomach and the spine to take it. And there's no
one else in this race, either now or hypothetically that's
got the kind of background litigating, appealing, suing, defending, and investigating.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
On all of the major issues.
Speaker 11 (23:15):
That attorney general that has made Attorney General Packson one
of America's favorites on election integrity, order, security, transit, the
Kids Second Amendment, backing the Blue illegal aliens, all of
these issues. Right, you need an attorney general to succeed
Ken Paxton who's got the battle stars to prove that
(23:35):
he knows what he's doing on day one, is going
to be deeply aligned with this administration to advance the
America First law and order agenda. And there's only one
person in the race, in my opinion, that I think
can do it adequately, and it's me and folks can
learn about me at aaronrights dot com a ar O
n rii TC dot com.
Speaker 1 (23:54):
Perfect Aaron. I know that there are probably a lot
of people out there who would say, you know a
position at the DOJ, that's a really, really prestigious position,
and now you want to run for Texas Attorney General.
Do you consider Texas Attorney general if you win that
if you win that position, do you consider that to
be even more consequential than your position at the DJ
(24:14):
I do I do.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
Believe that it is.
Speaker 11 (24:16):
And that was part of the prayerful analysis and due
diligence that I put into thinking about this Attorney General
Packson announced his Senate run over two months ago, and
so I went through an exploratory phase where I thought about, Okay,
what would happen to our country if Ken Paxson is
succeeded by somebody who's not ready?
Speaker 3 (24:39):
What if the next Texas Attorney General is.
Speaker 11 (24:41):
Someone who's just a generic member of GOP inc. What
happens if the next Texas Attorney General has never really
practiced law, which my primary opponent right now is not.
What would happen if the next Texas Attorney General has
zero MAGA credibility, has not been vetted, tested and tried
(25:02):
by the forces of the left. What happens if the
next Texas Attorney General does not strike fear into the
heart of the left. As Senate Majority of Judiciary Committee
Democrat ranking member Dick Durbin said about me, or Corey
Booker said about.
Speaker 10 (25:18):
Me during my hearing.
Speaker 11 (25:19):
He said, I sent a chill down, as fine, what
happens if we have somebody who's just kind of a
b player, Texas and the country will be seriously disserved
law and order and justice will not be done.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
And the unit, not just Texas, but.
Speaker 11 (25:34):
This country and this administration cannot afford to have somebody
who is not quote, a true MAGA attorney and a
warrior for the constitution, which President Trump called me ready
to serve on day one as Texas AG and so yes,
I am absolutely honored to have been brought into President
Trump and Attorney General bodies Justice Department. It was the
(25:56):
honor of a lifetime to go through that process and
to serve alongside law and order attorneys at the DOJ.
But I'm telling you right now, I've seen DJ I've
seen Texas AG's office, I've seen everything in between, and
we've got to get a strong Texas AG next. I
think I'm the guy, and folks to learn more about
me at Aaronrights dot com.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Ye tried and tested and endorsed by Tom Homan, and
considering Texas as a state that, for all intents and purposes,
is sixty percent of our border, that's pretty darn important.
Aaron Wrights, thanks so much for being here, and again, everybody,
Aaronrights dot com you can find out more about his campaign,
all right, everybody. After the break. Democrats continue to fight
for men in women's bathrooms and locker rooms, as well
as transing your children. But why is this such a
(26:37):
major issue for them when the majority of Americans disagree
so vehemently. We're going to talk to a former teammate
of a trans swimmer, Leah Thomas, Paula Scanlon.
Speaker 8 (26:47):
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Speaker 1 (28:17):
Welcome back, everybody. House. Republicans recently took a very principled
stand for fiscal responsibility and traditional values by passing language
in the Big Beautiful Build that prohibits federal Medicaid and
Affordable Care Act funding from being used for gender transition
procedures for any age. That was the language, I call
it sexchange anyway. That happened across all fifty states, and
Democrats are of course against it. So we've also just
(28:39):
seen the Supreme Court hand down a likely precedent setting
judgment that when they upheld Tennessee's ban on transgender surgeries
for miners. Yet Democrats continue to fight for transing kids
and men playing in women's sports, even when it is
now essentially an eighty twenty issue in America, if not
ninety ten. It's not going their way. So joining me
now to talk about all that from the American Principles Project.
