Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Historic executive orders to bend men from competing in women's
sports illegal voter course. It's the lowest ever recorded ever
gon to freeze on all foreign aid.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Are you either going to make a deal or wear out?
Speaker 1 (00:27):
I declared a national energy emergency.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Drill, Baby drill.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
I withdrew from the unfair Powis Climate Accord. We ordered
all federal workers to return to the office, ending the
flagrant waste of taxpayer dollars, reveer the jarney of so
called diversity, equity and inclusion.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Our country will be walk no longer.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
Other tunchies of houst tariffs against us for decades, and
now it's our turn to we start using them against
those other touches.
Speaker 5 (01:10):
We support Donald following Mona bes On tariff one percent.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
This will be, indeed the golden age of Americans coming back.
Speaker 6 (01:20):
It will be like nothing that has ever been seen before.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Thank you, God bless you, and God.
Speaker 7 (01:27):
Bless America Trump. The First hundred Days starts now.
Speaker 8 (01:39):
Tuesday, twenty ninth April and the era of Earil twenty
twenty five. Welcome to Real America's Voice coverage continuous coverage
of the one hundred days. This is the commemoration The
celebration is going to take place in Reagan Democrat country
of McComb County, Michigan. Eric Bowling and myself were co
hosting here in the war room.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
We we're going to.
Speaker 8 (02:01):
Toss it now to our host. We're sitting in for
his hour, Steve Gruber. Steve, I call you the rush
Limba of Michigan. But maybe that's not big enough of
how big you are in Michigan. How big a day
is this for you guys today to have President Trump
on his one hundred day come back to Michigan and say, guys,
how am I doing?
Speaker 9 (02:23):
Look, Steve, you know this from talking in the same
way I do. Donald Trump is always considered Michigan to
be grounds here.
Speaker 5 (02:28):
Guys, are you fired up?
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (02:29):
Hey, are you fired up? You're supposed to be here cheering.
Let's right there, he goes. Anyhow, it's a festive hemisphere here. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:36):
There he is, guys, about eight feet tall. He's a
uaw guy. I was just talking to him. They want
to hear more about what's happening with Taroff, Steve, because
it means everything in Michigan. Twenty percent one dollar in
five in Michigan spent on the auto industry. These people
are filing in, they're getting ready for a show at
six o'clock. As you mentioned, I heard from Howard Lutnik earlier.
The Commerce Secretary said that they might have a deal
(02:58):
on tariffs for the auto industry.
Speaker 5 (03:01):
I expect Donald Trump can talk about that tonight. This
is big.
Speaker 9 (03:04):
But what I started to say at the beginning there
was Donald Trump believes that Michigan has ground zero. He's
thought that in twenty sixteen, twenty twenty. In twenty twenty
four he told me a couple of different times, if
he won Michigan, he was gonna win it all.
Speaker 5 (03:17):
He knew that.
Speaker 9 (03:17):
I believe that to be true. It's also true in
the midterms. But here's the key, Steven.
Speaker 5 (03:21):
You know this, and so does Eric.
Speaker 9 (03:23):
We've got to get these Trump voters out in the
midterms to make sure that Donald Trump.
Speaker 5 (03:26):
Has a House and Senate to work with. That's fact.
Speaker 9 (03:29):
He's got to have the tools to get his agenda done.
Nice start for one hundred days, but we've got another
hundred days after that, and one hundred days after that.
Michigan will deliver I hope in the midterms in twenty six.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
Yeah, it's a big one. It is you love. He's
always loved Michigan.
Speaker 10 (03:46):
I remember in twenty sixteen when Jason Miller I was
at Fox and Jason Miller's walking down the hallway and say,
I think we just I think we're gonna win Wisconsin
and Michigan. I go, what why? And yeah, he locked
it down. Trump has always had a heart big for
whatever reason, for Michigan. Maybe maybe he likes the idea
of you know, the big UA, the union membership flocking.
Speaker 8 (04:09):
It's trost war America. It's the engine that drove the
arsenal democracy, It's what won World War two. He's got
a strong affinity for Michigan, always had. Well tell me
about what are the folks, Steve, Maybe get some feedback
from the audience out there, from some of the Trump faithful.
How do they think they've done so far in one
hundred days.
Speaker 9 (04:30):
Well, we got a bunch of people outside. Let's see
if I can snag somebody right here to make a
comment for me, real quick, come on in here.
Speaker 5 (04:36):
It's okay, it's okay, I don't buy it. All right, fine,
can you make a quick comment for me? Sir?
Speaker 9 (04:42):
Come come out over here, right over here, we'll get
one here for you real quick.
Speaker 5 (04:45):
All right, sir, what's your name and where are you from?
Speaker 11 (04:48):
Jeremy Rippy from Manchester, Michigan. Manchester, Michigan. It's outside of Chelsea.
Speaker 9 (04:53):
I know exactly where it is, maybe an hour from here,
working class area.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
You guys voted for Trump. People are saying now there's
a lot of buyers of warts. People wouldn't vote for
Trump again. True or false? I would say that's false.
Speaker 12 (05:05):
I mean people, you know, one hundred days, you know,
it's a lot better than what we had before.
Speaker 5 (05:12):
You know, people were asleep at the wheel.
Speaker 12 (05:14):
Yeah, and you know, just by executive actions, things have
to be done.
Speaker 9 (05:19):
And look, Michigan is always a state that's on the
receiving kind of a recession. If things are tough, they're
tougher in Michigan. They're tougher in Nevada. Those are the
two states that take it the worse. How optimistic are you?
A lot of talk about tariffs and people criticizing Trump
from the left side.
Speaker 5 (05:33):
Of the arena.
Speaker 9 (05:35):
Doesn't matter what do you think about the tariffs at
resetting the global economy?
Speaker 12 (05:40):
Tariffs are temporary, taxes are forever.
Speaker 5 (05:43):
So you like it you'll do it again. Absolutely. What
do you want to hear from Donald Trump tonight?
Speaker 12 (05:49):
Just well, I believe he's probably going to announce some
sort of executive action about reducing tariffs for auto suppliers
auto manufacturers.
Speaker 5 (05:58):
That's huge for Michigan. But also you got to.
Speaker 12 (06:02):
Play the game and get what you want, and I
think he's pretty good at that.
Speaker 11 (06:06):
People are crumbling daily. So you know, I learned a
long time ago. I don't bet against Donald Trump. Sir,
would like to join? Thank you, sir, greatly appreciated.
Speaker 13 (06:14):
Sir.
Speaker 9 (06:14):
Would you like to come in here? Okay, come out here,
come out here. We'll get another one for you, Steve,
We'll get another one here for you.
Speaker 5 (06:22):
What's your name, sir? How are you doing? Jay?
Speaker 14 (06:24):
Jay?
Speaker 5 (06:24):
How are you? Where you're from? Detroit, Michigan?
Speaker 9 (06:26):
Tell me about it? You voted for Trump. I'm going
to make a guest in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 5 (06:30):
I did not you did not no, no. I just
talked along. Why are you here? I was O RFK
junior guy? Really?
Speaker 1 (06:36):
So?
Speaker 5 (06:36):
Where why are you here? That I'd like to understand
both sides.
Speaker 14 (06:38):
I think there's whispers of oligarchy and some dangerous notions
from the bedroom to the boardroom. And I want to know,
you know what our president is going to do to
preserve democracy. You know, we have a very disruptive time
and a global world happening right now, and these next
these next four years are going to be among the
(06:59):
most important in US history.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
UH.
Speaker 9 (07:01):
And what could the President say tonight that would convince
you to get behind him?
Speaker 14 (07:06):
Oh? Yeah, Well, I'm always behind the president, you know,
I have reverence for the office. But I'd like to see, uh,
or like to hear just reassurances that he's behind Michigan manufacturing,
empowering uh, you know, the people with technology and and
really just moving forward with UH.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
I know this basically what you told me. Robert F.
Speaker 9 (07:28):
Kenny Junior, got eight poisonous dives out of our food system.
By next year, We're going to take that same stuff
out of pharmaceuticals, making America healthy again.
Speaker 5 (07:36):
As part of Donald Trump's agenda. That must make you happy.
Speaker 14 (07:39):
That makes me extremely happy. And I hope to see
him running in in four years, mister Kennedy. That is
mister Kennedy, I got you. Thank you greatly, appreciate it.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
All right, Steve, can you ask to get to Kennedy
guy for second and get another question for you.
Speaker 5 (07:57):
All right, go ahead, what's the question? We have one
more question?
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Go ahead, yeah, and ask him what he liked about
Bobby Kennedy during the campaign. Why was he attracted to
Kennedy more than Trump during the campaign?
Speaker 9 (08:09):
The question pretty simple, Why were you attracted to Bobby
Kennedy more than Donald Trump? And when Kennedy joined the
Trump campaign you didn't go that way? Well, why be
attraction to RFK Jr?
Speaker 5 (08:19):
Oh?
Speaker 14 (08:19):
Yeah, that was just basically my aunt worked with him
on environmental you know, protection and conservation, so I really
had kind of a draw to him. I think he's
a powerful speaker, despite you know what happened with his voice,
and I think he has a lot of great messages
and initiatives that he can spring but off of Donald
(08:41):
Trump's President Trump's current momentum.
Speaker 9 (08:45):
When you hear I mean, you could look around. We
are the unhealthiest nation on Earth. Obesity, high blood pressure, depression, anxiety, suicide.
Speaker 5 (08:54):
Bobby is fighting all of those things and Trump put
him in that position.
Speaker 14 (08:58):
Who knows to President Trump for putting our FK in
that position to where we can make America healthy and
take some of the take these poisons out of our
our foods, you know, with the preservatives. We got to
go organic, we got to go vertical farms, We got
to bring the food closer to us in the cities.
You know, it's it's time for a radical transformation. And
(09:19):
I think Donald Trump is doing a good job and
in spearheading that, I think RFK will take it to
the next level.
Speaker 9 (09:25):
So you sound like a supporter, reluctant a bit, but
a supporter of.
Speaker 5 (09:28):
What's going on.
Speaker 14 (09:29):
You know, you always have to support the presidency and
the government right, So you know, and that's what made.
Speaker 9 (09:38):
He's delivering on your guys deal. He's delivering on your guys,
make America healthy again.
Speaker 14 (09:42):
That's what makes America great. We can disagree, but we
can still be united. There you have it, Thank you, sir.
That's a pretty good answer. I think Steve he look,
he liked.
Speaker 9 (09:53):
Bobby, he likes everything that Trump's doing to put him
in place to get all these things to happen.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
So there you have it.
Speaker 8 (09:59):
That's one of the mo bus intelligent answers I've heard.
This is also the future people talk about twenty six
and beyond and getting folks out the merger of the
make America Healthy again and make America great again is
the future. What Nicole Shanahan, But what a partnership.
Speaker 3 (10:15):
So logical, it's so common sense.
Speaker 10 (10:17):
Make America healthy again, bring it right into the fold
that make America. Making America healthy again, makes America great,
greater again. It was brilliant.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
But it's also standing up to the big farm, big pharma.
You sent up the big agriculture.
Speaker 8 (10:29):
You're getting back to kind of the more entrepreneurial spirit
of the Trump movement. Steve Gerber, Detroit is the beating
heart of industrial America.
Speaker 3 (10:39):
What do you think, folks? I mean, you know, you
know it better than anybody.
Speaker 8 (10:42):
What are folks gonna be looking for tonight about not
just President Trump's accomplishments, but some guidance of where we're
going on this on the trade war with China and
this great kind of economic reorganization of global commerce.
Speaker 5 (10:57):
Sir, Well, you know I.
Speaker 9 (11:01):
Heard Scott Basset say and call out the national media
here for the last couple of days and spot on
he was saying, look, two weeks ago, you tell me
it was gonna be the worst Naples since nineteen thirty two.
On the stock market. Well, the markets come back. That's
not true. The market was above forty thousand last time
I glanced.
Speaker 5 (11:15):
Today.
Speaker 9 (11:16):
The SMP and the Nasdaq also doing well. People want
just some confidence that things are going to go on
the right drinks.
Speaker 5 (11:23):
I think they have that.
Speaker 9 (11:24):
Look, the only trading partner that we're having a real
disagreement with continuously is China, and we have to have
that realignment. People here know that. But the problem here
is more complicated, Steve. As you know because the governor here,
Gretchen Whitber, is a progressive and you look around, they
got right to work here. Her big promise six years
ago was to fix the damn Rhods. I can assure
(11:45):
you the roads in Michigan are not fixed. So you
see the Honda plant go to Indiana, you see the
Hyundai plant go to Arizona. That's disappointed people in Michigan.
But it's no blame to Donald Trump. He's bringing the
plants to America. Michigan would like to see some of
that love come here. There's no question of these people here,
they're working people. It was the arsenal democracy and it
can be the arsenal of democracy again. As they said
(12:05):
a moment ago, one dollar and five in Michigan comes
from the autobile industry, either directly or indirectly. Twenty percent
of the state's GDP comes from the auto industry. We
don't want to lose that. We've already lost ground where
it's only fourteen manufacturing plants left in Michigan.
Speaker 5 (12:21):
We'd like some of that action.
Speaker 9 (12:23):
We'd like to see some of that auto plant facilities
come home. We'd like I know that Apple is investing
here in a big complex in Detroit that's been announced.
Speaker 5 (12:33):
I know that's happening, but we need more than that.
Speaker 9 (12:35):
Look, Michigan has had a net loss of people for
the last several years. We don't see that turning around,
according to Governor Whimber herself, until at least twenty thirty.
That's not exactly an optimistic path, now, is it?
Speaker 10 (12:47):
So?
Speaker 9 (12:47):
Donald Trump delivering hope here. But we have to knock
down these barriers. We got to get rid of the
trades and we want to be able to see a
Chevy suburban driving down the street in Tokyo, in Berlin,
in Bay. Knock down those barriers. Let how car companies
sell there. Make sure that we can sell I think
it's made in Michigan all over this world.
Speaker 5 (13:07):
Look, we're also a big ag producer.
