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November 25, 2025 49 mins

Just the News No Noise on Real America's Voice

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Speaker 1 (00:22):
Good evening, America and happy Tuesday. Welcome to the latest
edition of Just the News, No Noise. I'm your host,
John Solomon, reporting to you, as always from the nation's capital.
We hope you're getting ready getting closer to that Thanksgiving
dinner with family and friends. But before we get into
all that, a little programming network waiting President Trump's departure
from the White House from mar A Lago to his
home in Palm Beach, Florida. When that happens, we'll get

(00:43):
you out live to that, but we'll keep it close
side and you may see it pop up in the
bottom right handscreen from time to time, so keep an eye.
All right, we start tonight with some hopeful news as
we approach Thanksgiving. That that's also the deadline that President
Trump has said to get a deal worked out between
Ukraine and Russia to end the war in Eastern Europe.
It's been going on now for believe it or not,
eleven years, and that amazing. It's being reported that Ukraine

(01:05):
has agreed to core terms of the peace proposal. Justin
News has confirmed that this is major movement, as previously
Ukrainian President Voldemir Zelenski has been resistant any peace proposal
that involves seeding land to Russian. Now, there's still a
lot of items that need to be worked out. But what,
for the first time we have today is a very
clear set of what the Ukrainians are willing to agree

(01:25):
to and what the Russians are willing to agree to.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
They worked that out earlier this week.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
The two sides had never laid that out before in
this eleven year conflict. Now that every side each side
knows what the other needs, that opens the real negotiations
to the next major potential set of negotiations. Now, President
Trump announced he's sending Special Envoy Steve Whitcoff to Russia
to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin to find too

(01:50):
the deal points.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
Is also sending.

Speaker 1 (01:52):
Army Secretary Dan Drisco back to the Ukrainian side, where
he made some progress earlier this week. President Trump also
said earlier today that there are only a few points
of disagreement.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
That is a hopeful sign.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
Now, turning back here to Washington, internal Justice Department emails
released today by Senate Republicans show that Special Consul Jacksmith
team was told by the Justice Department's Public Integrity Section
that if it subpoenaed the phone records of senators, that
there were constitutional equities congressional equities, meaning that there needed

(02:24):
to be a litigation process that the senators had to
be notified. But guess what, that's not what Jack Smith did. Instead,
he went to Judge Boseburg, now kind of infamous here
in Washington, and got an order that said he did
not have to tell Congress, alert them, or take any
concern about the constitutional debate and speech cause that protects

(02:44):
members of Congress from executive branch things. Now, there's some
other interesting things in these emails. You can check the
whole story out in justinews dot com. One of them
is that Jack Smith actually made a bunch of errors
in this, including having the wrong senator. He was supposed
to be subpoenaing Rick Scott, but instead he focused on
talk a Senator Scott for a period of time because

(03:05):
he didn't have his eyes and t's crossed or even
a Scott's figured out. All right, with that, I want
to turn to some other headlines from my amazing colleague,
Amanda Head.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
Amanda, what are you watching today?

Speaker 3 (03:15):
Yeah, John, I know that we've been talking about this
throughout the week. But I want to stay on that
topic of Senator Mark Kelly and those other Democrats who
put out the video warning members of the military not
to comply with nebulous illegal orders. We now know the
DOJ and the FBI will be interviewing those Democrats for
an investigation that they have opened. And we've been seeing
a lot of reaction in the past few days from

(03:36):
both politicians and the media. For example, here's how CNN
and David from framed what an illegal order could be.

Speaker 4 (03:44):
Secretary Hechseth has issued these tweets in which he said,
the Department of War is going to prosecute Secretary. Sorry,
Senator Kelly. And then you had a clip at the
top of your show when the White House Press Secretary
Carolyn Levitt saying the Secretary of War, the Department of
War would never issue you an illegal order. Well, calling
it the Department of War is an illegal order. Every

(04:05):
time that, in violation of Act of Congress, the Secretary
makes up these titles for himself, Secretary of Partying, Secretary
of War, whatever he calls himself, those are illegal orders too.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
How's that for trying to minimize the issue and just
to take it up a notch. Senator Reuben Diego from Arizona,
the same state that Senator Mark Kelly represents, has issued
a warning to any member of the military that deals
with Senator Kelly's case.

Speaker 4 (04:31):
Watch what is your level of trust in the US
military justice system if it were to get that far
to handle this.

Speaker 2 (04:41):
Trust?

Speaker 5 (04:42):
I trust them actually a lot, and for a couple reasons.
Number one, these are professionals. They are also swearing to
the Constitution of the United States. They know that there
will be fallout and consequences if they are used in
a in a you know, a hard you know way
to to basically railroad someone like started Kelly. Because Donald
Trump's gonna be on a couple of years, and if

(05:03):
you're part of the military that's going after sitting senators,
sitting members of Congress, and part of the weaponization of government,
there will be consequences.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
John. I know that this is anecdotal, but it also
goes down to the policy level. Anytime you see President
Trump or someone from this administration appearing before troops, they
absolutely love them. They appreciate their loyalty to them, they
appreciate their the prioritization of the safety of America's troops
and just putting America first. So it's unfortunate to see

