Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:17):
The Charlie Kirk Show starts.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Now from Philadelphia to Phoenix, from Gettysburg to the Golden
Gate Bridge, and from factories of Detroit to the fairgrounds
of Des Moines. We stand on the shoulders of heroes
and legends across the oceans, blaze, the trails, came, the wilderness, settled,
the continent, raised up those beautiful skyscrapers, and stood tall
(00:42):
and defiant in the face of tyranny and death. From
seventeen seventy six all the way through today, American patriots
of one triumph after triumph, We've had victory after victory,
and let nothing stand in the way of the USA,
which we love so much. Legal aliens lost three hundred
and forty thousand, and we don't want bad for them,
(01:04):
but look, we have a country to run, and we
want to have them come in and we want to
have them help our farmers. But some of the farmers,
you know, they've had people working for them for years.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
And we're going to do something.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
We're working with Christie, and we're going to do something
that we're going to sort of put the farmers in
charge and if somebody have a part, if a farmer's
been with one of these people that work.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
So hard they'd bend over all day.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
We don't have too many people can do that, but
they work very hard, and they know them very well.
And some of the farmers are literally you know, they
cry when they see this happen. If a farmer is
willing to vouch for these people in some way, Christie,
I think we're gonna have to just say that's going
to be good, right, you know, we're.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
Going to be We're going to be good with it.
Speaker 4 (01:48):
We're all undocumented immigrant. You go back to twenty fifteen,
I'm gonna come to your side screen.
Speaker 1 (01:52):
There's forty two percent.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
Hell up, go to twenty sixteen, it was thirty six percent.
Look at where we are now. This was taken at
the end of last year. Fifty six percent. This is
twenty points higher than it was just before Trump got
in office the first time. So feelings towards immigration in
this country, feelings towards undocked out undocumented immigrants and deporting
all of them, have become considerably.
Speaker 5 (02:12):
More hawkish, and.
Speaker 4 (02:13):
I think that gives Donald Trump much more leverage to
go with the American people and sort of have these
hawkish some might say harsh different rhetoric and also issue
base sort of going after immigrants who are here illegally.
And so I think the American people are going to
give Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt to do
what he wants to do, at least if you believe
these blunk questions, including this one.
Speaker 6 (02:35):
This narrow, narrow, narrow sliver of liberal, rich white female
Democrats who nominated Mom Donnie, who have enough money to
lead when he destroys the city, nominated this guy.
Speaker 7 (02:48):
The working class went for other people. But what he's
going to do is end up destroying the city for
the working class, defunding the police, emptying the jails, fighting
against federal enforcement of our immigration.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Laws, defund improvement and enhanced experiences across the park system.
For this anniversary, I've just signed an executive order to
raise entrance fees for foreign tourists while keeping prices low
for Americans. People have worked for a farm on a
farm for fourteen fifteen years and they get thrown out
pretty viciously, and we can't do it. We got to
(03:20):
work with the farmers and people that have hotels and
leisure properties to We're going to work with them, and
we're going to work very strong and smart, and we're
going to put you in charge.
Speaker 7 (03:30):
We're going to make you responsible.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
And I think that that's going to make a lot
of people happy. Now, serious radical right people who I
also happen to like a lot.
Speaker 7 (03:38):
They may not be quite as happy, but they'll.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Understand, won't they. Do you think they'll understand that you're
the one that brought this whole situation up. Brooke Rawlins
brought it up and she said, so we have a
little problem. The farmers are losing a lot of people.
And we figured it out and we have some great
stuff being written, and let the farmers be responsible.
Speaker 8 (03:58):
They said gen Z would stay silent, that we'd back down,
that we'd.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Forget what's worth fighting for.
Speaker 8 (04:05):
But this generation remembers, we remember truth, we remember freedom,
and now we rise.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
This is more than a conference.
Speaker 8 (04:15):
It's a call to action to reclaim the future, to
ignite a movement that cannot be ignored. Student Action Summit
twenty twenty five featuring the boldest voices in the fight.
Charlie Kirk, Secretary, Pete Hegseat, Tucker Carlson, Steve Benny Brett Cooper, Secretary,
Christy Noman, Riley Gaines, Brandon Tatum, Jack Pisoba, Laura Ingram,
(04:36):
Meghan Kep, Greg Guttfeldt, Tom Homan, Congressman Byron Donalds, Russell Brand,
Savannah Christy joined thousands of students, future leaders, and freedom fighters.
This is the battleground of ideas. This is the Student
Action Summit. Register now at SAS twenty twenty five dot com.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
Every day is a battle for your mind.
Speaker 9 (05:03):
Raging information coming from every angle, but the will to
the sea.
Speaker 1 (05:07):
Fear not.
Speaker 9 (05:08):
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 1 (05:17):
This is the Charlie kirkshow fuck a lot?
Speaker 6 (05:20):
Here we go on, Okay, everybody, Radio stations across the country.
Happy Monday. We hear at the Bitcoin dot Com Studio.
That is the Bitcoin dot Com Studio, live here from Phoenix, Arizona.
What a weekend. President Donald Trump signed the Big Beautiful
Bill on Independence Day on July fourth, signaling a massive
(05:42):
legislative accomplishment. Tax cut, no tax on tips, no tax
and overtime, no tax on social security, huge investment in
border security, one hundred and seventy five billion dollars for ICE.
We're going to talk more about the profundity and the
importance of this bill, but it is it is of
(06:02):
great urgent necessity that we cover what is coming next.
And yes, we are going to talk about Epstein. We're
also going to have live coverage from the awful and
the unspeakable tragedy happening in Kerr County and near Hunt, Texas.
Just a national tragedy with the flooding issue in Texas.
(06:24):
But you would think that, hey, we get one hundred
and seventy five billion dollars for ICE, We're going to
get mass deportations. We're going to be able to have
now the largest deportation effort ever. Yes, in theory, but
in practice, there's something else afoot. Literally, the day before
(06:46):
President Donald Trump was signing the Big Beautiful Bill, I
got a couple phone calls from people that you would
call members of the ruling class, a lot of money
and a lot of connections. They said, Charlie, isn't this
amazing past the Big Beautiful Bill. I said, oh, yes, sir,
And they said, now we need mass amnesty. What I said,
(07:08):
we haven't even signed the bill yet. They said, yeah,
you know, these deportations we're going to lose the midterms
because of the deportations. The people on the right, they'll understand,
and we need to come to the middle, and we
need to legalize the twenty five million people here in
this country. I was speechlesscu see here, I am actually
thinking the naive We're going to sign this big, beautiful
(07:30):
bill and we're actually going to get mass deportations on
and erupted from an asymmetrical attack. So we have somewhere
between twenty to fifty million illegal aliens in this country.
We don't actually know the numbers. These are all guestimates.
These are all just approximations. And there is a movement
(07:55):
of foot as I am doing this broadcast. And this
is bigger than anything with Epstein. This is bigger than
anything with tax cuts. It is happening right now in Washington, DC.
And I can say this from first hand experience, that
people are pushing President Trump for amnesty. They are pushing
him for mass legalization of illegals. Now, President Donald Trump,
(08:18):
of course, would never push for amnesty. But President Donald
Trump said something at a rally on July third, and
my phone lit up like you wouldn't imagine. President Donald
Trump was talking about potentially doing a bi partisan compromise
deal for illegals that have stolen Social Security numbers, that
(08:42):
are illegally domiciling themselves here in the country, that are
all felons. Every single one of them are felons. They're
just not yet indicted felons. But if they're here illegally,
you're a felon. It's against federal law. We've gone through
all the different federal laws that you break by being here.
And this is President Donald Trump speaking at the I
(09:02):
Will rally saying that we might need to do some
form You didn't use the word amnesty, but some form
of soft amnesty. And I could tell you now through
other reporting that I've been able to do in phone calls,
there is a major push right now to do a
bipartisan amnesty deal, a major push. People are trying to
push the present. Hey, you got the money for ice,
(09:24):
Now we need to go move to the middle on immigration.
Play cut two fifty eight.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
People have worked for a farm on a farm for
fourteen fifteen years and they get thrown out pretty viciously,
and we can't do it. We got to work with
the farmers and people that have hotels and leisure properties
to We're gonna work with them, and we're gonna work
very strong and smart, and we're gonna put you in charge.
Speaker 5 (09:46):
We're gonna make you responsible.
Speaker 2 (09:48):
And I think that that's gonna make a lot of
people happy. Now, serious radical right people who I also
happen to like a lot.
Speaker 7 (09:54):
They may not be quite as happy, but.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
They'll understand, won't they Do you think they'll understand that
you're the one that brought his whole situation up. Brooke
Rowlins brought it up, and she said, so, we have
a little problem.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
The farmers are losing a lot of people.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
And we figured it out and we have some great
stuff being written, and let the farmers be responsible.
Speaker 6 (10:16):
Let the farmers be responsible. Look, I trust President Trump's
instincts one hundred percent here, But there is a group
of people that are pushing President Trump very hard to
stop the deportation effort and to try to have some
sort of a come to the table moment of a
bipartisan compromise that we need to try to figure out
(10:37):
how to make these people have a pathway to citizenship. Now,
this is not, by any means a knock on President Trump.
It is a knock on people that are trying to
pressure President Trump and pressure him hard. We don't know
any of the details, but President Trump did say that
the radical right people that he has a soft spot
(11:02):
for wouldn't like this. Hello. Hi, I'm one of those
radical right people, and I want to know what I'm
not going to like because of all the different stuff
that's in front of us. If you want to break
our coalition go and push amnesty that right, there would
be a complete collapse of everything that we have worked for. Everything.
(11:23):
So we don't know any details, but it looks as
if President Trump might be in preliminary discussions, and I
could tell you that there are many different discussions that
I've had with people, and they are pushing it hard
to create some kind of amnesty proposal aims specifically at
farm laborers in the United States, but it's more than that.
It could be hotels, it could be leisure properties. We've
(11:44):
heard the arguments about this for years. Well, the crops
are going to rot in the fields, they'll be starvation.
But here's the main thing that you need to know.