Speaker 9 (13:09):
We produce apples and cherries and blueberries and more grapes.
Wells's grape juice all comes from Michigan. God bless your
kids love it. We need to make sure we take
care of Steve.
Speaker 5 (13:19):
Do it. Knock down those agricultural tariffs, right, Steve.
Speaker 8 (13:23):
Steve, hang on for one second. We're gonna take a
short commercial break. We're going to return to McComb County
and Steve Gruber here on real American's voice, Eric Bowling
and myself holding down the fort in the Imperial Capital.
We will be back after a short commercial break.
Speaker 15 (13:39):
Speak attack the best beetle caught in past past peoples.
Speaker 6 (13:43):
We'll be like nothing that has ever been seen before.
Thank you, God bless you, and God bless I'm there.
Speaker 7 (13:51):
Welcome back to Trump's rally as we celebrate his first
one hundred days.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
First, these amazing Eric Bowen cuts. So I'm fascinating what
this is going to be.
Speaker 10 (14:05):
I'm the anticipation, per Steve Buber, energy, the energy, but
they're also the anticipation is that he Trump is going
to announce some sort of I guess easing of his
it stands on tariffs for the for the auto industry,
maybe the parts. Well, so this is important to me
because if it's just easing tariffs on autos, so you're
(14:26):
looking at car companies who maybe want to build plants
here in America, They're not necessarily going to go to Michigan.
They're going to go to Tennessee, South Carolina, Arkansas where
they're non union states. So how do you thread the
needle to make the people of Michigan feel whole or better? Trump,
as he was getting on Marine one on his way
to Andrews to take off to go to Michigan, said
(14:47):
the President said his eos offering limited auto tariff relief
were a transitional step, quoting it's a little bit of help,
he said, it's a little transition, and I'm trying to
parse that.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
How does a little help help them?
Speaker 10 (15:01):
I hope it's bigger, you know me, Steve, I'm I'm
the guys just just dropped the tariffs across the boarder.
That's just where I am. So I hope whatever it is,
it's a little bit more. I've got a couple of
hours here to see.
Speaker 8 (15:12):
I'm trying to Falling Bawling is an old friend, Okay,
but I had he had two formative experiences were not
great one one one was the free market capitalism of
the Pitts and Wall Street.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
The other was Fox News. Now I'm just kidding, we're
gonna get into that.
Speaker 8 (15:28):
I think some of the more high value added to
what they're trying to do. They're trying to make Detroit
a high tech center for advanced production of automobiles. But
you still go to Tennessee and South Carolina that as
a union state.
Speaker 10 (15:42):
I mean, the way to do it is break the
You can break the back of the unions in Michigan.
Speaker 8 (15:45):
If you got hang over a second, you've got to
remember the U A w is now all the all
the rank and follow their their See these Fox guys
immediately they're going to be union breakers, right Murdoch with
the New York Post House work out? Yeah, Man, you
gotta talk to Sig. You're not union, Jack Pasovic, you've
(16:08):
been covered to day.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
Okay, hold it.
Speaker 8 (16:10):
So the oligarchs, they don't change. They can't change. Talk
to me Jack about the one hundred days. But on
the one hundredth day, what happened Jeff Bezos showed his
true colors, did he not, sir, But.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Jeff Bezos showed his true colors.
Speaker 16 (16:25):
But he's been showing it all along because people need
to stop mistaking words for action. And it's something that
I've seen go on and a lot of people who
are Trump supporters and good people, they say, Oh, someone
says something nice about Trump, so everything's changed. Now someone
says something I was somebody showed up to inauguration? No? No,
(16:45):
what is the watchword of the war room?
Speaker 2 (16:48):
Action?
Speaker 3 (16:49):
Action?
Speaker 2 (16:50):
Action?
Speaker 16 (16:50):
So as they say in Hollywood, show don't tell. As
David Mammontt tells us, show don't tell. What does that mean?
That means put up or shut up? Where is the
uncensorship on Facebook and Instagram of all the conservatives and
all the conservative groups that were taken down during COVID.
Where is the unsensorship or the rolling back and reversal
(17:13):
of actions taken against all of these And where's the
unsensorship on Amazon? By the way, of all of the
conservative documentaries Denesta Suza, Mike Cernovich, so many people were
blocked from getting on Amazon.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
I'm sorry, I haven't heard anybody. Steve.
Speaker 16 (17:27):
You guys are putting out war room documentaries all the time.
Jeff Bezos call you up and ask you to put
up Cash Ptel's documentary A Government Gangsters or the Michael
Flynn documentary, and we're a men milius, I'll go.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
I talked to her all the time.
Speaker 16 (17:38):
She says, Nope, haven't had Amazon hit me up for
Amazon Prime talking about putting any conservative documentaries up. And
by the way, this isn't us saying that we want
some special favors. We just want access to be able
to have the ability to be put on here. But no,
we don't see it. Don't see the action.
Speaker 8 (17:55):
I didn't tell you about the ten million dollar advance
we got for Unhumans the film rights.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
Bowling your respect.
Speaker 16 (18:02):
Yeah, well we see the Millennia Trump one, right, the
Millennia Trump that's one.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
But I'm talking about don't go there, mag.
Speaker 3 (18:10):
That's forty million dollars there.
Speaker 10 (18:11):
Don't touch so, yeah, right right right, gives him forty
million dollars to do. It's a documentary on the line. Okay,
that's action. That's action, forty millions actions right right there.
So Bezos, if folks don't understand what what the Bezos
issue is, that is putting the tear amount of increased
pricing for their Amazon products as due to terrorists as
(18:34):
a kind of line item.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
Hold hold pay Amazon in your face when you got
the cart. It's going to be a different line.
Speaker 10 (18:40):
For terror be the same thing when oil prices went up.
I know, here's your fuel fee, and it went away
when it went away.
Speaker 3 (18:46):
The reason why I'm saying to kind of say, this
is what Trump's bringing on you.
Speaker 10 (18:50):
Right, But I'm hoping listen again, I don't think Bezos
should be doing it. I think it's it's disrespectful from
the to the guy who he claims to have found
a new love for on inauguration week. But I also
understand its business and listen to free market. You're free
to put that price up there if that's the amount
(19:10):
it's going to cost you more to purchase this piece
of this canna red bull on Amazon. Okay, so it's
fourteen cents more because of the Trump tariffs.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
I get it.
Speaker 10 (19:21):
They're trying to get all the tariffs down, and I'm
okay with that.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Let's go to we have Ted Nugent.
Speaker 8 (19:27):
Let's go to Ted NuGen Nobody knows Michigan better and
Ted nugent ted, it's a great honor today for President
Trump to be coming back and really giving a hat
tip and a thanks to the folks in Michigan that
actually pushed this victory over the top.
Speaker 17 (19:39):
Your thoughts, sir, well, my thoughts are one of glory, glory, hallelujah.
Because I'm the only MotorCity Madman that there is, because
I was born in Detroit when it was the epicenter
of work ethic, the epicenter of god, family, country, pride
of accomplishment to be a producer, and that spirit is
alive and well in Michigan, which is why our Hunter Nation,
(20:02):
our Hunter Nation Army literally woke up the conservation families,
the license hunters in Michigan that that's how we won.
In those battleground states and including my beloved birth state
of Michigan. There is a pisson vinegar factor and I
know those people really well. I'm going to be doing
my seven thousandth concert, Steve Eric seven thousandth concert at
(20:23):
Freedom Hill in Detroit on August thirty first, and I
am those people.
Speaker 5 (20:29):
They are me.
Speaker 2 (20:30):
They are the nugents.
Speaker 17 (20:31):
The nugents are the working, hard, plan hard families of
Michigan that voted for Donald Trump because we were offended,
we were embarrassed, and we were pissed off at the
intentional toilet flush by the deep state. That only one
guy came out and spotlighted the cockroaches of the deep state,
and that's Donald Trump. So these really are hallelujah times
(20:52):
in his first hundred days. Let's put it this way,
Steve and Eric, you guys know me. Everybody knows me.
I'm so simple, it's stupid. Dude would have done the
exact same stuff for the NuGen family that President Trump
has done for the United States of America in the
last hundred days. So the people that support Donald Trump
are people that dedicate their heart and soul to be
(21:12):
in the asset column, sacrifices, risk, work, ethic, determination, entrepreneur spirit.
That's who voted for Donald Trump. And that's who's in
Michigan right now to celebrate his first hundred days.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
I'm timed like hi on positive attitude.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Here's a question.
Speaker 8 (21:30):
The President's made a massive bet to bring mania, to
risk it all, to bring manufacturing jobs back here to
the United States.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
Is the arsenal democracy? Does Detroit?
Speaker 8 (21:39):
Does Michigan still have that piss and vinegar, that grit,
the determination. If those jobs come back, can we make
this successful?
Speaker 1 (21:46):
Sir, absolutely, Steve.
Speaker 17 (21:49):
You know the arsenal democracy I mentioned last night at
my concert at the barbecue place, Cooper's Barbecue, that wherever
ted NuGen shows up, it becomes the arsenal ofocracy. More
more firearms per capita than anywhere in the world. And
that's that described my household, and that really describes the
spirit of Detroit when we were fighting the evil Japanese
(22:10):
and Nazis, that we stopped producing for self and we
produce tanks and howitzers and bombers to safeguard good the
United States over the evil of abject evil that was
on display in World War Two. My dad was in
the US Army Cavalry and that's how he raised me
and my brothers and sisters so that we would be
in the asset column. But Steve, the words piss and
(22:32):
vinegar really describe the herculean work, ethic, the determination these
Michigan people. I love people all over the country, and
I'm a little biased because I was born in Detroit,
and I love those people and I know those people intimately.
But that spirit is not only alive and well, but
there's more sleeves being.
Speaker 5 (22:52):
Rolled up right now.
Speaker 17 (22:53):
And if you want to produce the best competition for
AI or vehicles or machinery or technology, Michigan is the place.
These are some smart, smart people, naturally instinctively smart, but
they pursue a career and endeavor to be the.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
Tip of the spear.
Speaker 17 (23:13):
Dare I say of the arsenal democracy, no matter what
that may manifest itself in so I love Michigan that
I know these people and the best people in the
world will be at that rally for President Trump's hundred
day celebration today in the wonderful, wonderful Motor City. I am,
by the way, did I mention on the MotorCity?
Speaker 1 (23:30):
Mad man?
Speaker 3 (23:32):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (23:33):
I will?
Speaker 10 (23:34):
I was waiting for that wonderful rant to finish because
Ted Nugent motacity, mad man?
Speaker 3 (23:40):
Are you kidding me?
Speaker 10 (23:41):
Forty years ago I watched Ted Nugent on stage in
Chicago just rocket my.
Speaker 3 (23:47):
Here as you know Ted, And.
Speaker 8 (23:49):
The closing days of sixteen we went to Michigan and
he put on one of those concerts. It took us
like an hour to get through to the Ted you
drew a crowd. And I'm telling you those are the
folks that got it because we had no organization.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
It's self organized.
Speaker 8 (24:02):
It was around Ted Nugent's concerts, and Ted, I'm going
to tell you the folks that you drew to it
was just unbelievable.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
If you had, if you had something to tell President
Trump today.
Speaker 17 (24:12):
Low to be Ted, well, I would I have the opportunity.
I'm really honored and humbled and blessed and inspired, stimulated
and motivated to communicate with my commander in chief. Don
Junior is a good hunting buddy of mine. And there's
no better connection than conservation, conservation, constitutional conservativism. And I
(24:34):
would say to Donald Trump, be safe, be sure you
vet your secret service guys, because the best of the
best are there around you to protect you at our
taxpayers expense. And there is no expense out of control
that we want President Trump to survive in these dangerous,
treacherous times where his enemies don't just want to disagree
and argue with him, they want to kill him. So
(24:54):
be careful, keep that head on a swivel, be cocked
locked and ready to rock that glock around the clock.
Dot Spock and a big salute to those secret service
agents that are protecting him, because these are dangerous, dangerous times.
There's a cop in Grand Rapids on trial for murder
because he stopped a man who invaded our country from
Africa and who was on the run, and he had
(25:15):
to neutralize the threat when this perpetrator grabs his stun gun,
and the court system, the anti justice court system of
American Michigan, is actually putting the cop on trial for
defending his life against a maniac attacker. So these are
dangerous times. So Donald Trump, we love you. We pray
for you every day. So keep reaching out to the
(25:36):
hand of God like you did in Butler, Pennsylvania, and
he will steer you in the right direction. Best Americans
in the Asset column love a commander in chief who
represents the asset column.
Speaker 10 (25:48):
Hey, I'm going to send you this. I have one
for myself. I got one for Stevie. You got to
get your team. Ban is my spirit anim I know
doesn't need.
Speaker 5 (25:58):
A spirit ant.
Speaker 3 (25:59):
He is to get your content.
Speaker 17 (26:01):
Brother, if the anniversary stranglehold shirt at Ted Nugent dot
com and we can't make it.
Speaker 3 (26:06):
Myranglehole is my ring tone.
Speaker 10 (26:10):
It's the best best rock song ever produced in the
entire history of America.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
The world true, this is true, ed where they it is?
Where do people go to get your content?
Speaker 7 (26:20):
Brother?
Speaker 3 (26:20):
Know you get a bounce?
Speaker 17 (26:22):
Well, we got all kinds of stuff going on. I
had a great crowd of young boys and girls and
old folks and crazy Americans, and we're doing speakeasy rockouts
every week. We do a run in Michigan at the
end of August. They go to Ted Nugent dot com
because the music is absolutely out of control. I feel
like I'm twelve years old when I strap on that
Gibson Birdland. So the spirit is alive and well Tednugent
(26:43):
dot com. Everything that will cure your soul.
Speaker 8 (26:48):
Okay, Ted Nugent, thank you very much. Brother, got speak pleasure,
amazing moticing that is Detroit. I tell you we're gonna
lose post, so let's go to post so quickly posts.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
So we're gonna lose you.
Speaker 3 (27:01):
I know you got to bounce.
