Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We've got a couple major issues that we're going to
be talking about today, including the Trump administration is moving
to fire FBI agents involved in the Donald Trump weaponization
of our government to probe him. Yeah, those people are
going to be gone. I'll give you all the details
on that coming up. But before we get to that,
(00:21):
Donald Trump moved on a very big issue, and that
was the issue of school choice.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
This through an executive order.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Donald Trumps signing an order on school choice as well
as funding. I want you to hear how Local Fox
was telling the story.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
And President Trump signs two executive orders on school funding
that fulfill promises he made on the campaign trail.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
The orders take action to stop schools here in our
country from teaching the so called critical race theory or
other topics on race and sexuality. Since taking off face
January twentieth, the president has issued more than three hundred
executive orders.
Speaker 5 (00:56):
This includes an order to support school choice.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
How they're removing federal funding from K through twelve schools
that teach critical race theory. Trump's order, titled Ending Radical
Indoctrination in K through twelve schooling reads in part, parents
have witnessed schools make their children in radical anti American
ideologies while deliberately blocking parental oversight. It goes on to
say such an environment operates as an echo chamber, and
(01:22):
when students are forced to accept these on ideologies without
question or critical examination of many cases, and as it
children are compelled to adopt identities as either victims or
oppressors solely based on their skin color and other characteristics.
Order cites Civil Rights Act of nineteen sixty four, which
(01:42):
prohibits discrimination over race, color, and national origin for any
activity of program receiving federal funding.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
This obviously a major move for parents, freedom of choice
and school choice. The President also brought in his former
White House Press Seretary SARIH. Hockebie Sanders to talk about
how Trump will provide prosperity for students through school choice,
meaning you're no longer controlled by the government or the teachers' unions.
This is putting students, education and parents first.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
We have on our screen right now, and we can
come back to this. I want to go back to
what the governor was just mentioning, because we have a
map twelve states with universal school choice Montana, Iowa, Indiana, Ohio,
West Virginia, Arizona, Utah, Arkansas, as you just heard from
Governor Sanders, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Alabama all have at least
one private school choice program that's universally accessible to K
(02:33):
through twelve students in that particular state. So states on
their own, like yours, have had to ignite this necessarily.
Speaker 6 (02:43):
Unfortunately it has been left to the states. But that's
not the case anymore. We saw President Trump sign an
executive order He's convened people from all over the country
here at the White House today. We now have somebody
who is going to champion American families and do so
by empowering parents to make the best decision possible about
where and how they can be educated. Republican governors have
(03:06):
had to have that fight on their own for the
last four years. We no longer have to do that
by ourselves. We have somebody in the White House that
not only is going to fight by us, but is
going to lead the charge and help make sure we
get the job done. And the best and most important
beneficiaries are going to be students and kids across the country.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
Well, and you know, Kevin or when you talk with
people in large urban areas like New York, city or
even my county in New Jersey, which is huge. When
you talk to parents who are financially struggling, they'll say,
everybody thinks that we don't want choice and that we'll
just take whatever they give us. They don't feel that way.
They like the idea of Okay, can I have access
That accessibility is it, and then let me figure out
(03:47):
how I get my child to this place or to
that place.
Speaker 6 (03:51):
No child should ever be trapped in a failing school
simply because of their zip code. And that's exactly what
this president is doing. He is removed those barriers and
making sure that every kid in America has a pathway
to prosperity. By giving parents a choice about where their
kids go to school, they will finally have all the
(04:11):
tools and resources they need to pave their own path.
And that's one of the best things about living in
America is it doesn't matter where you start. You get
to decide where you will finish. We have a president
now who understands that is going to fight for it
and make sure everybody has the opportunity to experience it.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
That's what It's very simple.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Donald Trump is saying you, as a parent, you should
be able to get your kid the best education possible,
and you shouldn't be stuck in a school that is
failing your child. That is exactly why the President has
moved forward with this executive action. Now, let me give
you some of the details in here so you understand
exactly what is going to take place and what this means.
(04:51):
First up, and this may be the most important part,
is President Trump signing this sweeping executive order backing school
choice and IMpower powering parents, is saying to this order
is for the states that you must support parents in
choosing and directing the upbringing and education of their children.
(05:12):
It is not your job to go against them. It
is not your job to make it harder on them.
And it directs the Department of Education to prioritize school
choice programs through discretionary grants.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Quote.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Parents want and deserve the best education for their children.