We've tried this before. This is not some sort of
new thing. And by the way, just so we are clear.
I went to an event this last weekend in San
Diego Ja. D Vance was there and another person came
(12:05):
up and said, Charlie, do you know what we need?
We need to have some sort of pathway citizenship for
twenty five people. I said, are you guys on all
some sort of group chat or something? Are you guys
all just coordinating? We have not even forty eight hours
of the largest investment in border security deportation in Ice.
And why are you pitching me on mass amnesty? What
is that all about. There's a lot of reasons for this,
(12:28):
and one of which is the corporate class is deathly
afraid that they might actually have to hire Americans and
pay a higher wage. Somehow, other countries are able to
grow food without imported surf labor. How are they able
to do that? I don't know. Apparently we have built
so many parts of our economy to be reliant on
(12:48):
foreign criminal invaders that have come into this country. And
some people, oh, we have to allow farmers transition. No,
you deport them back to their country of origin, all
of them. We did not run on mass amnesty. We
ran on nasty deportations. We did not run on well
you know you can transition, because you know who told
us the transition. And I'm going to go into this
(13:08):
in the next segment. We tried the transition argument, and
we are told, hey, if we do this, Hispanics will
vote Republican for a generation. Hispanics will vote right wing
for a generation. And Ronald Reagan tried this in nineteen
eighty six. And what is so, what is so frustrating,
(13:30):
unspeakably frustrating. We are winning Hispanics in a way we've
never won them before because we are so firm an immigration.
It was running against amnesty that got us Hispanic support.
And I don't want to hear about people say, well,
this is how we beat the Democrats. We just beat
the Democrats. We know how to beat them. Don't tell
(13:52):
me the Carl Roves of the world. Well, now here's
how I beat the Democrats. Everything you have suggested the
last twenty years had been wrong on trade, on immigration,
on the deep state, on the administrative state, everything you
have suggested on the Iraq War, on foreign policy. It's
all been wrong of the Karl Roves the word world.
But now, in the year of our Lord twenty twenty five,
(14:17):
I have to now be lectured that we are going
to win back Hispanics, even though we're already winning back
Hispanics by compromising the core base as a core campaign
promise of our coalition. I have full faith in President
Trump that this will be largely rejected. But the push
(14:37):
is on and President Trump does this a lot. It's
kind of a rhetorical practice. He'll throw it out at
a rally. Do you like it? Do you not like it?
We're going to talk about it like a trial balloon.
He crowd sources his polling. But I could tell you
I know some of the people that are pushing some
of this stuff, and we're going to talk more about
(14:58):
it because it's been tried before, and this is a redline.
Amnesty is a red line. Z factor dot com. I
think we all know that one person who when their
head hits the pillow at night, they're out. And I'm
jealous too. Most of us have trouble falling asleep or
staying asleep, which means they're not getting quality sleep. Let
me tell you about Z factor from relief Factor. Go
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Go to relief factor dot com. That is relief Factor
dot com. So check it out right now at reliefactor
dot com. Let me ask you guys, would you guys
support a amnesty bill? Email me freedom at Charliekirk dot com.
Speaker 9 (15:50):
Up watching the news and start from making some the Charliekirkshow.
Speaker 6 (15:54):
Okay, everybody? Whyrefi dot Com is amazing. They are the
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Heegsath Tucker Carlson, Steve Bennit, Brett Cooper, The.
Speaker 8 (16:21):
Secretary, Christy Noon Riley Gaines, Brandon Tatum, Jack Pisoba, Laura Ingram,
Megan Keller, Greg Guttfeld, Tom Homan, Congressman Byron Donalds, Russell Brand,
Savannah Christla joined thousands of patriots, future leaders, and freedom
fighters of all ages register now at SAS twenty twenty
five dot com.
Speaker 6 (16:41):
Okay, everybody's yrefi dot com. Y Refi is not a
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That is why are ef y dot com. Email us
freedom at Charliekirk dot com. We have a lot more
to say about the push for mass amnesty. You need
to be on guard. Stay right there. Okay, everybody, welcome back.
(17:27):
And I just want to say our reporting has always
beared out. I remember back in February, we sent out
a tweet We're at the Bitcoin dot Com studio that
there is a push for airstrikes against Iran. Now, I
think President Trump handled the Iranian situation beautifully. But when
we get heads up here on the show, we're not
a false alarm show. I'm telling you that there is
an aggressive movement afoot for a big amnesty compromise deal.
(17:52):
So here's what we're told. We're told that we need
the workers. There's a lot wrong with that argument. But
even if I would simpathize that, then they don't have
to be illegal farm workers. They could potentially be seasonal
workers that could come legally. We have a whole visa
program for that. But even that I'm very skeptical of.
But fine, there's a whole carve out in the immigration
(18:13):
code for that. Number two is well, it's just hard
to get rid of them. I'm sorry. We do hard
things in this country. We go to the moon, we
build dams out of the spectyl of the world. We
win world wars. We're the wealthiest country, the most generous country,
and the most productive country. We do tough stuff. What
did I sign off with last week? I said one
of the hardest, most challenging things in front of our country.
(18:35):
Which will be the most enormous public policy project in
front of us will be the mass deportation of fifteen
to twenty million people. No one said it's easy, but
we do hard stuff in this country, and it's about
the reclamation of a republic. And then number three, where
I just this is the one that I get the
most animated about. Well, Charlie, amnesty means that we are
(18:56):
going to win Hispanics for the future. This will destroy
the Democrat Party, this will ruin them forever. I want
to give you a little bit of a history lesson
front page of the New York Times from nineteen eighty six.
November seventh, nineteen eighty six, Robert Pierre special of the
(19:17):
New York Times rights President Reagan signs landmark bill on immigration.
It's called the Simpson Mizzoli Act. And I'm going to
post this entire article on charliekirk dot com if we're
legally allowed to. This is one of the most chilling
articles that you can read.
Speaker 10 (19:38):
It.
Speaker 6 (19:39):
Not only is it so applicable today, but all the
people are.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
The same people. It's unbelievable.
Speaker 6 (19:46):
Chuck Schumer was the one that pushed for mass amnesty
back in nineteen eighty six. They're still all there. Let
me read this to you. President Reagan today signed a
landmark immigration bill that prohibits employers from hiring illegal aliens. Ooh,
that sounds good, and offering legal status to many illegal
aliens already in the United States. So everyone thought this
was great. In fact, they thought Reagan said this. By
(20:07):
the way, I think Reagan was a good president a
lot of the ways. Reagan was also super over Ragan
a lot of ways. We got to stop the over
veneration of Ronald Reagan and just be honest that Ronald
Reagan gave us mass amnesty, which is one of the
greatest immigration mistakes, next to Ted Kennedy's Nation of Immigrants nonsense.
Just got to be honest. You've got to call the
shots as it is. We don't venerate people in history unnecessarily.
(20:29):
And Reagan did a lot of good stuff. He's a
mixture of good and bad. He's not all good or
all bad. So Reagan says this. Reagan said that this
was the most comprehensive immigration reform of our law since
nineteen fifty two.
Speaker 5 (20:43):
Quote.
Speaker 6 (20:43):
This is Ronald Reagan. Future generations of Americans will be
thankful for our efforts to humanly regain control of our
borders and thereby preserve the value of one of the
most sacred possessions of our people, American citizenship. I'm sorry.
Did we get control of our borders thanks to Ronald Reagan? No,
In fact, it got worse. It was more illegal immigration.
There were more people that came into the country. But
(21:04):
Ronald Reagan did as Ronald Reagan gave amnesty to millions
of people that broke into the country before him, because
he thought that we would win them over for a generation,
that we would win over the Hispanics and they would
all be Republican. Mister Reagan continued, Oh, Barney Frank is
in here too. It's like all the same people. Let
me kill this is one of my favorite parts. Chuck
(21:27):
Schumer says, quote the bill is a gamble, is from
nineteen eighty six, a riverboat gamble. There's no guarantee that
employer sanctions will work or that amnesty will work. We
are headed into uncharted waters. Mister Schumer said the current
situation was unacceptable. The government caught one point eight million
(21:48):
illegal aliens in the fiscal year ended in September thirtieth,
an increase about thirty percent a year, So about two
million people were coming across the border a year. And
by the way, back in nineteen eighty six, you were
allowed to talk about mass deportations. You weren't able to
talk about the wall. So what did Ronald Reagan do.
Ronald Reagan said, we're gonna give them all amnesty, and
we're gonna have a lot of teeth the bill. Guess what,
All the teeth of the bill got struck down by
(22:10):
the court as being a racist. So all of the
good stuff of the bill got struck down, and all
of the other measures weren't even enforced. But you know what,
of course was upheld was amnesty. New York Times Rights,
there's no way to know how many illegal aliens in
the United States are. This is seven years before I
was boring, to give you an idea. Seven years before
(22:30):
I was boring, we had this exact same debate, and
we did it, and we tried it, and it was
a catastrophe. Not only did it create more illegal immigrants,
the border remained open. And know the Hispanics all of
a sudden were not Reagan Nites. They became the base
of the Democrat Party. They became the base of the
modern left. Do you know why? And here's what no
one wants to talk about. When you give them amnesty,
(22:52):
a lot of them are then eligible for government benefits
and they can then seamlessly go on food stamps, on welfare,
chain migration, and they don't all of a sudden start
wearing maga hats. I don't know how do you win
over Hispanics? Do what Donald Trump did? Because we won
over Hispanics. It's not amnesty, it's mass deportations.
Speaker 11 (23:10):
Be right back, Welcome back to this Real America's Voice
News Break.
Speaker 5 (23:21):
I'm Terrence Bates.