Speaker 16 (27:02):
Closing thoughts, sir, Look Steve, what Uncle Ted said there
is absolutely right the people in Michigan, and this is
key and intrinsic for everyone to understand the Maga movement
and understand the type of people that came out for
President Trump, particularly in the rust belt. They vote with
(27:22):
their dollars, they vote with their wallets. Okay, so this
isn't an area. It's not the Bible Belt. The rust
Belt is not the Bible Belt. So what does it mean.
They're the people who understand China. They understand tariffs, they
want the tariffs, they want the jobs.
Speaker 2 (27:40):
They understand.
Speaker 16 (27:41):
Why does Detroit you know yet, Uncle Ted, they're talking
about Detroit. Why does Detroit look the way that it
does now? And Shanghai and shen Jen and all on
Ningbo and Honjo and all these great cities of China.
Why do they look so advanced and Detroit looks so
rundown because of what was done in operation. That was
done to the people of this country, and particularly the
(28:02):
working men and women of this country. That's why President
Trump is going up there to Michigan, because those people
are the ones who get it. You know why, Because
they're the ones who took the brunt of it when
globalism was first erected forty years ago.
Speaker 8 (28:16):
Amen, the arsenal democracy. And you know, Pennsylvanian like Ted
knows Michigan. And that's why one of the reasons network
so strong and people on the ground know and know
the ground truth. I know you got to bounce say
hi to tany Tay. Where do people go to get
you on social media?
Speaker 1 (28:33):
Jack?
Speaker 3 (28:33):
Because you are on fire, brother.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
I appreciate that, Stevie.
Speaker 16 (28:37):
We're going to be on fire if anybody misses the
podcast where Apple Spotify, River gives your podcasts Human Events
daily at Jack Pasofic everywhere. By the way, the book
is on humans. It is a war room book. Stephen K.
Bannon wrote the foward to it, and Steve, I got
to tell you we have seen a massive spike in
book sales since Luigi Maggioni and everything else that's going
(28:58):
on with the Tesla terrorists over at the last couple
of weeks. So this book it's still selling like crazy.
Speaker 8 (29:04):
And we're gonna make an official announcement later the week.
We are going to make a movie about it. But
I'll talk to you more about later. We're gonna I'm
ann divvy up that ten million that the.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
Jack was sovic love you, brother.
Speaker 8 (29:14):
We're gonna take a short commercial break here in real
America's voice. We're gonna return to go to Steve Gruber
at Macomb County for the for the rally.
Speaker 18 (29:23):
In a moment, welcome back to.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Real American Voice coverage of the One Hard Day rally
the President Trump in Michigan, Macomb County. It does get
more real than holding back.
Speaker 8 (29:56):
That's the real deal. That's the real deal. You know
what's what's with Michigan. Michigan's Yeah, Nudgen. I think kid Rock.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
Was because it's a place of it's a real guys,
real not just that it's it's real, it's real people.
Broomer's there too.
Speaker 10 (30:11):
I think Ruber Groovers, Steve Steve Grewer know how to
play the guitars.
Speaker 8 (30:18):
Gruber talk to me. Ted Nugent just said about the
arsenal democracy. He talked about the piss and vinegar of
Michiganders and that if this bet when it works for
President Trump to bring Josh back, you guys are ready.
Speaker 9 (30:33):
Yeah, absolutely true. Look I blame Ted Dusa for my
hearing loss. I'm just gonna tell you right now half
my hearing loss. You got to his concerts, you'd leave
those things. Your ears are bleeding. I'm not kidding you.
I've known Ted personally since my nineteen eighty nine. We
first met actually in Billings, Montana. It's a long story,
h and I want to talk about that, but I
want to pivot to a guy I'm just saying here
talking to Peter. Peter is a Canadian who came here
(30:57):
today after the embarrassment of Peter Polia.
Speaker 5 (31:00):
I'm getting beaten.
Speaker 9 (31:02):
Yesterday by Mark Carney, a horrible globalist, a World Economic
Forum kind of guy.
Speaker 5 (31:07):
And so I want to say, hey, Peter, you're a
big Trump fan.
Speaker 19 (31:10):
Oh yeah, definitely.
Speaker 20 (31:11):
It's like I said, it's hard to be a conservative
in Canada, and Trump is I don't know if you'd
call him a conservative, but he's common sense and I
think that's what conservatism is.
Speaker 19 (31:21):
It's common sense.
Speaker 9 (31:22):
It is the things your mother said, Hey, do the
right things, tell the truth, work hard.
Speaker 5 (31:27):
So you heard he was going to be here, you
ran over here.
Speaker 9 (31:29):
You think the reason that Pierre Polyev folded and got
and in fact he lost his own seat yesterday, is
when he turned and attack Donald Trump.
Speaker 20 (31:37):
Yes, one hundred percent. If you've read anything on x
some of the people that have posted said the same thing.
Speaker 19 (31:45):
A lot of us are Trump fans. No matter what
Trump says about Canada, we still like the guy.
Speaker 20 (31:51):
And for Polyiev to have he didn't have to say
anything about Trump. All he had to do was put
the blame on the Liberal Party for not having a
an effective prime minister.
Speaker 9 (32:02):
So how big a disaster is Mark Coarney. He's a
citizen of three countries, he's the former what was he
the President of the Bank of London, He's a World
Economic Forum, he's a Davos guy.
Speaker 5 (32:12):
How much worse could it get?
Speaker 20 (32:14):
Well, it just goes to show you that you can
sell you can sell sant to an erab. I guess
people are just not very bright. I mean, look at
how many people voted for Kamala Harris.
Speaker 5 (32:26):
I mean it.
Speaker 20 (32:27):
Just goes to show you that either people aren't engaged
or they're easily manipulated.
Speaker 9 (32:32):
So I had this theory, and I'll just bounce this
theory off the folks. A lot of people here in
the American media said, well, Donald Trump really blew it.
Speaker 5 (32:39):
He shot himself in the foot.
Speaker 9 (32:41):
He went after and said make Canada the fifty first state.
And I thought about it here of the last few days,
I thought to myself, well, Trump is a long he
plays the long game, right. One if his whole intention
was to get this guy elected, to get Carne in
office so that Alberta would become available.
Speaker 5 (32:57):
What do you think of that?
Speaker 19 (32:59):
You know, I've said the same thing. Trump is a troller.
Speaker 20 (33:03):
He will throw things out there, and he has a
vision that we don't really.
Speaker 19 (33:08):
Know what his actual vision is.
Speaker 20 (33:10):
H And Alberta is separating to become the fifty first state.
Speaker 19 (33:14):
Well, it's my t shirt. Okay, that's what my T
shirt is.
Speaker 20 (33:17):
It's Alberta with a little Canadian dot here for.
Speaker 5 (33:23):
State fifty state fifty one.
Speaker 20 (33:24):
And I'm all for that, and it would make a
great price for America.
Speaker 19 (33:29):
It would make a great price for Alberta.
Speaker 20 (33:31):
Right now, they pay billions of dollars to support Eastern Canada.
They can't sell their oil to Eastern Canada because Quebec
won't let them put a pipeline through Quebec to get
to the East coast.
Speaker 3 (33:44):
I mean crazy, Yeah, Eric, commer, Eric, can you ask
your guests? Can you grab that guy for a second.
Speaker 8 (33:51):
I got a question for him, what is it going
to take to get a real populous nationalist party going there?
Speaker 3 (33:56):
Because Pierre was not the guy. I mean, he's been
a politician for twenty years. He never really braced real populism.
As ask our guests, what is going to take in
Canada to actually get a real populist nationalist party? And
is Danielle Smith? Is she the most Trump like figure?
Speaker 9 (34:14):
All right, he's asking you a question we talked about
here a bit ago.
Speaker 5 (34:17):
What's it gonna take? He says, Pierre was never the
real deal because he.
Speaker 9 (34:21):
Was elected first at the age of twenty five. He's
been in politics his whole life. He was never an outsider.
He was always a politician. What's it gonna take to
get Canada a real populist party? You can take your
country back and make America or make Canada great again
as it were. And he asked, is Danielle Smith the
one to get it done?
Speaker 5 (34:39):
I know what your answer is, Yeah, that.
Speaker 19 (34:41):
Daniel Smith is not the one to get it done.
Speaker 20 (34:43):
She's part of the cabal, whatever you.
Speaker 5 (34:46):
Want to call it.
Speaker 9 (34:48):
She's conservative, she does like Ottawa, but she's not one
to take Alberta out.
Speaker 19 (34:52):
No, because she knows where her bread is buttered. She's
part of the elites.
Speaker 20 (34:59):
She's not an Alberta first, Alberta fifty first.
Speaker 5 (35:04):
But I like that Alberta fifty first.
Speaker 20 (35:07):
And you know, she would make a great governor. I
truly believe that. But the point is is if we
want to have if we want to have a free Canada,
we need better.
Speaker 19 (35:17):
There is that other party, Max Bernier.
Speaker 5 (35:23):
I don't know who that is, But how do you
get a Trump like leader?
Speaker 19 (35:25):
Well that's the problem.
Speaker 5 (35:27):
I don't know.
Speaker 20 (35:28):
I really don't know if Canada has that kind of
Well here's.
Speaker 5 (35:32):
The other problem.
Speaker 9 (35:33):
Canada brought in five million legal immigrants in front of
the nation.
Speaker 5 (35:36):
But they came in legally.
Speaker 9 (35:38):
You can't you can't do what we did and say
hey there's the door.
Speaker 19 (35:41):
No, but Canada has done.
Speaker 20 (35:43):
Now I'm not I have no problem with Canadian immigration.
They have absorbed them to a point. They do give
them a lot of money though, which kind of ticks
people off. But the biggest problem is they've brought a
lot of students in with the promise of you know,
going to school and housing and work, and they haven't
provided for them. So a lot of these students, especially
(36:03):
from India, they've spent.
Speaker 5 (36:04):
Thousand What are you paying taxes?
Speaker 19 (36:07):
We pay a lot in taxes.
Speaker 20 (36:08):
We have a thirteen percent sales tax, we have free
health care, that you got to wait months to get.
Speaker 5 (36:14):
The PSTGST sales tax.
Speaker 20 (36:17):
Yeah, the hs GST is a thirteen percent tax, and
that includes you buy a house for five hundred thousand dollars,
you're paying thirteen percent on.
Speaker 5 (36:26):
That, on top of your income tax, on top of
everything else.
Speaker 19 (36:28):
I'm of everything else.
Speaker 9 (36:30):
Yeah, And that's what the liberals want to bring to
us in America.
Speaker 5 (36:32):
Peter, I greatly appreciate it. Thank you. I hope you
get what you're looking for, and thank you for being here.
Speaker 20 (36:37):
I do because I will rush over to Alberta to
become a US citizen.
Speaker 5 (36:43):
Why wouldn't you, Why wouldn't you want to be you
a citizen?
Speaker 3 (36:47):
Hold on, hey, Gruber, it's got a great pad to it.
Alberta fifty one fifty.
Speaker 10 (36:53):
First, do we really want to take what they like?
And yes, turn a whole country into a free market.
Speaker 3 (37:04):
I don't know what he's saying. Just take out Alberta,
just take you know.
Speaker 10 (37:07):
But if it's Alberta, Alberta, by the way, would be
the good one, the mould be the one to take
because of the oil production.
Speaker 3 (37:14):
That's the one we haste. Just hang on for a second.
Now that we know we got you on the riser.
We're gonna take our commercial break here in the moment,
we're gonna come right back to you. Uh, Eric, right there.
You heard President Trump. Some of his rhetoric, people said,
been over the top.
Speaker 8 (37:32):
What do you think about his calling the calling the
Prime Minister of Canada governor and going after Canada being
the frifty first state?
Speaker 10 (37:39):
You know, with Trump, everything seems to happen this way,
and it's really fascinating. He throws something in this This
started when Trudeau is giving him a hard time about
whatever it was. It was maybe the border. I can't
even remember what the issue was. And Trump literally says,
and the guy is funny. Trump is a funny guy,
and he says, careful, I'll make you governor of the
(37:59):
fifth the first stay called Canada. And everyone went like, wow,
that's hilarious. But and then Trump went, well, you know, funny,
but you know, maybe we can do this.
Speaker 8 (38:08):
And it's an artificial border, and it's it's two hundred
billion dollars a year in support we're giving.
Speaker 10 (38:14):
Them old you know, Trump's another another thing, that another
feather in his cap that he can do. And it
becomes more and more because conservative Canadians love the they love,
but we'll conservative Canadians still love the idea of, you know,
not having nationalized healthcare.
Speaker 3 (38:30):
And you know there's a lot of you.
Speaker 10 (38:33):
Hold these people in government, hold them on the government
tea for long enough, they may get used to the
government t it's hard to pull them off.
Speaker 8 (38:39):
Let's take a short commercial break here on Real America's
Voicecower return in a moment. We've got wall to wall coverage,
in fact, your own Brian glenn Is on Air Force one.
We got Natalie Winners at the White House. Brian glenn
on Air Force one. They're gonna stop first at the
National Guard Base. Short break back in a moment. Okay,
(39:29):
welcome back. You wouldn't know this if you're an audience
member of the War Room or Real America's Voice to
Eric Bowling Show, because I think we give pretty good
coverage for the president. What's happening the kind of action
way we've had a Tennessee now which the thing is
great because the president's distant remediating the press as he
has these press avails in the oval. I mean, have
you ever say anything like it? No, I mean it'd
(39:50):
be like FDR doing a fireside chat every day.
Speaker 10 (39:53):
And by the way, my show's out at four and
I lead into your Steve Trump loves the four o'clock hour.
The reason why I know that is because it gets
blown out like three days a week and we go
to the Oval Office or we're going to see you know,
East Room and.
Speaker 3 (40:05):
Watch Oh no, no, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 8 (40:06):
Bowling show is great, but you can't you can't make
u you know, invitation TV when and we've seen the
same thing.
Speaker 3 (40:14):
But the audience loves it.
Speaker 10 (40:15):
They just loves this question though you would know this,
are we going to continue to see it after one
hundred days? Because he has been, you know, very very
diligent about doing a lot of stuff, a lot of
eos every single day.
