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April 3, 2025 51 mins

THE WAR ROOM WITH STEPHEN K. BANNON, APRIL 3RD, 2025
GUESTS:
STEVE CORTES
JACK POSOBIEC
MIKE LINDELL

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Today.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
I think people at Capitol Hill field the same way
that finance ministers all around the world feel. It's a
pepto bismal moment in the marketplace, and finance ministers around
the world and now holding onto their stomachs. People are
kitchen tables and at workplaces.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
All across our country.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
I'll holding onto their stomachs that we're in one of
the greatest wealth destruction days.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
In the history of the world.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
And up here on Capitol Hill, I think Republicans right
now I'm thinking about popping bottles of champagne, but maybe
popping bottles of pepto bismo over the next few days
to really determine what is going to be the impact
on our economy. When JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs are.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
Bull saying there's a doubling.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
Of the chance we're going to have a recession this
year because of Trump's.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
Actions, I like this.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
I wouldn't go diving into buying stock tomorrow. A bottoming
in the stock market is a process, not a point
in time, so you have to be really careful about
when to get in and when to get out.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
All right, that is down nearly four percent for the now.

Speaker 5 (01:09):
For investors, What is your advice today.

Speaker 6 (01:11):
Okay, whatever money you may need for the next five years,
please take it out of the stock market right now,
this week. I do not believe that you should risk
those assets in the.

Speaker 7 (01:24):
Stock market, even if you would take a tremendous loss
and selling your stocks of this decline, you say, take
it out.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
I don't care. I do not care where stocks have beens.

Speaker 6 (01:31):
I do not care where stocks have been, I care
where they're going, and I don't want people to get
hurt in this market.

Speaker 7 (01:36):
But if you need it after five years, then don't
touch it.

Speaker 6 (01:40):
Well, yes, if you have that much flexibility. I'm worried
about unemployment. I'm worried about your purchases that you may need.
I can't have you risk that in the stock market.
For very dramatic statement, Jim, very dramatic salment. First, I
thought about this all weekend. I don't want to say
these things on TV.

Speaker 5 (01:56):
I don't want to see what is coming that it
makes you say that.

Speaker 6 (01:59):
I believe that we could have as much as a
twenty percent decline in the stock market. If you can
withstand that, of which most people can't, then I think
what you have to do if you can withstand it
is just ride it out.

Speaker 8 (02:09):
For too long, a small group in our nation's capital
has reaped the rewards of government, while the people have
borne the cost. Washington flourished, but the people did not
share in its wealth. Politicians prospered, but the jobs left

(02:32):
and the factories closed. The establishment protected itself, but not
the citizens of our country. Their victories have not been
your victories. Their triumphs have not been your triumphs. And
while they celebrated in our nation's capital, there was little

(02:55):
to celebrate for struggling families all across US our land.
That all changes starting right here and right now, Because
this moment is your moment.

Speaker 9 (03:16):
It belongs to you.

Speaker 8 (03:25):
It belongs to everyone gathered here today and everyone watching
all across America. This is your day, This is your celebration,
and this the United States of America, is your country.

(03:48):
What truly matters is not which party controls our government,
but whether our government is controlled by the people. January twentieth,
two thousand and seventeen, will be remembered as the day

(04:09):
the people became the rulers of this nation again. The
forgotten men and women of our country will be forgotten.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
No longer.

Speaker 10 (04:27):
This is the primal scream of a dying regime.

Speaker 11 (04:32):
Pray for our enemies, because we're going to medieval on
these people.

Speaker 10 (04:37):
You've not got a free shot.

Speaker 11 (04:39):
All these networks lying about the people, the people have
had a belly full of it.

Speaker 10 (04:44):
I know you don't like hearing that.

Speaker 11 (04:45):
I know you've tried to do everything in the world
to stop that, but you're not going to stop it.

Speaker 10 (04:48):
It's going to happen.

Speaker 12 (04:49):
And where do people like that go to share the
big line?

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Mega media?

Speaker 12 (04:54):
I wish in my soul, I wish that any.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Of these people had a conscience.

Speaker 10 (05:00):
Yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose?

Speaker 4 (05:03):
If that answer is to save my country, this country
will be saved.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
War Room, here's your host, Stephen k Back.

Speaker 11 (05:17):
Thursday, three April, year of everlerd twenty twenty five. I
wanted to have some history. I may pull Jim. So
we had Jim Kramer in the meltdown of two thousand
and eight. Remember Kramer went on TV a completely unprofessional
said if you need any cash next five years, I'm
not panicking, but you should sell everything you've got. That's
what they try to do today. Katie Turr at the end,

(05:39):
we showed you. Katie turned did her entire hour on
the New York Stock Exchanged floor, trying to elicit people
to say, oh, this is a panic, this is terrible,
every leading question, and in back of her it's dead quiet.
It's a snoozefest on the floor of the Stock chan
Now some of that is how they trade stocks today,
but there's certainly not a panic.

Speaker 10 (06:00):
They're trying to elicit a panic.

Speaker 11 (06:02):
And what's fascinating someone like Katie Turr who's never cared
about capitalism, never cared about the stock market. Katie Turr
doesn't know the difference between preferred stock and livestock, and
this bimbo is on the floor and she's trying to
They're trying to cause a panic.

Speaker 10 (06:21):
One of the great treats, I think from bad Ombray.

Speaker 11 (06:24):
They said, they've gone from the you know, the panic
of the terrorists, the gangster is not getting their due
process rights, to now the panic of hedge fund managers.

Speaker 10 (06:33):
Poso's in the in the studio here.

Speaker 11 (06:37):
Jack's been out and about all day, a little bit
White House and other places. Julie Kelly's gonna join me
at six. She's been over in Bosburg just taking the tour. Well,
she's taking Bosburg and Bosburg. I thought I gave you
the tour the first term. You were good over there
all the time touring. I give a big shout out
to you guys. Today Steve Cortez is with us. Cortez,
I want to go to you first. Give me the analytics.

(06:58):
There There has been a but it's an orderly sell
off because hey, you heard it. He's trying to restructure
and I wanted to go back. And I think Alex
bruce Witz for this. It's his great tweet that our
own Elizabeth picked up. Alex put that up on New
Year's Eve. I think of twenty four going down memory, Lenny.
But that gets back to the core of what President
Trump ran for, why he won in sixteen, what he's

(07:21):
trying to accomplish. This is what he's done with the
last twenty four hours. Is the core of the man
to restore the strength to America of becoming a manufacturing
superpower against Steve Cortez.

Speaker 10 (07:35):
Give me some analytics. Is Katie Urr right? Is this
a complete meltdown? Is this should cost panic?

Speaker 11 (07:40):
If you have any stock you need cash in the
next five years, like Kramus said, should you sell.

Speaker 13 (07:46):
No as usual, Katie Terr is completely wrong, and you're right.
It is simply not believable in any sense that she
has suddenly become an I'm ran capitalist.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
I mean, please, all right, anybody can see through.