Too many children do not thrive in their assigned government
run K through twelve school system. According to this year's
National Assessment of Educational Progress, seventy percent of eighth graders
in America were below proficiency in reading. Seventy two percent
(05:48):
of eighth graders in this country we're below proficients see
in math and moreover, quote, geographically based school assignments exacerbate
the car of housing and districts with preferred schools, stranding
the finances of millions of American families sacrificing for their
children's future. And let me just translate that for you.
(06:10):
What Trump's saying is, look, where there are good schools,
the costs of housing is much higher because parents are
dying to get their kids in a school district that
is a solid school district, that's a good school district.
And so that's the biggest point here. The biggest problem
is that it's unfair because there's a lot of parents
that are now are wanting.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
To give their kids a great education, they can't.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
Afford the housing or the rent in the school district
that was actually serving their kids' needs. So Trump saying
that's not right, that should never happen. We've got to
get rid of that to make sure that every parent
has a chance to get their kids in a great
school system, regardless of their zip code.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Quote.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
When our public education system fails such a large segment
of society, it hinders our national competitiveness and devastates families
and communities For this reason, more than a dozen states
have enacted universal K through twelve scholarship programs what you
just heard on Fox a moment ago that allows families,
rather than the government, to choose the best educational setting.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
For their children. Quote.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
These states have highlighted the most promising avenue for education reform.
Educational choice for families and competition for residentially assigned government
run public schools is important. The growing body of rigorous
research demonstrates that well designed education freedom programs improve student
(07:37):
achievement and cause nearby public schools to improve their performance,
or in essence, they're out of business now. The order
specifically directs the Secretary of Education issue guidance within sixty
days regarding House states can use federal formula funds to
support K through twelve educational choice initiatives. The Secretary of
Education to include education freedom as a priority in discretionary
(08:02):
grant programs. The Secretary of Health and Human Services is
going to issue guidance within ninety days regarding Weather and House.
States receiving block grants for families and children from the Department,
including the Childcare and Development Block Grants, can use them
to expand educational choice and support families who choose educational
(08:22):
alternatives to government entities, including private and faith based options.
So in translation, what Donald Trump is saying is you,
the parents, should decide where you want to put your kids.
You should be able to put them in the best school,
private school, or religious school, and you shouldn't be stuck
in a failing school. This is good for all Americans,
(08:44):
every kid, regardless of your religious beliefs and or your
political beliefs. And that is the point that Donald Trump
is saying. We're going to start on immediately. I want
to give you a quick update on the investigation the
tragic DC airline crash, and I want to go back
to March of twenty twenty three. There are moments that
(09:06):
happen and then when a tragedy hits, you go back
to him and you're like, oh, this is what happens
when you have incompetent people that are in charge of
hiring people for very complex positions. When there is failures,
there is massive catastrophic fallout. That is what we saw
with this helicopter that hit this plane in Washington, d C.
(09:30):
At Reagan National Airport. So let me go back to
March of twenty twenty three. Center, Ted Cruz was asking
the FAA nominee about what does he actually know about airplanes?
This is a woke DEI higher you could argue, and
I want you to hear how little he actually knew
about airplanes and flying.
Speaker 7 (09:52):
You ever flowing a plane?
Speaker 5 (09:54):
Thank you for the question, Senator. No, I have never
flown a plane, so.
Speaker 8 (09:57):
You weren't a military pilot or a commercial airline pilot.
Speaker 7 (10:00):
No Center, have you ever worked for an airline?
Speaker 5 (10:03):
No cenator.
Speaker 8 (10:05):
Have you ever worked as an air traffic controller? No, Senator,
have you ever worked for a company that manufactures airplanes? No, Senator,
you ever worked for a company that fixes airplanes?
Speaker 5 (10:16):
No, cenator.
Speaker 8 (10:18):
FA administrator is a specialized position. I'm not qualified to
be FA administrator. I've no idea how a flyplane. No
one in their right mind would put me in charge
of aviation safety because I don't have that experience. I
suspect most of the members of this committee are in
a similar position. The American people when they think about
aviation safety. When they think about I played in this
(10:39):
committee a Southwest Airlines and FedEx plane almost colliding at
Austin's Airport, they want an FA administrator who knows why
those planes crash and knows how to fix it to
keep them safe. And with all respect, mister Washington, it
gives no comfort to the flying public that their pilot
(11:01):
might be a transgendered witch but doesn't actually know how
to prevent the plane from crashing into the ground and
killing them. I believe your record is woefully lacking.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
Woefully lacking.