Speaker 11 (23:22):
President Trump has set to sign a new executive order
this afternoon. He'll also meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Nett and Yahoo at the White House this evening. The
Prime Minister touchdown earlier this morning, and we'll meet with
Middle East Envoy Steve Whitkoff before heading Before sitting down
with the President, the proposed ceasefire deal between Israel and Amas,
which could pause the fighting in Gaza, will likely be
(23:46):
on the agenda before leaving Israel, the Prime Minister said
that work is underway to achieve that deal. He also
said President Trump quote can definitely help advance this outcome
which we all hope for. The meeting may also be
an opportunity for the Allies to take a victory lap
of sorts related to the so called Twelve Day War
with Iran, which ended with the US demolishing Iran's latest
(24:09):
nuclear or largest nuclear facilities, and with so much happening
at the White House, Press Secretary Caroline Levitt preparing to
kick the week off with her latest press briefing. It's
slated to get underway at the top of the hour,
will of course have live coverage here on Real America's
Voice Plus RAF's chief White House correspondent, Brian Glenn will
be in the new media seat today. Among the issues
(24:30):
we expect the Press Secretary to discuss are the deadly
floods in Texas, along with the President's upcoming visit with
Israeli counterpart Benjamin Nett and Yahoo. Tariffs and the reaction
to the signing and implementation of the One Big Beautiful
Bill will likely be topics of conversation as well, and
trade likely part of the conversation today. President Trump says
(24:51):
he's expecting finalization of several trade agreements in the coming days.
The Commander in chief also saying that countries will be
notified of higher teriff rates by Wednesday.
Speaker 12 (25:01):
President Trump's going to be sending letters to some of
our trading partners, saying that if you don't move things along,
then on August first, you will boomerang back to your
April second tariff level. So I think we're going to
see a lot of deals very quickly.
Speaker 11 (25:18):
Letters are also expected to go out to one hundred
smaller companies with whom the US doesn't have much trade
and notify them that they'll face higher tariff rates starting
August first as well. In most cases, countries will face
at least a ten percent based tariff rate unless they
reach an agreement with the Trump administration laying out different terms.
That's a quick check off your headlines. As always, we
(25:39):
appreciate having you along for the ride. Now back to
the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 9 (25:55):
This movement will not be silenced. You're listening to the
Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 6 (26:00):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. Email us as always, Freedom at
Charliekirk dot com. You said, my patriots supply guys, is
that right? My Patriots Supply dot Com. Go to My
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patriots supply dot Com. Okay, so in a second, we're
(27:06):
gonna throw to Ben ber Kwam alive in Texas. But
I have to finish this thought. And it's just terrible
what's happening in Texas. We're going to spend some attention,
but I have to finish this. People are saying, Charlie,
you know what about Epstein? Charlie, what about you know,
Iran and et and Yahoo visiting. I said, look, all
that is worthy of maybe a segment that pales in comparison.
Listen to me. That pales in comparison to the civilizational
(27:29):
import of whether or not we have deportations or amnesty.
All of that is small ball. The Epstein thing we
can talk about. We need to we can need we
need to deconstruct the administrative state. We need to unseal documents.
I agree with all that stuff, got it. I'm on
board for all of it. I have as many questions
as you have about all this, but I am a
(27:50):
step ahead and trying to say, listen, this amnesty push
could could ruin everything.
Speaker 7 (27:59):
Now.
Speaker 6 (28:00):
I want to listen to you. I want you to
listen to this. This is Ronald Reagan, who a lot
of people think is wonderful. I think Nald I think
is fine. I think he's generally a good president. There's
a lot of things he did well or than anything else.
He loved America and was a believer in America and
had good intentions. And I think he was a patriot.
And he did help dismantle the Soviet Union, and I
think he deserves a lot of credit for it. But
(28:20):
Reagan exploded the deficit. He expanded the United States military unnecessarily.
He never he never assailed the deep state. And he
did mass amnesty. He's also responsible for no fault divorce
in California, all sorts of stuff. But mass amnesty was
the greatest legislative accomplishment of his term. It was the
one that he, honestly he regretted the most in his
(28:43):
later years. And look, you had a great on a curve.
The Cold War was big, and so I want to
be very clear and fair about that. This is Ronald
Reagan bragging about this piece of legislation. This is Ronald
Reagan telling us that people come from all over the
world to be become Americans. He's pitching mass amnesty to you.
(29:04):
This is Ronald Reagan saying that anybody can be an
American and it's so neoliberal, idealistic. And at the end
of his little diatribe here is one of the more
nauseating one liners from neoliberals, where he says, we get
our strength from people around the world, hold on, hold
(29:27):
on time out here, we get our strength from our culture.
If a nation got their strength from people who just
visited and moved there, then France would be amazing right now,
London would be incredible, Germany would be the greatest country
in the world. Europe would be a great example of
(29:48):
mass migration. It is just pure shallow, neo liberal garbage.
It's just Reagan not thinking very deeply, reading his words
on a piece of paper. This was the Republican Party
before Trump. But I want you to think about what
he's saying here. As he's signing mass amnesty, he's saying
(30:09):
that people that come to the country, that's where we
derive our strength from. Play cut two seventy eight.
Speaker 13 (30:15):
You can go to live in France, but you cannot
become a Frenchman. You can go to live in Germany
or Turkey or Japan, but you cannot become a German,
a Turk or Japanese, But anyone from any corner of
the earth can come to live in America and become
an American. For it's the great life force of each
(30:36):
generation of new Americans that guarantees that America's triumph shall
continue unsurpassed into the next century and beyond. Other countries
may seek to compete with us, but in one vital area,
as a beacon of freedom and opportunity that draws the
people of the world, no country on Earth comes close
(30:57):
because unique among nations draw our people our strength from
every country and every corner of the world. If we
ever closed the door to new Americans, our leadership in
the world would soon be lost.
Speaker 6 (31:12):
If we ever closed the door on new Americans, our
leadership would be lost. That's how you got zoon Momdani.
That's how you got elon Omar. That's how you got
Rashida Talib, that ridiculous pablem that Reagan was pushing. Oh,
if we ever closed the door on Kenyan refugees, I
ever closed the door on people from Uganda, That's how
(31:34):
you have allowed the nation to be infiltrated by Islamists,
third worlders, Haitians that do not assimilate I got to
hit to Ben Berkwam. I've gone way over time on this,
but beware everybody be on guard because on the heels
(31:54):
of this phenomenal legislati accomp from by President Trump on
the border, you knew DC wasn't gonna allowed because they
kind of they sucked it up to vote for all
that border security and that deportation money, and they were whispering.
But we're getting deep, We're getting amnesty next. We got
to nip this in the bud. Not gonna happen redline,
and I trust President Trump to come to that conclusion
(32:18):
declaratively what he said at the rally. I'll defend it.
It's just rhetorical trial, ballooning poll testing. Joining us now
is Ben Burkwan.
Speaker 4 (32:24):
Ben.
Speaker 6 (32:25):
I know you're in kirk County, Texas right now, and
I want to cover that tragedy. But just very quickly,
what did mass amnesty do to California? And then we'll
talk about what's happening in Texas.
Speaker 7 (32:38):
Yeah, it destroyed California. I was living there, you know.
I grew up with parents and missionaries in Africa and
we ended up in California right after in eighty nine,
and we lived from the Pete Wilson era following Ronald
Reagan as governor to Pete Wilson to seeing that state
go from the glory that it was to our country
to a dismal piece of crap state. I mean, to
(33:02):
use articulate language, it's garbage now, and in large part
because of mass amnesty. You're one hundred percent right. You
know who was one of the biggest proponents or opponents
of mass amnesty was Caesar Chavez. He was out there
fighting against it. They didn't want this, the all of these,
the farm labor Union, all these guys hated illegal immigration.
(33:22):
They didn't want it. But we allowed this to happen.
And now this lie that mass amnesty is something good
for Republicans in difficult seats, it's just an absolute lie.
And I hope you're right. I hope that was a
trial balloon. I was at the rally when he said it,
and the entire crowd went silent. There was no cheers
for it. MAGA does not want that, No amnesty to
(33:44):
port all illegals. That's what MAGA wants, So.
Speaker 6 (33:46):
Ben, thank you for that. Now let's go to what's
going on in Texas. It's an unspeakable, terrible tragedy. What
do we need to know about what's going on? Texas?
Walk us through what happened last couple of days. How
did this happen? And how can people help?
Speaker 7 (34:01):
Yeah? This is it is an unspeakable tragedy. I was
actually on my way home for the fourth of July.
I was the first fourth of July I was going
to be able to spend with my family in four years.
I was driving, almost got the Texarcana and then I
got message that they were that this was happening, turned around,
came back down here, and all I can think is,
you know, I missed my family for fourth of July,
but at least I get to go home and see them.
(34:22):
Most up to date numbers we just got this morning
from the sheriff and city administrators eighty two dead, with
fifty five adults, twenty seven children. Ten of these children
from the Mystic Camp, this Christian summer camp that are
still unaccounted for. And I asked the question, what are
we talking what's the total universe of missing? And I've
been asking that the last three days and I have
(34:44):
not gotten an answer. Today they said the same thing,
They can't give an answer, I said, well, are we
talking dozens or hundreds? And the response was a lot,
So you can you can read into that what that means.
It's not dozens. And so that's where we're at right now.
This was a atastrophic weather event. I also followed up
the question and not to get into the weeds on
geoengineering and the rest of it, but there's no question
(35:06):
about it. Texas, a lot of these dry areas have
been using cloud seating for years to help the farmers
in these areas. Last year was one of the driest
years on record. In fact, the river actually stopped running
last year, and so they've been using it. And I
just asked the question, is that as the mainstream media
is going after this, trying to pin this on President Trump,
I think it's legitimate. That's not legitimate. But what's legitimate
(35:28):
is to say, are there other factors that played into this?
The fact that this storm came and stopped basically parked
over Texas for hours and hours and hours, and instead
of jumping four inches to six inches of rain, it
dumped over fifteen in some locations. That's where we're at
right now. You know, it's a tragedy. These kids should
have hopefully, you know, you think back and you think, man,
(35:50):
we should have gotten them out of there. But coming
from Arkansas, spending watching these these weather patterns come up,
you know, you see this all the time, flood warning, floodwatch.
I never think I'm standing. Just to give you perspective,
you can see the broken down car truck behind me.
