Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:18):
The Charlie Kirk Show starts.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Now, why do you think other countries aren't judged revenue
strict immigration policy?
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Was born as a man and now I'm a woman.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
What do you think the biggest threat is to the
United States currently?
Speaker 1 (00:31):
There's a reason that a lot of the black community
doesn't have a father, and it's because of systemic racism America.
It is the only country or even those who hate
it refused to leave. That's how you know you live
in a great country. It's time that we start talking
to the next generation, not talking down to the next generation.
And that's what we're doing.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
These people are just idiots.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
I really, you know, I'm at the point where it's
become really hard.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
To have an intellectual debate with any of these.
Speaker 5 (01:06):
People because the level of stupidity that they are displaying
every single day is frankly embarrassing, not just in Congress
but as Americans. And the fact that these people are
allowed to say just the most ridiculous things tells you
that the dumbing of the United States has arrived, because
(01:26):
how else do we get Trump presidency again.
Speaker 6 (01:29):
Over the weekend, I read all these headlines and the
headlines were like Trump suffers legal blows. Another one was
Trump hit with unexpected loss. Here is one major DEI
legal setback. And I think the concern I have is
that people watching those headlines, especially people who don't like Trump,
are going to think Trump is getting his butt kicked,
(01:50):
and then when he wins invariable he's going to win
some of these cases, they're going to say.
Speaker 7 (01:55):
Well, what happened to all the butt kicking?
Speaker 8 (01:56):
Right?
Speaker 6 (01:57):
And here's why these are not major setbacks. One of
these courts said, hey, the language was too vague. You
know what that tells them? Just go draft another one.
It's not like legislation where you need a bunch of
people to agree on something. Do you know what it
costs to do an executive order? A piece of paper
and a sharpie. That's it, and they can go right
back to the drawing board.
Speaker 8 (02:16):
I got to ask you about this rumored list of
people that you allegedly put together that we're all going
to be cleaned out?
Speaker 1 (02:21):
Is there a list?
Speaker 3 (02:22):
Is there anybody left on the list?
Speaker 9 (02:24):
And it exists? There's no list, Shannon, I've heard that.
I've seen that very rumor. Although we have a very
keen eye toward military leadership and their willingness to follow
lawful orders. This is all about defending the constitution.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
Joe Biden gave lawful orders.
Speaker 9 (02:39):
A lot of them are really bad, and it's unfortunate
how they eroded our military ideological COVID mandates. President Trump
has given another set of lawful orders, and they will
be followed.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
If they're not followed, and.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
All these orders are in keeping with.
Speaker 9 (02:53):
The Constitution and norms inside the military. If they're not followed,
then those officers will find the door.
Speaker 8 (02:58):
The AP is usually at every ver presdential event, able
to hear what Trump says and oftentimes ask questions. But
the AP has been banned for the better part of
two weeks over a spat involving the name of the
Golf of Mexico, which Trump has declared to be the
Golf of America. The AP says it has to be
able to choose what language to use. It can't allow
the American president to be the word police. So the
(03:18):
AP going to court today in a big action, and
the White House Corresponds Association filed a brief overnight supporting
the AP and saying this situation this band has quote
already had a chiliad effect on journalists who simply want
to do their jobs. We'll see what the judge rules in.
This really important for some amond case.
Speaker 10 (03:34):
I understand. Maine is the Maine here, the governor of Maine.
Are you not going to comply with it?
Speaker 7 (03:44):
Well, we are the federal law.
Speaker 10 (03:47):
Well you better do it.
Speaker 11 (03:48):
You better do it because you're not going to get
any federal funding at all if you don't. And by
the way, your population, even though it's somewhat liberal, lolo I.
Speaker 10 (03:54):
Did very well there.
Speaker 11 (03:56):
You population it doesn't want men playing in women's sports,
So you better comply because otherwise you're not getting any
federal funding. Every state, good, I'll see you good. I
look forward to that. That should be a really easy one.
Every state has a responsibility to comply with Titledye to
have an obligation of legal obligation, and we'll be enforcing aggressively,
(04:19):
and we're going to be protecting our citizens.
Speaker 12 (04:21):
The most exciting of all is the fact that every
single day, the entire White House staff, the entire administration,
the entire cabinet, on behalf of President Trump and his
extraordinary leadership is getting the lies.
Speaker 13 (04:40):
Out of our schools.
Speaker 12 (04:41):
The men out of women's sports, the poison out of
our foods, the woke out.
Speaker 14 (04:45):
Of our military, the predators off our streets, and the
illegal aliens the hell out of our country.
Speaker 15 (05:02):
Every day is a battle for your mind, raging information
coming from every angle, but the will to deceive.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Fear not.
Speaker 15 (05:10):
You found the place for truth, the voice of a
generation that still has the will to believe in the
greatest country in the history of the world.
Speaker 13 (05:18):
This is the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Fuck a lot, here we go. Okay, everybody, radio stations
across the country. It is a action pack newsday. I
hope you had a wonderful weekend. We have a big
weekend store here. There are a lot of stories that
are bubbling up and we are going to be covering
them here exclusively on the program. The first of which
(05:41):
is an email, an email heard around the world, a
singular email that was sent last week, and the email
was to ask every federal worker, so what do you
do here? And what have you gotten done? Email was
(06:02):
sent and it says, quote, please reply this sent to
every federal worker. Please reply to this email with approximately
five bullets of what you accomplished last week and c
see your manager. Please do not send any classified information,
links or attachments. Deadline to reply is Monday at eleven
(06:25):
fifty nine Eastern Standard time. As soon as this email
was sent, federal workers started to scream and say, what
do you mean I have to tell you what I do?
This is harassment, this is taunting. This is unfair. No
one has ever asked a federal worker what do you
do now? We do this every single week at Turning
(06:46):
Point USA and Turning Point ACTION. What do you do here?
Tell us your progress report, in fact, taking a page
out of Elon. We're going to do this now every
single week, methodically, list of five things you got done.
Federal workers are now clamoring, saying that this violates union rules.
I'm sorry, guys, this is beyond laughable. This is repulsive.
(07:08):
These people have jobs that we pay for and they
can't respond to an email asking them just list five
things you got done here? And the answer, of course,
is they don't do anything of value. They show up,
get a cup of coffee, reshuffle some papers, go into
(07:29):
a conference room, and they're out the door by three
point thirty or four o'clock. They operate as not them personally,
but they operate as worthless parasites on the American taxpayer. Meanwhile,
every single one of you in the audience here, whether
you are a doctor or a lawyer, an engineer in
(07:52):
the private sector, every day you have to justify your
existence every day, even if you work at McDonald's, even
if you work as a garbage man. Name five things
that you did at McDonald's. Well, today, I cleaned the
French friar, and I scrubbed the floors, and I made
big Max, and I made sure the diet coke machine
(08:12):
was working. And I helped the customer to their car
because she was struggling in the snow. Five things great,
Thank you very much, McDonald's employee of the Month, earning
twelve dollars an hour. Someone at McDonald's tells you concretely
what they do. But if you dare to ask, are
millions of federal workers, hey, just tell us five bullet
(08:34):
points of what you did. They are mass refusing this inquiry.
It is intimidating. They say it's scary. They're not used
to have anybody come in and ask them a question.
In fact, what a chance to put out your chest?
Oh yeah, elon, these are the five things that I
do at the Department of Interior. These are the five
(08:56):
things I do at Health and Human Services. This could
be done in two minutes. These are the five things
I did one, two, three, four five. Can these people
not do bullets? Can these people read? I'm getting to
some very provocative answers. They are mass deciding not to
respond to this inquiry. If your work is all classified,
(09:20):
to say so, and chances are it's not. Chances are
you're not doing anything that you can even report on.
You simply exist. You are a leech on us. And
this is the core of what Elon is surfacing, what
President Trump is flushing out. It's not even that they
(09:43):
themselves are worthy of the criticism, which they are. A
lot of these people are less than desirable. They could
not hold a job at your local Chipotle. In fact,
your local Uber, each driver, your local Chipotle work. They're
working their tail off every day, and God bless them.
But the federal work, Oh, those are plushy jobs where
(10:07):
nothing is done. These jobs never should have existed in
the first place. And both Republicans and Democrats George W.
Bush alongside Bill Clinton, alongside Barack Hussain, Obama alongside Joe
Biden have been protectorates of this bipartisan regime that we
(10:27):
talked about a lot at the uniparty, where there are
millions of jobs that should not exist. There are famously
entire departments of the government just filled with people taking
months on end to do what would take a day
in a startup or any real company. The bottom line,
it is so telling that asking a federal worker to
(10:50):
take five minutes or two minutes to explain what exactly
you do here has become such a controversy. It proves
that the culture in government is rotten and the media
is going along with it. MSNBC right now has Musk
to federal workers, justify your job or else. Yes, that's
the way things work in the real world, not the
(11:12):
fantasy world of government because the money is running out.
If there's only one takeaway from our time together today
that I want you to internalize, it's that President Trump
and Elon Musk and Jade Vance and Pete Hegseth are
challenging the DC orthodoxy that government is untouchable. Government works
(11:35):
for us. They are not a holy realm of existence
that we are not allowed to criticize, that we are
not allowed to question now, mind you, the left, they
will criticize every conservative nonprofit. They'll investigate Turning Point USA,
they'll find out how many ballot chases we have on
the ground. They'll write ad nauseum about anything in right
(11:55):
wing world, but they will never criticize or lift a
finger asking a question about the government. This is not
the government's money. It is our money. This is your money.
We are a team together in this as you as taxpayers,
and they have been fleasing us over the last couple
of decades. And let me just read the email again.
(12:17):
Is this intimidating to you? Does this require a safe space?
Does this make you have to run away? And this
goes to my operating thesis that I wrote in that
book back there, the college scam, which I said, this
is the college campusification. It's not a word, but I
made it up of the entire country. You are not
allowed to ask a junior at Yale what did you
(12:41):
learn here? That's intimidation. You're not allowed to have an
exit test when you leave Stanford. That could be threatening.