Speaker 3 (40:25):
Is it going to end it?
Speaker 8 (40:26):
I think the second. I think the second hundred is
going to be even more intense with the o's and
every policy action, these things, and just that just now
he's got the deal stacked up, He's going to have
all those guys in for by lats.
Speaker 3 (40:37):
It's just going to be incredibly intense.
Speaker 8 (40:39):
Now, if you watch Real America's Voice, we actually cut
to and let folks see exactly what's going on and
the president is doing. If you watch majortream media, not
so much. We've got the great team of MRC Bill Degastino.
Speaker 1 (40:52):
Bill.
Speaker 8 (40:52):
If you're just a regular American and you're watching television,
how much positive news are you getting on President Trump?
Speaker 5 (40:59):
Sir, Yeah, now much at all.
Speaker 15 (41:03):
If you're watching broadcast news, you get ninety two percent
negative coverage of Trump. That's from a study that we
just did looking at his first one hundred days, which
this might surprise you, it's actually worse than the first
one hundred days during his first term that was only
eighty nine percent negative. But if you compare that to
eighty six percent positive or sorry, fifty six percent positive
(41:23):
coverage for Biden during her his first one hundred days,
it paints a pretty vivid picture. Also, we did a
breakdown of what topics they actually had the most negative
negative coverage of. The first was DOGE, which has been
racking up tremendous wins for America. So of course they
don't want to They don't want to talk about any
(41:43):
of that. They just talk about all of the dismantling
of supposedly important grants for who knows what, right in
Guatemala or wherever else, and the cutting of government jobs,
immigration order security, which is the most popular policy issue for.
Speaker 5 (41:58):
Trump right now, and then tear it.
Speaker 15 (42:00):
And so if you look at what those three topics
are right, it's reshoring our manufacturing, it's preventing the invasion
at the southern border and through other means at this
point too, and it's dismantling the administrative state. Those are
the three most negative topics that they talk about Trump on.
So clearly what this is from the media at least,
it's a backlash against the attempt for America to preserve
(42:23):
its own interests. The media, in covering these topics in
that way, are basically saying that they are opposed to
America's interest and they want to see it slowly crumble
away like it did over the last four years in
the Biden administration.
Speaker 3 (42:37):
Bill.
Speaker 8 (42:37):
We know, you know Breentozel and the great team over there.
You guys have done this for decades and done such an.
Speaker 3 (42:42):
Amazing job of it.
Speaker 8 (42:44):
I want to go to the White House Correspondence dinner,
because you know, Eugene Daniels think of Politico as the
head of the White House Correspondent. Gave a speech the
other night and He's very specific. He said we are
not the enemy of the people. Something came out of
the first Trump Trump Point house when there was a
lot of hate and discontent about calling the media the
(43:05):
enemy of the people. He's affirmed if we are not
the enemy of the people, and that got I think
is only standing ovation during the night. But if you
look at your analysis, since the policies you just talked about,
reshowing factory manufacturing jobs, stopping invasion of the southern border,
and breaking up regulation in the administrative state are very
popular with the American people, would you say, in fact,
(43:27):
by their actions not their words, they are enemies of
the people?
Speaker 15 (43:31):
Sir, Yeah, absolutely, And I mean, look, this coverage that
we're talking about here is just negativity on Trump, right
and some of his policies, But if you look at
the way they actually handle Americans, it's the exact same thing.
We did a study recently where we looked at now
this is morning and evening shows on the broadcast networks.
They did one hundred and forty three minutes for that
(43:53):
pil Mahrabrego Barcia, the Deported the Maryland Man right from
MS thirteen. They only did twelve seconds on the actual
Maryland woman, Rachel Morin, who was killed by an illegal alien. Right,
and so if you look at where their priorities are,
absolutely they're the enemy of the people. They care more
about an illegal gangbanger, alleged wife beater, alleged human trafficker
(44:17):
than they do about an innocent woman that was murdered
by just that kind of illegal alien. We did another
study actually looking at cable coverage of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.
They were five times more likely to describe him this
is CNN and MSNBC now five times more likely to
describe him as an American or a maryland Man than
they were to describe him as being from El Salvador,
(44:37):
which is where he's from. So there, the whole point
is to pull the wool over American's eyes as they
aid Democrats in flooding the border and hollowing out our economy.
Speaker 10 (44:50):
Steve Giamb but one of the things from the correspondence sooner,
I think this was probably the biggest moment. Again, that
was great where the guy says, you know, we're not
the enemy of the people. Okay, sure, you're not the
me of half the people. The other the other half
you kind of have been for the last fifty years,
especially the last four years. But at one point the
the Alex was Alex Thompson.
Speaker 21 (45:10):
Alex Thompson says, guy from Axios, from Axios, well he
was political first.
Speaker 3 (45:14):
I think that was a Axios says, we missed it.
Speaker 10 (45:18):
We didn't tell you the truth about Joe Biden's diminished return,
diminished of mental capacity.
Speaker 3 (45:25):
Why hey, hold on, that was a profile encourage for
that crowd. It was crickets, crickets. They were in shot
and they got the Can you just say sorry? I screwed.
Speaker 10 (45:35):
He screwed up as a group, the whole the whole
place screwed up.
Speaker 3 (45:39):
You're back here, So.
Speaker 8 (45:44):
You're back here to go to the White House in
some influence and discussion. So my question to you, Dagostino
has the addition, we're going to go to Natalie Winners
when we come back.
Speaker 3 (45:55):
From break at the White House. You got you got rabbed,
We got three White House correspondents, A guy on a
one bowling's there tomorrow. Has this is kind of Brett Brosel's.
Speaker 8 (46:04):
Dream to actually have new media and conservative media inside
the wire. Do you see that making any difference?
Speaker 15 (46:12):
Sir, Yeah, absolutely, I do. I mean, look at the
last election. The last election was a victory for the
new alternative media, and it was a complete rebuke of
the establishment corporate media's stranglehold on information. It certainly started
with Musk buying X, but it has gone far beyond
at that point, and it's outlets like Real America's Voice,
(46:35):
It's outlets like Newsmax. It's outleoks like Oan that are
providing the actual information about, for example, manufacturing coming back
to America, right about Amazon caving on terras. You don't
see any of that kind of coverage on broadcast networks now. Unfortunately,
they do still have a fairly decent audience. The first
quarter in twenty twenty five, at least, the broadcast networks
(46:56):
averaged about nineteen million viewers a night on their evening newscast.
Speaker 5 (47:00):
There's a lot more.
Speaker 15 (47:00):
Work to be done, but that's kind of why we
at the Media Research Center see most of our job
as at this point at least reputational destruction for these people,
because their audience is aging and we don't want more
people tuning in to hear canned lies essentially prescribed to
them by the Democratic Party.
Speaker 10 (47:18):
At this point, Yeah, so Fox it's interesting, Bill, you
didn't mention Fox in that group. You mentioned Rav, you
mentioned Newsmax, which I probably beg to differ with you
on including newsms into that group for reasons that we
can discuss another time, or we can do it now,
whatever you want to do. And oh, An, I would agree.
Fox is interesting what they've been doing lately. I don't
(47:39):
know if you saw. They put out this new commercial
and it's like Handity and Brett Baer and Martha mccownman,
they're like dressed down or like hanging out. And I
think it's had tip to the to the new media,
to the podcasters who are grabbing, slowly grabbing their audience,
tip to groups like us who are slowly grabbing.
Speaker 3 (47:58):
Bear and his dog.
Speaker 10 (48:00):
Okay, what's trying to do there but come authentic and
then go on TV and make sure everything you say
has been filtered through the corporate boardroom and and the
UH and the ad sale sales department. I will tell
you this, this new Fox poll that they have Trump
underwater massively, it reminds me a lot of the CNN polls.
And I'm trying to think, is Fox now just becoming
(48:22):
another CNN?
Speaker 8 (48:23):
Well, we saw the announce of the poles. They only
had a third of the Trump voters in there. So
John McLaughlin came out today and blew up all those poles.
Speaker 3 (48:30):
So it's out right. But we played the car Carl
Rove ripped on Trump. I saw that. Yeah, we played
it today. Bill.
Speaker 8 (48:35):
Where do people go, you guys at MRC on the
tip of the stair. I love the concept of what
did you call a reputational destruction?
Speaker 3 (48:43):
That's original gangster? We love that. Where do people go
to get more of this?
Speaker 5 (48:46):
Brother?
Speaker 15 (48:48):
Oh yeah, come check us out at MRC dot org.
All my studies and my colleague studies are up on
NewsBusters dot org. And if you're so inclined, you can
follow me at band Bill on x band unders or mill.
Speaker 3 (49:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (49:01):
No, NewsBusters is great, m r C is great, and
uh it's going to take over Brentos that was going
to take over soon as firm is going to take
over the global media platform for President Trump inside the
government and Carrie Lacal report to him, sir, Thank you
so much. Bill de Gastino over at m r C.
Love you guys, send our best. Those guys have been doing.
Speaker 3 (49:19):
You didn't you do that? For a while, didn't you
do something with the Voice of America.
Speaker 10 (49:24):
You know, our are basically our freedom message.
Speaker 5 (49:29):
To the world.
Speaker 8 (49:29):
No, once upon a time when you were high fluting
it over at Fox, Really America's Voice was called was
called America's Voice. People and people and people and people
thought and people thought it was the Voice of America.
And that's one of the reasons they changed the name
to Real America's Voice.
Speaker 3 (49:46):
The only Fox.
Speaker 21 (49:47):
We didn't wear a tie just for we were the
best box. You know, you were the first like tech
bro or being too pro Trump.
Speaker 3 (49:53):
You realize that, right, that is really at the end
of the day, that was how tough was How tough
was it over there?
Speaker 10 (49:59):
For that it was it was a day to day struggle.
Because I was at a table I was. I started
the five. I was the original center seat in the five.
And you know, sixty percent of that table did not
like Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (50:10):
They just disliked Donald Trump. And those are tough people.
Speaker 8 (50:13):
People, people were people were That was in Beck left
in fifteen.
Speaker 10 (50:22):
We started in twenty eleven. We started in twenty eleven.
We took over Becks five o'clock. Yeah, when Beck when
back punched out Glenn was here last week. It was
amazing at the top. He made the five o'clock hour
appointment TV.
Speaker 3 (50:37):
It was the dead zone, never that ever could get
a rating until back to Glen's Back discovered five o'clock.
Now MSNBC lives on it, right, Nicole Wallace, the biggest
thing they got, five is the highest rate cable on
a cable.
Speaker 8 (50:50):
Yes, no, they Beck changed TV by making five o'clock appointment.
Telegrade again made five o'clock great again. He was the
first guy.
Speaker 3 (50:59):
I told him.
Speaker 8 (51:00):
I'm sitting there and the guy's talking about quantitative easing.
Only guys on Wall Street, the only guys have followed
the fed's training.
Speaker 3 (51:05):
Dest that. This guy's got the whiteboard. He's but made
the show. You had four million people a day watching it.
Speaker 10 (51:11):
Yeah, he had, and he saw this this whole Muslim
caliphe thing happened.
Speaker 3 (51:15):
Oh he wore he had.
Speaker 8 (51:17):
The head well at Brightbart we were we were on
top of that because of the We had the great
Tony Lee and Matt Boyle.
Speaker 3 (51:23):
It's great guys.
Speaker 8 (51:24):
But Glenn Beck, he got into it, wrote a huge
book about it.
Speaker 3 (51:27):
It was he was he was cutting ash. It was amazing.
Speaker 8 (51:30):
And then he left Fox, which people forget at the
top of the game. Okay, we're gonna take a short
commercial break. We're gonna go to the White House. We
got Natalie winners, are gonna go back to Michigan.
Speaker 22 (51:38):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (51:38):
The plane should be landing, I think at the National
Guards station for a uh for a photo op with
cover Whitmer.
Speaker 3 (51:45):
Is she going to bring her did she bring her binders?
She folders? She didn't learn.
Speaker 8 (51:50):
We're hearing Real America's voice, Eric Bowley, Steve Bannon back
in a moment.
Speaker 3 (52:15):
Hey, welcome back.
Speaker 2 (52:16):
We're here.
Speaker 8 (52:17):
This is the this is the we're here in the
in the.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
The hour of the Eric Bowley Show. That's right, and
you're being preempted again, but this is I couldn't be
happier hanging out with you in the war room.
Speaker 8 (52:27):
Okay, we're Natalie in the White House moment, but you're
back here for some pretty big meetings.
Speaker 3 (52:32):
While are you back in DC. So what they've been
doing is the White Husband and the comms Chung and.
Speaker 10 (52:38):
Carolyn Levitt are bringing in influencers, new media types to
just have a conversation about what they're trying to do,
what they want to do. Obviously, there's a new media
seat in the briefing room. It's just phenomenal, and they
tend to go to that one first. And our own
Brian Glenn gets questions all the time, whether it's in
the briefing room or it's the Oval office.
Speaker 3 (52:55):
When I say, he's the Helen Thomas.
Speaker 8 (52:57):
So they had a tradition in the White House briefing
room that the senior, most and most respected correspondent would
always get the first question. Helen Thomas was his old
battle axe from United pres International. In fact, up I
have virtually gone out of business. It was a peace
competitor and Roy's for years. But she sat in that
anchor seat in the front row. They always got the
first question. She was the nastiest, meaning she.
Speaker 3 (53:19):
Would always ask some cheap shot question whoever it was right.
She was just she was a tough old broad.
Speaker 8 (53:25):
And so that's why I call him because he gets
a lot of the first questions now because he asked
good questions.
Speaker 10 (53:29):
He because he asks questions that Trump wants the people
to hear. Don't May wants to hear that question, so
we can answer it the way people want to. And
by the way that when he asks Zelenski, why he's
so disrespectful to the office of White.
Speaker 3 (53:41):
Do you own a suit?
Speaker 10 (53:43):
Do you realize that may've changed the trajectory of world peace?
Speaker 3 (53:48):
Peace? Who owns?