If I turn the camera, you can see the river
in the distance. There I'm standing fifteen feet underwater where
(36:12):
this flood was. The bridge back behind me there the
water went all the way up to the top of
that bridge. So the amount of water we're talking about
is really unimaginable and it's something that doesn't happen. So
anybody out there saying, well, you should have known, you
should have done, you should have done. We could talk
about all that stuff after the fact. We definitely need
(36:33):
to look at that. Should we have flood sirens like
we have tornado sirens, definitely worth talking about. But right now,
the entire focus is on finding those ten missing girls
and the rest of the missing now presumed, you know,
moving from that rescue to recovery. We're in that phase
now seventy two hours. Very few rescues will happen. We
keep praying, though, and that's my message to everyone. Your
(36:54):
final question, how can people help? There is a community
Hill Country Community Foundation that's set up. Would I would
ask you, guys, don't give your money to Red Cross.
Give your money local to the local community. They know
how best to spend it. And it's the Community Foundation
of the Hill Country. You can go on the City
of Kurville's our Facebook page and can get all the
(37:15):
details there. That's where I would ask you to send
the money, send your donations, don't come here, don't try
to do your own investigations, to do your own recovery efforts.
Don't do that. Let these guys do it. It is
being handled President Trump, Christinom, Governor Abbott down to the
local these guys, I've never seen an operation so efficient
and so good. So keep them in your prayers, keep
(37:35):
the family in your prayers, and if you want to contribute,
do it to the local communities.
Speaker 6 (37:39):
Okay, really quick, one minute remaining, though, Ben, people are
blaming President Trump for this. What is your response to that?
Speaker 7 (37:48):
Yeah, it's absolute nonsense. I watched these Palestine, I watched
North Carolina and Tennessee. The dismal failures of the last
administration when they were blowing wasting all of our money,
trillions of our dollars on things on garbage. What President
Trump is is he is a businessman. He's an efficient businessman.
Everything he does, the decisions he makes are strategic to
making decisions that help our country. Everyone from the top
(38:10):
down has said all of that is absolute nonsense. The reaction,
the response we're seeing here is the top the best
response I've ever seen. Again, having covered all those other
disasters from the local, the state, and the federal level,
this is by far the best response I've ever seen.
Anyone saying otherwise is a.
Speaker 6 (38:26):
Liar ben ber kwam, God bless you. I hope you
get home to your family soon. Thanks for your great work.
Thank you. Email us Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. More
on amnesty after the Break.
Speaker 9 (38:49):
One hundred percent American Maid, darn proud of it.
Speaker 1 (38:54):
The Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 6 (38:56):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. My daughter gave me a new
and this morning to show you a little dog. We're
gonna name him Sparky. So she's watching right now. Hello,
we have the little dog right here. You see the
other day we had Nemo. Today we have Sparky. I
have quite the collection here. I could put it right
on my laptop.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
See.
Speaker 6 (39:18):
I don't know if you guys can see that. Here
you go email us Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. We
have our Student Action Summit. Let's play cut fifty one
this weekend. Play cut fifty one.
Speaker 8 (39:31):
They said gen Z would stay silent, that we'd back down,
that we'd.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
Forget what's worth fighting for.
Speaker 8 (39:37):
But this generation remembers, we remember truth, we remember freedom,
and now we rise.
Speaker 1 (39:45):
This is more than a conference.
Speaker 8 (39:47):
It's a call to action to reclaim the future, to
ignite a movement that cannot be ignored. Student Action Summit
twenty twenty five featuring the boldest voices in the fight.
Charlie Kirk, Secretary, Pete hag Seth Tucker Carlson, Steve Bannon,
Brett Cooper, Secretary, Christy Noman, Riley Gaines, Brandon Tatum, Jack Pisoba,
(40:07):
Laura Ingram, Megan Kelly, Greg Guttfeldt, Tom Homan, Congressman Byron Donalds,
Russell Brand, Savannah Christie joined thousands of students, future leaders
and freedom fighters.
Speaker 1 (40:19):
This is the battleground of ideas. This is the Student
Action Summit.
Speaker 8 (40:25):
Register now at SAS twenty twenty five dot com.
Speaker 6 (40:30):
This weekend. We have Pete Hegseth. We have Christinom, We
have Tucker Carlson, We have Megan Kelly. We have Don Junior,
we have Steve Bannon, we have Greg Guttfeld, we have
Laura Ingram, we have Ross Olbrich. We have Tom Holman,
who's going to talk all about deportations. Byron donalds Russell Brand,
Ben Carson, Brett Cooper, Michael Knowles, Brandon Tatum, Benny Johnson,
Jack Pasovic, Savannah Chrisley, Michael Wattley, Ana Paulina, James o'keef,
(40:52):
Scott Jennings, Dillion Michaels, Chris Babloski, Riley Gaines, Josh Hammer,
and a debate between Dave Smith and Josh Hammer about Israel,
which will definitely be seen around the world. I will
be moderating that debate between Dave Smith and Josh Hammer.
Hopefully we're going to get to some I don't know
agreement clarity, I says twenty twenty five dot com. Okay, everybody,
(41:28):
welcome back. Email us as always Freedom at Charliekirk dot com.
We're here at the Bitcoin dot Com studio, That is
the Bitcoin dot Com studio. Here, I have little dog
Sparky puts all things in perspective. I hope you guys
had a wonderful Independence Day weekend. We're gonna cover the
Epstein files thing, but in some ways, I just want
to take a step back. I want to make sure
(41:48):
you guys understand on the Epstein thing. It's important. It's
all about the administrative state, but you have to rank
things in terms of importance. Our thirty thousand foot view
right now, and we have Mike Benz coming up in
the next hour, so we're gonna talk all about Epstein
stuff well plenty where I want all of your Epstein
questions emailing Freedom at Charliekirk dot com because I got
a lot of questions. I was texting people last night,
(42:10):
a lot of questions. But as we were planning this program,
I said, look, the most important thing is I'm hearing
all the chatter. I'm on these group text and then
I'm getting pitched. And I whenever someone pitches me on
mass amnesty, I say, I see, guys, do you do
you watch the Charlie Kirk Show. The Big Three Objections
(42:30):
and I just want to go through them again. Is
that it's hard to get rid of them. We totally agree.
We know it's hard, but we do hard stuff in America.
By the way, we're already we have self deportations, we
have ICE, we have all that, and then we have
number two. They say, well, so after it's hard, it's
number one. Number two is that, well, it's going to
be economically disruptive. Okay, I can understand that to a
(42:54):
certain extent. But there are legal carve outs for seasonal workers.
There's H two BVSUS. Now I'm very skeptical about that.
I have a lot of concerns about it. But that's
a thing. It exists, so you don't have to march
across the border and illegally domicile yourself. Now the H
two PI, so they're supposed to go home. Again, I
(43:14):
don't trust it. So maybe ICE can be involved in
that and manage it. So that's a whole other component,
but that still exists. That's a thing on the books.
And then the third of which which is the one
that I just it's just someone that does not have
any political pulse on where the current MAGA movement is.
Because if we were to do mass amnesty or anything
(43:35):
adjacent to mass amason. And look, they're not going to
call it amnesty because we have sufficiently been able to
define the terms when it comes to amnesty. Reading this unbelievable.
I'm going to read more of this story, This New
York Times story. Is this, you will see a ten
to fifteen, maybe twenty percent disappearance of the MAGA voter.
(43:58):
If you were to do any form adjacent to amnesty,
you would see an evaporation, a disappearance, a disappearance. Andrew
says more than that. In my opinion, if you even get,
if you even flirt with this idea, it is by
far the number one idea. And let's be honest, guys again,
I Blake is gonna hate this. So Blake's in South
(44:19):
Dakota right now, in Great American country, but I don't care.
I'm gonna say it anyway. He's gonna hate this. We
have all within a couple of weeks. We have a
potential schism over foreign policy. We have the Epstein thing,
and then we have the amnesty push. If you were
trying to divide the movement, and if you were trying
to basically demoralize, especially the under thirty five base that
(44:44):
we have helped build. And I sent this to a
White House staffer. I said, guys, I said, if you
are trying to make my job the hardest possible job,
have like the murkiest statement on Epstein imaginable, which is
kind of what it was. Then you have the whole
foreign policy thing, which again President Trump navigated well, but
(45:04):
still there's some tough feelings. We got to heal those,
We got to remedy that. I'm much more on President
Trump's side than that, but I know the audience that
I represent. And then you just have a gut punch
potentially of amnesty on top of that. This is cut
two fifty two. Hold on, is it two fifty two?
Which one? I want to make sure I get the
right one because running out of time. Which one is
the best one?
Speaker 12 (45:24):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (45:24):
Yeah, this is.
Speaker 6 (45:25):
Two fifty this. Oh, we need amnesty because the American
people want to know. Actually, people want mass deportations. Play
cut two.
Speaker 4 (45:34):
Fifty all immigrants who are here illegally fifty five percent
of the New York Times, Marquette sixty four percent, CBS
News fifty percent, ABC News with a slightly different question
fifty six percent. So what you're seeing essentially here is
very clear indication that a majority of Americans, in fact,
when they're asked us one question, which I believe gets
that the underlying feelings, do in fact want it to
(45:56):
port all immigrants who are here illegally. There's no arguing
with these different numbers because they're all essentially the same
across four different.
Speaker 6 (46:03):
Posters fifty five, sixty four, fifty seven, fifty six. You
can't get a majority agreement on anything, and that is
all illegal aliens. America has been overrun. We have been
the charity case of the Third World. Biden showed open
borders and it's full horror, and we are sick of
(46:24):
being overrun. So we have a mandate to solve this.
Voters voted for this, So why are we even whispering
about potentially some sort of bipartisan compromise, especially when nineteen
eighty six is flagrantly in our face and we're winning
Hispanics in major numbers. This is the red line, and
I think President Trump is going to come to that conclusion.
(46:47):
But we must stay the course. We must not get
weak in the knees, stay focused. This is what the
American people voted for It's the biggest thing happening in
the country. We'll talk Epstein after the break.