Safe spaces, speech codes, rooms with puppies and milk and cookies.
If you hear something threatening. These people are now staffing
your government. As we have always said, what happens on
(13:03):
college campuses is not stay in college campuses. It ends
up in corporate boardrooms, the halls of Congress, and metastasizes
into your government. This is the same mentality that I've
been fighting for the last decade in college campuses, that
we are finally starting to see a shift. And again
this is the email. Please reply to this email with
approximately five bullet points of what you accomplished last week
(13:24):
and c see your manager. Do not send any class
of information links or attachments. For every single person out
there that has had a private sector job, and there
are millions of you listening and watching, you should be
angered and incensed by this that these people think that
they are an untouchable holy class. They think they have
(13:45):
been given the divine right of kings, that we serve
at the pleasure of this oligarchy. That if you have
a federal job, we can't ask a question, We can't
dare question your existence. We are just lucky that you'll
mention us as an example. And I could tell you
(14:07):
if somebody who has employed employs well over one thousand people,
If Americafest was organized by the federal government, it would
take four years to plant it out. It would cost
five times as much, and there would be like a
single podium with five speakers. The federal government is not
just slow and blow to inefficient. It's largely become eighty
(14:29):
percent unnecessary. Of course, there's core function the federal government
that should exist. Eighty percent of these jobs should not exist.
Ninety percent should not exist, and they're proving our point.
They can't even respond to a crisp email. This is
what I do, This is why I exist. Your local
janitor at a school could tell you what they do
all day long. The person that serves you your Starbucks
(14:51):
coffee or serves you your dunkin Donuts can towed to
do it all day long. But no the HR manager
at Department of Commerce. It's against union rules. And the
difference is this, When you go to dunkin Donuts, that's
a voluntary exchange. You are deciding to spend your money
at dunkin Donuts. No one did that in a mandatory way.
But you must pay your taxes or you go to jail.
(15:14):
But you can't ask the workers that take your taxes
at gunpoint, what do you do all day long? Relieffactor
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guys should love it. Is it Reliefactor dot com or
called one eight hundred four relief That is one eight
hundred four relief. I want your thoughts, guys, Email me
Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. This is outrageous and it's
a fight We're gonna win. It's to the car, the bullhorn,
to the microphone.
Speaker 13 (15:55):
It's the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. Email us as always, Freedom at
Charlie and subscribe to our podcast. If you guys are
a private student loan borrower, listen carefully. Private student loan
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y dot com. Whyrefi dot com be right back? Okay, everybody,
(17:28):
welcome back. I want to hit the Dan Bongino news,
but I want to do it correctly, so we're probably
going to do that later in the hour because I
have to finish this argument, which is we have been
propagandized by the storytellers in the media, the mockingbird media,
and they conflate voluntary action versus compulsory action or mandatory action.
(17:57):
If you and the audience right now do not pay
your taxes, they'll eventually find you, most likely and put
you in jail. It is mandatory for you to pay
your taxes. I pay a lot in taxes, and I'm
sure you pay a lot in taxes. An unnecessary a
mountain taxes. So we pay a lot in taxes and
(18:18):
we send it to Washington, d c. It is not
us doing a voluntary contribution. Now, contrast that for a
second with when you go to home depot or when
you decide to take your family out to a meal
at Chili's. There was competition, there was choice, there was variety,
(18:39):
and they have to earn your money customer service. That's
why you're constantly singing, you can get a burger for
five dollars at Chili's. You can buy one, get one free.
They have to earn your money. They have to convince
you that your capital is worthy of spending. The government
does no such thing. At its core, comes in with
(19:01):
a gun, and with the gun they say pay us
or else. It's compulsory. Now, of course some form of
taxation is necessary. We agree with that some form of
compulsory extraction of capital from the body politic is essential
for common defense, for border security, for services, for those
(19:24):
that could never lift themselves up. For the federal government
has gone so much bigger than any of you realize,
and it should tick you off beyond any word that
I'm allowed to say on radio, because there is no
concern for actually what finances this and one of the
(19:46):
core elements and I would love to see President Trump
rescind this executive order is the forced unionization of federal workers.
I don't believe that this was done by an act
of Congress. I think it was an executive order by
either JFK. FDR spoke out against the forest unionization of
(20:08):
federal workers. It's so hard to fire these workers. So
for example, if you're running a local Wendy's and a
worker is constantly late and he is confusing burgers with
chicken patties and chicken nuggets with fries, he has a
bad attitude and is defiant, you fire them. But if
(20:32):
you have a federal worker that is confusing in audit
with a subpoena, it's constantly late, with a bad attitude.
It's very difficult to fire that person. Nearly impossible. So
market forces that built the wealth of the West, market
forces that allowed the competitive drive and edge of entrepreneurialism
(20:53):
for this country to become the greatest nation in the
history of the world, are not just not implemented in government.
They're at odds with those things. So what Elon Musk
and President Trump are doing is say, let's just ask
a couple questions, what do you do here? And what
have you gotten done? And the demons are shrieking within
the government because you can't even ask the question. And
(21:15):
let me reiterate the point. They are only able to
exist through force. Your local company, whether it be Apple,
or whether it be a local restaurant, Italian restaurant or
Lebanese restaurant that you care about, an auto repair clinic,
whatever it might be, they are there because they earned it.
(21:36):
They are not there through force, They're there through voluntary exchange.
You cannot have a functioning organization if you cannot terminate
the defiant, the lazy, or the unproductive. Write that down
and commit it to memory. You cannot have a flourishing organization.
(21:58):
If you cannot fire the lazy, the bloated, the defiant,
or the unproductive. And the federal government is there through force,
and we have no choice, and so we okay, say okay,
Since you're there because you extracted the money through us
at gunpoint, shouldn't we then be able to I don't know,
(22:19):
wonder where our money is going. Remember our money. And
by the way, if Apple or if Chipotle or five
Guys is wasting our money, then stop going there because
the product will decline. But it's done through voluntary exchange.
The federal government is different because it's we the people.
(22:42):
We are shareholders in this project. We are citizens, We
are co owners, at least we're supposed to be. And
that is the central question revolving all of this. Are
we the people customers? Are we shareholders? Or are we
subject who works for?
Speaker 16 (23:02):
Who?
Speaker 1 (23:02):
They work for? Us? And soon they gotta tell us
what they do all day long or else face instant termination.
Speaker 17 (23:17):
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice news break. I'm
Terrence Bates. A new day brings a new world leader
to the White House. French President Emmanuel Mark Kranz at
the White House as we speak, meeting with President Trump.
The two are going to join a phone call with
other G seven world leaders before then engaging in one
on one talks. The issue of the war between Russia
and Ukraine expected to be central to their conversation, as
(23:40):
Ukrainian President Voladimir Zelenski says he is willing to give
up his presidency if it means peace in Ukraine. However,
he's only willing to do so if it means Ukraine
gets membership to NATO.
Speaker 18 (23:52):
You should, Moldraz, I'll do it immediately without a long
conversation about it.
Speaker 19 (23:56):
I'm focused on Ukraine's security today and twenty years.
Speaker 7 (24:00):
I don't plan to be empowered for decades.
Speaker 16 (24:02):
Therefore, that's my aim and my dream.
Speaker 17 (24:05):
The Trump administration has been adamant in its opposition against
Ukraine joining NATO. President Trump is also called Zelensky a
dictator and even called for elections in Ukraine.
Speaker 19 (24:16):
In the past.
Speaker 17 (24:16):
Russia has made similar claims, saying that Ukraine's current president
is illegitimate. The Trump administration taking its next step today
and dismantling the US Agency for International Development, which is
known as USAID. Happening today, the administration is putting at
least sixteen hundred US based staffers on notice that they're
being fired. Only a fraction of employees will keep their jobs.
(24:40):
Those staying on or quote designated personnel responsible for mission
critical functions, core leadership, and or specially designated programs. The
move comes after a federal judge ruled on Friday that
the administration can move forward with its plan to pink
slips scores of USAID employees. Today's action escalates a month
(25:01):
long push to dismantle the agency, which has included closing
its headquarters in Washington and shutting down thousands of aid
and development programs worldwide. Now all of this comes from
Elon Musk determining that USAID's work has been wasteful.
Speaker 7 (25:16):
A federal judge.
Speaker 10 (25:18):
All right, So.
Speaker 17 (25:19):
We're hearing now that President Trump and McCrone meeting there.
You see the video yourself, the tour at the White House.
President McCrone just arriving moments ago. The two are going
to be holding a joint news conference here in short order,
and we of course will take you there.
Speaker 19 (25:33):
Live in the meantime.
Speaker 17 (25:34):
The issue of Ukraine will likely be very central to
what the two leaders.
Speaker 19 (25:38):
Have to talk about. We'll keep you updated throughout the show. Here. Now,
let's get you back to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 15 (25:55):
Ye listening into the future of America, and the future
is bright, dear is Charlie?
Speaker 1 (26:01):
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Joining us now is Senator Rick Scott from the great
state of Florida. Great to see you, Senator, I think
you would like to hear. I was just on the
campus of University of South Florida. We had two thousand
(27:06):
plus students attend this Thursday. I'll be in the campus
University of Florida this Friday, Florida State University. So we
are doing your home state proud, sir.
Speaker 13 (27:15):
I bet you're having fun. And the weather's pretty good too.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
It's it's very good, better than Washington, d C. And
much better than my hometown of Chicago. Right now. So, Senator,
I want to ask you a really hard question out
of the gate. Here. I need five bullet points of
what you did last week. The flora is yours.
Speaker 20 (27:33):
Okay, here we go, twelve Charlie. I was ready for
this because I'm a business guy, so I expected this.
We I do a new weekly newsletter to all my
constituents every week. Twelve thousand phone calls to my tin offices.
We passed reconcilation bill Thursday night. We got cash Battel confirmed,
We got Howard Letnak confirmed, and I filed a merit
(27:55):
based hiring bill, which means that will stop this stuff
that you you know that you know workers are like
different than everybody else, that you can't fire people for.