(29:02):
She also was a former teammate of trans swimmer Leah
Thomas at the University of Pennsylvania. Paulascanlon Paula, great to
see you again.
Speaker 3 (29:10):
Thank you so much for having me on.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
I cannot for the life of me and Paula. I
know we've talked about this before. I don't understand on
an issue that polls so poorly for Democrats, why on
earth is this something that they are doubling down on.
Speaker 3 (29:24):
You know, I wish I had answers, honestly for their sake.
Speaker 12 (29:27):
I hope they figure it out, because this is the
easiest issue for us.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
To continue to push on. I mean, yeah, Democrat voters
don't even agree with this.
Speaker 12 (29:34):
We're looking at New York Times polls that even admit
that sixty seven percent of Democrats, that's sixty seven percent
of people that voted for Kamala Harris, they do not
believe in men playing in women's sports, and they continue
to push this, and honestly.
Speaker 3 (29:48):
Let them do it.
Speaker 12 (29:49):
Let us keep winning elections over this issue, because truly,
this is what turned Centrists and even Democrats over to
our side and helped us win the election, helped us
get the majority in the House and the Senate. But honestly,
I can't even understan why they keep pushing this, and
they want to keep pushing this, and they really want
to just cater to this small, tiny group of their
(30:09):
party that's so radical in believing men can be women
and a six foot four tall man should be in
your girls' locker room.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
Yeah, I mean, it's so unbelievably common sense, and yet
they just seem to run in the opposite direction anytime
common sense knocks on their door. I want to ask
you about this Tennessee, this decision out of the Supreme
Court yesterday regarding the state of Tennessee and their law
that very reasonably says, we ain't paying for it. We're
not paying for sex change for miners. You can call
a gender transition surgery whatever, and it's not even sex
(30:38):
change because you can't change somebody sex anyway, you know
what I mean? How consequential. Is this going to be
Do you think it's.
Speaker 3 (30:45):
A wonderful win. But a lot of people think that
the fight is over. It's nowhere and ne'ar over.
Speaker 12 (30:49):
It's just saying that what's been done in Tennessee by
banning these surgeries for minors is allowed.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
It's not a violation of the Constitution. The Supreme Court
just ruled that.
Speaker 12 (30:57):
There are many activists on the other side that are crying,
saying their rights have been violated, that people are being
put in harms. Way, No, this is saving children in
the state of Tennessee, and ultimately we have to fight
this now in other states. There are other states that
still allow this to happen. There's still states blue states
in this country that are pushing for parents to lose
custody of their kids if.
Speaker 3 (31:17):
They don't want to transition them.
Speaker 12 (31:19):
I mean, there are still surgeries happening across the country
to minors, and we have to keep fighting. But I
think that this is a great win and I hope
we see the day where there's no more transgender surgeries
for miners anywhere in this country, no matter how blue
the state.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
Absolutely, I want to ask you about the state of
play pun intended with the NC DOUBLEA because President Trump
signed that very important executive order. This was what back
in February, I believe the NCAA said, Okay, yeah, we're right,
we'll comply. But then when you dug into the language,
the NC DOUBLEA was not really doing much of anything
to change their policies. When it comes to the NCAA,
(31:55):
are they still allowing or maybe even turning a blind
eye to men being in women's sports because they're not
really requiring the verification documents. It seems like yes, they
definitely are not.
Speaker 12 (32:07):
I mean, firsthand, let's just talk about the fact that
Leah Thomas started competing back in twenty twenty one, and
it took them years to even make any policy suggesting
that what they had done.
Speaker 3 (32:17):
To us was wrong.