(05:35):
this happening. But I'm pretty sure I know where most
of the military squares up on the side.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
Well, I know where Pete Hexas squares up, because just
a few minutes ago he released an update he has
asked the Navy Secretary to get back to him by
December tenth on whether or not Senator Kelly, a former
Navy captain, former astronaut, whether he should face a court
martial be brought back to actor doing to face court
martial and take some supporting action for his role on that.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
As you know, once in the.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
Military, always in the military, you can always be summoned back.
But Pete hex has setting a deadline and identifying the
Navy Secretary as the man who will oversee that investigation.
That's a pretty big deal. Pretty big deal. We'll keep
a close eye on that. That just moved over at
justindews dot com.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
All right, earlier.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Today, Amanda, while you're out reporting, I had a chance
to hang out with Andy Biggs for.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
A little bit.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
He missed you a lot, but we had a great
conversation about Jack Smith, about weaponization, about all the things
that are on the front burner of news on this
holiday week, including the Ukraine Russia peace talk movement. Have
it look, everybody, it was pretty pretty newsy interview. All right, folks,
joining us now to break down all of today's amazing news.
It feels it's a holiday week, but it doesn't feel
like a holiday week. Lots of big news breaking out.

(06:45):
He's a member of Congress from the great state of Arizona.
He's also the leading candidate Republican candidate for governor of
that great state. He's our longtime friend, Congressman Andy Biggs,
Congress and great to have you other show there.

Speaker 6 (06:57):
Thanks. John's great to be with you.

Speaker 7 (06:58):
And before I forget, happy Thanksgiving to you, your family
and loved once and your crew and Amanda and her crew.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
Well, thank you and back at you, sir, Thank you
for all you do for your country.

Speaker 3 (07:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
I know you've worked hard to make a better America
for the next generation and we're grateful for that on
this Thanksgiving, So thank you. All right, I want to
jump in on some of the big news. I think
a lot of people said, Okay, I don't understand this
cat and mouse game. Ukraine has one piece plan it's
agreed to. Russia has one piece plan. It's agreed to.
And how's that progress? But this is actually a strategy

(07:30):
because neither side would talk to each other and say.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
What they wanted. Donald Trump finally got it on paper.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
How big a moment is this and how does it
set the next wave of peace negotiations in motion?

Speaker 7 (07:42):
Well, if you've ever negotiated anything, and virtually everybody has,
if you don't understand what you want and what the
other side wants, you can never get to yes, it's
always going to be a no. And so to see
that now both sides have defined their interests and their
goals allows President Trump actually to come in and set

(08:03):
additional parameters time wise and to push it. And I
think it always is going to come back down to
territory and that's going to be the issue. But in
the meantime, there's a whole host of other issues that
both sides you're.

Speaker 6 (08:19):
Trying to get to.

Speaker 7 (08:20):
I think it's a defining moment and actually ratchets up
the heat on both sides now to come to the
table now that they've basically the cards are on the table.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Yeah, and all the US officials and by the way.
This is the art of a deal in action. My
President Trump knew that the reason there wasn't peace for
eleven years an ongoing war was that neither side really
knew what the other side wanted out of a solution.
Now it's in clarity and that really does allow for
an exchange of ideas.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
You mentioned territory.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
The other big one seems to be NATO membership for Ukraine.
Ukraine seems to want to keep that on the table.
Russia wants to take it off, but then have the
United States guarantee Ukraine and security going forward.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
How do you think that issue gets worked out.

Speaker 7 (09:05):
I think that one is one where you're going to
see some give. Unfortunately I don't. I don't want the
US to be the guaranteurs. If you want the truth,
NATO and the European Allies they should be the guaranteurs.

Speaker 6 (09:18):
And if they are, then I.

Speaker 7 (09:21):
Think that that Ukraine can live with that, and Ukraine's
gonna but Russia is also wanting them to lose some
armaments and the size of their military. I think Ukraine's
going to say, look, if you're going to make make
it so we have to defend ourselves, then we have
to have what we need to defend ourselves. And I
think in the end Russia probably gives on that because

(09:41):
that's not the big deal. The big deal for them
is NATO membership.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, I think that's that's where that
give that seems to be. It'll be interesting to see.
I want to turn to something else that you have
been so instrumental, and you're one of the first members
of Congress that I saw out there every day trying
to into Russia collusion and weaponization, the weaponization of the courts,
the weaponization of Congressional committees, the weaponization of the Justice Partment,

(10:07):
the FBI.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
The CIA.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
We now have some new evidence about Jack Smith in
Arctic Frost, and probably the most troubling of all the
investigations we now know from records that Senator Johnson and
Grassei released today that Jack Smith was told, Hey, if
you go with a subpoena, Congress has certain equities, like
this is the bait and speech protection clauses of the Constitution.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
They're going to have to litigate this.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
Instead, Jack Smith took that what to Judge Boseburg and said,
I just want to get a protective order and avoid
the whole fight with Congress. Not have to tell him
I'm taking their phone records, not have to comply with
the laws on the book. The fact that he was
told what he was should do and then he did
something different, what does it say about Jack Smith and
maybe his co conspirator, Judge Boseburg.

Speaker 7 (10:54):
Well, with Jack Smith, this is just only one of
a myriad an host of problems of his investigation.

Speaker 6 (11:01):
He was on a witch hunt, That's what he was doing.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
There was.

Speaker 7 (11:05):
If it wasn't an overt, it certainly was a nudge, nudge,
wink wink kind of thing. He knew what he was
called in to do, and that was to attag Donald
Trump and Donald Trump's supporters, and he did so. The
fact that he was told that he had to probably
go get some litigate the equities and protect the rights
of the senators and members of Congress who are protected

(11:29):
under the Constitution and he failed to do so is
just one more black mark against Jack Smith. But here's
the thing that really has been grinding me for some time,
and that is Judge Boseburg. As you know, I issued
I introduced legislation more than a year ago. Now I
think it is to actually remove Judge Boseburg from the bench.