Speaker 13 (28:03):
Not doing their job. So is that enough? I can
give you a bunch more if you want keep going.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
I want to keep hearing it.
Speaker 20 (28:08):
So so you know, Charlie, this is so simplistic. What
Elon Musk is asking for is exactly what should be done.
There should be complete accountability by every federal worker. Right
and guess what you know, I was governor of Florida
for eight years and that's exactly what I.
Speaker 13 (28:26):
Ask everybody to do.
Speaker 20 (28:27):
Tell me what you're going to get done this week
because we have an obligation. There are no no non
essential workers. There was none in my business life. There's
not going to be in the state government. There shouldn't
be in the federal government.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
And so let's just kind of dwell on this for
a second. That market principles when you built a business
are that if you're unproductive, or if you're defiant, or
if you are lazy, or if you are not a
good fit, you will be terminated. The government has always
operated as its own thing. Talk about how what you
did also as governor of flo order to bring in
(29:00):
those market principles and why Florida is probably the best
run state in the country. But how do we get
to a point in the federal government react as if
federal workers are an untouchable holy class.
Speaker 13 (29:12):
It doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 20 (29:14):
Like you, Charlie, you have the right to pick which
restaurant you go to, So if you have a bad waiter,
if you have bad food, you don't go back, right,
So you are deciding.
Speaker 13 (29:25):
Not to continue those people from having a job. You
do it every day.
Speaker 20 (29:28):
We do it every day based on what services will buy,
what products.
Speaker 13 (29:31):
We buy, all that stuff.
Speaker 20 (29:33):
So when I became governor of Florida, and that's the
way I thought, because I built business that I built
the largest hospital company, built a bunch of manufacturing companies.
Every employee had a purpose or they weren't there. And
by the way, if you get fired, you decided to
get fired. Any good manager is very clear what they
expect out of you. So if you get fired, it's
(29:53):
not a surprise because they told you this is what
your expectation was, and then you decided not to do it.
Speaker 13 (30:00):
I think what ought to be happening. So I did
as governor Florida.
Speaker 20 (30:03):
We create an unbelievable efficiencies. I think we went from
like one hundred and twenty seven thousand employees to one
hundred and twelve thousand employees because you know, we didn't
need as many employees. We write every day how to
get more efficient? How do I get more efficient? How
do I provide better service to the citzens of Florida
at lower price?
Speaker 13 (30:20):
That's what businesses do.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
And so what is Congress's role here? What would you
say as far as trying to put forward the DOJE
agenda and making government work for the people.
Speaker 13 (30:32):
Again, our job should be accountability.
Speaker 20 (30:36):
Our job should be we want trans There's two things
really that Trump's team has brought to the table when
you look at when you look at his cabinet picks,
what they bring the table, in my opinion, is two things.
A commitment to transparency and a commitment to accountability. So,
as an example, I was talking to Pam Bondi, who's
a good friend of mine, the other day. I mean,
(30:57):
under both under the FBI and dj under they didn't
think they had an obligation to tell us why they're
doing the way what they're doing Pam Bonding, cash Hotel
think totally different. They know that is the responsibility of
everybody that runs any part of the federal government is
tell the American public what.
Speaker 13 (31:15):
The living delates is going on. So that's what we
ought to be doing.
Speaker 20 (31:18):
What we ought to be doing here is holding hearings
and hold people accountable. So on helmet security. You know,
Ram Paul is running that committee down and we're going
to have committee hearings. We're going to be asking people
all the hard questions. Did you get something done? Why
does it cost that much? Can you provide a better service?
We want my office one for the best constituent services
(31:40):
team in the country last year of all House members
and seat of members. The reason we did is we
have a measurement system for success.
Speaker 13 (31:47):
What are the people we're looking for? That's what we do.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
And no one has sought to do this, and obviously
Biden wouldn't but for the last twenty or thirty years,
and we finally have this mandate given by the American people.
We also need we need serious deficit and debt reduction reform.
I know this is something they're very passionate about But
if we are not serious about analyzing key expenditures, we're
going to become routinely in trillion dollar deficits. It's a
(32:14):
make or break moment. Speak to this to our audience, Senator,
of the high stakes of the fiscal apocalypse that is
looming if we do not start cutting spending.
Speaker 13 (32:25):
Well, there's if you think about it.
Speaker 20 (32:27):
With thirty six training dollars, with that, we're now we're
at thirty six and a half trade dollars. With a debt,
we're growing about every but you know, we two trillion
dollars this year an increase, So inflation will not come down, right,
and interest rates will not come down. I mean, inflation
and industrates are completely tied to wasteful.
Speaker 13 (32:44):
Government spending, all right, So we don't have a choice.
Speaker 20 (32:48):
I became governor Florida, and we had not lived with
their means for twenty straight years. We had added a
billion dollars of excess debt every year for twenty straight years.
We're about to go on default on our debt. Eventually,
people not going to buy our debt. They're going to say,
I don't know that you can pay all that money back.
Speaker 13 (33:05):
So and but the.
Speaker 20 (33:07):
Worst thing for is for poor families. I grew up
in a poor family. A lot of Americans and my
mom would have had a hard time with the inflation
we've had under Biden.
Speaker 13 (33:15):
Yes, and where inter rates are.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
Now and government spending is the primary driver of that.
I know you're told yeah, so I know you told
producer Andrew in the break that the next two weeks
are going to be very interesting. Please outline the next
two weeks for us.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
Senator.
Speaker 13 (33:32):
So here we got we got two big things right.
Speaker 20 (33:35):
We want to get a reconciliation bill done that does
these things right. We want to secure the border, we
want to build up our military, we want to extend
the Trump tax cuts, and there's a variety of other things.
We want to reduce wasteful spending. Those are the things
we want to get done. So there's different approaches, whether
you have one bill or you know, two bills of
three bills. I'm okay with whatever number we have, as
(33:56):
long as we get those things done. So that we're
working on. We pass our out of the House the
Senate last Thursday. The House will try to pass theres
this week. But then on top of that, on March fourteenth,
if we don't come to an agreement, government gets shut down. Now,
as you know, a lot of Democrats said they want
to shut down government, which is fascinated me because they
always tried to blame that on Republicans. But the Democrats
(34:17):
now saying they want to shut down government, but none
of us want to. I don't know if Republican wants
to shut down government. But we're going to have to
figure out how to come together to get something done
that is basically responsible, where we don't have a gazillion
number of earmarks that's completely wasteful.
Speaker 13 (34:33):
I think the I think last year was eight thousand
ear marks.
Speaker 20 (34:36):
Complete waste, right, just complete waste when we're running two
trade dollars year deficits. So it's going to be how
we bring everybody together to get this done will be
very difficult.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
It's it's a very consequential time. What are also the
status of Trump's under secretaries and deputies? Give us some
idea of the confirmation schedule there?
Speaker 20 (34:59):
Well, we are now we've been We're behind on the
number of nominees we've gotten done since Obama's first term, but.
Speaker 13 (35:05):
We're ahead on cabinet picks, which is really good.
Speaker 20 (35:08):
Now, what we're doing is the under secretaries are going
through the committee process to get them out.
Speaker 13 (35:13):
Tonight, we're doing the Secretary of the Army.
Speaker 20 (35:17):
Hopefully we'll get that one completed tonight or tomorrow Wednesday.
So we're going through them and we're doing as quickly
as the Democrats allow us. The way it works up here,
depending on the nominee, you have thirty hours of debate
or two hours of debate.
Speaker 13 (35:31):
So what we're trying to do is we're.
Speaker 20 (35:33):
Doing this as quickly as we can, but the Democrats
are not giving.
Speaker 13 (35:36):
Us any time back.
Speaker 20 (35:37):
They're making us take all the thirty hours or two
hours for every nominee. So the other one we want
to get done this week is the Trade Rep. Jamison Career,
which is a really important job dealing with the Trump tariffs.
So but you're Republicans up here, we are staying we're
working hard to get those things done.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
So Senator I'll want your comments and we're gonna I'm
gonna speak about this later in the show of another
Floridian going into the FBI, Dan Bongino. Dan Bongino has
been chosen to be Deputy Director of the FBI. Your thoughts, I.
Speaker 20 (36:15):
Think it's great. I think Dan's going to do a
great job. First off, here's why I like Cash, matel.
The reason I like Cash was because he had been
persecuted by the FBI. He had been a target, right,
And so I think he's going to bring a totally
different perspective of somebody that's been they tried.
Speaker 13 (36:32):
To take advantage of it and ruin their life.
Speaker 20 (36:34):
Dan Bongino somebody that's been very vocal on this issue,
very vocal on what, you know, what our federal government,
law enforcement should be doing. So I think I think
those two together are going to do a great job.
Pam Bondi's going to do a great job as attorney general.
She was attorney general over the eight years I was
governor of Florida. So he's Trump's putting together a team
that's going to make changes happening and is going to
(36:55):
do two things. Create transparency and accountability, these things, you know,
these entities which they work for us, They're going to
be totally different. So I think Dan's going to do
a great job. Cash, Pam, all of them are senator.
Speaker 1 (37:09):
Any closing thoughts of things that are legislative priorities or
fights you on our audience to be aware of.
Speaker 20 (37:15):
Well, the big thing is be vocal. You you showed
it in the leaders race last November. Your voice was heard. Well,
I didn't win, we completely changed the Senate. So stay active.
That's how you get Trump's nominees done. That's how you
get Trump's agenda does. Stay active and being vocal.
Speaker 1 (37:35):
Senator, Thank you so much, really appreciate it, and godspeed
big couple weeks ahead.
Speaker 13 (37:39):
Thank you to here enjoy Florida.
Speaker 1 (37:42):
Thank you. You know we have a big Florida week
coming up. We have University of Florida and Florida State
University coming up this week. University of South Florida was
last week. And Ryan, we should get that clip of
the Doge Doge dude. With President Trump making massive strides
in his first month in office alone to deliver on
(38:02):
the campaign promises to make America great again. It's clear
as administration is committed to driving down costs and unleashing
prosperity across our country, but Big Farma is standing in
the way. They raise prices on over five hundred and
seventy five brand name drugs in January, blocks competition, and
spent millions pushing over priced meds on hard working Americans.