Speaker 11 (47:16):
More and more people are learning about living healthier and
losing weight, not just pounds, and they're doing so by
tuning into our energized health segments with John Jubilee.
Speaker 5 (47:25):
Hi everyone, I'm tearing Spates.
Speaker 11 (47:26):
We appreciate you being here with us. Allow me to
introduce you to a couple that not only tuned into
John Jubilee but also jumped right.
Speaker 7 (47:34):
In that I have lost fifty three pounds since we started.
Speaker 14 (47:41):
Okay, my weight change was seventeen pounds. I'm melting away. Well,
the cool thing is we are eighty six inches closer together.
Tell everybody it has brought us together, but not just physically,
spiritually as well.
Speaker 11 (47:57):
Oh absolutely, you're John joining us again this morning on
how your health truly impacts everything else in your life.
Speaker 5 (48:05):
John, Good to see you.
Speaker 3 (48:07):
Great to see you, Terrence. So let's start there.
Speaker 11 (48:10):
Health really is the key, it's the foundation. Everything else
emanates from it.
Speaker 15 (48:15):
Well, it really does, Terrence. You see that couple. You
see that couple and yeah, you know, they lost almost
one hundred pounds of fat. They lost eighty six inches,
So it brought them closer together physically literally physically eighty
six inches closer. That's funny that she said that, right,
But notice then she immediately said, and we're.
Speaker 3 (48:36):
Closer together spiritually. And why does that happen?
Speaker 15 (48:40):
Well, it's because when when we're struggling, when we're broken
or we've got those those things holding us back physically,
we can't be who we're really supposed to be spiritually
or mentally. Either we can't show up for our spouse
because we can't even show up for ourself. And so
(49:02):
it all just starts with taking that first step of saying, okay,
what's in my hand?
Speaker 3 (49:07):
What can I control?
Speaker 15 (49:09):
Well, you know what, I can choose to do a
scientific health protocol that for sure is going to take
care of my physical side and then at energize health.
To my knowledge, we're the only all encompassing, science backed,
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(49:29):
the soul, and the body.
Speaker 11 (49:31):
And I'm glad you brought up and you kind of
touched on relationships because there's studies out there that basically
say when someone doesn't feel well physically or emotionally, they
tend to create distance in their marriages, their friendships, and
their other family dynamic relationships.
Speaker 5 (49:47):
Talk about that.
Speaker 3 (49:49):
Yeah, well, Terrence, it's a natural thing.
Speaker 15 (49:51):
I mean, we don't, we don't really think about it,
but it's true for all of us.
Speaker 3 (49:56):
And so you know, let's just take a migraine heache.
Speaker 15 (50:00):
If you have a migraine headache, well, you know, can
you be loving to your spouse? Can you even listen
to what they're saying? Let alone try to meet their needs? Well,
of course not why because you're debilitated. All you're thinking
about is I want this headache to go away. Or
if you have joint pain, you don't realize it, but somebcusciously,
(50:22):
all you're thinking is I'm in pain.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
I want this pain to go away.
Speaker 15 (50:27):
You know, there's a saying, Terrence that you know, a
person with perfect health has one hundred they have one
hundred dreams, but a person with poor health has one dream.
Speaker 3 (50:39):
They just want to be healthy. And that's the power
of our health.
Speaker 15 (50:43):
Like if we don't have our health, it becomes the
all encompassing thing, and all we think about is I
want to feel better. I feel bad. I want to
feel better, I feel bad. We can't really show up
in relationships for our children, for our grandchildren, for our spouse.
But health is the thing to go focus on first.
And Terrence, I can go to the highest authority on
(51:05):
the planet, you know, which is God's word in the
Holy Bible. He said, Beloved, I wish above all things,
it's in the Bible.
Speaker 3 (51:14):
I wish above all things that you be in health.
Speaker 15 (51:17):
Because God knew if we didn't have our health, we
can't show up for anyone in life without our health.
Speaker 11 (51:23):
And that's where you come in. You're showing up to
help people get healthier, tell them how they can get
in contact with you, and start the program. It's about
thirty seconds.
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Yeah yeah, So guys, listen, we've been helping people for
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(51:54):
let us help you be your best.
Speaker 11 (51:56):
Johnny Jay, John Jubilee always get to see my friend.
We appreciate your time. That's a quick check of your
news break. We appreciate you being here with us.
Speaker 6 (52:22):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. Email us as always Freedom at
Charliekirk dot com. We heard at the Bitcoin dot Com Studio,
that is the Bitcoin dot Com studio. Joining us now
is Mike Benz, the Foundation for Freedom Online. You can
find him on ex at Mike Ben's cyber Mike, We're
going to try to get through as much as we
can with you.
Speaker 5 (52:40):
Mike.
Speaker 6 (52:40):
Let's just start with the facts for those people that
were enjoying a Sunday evening. You see, this is how
perversas all is here. I am on this beautiful Sunday
evening and the sun is setting and the Cubs are
up eleven nothing at Wrigleyfield on Sunday night baseball against
the wretched Saint Louis Cardinals. My phone is lighting up
like a Christmas tree, all about Epstein. I said, whoever
is responsible for this will be forever scorned in my life.
(53:01):
I said, I had a beautiful Sunday evening, the Cubs
are finally good for the first time in a decade,
and my daughter's watching the Cubs, and I have to
worry about Epstein. So what is it that got me
so distracted away from the Cubs up eleven nothing against
the Saint Louis Cardinals.
Speaker 16 (53:13):
Mike Bence, Well, we don't fully know yet because this
is all happening both quickly and then and then kind
of no official word. This is basically an Axios exclusive
that published what they what they said was and the
official results of a of the Justice Department investigation into
(53:36):
Jeffrey Epstein, with the Justice Department concluding that Epstein killed himself,
that Epstein had no client list, and you know that, effectively,
there was no further investigations pending into into the Epstein
affair at least related to many of these key issues
(53:59):
that so many people had been have been concerned about
for the past several decades now, but especially since twenty nineteen, particularly,
I think the new information on there after what the
FBI has been saying is the idea that there's no
client list. That effectively the reference to that Pam Bondi
(54:25):
made earlier this year that the Jeffrey Epstein client list
was sitting on her desk for review, that it actually
did not exist at all, is what that document suggests.
Speaker 13 (54:37):
Now.
Speaker 16 (54:37):
What's interesting is we don't know how official that is
from Axios. They posted a DOJ document on their news
article write up, and then within hours of uploading it,
they removed the document from the article. Now I don't
know if that's because of a potential legal.
Speaker 5 (54:59):
Action from the Justice Department against them.
Speaker 16 (55:01):
It does not appear that the Justice Department gave them
this exclusive, I should say, because there's no quotes from
senior DOJ officials around it. There's not, to my knowledge,
been official acknowledgment by the Justice Department of this Axios report.
But effectively the Internet pulled the document before before Axios
(55:23):
deleted it. And now this appears to be so really quick.
Speaker 6 (55:28):
So Mike, let's assume that it's real, because the reason
why I think it might be real is no one
has publicly come out and said it's not, so we
haven't seen like a hey, we're going after a leaker
type thing. So let's just assume you might be right
that it's real. What did we learn? They said that
there is no client list, but we're not getting the
victims list? Are there? Will there be any files disclosed?
(55:51):
And also talk about the comment on how Jeffrey Epstein died.
Speaker 16 (55:56):
Right, Well, this now gives a Justice Department radication. Assuming
that this is all true, This gives a Justice Department
ratification to what we've heard from the FBI for the
past several months. That Epstein killed himself, and this coming
from the Justice Department is much much bigger than it
(56:16):
coming from the FBI.
Speaker 5 (56:18):
The FBI is the.
Speaker 16 (56:19):
Investigative arm of the Justice Department, but the Justice Department
is really the keeper of all information. The elephant in
the room around the Epstein story has always been the
Justice Department two thousand and eight Sweetheart Deal with Jeffrey Epstein,
where the senior DOJ official Alex Acosta reportedly said that
(56:39):
he was quote told to back off Epstein because he
belonged to intelligence. That was then effectively left a giant
neutron bomb in Washington about how all of the potential
child sex trafficking and Wall Street deal making and sort
(57:01):
of covert arms dealing and everything else that Epstein was
involved in went much bigger than one kind of perverted
megalomaniac figure, but was rather tied to the highest levels
of power in Washington, d C. Now at the time,
the head of the Justice Department, Bill Barr, when Epstein died,
(57:21):
was not only personally connected to the Epstein affair through
Donald Barr, Bill Barr's father, who of course was with
Jeffrey Epstein at the Dalton School. Donald Barr was a
part of the founding of the Central Intelligence Agency, and
Bill Barr himself began his career as first seven years
at the CIA. So there's been lingering questions for this
(57:44):
Justice Department being more independent from those networks to be
able to get answers. Now effectively, there really has been
none on that side of it. There's no supporting evidence
that's provided in this Act leak about the contents of
what was reviewed. For example, we don't know what conversations
(58:05):
Pam Bondi may have had or not had with John Ratcliffe,
the CIA director.
Speaker 5 (58:10):
We don't know what search queries were.
Speaker 16 (58:12):
Put into CIA files or cables with.
Speaker 5 (58:16):
Reference to Epstein or the network.
Speaker 16 (58:18):
Alex Acosta, the prosecutor who was reportedly made that statement
about Epstein belonging to intelligence, and then when he was
questioned about it when he became a Cabinet secretary official
as the head of the Department of Labor for the
Trump administration, publicly, when he was questioned about it, he
(58:39):
said he could neither confirm nor deny, which I think
everyone thought was about as shady as it gets, and
then a very you know, strange Justice Department Office of
Professional Responsibility Investigation only relegated the intelligence question to a
single footnote where they reportedly asked a cost a kind
(59:01):
of tangential leading question, uh saying did you have knowledge
that Epstein was an intelligence asset? Acosta said no, but
that's a very easy no. If you don't have firsthand knowledge,
any lawyer would tell you answer only the question that
you're asked, not not you know.
Speaker 6 (59:22):
And we have a break. I'm sorry, don't mean to
cut you off because your commentary is always phenomenal. But
is it true that there's a missing safe from Jeffrey
Epstein after the FBI raid? Is that correct?