(11:52):
I don't think that he is serving under a good behavior.
I think he's exhibited horrible behavior. I think he has
an inherent bias. And I know everybody says, well, judges
have biases, but in this particular case, his family has
a bias.

Speaker 6 (12:07):
He has a bias, and he was.

Speaker 7 (12:10):
Actually issuing orders where he should have known that there
was a constitutional protection that was in place, and he
was deliberately going around it. So those are the types
of things that lead us to Judge Bosburg. Where there's
impeachment resolutions against him, there's an Article three, Section one removal,

(12:30):
and that's mine against him. And I think we look
at it and say, Judge Bosburg was a catalyst to
the weaponization of certainly the Arctic frost investigation by Jack Smith,
but also anytime anybody else was coming up, Judge Bosberg
was right there attacking this administration or President Trump when

(12:54):
he was out of office.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Even thirty five years ago, as a very young reporter
wrote story that a federal judge had been ruling in
cases where he owned stock he hadn't disclosed his financial
conflict of interest. The chief Justice at the time. William
Renquist within days intervened and severely punished that judge for
not complying with the law. John Roberts, the turned Chief Justice,

(13:16):
has been rather silent, even as there are growing signs
that there is dysfunction in the courts. Is this his
moment to maybe stand up and meet out some discipline.
He doesn't have to wait for congress or impeachment. He
can impose his own discipline as the chief disciplinarian.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
What do you think about John Roberts weighing in?

Speaker 6 (13:36):
Well, I'm thinking he's not going to weigh in.

Speaker 7 (13:38):
I mean, he should have weighed in in my opinion,
long ago, and he has chosen not to.

Speaker 6 (13:43):
And he's and I think he's in his mind.

Speaker 7 (13:46):
Perhaps he's saying, well, that's a political question. We're going
to stay out of politics. But isn't just a political question,
And this is why he should weigh in. He needs
to weigh in to protect the integrity of the courts.
And the integrity of the courts is going to hell
in the handbasket, John, because nobody in America really trusts

(14:07):
the courts anymore.

Speaker 6 (14:08):
I don't care whether you're right or left, you're not
trusting the courts. The left doesn't trust them.

Speaker 7 (14:12):
That's why they go there when they're in powered to
try to get the leftist judges to whack the conservatives.
The conservatives go there hoping that conservative justices will actually
protect them from the assault from the left. Neither side
thinks that these guys are these men and women of
the court are honest, fair, equitable brokers. Each side believes

(14:34):
that there is a bias there that each one is
going to exploit. And so Judge Roberts, by sitting on
his hands, is fostering greater insecurity and disruption in American
society because the courts are absolutely no longer trusted as
fair and honest brokers.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
Judge Bosberg specific he said, you don't have to tell Congress,
even though there was a lot all in the books
that any phone records taking of Congress would have to
be notified to at least the Senate Sergeant in Arms.
Giving that instruction, does the judge have the right to
approgate enforcement of a law?

Speaker 6 (15:14):
No, a judge does not.

Speaker 7 (15:15):
In fact, what the courts are supposed to do according
to the founders, they were supposed to be the weakest branch.
They're supposed to not interpret the law. They're not supposed
to legislate from the bench. They're supposed to do what
they're supposed to enforce the law and apply apply the law.
That's what they're supposed to do, apply the law to

(15:35):
the facts and case before them. To do otherwise is
to go outside their bounds and scope of authority. And
that's Congress and the executive branch have both failed to
bring judges to.

Speaker 6 (15:48):
Bear on that.

Speaker 7 (15:48):
And that's one of the reasons I've started the Article
three Section one project that I've done with that bill.
And the bottom line is, as long as the judiciaries
is with impunity, acting outside a scope, they become the
most powerful branch of government when the founders intended them
to be the weakest branch of government.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Yeah, pretty remarkable, it really is. Congressman. We're so grateful
for the clarity of your voice. Also all the work
you've done to help us understand where our government has
gone right. We're very lucky to have you on the
front lines of this important time in history.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Thanks for joining us. Say great to have you on
the show.

Speaker 6 (16:28):
Thank you, John. Always great to be with you. Tele Amanda, mister.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
I will she probably misses you as well. Happy Thanksgiving,
my friend.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
All Right, folks, we're going to take a closer look
at the possible peace deal between Ukraine and Russia. Diggingt
that a little bit more for with President Jrump's former
Deputy National Security of.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
E will have that next. Could there be more ended
by Thanksgiving?

Speaker 3 (16:49):
Bill?

Speaker 2 (16:49):
Answer that question next? After these messages?

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Welcome back everybody. If you see that little window at
the bottom, that is President Trump getting ready to depart.
He hates a Turkey day too. I know he's working hard,
but of course he's gonna take a little time with family.
All right, everybody, So, as John was talking about, is
the war in Ukraine close to coming to an end? Lordy?
Don't we all hope? We know that Ukraine has agreed
to most of the points that President Trump's laid out

(17:24):
in his peace plan. So will Russia agree as well?
Joining us now to discuss all of that. As former
Deputy National Security advisor to President Trump, she's also the
vice president of National Security and Foreign Policy at the
Heritage Foundation, Victoria Coats, Victoria, thanks so much for joining
us tonight.