Speaker 23 (53:50):
What?
Speaker 3 (53:51):
Where?
Speaker 10 (53:51):
Brian Glenn asked some question and all of a sudden,
Russian your.
Speaker 3 (53:57):
Here's the great thing about Brian Glynn. He's kind of
every man. He's sitting there, he's not trying to be anything.
He's sitting there and he's it's like Trump, He's thinking
what the audience is thinking?
Speaker 8 (54:07):
Why is this guy sitting next to the president And
he's got like this gym outfit on or whatever.
Speaker 3 (54:11):
And basically, hey, do you own a suit? Don't you
think about? You knows It's not.
Speaker 10 (54:14):
Going to be some bs like pre planned suck up question.
It's a question that makes a lot of sense in
our world, in the maga world, in the in the
right wing markets and markets close another big day.
Speaker 8 (54:26):
First off, the headline two weeks ago, bro was the
worst April in the history of the stock market since
nineteen thirty two, or since the Great Depression.
Speaker 3 (54:35):
So we're basically back.
Speaker 10 (54:37):
Icond started, No, we're not back, but we're kind of bad,
you guys, but we're not back.
Speaker 3 (54:41):
We're kind of back What are you talking to men,
We're kind of backward. You're not a kind brillion market,
You're not a no no, no, that's I'm talking about.
Since the terroriffs don't give me that.
Speaker 10 (54:51):
I'm from April second till now. We're still we're down substantially.
We can other ways.
Speaker 3 (54:59):
What the whole deal? You're in the war room. We'd
spend far be it? All right, no, spin, here's the deal. Okay,
give it. The markets are still down. Yes, do we
bounce back some?
Speaker 10 (55:09):
We're still below April second because the market doesn't know
what to expect.
Speaker 3 (55:12):
I will tell you he's going to Michigan to maybe relief.
Speaker 8 (55:16):
Can you see the underlying Did you see the underlying
of the Austrian economics here?
Speaker 3 (55:22):
The underlying as economics free. First of he hates he
hates tariffs.
Speaker 10 (55:27):
He hates government involved in anything, especially the mark anything.
Speaker 8 (55:32):
By the way, we have a mark in tola system globally,
so you have to be involved. That's the problem. The
Chinese run a totally market mark intil system.
Speaker 10 (55:38):
But the Chinese listen the seasons I've said, the best
years of the happiest I've ever been paying my taxes
is when I pay the most.
Speaker 3 (55:46):
Right, I hate taxes, but it's because I'm making a
lot of money. Right, we were making.
Speaker 2 (55:50):
So you're gonna love.
Speaker 3 (55:51):
You're in love, You're you're my target on the upper
bracket here right here, yic ly want trying.
Speaker 10 (55:56):
To to go reduce your tariffs. We'll reduce ours, and
the China goes, okay, well do that, but you know
we're gonna.
Speaker 3 (56:01):
Have to start paying people.
Speaker 10 (56:02):
It's not fifteen twenty thirty dollars an hour, but they
pay him six hundred bucks a month and they have
to live in the in the in the freaking's slave labor.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
It is terrible. But for that we paid the terriff
and it worked. Okay.
Speaker 10 (56:15):
Anyway, markets are up a little bit, still working on.
They're happy. Trump is talking about maybe loaning some Don't
send you.
Speaker 3 (56:21):
To the over tom A to tail President Trump.
Speaker 8 (56:24):
Don't when you go in the over to mar and
see Trump, because you're you guys are old buddies.
Speaker 3 (56:28):
Do not telling the markets down seven training dollars. Don't
just don't tell him, no.
Speaker 8 (56:32):
One, I know you did, Okay, talk to me, get
out the market.
Speaker 3 (56:37):
How about to happen as that.
Speaker 8 (56:38):
What's my ten year treasury? Ten your treasures down? Morgan's
that ten treasure for for one? Come on, man, tenure
treasury is down. Thanks a little more.
Speaker 3 (56:47):
Stable two years, three, three sixty five. You were in
the pits for twelve years. Twelve years. Yeah, tradeing ol and.
Speaker 10 (56:53):
Gold, gold, mostly energy, natural gas, gold, agricol, a hedge.
Speaker 3 (56:58):
Well every gold, look gold and silver and copper. Have
you ever seen gold like this in your life? Goldson
never never does. And that's what's the matter. It's so
it's never trust a trade.
Speaker 10 (57:08):
Like this though, right, I was going to bring announce
of gold with me because you can feel value you.
Speaker 3 (57:12):
Hold announce a one ounce coin or a bar of gold.
You know, you can feel the value of it. And
that's why I've said.
Speaker 10 (57:18):
The first day I walked on Fox, their finance guy like,
what's the trade? Eric, Like, I pulled announce of gold
on said, never sell this those six hundred bucks an ounce.
Then it's thirty three hundred and fifty now and there's
no reason for it to go down good times, bad times.
It's just it's it's it's something every portfolio should have.
Speaker 3 (57:37):
It's it isn't even a gold commercial it's it's a hedge.
It's a hedge.
Speaker 8 (57:40):
But since we are birch Gold dot com slash bandoned
the end of the dollar empire. By the way, I
talked to the great marketing director here, Real America's voice.
We're working on the Rio trip and you're the number
one draft pick rear race.
Speaker 3 (57:55):
This thing is massive, it's so huge. This is beyond gold.
Speaker 10 (57:58):
If the Real race ever quickly is a group of
bricks countries, but now there's up to thirty or forty
countries that want to get involved in this. And what
the talk is is to pull the US currency anywhere
in the world. If you want to trade oil or
agricultural commodities, you need US dollars to trade it with
our everything's traded in a dollar price. What they're talking
about is pulling the US dollar off that as a
(58:19):
reserve currency. You don't trade a barrel of oil in
dollars anymore. You're going to trade it and you want
or some of the Euro currency. That will destroy the US.
Speaker 8 (58:29):
The reason President Trump's going to Michigan is talking about
this reordering of the postwar international rules based order commercial relationships.
And one of the reasons the Chinese are trying. The
weapon against us is de dollarization. Let's go to the
White House. We got our own, Natalie Winners, Natalie one
hundred days. You've been working on this a long time.
Your thoughts, ma'am.
Speaker 24 (58:51):
I think we have our country back, and I think
that was something we didn't have for four years under
Joe Biden.
Speaker 25 (58:56):
You and Eric we're getting into.
Speaker 24 (58:57):
I think if you get to the crux of what
President Trump has on, it is unwinding so many of
the original sins of the globalist economic model, and I
think the global government model. We see that with what
they're trying to do with the tariffs. Which believe me,
if you told me that we would ever see an
administration not just prioritize working class Americans manufacturing jobs over
the moneyed Wall Street elites, but more precisely actually take
(59:20):
on the Chinese Communist Party, not just talk tough, I
wouldn't have believed you. But I think what we've seen
come out of this White House really affirms that.
Speaker 25 (59:28):
I think you also see it, first and.
Speaker 24 (59:29):
Foremost at the southern border, the idea that sovereignty matters
for us to be a country. And I think we've
seen that with DHS proclaiming quite boldly yesterday and they're
kind one hundred days wrap up that we actually now have.
Speaker 25 (59:41):
Operational control of the southern border.
Speaker 24 (59:43):
Attempted crossings down essentially ninety nine point nine to nine percent.
Obviously there's room for improvement on mass deportations. I wouldn't
necessarily describe them as mass. We're seeing some deportations, but
not to the tune of ten million people.
Speaker 25 (59:56):
But I also think too.
Speaker 24 (59:58):
Speaking of going after this of political DC swampy class,
that's too.
Speaker 25 (01:00:02):
Nice a term.
Speaker 24 (01:00:03):
I think there are a lot of eos that we've
seen come out, We've seen President Trump sign them that
even this audience, who is obviously always ahead of the
curve when it comes to who exactly constitutes that deep state,
The architects of the law fair people like Normalizen, people
like Mark Zaid, all the law firms, the lobbying firms
with the government contracts and security clearances. I think those
represent that this administration as president is firing on all cylinders,
(01:00:27):
and all you need to.
Speaker 25 (01:00:27):
Know is just look at who's around me.
Speaker 24 (01:00:30):
All my legacy media colleagues are absolutely apoplectic. As you noted,
Rachel Matta was essentially broken, though I guess that implies
she was put together before that.
Speaker 25 (01:00:39):
I don't know about that, but it's great.
Speaker 24 (01:00:41):
I think another victory too that i'd shout out is
what they've done on the new media front. I think
that's something that's truly historic and Warroom myself honored to
be a part of that.
Speaker 8 (01:00:51):
So we just had Bill Degostino on here from the
Brempozel guys over at a media research center.
Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
He had an analysis.
Speaker 8 (01:00:58):
They've done a study ninety two percent of mainstream media's
news broadcast have been negative on President Trump.
Speaker 3 (01:01:06):
And they did another analysis about Maryland.
Speaker 8 (01:01:09):
Man, I think it was one hundred and forty three
one hundred and forty three minutes of prositive couras from them,
but only thirteen seconds for the unfortunate victim who is
brutally raped and murdered by the illegal alien in Maryland.
Given that you've had a ringside seat since day one,
I mean, what's your assessment of how this new ecosystem
(01:01:32):
of having you know, we got Brian glenn on the plane,
we got bowlings over there tomorrow. You've been profiled all
over and you're doing hits with us every day and
co hosting is it having an impact? I mean, what's
been the arc of kind of the media shift over
in the White House.
Speaker 24 (01:01:51):
Well, I think we've proved that we're not a fad
and we're not going anywhere like these illegal aliens should
be getting deported. I love the guys over Media Research Center,
but I think they might have to revise some of
their metrics because I would say it's probably closer to
ninety eight ninety nine percent. I've been hearing the hits
all day watching MSNBC. You rarely hear anything positive. But
(01:02:11):
I think the most important thing if you abstract and
really I think get to what the new media initiative
is about. And it's frankly all the questions that I
have fielded whenever I've been doing these interviews, these profiles,
and you get it when you go into opposition media
as well.
Speaker 25 (01:02:25):
Why are we smeared?
Speaker 24 (01:02:26):
Why is there a pejorative connotation when we're quote unquote biased.
But people who are essentially in line with wanting to
actively impeach, oppose, tank sabotage President Trump's agenda, that's somehow
apolitical right left wing bias is not a bias to them,
that's just the normal state of affairs, the default setting
of media, and I think the inclusion of people like
(01:02:46):
myself in that briefing room is forcing a very I think,
kind of tenured, ossified class institution of you know, legacy
media elites to grapple with that question, and I think
we encapsulated it best. And then interview that I did
with CNN's Donio Sullivan where when he asked me, well
do you really think of yourself as a real journalist?
Speaker 25 (01:03:07):
And I think it keeps going back.
Speaker 24 (01:03:09):
These people covered up for Joe Biden being, as I said,
essentially dead. I think that was the first time CNN
probably ever aired a remark like that, but for four years.
So we're not just here because the White House wants
to have a bunch of positive coverage.
Speaker 25 (01:03:22):
We're here because we deserve to be here and have
broken more stories.
Speaker 24 (01:03:25):
And I think frankly, when we've had the opportunity to
press administration officials, we've asked them why those deportation aren't
numbers aren't higher if there's going to be a Ukraine audit.
So I think it's important to have our voice here.
I can think the new media or the legacy media
people are maybe adjusting to our presence here a little bit.
There's maybe a little fewer eye rolls, though I think
if it were up to them, they would still probably
deport us. But it's been an honor to be I think,
(01:03:47):
really at the forefront of history when it comes to
the changing of information warfare here at the White House.
Speaker 8 (01:03:54):
Natalie Bowing brought up in the last segment that the
White House Correspondence dinner that the most important moment wasn't
when Eugenie Daniel said, hey, we're not enemies of the people,
and they gave.
Speaker 3 (01:04:06):
Themselves a round of applause.
Speaker 8 (01:04:07):
It was when Alex Thompson, who used to be a
political but now is one of the senior guys that
were axious, actually admitted to what you said on CNN
that hey, this was the biggest story going on, and
it's one thing for a staff to cover it up,
et cetera. But myself it took personal responsibility.
Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
And many in this room. Steve, yeah, I mean to
cut off. It was a little soft it saw because
he said we missed it, and yeah, they didn't miss it.
I mean they didn't miss it. They purposefully covered it up.
They looked the other way. On purpose, and they reported
the opposite.
Speaker 10 (01:04:41):
Joe and Mika were saying, how cogent and together Joe
Biden was, you know, ten days before the debate, and
he fell apart in the day went until they could
no longer cover for it.
Speaker 3 (01:04:51):
And then Jake Tapper, can you believe Jake Tapper.
Speaker 10 (01:04:54):
Writes a book now saying that, oh, we blew it,
we missed the decline of Biden.
Speaker 26 (01:04:59):
He these are these people were conplicit in the conspiracy
to hide the fact that the United States, the leader
of the free world, was degrading in front of our
own eyes.
Speaker 8 (01:05:10):
And they hit it and they didn't let us know.
And that is one of the most dangerous things to show.
How degraded at the at the for the Pope's funeral,
he could barely get.
Speaker 18 (01:05:19):
Around with it.
Speaker 3 (01:05:20):
I mean, he is like a little old man that
they have to got around.
Speaker 8 (01:05:22):
I think if he had been commander in chief Natalie
put us in the room, would it be possible, given
the people don't understand how tiny the West Wing is
and how you're on top of people, and how small
that briefing room is, would it be possible, ma'am, to
actually miss the decline of Joe Biden, who now was
kind of led around very sad like a guy in
(01:05:45):
his nineties around the Vatican the other day, could probably
could you have possibly missed it or would have been
have to been an active cover up?
Speaker 24 (01:05:56):
Well, I have learned that these people are pseudo intellectuals,
but I do not think that they are that dumb
looked out to go full icy on you. But what
you saw from Alex Thompson, even the I think the troll,
the heckle that is giving him the award for writing
that book.
Speaker 3 (01:06:10):
That is hanger for one second.
Speaker 8 (01:06:12):
We got hang on one second, we got to walk
out of President Trump. Let's go ahead and cut to it.