Speaker 13 (07:57):
This ridiculous facadonomery guarding Jim Kramer. By the way, I
like him, nice guy, worked with him for many years
at CNBC.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
But he is constantly wrong.

Speaker 13 (08:07):
There is a reason that inverse Kramer is one of
the more popular financial accounts on social media because if
you do the opposite of what Kramer says, for the
most part, you're going to be very wealthy and very prosperous.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
And you're exactly right, Steve.

Speaker 13 (08:20):
That's going all the way back to two thousand and
eight until right now.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
So corporate media, though, of course, is giving him his
time in the sun right now.

Speaker 13 (08:27):
Why because he's a liberal New York Democrat who is saying, panic,
hold your hair out.

Speaker 1 (08:32):
So let's talk about the reality of today.

Speaker 13 (08:34):
And I say, this is somebody who traded for the
biggest hudge funds in the world for twenty five years
on Wall Street. It was a bad day, Okay, no
way we can't shine a sneaker. It was a bad day,
down almost five percent on the S and P. Most
of the action was overnight, So to your point, the
trading session wasn't really that preenetic today.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
It just wasn't.

Speaker 13 (08:51):
Most of the downdraft happened in the after hours starting
yesterday and the overnight session into today.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
But it was entirely orderly.

Speaker 13 (08:58):
Okay, And I'm not trying to diminish losses, but the
point is it was orderly. And also, before I get
to the restructuring part, I think perspective is really important here.
So I provided and I did this last minute. I
hope they have it ready. If they have chart one ready,
I want to show the S and P over a
long time frame. If we can show that over a decade, okay,
So that is the S and P five hundred SPY

(09:20):
is the ETF the exchange train of fund for the
S and P five hundred. As you can see, it's
had a magnificent decade. And if you look at that
chart at the most recent part the upper right corner, yes,
it's had a downdraft. Is it that material in the
context of where it has been because people continually want
to buy America. No, it's really not very material, So

(09:42):
I think that's important for us. You'll never see this
kind of context, by the way, from the corporate media,
even from the financial press places like CNBC. But more
importantly than what the market did today, Steve, is what
Donald Trump is doing in terms of trying to re
industrialize this country and in doing so, to reinvig or
the great American working class, to rebuild a great American

(10:05):
middle class that has been absolutely hollowed out by the globalists.
We have, unfortunately, Steve, an economy in this country that
has really been built on two premises, two false foundations.
The first is offshoring and the second is gargantuan unsustainable debt.
Now tariffs, by the way, addresses both of those problems

(10:25):
concurrently right because it compels onshoring back to the United States.

Speaker 1 (10:30):
If you don't want to pay these honors teriffs.

Speaker 13 (10:32):
The best way around them you set up shop right
here in the United States of America. Whether you're an
American company or foreign company, doesn't matter. Once you set
up here in the United States. On shoring to reinvigorate
main street small businesses in this country, not the globalists, multinationals.
And then on the debt front, we know that most
of this thirty six trillion dollars of debt that we

(10:53):
have incurred absolutely recklessly exorbitant borrowing and spending. Most of
that we racked up at interest rates which were far
preferential to what we have now because of Bidy's inflation explosion,
which means that from here forward the situation gets much
more dire and much more serious. So what's the best
way for us to raise revenue? We also need to

(11:13):
come spending, of course, but what's the best way for
us to raise revenue.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
It's to raise it from foreigners.

Speaker 13 (11:18):
And why can we get away from that with that
stdeve Because we are the United States of America, and
because of centuries of entrepreneurs and hard working men and women,
we have built the crown jewel consumer market, the envy
of the world that every country and every company on
earth is pining for access to.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
And because of that.

Speaker 13 (11:37):
Reality, we may not always have that right if we
don't institute these reforms.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
But because we have earned that status and that.

Speaker 13 (11:44):
Premiere elevation among consumer markets in the world, we can
charge a premium.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
You've said this many times.

Speaker 13 (11:51):
As a good analogy the theater or a sporting event,
we have the box seats, you charge the most for
the best seats.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
So it just simply makes sense. It it alleviates these.

Speaker 13 (12:00):
Twin problems of offshoring, which has crushed American communities, led
to deaths of despair, led to millions of men, working
age men in this country who have simply dropped out
of productive life. It solves that problem. It's probably the
most significant reform to solve the.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
Problem of offshoring.

Speaker 13 (12:17):
And then it also, on the other hand, this unsustainable
debt problem. It vastly improves our debt situation and our
debt ratio. So to me, this transformation, it can be painful, absolutely,
because the country had become addicted to offshoring and to
constant public financing. Okay, not a healthy addiction. Breaking addictions
at times can be painful. So we're seeing some of

(12:39):
that consternation right now. Now let's not exaggerate the pain.
But the point is, there is a place of prosperity.
There's a place of societal cohesion, of patriotism, of shared
and dispersed prosperity throughout this country. That place lies on
the other side of this process, and we must go
through it. And I so commend President Trump for doing this.

(13:00):
He's talked about it for decades. He was talking about
it as a private citizen for decades before he got
into public life. These are some of the most consequential
economic reforms in American history, in all of American history,
and I would argue they're probably the most consequential economic
reforms since FDR. His were toxic for the country, vis
are going to be wonderful and prosperous for our country.

Speaker 10 (13:22):
So bad day.

Speaker 11 (13:25):
The worst was overnight when they first heard it, because
people didn't believe he was going to do it. They
actually didn't believe. You see the market yesterday. President Trump
did it overnight responds today not too shabby, Right, We're
going to be a couple of days to get through here.

Speaker 10 (13:38):
The one thing that's going to drive any.

Speaker 11 (13:40):
Kind of I'm not saying panic selling, but dumping US
stocks is the left media is all over. They think
this is what takes President Trump down. This is how
much they hate this country. You haven't heard him once
say anything about working men and women. This is the
credentialed class. You saw Katie Turr, is there a bigger
joke than Katie Turr being on the flo The New

(14:00):
York stock has changed.

Speaker 10 (14:01):
I mean, that's laughable. That is laughable.

Speaker 11 (14:03):
That is they're they're there and all our questions in
this terrible how bad is this? And they have people
like we'll come back, Cortez. I know you work with
Steve Lessman. What a beauty that is, you know, a
left wing hack that all he's doing is dumping on
President Trump all day.

Speaker 10 (14:16):
We're gonna make a short commercial break postos in the house.

Speaker 11 (14:21):
The Great Deal is what you call it, a great deal.
That's what we have coming for you. You you refer
to this as the Great Deal, the great deal. We had,
the New Deal, the Square Deal, the fair Deal. We
have the great society. Now we have the Great Deal,
the Great Deal, under the leadership of President Trump. Short
commercial break, Johnny Connell, take us out. We're going to

(14:41):
be back in a moment in the war room.