Speaker 8 (17:40):
Well, Happy early Thanksgiving guys.

Speaker 9 (17:41):
Good to be with you.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
Happy early Thanksgiving to you. And you know, I look
at the grand picture here over ten years of ambiguity
between Russia and Ukraine, and you know, very little clarity
as far as what agreeable terms would look like. And
in about ten months under President Trump, we finally have
that clarity. Where do we go from here?

Speaker 8 (18:04):
We really do And if we think back to that
ten twelve years ago when Barack Obama was president and
Vladimir Putin just seized the entire Crimean peninsula in the
dead of night, essentially, and the President of the United
States said nothing, did nothing. There were some minor sanctions
slapped on Russia, but essentially Ukraine was forced to simply

(18:25):
accept this annexation of their sovereign territory. And this was
not done in any sort of orderly way. I understand
the views of many of my Russian friends on the
way Crimea was dispensed after World War Two. I mean,
there is a historical argument there, but this isn't how
you just seize territory and just simply do it with impunity,

(18:47):
Because when that happens, we then have the invasion of
Ukraine proper under Joe Biden in twenty twenty two and
We've been in this grinding stalemate for under for almost
four years. Donald Trump is the old only person who's
put a plan on the table that seems to have
any kind of prospects for succeeding. And I think everybody
should be a little bit more enthusiastic about this and

(19:09):
a little bit more supportive. There are way too many
Democrats and some of our weakned European friends who are
just assuming this is a disaster. It is literally the
only pathway to get out of this horrible war.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
Yeah, so important.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
There is a major hint in this that Ukraine has
given some ground that it is going to give up
some of its lands, something that was always going to
happen because it's lost some of its land and war
tell us about some of.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
The sticking points.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
It seems like NATO membership, no membership is one what
land specifically we maybe change hands. Where do you think
the hardest work ahead for Steve Whitkoff and the president
and Marco Rubio are I think.

Speaker 8 (19:48):
It is probably that border. So this is the Donteesk
region in the east of Ukraine. It's the industrial heartland
of Ukraine. There are assets there that I don't think
Ukraine is going to be at all eager to give up,
especially because Russia doesn't control them right now. I think
you'll see Ukraine saying that we can freeze the lines
where we are the battlefield reality right now. But we're

(20:09):
not simply handing over territory that you don't control. You
don't get like a gift bag at the conclusion of
this invasion. You could maybe keep what you've taken for now,
So that's one thing. I also am very unsure about
this limit of six hundred thousand members of the Ukrainian military.
How do you even count those guys? Are they combat soldiers?

(20:32):
Are they firemen? Are they coastguard personnel? So there are
all sorts of different ways that could become a very
nebulous sort of situation. And then finally, as you mentioned
this kind of prohibition on NATO membership, well, the only
way you can prohibit a country from becoming a member
of NATO is to pass it through the NATO Council,
where I believe it has to have unanimous consent. And

(20:54):
guess what, this isn't going to get in the NATO
Council unanimous consent, So that's sort of a non started
to begin with. I think you can have Ukraine pledge
that it will not join NATO for twenty years, which
is quite frankly how long it would take them to
get in anyway. But this idea that you're somehow going
to prohibit it, I don't think that's possible.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
So, Victoria, we went from a twenty eight point plan
to a nineteen point plan. Is there anything significant or
I gues I suppose even surprising that got asked to you?

Speaker 8 (21:26):
Not really, Amanda. I mean this was always going to
be pared down into what Ukraine could accept, and I
think we've also had some consultation with our European allies.
I'm just back from Europe over the weekend, got an
earfull from a number of folks who were deeply concerned
this was going to be the surrender of Ukraine in
a matter of days. Well, clearly that hasn't happened. And

(21:50):
the engagement with Secretary Rubio and his team with very
senior Ukrainian delegation in Geneva apparently was fruitful. And now
we have, you know, Steve Witkoff to engage in some
pre Turkey diplomacy with Russian counterparts, and we'll see what
they say, so. You know, as I said, that twenty
eight point plan was always probably overly ambitious, but it

(22:12):
was a maximalist starting position. Now we're getting down to
what's actually possible, and it seems much more realistic to me.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
Yeah, that does all right.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
So in the backdrop of this, President Trump and President
She have a conversation and they're lining up for PRESIDENTEV
to go visit Beijing early next year. I was taught
a long time ago in Washington, if something looks like
a coincidence, it probably is. Is there some tie between
these two events?

Speaker 8 (22:39):
There has to be. And this was an unusual phone
called John and that G apparently initiated it. Usually the
Chinese premiere is called by the American president. The Americans
initiate the phone call. In this case, G reached out,
so that means he had something he particularly wanted to
talk about. I think there is a lot of concern
in China about their economic prospects on the potential limiting

(23:03):
of the very highly sophisticated semiconductor chips. That is a
big hot topic of conversation in Washington literally this week.
Are we going to put export controls on those things?
And we do have this period of a year now,
when China has said they're not going to limit the
export of the rare earth minerals that we so desperately
need for our high tech manufacturing, there'll be a lot

(23:26):
of posturing that goes on there. There's the President's proposed
visit in April. She said he's coming to the United
States in the fall, so you know, maybe there can
be a better step forward for the US China relationship,
which would then put a lot of pressure on Vladimir Putin.
So I think you're absolutely correct there is a connection here, Bolks.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
Just as we're sitting here, the presidents of sending the
stairs on the Air Force one headed out to mar Lago.
Did not make any comments, but you can see that
in your box here. MANA sorry, step Ony, just want to.