Speaker 1 (11:17):
If this could be a Saturday Night Live skit, except
it's real life. Now you go back to the questions, right, like,
what other questions were asked? Let's go back Joe Biden's
pick to leave the FA couldn't answer a single question
about aviation as well. This was a question that was
asked by Senator bud Take a listen to.
Speaker 9 (11:40):
This, mister Washington, can you quickly tell me what airspace
requires an ADSB transponder?
Speaker 5 (11:47):
I'm not sure I can answer that question right now.
That's okay, We'll just keep going.
Speaker 9 (11:50):
So that's a pretty important part. So what are the
six types of special use of airspace that protect this
national security that appere on FAA charts?
Speaker 5 (12:02):
Sorry, Senator, I cannot answer that question.
Speaker 9 (12:04):
So what are the operational limitations of a pilot flying
under basic MED.
Speaker 5 (12:08):
Senator, I'm not a pilot.
Speaker 9 (12:10):
So obviously you'd ever see that Federal Aviation Administration. So
any idea what those restrictions are under basic MED?
Speaker 5 (12:19):
Quickly? Well, some of the restrictions I think would be
high blood pressure. Some of them would be it's.
Speaker 9 (12:26):
More like how many passengers per airplane, how many pounds
in different categories, and what altitude you can find or so,
and then amount of knots. It's under two hundred and
fifty knots, so it's not having anything to do.
Speaker 5 (12:40):
With blood pressure.
Speaker 9 (12:41):
So can you tell me what causes an aircraft to
spin or to stall? Again?
Speaker 5 (12:46):
Senator, I'm not a pilot.
Speaker 7 (12:48):
Okay, let's keep going.
Speaker 9 (12:50):
What are the three aircraft certifications FA requires as part
of the manufacturing process?
Speaker 5 (12:55):
Quickly? Please? Three aircraft certifications Again. What I would say
to that is that one of my first priorities would
be to fully implement that Certification Act and report.
Speaker 9 (13:09):
You know, the three types, mister Washington. The three types okay, Yeah,
that's type certificate, production certificate, and airworthiness certificate. Okay, all right,
let's just keep going, see if we can get lucky here.
So can you tell me what the minimum separation distance
is for landing into parting airliners during the daytime.
Speaker 5 (13:27):
Mister Washington, I don't want to guess on that, Senator.
Speaker 9 (13:31):
Are you familiar with the difference between Part one oh
seven and Part forty four eight oh nine when it
comes to unman aerial standards unman aarily unmanned like drones.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
Are you familiar with? Yes?
Speaker 9 (13:41):
Yes, okay, you know the difference between those two Part
forty four eighth nine and Part one oh seven.
Speaker 5 (13:48):
Do you know the difference there? No, I cannot. This's okay.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
When you start putting people in positions of power based
on race, not based on qualifications, you get what you
just heard, people that are unqualified for a job. By
the way, I'm not a big fan of I got
you questions like for people that are up, I'm not.
There's questions you're can ask to try to make somebody
(14:13):
look stupid. These are not questions that were asked to
make them look stupid. You're wanting to be in charge
of the FAA. You're the man that Biden picked to.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Lead the FAA.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
You should be able to answer the questions that the
FAA is involved with with safety, like that's your job.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
That's something that you should be able to do.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
So you fast forward to what happened the other night,
and now you understand why we may have gotten there.
Whether it's on the military side, or the or the
air drone control sided or I mean, there's a lot
of things here that could have gone wrong because we
decided in the military that DEI was more important than
the most qualified. We decided in the towers where the
(15:00):
traffic is controlled, it was more important to hire based
on something of DEI than it was to find the
best people for the job. You've got a guy that
they said we want to leave the fa that couldn't
answer a single question about what's happening within the FAA,
(15:24):
which brings me to NBC News. NBC News is Tom
Costello came out with a breaking news report that the
FAA air traffic control boss let the supervisor leave early
before the mid air crash. NBC's Tom Costello covers aviation
for US.
Speaker 7 (15:42):
He's at Reagan National again. He's got the very latest
this morning.