Now they're pressuring Congress implement mandates they'll undermine the one
(38:24):
reel check against drug companies and ban the very market
based and centives that help employers and families save on
prescriptions and health care costs. Even worse, Big Pharma wants
to strip American employers of the freedom to choose health
care benefits that they want. Their proposals could hand big
Pharma a thirty two billion dollar money grab at the
expense of American employers and families. Conservatives for lower healthcare
(38:48):
cost warrants. Big Pharma is not on our side. They
fought against solutions to lower drug prices during Trump's first
term and oppose Bobby Kennedy's nomination to HHS to make
America healthy again. Big Pharma is no friends of the
American people. Go to pharma windfall dot com. That is
pharma windfall dot com. Congress can stop this. You can
make a difference. Let's fight back, Fight back. Go to
(39:10):
pharma windfall dot com today. Congress can make a stop
of this. That is pharma windfall dot com. Portions that
charliekirkshowre brought to in part by conservatives for lower healthcare costs.
Go to Pharma Windfall dot com. Pharma Windfall dot com,
Email us as always Freedom at Charliekirk dot com and
subscribe to the Charliekirkshow podcast page. Our podcast is doing
(39:32):
very well right now. In fact, I believe we are
top twelve in news, which we really appreciate. So make
sure you subscribe next week. Cover Dan Bongino like a
missile going into the FBI. You heard that scream. That's
James coming to say him.
Speaker 16 (39:52):
Nobody ignores him. It's the Charlie Kirkshow.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
Welcome back, everybody. Email us is always Freedom at Charliekirk
dot com and subscribe to our podcast. What do we have, guys?
Let's go to our campus tour footage. Do we have
any footage to play here yet? So this was a
conversation I had with a very troubled young man. Play
cut sixty seven, wait for five million dollars for voter
confidence in Liberia. Biodiversity in Nepal nineteen million dollars.
Speaker 13 (40:19):
Again, those can be important.
Speaker 1 (40:21):
You have to like those could be helpful. Okay, So
how could biodiversity in Nepal for nineteen million bucks? We
spent twenty million dollars for a new Sesame street in Iraq.
You have to do You have to both justify that
these programs are bad. I think no, you can just
you can thought this is a program because this most money.
Speaker 21 (40:38):
You can say that do.
Speaker 1 (40:39):
You know anything about Liberia? I mean like I mean no,
I mean I happen to know a lot about it.
That's a separation. It's not about what I know. It's
about the people in the government been making these decisions. Yes,
and they have proved themselves to be robber barons over
the last twenty years, that they that they are spending
your money with reckless abandon and total indiscretion. You think
the government is innocent until proven guilty. I think the government,
(41:00):
after what we've learned, is guilty and superven innocent. They
have to justify why this money is based. By the
first place, in a minute, that's how the law works,
and it's that's not proven guilty. You have to prove
that that's that's not how taxpayer money works though, it's
that if we find way. Oh, we have some great
(41:27):
videos from this campus tour. I'll tell you what. It's
just going to go viral and the team. That's and
that's just one stop. That is just one stop what
we have. While we may have won the election, the
fight to restore our great nation is only beginning. Now
is the time to take a stand, and Patriot Mobile
(41:47):
is leading the charges. America's only Christian conservative wireless provider,
Patriot Mobile offers a way to vote with your wallet,
the compromising on quality or convenience. I love Patriot Mobile.
I just had dinner with Glenn's story the other night.
He's a great man. Patriot Mobile. You get outstanding nationwide
coverage because they operate on all three major networks. The
difference with Patriot Mobile and the other networks is you
(42:09):
spend every dollar support in the First and Second Amendment
and Turning Point USA. If you guys are looking for
a way to support Turning Point, you'll say it's no
extra money. You make the switch. You already have a
cell phone bill. Switch it over, Boom, switch it over.
Switch to Patriot Mobile today and defend freedom with every
call in text you make that is Patriotmobile dot com,
slash Charlie or call nine seven two Patriot and get
(42:31):
a free month of service with promo code Charlie. That
is Patriot Mobile dot com slash Charlie or call nine
seven two Patriot. That is Patriot Mobile dot com slash Charlie,
Patriot Mobile dot com slash Charlie. Bombshall News, Bombshall News.
My friend and friend of this program and great American
(42:51):
patriot is going to be number two at the FBI.
This is so important, everybody. Let me explain to you
before we play Dan Bongino's clip here, Dan Bongino become
deputy director the FBI means that somebody is going to
have cash Pattel six, that somebody is going to be
able to make sure that Cash Pattel has his back covered.
(43:12):
Dan Bongino was a Secret Service agent. A Secret Service agent,
by the way, does have arrest authority, So you could
say that he was a law enforcement agent, and I
believe he was a police officer before that, if I'm
not mistaken. The media is trying to say, oh, he
was just you know, a podcaster. No, no, no, he has
significant law enforcement background. But Dan Bongino, his podcast is massive,
(43:35):
it's huge, really got viral during Russiagate. Dan Bongino went
all in during Russiagate and exposed the line the deceit
and the illegal activity of the FBI against President Trump,
and he was terrific at it. Dan Bongino also will
(43:58):
get to the bottom what happened on July thirteenth and
Butler Pennsylvania. No more. Can they just oh, take out
Cash ptel. But you also have Dan Bongino, No, no,
Now you have this dynamic duo to turn the FBI
back into a law enforcement agency. And I trust Cash
without my life, and I trust Dan Bongju in my life.
And you have one two combo here and people did
(44:20):
not see this one coming. Here is Dan Bongino this
morning making the announcement on his program or reacting to
it play cut sixty five.
Speaker 22 (44:29):
Obviously, we're going to be working with a team of
people to make this transition from me political commentator Dan
to Deputy Director the FBI Dan. Those are different roles
require different skills, skills I haven't I have used before
and I plan to use again. Vision of President Trump,
Attorney General Bondi, and Director Patel. I am going to
(44:54):
do my job to implement that vision. And I can
tell you right now we are going to try our best.
Every single thing I have in me, every single strand
the DNA selling. My body is going to be dedicated
towards keeping this homeland safe no matter what.
Speaker 1 (45:10):
This is why all of you chase ballots, This is
why all of you gave financially to President Trump and
turning point action, this is why all of you registered voters,
all of our fortitude to grind through the dark Knight
of the soul is paying off. It's not just that
we have President Donald Trump, but we have Pete heggsid
We Marco Rubio, we have Scott Bessant, we have Bobby Canner,
(45:33):
we have Tulci Gabbert. Not just Cash Battel, but now
Dan Bongino TikTok for all of the deceitful parasitic criminals
that have been infecting our law enforcement agents, the Department
of Justice, the FBI. We got Pam Bondi, we got
Cash Battel, we got Dan Bongino, We got eyes scanning
(45:55):
the horizon for any activity. Dan Bongino, being number two
at the FBI, will ensure that President Trump does not
have to go through a Rushi Gate two point zero.
We'll ensure that Peter Structurokes Smirk and his like and
his little minions are not going to infiltrate the government,
to be weaponized against the people and against the administration
that was popularly elected. This is a man devoted to
(46:17):
America and I can't speak high enough about his integrity,
his character, his honesty. He's been a wonderful friend to me.
You know, Dan Bongino, every time he speaks at Turning Point,
USA does not charge us a cent. You know, some
of these Prima Donalds, they'll charge you hundreds of thousands
of dollars. You've got to negotiate down like no, no, no, like,
let's not do that, and you gotta. He will never
(46:37):
charge us a dollar to speak at our events. That's
who he is. And he has spoke at tons of
our events. And he's always been there for me and
always been there for our country. I couldnt be more
happy for not just for Dan Bongino, but for our country.
And whoof watch out, DC, it's gonna get a little uncomfortable.
Second hour coming up.
Speaker 17 (47:16):
Welcome to this Real America's Voice news break. I'm Terrence Bates.
Speaker 23 (47:20):
Listen, guys, five days, we promise you this will change
your life. I've spent twenty seven years helping people transform
at the Sailor level.
Speaker 7 (47:30):
This is your time.
Speaker 16 (47:31):
I started on the five to five challenge.
Speaker 13 (47:33):
I lost a ten pounds.
Speaker 17 (47:35):
That was John Jubilee laying down the challenge in a
testimonial from one of the people who picked it up
and ran with it. John says, if you give him
five days, he'll teach you how to get the upper
hand on low energy brain fog and other chronic ailments.
He can tell you better than I can, though, so
he joins us right now, John, always good to see you.
Speaker 7 (47:53):
Well, great to see you, Terrence. Hey, I don't know
if you picked it up at the end, but look,
it's a five to five to five ChIL Terence.
Speaker 23 (48:00):
To lose one of these, this is five pounds of fat.
And that gentleman, come on, that gentleman in his sixties
lost two of these, Terrance. He lost ten pounds of
fat in just five days with this breakthrough science man
of intercellular hydration.
Speaker 7 (48:17):
It's the real deal, Terrence. It's the fountain of youth
for people.
Speaker 17 (48:20):
And the fat really is just a symptom. That's a
tangible way of seeing results. But there's so many bigger
things that people are able to gain.
Speaker 7 (48:29):
From this five to five to five challenge. You're doing
this five to five to five challenge. Well, it really is, Terrence.
Speaker 23 (48:35):
One of the funnest things is, you know, people say, oh,
you know, do you have a weight loss program, and Ery, no,
it's not a weight loss program.
Speaker 7 (48:43):
It's really not.
Speaker 23 (48:44):
It is an intracellular hydration program of how to get
healthy at this cellular level. It just so happens. One
of the side effects, the side effects of getting healthy
at the cellular level, is this stuff melts off of
you like a butter in a hot pan.
Speaker 7 (49:04):
So it's only a side effect, Terrence.
