All Episodes

November 14, 2025 51 mins

Just The News No Noise on Real America's Voice

Segment A: WHAT'S NEXT AFTER THE SHUTDOWN? / IRS WHISTLEBLOWERS SPEAK OUT

Segment B: MICHIGAN GOVERNOR CANDIDATE REQUESTS FEDERAL OVERSIGHT OF 2026 ELECTIONS

Segment C: JUST THE NEWS HEALTH UPDATE

Segment D: WIKIPEDIA CO-FOUNDER WALKS OUT OF INTERVIEW

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Good evening, America, and welcome to the Friday edition of
Justin News, No Noise. I'm your host, John Solomon, reporting
tears always from the Nation's capital and the Yeah. May
be Friday, but it is not a slow news day,
not at all. Lots of news, particularly in the Jeffrey
Epstein front.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
YEP Congress has released a.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Whole bunch more of emails the Democrats tried to make
hay but it hasn't stuck to Donald Trump. You know
where it's sticking to Democrats. And today the story really
significantly boomeranged around.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Why is that?

Speaker 1 (00:50):
First a Gallain Maxwell's lawyer accused Democrat Jamie Raskin of
working with prison officials to leak confidential communication from his client.
Those prison officials apparently have been disciplined, but that.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Is only the beginning of it.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Just a few moments ago, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced
that she is naming the acting US Attorney in New
York City, Jay Clayton, to investigate democrats relationships with Jeffrey
Epstein and whether any of them rose to the level
of criminality. Why because so many of the emails today
didn't involve Donald Trump or Republicans.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
That's right. It invited all involved, all those.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
Democrats, and this time around the idea that Democrats would
project on Republicans.

Speaker 2 (01:33):
Ain't going to cut it.

Speaker 1 (01:34):
This Justice Department is going to go full board into
That is a big, big decision in the weaponization era,
and it's another of many signs that I think Pam
Bondi's moving towards approving the notion that there was a
grand conspiracy against Donald Trump and his followers are conservatives
and it needs to be treated as such, just like
the mob was involved in a grand conspiracy, or drug

(01:57):
cartels are involved in a grand conspiracy. It looks like
Justice Department is moving closer and closer to that.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
Now.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
On another front, just a few moments ago, the judge
overseeing President Trump's Georgia election interferance case, the President's been
charged with lots of crimes in that case, it's all
on hold because he's president, the president's community. But the
judge today dismissed three of the charges from that Fannie
Willis prosecution. Meanwhile, I knew prosecutor has been named there

(02:25):
as well, so that case is getting a new look
and a new thing. I would not be surprised if
in a few months you see prosecutors go to the
judge and say.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
I want to reverse this case. But we'll see what
that has.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
But meanwhile, the judge dismissed me cases three charges in
the case today, a sign that maybe more is added.
With that, I'll turn to my Oh, one other thing
I want to mention just quickly, President Trump has been
working a two lower the costs in America. Eggs are cheaper,
gas is cheaper, prescription drugs are cheaper. Today, President Trump

(02:55):
lowered the tariffs on several other foreign food products to
give Americans as possible break at the dinner table. That
just happened a little while ago. You can check that
out over at justinews dot com. And with that, I
will turn to my amazing cost amandad because she's checking
out some of the other headlines.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Amanda, what you got on your radar?

Speaker 3 (03:11):
Well, I'm actually going to stick on what you mentioned
about Jeffrey Epstein, because this is how it all started.

Speaker 4 (03:16):
Today.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
President Trump responded to all of the Epstein drama, posting
this message on his true social account earlier this morning,
before a prosecutor was assigned, and he wrote this, now
that the Democrats are using the Epstein hoax involving Democrats
not Republicans, to try and deflect from their disastrous shutdown
and all of their other failures. I will be asking
a Gpambondi and the Department of Justice, together with our

(03:40):
great patriots at the FBI, to investigate Jeffrey Epstein's involvement
and relationship with Bill Clinton, Larry Summers, Reid Hoffman, JP Morgan,
JP Morgan Chase, and many other people and institutions to
determine what was going on with them and him. This
is another Russia Russia, Russia scam with all arrows pointing

(04:01):
to the Democrats. Records show that these men and many
others spent large portions of their.

Speaker 4 (04:07):
Life with Epstein and on his island. Stay tuned now.

Speaker 3 (04:11):
That post comes after Speaker Mike Johnson yesterday said that
a vote on the Epstein files would take place next
week now that the bipart is in discharge. Petition on
the files has enough signatures to force action on that matter,
so it'll be interesting to see where that all leads
next week. But in immigration news, the United States Conference
of Catholic Bishops issued a statement on immigration enforcement policies

(04:34):
under the Trump administration, largely rebuking them. Here is a
snippet from the bishops themselves.

Speaker 5 (04:40):
We are disturbed when we see among our people a
climate of fear and anxiety around questions of profiling and
immigration enforcement.

Speaker 6 (04:48):
We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and
the viblification of immigrants. We are concerned about the conditions
in detention centers and they'll lack of access to pastoral care.

Speaker 7 (05:02):
We lament that some immigrants in the United States have
arbitrarily lost their legal status. We are troubled by threats
against the sanctity of houses of worship and the special
nature of hospitals and schools.

Speaker 3 (05:16):
Well, those statements were brought up earlier today to fellow
Catholic and Trump borders are Tom Hoeman.

Speaker 4 (05:22):
He didn't hold back check it out.

Speaker 8 (05:24):
So according to them, the message we should send to
the whole world is that if you cross the border illegally,
which is a crime, don't.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
Worry about it.