Speaker 12 (32:18):
Back then, they waited until Trump signed the executive order
to do anything at all, and when they did that,
they said, okay, we're going to base this off of
birth certificates. Well, upon looking into it, there are over
thirty states in this country where you can change your
birth certificate.
Speaker 3 (32:31):
You can go down. I can go down. I live
in a liberal state.
Speaker 12 (32:34):
I can go down to the DMV or whoever in
petition and say actually, I want my birth certificate changed
to be male, and they.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
Would do it for me, meaning the other way around.
Speaker 12 (32:44):
For male athletes wanting to compete in women's sports, they
can use that and they can still go and play
in women's sports based on how the NCAA set up
their policy, and they haven't changed it. Once they heard this,
they didn't care at all, and it just showed me
that this was never.
Speaker 3 (32:56):
About protecting women.
Speaker 12 (32:58):
This is always about advancing their best end, and they
have no interest in protecting female athletes.
Speaker 3 (33:03):
They only have an interest in making money in those.
Speaker 12 (33:04):
Big sports like football and basketball, and other than that,
they don't care about you.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
Good luck, Yeah, Paul. I remember in twenty twenty one
when this happened with Leah Thomas, and I remember thinking
to myself, it's going to be women who who make
this change. It's going to be women who forced this
to change, and women like you sure enough step forward
to do this. Who else needs to get in the
fight with you?
Speaker 10 (33:25):
Guys?
Speaker 3 (33:26):
Well, I think we need more women.
Speaker 12 (33:28):
I mean, we just saw what happened with Simone Biles,
who is a outstanding female athlete, and we're looking at
these gold medalist, female athletes that have said nothing.
Speaker 3 (33:37):
I mean even in the swimming world.
Speaker 12 (33:39):
Of course, Riley Gaines, a great friend of mine, has
done so much for this movement, but there are many
other female athletes that competed at the NCAA Championship that
have Olympic medals, that are outstanding athletes, and they have
been silent.
Speaker 3 (33:52):
On this issue.
Speaker 12 (33:52):
And not just in the sport of swimming, but in
every sport, I mean track and field.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
This issue is running rampant. I swear every single weekend,
I'm seeing a.
Speaker 12 (33:59):
Story out of California or Oregon where a male athlete
is dominating female athletes in a high.
Speaker 3 (34:05):
School track championship, and yet none of those olympians are
speaking out.
Speaker 12 (34:08):
And so ultimately, I think if we can't depend on
them to speak up, I can see why people don't
think this issue is worth fighting for.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
Yeah, Paul, I'm sure you know this. My alma mater,
Auburn University, is a big swimming school, and I would
love to see some of the female athletes out of
my university speak up more, people like Sunny Lee who
have won gold medals in the Olympics. It seems like
I don't is it cowardice, What is it?
Speaker 12 (34:33):
I think it's a lot of fear and actually, funny enough,
I actually grew up swimming with a girl who went
and swam at Auburn, and she messaged me to say
she supported me and Riley, but didn't feel like she
was really out a point where she could talk about
it because she didn't directly compete against Leah Thomas, which
is fair, but she was on her side.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
So maybe your university does have some good ones in there.
Speaker 1 (34:51):
Yeah, well, I wish they would speak up. I understand
that maybe they didn't have to compete with Leah, but
courage is contagious, and Paula, you've got a whole boatload
of that. So thank you so much much for being here.
All right, everybody. Next, the media is hyping up a
new form of COVID. They are dubbing the new variant
razor blade throat in headlines. If we ever see the
(35:12):
end of this, I don't know who. We're going to
talk about it with doctor Peter McCullough about that and
much more after the break.
Speaker 8 (35:21):
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our healthcare system aren't going to simply go away. The
challenges our system faces won't disappear overnight. Now more than ever,
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Speaker 1 (36:42):
Welcome back, everybody. The media is hyping up a new
COVID variant, a razor blade throat is what they are
calling it. Is there anything to worry about? Or is
this just more fear mongering? Joining us now to talk
about that and much more. World renowned doctor and chief
scientific officer at the Wellness Company, Doctor Peter mccullought. Doctor McCullough,
Thanks so much for being here.