Speaker 23 (49:07):
We teach let's get healthy at the cellular level, but
it just so happens. We're going to gain innercellular hydration,
we're going to gain lean muscle mass, and we're going
to lose our fat because that's what happens when we
get healthy at.
Speaker 7 (49:20):
The cellular level.
Speaker 23 (49:22):
It's all about taking those raisin cells they're all dehydrated,
and turning them into healthy grapes. So we all seen
a raisin and a grape. The only difference between them
is what it's just hydration. So when you optimize your cells, Terrance,
you're optimizing your brain, your heart, your lungs, your kidney,
your thyroid, you're pancreas, your liver, every organ is being optimized.
(49:47):
And when you get healthy like that, you metabolize fat
like you did when you were fourteen years old.
Speaker 10 (49:53):
John.
Speaker 17 (49:53):
When you say getting hydrated at the cellular level, there
are a lot of people who are hearing that, and
all they're really hearing peanuts.
Speaker 16 (50:00):
Wah wah wah wah woah.
Speaker 17 (50:02):
The reality is this is about getting healthy at the
grassroots level. That's a just real common way to put it.
Speaker 23 (50:08):
Well, it really is, Terrence, Guys. We don't get hydrated
by drinking water. We really don't. Our cells are as
hard as glass marbles.
Speaker 7 (50:16):
All that water is just bouncing off.
Speaker 23 (50:19):
Picture a sponge versus a marble, a sponge versus a marble.
Right now, your cells are as hard as a glass marble.
Nothing's getting in there. You know, you've already tried drinking
water and you still were dehydrated. So why don't you
try something new so you can have something new. When
your cells are like sponges, they're poorous. Now they'll uptake
your healthy hydration and they'll push out all of the
(50:43):
toxins and the inflammation out of your body.
Speaker 7 (50:45):
And that feels great, and.
Speaker 17 (50:47):
The impact can address some of those chronic issues diabetes,
the brain fogged, high blood pressure. You're saying that if
you at least give it a try, you have nothing
else to lose.
Speaker 7 (50:57):
Well, you really don't.
Speaker 23 (50:58):
Look, if you want your health and you want your
best years to be ahead of you, then you need
to implement something you've never tried before. Guys, I tried
everything for ten years. Everything works for us a minute,
but life's a lot longer than a minute. This will
transform your body at the cellular level.
Speaker 7 (51:18):
You can have your best health for a lifetime.
Speaker 1 (51:21):
All right, And talk.
Speaker 17 (51:21):
About traditional water because people are going to always go
back to well, if I just drink more water, I'll
be hydrated. That's not the cure all in and of itself.
And if someone is going to just focus on water
as their specific kind of water, maybe they should focus on.
Speaker 7 (51:36):
You know what, terrence there is not you know what?
Speaker 16 (51:39):
You know?
Speaker 23 (51:39):
God made water, and even if you put a few
bad things in it, God gave you a filtration system.
Speaker 7 (51:43):
It's called kidneys.
Speaker 23 (51:44):
You know it will actually filter out, you know, any
impurities in your water. And look, if you want to
do something for fun, look at we have two hundred
people that were drinking two gallons of water a day,
two gallons Terrence, and they were completely the hydrated when
we measured him with our medical device. So you don't
get by drinking water.
Speaker 17 (52:05):
John Jubillie, We appreciate your time.
Speaker 1 (52:22):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. Email us as always, Freedom at
Charlie Kirk dot com. And again make sure you subscribe
to our podcast. We deeply appreciate when you guys do that.
The podcast is doing extremely well. We have one of
my favorite people on the program. He's doing an amazing
job and I see the world exactly the way he does.
(52:44):
Is David Sachs. David, welcome to the program. Always in honor.
David is the AI cryptozar. So we're definitely going to
talk about that. But first, David, as much as you're
able to speak or willing to speak about the developments
were guarding Ukraine, President Trump Russia makes sense? What's happening here?
Speaker 24 (53:07):
Well, I think that there's been huge developments on Ukraine.
I mean the President has said from the outset, I
mean during his campaign, that he wanted to bring this
war to an end. Charlie, and I think that he's
in the process of doing that. For the first time
in I think three at least three years since the
war began, we had a conversation between an American president
(53:28):
and the Russian president. I mean, that's the first step
in getting to some sort of peace agreement, is to actually.
Speaker 16 (53:33):
Talk to the other side.
Speaker 24 (53:35):
You then had conversations between the delegations from the US
and from Russia in Saudi Arabia, and they seem to
have made substantial progress. And I would say that most
of all, the thing that I think has been the
biggest breakthrough is just that finally this administration has been
willing to tell the truth about how this war started,
(53:59):
because you need to understand that in order to bring
it to an end. And what Secretary of Defense Hesa
has said and what Stephen Wikoff has said, is that
it was NATO expansion that the Russians saw as a provocation,
and it was the United States desire under Joe Biden,
their insistence that they had to bring Ukraine into NATO
(54:22):
that was seen as incredibly threatening by the Russians, just
the same way that we saw Soviet influence in Cuba
during the Cuban Missile crisis is incredibly threatening and the
United States back in was in nineteen sixty two, was
willing to go to war to keep the Soviets out
of Cuba. And in a similar way, the Russians, they
(54:44):
telegraphed in advance that this was a red line for
them for decades, and they said they'd be willing to
go to war to prevent Ukraine from becoming a member
of NATO. And yet that Biden administration insisted on trying
to bring this about. You know, it was widely under
reported in the first month of this war that started
three years ago, that's cost so many lives. There was
(55:06):
a deal that was signed, a draft deal that was
signed in Istanbul to end the war, and all it
really required was for Ukraine to agree to be a
neutral country. And if they had been willing to do that,
the war would have ended. There would have been no destruction,
and Ukraine would have kept its territories in the eastern
part of the country. And it was the Biden administration
(55:28):
that basically sabotaged that deal, and that's why the war
has now raged on for three years.
Speaker 16 (55:33):
I'd say upwards of a million people have died.
Speaker 24 (55:36):
The country's never going to be the same, and the
craziest part of the whole thing is that the Biden
administration itself, and Jen Stoltenberg was the head of NATO,
said at the very end of the Biden administration that
Ukraine could not join NATO, would not be joining NATO
because it was unable to win this war.
Speaker 16 (55:56):
So this whole conflict was over nothing.
Speaker 24 (55:59):
We could have just agreed to the thing that everyone
understands now, which is Ukraine is not going to be
part of NATO, and this whole thing could have been avoided.
Speaker 1 (56:09):
Well. And let's say that if your cause is wearing
the Ukrainian pin, which I find to be repulsive and ridiculous,
let's say that is you and you're a lawmaker on
Capitol Hill. Ironically, if they would have accepted the early
peace deal, it would have been far better for the
cause of Ukraine's independence, sovereignty, geography that it controls, and
(56:30):
lives lost. Speak about David how early on there was
a peace deal on the table Istambul Turkey. I know
you mentioned this Tony Blanken Boris Johnson that if you're
one of those virtue signalers that wears the Ukrainian flag pin,
even for what they want, that would have been a
better deal for everybody involved.
Speaker 16 (56:49):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 24 (56:50):
And this is where I think that we cannot conceide
the moral aspect of this argument. Those of us who
have wanted the United States to avoid get being deeply
involved in this war. You know, they call us pro
Russian or anti Ukrainian, But what we're suggesting would have
been the most pro Ukrainian policy of hundreds of thousands
(57:12):
of Ukrainian lives would have been saved, their country wouldn't
have been destroyed, They would have held on to all
those territories in the east. It would have been better.
You know, something like ten million women and children have
also fled the country. They're never coming back. I mean,
it's this country is never going to be the same.
And it all could have been avoided if they had
just agreed to that Istanbul deal, which was a better
(57:34):
deal than anything to get now because they have lost
the war. And why did that deal not happen Because
Baris Johnson flew into Kiev and said, we want to
challenge Putin, not make a deal with him. Alexi Aristovich,
who at the time was a member of the Ukrainian
peace delegation, who was there in Istanbul, who was there
when they signed. They signed a draft of the deal.
(57:56):
He said the Ukrainian delegation was popping Champagne. They were
so happy because the war was over.
Speaker 16 (58:02):
And then it was the West.
Speaker 24 (58:03):
It was the Western leaders who came in and said,
you can't do this deal because it doesn't fit with
our interest and what we want to do is challenge Putin.
People like Boris Johnson and Victoria Newland. They had a
delusion that this war could be used to weaken Russia
and then ultimately cause a regime change in Moscow. Remember
(58:23):
when President Biden said that this man cannot stay in power.
That was their unofficial policy, as they actually thought they
would bring Russia to its knees. They thought that sanctions
would crush Russia's economy. They thought that we could use
the Ukrainian military to destroy the Russian military and all
these things would basically finally bring the hated Putin to
(58:43):
his knees and we'd have a palace coup in Moscow
and they would get this big regime change. And it
never happened. No part of that happened. Instead, what happened
is that Ukraine got completely destroyed and now it's on
his last legs, and I think that, look, we could
just allow what is going to happen here to take
to take its course. I mean, if President Trump did nothing,
(59:06):
then what's going to happen is that eventually the Ukrainian
lines are going to collapse under severe pressure and the
Russians will just take more of the country. But I
think that President Trump wants to bring this war to
an end. He wants the dying to stop. I truly
believe it's a humanitarian interest of President Trump because because
this is not his war. This was Joe Biden's war,
it's Victoria Newland's war, it's Boris Johnson's war, it was
(59:30):
their war. But President Trump wants to stop it because
he wants the dying to stop.
Speaker 16 (59:34):
I think that is.
Speaker 24 (59:35):
A holy, salutary and humanitarian thing to do.
Speaker 16 (59:39):
And of course, what is the reward for that.
Speaker 24 (59:41):
In the mainstream media, they basically deride President Trump and
anyone who speaks on behalf of peace is completely warped.
Speaker 1 (59:50):
That is so well articulated, David. Can you just add
on really quick? We have two minutes left in this segment.