Speaker 14 (14:44):
Right.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
What is your advice today?

Speaker 6 (15:01):
Okay, whatever money you may need for the next five years,
please take it out of the stock market right now
this week. I do not believe that you should risk
those assets in the.

Speaker 7 (15:14):
Stock market, even if you would take a tremendous loss
and selling your stocks at this decline, you say, take
it out.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
I don't care.

Speaker 6 (15:19):
I do not care where stocks have been. I do
not care where stocks have been. I care where they're going.
And I don't want people to get hurt in this market.

Speaker 7 (15:26):
But if you need it after five years, then don't
touch it.

Speaker 6 (15:30):
Well, yes, if you have that much flexibility. I'm worried
about unemployment. I'm worried about your purchases that you may need.
I can't have you risk that in the stock market.

Speaker 5 (15:39):
For the very dramatic statement, Jim, very dramatic Salaman.

Speaker 6 (15:41):
First, I thought about this all weekend. I do not
want to say these things on TV.

Speaker 5 (15:46):
I don't want to see what is coming that it
makes you say that.

Speaker 6 (15:49):
I believe that we could have as much as a
twenty percent decline in the stock market. If you can
withstand that, of which most people can't, then I think
what you have to do if you can withstand it,
is just.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Ride it out.

Speaker 10 (16:00):
That was back in two thousand and eight. That was
NBC Today's show. They were in shock. That caused massive selling.

Speaker 11 (16:06):
Because, don't get me wrong, two thousand and eight was
fifty times versus that was a total collapse because of
corruption and competence. President Trump has thought this through this
or reordering of the world economy so that American working
men and women don't have the whole weight on their
shoulders and are getting screwed the entire time. This is

(16:27):
Trump more so than the border kind of came up,
you know, in those years in like fourteen and fifteen,
because what was happening to Obama, the ambassy, the Bush
tried to do, of course, the Iraq Wars.

Speaker 10 (16:39):
This is Trump from the beginning.

Speaker 11 (16:42):
He would watch lou Dobbs when he first started coming
on doing interviews as a private citizen, but about things
that were not about media or New York City because
it was a huge celebrity in New York City in
the eighties and nineties when they would have him on
shows and talk about things of substance because people were
talking even then, Hey, would this guy run to be presidents?

Speaker 10 (17:02):
This guy a guy that's going to be a reformer.

Speaker 11 (17:05):
He would always go and talk about trade, talk about
American workers getting screwed, talk about factories being shipped.

Speaker 10 (17:10):
This is Trump to his core. That's why that speech yesterday,
he walked in.

Speaker 11 (17:15):
And owned that I mean, it's one of the most
eloquent speeches he's done, very powerful, to the point, that's
why I wanted to go back and play some of
the best moments from the first in arg world, because
that's Trump. What you're seeing is pure Trump, and he's
not going to back off this. I think he told
people today, don't be putting the word out there. I'm
open for negotiation the whole They're lined up around the corner,

(17:37):
right they all want to come and talk, just like
the law firms, just like the universities. Trump's saying right now, Yeah,
let it simmer on human events.

Speaker 15 (17:46):
Earlier today, we had Harrison Fields on from the Press
Office and I asked him that question. I said, what
about the negotiation. He said, Jack, there's no negotiations. This
is not a negotiation tactic. This is policy. This is
policy of the White House Day one policy. He ain't
budget on this. This is going to be the policy
going forward. And I said, so, it's a great deal.

(18:06):
It's the great deal.

Speaker 11 (18:08):
Tell me about influencers. MAGA is a great deal resonating
with the base.

Speaker 10 (18:13):
People are liking it. I'm starting to see people pick
it up more.

Speaker 15 (18:15):
I'm starting to see people use it because when you
and by the way, the Great Deal isn't just about
the tariffs, right, you have to put everything together. It's
the tax breaks, it's economic, the energy independence, the deportation is.

Speaker 10 (18:27):
So the whole thing is we've never really had a
package deal.

Speaker 15 (18:30):
We've never had a brand name for the whole thing
yet to kind of put us it's a Trump it's populism,
and we sort of and then you get into the
arguments about what is a tariff attax, what's kind of
like attack, what's attack on Wall Street?

Speaker 4 (18:41):
Right?

Speaker 10 (18:41):
A tax on them? It's not a tax on you?

Speaker 15 (18:43):
Because what take go back to the history of it,
right two thousand and eight, this is this is how
the tea Party gets started. What was and what started
the tea Party? The bailouts. It's Antilly Antilly and it
was so.

Speaker 10 (18:55):
They got there.

Speaker 15 (18:55):
It was Wall Street that got the bailouts in two
thousand and eight. It was Wall Street that got bailouts
Door COVID. So it starts all of this gets wound
back to the global financial crisis of two thousand and eight.
That's when the stock market, the print got floated by
the false printed money of the federal reserve. So all
this funny money has been running around our system for
over a decade at this point, and by the way,

(19:17):
it was going to come to a halt with with
the debt ratio being where it is on its own,
it was we were headed for some very very choppy
waters after Biden did what he did for his four years.
And you talk about this every day on the show.
So it was going that there was going to be
a correction one way or another. What President Trump is doing,
he's saying I'm going to be the correction and instead

(19:37):
of a bailout for Wall Street, this time around to
bail in for the American worker and the American people.
And it's kind of like we were joking about on
the show. Steve I said, it's like we've been skipping
leg Day. We've been skipping leg Day. We've been skipping
leg Day. We've got the sugar high. We're skipping leg Day.
No more, no more.

Speaker 10 (19:55):
Hold it.

Speaker 11 (19:55):
We've got President Trump on Air Force and President Trump's
heading down to draw I think the Live Golf Championship.

Speaker 10 (20:01):
Or he's got a dinner tonight for that is that
is that?

Speaker 11 (20:03):
Because it's the week before the Masters and these guys
all come in the live players. President Trump's also working
on that deal to put the two tours together.

Speaker 10 (20:10):
Let's go and play it.

Speaker 16 (20:13):
Company to run or a number of companies to run.
You know that he can do this, that he can
find the time. He loves the country, that's why he
does it. But we're in no rush. But there'll be
appointed which time.

Speaker 13 (20:25):
You know it's going to have to leave.

Speaker 9 (20:26):
So specific I would make.

Speaker 17 (20:30):
A few months even when el On these it goes
back to being CEO.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
A wild should stick around in some kind of capacity.

Speaker 8 (20:39):
Yeah, it'll sell dose yourself.

Speaker 4 (20:43):
Yeah, and some boys just show you understand.

Speaker 9 (20:47):
I don't know what get wrong.