Speaker 8 (05:32):
If you get ordered to remove by frederal judge at
to do process, don't worry about it because there shouldn't
be mass deportations. If that's the message we send to
the whole world. People are still put themselves in harms
way to come to the greatest nation on Earth. They're
going to spend their life savings to give us their
criminal cartown. We saw during the Biden administration when there
was no immigration enforcement or four thousand amiens died and

(05:52):
make an eight journey historic record according to an American
dife invent and all historic record. Secure border saves lives.
And we're say Catholic Church and understand that, John.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
I think too many of these Catholic charities that unfortunately
house themselves at the border and help facilitate a lot
of this entry into the United States.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
And I can't help but think of the.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
Relationship between those charities, as those philanthropies, and the Catholic Church,
and what those bishops said, it's a little awkward.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
I am Catholic and almost became a priest once, but
I will tell you that this is not Catholic doctrine.
A Catholic Church doesn't belong in dictating the laws of
the land or trying to facilitate people from coming across
the border. I think these are wayward bishops, and hopefully
at some point they'll be rained in by common sense
if not their own flocks.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
But it is what it is.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
And I can tell you one thing, it's not going
to turn Tom Holman or Donald Trump, or Ice or
anyone else. And also it's not going to turn most
Americans who realize that the people that are being removed
from the street aren't innocent moms taking care of kids
who came across the border. It's the thugs that are
running the cartels and raping and maiming people. And that's

(06:59):
the funny part about this. They were not even talking
about the same people in the debate. It's crazy, all right. Well,
a guy who knows a thing or two about the
border because he lives in one of the great border states,
but also has a healthy though some common sense every
time he comes on the show. Our good friend Texas
Congressman Brian Bammitt by Bammitt joins us at the top
of the show. Congressman, great to have you on the show.

Speaker 5 (07:18):
Great to be with you. And Amanda John always always good.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
All right.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
I think the last few weeks have been an eye
opener for a lot of Americans. They got to see
how much government they don't need because they didn't miss it.
They got to see Democrats withhold some of the important
things like food subsidies from the American people because they
had a political motive, not the motive of the American people.
Is the shutdown? Boomerang on Democrats? And how does your

(07:45):
party make sure they pay for what they did? Oh,
it looks like all right, we're gonna try to get
the congressman back. There, looks like we lost him for
a second. Just the signal drop.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
A good question? Ready for but I they go come back.
That's good.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
While we're waiting for the congressman to come back, I
think you're seeing now this coalition of people that were
behind the open borders, the Catholic Church and all the charities,
the Democrats, the social networks, the insurance companies that would
potentially get subsidies for taking care of at least the
legal immigrants who've got legal status.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
They're all kind of being exposed.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
For they were in on this, and the American people
like or not wait not failing, Sorry for you. It'd
be very interesting to see how that plays out in
the next couple of weeks.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
You know, it's interesting there are so many Americans.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
I would say the majority of Americans didn't feel anything
from the shutdown, and as you rightly pointed out, it
shows how unnecessary so much of government is. But for
those who did feel the shutdown, those you know TSA
agents that President Trump is now awarding with ten thousand
dollars bonuses people who showed up and showed out for
the American people who are traveling as we as we

(08:56):
move into this Thanksgiving holiday, and it just shows you
the two different sides up the coin.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Yeah, you know, there's no doubt there's a really significant
now backlus, I think Americans got to see how insignificant
so much of government is and how much common sense
government feels better. Well, I was talking to folks the
last couple of days, and when a country wants to
stabilize America, like the Cuban spy wants to talk to

(09:22):
they tried to make the abnormal normal. Donald Trump is
just making America normal again. I think people are like,
I kind of like it. This, I forgot what normal
felt like. It feels good, it's kind of interesting.

Speaker 3 (09:30):
It's not Maggot's manna, and this time it's not falling
from the sky.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
That's exactly right. I think that's exactly right. We're still
trying to get the congressman on. As soon as he's reconnected,
we're going to bring him on Amanda some of the
other things. President Trump shows this flexibility all the time,
and I think today he's got these terroffts. They're working
to start to get good deals with countries. I think
we got was it Luxembourg or Switzerland today that came
in with some good deals on trade. But he also realizes, hey,

(09:53):
if the American people have a negative consequence, I'll back off.
He backs off a lot of the food tariffs today.
He's always got the dinner table in mind.

Speaker 9 (10:00):
It seems like absolutely.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
And you know, President Trump for all of the criticism
of the left both going into his presidency when he
began in twenty seventeen, and of course it never it
never really stopped there. Their rhetoric that he was a
dishonest broker, that he was a bad business man. They
had so much criticism regarding business acumen.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
And it just goes to show you that.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
President Trump he means what he says, and he was
an honest broker when he was brokering these relationships and
brokering these trade deals. And you know, even if the
deals went sour, and it ended up with, you know,
some lopsided tariffs with the American people benefiting. President Trump
stuck true, He stayed true to those deals.

Speaker 4 (10:39):
And he it's not always a stick with him.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
Sometimes it's a carrot, and when other nations deal fairly
with the United.

Speaker 4 (10:45):
States, he says, all right, here's your carrot. And it's
good to see.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
I think the Epstein case is about to finally boomerang
on Democrats. They got all their moledge out it with
their friends in the media who only cover one side,
and quite frankly, got taken advantage of it. I think
earlier this week with that isolated leak that didn't give
the full context of Donald Trump in Epstein's conversations. But
Jamie Raskin is going to face some questions. What were

(11:09):
you doing getting private things? Were you trying to pierce
the private nature? Is that really congressional oversight?

Speaker 2 (11:16):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
And then I think secondly today Pam Bondi Jay Clayton
is a serious go after prosecutor used to be Chief
of Enforcement SEC. That's a pretty big a pretty big deal.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
All right.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
We have reconnected with the congressman, at least by phone
and I don't want to miss a moment because he
always brings great wisdom to us. Joining us from the
great state of Texas. Congressman Brian Babbitt, Congressman.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
Good to have you on. Sorry about the technical glitches.

Speaker 10 (11:41):
That's okay. You know, I'm the chairman of the Science,
Space and Technology Committee and there's we're having problems here.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
I bet you get to the bottle that quickly.