Speaker 5 (59:35):
I don't know about the contents of that.
Speaker 16 (59:37):
I've read essentially, you know, secondhand reports on it. I
don't know about you know what the FBI's knowledge on
that is. And part of this is we're all operating
in a vacuum because there's been no real transparency. When
Tulsa Gabbert did the JFK files drop, they put eighty
(59:59):
thousand dollar documents in a giant wikiliks style index and
said internet have added and that I think was a
phenomenal example of how you at least engage with the
public even if the answers are not satisfactory, you're at
least showing your work. Here are the files that we saw.
Now you see them. Come to your own conclusion. Here's
(01:00:22):
our conclusion. This has not been done in the Epstein case.
We're getting trust me. We've made this determination without any
supporting files.
Speaker 6 (01:00:31):
Well, and I know very little about Again, I know
the people involved, I know Cash, I know Bongino, I
know Pambondi. So I I tilt towards trust. But do
you trust what we're being told? Your mic?
Speaker 16 (01:00:43):
Well, the issue is is I don't operate on trust.
I think that Cash and Dan are phenomenal, and I
don't think that this is an FBI thing. Frankly, I
think that you're when you're talking about the foreign intelligence
networks that Epstein was involved in since nineteen eighty one,
this is his whole story.
Speaker 6 (01:01:03):
Well, but let's just sorry, so, but do you mean
do you mean is Raeli intelligence, Saudi intelligence? What do
you think he was likely a a attache for?
Speaker 16 (01:01:13):
I think you have a global network here that spans
the Central Intelligence Agency in the US that spans British
intelligence is rarely intelligence Saudi intelligence. How does how does
Jeffrey Epstein go to be the primary financial embezzler but
the embezzler for a non koshogi the guy who personally
(01:01:33):
negotiated and fronted the money for the arms for hostages
when we were running missiles to Iran during the Iran contraction.
Speaker 6 (01:01:45):
Look, and even better argument that's a good one is
that this guy goes from a math teacher to living
a multiple billionaire type lifestyle with some of the most
incredible real estate ever. And no one has any records
of trades from this guy.
Speaker 5 (01:01:58):
Ever.
Speaker 16 (01:01:59):
Non koshogi work directly with the Central Intelligence Agency for
all of it. The head of the BCCI bank testified
to that in person during during that that scandal's emergency.
Speaker 6 (01:02:12):
We have you for another one. Yes, sorry one sec Mike.
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Speaker 1 (01:03:03):
The next Great Awakening is here. Welcome back to the
Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 6 (01:03:10):
Welcome back, everybody. Email us is always freedom at Charlie
Kirk dot com. Breaking news here on the program. Let's
see here. I'm gonna play this just kind of read
this tweet here following our segment here in our one,
multiple Republican members of Congress, including Senator Eric Schmidt Randy
Fine come out immediately against any form of mass amnesty
following our program that DC forces are pushing President Trump
(01:03:33):
for it. So we already have lawmakers that are following
the narrative that is established here on this program. And
so thank you guys for supporting this program. And for
being in the trenches. Whyrefight dot com, Why Refi, They're
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(01:04:16):
hear that pop? That is the sound of the trial
balloon that has been on this program. We'll be right back.
(01:04:37):
Just a reminder, we have our Student Action sum at
all ages are welcome. It is a game changer event.
We're he at the Bitcoin dot Com studio coming up
this weekend. Sas twenty twenty five dot com. All right, Mike,
I cut you off. So, Mike, I think that you
and I both believe that he had some sort of
relationship with foreign intelligence and maybe domestic intelligence. There's just
(01:04:58):
no way he was able to get that magnitude of
wealth that quickly, being a vastly unimpressive person when you
met him in person. I never met him, but a
lot of people met him that I know that. Of course,
we're not involved in his whole scheme, and they just said,
this guy's underwhelming, Like, this guy was not some sort
of brainiac. He was kind of just very crass and
(01:05:18):
very obviously into women. That was his whole thing. So
here's my question, Mike, why the shift where we were
told there was a client list and now it doesn't exist.
Was that a rhetorical misstep or do you think it
suggests something else?
Speaker 16 (01:05:35):
Well, it is very possible that Pam Bondi was referring
to the so called Little Black Book, which was partially
admitted into evidence during the Glenn Maxwell trial, and that
referred to contacts and addresses rather than a formal client list.
I think that is possible. But to me, the great
unanswered question here is why are we asking about the
(01:05:58):
FBI when we should be talking about the CIA and
getting answers on that question because the CIA question will
get you to the foreign intelligence aspects. There's simply no
way on planet Earth that the Central Intelligence Agency does
not have documents at least referencing Jeffrey Epstein, given that
his whole life story for the thirty years preceding his
(01:06:21):
death was a CIA story. Jeffrey Epstein was in the
middle of Iran Kantra, the CIA operation to run guns
to the Nicaraguan contras and of funnel arms to Iran
in illicit covert arms dealings with odd non Koshogi as
the middleman, and Jeffrey Epstein was the financial fixer for that.
(01:06:46):
It was Jeffrey Epstein who personally negotiated the transfer of
the CI's proprietary airline, Air America, which became Southern Air
Transport after it was busted doing covert CIA drug and
gun trafficking. It moved from Miami, where Epstein had one home,
to Columbus, Ohio, where Epstein had the other.
Speaker 5 (01:07:07):
While he was less West's right exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:07:10):
The Columbus is totally Wexner, and Wexner, by the way,
very well, I also have foreign intelligence ties. I mean
very well.
Speaker 16 (01:07:17):
That's a CIA proprietary airline that Jeffrey Epstein negotiated to
do that, and from his ties to the gun running world,
to the to the the entire gamut of international affairs,
from the Safari Club, all of this is But the
fact is, why don't we have anything from Pam Body.
Speaker 5 (01:07:39):
So here's what I'm cia.
Speaker 6 (01:07:40):
Here's what I'm I'm told that these are all under
seal from the judge. But can't the Department of Justice
move to unsealed things that were put under seal? Isn't
that technically the way that this could potentially be brought
to the public, Because I think we need mass disclosure.
I think we need more information, at least for my
under thirty crowd. I know my demo. They are volcanic
(01:08:01):
over this whole thing. And by the way, over sixty
crowd they're like Epstein whatever, not a big deal, No,
But under thirty, can you explain that to our audience,
to Mike the hyper online under thirty crowd, this is
a major major issue.
Speaker 16 (01:08:14):
Well, because if you can get away with this, you
can get away with anything.
Speaker 5 (01:08:17):
This was so in your face.
Speaker 16 (01:08:20):
You're talking about mass child sex trafficking with a little
Saint James Island in broad daylight that everyone you know
and love and see on TV is going there, and
if even that person is given a sweetheart deal by
the Justice departments. Family friends with two Attorney Generals, Bill
(01:08:42):
Barr and John Mitchell. John Mitchell was the head of
the Justice Department for Richard Nixon who personally introduced Jeffrey
Epstein to Odd Non Koshogi to do the CIA gun
running during Iran Kantra. If at the end of that
you don't get a single CIA file on this guy
despite having reported testimony from the head of the Justice Department,
(01:09:03):
where now eleven months of his emails go missing? Is
DOJ dot gov emails go missing as soon as the
DOJ starts investigating. And to have no transparent I mean,
this is supposed to be the most transparent administration ever.
It looked like when when Tulsi was doing the JFK files,
(01:09:24):
it looked like that was supposed to be a kind
of prelude to the disclosures we were going to get
on Epstein. And it may be the case that Epstein
killed himself. It may be the case that there's you know,
no client list, so to speak. It but I want
to see what they see. You can you can show us.
There's so many layers here.
Speaker 6 (01:09:43):
We got to go there's and Mike, you're doing an
amazing job here. There's so many layers. What I am
most interested in is a the cover up. And look,
are there a bunch of rich slobs in Palm Beach?
Not Donald Trump obviously, because if Donald Trump will have
been on here, they would have lead it. Are there
a bunch of rich slobs in Palm Beach that were
probably involved in some really sultry beneath the table disgusting
sex stuff with Epstein? Yes, that's not like breaking news.
(01:10:07):
More importantly, and I think you're onto something. Was he
used as an instrument of domestic or foreign intelligence and
was then used against our own country? And for what purpose?
That's the question. Mike, Ben's want to have you on
another time. Great work, and we have Byron Donald is
next Governor.
Speaker 11 (01:10:23):
Flor Welcome back to this Real America's Voice News Break.
Speaker 5 (01:10:33):
I'm Terrence Bates.
Speaker 11 (01:10:34):
President Trump has set to sign a new executive order
this afternoon. He'll also meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Nett Yahoo at the White House this evening. The Prime
minister touchdown earlier this morning and we'll meet with Middle
East Envoy Steve Whitkoff before heading Before sitting down with
the President, the proposed ceasefire deal between Israel and Amas,
which could pause the fighting in Gaza, will likely be
(01:10:58):
on the agenda before Israel. The Prime Minister said that
work is underway to achieve that deal. He also said
President Trump quote can definitely help advance this outcome which
we all hope for. The meeting may also be an
opportunity for the Allies to take a victory lap of
sorts related to the so called Twelve Day War with Iran,
which ended with the US demolishing Iran's latest nuclear or
(01:11:21):
largest nuclear facilities. And with so much happening at the
White House, Press Secretary Caroline Levitt preparing to kick the
week off with her latest press briefing. It's slated to
get underway at the top of the hour, will of
course have live coverage here on Real America's Voice plus
RAF's chief White House correspondent, Brian Glenn will be in
the new media seat today. Among the issues we expect
(01:11:43):
the Press Secretary to discuss are the deadly floods in Texas,
along with the President's upcoming visit with Israeli counterpart Benjamin
Nett and Yahu. Tariffs and the reaction to the signing
and implementation of the One Big Beautiful Bill will likely
be topics of conversation as well. Trade likely part of
the conversation today. President Trump says he's expecting finalization of
(01:12:05):
several trade agreements in the coming days. The Commander in
chief also saying that countries will be notified of higher
tariff rates by Wednesday.