President Trump has called called Zelensky a dictator. What is
the evidence of that.
Speaker 24 (01:00:06):
Look, Charlie, dictator is as dictator does. Zelensky has banned
political opposition parties, he has had he sees the assets
of his political opponents, including a former president of Ukraine.
He's basically cracked down on the churches and priests and nuns,
(01:00:26):
and he's cracked down on the media. In order to
be a journalist in Ukraine, you have to basically get
a license from the government and tow the party line.
And I would say that the worst part of the
whole thing is that there was an American journalist living
in Ukraine named Gonzalo Lira who was arrested trying to
flee the country. And there is a chilling tape by
(01:00:47):
Gonzalo Lera where he posted on social media saying, I'm
about to be arrested. If I'm arrested, I will never
see the light of day again. Please help me, State Department,
please come help me. Just let let me go. I
just want to leave the country. And the Ukrainians could
have let him leave, but they didn't. They arrested him
and he was tortured in a dungeon, denied medical care,
(01:01:09):
and ultimately died in Russian captivity. To me, that is
completely unacceptable. This man was an American citizen. An American citizen,
you know, a foreign country, especially one that's a putative ally,
should not touch a hair on the head of an
American citizen. Happened to let that man does die in
(01:01:29):
prison after being tortured is completely unacceptable, and as far
as I'm concerned, that alone rules out the idea that
this is an ally of the United States.
Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
David, stay right there. We could talk about Ukraine for
the full hour, but I really want to talk about
artificial intelligence and our mutual friend jd Vance's phenomenal speech
in Paris regarding AI, because I know that overlaps with
your portfolio jurisdiction. Stay right there. Z Factor for malief
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(01:02:48):
Charliekirkshow podcast page. David sachs Ai Cryptozar continues after the break,
the Great Reset stops here the Trump Show. Okay, everybody,
(01:03:08):
welcome back. Do we have something here or no? Okay?
I want to remind you guys, our American Comeback Tour
is underway. This Thursday. I will be in Gainesville, Florida,
at the University of Florida. This Friday, I will be
at Florida State University. And I think I'm allowed to
(01:03:28):
tell you where I'm going to be a week from today.
Andrew doesn't even know this. The team doesn't even know this.
It's not even scheduled. It came out of nowhere. Let
me see if it's here. It might be. Let me see, melp.
It's still not on the website. So but I might
be at a certain school in Los Angeles that I've
never been to. I've never been. I'll let you guys
(01:03:51):
guess what that is. In just a second, we're going
to welcome back David Sachs. David is amazing. We were
interrupting this pro for a special live report.
Speaker 17 (01:04:02):
We are interrupting your regularly scheduled programming to take you
to the White House where President Trump is meeting with
French President and Manuel Marcrome.
Speaker 16 (01:04:09):
Let's listen.
Speaker 11 (01:04:10):
We're also talking about trade and various great deals that
we we'll be doing with France, and.
Speaker 21 (01:04:17):
We'll be discussing a little bit further than.
Speaker 11 (01:04:19):
We'll have a press conference later and you can ask
some questions when we have in a press conference. A
little while, we're can have lunch with the entire French
staff and we look forward to it. And again, the
relationship has been very special with France and very special
with this gentleman on my right, and we look forward
to keeping there going for a long period of time.
Speaker 18 (01:04:39):
Thank you very much, thank you, thank you, mister President.
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I want to thank you,
mister President for it's a bit of the day. We
had a good discusion this morning for detail and Ada
and for the serve year of this war in Ukraine.
Speaker 21 (01:04:58):
And I think.
Speaker 18 (01:05:00):
Common objective fairly is to build peace and a solid
and long standing peace, and this is what we will discuss, obviously,
because I have great respect for bravery and.
Speaker 21 (01:05:13):
The resistance of Agrainian people, and.
Speaker 18 (01:05:16):
We do share the objective of peace, but we are
very aware of the necessity to have guarantees and the
solid peace in order to stabilize the situation. I'm here
as a friend because through centuries we've been friends, and
we are personal friends. I mentioned it because we work
very well together and I think the US and Friends
(01:05:39):
always stands on the same side, the right side, I
would say, Officer, and this is exactly what that stayed today.
And this is a very important moment for Europe as well,
and I mean.
Speaker 21 (01:05:48):
Here as well.
Speaker 18 (01:05:49):
After discussions with all my colleagues to say that Europe
is willing to step up to be a stronger partner,
we do more in defense and secure default continent and
as well to be a reliable partner and to be
engaged on great economy investments in a lot of topics.
(01:06:09):
So I'm very excited by the discussion we will have
and obviously we will follow. And I want to sink
you again, mister prison for your prisons for Notre Dando
Bardi men the law for French people, and I want
to thank you for that.
Speaker 11 (01:06:24):
Let's see cathedral and they've done a fantastic job.
Speaker 21 (01:06:27):
The President's done a great job and.
Speaker 11 (01:06:29):
Bringing it back with a terrible thing like what five
years ago watching that burn was a very horrible, horrible
site and you've done a fantastic job and bringing it back.
Speaker 21 (01:06:39):
So I congratulate you.
Speaker 11 (01:06:40):
Thank you for being here saying your premier n anybody
let me ask a question or two is a foolish question.
It looks like we're getting very close the deals being
worked on, and we're I think getting very close to
getting an agreement where where we get our money back
(01:07:02):
over a period of time, but it also gives us
something where I think it's very beneficial to their economy,
to them as a country. But you know, we're for
three hundred and fifty billion dollars. How we got there,
I don't know. But that's a lot of money, a
lot of a lot of money invested, and we had nothing,
nothing to show for it.
Speaker 21 (01:07:23):
That was Dividen administration's fault.
Speaker 11 (01:07:27):
The Europeans are in for about one hundred billion dollars
and they do it as a form, in the form
of a loan.
Speaker 21 (01:07:34):
And the Europeans have been greater in this issue.
Speaker 11 (01:07:35):
They understood it wasn't fair and we were able to
work something out. But with the Ukrainians, I think I
can say that we're very close Scots around here someplace,
and I think we can say that we're very nice Scott.
I think we're very close to you have something to
say about that.
Speaker 21 (01:07:51):
So we are very quote were good one hour long?
All right, what manial you'll include a security guarantee for Ukraine?
Speaker 10 (01:08:03):
Well, it'll be Uh.
Speaker 21 (01:08:05):
Europe is going to make sure that nothing happens. I
don't think it's gonna be much of a problem. I
think once we settle uh, there's gonna be no more
war in Ukraine.
Speaker 10 (01:08:14):
And you're not gonna have it.
Speaker 21 (01:08:15):
It's not gonna be a very big problem. That's gonna
be the least of it.
Speaker 25 (01:08:21):
In Greek media reporting that the US is agreed to
shut down a military.
Speaker 21 (01:08:25):
Based in Greeces just for getting shout that. Who should
the uh?
Speaker 25 (01:08:29):
The the US is agreed to shout it down as
a request of uh, Turkey and Russia.
Speaker 21 (01:08:33):
Is at all Uh Marco you having a new sorts
that's enough. Uh, he's a president. No, it's not a
correct story. President lowly react to uh people in Europe.
Speaker 15 (01:08:49):
Uh who said that you're a none in Ukraine and
then you're going to sacrifice the security of Ukraine by
any humid with a routine.
Speaker 11 (01:08:57):
Now we're uh helping Ukraine like nobody's ever helped Ukraine before.
And I can say this, if uh I didn't become president,
the Ukraine would right now still if be.
Speaker 21 (01:09:08):
At a level where there would be no even thinking
about a peace.
Speaker 11 (01:09:11):
And it was Uh, it's a it's a sad thing
that this happened. This would have never happened, this war,
but we're president zero chance.
Speaker 21 (01:09:20):
And it has happened.
Speaker 11 (01:09:21):
So Uh, my function is to get you out of
the war, get them out of the war, let them live.
Speaker 21 (01:09:28):
It's a bloody war, it's a horrible war.
Speaker 11 (01:09:30):
Thousands of people are being killed a week, and I
would say Russia maybe seven hundred thousand people. I think
Ukraine probably a similar number. And that's not talking about
the towns and the cities that have been blown up.
That's talking about soldiers. This has been a horrible, bloody mess,
and we're gonna get it solved. We gotta get it solved.
(01:09:52):
And you know, we're not talking about American soldiers soldiers
from this country. We're talking about Russia and Ukraine. But
on a humanitarian basis, we have to get this very
very bloody, savage problem solved. And I will say this also,
it could lead to World War three if it's done,
So you know, there'll be a point in which it's
(01:10:13):
not gonna stop at.
Speaker 21 (01:10:14):
Those two countries.
Speaker 11 (01:10:16):
Already there's such involvement from other countries and it could
really lead to a very big war of World War three,
and we're not gonna let that happen either.
Speaker 21 (01:10:26):
Troops in Ukraine to lead in.
Speaker 11 (01:10:29):
European troops may go into Ukraine as s peacemakers. So
when the agreement is done, they can watch that everything's
followed properly. I don't think that's gonna be a problem.
And a lot of the European countries I think. I
don't want to speak for France, but I know that
the presidents talked about doing that.
Speaker 10 (01:10:47):
Also.
Speaker 11 (01:10:47):
I think that'll be a very good day where we
can go on as peacekeepers, as opposed to what's going
on right now with everybody being.
Speaker 21 (01:10:54):
Killed, US stacking. They have USACA when well, we're gonna
have a backing of some kind, and obviously.
Speaker 11 (01:11:04):
The European countries are gonna be involved, and I don't
think you're gonna need bunch backing.
Speaker 21 (01:11:09):
I think that's not gonna be a problem.
Speaker 11 (01:11:11):
Once an agreement to signed, Russia is gonna get back
to its business and Ukraine and Europe are gonna get
back to their business.
Speaker 21 (01:11:18):
I don't think it's gonna be a problem. What who
you meet these prison dates. I will be meeting with
presidents of Olynsic.