Speaker 10 (11:52):
Hey, we got to get some people on this problem.
But great to be with you all as always. Good
to be with you.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
Thank you, sir Hodder, to have you on all right.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
Let me ask you, there is a concern today that
some of these leaked emails that came from Gallinne Maxwell
may have been done by federal president officials. Apparently there's
been some discipline there, at least according to Glaine Maxwell's attorney,
and of course they end up with a Democrat. Is
there any concern that Democrats may have been doing something
untoward here?

Speaker 10 (12:23):
Yeah, one hundred percent that there is something the Democrats
have been doing that is very suspicious. And it seems
like Johnny, you're right in the middle of this thing
because you're one of the biggest exposes making these things
happen and showing us exactly what we've all suspected for years,

(12:43):
that something something nefarious has been going on. And so
I can tell you that, I mean just from a
common sense standpoint, and I've had conversations with the President
about this as well. You know, if they keep the
Democrats are demanding the release of the of the Epstein files.
Do you think that Biden's d OJ and and his

(13:07):
his bureaucracy, they had full control of the of the
Epstein files for four long years. Why are they suddenly
uh suddenly interested in trying to make it look like
Trump had something going on with Epstein. I think it's
like you said, this is going to boomerang on them.
The whole thing was a sham. This is something that

(13:30):
I believe they're going to They're going to regret opening
Pandora's box on John, Thank you.

Speaker 4 (13:37):
Right well, sir as.

Speaker 3 (13:39):
As John pointed out, this feels like a distraction from.

Speaker 4 (13:42):
The results of the shutdown from.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
Democrat in fighting for all of these issues that are
happening on the left side of the aisle. But my
question is, let's let's go a few miles down this
hypothetical road, and I cannot think of any other situation
better analogized with the dog catching up with the car
than Democrats finally getting these records released. So if these
records come out and they do show that there was
a whole lot of Democrat politicians out there, they've even

(14:07):
leftist activist folks who had a lot of involvement with
Jeffrey Epstein, then what did they divert to to move
away from that? Because that looks really bad for them, It.

Speaker 10 (14:17):
Really does, Amanda. I mean it's over and over and
over again, what they've done, you know, during the Obama administration,
all during the four years of the bad administration. It
really makes the Watergate scandal look like an absolute preschool recess,
is what it is. What it looks like. And over

(14:39):
and over again we see that these people will absolutely
stop at nothing to target Republicans to go after President
Trump because of their their Trump derangement syndrome. I think
these doj emails that you all have been reporting on,
These same officials who protected Hillary Clinton's dossier, you know,

(15:00):
ran this this thing on arctic frost as well, this
witch hunt, and uh, you know, partisanship, it's deliberate, it's
detrimental to justice. And uh, we we've seen them spying,
grabbing telephones. My good friend Scott Perry had his phone seized.
Uh and over and over again. We see the over

(15:21):
the top corruption uh in weaponization and misuse and abuse
of their of their office and and disobedience to their
their oath of office as well. So I can I
can just tell you, I think the American people are
not stupid.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (15:38):
They see through this stuff. I was disturbed about, uh,
you know the losses in in in Virginia, but nevertheless,
uh we those were those are three blue states. And uh,
I think we're going to see uh more as things
are exposed and thanks to people like you, Uh, we're

(15:58):
going to see the truth come out. And sunlight always
corrects this corruption.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
Yeah, it's the ultimate antiseptic.

Speaker 2 (16:06):
There's no doubt, sir.

Speaker 1 (16:08):
Before we let you go, it does seem like we
have some significant evidence now that Jack Smith was also
spying on members of Congress, certainly going through their phone data,
the metadata to get their phone records, to find out
who they were talking to, where they were talking to
them from. And it looks like he worked with a
federal judge to kind of steer around some of the
legal requirements. The Senates Sergeant Arms is supposed to be notified.

(16:30):
There was even a contract that said the phone companies
should notify the Senate if any member is there, if
a federal judge like Judge Bosberg was involved in trying
to do this, is there impeachment? Is there a complaint
to Justice Chief Justice Roberts. There's some discipline that should
be meted out to that judge.

Speaker 10 (16:50):
There should absolutely be, John, there's already I think there's
a bill out there azation. So anyway, Yeah, I think
that that is totally justified. Judge Boseburg showed himself to
be a really corrupt, a totally corrupt federal judge, and

(17:10):
I think he should be removed from office. That's what
impeachment should be all about.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Yeah, yeah, Well, we're going to watch that play out
in the house over the next few weeks. I suspect
it seem think a lot there, all right, sir, Always
a great honor to have you on the show. Always
get a healthy dose of common sense from good Duel
Texas when you're on.

Speaker 10 (17:30):
Thank you for joining us, exius common sense. You bet well,
God bless and Happy Thanksgiving. Both of you all.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
Thank you so much, sir, what a great honor to
have you on the show today. All right, I think
we've gotten through the break We're going to skip the
commercial breakup. I heard right from Patrolman and go next
to our next two guests, because we have two specialists
of man. I gonna let you bring him in.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
Yes, John, And this is a story that you and
I have been talking about on the show forever when
it comes to finally some transparency, some justice as far
as the weaponization of the federal government and its law
enforcement agencies. And we had these two gentlemen on the
show numerous times in the past to talk to us
about what they went through what they saw at the
IRS with respect to former President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden.

(18:13):
And those whistlelowers are Gary Shapley and Joseph Siegler.

Speaker 4 (18:16):
Gentlemen, thanks so much for being here.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
Yeah, thanks for having us.

Speaker 4 (18:22):
Gary. I'll start with you first.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
I would say this is a happy ending because you've
got the other side who's saying, yeah, you're right.

Speaker 4 (18:27):
You guys were allowed to do what you did, which
we all knew.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
I'm sure it doesn't feel exactly like a happy ending, though,
because you want to believe that agencies, even like the IRS,
are still moving and maneuvering in an ethical way.