Speaker 12 (01:12:13):
President Trump's going to be sending letters to some of
our trading partners, saying that if you don't move things along,
then on August first, you will boomerang back to your
April second tariff level. So I think we're going to
see a lot of deals very quickly.
Speaker 11 (01:12:30):
Letters are also expected to go out to one hundred
smaller companies with whom the US doesn't have much trade
and notify them that they'll face higher tariff rates starting
August first as well. In most cases, countries will face
at least a ten percent based tariff rate unless they
reach an agreement with the Trump administration laying out different terms.
That's a great check off your headlines. As always, we
(01:12:51):
appreciate having you along for the ride. Now back to
the Charlie kirkshow.
Speaker 1 (01:13:10):
We will not.
Speaker 9 (01:13:10):
Come fine you listening to the sound of freedom.
Speaker 1 (01:13:14):
It's the charliekirkshow.
Speaker 6 (01:13:16):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. Email us is always freedom at
Charliekirk dot com. Here at the Bitcoin dot com Studio.
What do we have, guys? What is that? It's time
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switch today patriotmobile dot com slash Charlie. Email us as
always freedom at Charliekirk dot com and subscribe to our podcast.
Joining us now is the next governor of the Great
State of Florida. Congressman Byron Donald's Congressman, welcome to the program.
Really quick out of the gate, we were talking about how
there is this push for amnesty and I first had
(01:14:43):
experience from this. Can you also confirm that you've heard
these rumors as well.
Speaker 17 (01:14:48):
I've heard talk about it on the hill, But to
be honest with you, I don't think the votes are there.
Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
I know that's not something I could support.
Speaker 17 (01:14:54):
And let's be very clear why we've had a legal
immigration issue in the United States for really forty years.
What Joe Biden did the last four was the most
unconscionable of all of it. So what we need to do, Charlie,
is following what President Trump's already done, which is secure
the southern border. That's step one. Step two is finishing
border wall construction and the other elements of complete border
(01:15:15):
wall construction and border security at the southern border and
also at the northern border.
Speaker 6 (01:15:20):
That's what the One Big.
Speaker 1 (01:15:20):
Beautiful Bill did.
Speaker 17 (01:15:22):
The third piece is going to be the deportation efforts
along with consistent border security, and that's where this thing
is really going to either come together or fall apart.
And so I think you got to accomplish the first three,
the third of which is going to take several years
really for the American people to know that America's government
is serious about securing the nation and not just playing
(01:15:43):
games with border security. That's how we got into this
mess in the first place. So I don't think it
has the votes in the House. Number two. That's not
something I can support. We got to obviously secure the border,
send a lot of people home. But when it comes
to mass amnesty, I'm not there, and I think there
are a lot of members that aren't there either.
Speaker 6 (01:16:00):
There's a red line no mass amnesty and you and
I both they're hearing the same kind of chatter and
the same sort of nonsense that is being pushed. So
let's now talk about how important the Big Beautiful Bill
is and how it funded ICE and funded the mass
deportation effort. That is what we should be emphasizing, how
we're gonna get deportations because of the Big Beautiful Bill.
(01:16:21):
Brag on it to our audience that might not quite
understand the accomplishment, the civilizational win that is included in
the Big Beautiful Bill.
Speaker 17 (01:16:31):
Well, I'll go back to border security before I get
to the tax pieces. We're talking about one hundred and
fifty billion dollars to do the very thing that conservatives, Republicans,
and quite frankly, most Americans have been wanting to see
since Reagan's amnesty.
Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
In nineteen eighty six.
Speaker 17 (01:16:46):
So since nineteen eighty six, there was a promise from
the Democrats to fund border wall construction. They renigged on
that deal. Donald Trump had to fight tooth and nail
just to be able to build a couple hundred miles
of it. We are not gonna finish border walk and
str diruction that's in this bill. Second thing that's in
this bill is the Logistical Forces bedspace vehicles for Tom
(01:17:08):
Holman and Christy Nome to do the job of sending
criminal illegals out of this country in a timely matter
and then beginning to work through the more than ten
million that Joe Biden led in. People need to know
what Joe Biden did was at a combination of things.
He did asylums, he did parole. He expanded children coming
across the border without adults. They were actually separating kids
(01:17:30):
from their parents at the southern border because they figured
it was easier back with Title forty two to bring
unaccompanied miners into the country before Title forty two was
rescinded and then they had to come back in. They
had to come in with an adult. So the Big
Beautiful Bill lets all of us to accomplish that. When
it comes to defense, it gives us money to modernize
the Defense Department in terms of the war fighting effort.
(01:17:53):
Wars and how they have been fought historically have changed
changed significantly over the last decade. What is just did
in Iran is indicative of that, where it wasn't just
your airplanes, it was also drone technology being used on
the ground to take out small sites on the ground,
so we have to modernize DoD that's in the bill.
There is provisions in there of being able to become
(01:18:15):
energy dominant Droe Baby drill like the President likes to
talk about. That's going to mean a lot for the
future of our energy security. And then when it comes
to tax policy, this is the largest middle class tax
cut in American history. What we did at the top
rates is we kept those consistent, so your top earners
just have consistent policy back from twenty seventeen. That's great
(01:18:36):
stuff in tax policy. But with the new stuff, no
tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax I
believe it's on the first there's an additional six thousand
dollars tax credit for Social Security benefits that helps seniors
on the bottom end of the income ladder, working families
as middle class families.
Speaker 1 (01:18:53):
We kept small.
Speaker 17 (01:18:53):
Business taxes consistent to Schedule one ninety nine eight that
was scheduled to go up, so we kept that consistent
over the next deck. Actually, I think that part's permanent.
We brought in one hundred percent expensing for the next
couple of years, so if a business goes out and
acquires a piece of equipment, they could expense that one
hundred percent on their taxes and have to follow some
accountant derived depreciation schedule. To help the tax people in Washington, DC.
(01:19:18):
So we did monumental tax policy which is going to
stabilize not just our economy, but allow it to grow
into the future with energy policy and then the policies
that Donald Trump campaigned on that the American people wanted,
which is security of the border and deportations for illegals.
Speaker 6 (01:19:34):
So explain the depreciation. For some people in our audience
that don't run businesses, they don't quite understand it. What
will this mean for economic growth, for people that are
now talking about buying new machinery, buying new forklifts, What
does this mean for a company business improvements? And what
is this proven to do on the industrial side of
(01:19:58):
our economy.
Speaker 17 (01:20:00):
Well, under the president's first tax policy, there was a
provision for one hundred percent what we call expensing in
the first year meeting. If you buy a piece of
equipment under the old tax system, you would depreciate or
shave off a portion of that value over a period
of years. So if you bought a press, a hydraulic press,
(01:20:21):
let's say you could actually you would have to depreciate
or take a portion of that value over the next
five or seven years on your taxes, and you could
probably take the first thirty percent in year one, another
twenty percent in year two, and that number would shrink
every single year until you got to year seven. So
as a business, you'd put that money out in year
(01:20:41):
run in year one, but you wouldn't be able to
deduct it off your taxes until over a seven year period,
which means you delay actually seeing the benefits from a
tax perspective on writing down the amount of income. What
we did is say if you bought the piece of
equipment in year one, you get to deduct it in
year one all your tax liability. What that's going to
(01:21:02):
help businesses do is it's going to incentivize them making
capital expenditures in our economy immediately, as opposed to having
to find a way to scale out the cost over
several years. With the president's position on trade policy trying
to bring manufacturing back to the United States, what that
means is if somebody decides that they're going to get
(01:21:22):
out of China and build a plant in America, they
would be able to expense the cost of building that
plant in the first year. Major incentive for bringing manufacturing
to the United States or for businesses currently in the
United States to expand your manufacturing capabilities or any other
capabilities they might be doing. Great win for economic growth.
Speaker 6 (01:21:42):
What a phenomenal explanation there, Thank you, Byron. Byron. Can
you also dive into this one thousand dollars investment account
that every new baby is going to get, the Trump
baby bonus account if you will? And look, I don't
like to racialize our politics. I think that's dumb and
it's terrible. But a complaint that you get and that
I get whenever I talk to black communities or the
(01:22:03):
black voting block is they say, what have politicians ever
done for me or for my kids? Well, now we
can say, for every new baby, black, White, Hispanic, Asian,
do you have a one thousand dollars investment account that
can mature beautifully over eighteen years. What will that mean
not just for the politics, but also creating stakeholders that
they have some form of Dare I say equity in
(01:22:24):
the system.
Speaker 17 (01:22:26):
Yeah. What that will do essentially creates a wealth fund
for every child in America is what it's going to
do as long as you know parents or the guardian
leaves those funds in the account. When you have a
deposit like that when a child is born for the
first eighteen years of life, I mean, assuming that the
money grows at a normal interest rate, what you would
(01:22:48):
have is a growing nest egg for that baby when
they're born. That whether it's age eighteen, when they become
adults and it becomes their property, or what they really
should do is not touch it at all and leave
it until the age of sixty five or seventy or
seventy two, whenever they decide.
Speaker 6 (01:23:06):
I agree. I was told though that it's lock box.
Does that not true or can?
Speaker 12 (01:23:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 17 (01:23:10):
It today it is, and so I will say that.
You know, the one thing about Congress is a current
Congress can bind a future. Once it is something always
is something. You have to stay vigilant.
Speaker 6 (01:23:20):
I just imagine, I just want to understand that the
moral perversion. Could you imagine that we finally have a
win for our kids. We finally have something that is
secure and safe and one way drop box, and some
degenerate Congress in the future will be like, hey, now
parents can access it, so we could further rob our
kids of their future. So I'm glad you put that
(01:23:40):
covey on it. But the way it's written right now,
parents can't access it. Is that right?