Speaker 10 (15:45):
Tom Good morning, Savannah, Good Morning. A high level investigative
source tells me that they have now confirmed that an
FAA air traffic control supervisor in the tower here at
Reagan had allowed a supervisor to leave early, and as
a result, there was only one supervisor Wednesday night, handling
both helicopter traffic and plane traffic. Normally you would have
(16:08):
one dedicated to helicopters one dedicated to planes. Now, while
this is not optimal, it is allowed, but nonetheless that
will clearly be a part of this investigation. Air traffic
control staffing nationwide, as you know, has been an ongoing issue,
with the shortage of ten thousand controllers nationwide. It's been
a problem years in the making, and so now the
(16:29):
question is whether staffing in any way played a role
in this accident. In addition, I have also learned that
in fact air traffic part of me investigators are going
to be looking closely at the black box, if like
data recorder when they get it from that Blackhawk helicopter,
because that will tell them and give them a precise
reading on the altitude for that helicopter. There is evidence
(16:53):
that the chopper was higher than it should have been,
in fact, at the same altitude as that plane. Well's
going to be. Why was it at that altitude? Did
they have an alternative altimeter misfiring or miss misreading if
you will, inside the chopper that'll be part of this investigation.
I can also tell you the NTSB sent time with
spent time with the families of the victims yesterday here
(17:16):
in the Washington area, briefing them on the status of
the investigation. And the NTSB has brought in its own
black Hawk helicopter pilot from Alaska who is an expert on.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
The black Hawk.
Speaker 10 (17:28):
He is employed by the NTSP, but they have brought
him into Washington to be their own eyes and ears,
and they're expert on the black Hawk. In addition to
the Defense Department's own investigative team that will be looking
into what happened on board that helicopter, and then separately
the NTSP of course looking into what.
Speaker 7 (17:48):
Happened with the plane.
Speaker 10 (17:49):
All of this now less than two days after this
horrific crash in which everybody on.
Speaker 7 (17:54):
Board both aircraft were killed.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
So to recap the FAA air traffic control boss let
the supervisor leave early before the mid air crash, and
as a result, there was only one supervisor Wednesday night,
handling both helicopter traffic and plane traffic. Something else that
he said, air traffic control staffing nationwide as you know,
(18:18):
has an on has been an ongoing issue with a
shortage of ten thousand air traffic controllers nationwide. Ten thousand short.
This was a recipe for miscommunication. It was a recipe
for disaster, and now we are seeing what happens when
you put a radical DEI agenda and kumbai ism ahead
(18:42):
of efficiency. We should never been ten thousand agents short.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
I want to move.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
On to the FBI right now, and there are some
major shakeups underway as the Trump administration has made the
decision to dismiss FBIA agents involved in investigations.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
Concerning President Trump.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
This underscores a commitment to revitalizing the nation's top law
enforcement agency so that it would not be weaponized against
anyone by addressing the perceived bias and ensuring that the
FBI operates without political prejudice. The administration also says they
aim to restore public confidence and trust in our federal institutions. Now,
(19:26):
this initiative is part of a broader strategy the White
House going to make clear to reform federal agencies promoting
accountability and efficiency. Now, the appointment of individuals like Cash
Pattel as the nominee for FBI, it reflects a dedication
to leadership that prioritizes integrity and transparency, which is exactly
(19:48):
what Cash talked about it his confirmation hearing. Patel has
pledged to protect FBI employees from political retribution and to
uphold the agency's policies and procedures.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
Now.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
By implementing these changes, the Trump administration is seeking to
create a more efficient, they say, more effective, and impartial
federal workforce, ultimately benefiting the American public through enhance trust
in government operations. Now, Caspateel is a guy that actually
talked even before his confirmation hearing about how he was
(20:26):
targeted by the deep state and how big Tech helped
to basically give all of his information without his knowledge
to the FBI. He was asked a question like who
runs these things, right, Like who's in charge? Where they
can just spy on any American and they can weaponize
the deep state of the federal government against people that
(20:47):
are actually serving their country because they don't like what
they're saying or what they're doing, or that they're conservative.
And I'm going to play this clip from you for
you because this was back in December. All right, listen carefully,
what Casptel says the government, the FBI, that he is
about to run what they did even to him because
he worked for Donald Trump.
Speaker 11 (21:07):
To me, it is so who's at the end of it?
Is it a country? Is it us politicians? Is the
World Economic Forum? Where it's so well orchestrated, there has
to be an organizer, and so who is the organizer?