Speaker 4 (18:42):
Tell us your thoughts.

Speaker 11 (18:45):
Yeah, I mean that's everything that we're doing right now
is you know, working to bring back the trust for
the IRS and the federal government because there are a
lot of federal government federal government workers out here that
really care and they're there for service. And what we're
doing now with a book that we just put out
on Veterans Day is really supporting you know, whistleblowers, current

(19:08):
and future.

Speaker 7 (19:08):
And the whole.

Speaker 11 (19:10):
Point is is it to give them an avenue to
come forward and support whistle blowers come forward and really
improve the federal government and make sure that the weaponization
that occurred previously in the Hunter Biden case and elsewhere
isn't repeated.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
Yeah, it's so important, and you guys, I think could
have couldn't have gone through a more torturous process to
get to justice. But you got it yesterday, I think
was the final phase. Amanda alluded to it that Hunter
Biden's lawyer who once accused you guys of doing something
wrong by exercising the law and reporting your whistleblower concerns
to Congress. He had to admit that what you did

(19:49):
was right. I want to start with both of you
guys and get your reaction.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
Joe.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
I'll start with you. We do some guys, we lost
them there. Okay, there he is. Can you hear us?

Speaker 2 (20:09):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (20:12):
Yeah, Gary, let me go to you, just because I
think re a little problem with Joe. Sound Gary, your
reaction when you found out Abbey loll acknowledged what we
all knew, that you followed the law.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (20:23):
Look, the whole the whole point of that was all
principle driven, and uh, you know we're we're we're standing
up for for whistleblowers right to come forward and they
should be able to come forward without you know, fear
of being retaliated against by agencies and being attacked by
you know, anyone out there. So, uh, it's the principle

(20:43):
was was achieved. And uh, you know, the the settlement
is exactly what we need to show future whistle blowers that, uh,
you know, to come forward, do it the right way
and uh and uh you know everything will will end
up good in the end.

Speaker 2 (21:02):
Yeah, it did in this case.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Joe, did you hear John's question because I want to
get your take on this as well.

Speaker 12 (21:08):
Yeah, I did not hear his question, so if he
can repeat it, I can hear now.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
Yeah, of course, just the result and Abby Lowell, the
recognition that you guys followed the letter of the law
as whistleblowers, you came forward to Congress.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
And by the way, this was never partisan. There were
so many.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Accusations slung at both of you saying that this was
partisan and you were going after Hunter Biden because he
was Joe Biden's son.

Speaker 4 (21:30):
It was never anything about that.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
But I want to get your take on Abby Lowle
his come to Jesus moment and recognizing what's right.

Speaker 12 (21:38):
Well, I think it really shows a support for whistleblowers,
supporting the process, that Gary and I were right all along,
that we didn't do anything wrong, and we lawfully came
forward how we should have done and it wasn't a
partisan issue or this was very much so what was
right and what was wrong treating We need to treat

(22:00):
taxpayers the same, and that's what Gary and I stood for,
and that's what we continue to stand for. And what
we're doing through the book is we're trying to tell
our stories so that other whistleblowers out there can hear
what we have to say. And I mean we're putting
our money where our mouth is. We're not making a
cent off the book. All the proceeds go to the
nonprofit and Power so that they can support provide legal

(22:24):
support to current and future whistleblowers.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
So important now because from your journey, you now are
in a position to really have a great impact on
the IRS. You're helping to run the IRS in its
criminal division. I know both of you take this seriously,
and there is a very strong message you want every
IRS employee to follow. Gary tell Us with the new
and bigger role that you have today, what message you

(22:50):
want every I R S employee to know about the
new IRS, the IRS that you help govern every day?

Speaker 11 (22:58):
Sure leadership of higher S is is We're we're earning
the trust of the American people, and we're we're working
forward to UH looking forward to you know, creating an
efficient and effective process and and and and making UH
a service and and and UH privacy and collections of
the taxes that the tax payers. Oh and not a

(23:20):
cent more the priority here the I R S and
UH you know the message that that I've given and
Joe have given to to I R S employees or
that you do the right thing. You do the right
thing each and every time, and this this the government
can be trusted and there are people there that that
will support them and uh, you know, they'll they'll be

(23:41):
successful in the end and they you know, even though
there is some retaliation, hopefully by us going through that
and coming out on the other side in a positive
light will will make other people come forward when they
see fraud, waste, abuse, or violation of the law.

Speaker 3 (23:58):
Joe, whistleblowing has always been a courageous act, but going
forward anytime in the future, I have a feeling that
there are some whistleblowers out there from from multiple administrations
who feel that things are so politicized right now that
maybe it takes an extra dose of courage, even on
top of what it typically would take. What would be
your advice to those folks who feel the need to

(24:21):
blow the whistle on something but they're worried about the blowback.

Speaker 12 (24:25):
I think when you sign up as a as a
government employee, you have a duty and obligation to the taxpairer,
to the people actually funding your how what you're earning
to do the right thing. You we when we sign
up as public servants, we don't just put on one
portion of a public servant hat. We we we take

(24:45):
that honor with us. And I think that that that
they need to look look deep within themselves to identify
what is it that you have and like, what what?
What are the reasons why you went into federal service?
And I really I think that if there are any
whistleblowers out there, if they need support, Gary and I

(25:05):
are always available. People come to us all the time
with their issues, and we helped to try to provide
them support.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
I just got my copy of The Whistleblowers Versus the
Big Guy, and of course the big guys Joe Biden.
We all know that now and I can't wait to
read through it. But I thumbed through some of it
today because I knew we'd be talking tonight. There's a
common theme that really comes through it, and that is
that you have the doing the right thing mentality in
both of your minds. And I saw this firsthand just

(25:36):
chronicling this as a reporter early on.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
Every step of the way, you did the right thing.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
You checked the law before you went, and it disclosed
anything to Congress. You check the statues to make sure
you weren't making up anything. You checked the evidence over
and over again. There was a bureaucracy that oftentimes didn't
want to recognize that what you were doing was the
right thing. How do we fail? I want to throw
this at both for you guys. How do we fix

(26:01):
that bureaucracy longer? There's a lot of good people, but
sometimes the machine y of bureaucracy keeps the right thing
from happening. I know you guys have fought a lot
about it. What are some of the fixes that you'd
like to see in government?