Speaker 4 (20:48):
I want Elon to stay as long as possible. Number one,
I like him. Number two, he's doing a great job.
Number three he is a patriot, that's why he's doing this.
And he's you know, it's very closely man. But so
I wanted him to stay as long as possible. But
there'll be a point where he's gonna have to leave,
and what he does, the secreturs will take totally over

(21:11):
and those will stay active. We have a lot of
smart people. A lot of those people I believe are
going to go into the agencies and they'll work on
her from the inside.

Speaker 17 (21:21):
You mentioned auto companies that you've been speaking there. If
you spoke at to any executives today.

Speaker 4 (21:26):
Yeah, I don't want to say hope, but I speak
to a lot of the auto executives. But we have
much more than autos. We have chips coming in, we
have steel coming in. The steel factories are opening up
and expanding and levels and people have not seen. Also,
can you.

Speaker 9 (21:44):
Tell us a little bit about your meeting with Laura
Lumer and Mike Woltz today how that came out.

Speaker 4 (21:50):
So, Laura Lumer is a very good patron. She is
a very strong person. And I saw her yesterday for
a little while. She has watch She recommendations of things
and people, and sometimes I listen to those recommendations like
I do with everybody. I listened to everybody, and then
I make a decision. But I saw her yesterday. She

(22:12):
was at the ceremony that she is. She'll always have
something to say, usually very constructed.

Speaker 9 (22:19):
What did she recommend?

Speaker 16 (22:21):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (22:22):
She recommended certain people for jobs adding adding.

Speaker 9 (22:25):
To the administration. No, not firing, Well, she'll recommend that too.

Speaker 4 (22:30):
Who yesterday she recommends some people for jobs.

Speaker 17 (22:33):
Did she have anything to do with the nsc aids
who were ousted.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
No, no, don't.

Speaker 17 (22:38):
Did you know how many sor do you know how
many from the NSSE May was in five a dozen?

Speaker 9 (22:45):
I really don't know who does. There were a couple
of there who did Laura recommend Tying?

Speaker 16 (22:50):
Well?

Speaker 4 (22:50):
I don't want to say that, but she's she's recommended
some good people over the years she's been she's been
in the party a long time.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
She's done a good job. Do you trust your national
Securities is doing what you want them to do?

Speaker 4 (23:02):
We've done very well. We've had big success with the hoodies,
as you probably know. Nobody's been able to do it
like us. And they were shooting the boats out of
the water that were sinking ships. That's what they want
to do, and they're getting to make charge out of
sinking ships. And unfortunately they're associated with the RANT very closely.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
So they have to stop that.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
But we've hit them very hard, and we've been hitting
them very hard.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
Did you talk to Congress a little about her resolutions.

Speaker 16 (23:32):
Get the turned os but power something about her resolution
to lot launch the body bringing hunters?

Speaker 9 (23:39):
I did?

Speaker 8 (23:40):
I did, and.

Speaker 4 (23:43):
I would say this, I guess there's two sides to it.
Read it's a little controversial. I don't know why it's controversial.
I think she's great Ana, She support her, I think,
and I'm going to let the speaker make the decision.
But I like the idea of being able to if
you're having a baby, I think you should be able.

Speaker 9 (24:04):
To call in and vote. I'm in favor of that.

Speaker 4 (24:08):
I understand some people and I'm not involved in the issue,
but I did I suppose to Anna yesterday. She and
some people feel strongly about it, and I would agree
with it.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
You know, so you mentioned ern.

Speaker 17 (24:22):
Now you have come out and said, if they're gonna
sit down with the US, they want to use an intermediately.
And I believe the US wanted direct talks. Would you
still be going to talk to them by an intermedia?

Speaker 9 (24:32):
It's better if we have direct talks.

Speaker 8 (24:33):
I think it goes faster and you understand the other
side a lot better than if you go through intermediates.
Would they want to use they wanted to use intermediators.
I don't think that's necessarily true anymore. I think they're concerned.
I think they feel vulnerable, and I don't want them
to feel that way, and I think they want to me,

(24:56):
you know aroand they're talking about around you.

Speaker 17 (24:58):
Said you don't think they want to use intermediate years anymore.
Did they send another letter? Did the UAE let you
know about this?

Speaker 8 (25:04):
I know for a fact I think they'd like to
have direct talks.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Can you say anything about what the letter said from Iran?

Speaker 7 (25:12):
No?

Speaker 8 (25:12):
I just think I'm just telling you I think they
want to have Forget about letters.

Speaker 10 (25:17):
I think they want to have direct talks.

Speaker 17 (25:19):
When did that happen on Pinhagsath in this IG investigation?

Speaker 1 (25:22):
Do you want to weigh in on that?

Speaker 16 (25:23):
What is it?

Speaker 17 (25:24):
There's an IG investigation into the Secretary of defensive use
of the signal out?

Speaker 14 (25:31):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (25:31):
And is that you're bringing that up again? Don't bring
that up again? Your editors from them. That's such a
wasted story.

Speaker 9 (25:37):
So what Chinese farmland?

Speaker 7 (25:39):
Do you have some plans for Chinese ownership of farmland
and the.

Speaker 9 (25:44):
USA all the time.

Speaker 8 (25:45):
And look, I have a very good relationship with China
and with the president to have a lot of respect
for a president she so you know, we look at
that all the time. Farmland, it's been an issue for years.
It's been people have talked about it for years. But
I have a lot of respect for China, and I
have a lot of respect for President She.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
When's the last time you talked to President She?

Speaker 8 (26:06):
I speak to him, doesn't matter when, but I speak
to him.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Say, we talked to Philinski recently, not too.

Speaker 9 (26:14):
Long ago, yet, how did that go good? I think
he's ready to make a deal.

Speaker 8 (26:19):
No progress, so that I think a lot of progress
now he's he's ready to make a deal. And I
think that President moved his ready to make a deal,
and then you'll stop the killing of thousands of young
people a week.

Speaker 17 (26:33):
Did the real Dmitriev say that to your counter his
counterparts in the US thrill Dmitriev the Russian negotiator that
did Washington.

Speaker 9 (26:42):
But I don't talk about specific people.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
I just will tell you that there's a lot of
good conversation going on about Ukraine, Russia.

Speaker 8 (26:51):
Her approval for the UK deal, over the tag of
silent and prime Minister's murder, and you're we're talking to
the prime minister about it, and we'll see that turns out.
He said, we have a very good.

Speaker 9 (27:02):
Dialogue on.

Speaker 8 (27:04):
And I think it was very happy about how we
treated them with tariffs, are a lot.

Speaker 9 (27:09):
Of people were upsaid about how they're The Daily Mail
a lot.

Speaker 10 (27:14):
Of people were upset today about how their forward case.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
Would you read you have investments?

Speaker 8 (27:19):
I think I think our markets are gonna bove.

Speaker 1 (27:21):
We've got to give it a little chance.

Speaker 8 (27:22):
But we're taking in jobs, and we're taking in industry,
We're taking in trillions of dollars. I think I think
our markets are gonna boom. Got to give it a
little bit of time. When they've already started construction on
numerous plants.