Speaker 12 (21:25):
I don't think that there's one specific organizer. I think
there is a group of organizations that have participated in
it for a while. The World Economic Forum is a
piece of it. Certain politicians are a piece of it.
Certain people who become ags, Directors of the FBI, directors
of the CIA, et c.
Speaker 7 (21:45):
Are a piece of it.
Speaker 12 (21:46):
And of course the mainstream media is a big component
of it. All of those entities partner up together to
take over Washington, DC, and instead of doing the job
for the American people, they come out instead come up
with government boo doggles that pay them sells billions and
billions of dollars or their friends billions and billions of dollars,
which is our dollars, and they want to make sure
(22:08):
that that keeps going over and over and over. I'll
give you a perfect example. Who cares if you've ever
followed Russigate or any of this other stuff about the
deep state. Chris Ray, the director of the FBI, and
Rob Rosenstein, the Deputy Attorney General then of the DOJ,
were tasked with helping us at Congress, where I ran
the Rushigate investigation to expose Russiagate. We went to them
(22:29):
and said, look, you guys didn't do this, help us
expose it, and they both doubled down.
Speaker 7 (22:34):
You know what they did.
Speaker 12 (22:36):
They launched an investigation against me, the senior congressional investigator
for Russigate on the House Intelligence Committee, and six other staffers.
They used grand jury subpoenas to get my personal information,
my banking information, my emails, my cell phone information, and
everything else. I didn't find out till five years later
when Google called me and said, hey, our five year
notification as lapsed. We can now tell you the DOJ
(22:58):
surveiled you, and we had to turn over documents so
that we exploded that into a federal lawsuit that's still
ongoing in the DOJNFBI.
Speaker 7 (23:06):
But those two guys, hold on.
Speaker 11 (23:09):
What So Google informed you that you're being surveilled five
years after the investigation started, right?
Speaker 6 (23:16):
What?
Speaker 7 (23:17):
I mean, what more did they tell you.
Speaker 12 (23:19):
They're not allowed to say anything, but that you can
be informed now since it's five years later. So as
a former assecurity prosecutor, I know you don't just go
to Google. You go to every provider, you go to
all the telecoms, you go to the bank, You got everybody.
Speaker 7 (23:33):
If you're going to run investigation, that's what you do.
Speaker 12 (23:35):
But these two guys who were running the FBIDJ sat
in a room with the Chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee and lied to our faces. They threatened to investigate us,
which was bad enough, right they actually did it, and
then these two guys would get exposed for Rob Rosenstein
specifically for signing a FIZA that was totally bogus. And
we've caught Chris Ray lying time and time again as
(23:57):
the director of the FBI.
Speaker 7 (23:59):
Put these guys over here for a second.
Speaker 12 (24:00):
Gina Haspell, who was the director of the CIA, was
London station chief in England when Russiagate kicked off. Under
the rule of law in America, if you want the
Federal Burea of Investigation to launch an investigation overseas, you
have to get permission from the head and tel rep
in the England.
Speaker 7 (24:15):
It's excuse me, the station chief.
Speaker 12 (24:19):
So she allowed Russiagate to occur on British soil where
there was a barroom operation to try to record some
nub into spilling the beans on Donald Trump, and they
would use that to launch the whole Russiagate offensive. Gina
Haspital would later become Trump's CIA director. And then when
these guys got out of the administration, Dono Wor, Gina Haspel,
(24:41):
and Rod Rosenstein worked today at Christopher Ray's old law
firm as senior named partners, making seven and eight figures.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
You want to know why they're so afraid of Cash Bettel.
This is why, because they did a Cashtel the same
thing they did on Trump, the same thing they did
to anybody else that got in their way. Cashptel was
just telling you there. It was like they didn't even
tell me until five years later that I was a
target that they came after me. I mean, Cashpatel was
(25:10):
in the National Security Division doing discovery for the for
Benghazi when they found out Hillary Clinton's secret email. By
the way, a lot of people don't know that either.
You want to know again, why they're so afraid of Cashpatel.
This is why, this is why they don't want him
at the FBI. This is why the media is coming
out against him. This is why Democrats are losing their
(25:32):
minds because they understand just how dangerous Cashpatel is to
reform the FBI. Because the FBI spied on cash Battel,
secretly vacuumed up his emails, as phone records, as bank records.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
They did it all folks.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
They don't want that guy, and they're going, all right,
let's go see what else they did that was illegal
to other Americans. I go back to Benghazi for a second.