Speaker 11 (26:15):
Well, the you know, John, I'm honored that you asked
me the question that I can that would probably be
the best answer of the twenty first century here for
the federal government. Right, but there are lots of steps
we take right. We empower our people, we support our people,
We protect our people, you know, to come forward and
make decisions. You know, we're promote based on performance and merit,

(26:38):
not some other you know reason why and is, and
then we hold them accountable when when they do the
right things and when they do the wrong things. Right,
and you know, the the change in culture that's required
to bring back the trust and to and to bring
back the efficiency in the federal government. I think it's
a whole bunch of small steps that all together will

(26:59):
be credibly important. But it starts with the people, and
it starts with supporting the people and picking the best
each and every time.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
I love that answer.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
I want to ask a question to both of you.

Speaker 3 (27:10):
Joe, I'll start with you, especially following this shutdown, there
are a lot of Americans out there who feel like
government is not only unnecessary, but it is also corrupt
in the interest of whistle blowing. From your experience, what
you have seen and witness and even experience in the
federal government at IRS, but also other agencies as well,

(27:34):
does it seem like there are good men and women
such that whistleblowing will continue or is it so infected
like unfortunately a lot of Americans think it is.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (27:45):
I mean, I've been really encouraged with the amount of
people that we've been talking to that after blowing.

Speaker 9 (27:53):
The whistle, I mean, we've.

Speaker 12 (27:55):
Had countless of government employees, countless of special agents, countless
of people and leaders ship who when the time has come,
they have completely supported us. And I can tell you,
even after working the Hunter Bye and investigation, I actually
worked with quite a few other prosecutors who were actually
complimentary of me. They said that they encountered the same

(28:17):
issues that I did. I just encountered them on steroids,
and and I think to hear that from them, I
think that we can set up guardrails, we can set
up different things that can protect our democracy and can
protect our government from something like this happening again. I mean,
that's the only way that we've got to move forward.

(28:37):
We've got to the bureaucracy, the rot, the deep state.
I know people keep talking about that the deep state
is real, and it's it's going to take some time.
But what I can tell you is this current administration
is doing doing some good things that they're They're focusing
on performance reviews, they're focusing on the things that should

(29:01):
have been fixed a long time ago. And I can
tell you within the last year, I'm so very encouraged
by by the path that we're moving forward in the
federal government.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
Agree, Yeah, I do.

Speaker 11 (29:17):
Like, Look, the it doesn't matter which side of the
policalile you're on. It doesn't matter what the media is
really you know, reporting in the mainstream. I mean, there
are people in this in the federal government today that
that are living and breathing service to this country and
their true patriots, and and I see it every single day,
and I see more of it now because these people

(29:41):
are empowered to come forward and make decisions and improve
the inefficiencies that have just been coddled, you know, for
for decades. Right, So I'm I'm very I see the positives,
you know, way more than the negatives. There are still
some negatives, but but we're hoping to uh to help
fix those.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
Yeah, I think America has a bright future when it
comes to transparency if there are more Gary Shapleys and Joseph.

Speaker 4 (30:06):
Siebler's out there. Gentlemen, thank you.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
So much for being here, and everybody go check out
their book, The Whistleblowers Versus the Big Guy.

Speaker 4 (30:13):
It is an excellent read. All right, everybody, We're going
to take a very quick break.

Speaker 3 (30:16):
But on the other side, one of Michigan's candidates for
governor has requested general oversight of the twenty twenty six elections.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
There. Why well, we're going to talk to him about it.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
On the other side, Hey, America, as an investigative journalist,
I've built my career in facts, and I always do
with my homework before recommending anything my audience. That's why
I can confidently say AMAC, the Association of Mature American Citizens,

(30:46):
is the real deal. AMAC is a conservative alternative to AARP.
They're fighting for faith, family, and freedom and bringing their
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Speaker 2 (31:08):
That's just abut twenty a month to join a movement
working to hold Washington accountable and preserve the values that
we all care about. I vetted them, I trust them.
You should too.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Visit AMAC dot us slash just News and become a
member today, just like me. That's AMACAMAC dot us forward
slash Just News AMAC protecting America's future, one member at.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
A time, walking back America. There's no doubt.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
One of the biggest elections in twenty twenty six will
take place in Michigan, where both the US Senate and
Governor's races up and one of the big battlegrounds in America.
That oh is a great bellweather of politics joining us
now a man on the front lines of that very
big race. He's a state senator now running for governor. Eric,
good to have you on the show.

Speaker 5 (32:02):
Hey, thanks for having me on and covering the important
issues here in Michigan, making sure we secure elections and
making sure Jocelyn Benson never gets anywhere close to the
governor's office.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
Yeah, this is a very big moment here. We got
these two big prizes. A lot of Shenanigan's kind of
going on in the background. There's been questions about ballot
harvesting and other things over the years. You want federal
election monitors to come into Michigan.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Tell us why? Yeah.

Speaker 5 (32:28):
So the former Secretary of State Ruth Johnson, who's a
colleague of mine in the State Center, and the Senate
Republican leader and twenty one others from the Elections chair
in the State House is the Speaker pro tempt Rochelle Schmidt.
We all came together and requested Pam Bonni and the
Department of Justice to let's over do oversight of our elections.

Speaker 2 (32:49):
Here.

Speaker 5 (32:49):
We have Jocelyn Benson. Last year allowing Chinese nationals to
vote in our elections. We have over one hundred percent
voter registration here in Michigan, and we have the secretary
of State running to be the next governor. And she's
lost lawsuit after lawsuit after lawsuit over the last seven
years as she's been Secretary of State here in Michigan.