Speaker 14 (27:37):
Soon there will be.

Speaker 8 (27:37):
Many, many plans all over the country.

Speaker 9 (27:40):
They're going and you gotta give that. You gotta give
that a little time. I haven't checked my forward Thank
you very much. What was the Fed?

Speaker 17 (27:49):
A lot of money markets are now price to get
more FED cuts this year.

Speaker 4 (27:52):
But one thing I like is interest rates going down.
You see that happening, and interest you know what's beautiful.
Interest rates go down.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
I like.

Speaker 9 (28:01):
I like groceries going down. I like ches going down
if you.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
Look at it, and very importantly, the gasoline prices are
going down.

Speaker 9 (28:09):
So a lot of good things happen.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
Thank you for check, you for your time as president.

Speaker 8 (28:15):
Thank you.

Speaker 11 (28:18):
Okay, there's the President right there taking all questions. Jack Bosovak,
Any News, Laura Loomer, Laura Lumer took out three or
six members of the National Security.

Speaker 15 (28:27):
Council, three that I heard from originally, and you know,
I read about that in the New York Times when
when it came out. I think Axios maybe originally had
the story to people at different pieces of.

Speaker 10 (28:37):
It, and uh, you know, this is nothing that you.

Speaker 15 (28:40):
Know obviously came out of the you know, I think
the signal situation, the signal chats and.

Speaker 10 (28:46):
Which the President just blows off, Right, that's not interesting.
Let's move on.

Speaker 15 (28:49):
But the president, Yeah, the president, he's a boring story.
He said that a couple of times where he said,
that's a boring story. You know, you don't want to
you don't want to hear the boring story.

Speaker 10 (28:55):
That's boring. We're not going to talk about that.

Speaker 15 (28:57):
And then he and then he moves on because remember
this is then so this is this is look, this
is no scout policy. But those but but but maybe
some mini scalps.

Speaker 11 (29:06):
Many scalps, but those are those are internal. You're doing
those internally. They don't count scouts.

Speaker 15 (29:11):
Well, look, scouts because remember there are a lot of
people still the way that the National Security Council is constituted,
there are still people who were either either.

Speaker 10 (29:21):
Holdovers from detailers and details.

Speaker 11 (29:24):
So thirds of the two thirds, the seventy five percent
of the staff is detailed from the Pentagon, from the CIA,
from DHS, from from Justice Department, State, and one third
are the political pointees, people that the president can bring in.
So it's basically thirty to fifty political. But the SEB

(29:44):
gorkas the world vast majority of detailers from detailers, Yes,
and you manage those detailers and they bring the resources
of those departments. The people that are gotten rid of
though were I believe political pointe is not detailers that
were not.

Speaker 10 (29:58):
Well, I'll have to find out. I know there's a
list to detail these two.

Speaker 11 (30:01):
We had a list of you know, put together by
Sargeant Higgins, I think was like one hundred and fifty
people should go back because the detailers were all dam
and Bush. Yeah, and Sergeant Higgins, of course McMasters did
not implement that. Hang one second, Steve Cortez has got
another clip. Let's play the clip, and Steve will bring
you back in any other thoughts you've got today, because
those are the questions that were bombard and the President

(30:22):
he's saying, Hey, I'm talking to executives, talking to automotive executives.
Everything I'm here is going to everything's going to work out.
Steve Cortez is going to play the.

Speaker 18 (30:30):
Clip patriots, do you think that we should be a
country that makes things again? Should we be a society
where a family can thrive on a single income. Well,
we can never reach those goals unless we get trade
policy correct, and tariffs are a huge part of that

(30:52):
new agenda of patriotic populist nationalism.

Speaker 11 (30:59):
Steve Cortez explained that for me, we can't get the
economy right. Do we get trade policy right?

Speaker 10 (31:03):
What do you mean by that?

Speaker 13 (31:05):
That's exactly right, because again, too much of the economy
for decades has been predicated upon offshoring and massive exorbitant,
unsustainable debt.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
And what you know I promoted there and.

Speaker 13 (31:17):
Communicated in that video and an article I wrote on
it as well, is that President Trump is doing something
daring here right, and he is challenging America to dream
about something big. For example, let's reclaim a prosperity that
we used to have in this country where a family
could thrive on one single middle class income. We've completely

(31:38):
left that economic realm, and we hardly even talk about it.
But President Trump is saying, here's how we get back
there by reindustrializing the United States, by making sure that
we make things in this country again, and by making
sure that we are not abused by predatory trade practices
from any other country, particularly China, but even from our
supposed friends, that we are not going to be abused again.

Speaker 1 (32:00):
And by the way, I think.

Speaker 13 (32:01):
President Trump, you made this point earlier, Steve, it's so important.
President Trump's whole life, really, if you look at it,
has been leading to this moment, because you're right, He's
done some incredible things on the border, some incredible things
on the culture, on pro life, a huge list of
material accomplishments.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
But his signature issue, if you go.

Speaker 13 (32:20):
Back all the way to when he first became a
public figure, all the way back to the nineteen eighties,
his signature issue has been trade and has been the
way America has been abused in trade. And by the way, Steve,
I will you know public confession here. I speak about
this with the zeal of a convert because I used
to be a Wall Street Republican. I used to believe
in that nonsense of so called free trade until Donald

(32:41):
Trump came along in twenty fifteen and opened my eyes,
and I think opened a lot of people's eyes and said,
wait a second, we don't have free trade.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
We never have.

Speaker 13 (32:48):
It's been managed trade, and mostly managed against the interests
of working class Americans and in favor of the Chinese
Communist Party, and in favor of American blutocrats, an American
oligarchs for their self agroandizement. And they simply don't care
what happens to entire communities, entire regions, entire industries in
the United States. So he has been working toward this

(33:11):
in many ways his entire life. This is a culmination
of a life's work. And again, this kind of a
grand strategy and this kind of a momentous policy shift.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
It's not easy.

Speaker 13 (33:23):
That the transformation is not easy, and there's fits and
starts of course along the way. But the point is
if we look at where it's going to take us,
we can also hearken back to history. It's not only
looking forward, parking back to Alexander Hamilton, to Abraham Lincoln,
some of the great champions of tariffs in American history.

Speaker 1 (33:39):
So looking back on our history and then looking forward.

Speaker 13 (33:42):
At what we can and will become if we insist
that we prioritize American workers in all of our trading relationships.
And again, we have an advantage that no other country
in the world has. We've earned that advantage.

Speaker 1 (33:55):
It's not luck.

Speaker 13 (33:56):
We earn the advantage of being the crown jewel consumer
mark in the world. And when everyone is dying to
get into your section of the theater, you're part of
the stadium, you charge a premium. That is what Donald
Trump is starting to do. And I think it's also
important for us to telegraph, you know, as Jack was saying,
that these aren't just negotiation ploys. No, this is policy. Okay,

(34:19):
this should be permanent. We should have been doing this
for decades. We did it for many, many decades in
our history. We should have been doing it in our
recent history. We're going to do this going forward. You
have to pay a premium to get in here. You
will not abuse American workers. And if you want access
to this market, the best way to do it is
employee Americans, invest here by American real estate, American capex,
make your products here, and then the terrorists are irrelevant.