Speaker 3 (23:53):
Make sure people the yeah, no, wrong, yeah, Thank you,
John for letting everybody know. Victoria with respect to President
trump slightly upcoming conversation in person with President she what
does the timeline say about President Trump's leverage in that
conversation if this happens first, is that something is that
probably a large piece of leverage that President Trump has

(24:16):
to make. She come to the table and maybe to
his knees on a lot of these economic issues.

Speaker 8 (24:22):
In terms of the conversation that proposed conversation in April, Amanda, Right, Yes, yeah, No,
I mean I think we're going to have a lot
of water under the bridge between now and then. I
think we're going to hopefully see a resolution of the
Ukraine War, and if China feels they can start to
play a more constructive role in bringing Putin to the
table and getting that situation resolved, I mean I think

(24:45):
then that there are a number of other topics that
could be on the table. Look, nothing would make me
happier then if China suddenly decided to become a responsible
international player, that they played by the rules. The world's
second largest economy, so you know, they they are important.
We have to deal with them. But we need to
manage this Ukraine situation in a way that is not

(25:06):
going to embolden g to go into Taiwan, because that's
of course, the great concern we're about to be in
twenty twenty six and twenty twenty seven is the year
GI has set out to potentially have the People's Liberation
Army be ready for a move on Taiwan. So That's
why I think this whole year that we're going into
with both this and the second potential summit in the

(25:27):
fall in the United States, is really going to be
fraught and charged. And I just have to tell you
one of the things I'm most thankful for this Thanksgiving
is that we have President Trump in charge of that year.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Yeah, it's so important. Before we let you go, Victoria
real quickly. The Middle East, Hamas it's kind of somewhat holding,
but I'm certain what happened there. Meanwhile, Bals and Brotherhood
got an important designation from President Trump. Want to just
get your two thoughts on that.

Speaker 8 (25:53):
Yeah, I mean, we're watching Hamas try to reconstitute itself.
Hopefully that's not going to be permitted. We've seeing Israel
take some additional actions against both Hamas and Hezbalah this week,
so that remains a situation to be managed by Israel.
But clearly now with US support and the Muslim Brotherhood
designation is really important. I've been working with my old employer,

(26:14):
Senator Cruz on this for ten twelve years, and so
what President is initiated here is kind of a bottom
up approach to this. We're going to designate some of
the little splinter groups that are very supportive of Hamas
of other terrorist groups underneath the umbrella if you will,
of the Muslim Brotherhood, then you can start targeting the

(26:34):
Brotherhood for providing material support to those groups. So this
is going to take a lot of work. As I said,
at ten twelve years, I've been working on it. I
guess I've failed. But with some assistance from the administration,
hopefully we can make progress on this thing and start
to unravel just this labyrinth of organizations and funding that

(26:55):
is the Muslim Brotherhood, the political arm of radical Islam
that is working here in the United States against our
own government. It's ambitionous, it's going to be hard, but
so important that we've gotten it started.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
Yeah, and let me clarify, you absolutely have not failed.
You have shed light on this. You accomplished a lot
of work, your work, bar Fruit during President Trump's first
administration with a lot of these issues. So thank you
so much for all of your work. Vice President of
National Security and Foreign Policy at Heritage Victoria Coast, Victoria.
Happy Thanksgiving to you.

Speaker 8 (27:27):
Have a great holiday, Take care.

Speaker 3 (27:29):
Same to you. All Right, everybody, we've got to take
a very quick break, but we'll be back on the
other side.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
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Speaker 2 (29:04):
Welcome back to America.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Earlier this month, we announced that justin News parent company
had acquired The Post monual. I was super excited about
that acquisition for one reason. There is a fantastic reporter there.
She's on the front lines of everything that goes on
in Portland with Antifa and also the anti Ice riots,
and she has put together an extraordinary exclusive video to
show you from her player the postmoder. She's a reporter,

(29:26):
Katy Davis Cort. We're gonna get through in a second,
but first watch what what she went through when she
went an exclusive ride along with Ice in Portland.

Speaker 10 (29:33):
Soon as as.

Speaker 11 (29:34):
We encounter someone, the community comes out and starts filming
our officers, our agents and trying.

Speaker 9 (29:42):
To docks them.

Speaker 11 (29:44):
We have had several of our employees be followed home,
their families, targeted and harassed. It's something that we face
every single day.

Speaker 10 (29:53):
I wish to point out.

Speaker 11 (30:00):
Every single day, every single day that our officers are
out doing their job, following the law, doing the law
enforcement job. They're being harassed.

Speaker 12 (30:08):
All right, guys, So right now we have an anti
ICE activist trailing our vehicle, blowing the whistle to alert
the community about ICE.

Speaker 10 (30:17):
I'll step back you guys, keep doing your thing.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
What is the actual right?

Speaker 8 (30:26):
It is a protest against Trump?

Speaker 10 (30:29):
Is that what it is?

Speaker 8 (30:30):
I mean we yesterday we arrested three sexual offenders, one
at sodomy against a child.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
How about that we have law enforcement officials doing their
job and they're getting harassed by the public and our
least members of the public in Portland joining us now
the great investigator reporter who put that documentary together. You
can see the whole thing at the Post Money go
check it out today, Katie Davis.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Car Katie. Great to have you on the show.