(33:12):
She's ignoring subpoenas from the Michigan State House right now,
She's ignored court orders in the past. She has a
history of not following the law, and she needs to
have somebody over, some oversight over her. And that's the
reason why we sent the letter to Pambondy, the Attorney General,

(33:33):
And that's the reason why we have to have this oversight.

Speaker 3 (33:37):
Yeah, Eric, there's another issue within this that's bugging me,
and it is this pipeline that we are seeing from
secretary of state to gubernatorial candidacy. We saw this with
Katie Hobbess in Arizona.

Speaker 4 (33:48):
What could possibly go wrong.

Speaker 3 (33:49):
The person who's overseeing and administering the elections.

Speaker 4 (33:51):
Actually running for the highest office in that state. Should
there be.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
Should there be something in within the states that puts
a pause or a moratorium between a secretary of state
term before they can run again for another office.

Speaker 4 (34:08):
Like governor.

Speaker 5 (34:09):
I mean, with what we've seen out of Jocelyn Benson,
she's the worst secretary state ever, the worst secretary state
in the nation. She's proven that she's dishonest, she's proven
that she's not willing to clean up the voter rolls,
and we cannot have her anywhere close to this governorship.
We know that, and you're exactly right, that's very troubling

(34:30):
on what she's doing and continues to do. And this
is why, as I'm running for governor, that we need
to draw that sharp contrast to make sure that what
we're getting out of this pipeline from these sorrows candidates
that have been back to across the country, that we
actually provide openness to making sure that we only have

(34:51):
one person vote, one legal resident here in Michigan vote,
and a citizen that's voting. And fortunately, next year we're
working with a broad spectrum of coalitions here here in
Michigan to put on the ballot citizens only voting. This
is about peposo. It's been very much well received by
the grassroots, well received by the populace here in Michigan.

(35:15):
That does three things for next year. One only citizens
can vote.

Speaker 2 (35:20):
Two that we clean up.

Speaker 5 (35:22):
The voter rolls, and that we also make sure that
there's photo ID when you vote. Very common sense, and
so we're rolling that out. We're working to make sure
they get the ballots there if people are interested signing
up go to citizens only Voting initiative here in Michigan.
We need to make sure that gets on the ballot

(35:42):
next year. We also need to make sure next year
we have a strong Secretary of State candidate so that
we can clean up this mess that has been left
behind by Jocelyn Benson. We know we can win. President
Trump showed that last year here in Michigan. We won
back the state House. Only state and then they should
actually flip a chamber from Democrat to Republican was here

(36:03):
in Michigan, and we did that with the grassroots with
while being outspent, but we had the right candidates and
we had the right message. We had President Trump on
the top of the top of the ballot.

Speaker 1 (36:16):
There's something else that you helped prove in the last year,
and that is that there are instances of non citizens voting.
Your effort to get this non citizen voting ballot initiative
is actually driven in evidence. You had a Chinese national
and I believe fifteen or fourteen other non citizens who
got all the way through the process up through and
including voting. Democrats say that's a conspiracy theory until it

(36:36):
isn't right.

Speaker 2 (36:37):
It actually happened in Michigan.

Speaker 5 (36:39):
Well in The bigger part about it last year is
that she allowed Chinese nationals to vote and she didn't
even catch them. She didn't even catch them. Yeah, just
about then one of them actually turned themselves in and
it's being deported. However, this show that we have real

(37:01):
problems and that we have to step up our guard
to make sure that we add these provisions of the
constitution next year, we get a good Secretary State elected
next year, and we make sure Jocelyn Benson, who would
be the most liberal governor that Michigan ever seen, gets
nowhere close to the Governor's.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
Office, Senator.

Speaker 1 (37:19):
For folks who want to learn more about your candidacy
for governor, what's the best way for them to stay
in touch and learn more about you.

Speaker 5 (37:25):
Yeah, our website nesbit Forgovernor dot com. We're on Twitter,
Eric Nesbitt, We're on Facebook, We're on TikTok. We're really
trying to get the grassroots out there. I've been to
all eighty three counties here in Michigan. Continue to raise
the money that we need to. We've already raised over
two point seven million. But it's about putting the coalition
together that President Trump showed us last year of putting

(37:47):
Michigan first. So making sure that people are having trouble
making here in Michigan, that we make it easier for
our families, for our small business owners, for our farmers,
and for our kids to make it here in Michigan.
That's we're running our campaign on. And I've been blessed
by the folks and the grassroots saying, you know what,
it's time for a change. The totalitarianism that we've seen

(38:09):
from Governor Whitmer needs to go. We need to make
that change. And next year's that change. And I'm going
to work hard. As a farm boy at my Hillsdale
College graduate, I know what freedom looks like, and that's
what we're going to bring to Michigan next year.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
And I think also that nonsense of citizen only voting
initiative is going to be very popular in the great
state of Michigan Senator.

Speaker 2 (38:30):
Great to have you on the show today. Thank you
for joining us.

Speaker 5 (38:33):
Hey, thanks for covering the news that matters and just
providing just the news. Let's get this done. Let's win
back our statement.

Speaker 2 (38:40):
I like it. Thanks so much, sir for joning. It's
been a great conversation.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
All right, folks, we're gonna take a cook commercial bank
when we come back. Time to think about health, our
weekly news health update right around the court having these messages.

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Speaker 3 (40:09):
Welcome back to our just the News health update brought
to you by Native Path. Joining us now the co
founder and chief culture Officer at Native Path, doctor Chad Walding.

Speaker 4 (40:17):
Doctor Walding, wonderful to have you.

Speaker 9 (40:19):
Hello Amanda, so good to be here. Hi John, thank
you for having me.

Speaker 2 (40:22):
Good to have you.

Speaker 4 (40:23):
All right.