Speaker 6 (37:02):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (37:03):
Okay, So a new COVID variant is what is the
virility like? Is this something we need to worry about?
If somebody starts feeling a scratchy or sore throat, do
they need to panic?
Speaker 6 (37:14):
You know?
Speaker 13 (37:15):
It's a variant that has now a name and actually
a description. It's NB one point eight point one. It's
a omicrome subvariant. It's been called nimbus or a razor
blade sore throat. And I think all of us have
had a viral illness where the sore throat is severe. Remember,
(37:38):
a virus is in the nose for about five days,
silently replicating, and then the lymphatics strained back to the
throat and we feel a sore throat first. But when
we feel a sore throat, the virus has actually already
been in the nose for five days. So I got
to tell you this variant is a strong call for
(37:58):
nasal sprays and gargles to be done routinely, twice a day.
Don't wait until you're sick, because the virus could be
there even today, and if it's disrupted with a nasal
spray and a gargle, and nasal sprays can be you know,
iodine based, xylotol, colloidal silver, the whole variety of gargles work.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
That's the best prevention measure.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
So if people want to do a gargle or something
like that, you know, I've seen various recipes online. Obviously,
especially with colloidal silver, you have to very very strongly
dilute it. What do you recommend? Is there a specific
one you recommend?
Speaker 13 (38:36):
At the Wildness Company, we feature Immune Mist, which is
saline iodine based missed nasal spray. Throat sprays great when
you're traveling, you know, outside of the Wildness Company. One
of my favorites is clear. It's a xylotol based one
x l e R and then the companion gargles called spray.
Speaker 4 (38:55):
S p r Y.
Speaker 13 (38:56):
They have very good randomized trial data. They clearly prevent
COVID nineteen, common cold flu RSV, and they're good actually
for kind of nasal hygiene and esidental hygiene.
Speaker 3 (39:09):
So everybody should be doing.
Speaker 13 (39:10):
Twice a day nasal sprays and gargles. Don't wait until
you get sick.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
I love that, Okay. I want to move on to
some recent news. Within the last twenty four to forty
eight hours or so, two major companies, General Mills and
Hines have stepped forward and said we're going to get
rid of the artificial dies in our food. This obviously
would have never happened were it not for Bobby Kennedy
and a whole sleut, Jay Badacharia, Marty McCarey, a lot
of these people who have stepped forward in this movement.
(39:36):
How consequential is this going to be for just making
Americans healthier in general?
Speaker 3 (39:42):
It's good news. Both companies were on the way to
doing this.
Speaker 13 (39:45):
They had initiatives, and we're talking largely about yellow and
red dyes. Both of them have been linked theoretically in animals,
chronic exposure to various cancers.
Speaker 3 (39:57):
That's just concerning.
Speaker 13 (39:58):
And there aren't clinical data showing their link to hyperactivity
and children. That's another reason to get rid of it.
So I think it's it's a welcome change. The companies
have said it's not going to be till twenty twenty
seven until they're out of the products, but you know,
these are positive changes, so good to see them.
Speaker 1 (40:18):
I got to say, twenty twenty seven until they're out
of the products, that's two years from now. That means
that they are using components that are two years old
by the time twenty twenty seven rules around. But I'm
going to side step that for a moment, and I
want to get something from you regarding the topic that
I had with my last my last guest regarding transurgery.
You know, I think for so many of us who
oppose this, we see the savagery and the mutilation, and
(40:41):
you know, at the very least, what can turn someone
sterile if they are on puberty blockers at a certain age.
But I know you've got some strong scientific data about this,
so literate.
Speaker 13 (40:53):
It's true that their data have been coming in now
for at least a couple decades, we now know that
most children who are beginning this transgender process they have
gender dysphortia. They actually have background autism spectrum disorder.
Speaker 3 (41:10):
The majority do.