Speaker 10 (30:55):
Yeah you too, John, Thanks for having me.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
It's an honored I have you on.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Congratulations on all the great reporting you've done, all the
courage you show out in the field so that Americans
can see what's.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
Really going on.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
You help us see something that I think most Americans
don't get from their local and traditional news media, and
that is there's a false narrative that oh ICE is
out there rounding up innocent grandmas.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
They're going after.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Bad people, and they're trying to do it in the
most dignified way, and they get what you show there.
Tell us a little bit about what you experienced on
your ride along.

Speaker 3 (31:29):
Right, John.

Speaker 12 (31:29):
So you know, this whole story has been a full
circle moment for me in the journalism sphere. I've been
covering the protests outside of the ICE facilities since mid June,
and now I got to see firsthand how these agents
are operating in the field.

Speaker 10 (31:45):
You know, despite the violence pull.

Speaker 12 (31:47):
Their way at the facility, these ICE agents have been
hitting the streets hard in this self designated city sanctuary
city of Portland, Oregon, and they are out there resting
the worst of the worst offenders who are residing in
our community.

Speaker 10 (32:05):
But what is so.

Speaker 12 (32:05):
Disturbing is these illegal aliens who have committed heinous crimes
against the American people who have come into our country,
you know, after murdering people in their home countries, They're
out there arresting the worst of the worst offenders who
are actively being shielded by the city of Portland and.

Speaker 10 (32:27):
The state of Oregon.

Speaker 12 (32:28):
And now they have agitators disrupting and impeding their operations
at every single turn in the field, which is what
people will see in.

Speaker 10 (32:37):
This documentary that we produced.

Speaker 12 (32:40):
But I think what was so eye opening to me
was how dedicated these ICE agents are in protecting the
homeland from these foreign invaders.

Speaker 3 (32:50):
Yeah, and Katie, something that's so concerning about the dosing
is that you know, like you said, they are arresting
the worst of the worst, So the associates and family
members of the worst of the worst, they're likely connected
to these cartels as well. And we know what the
cartels do for punishment.

Speaker 10 (33:09):
Yeah, you're exactly right. That's why you will see in
the documentary they.

Speaker 12 (33:13):
Either are wearing gators to cover their faces or we
had to blur their faces to ensure that these ICE
agents are protected. And they have the protest outside of
the ICE facility is a bunch of ANTIFA affiliated networks
all joining together to protest ICE. And so you really
have domestic terrors hunting down these ICE officers who are

(33:34):
just trying to protect the American people.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
It's just insane.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
For a long time, Antifa's existence was essentially denied by
the former FBI director. It's not really an organized group,
but we now have some pretty strong proof in a
very different story now in Texas, I think nine members
of an Antifa cell are charged with terrorism crimes. How
big a moment is that for those who've been fighting
against Antifa and those who've seen it terrorize Portland for a.

Speaker 10 (34:00):
Long time, it's huge.

Speaker 12 (34:02):
You know, me and several of my colleagues have been
reporting on Antifa here for years now, it's been almost
a decade, and a lot of us were actually invited
to the White House recently to brief the President on
Antifa terrorism, not just in the nation, but there's really
a huge it's really ground zero for Antifa here in

(34:23):
the Pacific Northwest, who have just terrorized anyone who they
believed to have a different view than them. And finally
seeing the FBI do something about this terrorist group is
It's very appreciative and I think it's going to make
America a lot safer.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
Yeah, Katie, before we let you go, there was a
viral video two ICE agents who had arrested a man
and they were putting him in the back of their
ice vehicle, and there was a white woman who was
pitching a fit about it, and one of the ICE
agents turned around and said, we worked for the Child
Predator Unit, and she shut up immediately because she realized
exactly what that meant. What that meant that this man did,

(35:00):
that they were arresting him. Who needs to do a
better job of getting the messaging out there.

Speaker 12 (35:07):
You know, these people are so brainwashed. They just hate Trump.
It's who these who the left is.

Speaker 10 (35:14):
They are active.

Speaker 12 (35:15):
The Democrat Party is actively trying to keep these illegal
aliens who've committed to Hanu's crimes against the American.

Speaker 10 (35:21):
People in the community because they need him for votes.

Speaker 12 (35:24):
It's blatantly obvious, and they're being supported by the Democrats.

Speaker 10 (35:28):
So you have just normal America. It's really normal American.

Speaker 12 (35:32):
Citizens who are really have moved to the right side
versus just the insane left.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
Katy, before we let you go, did you see on
your ride along any ICE agents go in and break
into a school and take any young kids out of
the classroom or take any innocent grandmas off the street.

Speaker 10 (35:49):
That is totally fake news.

Speaker 12 (35:51):
And it's funny you said that because several schools in
the area shut down because ICE was there saying that
they were going into the schools.

Speaker 10 (35:57):
I can first hand say, none of that has been there.

Speaker 12 (36:00):
Not targeting the schools, They're just targeting the worst of
the worst.

Speaker 10 (36:04):
And you know anyone in the country is here unlawfully.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
Yeah, well, I'll tell you one thing that isn't fake news,
the great reporting you and your colleagues do at the
Post Moloney. We're so lucky to be partner alongside of you. Now,
great work, folks, Go and see Katie incredible work thepostmonial
dot com amazing ten to eleven.

Speaker 2 (36:22):
Minute video footage. Go watch it.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
It gives you an entirely different perspective than some of
the bogus news you get in.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
Your traditional media. All right, we're going to take a
quick commercial break. We'll be back in just a few seconds.