Speaker 3 (40:24):
I want to call this exercise snacks. What is this?
And I know that it's not a handful of eminem's
before your workout?

Speaker 4 (40:31):
Tell us that.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
It is not. So.

Speaker 9 (40:34):
Exercise snacks are small micro doses of movement that you
do during the day, and I deal you do it,
you know, every hour, every two hours, just get up
and go move your body, ideally outside for a walk
where you're getting good sun exposure for a period of
maybe two to five minutes.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
Right.

Speaker 2 (40:50):
And what we're.

Speaker 9 (40:51):
Finding with the science is these small microdoses of movement
are profound in reducing our risk for chronic disease, for
reducing pain, helping us feel better, you know, a native
path we talk a lot about the changes that have
been happening in the past one hundred years and how
much we move and the quality of our movement has
really changed. You know, our great grandparents, our great great

(41:12):
great grandparents were or up in the fields, moving all day, planting,
picking things up, carrying things.

Speaker 1 (41:17):
Right.

Speaker 9 (41:18):
The way we work in the modern world today is
we're usually stagnant. We're sitting over a computer with forward
heads and rounded shoulders and rounded spines, and we get
stuck in that position. You know, as a physical therapist,
I would see it all the time. As people age,
they just they get shorter, but really it's their posture
that starts to crumble. So we have poor positions and
then we're not moving enough. So these micro doses of movements,

(41:41):
they have a profound impact on our house. So I
mentioned the problem in the modern world where ninety percent
of all our activities are done in that sitting position.
What that does is it changes the internal hormonal profile
of our body. So it decreases alight paced protein, lipoprotein,
life based protein enzyme that decreases the fat in our bloodstream. Right,

(42:06):
so we need that we need movement in order to
clear out the fat in our bloodstream and that can
help us with things like our cholesterol profile, our home runs,
our bone density, and it also the chronic sitting is
such an issue. It can increase your rate of heart
disease and obesity and diabetes by two to three times.
You can impact your emotional state. Right Again, our ancestors

(42:27):
spent ninety percent of their time outside with fresh air,
moving throughout the day, so that's what our genes are
expecting of us and we have to work with that.
But the coolest thing is you don't have to just
spend two hours at a gym and think that that's it.
You get more impact with micro movement. So an easy
thing you can do top of the hour every hour.
Set an alarm to go off every sixty minutes. If

(42:49):
you want to just get up, go outside, move for
two to five minutes in whatever way you want. You
will do more with that to offset the negative impacts
of sitting and stagnation than even if you would if
you went to the gym for an hour or two hours. Right,
you don't want to just go to the gym. You
want to make sure you take care of the foundational things.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
I know what happens when we start thinking about this,
we really start to get incentivized, and.

Speaker 2 (43:10):
We go, you know what, I'm really sore.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
My ankle hurts, my shoulder hur it's my neck ker
it's my back hurts, and it becomes an excuse. How
do we deal with some of those tissue joint issues
that make us say I'll do it tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (43:23):
Not today.

Speaker 9 (43:24):
Yeah, Well, to feel better, I recommend collagen. You know
you mentioned the tissues, the joints, the ligaments, these things
are all made up of collagen. We don't want to
just move. We want to make sure that the muscles
are attaching to strong tendons and strong ligaments for a
good foundational body. So what is collagen? It's one of
the most abundant proteins in the body, but we're so
deficient in it because we're not getting enough in the

(43:45):
modern world, just like we're not moving enough in the
modern world. So our answer is will get plenty of
collagen in their natural diet, but we're not today, which
is why I'm such a big fan of supplementing with it.
And at Native Path collagen is our hero product. It's
one of the first things we encourage people to take
because it makes everything else with your health easier or unnecessary,
particularly with how your body feels right. Your joint health

(44:08):
is really important, and collagen is a great thing to
do to supplement with that native path. We value purity.

Speaker 7 (44:14):
You know.

Speaker 9 (44:14):
Our collagen is as close to nature as possible. It's
third party expected comes from happy cows that are eating grass,
and it's good for the environment. So easy thing you
can do to give yourself a win.

Speaker 3 (44:25):
Here, Doctor Walden, before we let you go, I want
to ask you about maybe, like the older crowd, the
seventy plus, don't kill me eighty plus, No, let's say
one hundred and ten plus.

Speaker 4 (44:32):
I don't want anyone to get mad at me.

Speaker 3 (44:33):
But the older crowd who may be experiencing some of
that tightness, maybe some arthritic issues in their joints. I've
always heard motion as lotion. So even if they can't
exercise and get out and do a job, just kind
of moving and stretching is good as well.

Speaker 9 (44:45):
Right, Well, you're so right on motion is lotion. I
was actually going to mention that it's a physical therapy
term that we use because when we move, fluid starts.

Speaker 2 (44:54):
To move right.

Speaker 9 (44:54):
So even if you're someone who, let's say you can't
go outside for a hike, right, everyone can can get
some easy movement. And there's there's so many great resources
you can do even in just a chair. You know,
you mentioned people that are over the age of eighty.
You can go on YouTube right now and just look
up chair exercises for an older population. You're going to
find all kinds of good things. Where you're moving your shoulders,

(45:15):
you're moving your spine, you're moving your neck. What we're
trying to do a good movement practices is express natural
range of motion. You know, slouching over correct, slouching, roll
on the shoulders, looking left, looking right. Even if we
do that right now, you can feel things open up
because you're using motion as lotion, right, So we don't
we don't want h to be something that stops us.

(45:36):
You know, if you can't go outside, we don't want to.
We don't want to stop that. Use resources that we
have with technology and videos and get moving and it
makes such a big difference in terms of how you feel,
but your health span. We don't want to just live long,
we want to live really healthy. We want to maintain
functional independence, and movement is primary. It's not just good
for your joints. It's good for how you feel, your

(45:58):
whole immune system, your metaboloc systems. It's foundational overall.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
I met a guy, honest to gud, he's eighty four.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
I've got it the other day and every day, twice
a day in his chair he does the Ymca dance
by the Village people, and that's his idea for moving.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
But hey, it.