Speaker 11 (34:41):
To you a a couple of days at least of choppiness,
and particularly as the left, the left.

Speaker 10 (34:46):
Is trying to spur a panic.

Speaker 11 (34:48):
Here a couple of days of Steve Lisman and these
guys on CNBC trying to got on people dumping their stocks,
dumping their bonds, Sir, you expect that the next couple
of days, you know.

Speaker 13 (34:59):
Let me give you a word about Steve Lashman's as
I mentioned before. You know, I worked at CNBC for
a long time and had great years there. Steve Leishman
has worked his entire career in journalism, Okay, went to
Columbia journalist school, then took his Ivy League journalism degree,
and worked in journalism as a as a dutiful stenographer
and pr agent for the American establishment. So when he
talks about financial markets, he's not somebody you know who,

(35:21):
like me, traded the Chicago options markets, dealt with the
Chicago pits, with some of the wildest forms of capitalism possible.
He's not somebody who managed money, not somebody who took risk.
It's not somebody who assigned paychecks. He simply pontificates his
ridiculous leftist defenses of the ruling class prerogatives in this country.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
That's the reality.

Speaker 13 (35:42):
And to you answer your question directly, are they trying
to gin up fear and panic?

Speaker 1 (35:46):
One hundred percent they are.

Speaker 13 (35:48):
Why because they hate Trump more than they love this country.
They despised Trump more than they care about the prosperity
of their fellow Americans. That is the reality here. To
all the deplorerals out there, please don't fall for it.
I'm not saying things aren't volatile. Of course, there's volatility
in the market. I'm not saying this wasn't a bad day.
It was absolutely a bad day in the market. I'm

(36:10):
saying keep perspective, put things in context, in broader context,
and then also focus on where we are headed now.
Because we painted ourselves into an awful economic corner, it
doesn't mean that getting to that place of reindustrialized America
and mainstream of prosperity. It's not easy, but it is
worth doing. And if any country on Earth can do it,

(36:31):
it's the United States. And if any leader and team
can do it, it's President Trump. With lieutenants like Scott
Besant talk about somebody who was managed money, who knows
about interest rates.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
Who knows about bonds.

Speaker 13 (36:42):
He's one of the most successful bond traders in the
world now managing the bond portfolio of the United States,
and President Trump mentioned this as well in the plane.
One of the few silver linings of this market volatility
lately is that money has come into bonds, and when
money comes in and buys bonds, it means interest rates
go down. So our debt our dead obligations, while still ridiculous,
have gotten a bit more manageable in recent days. That's

(37:05):
a good thing, you know. President Trump mentioned this interest
rates down since he took office.

Speaker 1 (37:09):
Gasoline down, eggs down. That's real world.

Speaker 11 (37:12):
That's the ten the ten yured treasury getting closer to
four y. So this episode, it's gonna be chopping for
a couple of days. People got to stick with it. Cortes,
where do people go on social media to get these videos?
You're you're making these films everything about the American worker,
this new group.

Speaker 13 (37:30):
Thank you, all of my my documentaries, my articles, everything
at Cortes investigates dot Com, Cortes with an Ask, Cortes
investigates dot Com and.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
On X I'm at Cortes. Steve, thank you so much.
Steve appreciate it.

Speaker 10 (37:42):
Thank you, Jay Broll.

Speaker 11 (37:42):
The Cortes, good report from the pits. Cortes was in
the pits in Chicago with Santelli. Rick Santelli. That's a
real American. You have news to report to you.

Speaker 10 (37:53):
Not Jeck Pisovic. President Trump.

Speaker 15 (37:54):
He says they're on on the clip as well from
Air Force one that they asked him, how long do
you think it'll be to see this this manufacturing to
get to where you want it? And President Trump says,
this is a two year process. So that's in line
with what we've been reporting out on human events as
well about how this is not some ploy, this is

(38:17):
not him doing the art of the deal, which of
course a lot of people seem to think, oh, he's
just getting people to the table.

Speaker 10 (38:21):
This is the opening bid.

Speaker 15 (38:22):
And you know, even even Secretary Best said don't worry,
don't worry. I'll come in and said, look, no, no, no,
And how is President Trump portrayed.

Speaker 10 (38:29):
It's an operation.

Speaker 15 (38:30):
It's an operation the patient is doing was tweet to
swim the body.

Speaker 10 (38:35):
The body is taking it.

Speaker 11 (38:36):
Well, let's go back to Corteza's and it's working.

Speaker 10 (38:39):
Let's go back to Cortesa's point, but it's going to
take us. This is to the core of the man.

Speaker 11 (38:44):
This is what he's believed when he first started thinking
about public office and started thinking about something bigger than
New York City real estate, something bigger than himself. He
was focused from the very beginning on the country, on
blue collar workers, on the heart of the country. This
is a guy that came from Queen Remember you got
first time you got in vote in sports was in football, right.
This is he's he's he's really a throwback to the

(39:08):
mad Men era. You look at Trump, you think of this,
frank City came up and they came up in that era.
This guy understands what America was at the top of
its game when it was a manufacturing superpower, and how
those workers, how New York City was a manufacturing superpower
back in those days, back after the war, fifties and sixties,
before the jobs left.

Speaker 10 (39:27):
This is to the core of him, is it not.

Speaker 15 (39:29):
And even before that day, New York City was the
focal point from the Erie Canal, where all the Erie
cities would come down through the Erie Canal, you'd.

Speaker 10 (39:38):
Stop in New York City.

Speaker 15 (39:40):
That's what built Wall Street because It became the financial
capital for all of the ex.

Speaker 11 (39:44):
Those Dutch, those Dutch trading right there where the dumb
mix and the POLLACKX we were don't be in the
work of the Steve Adores.

Speaker 15 (39:53):
But this is this is the whole idea is we
don't even realize why New York City is New York City,
Why Wall Street exists. So you had to have the
financial trade there to be able to come in and
purchase and sell those exports that were coming out.

Speaker 10 (40:05):
It was because of the Great Lake cities. Because those Great.

Speaker 11 (40:07):
Lakes went to the Ohio Valley. They wanted to get
into the heartland of this country. That's what got you
across the Appalachians, across the head around.

Speaker 10 (40:14):
That's why the manufacturing is there. It's all based on
the waterways.

Speaker 15 (40:16):
If you just understand the waterways, this can all come together.
But nobody teaches any of this stuff anymore. Why do
the hoot these matter? Why is the Red Sea matter?
Why is the Panama Canal matter? Why does Greenland matter?
Why did the Great Lakes matter?