Speaker 13 (41:12):
So children with autism are suggestible, they feel ostracized, and
normal children essentially wouldn't do this, I mean, because their
gender orientation is solid. So it's important to understand that
transgender clinical care in a sense is preying upon children
(41:34):
with autism. We have a neuropsychiatric disorder, and all the
data suggests that transgender care is sterilizing.
Speaker 3 (41:42):
Its disfiguring is permanent.
Speaker 13 (41:44):
It increases the burden of psychiatric disease and increases mortality
from all causes. More than half the states have banded
in the youth, and now the Supreme Court is backing
up Tennessee, which in a sense is backing up Texas
and the other twenty five states, and President Trump, who
has also weighed in with an executive orders. So I'd
(42:05):
like to see this completely eliminated from as a threat
to our children. Above all, do no harm. I know
that children and adults want neurodiversity and gender diversity, but
it's not something that is clinically appropriate or prudent. We
can't have harm done to autistic children.
Speaker 1 (42:27):
Yeah, absolutely, sir. Before I let you go, I want
to ask you about pharmaceutical ads. I saw one this
morning for something I had never heard of, CIPD, not COPD,
and I thought to myself, well, that's something novel and
never even knew. I still don't even know what that is.
But we are only one of two countries that allow
pharmaceutical ads on TV. Is this something that RFK needs
(42:51):
to look at and possibly consider doing away with.
Speaker 13 (42:55):
RFK actually has a team now, so Bernie Sanders and
Angus K King and the Senate are moving with RFK
to ban pharmaceutical advertising. The reason why this is so important,
and Tucker Carlson exposed this now a few months ago,
is that when a pharmaceutical company is advertising a drug
for an obscure problem like you mentioned, typically with a
(43:17):
complicated acronym, what they're doing is they're essentially buying control
of the entire media platform.
Speaker 3 (43:25):
And the narrative.
Speaker 13 (43:26):
So you can imagine if Pfiser has an ad spend
for their blood centers or other drugs, they can actually
have conversations with CNN or MSNBC and say you know,
we don't want any negative stories about our other peiser products,
like our vaccines, and so the media platforms have not
been free to review safety of products because of pharmaceutical advertising.
Speaker 3 (43:51):
It needs to go.
Speaker 13 (43:53):
United States New Zealand are the only countries it's doing
great harm. Getting rid of pharmaceutical advertising will will benefit
medical freedom of speech and I guarantee the mainstream media
will start to have much more fair medical reporting.
Speaker 5 (44:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (44:09):
I mean, look, I work in media. I've seen it
happen at other networks where sometimes it's not just pharmaceuticals.
It can be a soda brand and they expect a
certain type of coverage when they put when they put
in a big adline. Yeah, all right, doctor Peter McCollough.
Always wonderful talking to you. Thank you so much for
being here, sir. And remember go to ATWC dot health
(44:31):
slash just news and you can save ten percent by
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they have a whole other host of other kits as well,
So go check it out, all right, everybody. President Trump
(44:51):
is proposing giving every newborn child in the country one
thousand dollars in an account that will be invested into
the stock market. So we're going to get you a
little bit more information about that's. Welcome back, everybody. As
part of a broader effort to strengthen families and promote
(45:14):
upward mobility, and new proposed policy allows American parents to
open savings accounts for their newborns seated with one thousand
dollars from the government at birth. They are called Trump accounts.
And are they a good idea of joining us now
to discuss that is the President of Forty Days for Life,
Sean Carney, Shawn, thanks so much for being here.
Speaker 10 (45:33):
It's going to be back. Thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (45:34):
All right, So, baby savings accounts. I love the idea.
I don't know all of the logistics and you know
how it's going to work. But when can babies touch
this first of all?
Speaker 14 (45:47):
Yeah, well when they're eighteen. I mean it's really amazing.
It's a genius idea. It brings in the private sector,
it encourages growing capital and encourages building the economy through investments,
and unlike five twenty nine accounts, it doesn't have all
of the red tape and the regulations those are typically used.