Speaker 3 (46:13):
Works, Doctor Tadai, Yeah, thank you so much.

Speaker 4 (46:17):
The co founder and chief culture officer at Native Path.

Speaker 3 (46:19):
Always love having you and to our audience. You can
get a special bundle deal at a fraction of the
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News, now just News.

Speaker 3 (46:41):
But do it now, All right, everybody, We'll be back
on the other side.

Speaker 13 (46:47):
At Real America's Voice. We know that you want to
be a part of something bigger, and that's why we've
teamed up with AMAT the Association of Mature American Citizens
to build a real community of folks who care about
fate and our country's future.

Speaker 9 (47:03):
There is no force on earth that can stop us
from saving our country.

Speaker 13 (47:08):
Want to be a part of this movement, It's easy.
Just scan the QR code on your screen right now,
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Speaker 13 (47:31):
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Speaker 4 (47:55):
Welcome back, everybody.

Speaker 3 (47:56):
There were a few stories today that caught my eye
and I wanted to show you a clip from one
of them now.

Speaker 4 (48:01):
If you watch the show regularly. A few months ago,
we had Larry Singer on the program.

Speaker 3 (48:05):
He was one of the co founders of Wikipedia, and
he came on to talk about what appears to be
revised truth that.

Speaker 4 (48:11):
Happens over at Wikipedia.

Speaker 3 (48:13):
Anyone who's been over to that website is to look
at practically anything you've seen that Well. The other co founder,
Jimmy Wales, who unfortunately is an Alabama native from my
home state. He was in an interview and he introduced
himself as the founder of Wikipedia, and the interviewer pressed
back on him just a little bit, and I'll just
let too much.

Speaker 2 (48:32):
Who are you?

Speaker 14 (48:33):
I'm Jimmy Wales. What your Wikipedia? You're the founder or
co founder? Because I don't care. That's the dumbest question
in the world. Really, absolutely, this seems to be a dispute.

Speaker 2 (48:44):
There's no dispute.

Speaker 14 (48:45):
I don't care, So yeah, say what you like, it
doesn't matter for you.

Speaker 2 (48:51):
You're the founder.

Speaker 9 (48:52):
Can I just.

Speaker 5 (48:52):
Say again, it doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (48:54):
I've answered your question four times.

Speaker 5 (48:58):
I mean what I'm done.

Speaker 9 (48:59):
I wish as you thanks what's going on?

Speaker 2 (49:02):
It's stupid. Don't ask me stupid questions. How is that stupid?

Speaker 3 (49:08):
Listen, regardless of whether you are a founder or co founder,
will splitting hairs over it, whatever, There.

Speaker 4 (49:14):
Is a much more aggracious way to respond to that.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
I don't have to say.

Speaker 1 (49:18):
The whole Wikipedia thing is backfired on Wikipedia, I think,
and there'll be new competitors in those space soon that
will be interesting.

Speaker 2 (49:25):
Competition is the way to salvas.

Speaker 3 (49:27):
Yeah, absolutely, Okay, John, So you were talking about those
tariffs being removed from certain items, and then a few
weeks ago we covered the story where Walmart said that
their Thanksgiving package where they have this prepackaged thing with
all of the ingredients you need to put together your
Thanksgiving feast was going to be I think twenty five
percent cheaper than it was last year, which Democrats going
into the election told you that was not possible.

Speaker 4 (49:49):
Prices we're not going to go down under Dollar's frunt well.
Target has announced.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
That three thousand of their food, beverage and essential items
are going to go down in price and they are
bringing back their Thanksgiving meals at the lowest price ever. John,
if we were listening to Democross last, but they would say,
there's no possible way that can happen.

Speaker 4 (50:08):
But it has.

Speaker 1 (50:09):
Listen, everything's gotten cheaper because you go back to common
sense economic policies.

Speaker 2 (50:13):
I mean a lot of these things.

Speaker 1 (50:14):
Are artificially inflated, inflated by unnecessary governments, spending, inflated by
unnecessary energy, unfriendly policies. Yeah, i' inflated by illegal immigrants
coming in and putting stress on the system.

Speaker 2 (50:27):
And now there's a you know.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
A correction going on and it will continue. A lot
of the economists I talk, do you think that twenty
twenty six is going to be a boom in year?
It's going to look like the nineteen nineties web ear
where things rolled for a while, the fifties ere after
the war. We'll see if that happens. But there are
signs that you know there now, sometimes the economy and
what it feels like at your dinner table, there's a gap.

(50:50):
So Republicans need to be cognizive that sometimes takes time
for people to fill at the dinner table. But they're
setting up these these forces are setting up to be
for a good economic prod in America.

Speaker 3 (51:01):
Potentially, speaking of a good run in America, let's finish
with something a little bit entertainment related.

Speaker 4 (51:07):
The Disney Company.

Speaker 3 (51:08):
Of course, they have been embroiled in a number of
controversies in the last few years, most of it regarding
their content. But it seems like they are betting big
on America. John They have started an initiative and a
basically year long celebration called Disney Celebrates America that will
culminate next summer with America's two fifty and they are
going big at all of their properties, all of their resorts,

(51:29):
all of their parks.

Speaker 4 (51:30):
That's going to be a huge celebration of America. As
it turns out, people love America.

Speaker 1 (51:34):
Go figure out that you don't say gay comes up
at all that. Don't say gay, but write that history
out of the Disney place, all.

Speaker 4 (51:41):
Right, but do say happy Birthday to America. Next.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
Has got a lot of great things and a lot
of family. People love it and they're getting back to
the roots.

Speaker 3 (51:49):
That is a good thing, all right, everybody, We appreciate
you being here tonight. Grant Stinchfield is going to take
you through the next hour, have a great weekend, and
we'll see on Monday.
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