Speaker 17 (01:23:45):
That is correct. The way it is right now, it's
lock box. And I was stressed. This is why people
have to stay vigilant because future congresses they can do
what they want to do. But that being said, what
this would do is it provides people with an ability
to begin to be in the game of building wealth,
really building generational wealth. And you would think like, oh,
it's one thousand dollars, it's not a lot, But when
you look at time value of money, which is the
(01:24:06):
eighth wonder of the world, that deposit will grow over time.
For all your listeners and finance, it's called the rule
of seventy two. The rule of seventy two is is
that if your money earns seven point two percent over
a decade, it doubles over that decade. The e commerce
is also true. If your money owns ten percent over
(01:24:28):
every seven point two years, it doubles. So your thousand
theoretically can go to two thousand to four thousand to
eight thousand. And that doesn't say about it and it
don't say anything against the parents or that individual child
deciding to open up other investment accounts and making other
deposits as well. Like my son is twenty one, just
started his job last week. The thing we talked to
(01:24:50):
him about is start saving. Start saving now, just put
it away because trust me, by the time you start
getting into your sixties, it'll be a major pot of money.
A couple million dollars actually, when you'd sit back and
look at it, all the stuff you did.
Speaker 6 (01:25:04):
So final thought here, I know that you and your wife,
Eric Ababa, you guys are going to be at our
Student Action summit this weekend are huge school choice advocates.
This bill doesn't get it all done, but it's still
a massive school choice win accomplishment. Just thirty seconds brag
on that for our audience, please Byron Donald's.
Speaker 17 (01:25:22):
For the first time ever, there are federal tax credits
for school choice. You will be able to, up to
a certain threshold, deduct the costs of putting your child
in a school that you want from your federal income taxes.
Major win for the school choice movement. There was more
we wish we could have got done, but this is
a great first step. And like I said, can't find
future Congress, we could always add on to it going.
Speaker 6 (01:25:44):
Forward, Byron, great job. We're behind you one hundred percent
as you seek to be governor of the state of Florida.
We will see this weekend in Tampa. God bless my friend.
Thank you. See you are friendic Okay, I don't have
a Good Ranchers hand. Oh yes, I know. I don't
think Daisy gave me a Good Ranters thing here, So
therefore I am just gonna have to go on about
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(01:26:07):
how it works with Good Ranchers. They're incredible. So you
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I mean, there's so many people that I saw this
July fourth weekend that we're using Good Ranchers. They talked
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about it. They said, I have all this amazing Good
Ranchers meat, and I'm telling you these chicken nuggets they
are lethal. Well they're not lethal, but they're so good
that they are like to die for for. My kids
love them, my son and my daughter. They say, why
don't we getting more chicken nuggets? Go to good ranchers
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The wagu beef. The cloudyd beef is really good. Good
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ranchers dot com promo codekirk. More on amnesty after the.
Speaker 18 (01:26:54):
Breaking negotiations and discussions that are taking place. But as
for the takeover of Gaz, I don't believe the President
ever said that. I think he discussed a rebuilding of
Gaza once this war is over. This has become an
uninhabitable place for human beings, and the President has a
(01:27:15):
big heart. He wants this to be a prosperous, safe
part of the region where people and families can thrive.
And there will be a need for a real rebuilding.
Speaker 19 (01:27:24):
Effort when the time comes. But right now, we need
to end this war and we need to bring all
of the hostages home. The President is adamant about that.
Speaker 12 (01:27:33):
Again.
Speaker 19 (01:27:33):
I will let the President speak for himself later if
he decides to comment on the details of the agreement,
but out of respect for the discussions, I won't do that.
Speaker 5 (01:27:40):
From the podium.
Speaker 20 (01:27:41):
So Congressman Lawler and Gottheimer had introduced to bill in
Congress the bunker Buster Act that would allow the United
States to sell the shoe bombers and bunker Buster bombs
to Israel. Is that something the president would support?
Speaker 19 (01:27:55):
Well, I don't know if the president's aware of the
bunker Buster Act, but I will ask him and see
what his opinion on that is.
Speaker 6 (01:28:01):
I'm not sure.
Speaker 13 (01:28:04):
Ca.
Speaker 14 (01:28:04):
Thank you Carolyn Building.
Speaker 10 (01:28:06):
After the question earlier about the shooter in Texas who
targeted ice actually as for porn to today, I believe
that Democrat lawmakers were saying their constituents are calling on
them to be more violent when they go to ICE facilities,
including I believe they want them to shed blood, and
that they said that Democrat lawmakers should be willing to
get shot themselves.
Speaker 14 (01:28:24):
Can you respond to that?
Speaker 4 (01:28:25):
And do you have concerns that.
Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Any of people?
Speaker 6 (01:28:34):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. Do we have a partner or no?
Bitcoin dot com is amazing, buy sell, trade bitcoin at
bitcoin dot com. That is the Bitcoin dot Com studio,
Bitcoin dot Com Studio. Some people very upset that I
touched the third rail and I dared criticize the holiness
(01:28:55):
of mister Reagan. I'm sorry. He wasn't a perfect president. Okay,
there's a lot he did wrong. Mnesty was a catastrophic failure.
He was a good president, he did more good than bad,
but he was not perfect, and he should not. I
actually think that a lot of the problems of the
modern conservative neoliberal movement is the over veneration of Ronald Reagan.
(01:29:16):
I don't think we should insult him. He wasn't a
bad president. He was far better than hw Bush. He
was way better than Carter. We came out of a
Malay's interest rates went to I mean, of course, but
there was there's this over veneration with Reagan. That means
we need more heroes. Okay, that means that there are
other things. The conservative mind in the modern era that
I was raised in is World War Two is basically
(01:29:37):
the most important event ever to exist, and Reagan was
the greatest thing ever. Fine, okay, but honestly, I think
Dwight D. Eisenhower was a better president than round Reagan.
I think Eisenhower was a much better president, and every
objective possible way, Eisenhower was probably top three of my
favorite presidents. Eisenhower did deportations. He built the American Highway System.
He was non ideological when it came to trade and
(01:30:00):
economic measures. People forget Eisenhower. We should have a big
picture of Ike warned about the military industrial complex and
an unelected scientific elite. He coined the term in his
farewell address. I think Eisenhower was a fabulous president. And
for whatever reason, I think I know the reason, it's
fine as understandable. Reagan was a phenomenal communicator. He was
(01:30:20):
great on TV. He was shot. He was really a
positive force when we were so negative in the seventies.
So I get that, trust me, I really I understand.
I didn't live through it, but I get that he
revived American patriotism. He was full of optimism. The seventies
was full of Vietnam War protests and after Carter and
after Iran, and after the hostage crisis, and after high
(01:30:42):
interest rates, and we just felt like a country that
was in decline. And Reagan or anything else, just was
a cheerleader for the nation. And he deserves a lot
of credit for that. And he looked good in comparison
to his two counterparts prior and after Carter and Bush.
But by no means who we look at what he
did with amnesty and say, yeah, we should do that too.
In fact, that was a really bad decision he made.
So where do the American people stand on amnesty and
(01:31:03):
mass deportations. By the way, as we are doing this program,
are kind of warning shot on amnesty. It's going viral
all across the internet, which should By the way, I'm
not making this up. Obviously, Byron, Donald's validated what we said.
He said, Yep, I've heard the same thing. Let's go
to cut two fifty one. Let's play cut two fifty one.
Speaker 4 (01:31:22):
Deport all undocumented immigrants. You go back to twenty fifteen.
I'm gonna come to your SETU screen. It's forty two percent. Hello,
go to twenty sixteen. It was thirty six percent. Look
at where we are now. This was taken at the
end of last year. Fifty six percent. This is twenty
points higher than it was just before Trump got into
office the first time. So feelings towards immigration in this country,
feelings towards undocumented immigrants and deporting all of them, have
(01:31:46):
become considerably more hawkish, and I think that gives Donald
Trump much more leverage to go with the American people
and sort of have these hawkish some might say harsh
different rhetoric and also issue based sort of going after
immigrants who are here illegally. And so I think the
American people are going to give Donald Trump the benefit
of the doubt to do what he wants to do,
(01:32:06):
at least if you believe these blunk questions, including this one.
Speaker 6 (01:32:10):
Biden opened the borders and changed public opinion on mass
deportations in a supremely powerful way. But Biden Harris' agenda
is We're just gonna flood the country. It's gonna be
a charity case for the rest of the world. We
will be a dumping ground for the third world, and
people are just going to suck it up. We will
change the polity forever. Play cut two fifty two. CNN
(01:32:31):
reports that Americans number Americans that want illegals and legals
deported is the highest levels since nine to eleven. Play
cut two fifty two.
Speaker 4 (01:32:40):
Want immigration levels decrease. This includes legal and illegal immigration.
Look at this last year fifty five percent. That is
the highest level since the nine to eleven. Aftermath, you
go back.
Speaker 6 (01:32:51):
Just to twenty and this is again legal and illegal.
Speaker 14 (01:32:54):
They want people want less people coming into the country.
Speaker 4 (01:32:57):
Exactly, They want less people coming in the country. Look
at that, that's a fourteen point rise from twenty twenty three.
You go back to twenty sixteen when Donald Trump again
was running for president the first time, thirty eight percent.
Speaker 5 (01:33:07):
That's a seventeen point rise.
Speaker 4 (01:33:09):
So the bottom line is more folks want people who
are here illegally deported, and their overall feelings towards immigration
have become considerably more haukous since Donald Trump was first
getting an office, Kate.
Speaker 6 (01:33:20):
We are not a nation of immigrants, where a nation
of settlers that assimilate to what has been built. People
have come to this country and they've benefited it tremendously,
but it's because they assimilate to something above them. This
is the key, is that you must have a transcendent
creed or ideal. Diversity is not our strength, and we
(01:33:43):
are not made stronger by open borders. Our culture is amazing,
our people are powerful, our heritage is precious. We are
the greatest civilization ever to exist in the history of
the world. And we celebrated this last Independence Day weekend.
And President Trump deserves such phenomenal credit for the big
beautiful Bill, and I believe President Donald Trump will continue
to execute a mass deportations and stand up to the
(01:34:05):
amnesty push and the people in his ear right. Now,
we'll see you guys tomorrow. God bless