Speaker 11 (40:28):
The vast Pacific specific the heartland and three island chains
the heartland of the nation.

Speaker 10 (40:34):
Donald Trump understands it.

Speaker 11 (40:36):
Folks what Trump is doing, and this is what crushes
all these people that's criticizing them all the time. It's
a geoeconomic and geostrategic reset that that is literally the
most and biggest thing since World War Two, which was
a culmination. World War Two either ended or was a
midpoint in a war that started in nineteen fourteen and

(40:56):
ended up basically in nineteen eighty nine, right the short
twentieth century, and the world was World War Two was
the midpoint of that. Trump is trying to essentially end
that war, right because the Cold War really didn't end it,
and have another geostrategic reseaid. That's why the Russian people
and the Chinese people are so central here.

Speaker 10 (41:17):
They're are true allies.

Speaker 11 (41:18):
They're the ones that bled in World War Two, as
ourselves in the British produced the arms and came in
from the perimeter in a very bloody and gallant way,
but to free the Eurasian land mass from the fascist
powers that we're trying to control.

Speaker 15 (41:32):
It, and in a way we sort of inherited the
British Empire and we've sort of been attempting to maintain this.
We call it different things.

Speaker 10 (41:40):
We call it the liberal world or the post war
international rules based order, the rules based et cetera.

Speaker 15 (41:46):
But it's basically along the lines of the British Empire
plus plus a few things. That's why India is on board,
That's why all the rest of it is there. So
the Commonwealth Countries former Comonwealth Countries. President Trump actually has
an interesting correspondence with King words about the Uh, don't go.

Speaker 10 (42:02):
Get my brother Alex Jones. He's got post Raheem's on
here about that. He's got post on Raheem talking about
poor Alex Jones will meltdown again. But the point, the
point is that this has been the system. This has
been the system.

Speaker 15 (42:13):
But America was never designed to be our whole independence.
Go back to seventeen seventy six and founding fathers did
not set us up to be part of the British system,
nor set us up to be the inheritors of the
British system. We were set up to be a separate
nation state that was was wholly independent, that was economically independent,

(42:34):
that was energy independent, that would be energy dominant. Ben
Franklin talked about that whoever controls the Mississippi and the
Mississippi River delta will have the power in this hemisphere.
He is very clear about this, and it's still true today.
So when you look at everything that we've done, is
we've attempted to over extend ourselves to become this sort
of New Britain and New Rome, whatever you want to

(42:55):
call it, and it just doesn't work. Some just doesn't work.

Speaker 11 (42:58):
Somebody else knew about Mississipiuneruals Grant and Sherman who tried
to convince Lincoln we can end this war, but taking
the Mississippi. Once you take the Mississippi, you cut off
Texas and then we'll figure it out from there. We're
gonna take a short commercial break. Post is gonna stick
with us. Julie Kelly if she's out of court, she
was over at Judge Boseburg today.

Speaker 10 (43:16):
The irony of ironies.

Speaker 11 (43:18):
Boseburg is the judge that has to decide on the
on Facebook totally.

Speaker 10 (43:24):
How does he draw Facebook? Actually on our he's on
our side on Facebook.

Speaker 11 (43:29):
I hear that he does not want to delay the
trial because he's he turns out I think maybe a
anti monopolist if I'm hearing correctly, don't know.

Speaker 15 (43:38):
But what the odds of that he draws Faceburg bought
the mansion right next to his house.

Speaker 11 (43:45):
Is Zuckerberg now as staffer over the White House. Okay,
short commercial breakway back in the warm, just a moment.
We will buy till the rock God we originally let's
stick down.

Speaker 12 (43:58):
That's an interesting asset. I mean, it's spend a spectacular asset,
not just this year, It's been a spectacular asset for
twenty five years. I mean, I would like to point
this out to people. Gold is outperforming the SMP five
hundred by almost one hundred percent over the last you know,
twenty five years.

Speaker 5 (44:11):
It's a little known fact.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
The risk for gold.

Speaker 12 (44:13):
Something like that, which is a safe haven asset is
that's what you know. That's what you sell when you
need to sell something, you know. So we're definitely not there,
like for example, in COVID. If you remember in COVID
when we had the final collapse, gold went down as
much as the stock market. Why because that's what you know.
You sell what you can, not necessarily.

Speaker 10 (44:31):
What you want to.

Speaker 11 (44:32):
When say it, gold outperformed the S and P five
hundred over the last twenty five years.

Speaker 10 (44:37):
That's pretty shocking. It's true.

Speaker 11 (44:39):
We don't promote it here on the show. What we
do is tell you to go learn about gold as
a hedge in a store of value. But times have changed.
Goal's over thirty one hundred bucks. It's not about the price,
it's about how it got there and where it's going.
That's what Philipatrian team can give you. Birch Gold dot com,
slash Ben ended the Dollar Empire. Get smart, the smarter
you get. Remember, they do not want you to understand

(45:04):
the math assorted with macroeconomics or public economics. This month,
April is financial literacy month. Did you know that if
you become financial in flancery literate, you become more powerful
in your own life besides the fact you become more
powerful in the political life of maga.

Speaker 7 (45:21):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (45:21):
This Treasury Department actually talked to me today.

Speaker 11 (45:23):
I think tomorrow we're gonna start rolling out some things
on financial literacy. Birch Gold dot com. Best thing you
do take your phone at Bannon nine eight. It's a
free brochure uninvesting in gold in the era Trump, the
Ultimate guide, Get it today, Get Smart post. So it
was great for you to drop by. A very busy
day for you, very a couple of busy days for you.
You've been all over.

Speaker 10 (45:42):
Now you're tomorrow. You're in Harrisburg, Harrisburg, tomorrow. It's all over, man,
moving at home. What's up in Harrisburg?

Speaker 15 (45:50):
Confidence Leadership Conference is going to be there with doctor
Steve Turley, We're going to be with Cliff Maloney. We're
gonna be talking new media, We're going to be talking how.

Speaker 10 (45:58):
When do you run it? When are you running for
the senator?

Speaker 1 (46:00):
For I love what I do.

Speaker 10 (46:02):
I love what I do.

Speaker 15 (46:03):
I love what I do, but I do get upset
when I see the people in Pennsylvania getting ripped off the.

Speaker 10 (46:07):
Way that they are. And Joshapier, is your government come?
I can't don't even say come on five to three,
that little five for three. He's got a lot of
he's got a lot of problems.

Speaker 15 (46:16):
Hey, pick on someone your own shap and And the
the thing is, though, is what what are we're going
to be talking about, especially with Cliff Maloney, is we're
going to be dissecting. We're going to be dissecting what
happened in Wisconsin. And I've been saying this, you know,
on human events as well. I said, I said, guys,
we need to be soros maxing He said, what Soros, Max,
what do you mean? He said, look, what does he do?
What a source that He didn't just throw some money

(46:37):
and have a bunch of rallies. No, he builds.