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Speaker 2 (38:02):
Welcome back to America.

Speaker 1 (38:02):
Time for one of my favorite segments of the week,
The justin News Health Update, brought to you by our
great friends at Natapath joining us now the co founder
and chief culture officer at Natapath.

Speaker 2 (38:12):
Our good friend, doctor Chadwaldy, Doctor. Good to have you on.

Speaker 9 (38:16):
Hey John, so good to be here. Thank you for
having me.

Speaker 1 (38:18):
I love these discussions. I've heard from so many people.
I was out at a speech a couple of weeks ago,
people come up. I love the hell segments. We dive
into really important stuff. And one of the topics that's
been coming up a lot, maybe because of the Maha
meat movement, is the connection between fake meat and chronic disease.
Tell us a little bit about what we're learning between
that connection and what it could mean long term.

Speaker 9 (38:41):
Well, I think people are really waking up. You mentioned
the Maha movement. I think that's created so much awareness
in people that when they hear things like lab meat
or something that's processed or ultra fine, they're starting to
put their hands out. They're like, hold on, you know.
We're starting to see different states banning lab meat and
different company is funded by Bill Gates going bankrupt because

(39:03):
people are refusing this stuff, and that to me shows
the power of the movement, the Maha movement. It shows
the power of the level of awareness that people are
now connecting with their health and their food, and the
power of when people come together and make a decision
and really take action. That's one of the most important
things to make a difference.

Speaker 3 (39:22):
You know.

Speaker 9 (39:22):
We know now if you look at the past one
hundred years, there's a trend. The further away we get
from real whole natural food, as close to nature as possible,
that's rich in nutrients and vitamins, the further away we
get from that, the more chronic disease we experience, the
further we go down, metabolic disease, insulin resistance, cancers, diabetes,

(39:43):
heart disease. That trend is there, and it's been happening
despite all our advances in science and in technology. So
it might look from a technological standpoint, this is amazing.
We have lab grown meat and we don't have to
plan anything, and animals will stay alive. But that comes
at a radical cost. You see people waking up. I
think it presents a bright future in my opinion, I'm

(40:05):
very excited about that. I'm very optimistic about it.

Speaker 3 (40:08):
Doctor Walder. When you look at real meat versus lab
grown fake meat, I mean, real meat has an abundance
of protein, of iron, of antioxidants, so many nutrients that
we need. Lab grown meat, as I understand it, is
one of the most processed items out there that seems
extremely bad for your system, and it doesn't really does

(40:29):
it provide any of those other benefits that real meat does.

Speaker 9 (40:33):
Not as much. Right, it's less nutrient dense, right, So
real meat coming from healthy callows right. We want to
think about the whole supply chain of food, where not
just what we eat. Where what we eat eats right.
So you can take an animal that's out there eating grass,
drinking sunshine, like what we're seeing here, they're actually churning
the soil with their hoose. They have manure on the
ground that fertilizes everything. What you're seeing is a natural,

(40:56):
harmonious state of nature that nature loves to be in
harmony with itself.

Speaker 2 (41:00):
Right.

Speaker 9 (41:01):
When we take things and refine things and get synthetic,
all the vitamins are lamentials get stripped away from that.
But there's, like you said, there's other toxins that get
added in to er in order to keep this stuff
shelf stable, in order to disobey the laws of nature,
so to speak. Right, So it has a downstream effect
on our health where we're not getting the important amino

(41:22):
acids that we need for our health. We're not our
metabolism isn't burning calories at the state it would with
real whole protein, real strong protein. We actually burn calories
when we eat it. When we eat a good quality steak,
our body is like, Wow, we're going to have to
work really hard for this. We're going to have to
burn some calories and we become healthier for it.

Speaker 2 (41:40):
Right.

Speaker 9 (41:40):
Protein is one of the most It is the essential macronutrient.
We can go without carbohydrates, we can go a pretty
long time without fat. We absolutely cannot go without good
quality protein.

Speaker 3 (41:50):
Right.

Speaker 9 (41:50):
So, going further down this lab generated fake meat stuff,
it's only going to lead to more diseases. It's going
to get us more disconnected from nature and our true health.
It's going to create problems. So again to see us
reversing course on that is exactly what we want to
be doing.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
Talk a little bit about protein and then that transition
to collagen.

Speaker 2 (42:09):
Collagen is the super protein that powers our body.

Speaker 1 (42:12):
When you get my age, I guess my collagen's being
dialed down, isn't it.

Speaker 9 (42:17):
That's right?

Speaker 2 (42:17):
It's right.

Speaker 9 (42:18):
I mean again, protein is the most foundational thing. I
always encourage people and eat a whole real food diet,
you know, seek out the best sources, but also recognize
that collagen is the most abundant protein in the body. Right,
So when we're looking at each other, we're looking at
our skin, our hair, our nails. All of this is
made up of collagen inside our bodies. We have arteries

(42:38):
in veins, we have gut lining, we have a whole
nervous system. Right, all of that is also made up
of collagen.

Speaker 2 (42:45):
Right.

Speaker 9 (42:45):
One of the issues though, is that we're super deficient
in collagen in the modern world. Our ancestors got plenty
of collagen because they would eat nose to tail, you know,
they would they take the bones of an animal, they
would put it in soups, they would boil it down,
and they consume that on a consistent basis. Because we're
so deficient in collagen in our modern world and have
been eating so many refined foods, many of us as

(43:07):
individuals are also extremely deficient in collagen. We produce collagen
on our own, but that production begins to decline around
the age of twenty. By the age we're fifty, we're
producing is half as much collagen internally as we did
in our twenty So the older we get, the more
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That's why I'm such a big fan of it. Our company,

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(44:32):
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Speaker 2 (44:45):
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Speaker 2 (45:13):
All right, we'll be right back right after these messages.