We'll come back to Natalie Whins the White House home.
Speaker 25 (01:06:21):
Can they hearsident?
Speaker 3 (01:06:23):
This is?
Speaker 8 (01:06:24):
This is President Trump walking out. He's at the National
Guard air station. There's going to be a quick uh
event there. I think Governor Whitmer is going to join him.
There's the President coming down. Ball cap on Eric Bowling beautiful?
Speaker 3 (01:06:42):
Is it Trump twenty twenty eight or is it make
America Great Again? Baseball cap?
Speaker 5 (01:06:47):
What do you think?
Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
It's Golf America? Naturally, he's all about branding. That's great
it's a full troll. It's like, man sense, why what
was it golf Mexicans.
Speaker 8 (01:06:58):
Like, by the way, when it was for US announce
I get obviously, how did he know? How did we
never think of that? It's so genius and and you
know Greenland, I mean that that's brilliant. Okay, this President Trump,
I think Whitmer is supposed to meet. This is the
National Guards station. Now our own Brian Glint is with him.
(01:07:19):
We don't know if we're going to break out or not.
I think there's gonna be a little ceremony there. He's
going to stop for a few minutes and they're gonna,
I guess, uh take the moticate in. I don't think
they take Air Force one back off. I think they'll
stay there and go. So this is President Trump meeting
the local dignitaries and Air Force. People love this. I
mean they wait, they get all, you know, everything squared away.
(01:07:41):
President Trump shows up and you'll see and when he
returns normally what he does with the police officers that
are there with their motorcycles, He'll shake every hand and
take every self.
Speaker 10 (01:07:51):
It's Steve thesta position. These guys love what we've been
talking about. Is it is looking to look at the
same age as as Biden was when he first started
the term, and look at how coaching he is.
Speaker 3 (01:08:02):
Look at he's aware.
Speaker 8 (01:08:03):
I mean, remember Biden, can we cut back to that?
Or they got in the motorcate So he shakes hands,
he knows where he is.
Speaker 10 (01:08:10):
Why didn't we get off Air Force one or get
out of you know, a vehicle and have to be
held and told where to go?
Speaker 3 (01:08:17):
And he's lost.
Speaker 10 (01:08:18):
Trump commands he goes where he wants to go, and
everyone follows me up.
Speaker 3 (01:08:22):
He was like, where do I go? How do I
help me? Jill, help me? Help me put on my jacket?
Speaker 8 (01:08:26):
The thing is stumbling around and was so embarrassing. That's tripping,
and he don't look as much as I detested Joe Biden.
He don't like to see that happen anybody, particularly President
United States, just.
Speaker 10 (01:08:35):
The office, and so I just had never been a
fan of him. A lot of people are felt sorry
for REPEATII. But he's a good person. He was not
he's a terrible test First, it was not a president.
He was an illegitimate president. Let's go back to Natalie Winters.
So Natalie, let's continue on that great explanation.
Speaker 24 (01:08:50):
Man, Well, I was just saying it was a limited hangout.
That's what we saw on the White House correspondence. In
our stage, the idea that the press just sort of
passively missed the story and maybe should have better reported
on his mental health, that's not what.
Speaker 25 (01:09:06):
The issue is.
Speaker 24 (01:09:06):
It was how they repeatedly through every failure that that
regime had, whether it was Afghanistan, the Southern border, inflation,
the illegal alien invasion, take your pick of the issue.
You had a president who was so out to lunch,
so his rogus of rogue advisors were able to essentially
steer course and implement the most radical policy. So it's
(01:09:29):
complete and utter failure, complete dereliction of duty on every
single front. And frankly, I think it's the same paradigm
through which you can sort of view the horrors and
atrocities committed by the Biden regime. It was the number
one question that we asked from day one, is this
intentional or is it a result of incompetence? And maybe
in this case we're not talking about Joe Biden directly,
(01:09:50):
but I think that you can sort of use that
paradigm to look at what the media did and of
course it was intentional. And I think that it speaks frankly,
what you guys were talking about, right, the transparence, see
the strong man nature of President Trump, the deep state,
the just way that Washington works.
Speaker 25 (01:10:05):
Who saw it when does tried.
Speaker 24 (01:10:06):
To enter the US Institute of Peace or what they
try to do with USAID. They thrive on weak presidents.
They don't want strong men, right, so they love having
a dead president. That is the deep State's you know,
wet dream. That's all they would ever want because they
can exploit them for whatever agenda they see fit. So
they didn't cover it because they didn't really think it
was an issue, right Because to them, I think, if
(01:10:27):
you really want to, you've talked about unitary executive theory,
you know, Curtis Yarvin's idea of what it means to
be a president, the Cathedral. They wouldn't even care if
the president were dead because this town, the city, this
country has always run on just sort of you know,
a status quo, just like Operation Death Star, like Russ
Voda always talks about the cartel, right, So I think
there's more to it than just oh, these journalists were lying.
Speaker 25 (01:10:50):
Don't buy that book. Please, it's a joke.
Speaker 24 (01:10:52):
We should not reward horrible behavior that almost destroyed this country.
Speaker 25 (01:10:56):
But it's a troll.
Speaker 24 (01:10:57):
I believe that the WHCA, which I'm sure or there's
a bunch of their members standing literally right behind me,
that they just honor Alex.
Speaker 8 (01:11:06):
Okay, we're going to just hang with us one second.
We're going to go momentarily. They've motivators reached the National Guard,
so where President Trump's going to make some remarks.
Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
We want to cut their immediately.
Speaker 8 (01:11:16):
One thing, Natalie, the esprit of core of the White
House staff. These people are putting in twenty hour days,
seven days a week, I mean, is a grind. And
particularly when you've had so much going on, the flood,
the zone, these executives, everything's got to be perfect.
Speaker 3 (01:11:30):
You've got to get on top of it.
Speaker 8 (01:11:32):
Give us established report of how folks are doing at
the White House today on the hundred day.
Speaker 25 (01:11:38):
Oh, they're working non stop.
Speaker 24 (01:11:40):
In the signs if you can potentially see behind me,
of all the illegal aliens that have been deported are
still up that the wind has blown some of them over.
I don't see anyone from legacy media running to help
fix them. But CNN also blurt out the faces and
they're shot at MSNBC was complaining that we were I
guess dosing the identities of child rapists and murders. Make
your pick, but I think on all cylinders, you know,
(01:12:02):
we were honored to participate in what was I believe
the first podcast ROW though Steve, I know we're not
a podcast or a TV show, but when the White
House advised to do a podcast ROW, you say yes, thank.
Speaker 25 (01:12:12):
You, but we went.
Speaker 24 (01:12:13):
We interviewed a ton of administration officials really on every vertical,
from the law fair stuff to the Comms department, the messaging,
and I think we should give a huge shadow. I
think one of the most underreported things that we've seen
from this administration is just how young and on the
other side of that, how committed and devoted a lot
of the people in the comms and press shop are.
Speaker 25 (01:12:32):
I think you see it with how young and fun
and mem A.
Speaker 24 (01:12:35):
Lot of the stuff you see coming out of their
social media accounts are And believe me, the left wing media,
the legacy media, they do not get the joke. I
hear them, you know, lamenting the memes in the briefing room,
which is quite awesome.
Speaker 25 (01:12:45):
To hear.
Speaker 24 (01:12:46):
I think, Steve, what was it, Probably the first week
or so I was here. I remember I told you
at the first time I was waiting in line for
the bathroom, I heard a bunch of legacy media people complaining,
becoming apoplectic and melting down about the idea that Trump
was just quote mantling the entire government.
Speaker 25 (01:13:02):
And I'd love to hear those people's thoughts. Now, I'll
a'sk a follow.
Speaker 1 (01:13:07):
Up on that.
Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
Natalie.
Speaker 8 (01:13:09):
We're gonna go to the National Guard here in a
second before we let you go. One word that would
summarize the one hundred days as you've seen it up
close and personal in the White House, this historic one
hundred days of President Trump.
Speaker 5 (01:13:19):
What would it be?
Speaker 25 (01:13:20):
Man, Well, I have to go with retribution, our.
Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
Own Natalie Winners. Natalie, where they get you on social media?
Where do people follow you.
Speaker 25 (01:13:33):
More?
Speaker 24 (01:13:33):
Retribution is always Natalie G. Winters on all social media platforms.
Thank you for having me, Steve Perfect, thank.
Speaker 3 (01:13:40):
You, Thank you, ma'am Natalie Winners. Our White House correspondences.
Speaker 10 (01:13:43):
Right those those young generally young people in comms and
certainly in the comms and assume every other agency department
in the White House. Young people don't earn a lot
of money and they're on call twenty four grind.
Speaker 3 (01:13:55):
It is a grind in seven days a week, and
you know, for.
Speaker 8 (01:14:00):
To serve at the behest of the president. That's look
once in lifetime. As I've told people that have come
and said, you got to do it. It's a ticket punch,
but it's also a time in history. You'll never be
able to replace this time.
Speaker 3 (01:14:11):
And did you enjoy your time in the White House?
I hate it every day of it? Did you really
want it? Just it was just such a such a grind.
I'm also not a staffer.
Speaker 8 (01:14:18):
I mean I had built my own business, had done
my thing at Bright Part.
Speaker 5 (01:14:22):
I ran it.
Speaker 3 (01:14:23):
I was happy to do it. That's why I took
one year.
Speaker 8 (01:14:24):
I went from basically August of sixteen to August of seventeen.
It took one year in my life and said I'll
do this, and you know, but it's just not it's
I'm not a staffer.
Speaker 3 (01:14:33):
I didn't enjoy it one day in the White House.
Just didn't enjoy it.
Speaker 10 (01:14:36):
Really a staffer though, I mean you would walk in
privilege as you you know, yeah, but you're a staffer,
trust me.
Speaker 8 (01:14:41):
You know, you would be incorrect. I have to tell
you about my job interview with Eric Bowling.
Speaker 3 (01:14:48):
We gotta save that.
Speaker 8 (01:14:50):
We save that for We've got to save that for
another day, Eric Bowling, the h There.
Speaker 3 (01:14:56):
Was wild times back there in sixteen, but very different.
Speaker 8 (01:14:58):
Here's why this steel in twenty and by the way,
we're gonna go to the National Guard as soon as
they open up, as soon as prison Trump steps up.
The twenty sixteen and then the steel in twenty was
providential because we needed those four years.
Speaker 3 (01:15:13):
He needed it, he needed Jozo.
Speaker 8 (01:15:15):
We were surrounded in the White House and winning in twenty.
If we had powdered into twenty one, it had been
like trench warfare.
Speaker 3 (01:15:21):
It had been the you know, been the Magino line
right there.
Speaker 8 (01:15:24):
This gave him four years to step back, regroup, rethink.
Have all these think tanks come up cr A project
twenty twenty five broke Rollins and the team, Stephen Miller,
all of them to get to get the team.
Speaker 5 (01:15:38):
Bang bang bang.
Speaker 3 (01:15:39):
This is the reason we had.
Speaker 8 (01:15:40):
I gave the PBS interview after I left the White House,
and I talked about flooding the zone. Our strategy, what
we tried to do when we had nothing, we had
no people. I said, if we get two or three
things up a day, right, the media will jump on
one and we'll push the ones. You know, we'll really
do the ones we want. Now there's ten to twelve.
You couldn't have had that back in sixteen.
Speaker 10 (01:16:00):
Important losing twenty was or getting his stolen whatever stole.
Speaker 3 (01:16:06):
They're not Newsmax anymore.
Speaker 10 (01:16:09):
You're not gonna speak and now I'm not gonna get
censored and every that's by the way, Why the four
years the left thought he was done. They thought they
were done with Trump, like, oh, yeah, he's gonna he's.
Speaker 3 (01:16:20):
Gonna come back. We got him.
Speaker 10 (01:16:21):
He lost in twenty it won't big time, and they didn't.
They didn't prepare him. But more importantly, Trump got pissed off.
He got ticked.
Speaker 3 (01:16:30):
Off when he won.
Speaker 1 (01:16:32):
He did.
Speaker 3 (01:16:33):
I'm sure it went through his mind.
Speaker 10 (01:16:35):
I'm not gonna waste a second. I'm gonna put my
agenda into play minute one. How much is right through him?
Speaker 3 (01:16:42):
But okay, but the first time, it wasn't like that
about that sense of earth, well, but he was.
Speaker 8 (01:16:47):
You could tell he was feeling his way a whole
new environment. And you had guys like Paul Ryan to
come in and tell you everything and then stabb you right.
Speaker 3 (01:16:55):
In the back.
Speaker 10 (01:16:55):
I don't know if you're friendly with him with Ryan,
So I don't think Ryan's previously did him any favors.
Speaker 8 (01:16:59):
Well, I think Ryan's did a better job. I'm a defender, writes,
thinking did a better.
Speaker 10 (01:17:03):
Job than than than then he was involved in the
story we're going to talk about later.
Speaker 3 (01:17:07):
Okay, yes, very much.
Speaker 8 (01:17:08):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:17:08):
I don't want to give too much. I want I want,
I want to, I want to I get a phone call.
I want to get here. See I gotta go on
Aaron about an hour and a half, He's get here.
Speaker 8 (01:17:17):
Don't that's just a I'll tell you later. The sense
of we're gonna go back maybe got a second to
go back to Steve Gruber in a second about to
walk out.
Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
Okay.
Speaker 8 (01:17:29):
The sense of urgency he has, how much is that
is tied to the assassination attempt to who and Butler.
Speaker 10 (01:17:35):
I think he realized he was his mandate was not
only about the American people. I believe he has a
divine man. I believe he thinks he has, and I
do too. He's got a divine mandate too. About the
good Lord above saying get it done, Donald Trump, get
it get you believe that. I do believe that.
Speaker 3 (01:17:50):
Believe that that bully any you know whatever. We know
we can go over that. But to keep you in
the ear and survive it. Good God, that's insane. That's
that's that's great.