Speaker 11 (01:11:29):
In fact, he may come in this week or next
week to sign the agreement, and which would be nice
I'd looked at it would meet at the Oval office.
So the agreement's being worked on now. They're very close
to a final deal. It will be a deal with
rare earths and various other things.
Speaker 21 (01:11:47):
And he would like to come and I understand it
here to sign it, and.
Speaker 10 (01:11:51):
That would be great with me.
Speaker 11 (01:11:53):
I think they didn't have to get it approved by
their council or whoever might improve it.
Speaker 10 (01:11:57):
But I'm sure that will happen.
Speaker 21 (01:11:59):
I point didn't mean it was present reports.
Speaker 11 (01:12:05):
Yes, I don't know whether we speak. We're trying to
get this thing worked out. But yeah, at some point
I'll be meaning with personal.
Speaker 1 (01:12:18):
More.
Speaker 21 (01:12:19):
I can say a few words in fresh.
Speaker 18 (01:12:23):
Because you don't set. Yeah, that more apt on the
diffusion over on the training you know, almidion, not at ability,
the deep to the circumcree. It's a yet aggression utistics,
a perge of a canon through in picking a pat aspect.
(01:12:46):
It is like all the means. If you do you
don't record, there's a disfution set the state above.
Speaker 21 (01:12:52):
Yeah, said films fit Ukrainians.
Speaker 18 (01:12:57):
And that's t loo loo because you don't have it,
lump of don say that, mon president, surely there are
he go in application American in fald there's a wo
personal prayer on charge. So they from the vermien the
presence in compete to regular piece for Joabla in application
(01:13:21):
not very visitors need America and bunshoesstrial.
Speaker 21 (01:13:27):
It should put that county discution.
Speaker 18 (01:13:29):
Many Baptisal members the physical and disputis mana and only
know I played a video conference one Bans. I don't
see you've.
Speaker 21 (01:13:42):
Spoken about this. This is just a moment ago.
Speaker 25 (01:13:45):
This is exactly what we want to do.
Speaker 21 (01:13:46):
We want to build peace with Ukraine. As President trus mentioned.
Speaker 4 (01:13:50):
There are already one million dead and wounded in Ukraine
Sis the war began. We had a ceasefire in the
past that was not respected. This was under the Minx
Agreements one and two.
Speaker 25 (01:14:00):
President Frum, as you said, we'll be meeting with President
Deli the Silinski to sign a deal on rare Earth
and we are pleased to see this very strong American involvement.
Speaker 4 (01:14:12):
Europe of course also stands gready to support Ukraine in various.
Speaker 21 (01:14:16):
Ways, supporting its military.
Speaker 25 (01:14:18):
And if you don't want to pree into any sort
of discussions that occurring under way.
Speaker 4 (01:14:23):
So did you see share the same objective of building
this last few piece.
Speaker 21 (01:14:28):
I just wanna tell you a little story.
Speaker 11 (01:14:30):
So we're in the Eiffel Tower having dinner with your
wonderful wife and with my wonderful wife, and.
Speaker 10 (01:14:36):
We came out and your now, what can you talk
up a little louder?
Speaker 13 (01:14:44):
A is uh?
Speaker 11 (01:14:45):
Uh in this day?
Speaker 21 (01:14:46):
Louder?
Speaker 10 (01:14:47):
Can you talk a little louder? You have a beautiful voice,
but you're not the excuse me? Where are you from?
You from Italy?
Speaker 23 (01:14:54):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (01:14:55):
I love Italy?
Speaker 21 (01:14:56):
God, hey, I won't make you uh normally who you
of the same media? He doesn't have both times?
Speaker 11 (01:15:04):
Well, look, I love Italy and Italy is a very
important nation. We have a wonderful woman as your leader,
and she was on the conversation today.
Speaker 10 (01:15:12):
And one that we had the G seven and uh. Now,
I think.
Speaker 11 (01:15:17):
Italy's doing very well. I think I think Italy's got
very strong leadership with Georgia did through Let's see.
Speaker 10 (01:15:27):
The uh any other questions over here? Yes, ma'am, can
you clark by what.
Speaker 24 (01:15:31):
You met in your trouch today on the major ex
economic development transactions between the US.
Speaker 25 (01:15:37):
And Russia anymore?
Speaker 10 (01:15:38):
With respect to what Russia.
Speaker 24 (01:15:40):
Uh and sawing pl you said there would be major
economic development transactions which will take place between the United
States and Russia.
Speaker 11 (01:15:47):
Yeah, we're trying to do some economic development deals. They
have a lot of things that we want and we'll see.
I mean, I don't know if that will come to fruition,
but would love to be able to do that if
we could. You know, they have massive uh rare earth.
It's a very large it's actually the largest in terms
of land. It's by far the largest country. And they
(01:16:07):
have uh, very valuable things that we could use, and
we have things that they could use, and it would
be very good.
Speaker 10 (01:16:13):
If we could do that.
Speaker 11 (01:16:14):
I think it would be a very good thing for
world peace and lasting peace. Uh. Well, I mean our
f our first, by far, our first thing that we
wanna do. The first element of the overall transaction is
ending the war. But if uh, just as we're doing
with Ukraine, if we could do some economic development in
terms of Russia and getting things that we want, uh,
(01:16:38):
something like that would be possible.
Speaker 7 (01:16:40):
Is present?
Speaker 10 (01:16:44):
Yes, go ahead? Please?
Speaker 25 (01:16:45):
Can you now to have a US vote against the
UN resolutions that Ukraine could post and also the US
supposed Uh.
Speaker 10 (01:16:51):
I would rather not explain it now, but it's sort
of self evident. I think it's increasing the.
Speaker 21 (01:16:58):
Hut products of the ukion.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Yeah, that steals something most.
Speaker 25 (01:17:01):
Of you today.
Speaker 11 (01:17:02):
Well, it's not increasing. It's reciprocal. So whatever they charge us,
we're charging them. So it's not a question of increasing. Uh.
If they charge us twenty percent, we charge them twenty percent.
If they charge us thirty or forty percent, then we
do that too. So that would be on European year.
But that really would be respect uh, with respect everybody. Uh,
(01:17:23):
it's reciprocity, so reciprocal. Whatever they charge us, we charge them.
Nobody has a problem, even you. I see you don't
have a problem.
Speaker 10 (01:17:31):
Anyway, right to most school. Uh soon, Ay, I mean
not soon, but I would be certainly.
Speaker 11 (01:17:41):
Uh if if this all gets settled out, which I
think it will, sure, I would go there, sure not,
and he'd come here to all the racequare I don't
know the ninth and May, No, I don't. I think
that's pretty that's pretty soon. But no, A at the
appropriate time, I would go to Moscow. I think the
war could end soon.
Speaker 10 (01:18:04):
Within weeks?
Speaker 11 (01:18:06):
Yeah, I think so, right, don't you think so? I'd
like to ask, have you? I think we could end
it within weeks if we're smart. If we're not smart,
it'll keep going and we'll keep losing young beautiful people
that shouldn't be dying, and we don't want that.
Speaker 10 (01:18:24):
And remember what I said, this could escalate into it,
and you're homeboy.
Speaker 18 (01:18:33):
Steve Woibob suggested a temporary ceasefire in the conflict with
the Russian government has denied that out of hand.
Speaker 21 (01:18:39):
Are you worry that they're not dealing in good faith?
Speaker 11 (01:18:42):
No? I think they At some point we'll agree to that.
I think they probably wanted to. And I think once
you have a ceasefire, it's going to end, because they're
not going from a ceasfire back to war. I think
people have had Therefore, I'm just lad I was able
to help because there was no communication with Russia until
I came along.
Speaker 10 (01:19:01):
Biden didn't communicate. He couldn't communicate with his own child.
So Biden didn't communicate. He couldn't. It was terrible.
Speaker 21 (01:19:09):
He hadn't spoken to Putin in three years.
Speaker 10 (01:19:12):
You're trying to end the war. People are being killed
every week.
Speaker 11 (01:19:14):
Thousands of people are being killed, soldiers in this case,
mostly also towns. You know, his missiles go in and
back and forth. Now, it's it's a shame. This should
have never happened. This is a very sad. This is
going to go down to the history books. This is
a very sad moment because that should have been stopped.
That should have never stun it. And if it did start,
(01:19:36):
it should have stopped the first week, not three years later.
Speaker 18 (01:19:39):
Okay, if you'll know me, because I had just I
cam double said, is gonna pay to nisissity shows josual
(01:19:59):
g in capacity the disk restorate covers the president continue
your problem spans the first American said certitude. The President
putin can capacity quiperme the c that boks on Trev
like capacity are very stick at Trev respect and sweet
(01:20:22):
and the peer the rocks Lucrean and you see the
guaranted security don't care. Do the garanted security.
Speaker 10 (01:20:33):
They don't care.
Speaker 18 (01:20:34):
They are a smaller the discussions in the Lucrene Resturan
p So don't the discussion Lucrande and that it has
been the Meriky yes said Chris Respecte. It don't lose
par and particularly with Partnick don't care that run part Victu,
(01:20:57):
the pe European pre as his Wana parties guaranteed security,
the conditional.
Speaker 10 (01:21:06):
And bar.
Speaker 18 (01:21:11):
Com President the Troupe respect supposition partial in the front.
Just okay, don't confleet Martin, presence com guarantee Ye Roman
the districtor novel Responso discute President, credibility American chimis don
(01:21:36):
moment you seeco Cha don roll unity America. They don't
carecu from the guarantee, the American trend Paradiscus critic it's
not finalize.
Speaker 10 (01:21:52):
By the way, that is the most us.
Speaker 11 (01:21:54):
That is the most beautiful language. And I have no
idea what you say, but that is like elegant, beautiful language.
Speaker 4 (01:22:01):
Go ahead, please, this is a question that was asked
by several What we need to do is make sure
that we are building peace.
Speaker 13 (01:22:10):
We have.