Benghazi still matters to me because it's about government corruption
and cover. On the anniversary of nine to eleven, take
a listen to what he said about that.
Speaker 12 (26:04):
For his participation in Benghazi where he killed four Americans,
he'll be out of prison before the next presidential election
is done.
Speaker 7 (26:11):
Are you serious? Yeah?
Speaker 12 (26:12):
And he put him in his sock draw It's called
the Clinton sock drawer case. They went to federal court
the government, and the federal court adjudicated that no reasonable
prosecutor would bring this case. I was in the National
Security Division at the time. I was doing the discovery
for Benghazi where we found her freaking email people in
government like places like the FBI and senior leaders positions
(26:33):
and DJ making prosecutorial decisions based on a political election.
Speaker 5 (26:39):
You know.
Speaker 12 (26:39):
My first big instance of that was Benghazi. I was
I was the main justice lead prosecutor for Benghazi for
kid and.
Speaker 7 (26:49):
I remember it's meeting.
Speaker 12 (26:49):
With then ag holder and we had a deck of
like nineteen guys who wanted to prosecute you know, Jay
Sock had him rolled up, and we wanted to get
them all. They killed four Maria you know, it's a
legit terrorist attack. And the basic general response from the
FBIDO Jay leadership was Wow, it's only politically convenient to
(27:10):
get one guy, And they went and got basically the
wrong guy. And then we prosecuted that wrong guy. Not
that he wasn't a part of it, he just wasn't
like the top tier of guys I would have gone after.
And they screwed up the prosecution because they didn't listen
to us and they didn't want to use the right evidence.
Speaker 7 (27:26):
And it was all political decisions. What do you mean
they didn't want to use the right evidence.
Speaker 12 (27:30):
They wanted to you know, because half of that stuff
was classified and they wanted to. I didn't piece this
together then because we didn't have the whole fallout from Benghazi,
the hearings and the congressional review that would.
Speaker 7 (27:46):
Take time to come in.
Speaker 12 (27:48):
But they wouldn't let us prosecute I think sixteen of
the nineteen that I wanted, they didn't want half this
evidence declassified. And I was like, what they Well, the
leadership a DOJFBI in the intel community obviously played a
role in that, and so you know, we were just like,
all right, we'll do the best we can. And for example,
(28:11):
Katala H. Greenbrier River, the guy that's getting that first
got prosecuted. He is getting out for his participation in
Benghazi where he killed four Americans. He'll be out of
prison before the next presidential election's done.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
You listen to everything that he just described with Benghazi,
and there was a consistency of the deep state. If
they were told to make someing go away, they did it.
If they were told to lie, they lied. If they
were told to investigate a political opponent of the White House,
they did it. If they were told to raid the
president's home, they did it. This was all part of
(28:46):
the deep state. Doing whatever they could do, okay, whatever
they could do to shut down in silence their political
reporters three to one their political opponents. Now, let me
also give you some news that has just broken, and
(29:08):
I want you to understand this is huge. The White
House has just announced the release of eight additional hostages
from Hamas captivity. Here's the White House pre Secretary making
the announcement.
Speaker 13 (29:20):
I also do have news on the hostage front, which
I'm very surprised nobody asked about this because it is
big news story. And the White House applauds the release
of eight additional hostages from Hamas captivity. Thanks to the
ceasefire deal secured by President Trump, three Israeli and five
Thai nationals are being reunited with their families and their
(29:42):
loved ones after being held in unspeakable conditions for over
fifteen months. And the President remains committed to the release
of all remaining hostages.
Speaker 7 (29:50):
And they should have never.
Speaker 13 (29:51):
Been taken by the brutal terrorist group Hamas in the
first place. And I think President Trump's working meeting with
the Israeli Prime Minister next week emphasizes his continued support
for Israel and ensuring that brutal terrorists in that region
have hell to pay.
Speaker 2 (30:07):
Have hell to pay.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
I love being able to end the show with some
really good news and the release of eight additional hostages
from Hamas captivity thanks to the ceasefire deal secured by
President Trump. This was the whole point of getting that
deal done, and we are getting more of those hostages out.
Don't forget to share this podcast wherever you can on
social media, and I will see you back here tomorrow.