Speaker 10 (01:18:05):
I think he came out of the box and he
realizes that he's got to get this because he's going
to have another year in a couple of months. Yeah,
if we don't win, if he doesn't win, the Republicans
don't hold down the House, he's gonna go lame doc.
And he doesn't want that that that's gonna be trouble.
So this is an important time to get everything everything right.
Speaker 3 (01:18:24):
What do you mean an important time to get everything
because you can't miss anything.
Speaker 10 (01:18:27):
And that's what concerns me about the terrorists is like,
I don't want I want America to be winn.
Speaker 3 (01:18:31):
I want him to win.
Speaker 10 (01:18:32):
I want us to hold the house, to send it
in the White House in twenty twenty six, would he
find his win?
Speaker 8 (01:18:37):
I mean, his his thing is to totally redo or
totally redo the right.
Speaker 10 (01:18:41):
But if the markets don't treat him while going into
twenty six.
Speaker 3 (01:18:43):
They're going to market with it. I don't want him,
I want him to win. I want us to win. Okay,
can we cut live to the Let's cut live to
the other. It looks like a hanger. You want to
cut life to it, you guys, Oh yeah, look at
this's have ak out of the president.
Speaker 8 (01:19:00):
Let's go ahead. Okay, director, you can go ahead and
cut live for the hangar. There we go, right there,
President is going to walk out in the second.
Speaker 3 (01:19:10):
We're going to looks like except yeah, yeah, Pete, Pete
went out to that. There is right there, Secretary of Defense, Pete. Hegseth.
We've gone fixed band nets for Pete.
Speaker 8 (01:19:20):
A couple of three times I spoke, we'll go, We'll
go a couple of three times more.
Speaker 3 (01:19:24):
Tell me about speaking to Pete Pete. I spoked the
Cash and Pete on the same day. They're great.
Speaker 10 (01:19:28):
They're they're not being sidetracked by the liberal laugh who's
just turned everything in their power to get to get
a skin, to get a scalps.
Speaker 8 (01:19:36):
As you say, no, no scalps, no scalps, no skin
of great no scalps, no scalp.
Speaker 22 (01:19:40):
No.
Speaker 3 (01:19:40):
Well, I can't give him a scalp your buddy flut Nick.
Maybe hold laid, but hold it right. No, no, no. My
wife text me like, don't argue with Steve about the markets.
I'm like, I'm not arguing, just love. His wife has
always been the classiest person. That is incredibly cla I
don't know how she ended up marrying been marrying Bowling.
(01:20:01):
But non London.
Speaker 8 (01:20:05):
Comes out today this I've been all over besting these guys.
Loni comes out to day says he's running these deals,
He's cutting deals.
Speaker 3 (01:20:11):
Last thing I knew the Treasury Secretary was. I don't know.
I thought had the planes up and kind of leading
and doing the China thing. Maybe Lutnik is doing Commerce
secretary stuff. We should say, is any audio that we
can go to at all?
Speaker 18 (01:20:25):
Do you have the audio music?
Speaker 1 (01:20:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:20:27):
Some music? Can we going? Yeah, let's let's have some
music there. We gotta love that. Can we bring that
up a bit? Come on, guys, I could listen to
that all day. I got a choice between John Phillips
SUSA and Eric Bowling and Eric Bowling to come on, dude,
can I get some there?
Speaker 18 (01:20:47):
We go?
Speaker 8 (01:20:48):
Well, here comes to President of States, biled to the
chief the President I States Donald J.
Speaker 3 (01:20:55):
Trump.
Speaker 9 (01:20:58):
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the twenty fifth and forty
seventh President of the United States, Donald J.
Speaker 5 (01:21:04):
Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:22:23):
Well, I guess they think we're going to save this place.
And you know what, they're right, one hundred percent right.
We're going to save it and make it better. Actually,
so at ease, everybody, out of ease, enjoy yourself, sit
down if you can. If those are yea, yeah, they
are in a sense. Thank you very much. It's an
honor to be back in the great state of Michigan.
(01:22:46):
And as you know, we had big victory in Michigan
and I won't forget it, and I'm not forgetting it.
And I'm honored to be here at Selfridge Air National
Guard Base with the men in where of the one
hundred and twenty seventh Wing of the Michigan Air National Guard.
(01:23:06):
Thank you very much for being here. This is great
is a great honor, a great honor from me. We've
had such success in Michigan. I want to thank the
Secretary of Defense Pete haig Seth, who's doing a really
great job. The huties will tell you that he's doing
a very good job. Major General Paul Rogers and Brigadier
(01:23:27):
General Daniel Kramer of the Michigan National Guard, Commander of
the one hundred and twenty seventh Wing, Brigadier General Matthew
bron Kato, Thank you very much. Deputy Commander Colonel David Spiehar,
wherever you may be, David, where's David? Hello? Hillo, David?
Speaker 5 (01:23:51):
Hello?
Speaker 1 (01:23:51):
Are you David? Hello? David? Thank you very much. He's
like the quiet type, right, but a killer I hear.
Command Chief Master Sergeant Bruce Hedrick Bruce, Hello, Bruce, Thank
you very much. Bruce. Thank you, Bruce. Great job. For
(01:24:16):
decades they've been trying to save this facility. I didn't
realize that. I thought it was just recently because I
heard about it recently from some people, including your governor,
who has done a very good job. She came to
see me. That's the reason she came to see me,
by the way, to save Selfridge, and she was very effective,
(01:24:37):
along with some of the other politicians and some of
the military people that love this place. They loved what
it stands for, all the victories they've had here over
the years. So I want to thank Governor Gretchen Whitmer
for bringing it also to our attention very strongly. And
(01:25:03):
you know I'm not supposed to do that. She's a Democrat.
They say, don't do that, don't have her here. I said, no,
she's going to be here. She's done a very good job, frankly,
and she's she was very much involved with the Republicans.
They work together on saving it and it was not easy.
So I want to thank you very much. Gretchen, good job.
Thank you. Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall worked with Gretchen
(01:25:26):
and everybody else. Thank you, Matt. Great job you're doing too.
John James, as you know, is right now working on
the great big beautiful deal. I said, do me a favorite, John,
just stay back there and let's get your vote. Let's
not worry about this today. But John was fantastic, as
were all of the other representatives that you have that
(01:25:49):
are right now in Congress working very very very hard. Actually.
And Michigan Senate Republican leader Eric Nesbitt, thank you very much. Eric,
Thank you very much. Great job's done, a great job
right now working on the great big beautiful deal. They said,
do me a favorite, John, just stay back there and
let's get you a vote. Let's not worry about this today.
(01:26:11):
But John was fantastic, as were all of the other
representatives that you have that are right now in Congress
working very very very hard actually, and Michigan Center Republican
leader Eric Nesbitt, thank you very much. Eric, thank you
very much. Great job done, a great job. But I
want to thank all of the people that I just mentioned,
(01:26:34):
but in particular the You know, when I look at
the House members, they have been calling me all the time.
We got to get it done, and they worked along
with Gretchen and some others, and you're going to be
very happy with what I have to say right now.
I also want to thank Michigan's tremendous Republican delegation, the
(01:26:56):
whole delegation, the whole state, because they're back in Washington
and they're helping our congressmen and they're helping us get
the votes that we need because I think if we
get it, we have the biggest tax cut in history,
and if we don't get it, you have the biggest
tax increase. And for that I will blame the Democrats
(01:27:17):
because we probably won't get any votes from Democrats only
not for any reason other than them. We're Republicans and
the Democrats tend not to vote anytime we voted it,
So the whole thing is so crazy. But it'll be
the biggest tax increase in history if we don't get it.
And that's why the Republicans can do it. But they
have to stick together, and I think they are, from
(01:27:39):
what I understand, really sticking together. I want to thank
also Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and John Thune.
Leaders John Thune, they have been working together and with
the Senators and the congress men and women, and I
think they've got something that's really it's big league, and
it's very important, biggest, the biggest bill ever if we
(01:28:02):
get it done, and I think we will. For decades,
Selfridge Air National Guard Base has stood as a crucial
pillar of North American air defense, just twenty miles north
of Detroit, where you're going to have a lot of
car factories opening very soon, by the way, I might add,
with access to the largest military airspace complex east of
the Mississippi, Selfridge is tightly integrated with the National All
(01:28:26):
Domain Warfighting Center. This airfield sor it's first military takeoff
all the way back in nineteen seventeen. Can you believe
that wouldn't that have been a shame to close this
great history for something else that wouldn't be as good.
The Tuskegee Airmen trained here during World War Two, and
(01:28:47):
generations of Michigan patriots have served here with great distinction. Unfortunately,
that proud legacy was put at risk by the retirement
of the key aircraft based here, in particularly the A
ten Thunderbolt to Warthog, which I hear is an incredible plane.
I hear is an incredible plane. It's too bad. It's
(01:29:09):
a long time it's been up there. I said, why
don't we save it? I actually said that last time,
but we did save it. I said that in my
last term, and we did save it. But now it's
coming to an end. But I hear the Warthog is incredible,
and we have support aircraft and also the KC one
(01:29:29):
thirty five Strata tankers. In recent years, many in Michigan
have feared for the future of the base. They've been
calling everybody, but the only one that mattered was Trump.
They called Trump, and we got it done, which represents
eight hundred and fifty million dollars in economic impact across
(01:29:51):
the state of Michigan, and probably it could be much
more than that as we expanded out and create thousands
and thousand of good and important jobs, both in the
military and civilian jobs. So, Gretchen, that's a big that's
a big economic You're not going to have too many
economic development jobs like that. It's great. But today I've
(01:30:13):
come in person to lay to rest any doubts about
Selfridge's future and the vital role it'll play in our
national defense. As Commander in Chief, I'm proud to announce
that very soon we were replaced the retiring A ten
Warthogs with twenty one brand new F fifteen Ex Eagle
to fighter jets, the best in the world, the fresh
(01:30:36):
off brandow and they have an expression you know what
(01:31:03):
that means fresh off the line. That means they are
brand new, they've never been anywhere. This is where they're
going to be for a long time. And I saw
one of them flew over my head and I said,
what the hell is that? That plan has serious power. So
this is the best there is anywhere in the world.
The F fifteen Ex Eagle too. This will keep Selfridge
(01:31:25):
at the cutting edge of Northern American airpower. My administration
will also continue with plans to replace the outgoing KC
one thirty five's in KC forty six Pegasus aircraft to
continue that important refueling mission, and they'll be restocked with
brand new top of the line refuelers for generations. The
(01:31:49):
men and women of Selfridge have always been here, and
they've always been for us. Whether you're Republican or you're Democrat,
they've always been for us, they've been for America, and
under the Trump administration, we're going to be there for you.
The previous administration was willing to surrender air Nairtional Guard
fighter units across the country by retiring aircraft that were
(01:32:10):
not being replaced. We are replacing. But under the Trump administration,
we're correcting that injustice and that starts right here in Michigan,
where we have a big commitment to Michigan into the state.
Even beyond this, this is an exciting time for the
United States military. Since November, enlistment numbers for every branch
(01:32:30):
of the Armed forces have surged. Recruitment is now the
highest it's been in thirty nine years. Now, if you
remember that, you've better hold on to those jobs so
somebody will take them. Somebody will take those jobs, so
hold on to those jobs, don't leave that job. Who
would have thought, because prior to November fifth, which is
(01:32:52):
election day, I was hearing that recruitment was so bad,
it was so impossible. It was hard to get people,
not only for the armed forces, for the police, for firemen.
People are proud of our country again, big difference. But
we had the worst numbers that we've ever had. Virtually
we couldn't get anybody. And now we're overstocked. We have
(01:33:13):
waiting lists of people wanting to sign up and be
with the military. They're proud of our country again. And
I'll be supporting a record setting one trillion dollar investment
in our national defense. We're going to go one trillion dollars,
the largest in the world, largest ever in our country.
But no other countries invested that much. We have a
(01:33:33):
one trillion dollar budget for military this year, and we
have tremendous plans, including increasing the scope of self Ridge
and I recently signed in order to begin construction of
the Golden Dome missile defense shield to protect our homeland
from missile attack.
Speaker 5 (01:33:51):
We're going to call it the Golden Dome.
Speaker 1 (01:33:53):
We had the Iron Dome, but somehow Gretchen golden dome
sounds better to me. I don't know, maybe it's not.
What do you like better for a golden dome or
iron dome? What do you like better golden? Let's have
about golden dome? Oh no, I think we're in trouble.
Oh how about the iron dome? Good? Keep it good,
(01:34:18):
because we made all the changes already. It'll be a
little bit. Even the renderings look very golden beautiful. Now
it's going to be incredible, the latest and the greatest.
Speaker 5 (01:34:27):
A lot of it's going.
Speaker 1 (01:34:28):
To be made in Michigan. A lot of it is
going to be.
Speaker 2 (01:34:30):
Made the golden Dome.
Speaker 1 (01:34:32):
You know, other countries have it, in particular Israel has it,
and we have a much more advance And this is
very good. We helped do it, we did it, but
we have an advanced version now that really is incredible.
What it do is we had a case study of
one hundred and sixty nine. Out of one hundred and
sixty nine, every one of them just shut down. And
(01:34:55):
I think we're entitled to it, don't you. I think
We're entitled to it. As a country. America's military will
soon be stronger and more powerful than ever before in
Selfridge Air National Guard Base will remain at the center
of the action. And I just want to say, we're
building some of the greatest submarines and various other ships,
but submarines in particular. We have a monopoly on great submarines.
(01:35:20):
We're building the greatest and the world most powerful machine
ever built. And we're doing some things that are just incredible.
In one way, you hate to do it, but in
another way, you really have no choice. And we're fighting
very hard on the China front and the Russia front
with Ukraine, and what's happening in the Middle East, and
a lot of good things. You're going to be hearing
(01:35:40):
a lot of good things. It's a shame. When I
left office not so long ago, we had no wars.
We defeated Isis in three weeks. It was supposed to
take five years. They told me, sir, it's going to
take about five years. We did it in three weeks.
Raisin Kine, he's now your top you know, he is
your to your top person. He's the head of the
(01:36:03):
Joint Chiefs. And I did that because he was the one.