Speaker 4 (01:22:12):
We have deterrence capabilities that have been restored. As President
Trump said, there won't be any more problems. We've seen
the US re engagement and the message that that sends
to mister Plutin. We have deterrence which will allow a
truce to take place, verification of that truth, and then
a peace agreement can be put in place so that
(01:22:33):
we can start rebuilding Ukraine with security guarantees, and we
have a role to play in that. Again, I'm not
preempting any discussions, but we've spoken about Ukraine's sovereignty and
that has been a subject of discussion.
Speaker 13 (01:22:46):
Between the US and Ukraine.
Speaker 4 (01:22:48):
We have also been working closely with our British partners.
This week, we've shared this information with other European countries
and we are ready and willing to provide those security guarantees,
which could perhaps include troops, but they would be there
to maintain peace. They would not be along the front lines,
they would not be part of any conflict. They would
(01:23:09):
be there to ensure that the peace is respected. Our
assistance may include other capacity building, perhaps for the military.
We see US credibility here. We each have our role
to play, but we would be done in the United fashion.
Speaker 10 (01:23:29):
Well, we're going to see.
Speaker 11 (01:23:30):
It's a negotiation that's just starting, and you know, they've
been fighting and there's been a lot of land that's
been taken, so we'll have to see how that works
out as part of the negotiation. I will say there
was great unity in that room today. You know we
were skype or whatever, but it was great, tremendous unity
today in that room with the other countries.
Speaker 10 (01:23:52):
I was very impressed by.
Speaker 21 (01:23:57):
They lost in the past year.
Speaker 10 (01:24:00):
That's not an easy thing to do, is it r right?
Speaker 11 (01:24:03):
It's not an easy you know, he's asking whether or not, Uh,
you could take back the land that they lost, and
I I say that, uh, yeah, perhaps some of it. Yeah,
I hope so, but that's not an easy thing to do.
What pre it's gonna be something we're talking about when
you would you like.
Speaker 21 (01:24:22):
Set uh Urugu and troops as East Key grow?
Speaker 10 (01:24:25):
You mean yeah, he will accept that. We as I've
asked him that question.
Speaker 21 (01:24:28):
You're both do.
Speaker 10 (01:24:29):
I've asked him that question.
Speaker 11 (01:24:32):
Cause he's the not Look, if we do this deal,
he's not looking for more warrior doesn't mind. But I've
specifically asked him that question. He has no problem with it.
Speaker 3 (01:24:42):
He's going to.
Speaker 4 (01:24:44):
And froze and Russian assets in Belgium.
Speaker 21 (01:24:46):
Uh, France as opposed on raising it to say Ukraine
and compensate the US for its support. Is France going
to live its opposition to that?
Speaker 18 (01:24:55):
This is fro I mean we speak about frozen assets.
We'll really use them to back precisely the loans negotiated
at the G seven and it's part of the sanctions.
So it will depend on the follow up of the discussions.
But clearly with respect international law, it's just frozen assets.
Now you can take the proceeds of the frozen asset,
but you cannot take the assets themselves because it's not
(01:25:19):
respecting international law, and we want to respect international because
it's very different. You keep the assets, you take the
proceeds because they are part alive in a certain way.
You take the proceeds during the wartime, but you keep
the asset, and it's part of the negotiation at the
end of the war, because I mean, this war costed
all of us a lot of money, and this is
(01:25:40):
the responsibility of Russia, because the aggressor is Russia. So
at the end of the day, this frozen asset should
be part of the negotiation. All in all, I support
the idea to have Ukraine first being compensated because they
are the one to have lose a lot of the
fellow citizens and being destroyed by this attack. Second, all
(01:26:03):
of those who paid for could be compensated, but not
by Ukraine, by Russia because they was the one to aggress.
Speaker 11 (01:26:09):
Again, just say you just say, you understand Europe is
loaning the money to Ukraine.
Speaker 10 (01:26:15):
They get their money back now.
Speaker 18 (01:26:17):
In fact, to be frank, we paid, We paid sixty
percent of the totally faults and it was through I
like the US loans guarantee grants, and we provided real money.
To be clear, we have two hundred and thirty billion
frozen assets in Europe Russian assets. But this is not
as a collateral of a loan, because this is not
(01:26:38):
all belonging, so they are frozen. If at the end
of the day the negotiation we will have with Russia,
they're ready to give to give it to us, super
it will be loan at the end of the day
and Russia will have paid for that.
Speaker 11 (01:26:49):
If you believe that, it's okay with me. But they
get their money back without and now we do.
Speaker 10 (01:26:55):
But you know that's.
Speaker 11 (01:27:02):
Well, we're we're negotiating everything, and everything's on the table,
and we'll see if we can get some land back,
and we'll see about a lot of different things. And
we're going to be making a little speech and say
a few words and a little while. We're gonna have
another meeting, a luncheon meeting, and we'll see you in
about two hours.
Speaker 10 (01:27:18):
Okay, thank you very much, everybody, Thank you, thank you,
thank you very much.
Speaker 17 (01:27:29):
You were listening to President Trump and French President Emmanuel
Marl Kral speaking at the White House. Ukraine was the
focus of that conversation. The two were getting ready to
go back into another conversation, and there will be a
news conference that will carry here on Real America's Voice
in a couple of hours. All right, folks, that's going
to wrap it up for us. Now let's get you
back to the Charlie kirkshow this.
Speaker 11 (01:27:50):
Has been a live special report.
Speaker 1 (01:27:52):
We now join our programming already in progres.
Speaker 2 (01:27:54):
Because the officeholders themselves are often choosing from a menu
of policy has been written up by their staff or
that has been you know, sort of spun by ideologus
and think tanks and magazines. That's where the neocons have
a choke hold on American policy and on the American right,
and that's where they're really concerned they're going to lose
that joke hold in that grip if Bridge Colby gets
into the Pentagon.
Speaker 1 (01:28:13):
Daniel, thank you so much for your time. How does
our audience stay in touch with you and follow you?
Speaker 2 (01:28:18):
Yeah, you can find me on Twitter at the unusual
handle of Tory Anarchist, which is a nice sort of
fun phrase I use. And then online you can find
me on the internet at www dot Modern Age journal
dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:28:30):
Thank you talk too soon, Daniel, great job. Ever see
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Well?
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on AM five point sixty The Answer or KRLA, make
sure you hit subscribe and download a couple episodes. We
have a lot to react to Trump and Macron just spoke.
We'll be right back.
Speaker 15 (01:30:00):
Watching the news and start from making some It's the
Charlie Kirkshow.
Speaker 1 (01:30:04):
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Charlie four Hillsdale dot com. Okay, here's the very serious question.
Should elon Omar be deported? It's a very serious question.
(01:33:01):
Let's go to cut seven. Elon Omar says you are
stupid for supporting Trump, that Americans supporting Trump for winning.
These people are just idiots, you know, insulting the body
politic not smart play cut seven.
Speaker 3 (01:33:17):
These people are just idiots.
Speaker 5 (01:33:19):
I really, you know, I'm at the point where it's
become really hard to have an intellectual debate with any
of these people because the level of stupidity that they
are displaying every single day is frankly embarrassing, not just
in Congress but as Americans. And the fact that these
people are allowed to say just the most ridiculous things
(01:33:43):
tells you that the dumbing of the United States has arrived,
because how else do we get Trump presidency again?
Speaker 1 (01:33:52):
Now we should seriously look into our immigration status. I
think would make great headlines. If Trump to pour to
the member of Congress, I think it'd be great. She
is one of the most ungrateful members of Congress, let
alone in the country, and might say, well, Charlie, on
what grounds could you deport her. There is a lot
to say that her marriage is anything but legitimate. She
(01:34:15):
married her husband, but only in a Somali faith wedding,
her first real husband. And there's a lot of suspicion
about whether or not she married her brother. There's a
lot of allegedly around here. Then she married a second
guy and lying on immigration application back to Mogadishu. And
since America is such a terrible country full of stupid people,
(01:34:37):
why don't you go make Mogadishu great again? Elon I
believe in. You go to Mogadishu, run for mayor and
bring forth the values of elon Omar to Somalia. So
the second guy she married, who Somali sources say were
her brother. And it's not just trace, it's not trace
because Somalia has no documentation. Great country over there one
(01:35:00):
thing that Elano marcin to this country. And she was
full of gratitude and loved America. She calls American stupid,
she hates the country, She hates Israel, she hates Jews.
Sounds like a perfect person to get a deportation flight. Now,
how would that work? The member of Congress was deported,
That would be quite a novel test case. She's not
(01:35:26):
alone in her outrage or her ranker. This is her
fellow radical, Missus Crockett play cut two.
Speaker 26 (01:35:36):
There are so many chats that we have where we
are talking about what we're going to do, when we're
talking about what we are doing, but a matter of
amplifying those things is a lot more difficult.
Speaker 3 (01:35:46):
And I think that is important that those.
Speaker 26 (01:35:49):
Of us that sit in Congress have to figure out
what is really the best way for us to communicate.
And we've got to settle into that and recognize that
not everyone's going to sit on a podcast, not everyone's
going to be social media savvy, but they are going
to have to find their communication lane. And so I
do think that it is something that we struggle with.
We know right now we obviously have exes owned by Elon.
Speaker 13 (01:36:12):
We've also got the.
Speaker 26 (01:36:13):
Other news network that I won't name, and some other things.
So there's an actual ecosystem that pumps out this disinformation
consistently on behalf of them.
Speaker 1 (01:36:25):
Did you understand it? She just uses long words to
sound smart when it doesn't really fit. No, it's not
that we have a disinformation ecosystems. We have better ideas
and We're willing to finally fight for them. We're willing
to finally say no, We're not going to allow you
to destroy our country, and we don't care what names
that you administer towards us. It is a Rushlumba taught
(01:36:47):
us this. As soon as you don't care what they
call you, almost all of their little voodoo power goes away,
Almost all of their little mind control goes away. They
say I don't care. That's the only tool in their toolkit.
Once you say I don't care, they weaken, shatter, and scream.
See you guys tomorrow. Email us Freedom at Charliekirk dot
(01:37:08):
com