They can be used for private school, they can be
(46:08):
used for college. They're mainly used for college. But that's
about it. They don't even allow you to use five
twenty nine's for you travel to see your kids in college.
And so this is a basic account that the government's
going to help you with by starting it at one
thousand dollars, and then if couples are able to they
can invest, and those children can use it to buy
a home, they can use it to buy a car.
Speaker 10 (46:31):
The parents can certainly use it before then.
Speaker 14 (46:33):
It's really really smart and it just encourages economic growth.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
I remember, and it sounds so strange to say it
this way, but back in the century that I was born,
in the nineteen hundreds, there was an effort by parents
and grandparents to buy their kids bonds, and I think
they called them baby bonds, and those are you know,
I think that I actually still have some sitting around somewhere.
But this kind of reminds me of that. Why did
we ever move away from that anyway, when something like
(46:59):
this can be so.
Speaker 14 (47:00):
Beneficial, well, I think it speaks to the fact that
not only his Trump by far and it's not even close,
been the most pro life president ever, he's been the
most pro family president. He's done more for single moms,
he's done more for couples, He's done more for families
than any other president. And this is just yet another incentive.
You know, many of his tax benefits don't apply to
(47:22):
people who who make, you know, a lot of money,
but those people can now invest in these accounts, and
that's why, you know, of course he gets criticized for everything,
but Wall Street is rejoicing this because they want parents
to have incentive to invest. And it grows tax free,
and again it looks like you're going to be able
to use it the way the plan is written for
(47:42):
pretty much anything for your child, or you can gift
it to them, you know, when they turn eighteen.
Speaker 10 (47:48):
Or at a later time. So it's really really smart.
Speaker 14 (47:51):
It encourages investment, it certainly encourages savings.
Speaker 10 (47:54):
And it's yet another benefit.
Speaker 14 (47:56):
And I think it lines up perfectly when we're finally
having this com versation about how underpopulated the West is
how Americans are just replacing themselves barely, but we're totally
dependent on immigration at two point one kids per household.
And not that this always works in places when you
give some financial incentive, but it certainly doesn't hurt. And
(48:18):
we have got to promote and prop up having children.
Speaker 10 (48:21):
If we don't have children, we won't have a country.
Speaker 1 (48:24):
Yeah, absolutely, And from what I understand, parents can add
on top of that. They can add I think up
to five thousand dollars.
Speaker 14 (48:30):
Yeah, per year, and it all grows tax free. And
so even if parents, you know, they can't max it out,
but they've got you know, a couple of one hundred
dollars left that adds up over time.
Speaker 10 (48:40):
So it's it's very, very smart.
Speaker 14 (48:43):
And I think it takes the government out of investing
for your children because it's not so highly regulated like
retirement accounts or college saving plans.
Speaker 1 (48:53):
Yeah, Michean, I always love having you on. I love
what your organization, forty Days for Life does tell everybody.
Bit we got about thirty seconds.
Speaker 14 (49:02):
Yeah, we hold peaceful vigils across the country for forty
straight days in front of abortion facilities. We're in eighteen
hundred cities in sixty four countries, the largest a pro
life organization in the world, and demand has been at
an all time high in a post row.
Speaker 1 (49:17):
America, indeed, And where can people find out more and
donate if they want.
Speaker 14 (49:21):
To, They can go to forty Days for Life dot com.
We do survive on private donations. I know you'll be
shocked to hear we don't get money from the federal government.
Speaker 1 (49:30):
Yeah, and hopefully, very very soon there will be no
abortion clinics across the country they get any more funding.
I know that's something that President Trump spoke very loudly
about and Sean, I'm sure you spoke to him about
that in the days leading up to his second term.
But Sean Carney from forty Days for Life, thanks so
much for joining me tonight. All right, everybody, that's all
the time we have for tonight. I'm going to be
back here tomorrow at six pm Eastern, same time, same place.
(49:53):
Grant Stinchfield is going to take you through the next hour.
See you tomorrow.