Speaker 3 (45:26):
Welcome back everybody. To finish up the evening, a few
more stories. First of all, President Trump today pardoned two
very lucky turkeys, Gobble and Waddle, and he had some
very funny things to say.

Speaker 6 (45:37):
Check this out.

Speaker 5 (45:38):
The turkey's being pardoned today, go by the names of
Gobble and Waddle.

Speaker 2 (45:43):
When I first saw the pictures, I thought we should
send them. Well, I was gonna I shouldn't say this.
I was gonna call him chuck in Nancy. But then
I realized I wouldn't be pardoning them. I would never
pardon those two people.

Speaker 9 (45:59):
I wouldn't pardon I wouldn't care what Milannia told me.

Speaker 2 (46:02):
Darling, I think it would be a nice thing to do,
I won't do it, Darling.

Speaker 3 (46:06):
John, he was on a roll today. He was talking
about how these were the two first official Maha turkeys
because they were green fed and grass fed, and but
he commented on their weight because they were fifty pound
turkeys and said they should have been drinking smoothies instead.
He was a rite. He was on a roll today.
You can tell the.

Speaker 1 (46:26):
Joke about pardons, right, He actually said that Joe Biden's
Turkey partons were invalid because they were done by autopen.

Speaker 2 (46:32):
No. So pretty funny stuff. Yeah, good for it today
you could tell.

Speaker 3 (46:37):
Yeah, absolutely, Okay, So I want to get into a story. Actually,
you were just mentioning that where you are going, the
forecast for Thanksgiving is calling for eight inches of rain.
This is something that's going to be taking place actually
in a large portion of that part of the country.

Speaker 2 (46:52):
Nowhere I'm going, not rain. I'll take rain, snow.

Speaker 3 (46:55):
It's not I'm sure, I'm sure. But these are called
lake effect storms. And I had to look it up
because you know, from the south and southern California, I
don't know what this is. So it's this highly localized
storm that happens when you've got very cold Arctic air
blowing across large, relatively warm bodies of water like the
Great Lakes. So you guys are getting eight inches and

(47:17):
it looks like it's going to be happening all over
the late Great Lakes region.

Speaker 2 (47:22):
Yeah, I have a name. I have a great story.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
When I first spent time in Wisconsin, I never experienced
lake effect and it can sometimes be like seven eight
days in a row every day it snows, you know,
in November, December, on Christmas, Oh, isn't that cute?

Speaker 2 (47:35):
We got some nice snow. It's white and fluffy. Great.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
By early January, you go shovel your driveway and the
plow man cuns, but it immediately plows you back in
and you're cursing lake effects snow.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
It is not a fun thing.

Speaker 1 (47:46):
And like in Buffalo, sometimes it goes to like forty
fifty inches of lake effects snow. So it is the
bane of winter existence in some of these lakefront communities.

Speaker 3 (47:57):
Yeah, I'm sure, and I mean, you know, I'm married
to a Canadian and from a very cold area of
Canada where it goes down. My first Christmas there it
was minus fifty five. Being from Alabama, I don't even
own enough clothing to pile on to prepare for that.
I you know, it's got to be really hard to
live in areas like that.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
Yeah, oh it is.

Speaker 1 (48:18):
You gotta be tough and then you got to be
able to put up with a lot of us though.
But it's sort of funny. But I hope everyone gets
a safe travel and that we get some great times
with family, and it should.

Speaker 2 (48:28):
Be a it should be a big.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
It's going to be the largest travel Thanksgive, second largest
travel Thanksgiving in history, the largest like fifteen twenty years,
I'm told. And prices are down in a big way,
so it's a cheaper and more travel Thanksgiving. That's a
sign that maybe the economy is starting to bump on up.

Speaker 2 (48:45):
Those two turkeys. Hey, we really did get it.

Speaker 3 (48:46):
We did a little road trip and I love seeing
those gas prices. It was fantastic, John. I want to
squeeze in one more thing before we go, because I
get really irritated with messaging and people who walk around
with the numbers and Charlotte's mayor vibe By Lyles. She
has been touting the fact that crime is down in
her city. And while it is down eight percent, overall,

(49:08):
violent crime is up in that city. And when you
have this competing messaging, it destroys police departments because they
were trying to have you know, they're trying to do
their best in those communities, but people are lying about it.
Mainstream media is lying about it, and they just want
to make sure that they can bring crime down to
keep people safe.

Speaker 2 (49:26):
Propaganda, that's what it is.

Speaker 1 (49:28):
If you don't tell them, you know, you can anyone
can find a statistic, the question is is it an
accurate reflection of what's going on. And until just a
few days ago, when the Feds rolled in and cleaned
up some things in Charlotte, violent crime was up.

Speaker 2 (49:40):
And that's just the fact.

Speaker 1 (49:41):
No media can make that fact go away, non't matter
how hard they tried.

Speaker 3 (49:45):
Yeah, when I just saw videos of Long Beach, California,
where the streets are empty, it makes you wonder if
those estimates of illegal aliens in this country are awfully wrong.
All right, everybody, thanks so much for being here. We'll
be back tomorrow night and at sixteen Eastern
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Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

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