He said, so we can do it in three weeks,
I said, three weeks. They told me five years, No, sir,
you can do it in three weeks, sir, And I said,
let's see if you can do it. And he did it.
He had a little time left over, actually, and Isis
was gone, totally defeated. And he's the man we wanted.
(01:36:24):
It's a man I said, if I do this again,
I'm going to put that guy in charge, because he
did things that nobody else was able to do, and
nobody else even thought it or even suggested. So very
proud to have him hit up the whole military operation,
along with Pete and some other great people. So I
just want to say that Michigan, It's been my great
(01:36:47):
honor to be here. I've had tremendous success in Michigan.
Not all Republicans have, but I have, and not just
this time either. We had tremendous We did tremendously well
in twenty twenty, and we did wridibly well in twenty
sixteen and twenty sixteen. They said it couldn't be one,
you know, it couldn't be one, but we won and
we won by a lot. So it's a special place.
(01:37:09):
And I don't forget. I don't forget my friends and
Michigan's been my friend, and I want to just thank
everybody here. I want to congratulate you actually, because there
are a lot of people wanted this to happen to
their neck of the woods, but it's happening for you.
So congratulations and God bless you all. God bless our military,
and God bless America. Thank you very much. Congratulations everybody graduate.
Speaker 23 (01:37:55):
Only because the Commander in chief invited me.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
Mister President, thank you.
Speaker 23 (01:37:59):
For miss throwing the warrior ethos inside our formations, for
rebuilding our military, re establishing deterrents around the world, and
making Americans proud to wear the uniform.
Speaker 19 (01:38:09):
That recruiting surge we're seeing right now.
Speaker 23 (01:38:12):
Is because they know they have a commander in chief
that has their back. That's my message to these men
and women every single place we go. All I ever
wanted when I was in combat was to know that
my commander had.
Speaker 5 (01:38:23):
My back no matter what. And when Donald J.
Speaker 23 (01:38:26):
Trump, that commander has your back, and that means something
to the men and women of America. And that's why
we're seeing a record surge and're recruiting. That's why we're
locking down our southern border. That's why our enemies know
we mean business because we have a commander in chief
that has our back, and he.
Speaker 2 (01:38:42):
Has the back of this base as well.
Speaker 5 (01:38:44):
God bless you all. Thank you.
Speaker 13 (01:38:59):
Well. I hadn't play to speak, but I am on
behalf of all the military men and women who serve
our country and serve so honorably, on behalf of the
state of Michigan. I am really damn happy we're here
to celebrate this recapitalization at Selfridge. It's crucial for the
Michigan economy. It's crucial for the men and women here,
for our homeland security and our future.
Speaker 25 (01:39:20):
So thank you. I'm so grateful.
Speaker 13 (01:39:23):
That this announcements me today and I appreciate all the work.
Speaker 19 (01:39:27):
Thank you.
Speaker 27 (01:39:36):
Well, thank you, Thank you, mister President. It's because of
your leadership this is happening. No one else could save Selfridge.
We've tried for decades. It took you, mister President. This
is why the people at Michigan elected you, sir. You
am not forgetting us. This is the first time in
decades where we can all say Selfridge is winning. We
(01:39:58):
are winning because of you, President Trump. And I know
all of these troops here will not let you down
with this new fighter mission, which will keep Selfridge Air
National Guard based thriving for the next thirty to forty years.
Thank you, mister President for remembering us and keeping your
commitment when we saw you in Washington a few weeks ago.
Speaker 5 (01:40:16):
Thank you sir.
Speaker 2 (01:40:27):
Well, mister President.
Speaker 28 (01:40:29):
Thank you for coming to Macomb County, thank you for
coming to Michigan, and thank you for writing another important service.
Speaker 5 (01:40:37):
Of the F fifteen X.
Speaker 28 (01:40:39):
This means that these folks are going to be continuing
on the mission for America for the coming decades because
of your leadership. America's back again, mccomb's back again, Michigan's
back again, and Selfridge will be leading the way.
Speaker 2 (01:40:53):
Thank you, mister President, for showing that.
Speaker 22 (01:40:54):
Leadership to the.
Speaker 3 (01:41:10):
Great good. I'm gonna hear the music going on the
President United States a saving an Air National Guard basically
another thirty year life's competive doctor jumping. So this whole
idea of pet tech, Sasha, is is he a short time?
Is there a kids runnings? A thirty day game? He's
(01:41:31):
going and see if you talked about rolling stall taking credit, Yeah,
the printing that whole time in life.
Speaker 10 (01:41:37):
You saw President Trump waring Pete Legs took the podium
that's the support that the people he needed, that Pete needs,
and the people who are the detractors who are maybe
yapping in the Department of Defense, who are knocking it's
got to stop.
Speaker 3 (01:41:52):
The chatter's got to stop, right, That's usually what it is.
Speaker 10 (01:41:54):
It's an you know, it's a couple of guys hanging
out to talking badly about the boss, and it's back
to the boss.
Speaker 3 (01:42:01):
He's the Pizza Pizza good ship. And I told her
this spook the PM playing fid and he's in very
good spirits. He's very confident in consult. This this amazing
to come to this Air National Guard base. And because
you don't know Gretchen, is she wearing a Maga hat?
Was you teach?
Speaker 25 (01:42:17):
I have a question?
Speaker 3 (01:42:18):
Is she going full Christy? Nome on me?
Speaker 22 (01:42:20):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:42:21):
No, is that I thought I thought it was the
Secretary of DHS. Huh she was hold she have? She had.
Speaker 8 (01:42:29):
All I needed was a DHS fest and a Gretchen
Whitmer is going to get so much great now.
Speaker 3 (01:42:35):
That is what the country should be.
Speaker 8 (01:42:37):
The president United States there is it's a democratic governor.
You're there to save talking about not just save. This
is an instrumental Air National Guard base. They're going you know,
they got now a new mission. Uh, it's fantastic. And uh,
I tell you what can we get that some power
on that threat?
Speaker 10 (01:42:53):
I tell you what also steve the difference between Gretchen
and wh a Democrat in a blue state to the
governor of Maine pushing back on Trump.
Speaker 3 (01:43:02):
You're gonna get different treatment.
Speaker 10 (01:43:03):
And guess what beautiful National Guard base is going to
be built and it's going to be wonderful.
Speaker 8 (01:43:08):
But extended life. And she comes out, but she's gonna
get massive. She's not gonna be invited onto the replacement
for the Rachel Mattow Show for a while.
Speaker 3 (01:43:17):
They're spinning nails right now.
Speaker 8 (01:43:18):
If you watched today's coverage of the mainstream media, I
would have to say it's revolting, right, just the misrepresentation
of facts, but the hatred that comes out. I don't
know how people can watch it. The media hasn't learned anything.
If you want to beat Maga and beat Trump, you're
not going about it the wrong way. The hatre just
comes out and they work on each other. This is
(01:43:39):
why Rachel Mattaw had a nervous breakdown last night. Right,
She had a nervous breakdown?
Speaker 3 (01:43:44):
Is nervous breakdown? Gretchen Whitmer, is she couse playing Christy?
Speaker 15 (01:43:50):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:43:50):
Now listen, So does do you trust it? I mean
we just talked about trust Christy.
Speaker 22 (01:43:59):
No.
Speaker 3 (01:44:00):
I mean that's what we graduating me. You trust bezos?
Speaker 10 (01:44:03):
It drops forty million on a Milania thing, he gives
Trump a million dollars for the inauguration party, and all
of a sudden he's putting tariffs, you know, on this thing,
which people have a problem with.
Speaker 3 (01:44:12):
My point is, do you trust an these liberals?
Speaker 8 (01:44:14):
I don't you know people people have a problem with
You don't have a problem with him putting the tariffs
up on the They're trying to highlight Trump is make
your life more miserable.
Speaker 10 (01:44:24):
Well, I wouldn't call him trump tariff if he didn't
I haven't seen it yet. But if they call it
Trump tariffs, and I got a problem with it. But
if it's tariffsy we break out fuel. When gas prices
were five bucks a gallon for everyone, we had fuel
search charges on everything on everything.
Speaker 3 (01:44:37):
Okay, deliveries on airplane tickets, everything, fuels. Here's what it's
going to happen.
Speaker 8 (01:44:42):
My good friend Eric bowling after he goes to the
White House tomorrow for the high level meetings.
Speaker 3 (01:44:48):
We never get invited here at HIL once you go
to the White House for the plus one. I got it.
I'm gonna I'm gonna do your map. I don't make
no guy. I got a guy, know, I gotta guy.
Let's go. We're going to go back to all this.
Uh hey, Gruber, was that Gretchen Whimer? Christy nom tell
me tell me who it was.
Speaker 9 (01:45:11):
Listen, I'm a little crush knowing that I'm not going
to be Rachel Madowse fill in for a while. You
know that hurts my feelings. I don't think you're on
the most either there manon. Just for the record, look,
I wasn't able to see the feet. Just tell me
Gretchen didn't do this. I just want to make sure
that she didn't know.
Speaker 3 (01:45:29):
What are you talking about?
Speaker 5 (01:45:31):
But she was loud to crowd.
Speaker 3 (01:45:32):
Mag I think I think it's a Trump twenty eight
and half.
Speaker 10 (01:45:36):
You can see by the way Trump turned to Whitmer,
and it wasn't planned.
Speaker 18 (01:45:40):
It wasn't.
Speaker 10 (01:45:40):
He looked at her and extended his hand and said,
do you want to speak? And she chose to speak
as both hiding behind the.
Speaker 22 (01:45:50):
Hold.
Speaker 3 (01:45:50):
He got her again, he got he introduced her to
she may you know, you know Gruber, We got a
couple of meds for he got a heard break. He's
coming your way. Talking me about seriously about Gretchen Wimer,
who's on the short list of governors running against President
Trump in twenty twenty eight. Tell me about that whole
event with Sharon Doz.
Speaker 5 (01:46:12):
Yeah, she was.
Speaker 9 (01:46:13):
Look, it's no secret when Joe Biden was floundering after
June the twenty seventh, everybody knew that Gretchen Whimmer had
her team together.
Speaker 5 (01:46:21):
It was not a secret. Her team was there, her
fundraisers were there, Her.
Speaker 9 (01:46:25):
Eye was on the prize of the Oval Office. Then
all of a sudden, Joe came out, dropped.
Speaker 5 (01:46:29):
Out, put Kamala Harris in his place.
Speaker 9 (01:46:31):
The same day, and Gregen Whitmer and all the rest
were like, Wow, I can't believe that happened. And of
course she didn't want the job to run for vice president.
Jos Shapiro didn't want the job to run for vice president.
But Gretchen Whipper is, Look, she's damaged goods at this
point when things like this happen it doesn't help her standing.
She's not going to be invited all the important parties
for the Democrats.
Speaker 5 (01:46:51):
For a couple of weeks. But she's doing the right thing.
Speaker 9 (01:46:53):
Look when the President and I States brings you F
fifteen fighter jets and says we're going to restock Selfridge
Air Force Base, say thank you, mister President. I appreciate
you helping out. It's the right thing to do. She
did the right thing. Will she pay a price for it?
Of course she will. They're always vindictive on the left,
you know that, and so it hurts her and I
don't know that she's.
Speaker 5 (01:47:13):
Really viable anymore.
Speaker 9 (01:47:14):
In fact, if you look around at the Democrats and
who's in the field, I at one time thought she
was the most electable. Then they put Kamala Harris at
the top. Look, as you know, there's a lifespan in politics, there's.
Speaker 5 (01:47:26):
An expiration date. I think by the time you get.
Speaker 9 (01:47:28):
To twenty eight, lil and out of office for a
couple of years, time will tell she wants the job.
She has a team, she has fundraisers, she's fairly well
liked in Democrats circles.
Speaker 5 (01:47:38):
But she dropped the ball on COVID. She was terrible.
Speaker 9 (01:47:42):
Michigan has the second highest unemployment rate in America right now,
second only to Nevada. Michigan Nevada often compete for who's
having the worst economy when things go badly. She didn't
fix the damn rhoads as promised. A lot of things
haven't gone very well. And she think about this. She
took the annual budget at Michigan from fifty billion dollars
when Rick Snider was the Republican soda Republican governor when
(01:48:05):
she took over. Now it's eighty seven billion dollars. How
do you account for thirty billion extra dollars? We charge
thirty five billion more than the state of Pennsylvania runs
for thirty five billion dollars. Less, do the math on
that for me and explain it, because that's what her
opponents will come after her on stage four if she
gets into a debate situation, how'd.
Speaker 5 (01:48:24):
You blow all that money?
Speaker 9 (01:48:25):
And when she came into office, there was a nine
billion dollar reservoir of money, there, a surplus. It's all gone,
and now she wants to raise taxes. I mean, she's
in a tough spot, but then again, all the Democrats
are tough spot. My money is on Shapiro at this point.
If it was all too early betting, that's where my
money would be for the Democrats. And of course AOC
(01:48:46):
is everybody's favorite on the far left.
Speaker 5 (01:48:47):
But I find that hard to swallow.
Speaker 3 (01:48:50):
We'll see groover.
Speaker 8 (01:48:52):
Hang on a second. We're going to take a short
commercial breaker and come back top of the r. Steve
Gruber's going to be with us. He's actually in the
arena in the county. We've got We've got John Salmon,
the Great John Solomon's going to join us. Eric Bowling
is going to continue to write a shotgun. Here a
real America's voice in the box right there. We have
the one, our one and only. Brian Glenn is giving
(01:49:14):
us a visual right that we'll come back with of
the motor table hitting is very cool. Brian Glenn's always
on it. Real America's voice coverage, NonStop, continuous coverage of
the one hundred days, and man, what a historic one
hundred days has been. The Daily Telegraph came to me
this morning and said, or the Spectator out of London
(01:49:37):
came to me and said, Bennon, give us one word
that sums up the hundred Days Revolution. The Trump Revolution
comes to America to basically regenerate, rejuvenate, and take bring
the country back to its original greatness. Short commercial break
back in real America's voice in a moment