Speaker 10 (46:39):
He goes in and he builds institutions from the ground.
Wait for low propensity voters, We need a machine.

Speaker 11 (46:45):
Charlie's kind of started this, but Wisconsin showed that you've
got to get to the Trump low propensally voters. Trump's
not going to be on the ballot forever. Of course
he's going to be on the ballot. He's going to
be on the ballot in twenty eight. But then thereafter
we got to figure it out.

Speaker 15 (46:57):
Right, we got to get and we have to win
in twenty six or else. The Trump administration grinds to
a halt because there'll be an impeachment, the subpoenas.

Speaker 11 (47:04):
These folks, you don't want to go back through that.
Remember the two Remember the years we had to fight
all that.

Speaker 15 (47:07):
You don't want to go Adams Shiff I'm sure has
three you know three I teachment ideas on.

Speaker 10 (47:12):
No sign over the show.

Speaker 11 (47:13):
At the very first in October of twenty nineteen, we
first started working apeachment because nobody else on the right
was covering because we didn't believe it. Well, the White
House was actually saying it's fake news. Right, so we
had to start. We don't want to go back to that.
Remember how that that was a grind? Yes, that was
a great So the way that you do it.

Speaker 15 (47:28):
No, I remember sitting right over there on the couch
with Raheem and he would print out the transcripts and
we're going through and you've got you know, Greg Taiat
and this ambassador and that, and he's got the highlighters
out and the different boxes and I'm like herd bro
and and and but we went through it.

Speaker 10 (47:46):
We went through.

Speaker 15 (47:46):
We blew the whole thing up. And that's how we
got Charamela. That's how we got Venman, that'she we get
the rest. But look, look, the point is you have
to go in these places and build, and you have
to work the coalitions.

Speaker 10 (47:54):
Look, the the Maga is.

Speaker 15 (47:58):
The working soul of heart and soul of this movement
and of this country. But you know who else is
out there is Maha. There was no engagement of the
Maha movement at all of Wisconsin. You have to work
the coalitions. You can't just sit there and say hey,
come vote for us. This guy's like Trump. It's good
to go. No, you have to be there. You're day in,
your day out on the granuar level that takes local

(48:18):
institutions and local building.

Speaker 10 (48:20):
Corn casts on Human Events Daily.

Speaker 15 (48:22):
Tomorrow we're scheduling. So tomorrow's the conference. We'll be doing
the show at the car.

Speaker 10 (48:26):
You're going to do it live.

Speaker 11 (48:27):
We're getting out, We're okay everything with the show. Your
social media, Twitter handle all of it.

Speaker 10 (48:34):
Look, folks, it's the great deal.

Speaker 15 (48:36):
Go watch Human Events Daily this week we've been breaking
it down. The great deal is a great deal for
the American people. You've been getting a bad deal. Now
it's time for the great deal. So Human Events Daily
go listen, download it.

Speaker 10 (48:50):
You'll be able to.

Speaker 15 (48:50):
Get it every day wherever you get your podcasts. And
of course the book Unhumans Understand What's going On in
our World.

Speaker 10 (48:55):
Love that book.

Speaker 11 (48:56):
The Great Tanya Tay, Tanya Tay is out with her sister.

Speaker 9 (48:59):
Is that?

Speaker 4 (48:59):
What is that?

Speaker 10 (49:00):
A little little little girls family. That's a girl's action.
You're taking care of the kids. Jack Jacket one.

Speaker 11 (49:06):
Okay, fine, okay, pasobics. We can we can pick up
Human Events Daily Live. You're gonna do it live tomorrow.
We're gonna be live tomorrow. We can even we can
even do some hits, you know, maybe during the day,
maybe morning, ten and noon from har fine, perfect done.

Speaker 10 (49:18):
We'll be up there a center. Mcormick The Way Book.
I love McCormick and Dina.

Speaker 11 (49:23):
Okay, Mike Lindell, I'm gonna see if you can sell
better than Pasobic, sell me, sell me some sheets.

Speaker 14 (49:30):
Brother, Hey tired, this is this is gonna be called
the war Room Wholesale Specials. That's what we're gonna give
you all the time these box stores that have canceled,
we got a whole new line for you.

Speaker 9 (49:42):
All the kitchen towels, bathroom towels, We.

Speaker 14 (49:44):
Have oven, mittz pod holders, all this stuff that was
ear marked where these box stores canceled. You get it now.
The war Room polse if we put it up there,
it is you guys as low as nine with what
the famous promo code, war Room, the most so after
promo code ever kitchen and towel sale. It's all on
for wholesale prices. Go to the website. Go to my

(50:07):
pillow dot com. Scroll down to you see our leader
Steve there. Click on them.

Speaker 9 (50:13):
There it is the nine to ninety nine sale, you guys.
Click on that. You'll see all these kitchen.

Speaker 14 (50:17):
And bathroom stuff on sale for wholesale prices. Because we
keep getting canceled by the box stores and we're gonna
pass it all on to the Warroom.

Speaker 9 (50:26):
Polse, we have our clear special still on. Go ahead.

Speaker 11 (50:31):
No, what I want to do is tomorrow on the
Morning show, I want to get the letters. I want
to read some letters to the audience of the box
stores that are canceling.

Speaker 9 (50:38):
Horrible.

Speaker 11 (50:38):
Dear Mike, we don't't be associated with a band like
My Pillow that supports President Trump, right, screw.

Speaker 10 (50:45):
Them, terrible, screw them, you don't.

Speaker 11 (50:47):
We're not gonna say you're not gonna sell your pillows
and your great sheets in those dumps.

Speaker 10 (50:51):
Right, We're gonna rip them.

Speaker 11 (50:52):
We're gonna rip their stores on on the on the
on the show live.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (50:56):
And then if you know what they're doing, you know
what they're doing.

Speaker 14 (50:58):
They're using that promo co war Room because you know
they're using the products.

Speaker 11 (51:03):
Exactly exactly my pillow dot Com promo Core Warm.

Speaker 10 (51:07):
We'll see tomorrow, Mike Lindell. Keep fighting Lindell supports the
Terroffts Made in America.

Speaker 11 (51:13):
Baby Made in America by Americans, Made in America by Americans.
Jack Pasoba, We'll get you on in the Tendon New
Show live up in Harrisburg.

Speaker 10 (51:21):
As Jack Pasofic takes the road, We're gonna leave you
with the right stuff.

Speaker 11 (51:25):
We're going to cartel Country, the Indefatiga Role, Ben Berkwam
and Oscar Blue Rameraz are down to give us a
live report on the tip of the Spirit, one of
the most dangerous parts of the world, as President Trump
prepares to drop the hammer on the cartels and destroy
the Fatnah market. And Julie Kelly, fresh from Federal Court,

(51:45):
is gonna be here live next hour only in the
War Room.
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