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September 5, 2025 • 36 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from War from Everywhere, USA. It's
Fox Across.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
America with Jimmy Phyla.

Speaker 1 (00:08):
Jimmy, there's our guy back in action.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
Big hour of Fox Across America with your main man, Jimmy.
Fayla Giano called Well a Fox News contributor who is
not happy with the Democrat Party. He wrote a New
York Times best selling book called Taken for Granted about
how the Democrats have failed the black community and he
is pretty worked up about. It's bizarre, but it's like

(00:32):
a pro crime message out of the Democratic Party right now.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
That's the dumbest thing I've heard of.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
We're going to sort of talk about it, but it
is so dumb that we literally had an intervention with
some callers in the last hour to discuss how this
news cycle is becoming collectively hard on anybody with like
an eighth of a brain, because this really is the
dumbest time there has ever been to be alive. So

(00:59):
we're gonna try to make sense of it for you
in this hour, But wish us luckman, you.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
Got some big testicles to pull this off.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Broke.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
I don't know that we're going to pull it off,
but yes to the Big Testicles anyway, eight at eight,
seven to eight, nine to nine, one zero. If you
want to be a part of the conversation, also the
phone number. If you would not like to be a
part of the.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
Conversation, you're just another bag.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
Fine, Okay, I get that a lot. But either way,
you're welcome. Agreed, disagree to be a Republican, be a Democrat,
just don't be a bang. Here it is we get
underway in the third and final hour of a three
hour audio masterpiece sponsored by the fine folks at Previgen
Previagen for your Brain. Something I want to get into

(01:39):
in this hour as a comic who hosts a TV
show and it's going on tour again.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
This fall.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
Has to do with I guess what we would call
the outrage mob, cancel culture. I wrote a New York
Times bestseller myself called The Cancel Culture Dictionary, An A
Z Guide to Winning the War on fund. And that's
a real thing I did. I might be the only
Nassau Community College graduate to hit the New York Times
bestseller list, but damn it, that's a thing.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
We did that.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
And what I talked about a pretty great length in
that book is that the democrats back four or five
years ago had created a gap between what people believed
to be true and what they were willing to say
in public. Meaning five six years ago, no one believed

(02:30):
that biological men should be competing against biological women. No
one believed that, but they went along with it because
they didn't want to be called a transphobe or a bigot.
They didn't want to get shouted down. That's why female
swimmers like Leah Thomas, who were actually men, were able
to gain access to the female sites just by claiming

(02:51):
they were a woman.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Most people agreed it wasn't right.

Speaker 3 (02:54):
You know who else agreed that biological men had a
massive advantage over biological women when it came to athletics.
The most decorated female athlete of all time Serena Williams,
who was once asked about the idea of playing Andy Murray.
Who Andy Murray was in one to one hundredth the
player Serena Williams was at her peak. He wasn't remotely

(03:15):
as dominant in the men's division and she is in
the female division. Okay, it's probab the greatest female tennis
player of all time, But here she is talking about
the idea of playing against Andy Murray.

Speaker 5 (03:24):
For me, tennis and men's simms and women's stays are
completely almost two separate sports. So I'm like, if I
were to play Andy Murray, I would lose six oh
six to Soho in five to six minutes, maybe ten minutes,
because no, it's true, it's completely it's a completely difference worth.
The men are a lot faster and me, and they

(03:45):
they get, they serve horder, they hit hard.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
It's just a different game.

Speaker 2 (03:48):
And I love to.

Speaker 5 (03:49):
Play women's tenness and I only want to play girls
because I don't want to be embarrassed. I would not
do the tour. I wouldn't do Billy jan any justice.
So Andy's stop it. We're not gonna I'm not gonna
let you kill me.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
So that's Serena Williams honesty. But she said that to
David Letterman. That was back in twenty thirteen. Okay, fast
forward five or six years. You can't say that anymore.
She would have lost her Nike sponsorships. Nike was not
only putting transgender men into women's sports bras like they
did with Dylan mulvaney. That was embarrassing, Okay, but they
were actually funding research that was exploring the biological advantages

(04:27):
boys might have in youth girl sports. I mean, Nike's
done a lot of nefarious things along the gender thing.
But the point is this was able to happen because
there was so much social pressure to play along with
the mob, the outrage mob. People didn't want to get canceled,
they didn't want to get docked and have their employer harassed.
They didn't want to be chased out of leadership positions

(04:49):
because they weren't conforming with what the outrage mob demanded,
which is that we all pretend men and women are
the same. Even though mister Rogers got famous for singing
about their differences.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
Boys are boys from the beginning. If you were born
a boy, you stay a boy. Girls are girls right
from the start.

Speaker 6 (05:12):
If you were born a girl, you stay a girl
and grow up to be a lady.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
But the Democrats came along fifty years after he started
singing that song and they were like.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
That is a fact check false.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
No, ma'am, boys and girl are the same. It's just
a construct. You are whatever you identify as. And that
outrage mob was so pervasive that intelligent people who knew
better played along with it. Malcolm Gladwell wrote tipping point.
I mean, he's written a lot of good books. Is
as successful as an author can be. Malcolm Gladwell. Here

(05:45):
he is admitting on a podcast this week that he
was basically pressured into supporting trans athletes, something he's embarrassed
to say he did. But it was back in twenty
twenty two, and he didn't want to be on the
wrong side of that mob. He wanted their approval, he
didn't want to get screamed at. He didn't want his
book sales to be crushed. Here he is talking about

(06:06):
it a CUB twenty nine.

Speaker 7 (06:07):
There's many interesting things to say with that conversation. One
was that it was a particular moment which has passed.
If we did a replay of that exact panel at
the Sloan Conference this coming March, it runs in exactly
the opposite direction, and it would be I suspect near
unanimity in the room that trans athletes have no place

(06:32):
in the female category. I don't think this is any question.
I just think it was a strange I mean, I felt,
I mean I was the reason I'm ashamed of my
performance at that panel because I share your position one
hundred percent.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
And I was count So that's Malcolm Gladwell, best selling
author who has made tens of millions of dollars selling books,
and he's flat out admitting that in twenty twenty two
he was cowed into agreeing with something he didn't believe
to be true, because that, for the better part of

(07:10):
the last ten years, is how democrats have gotten their
way in politics. They scream until you're so uncomfortable by
the prospect of them screaming that you give them their way.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
It's all a lemon drop. I'm a former cab driver.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
There's a street hustle I've talked about it on the
show before, called the lemon Drop. Guy walks around Times
Square with a broken set of glasses. He spots a
family of tourists that are looking up at all the
big buildings, crashes into one of them, drops the broken
glasses on the ground, and goes, you gotta watch where
you're going. You just broke my glasses. Man, I can't
believe this. I can't see you broke my glass. You

(07:44):
better give me some money, get my glasses fixed, Give
me some damn money. You broke my glasses. And the
guy's like, I'm not giving you money. I didn't and
the guy starts yelling officer, officer still broke my glasses.
Won't give me any money. And the guy's like, oh god, alright, jeez.
The cops are all right, honey, give me twenty. Let's
get out of here. And they give him the twenty
and he walks down the block and you know what
he does. He bumps into the X family of tourists,

(08:05):
drops the glasses on the ground, and starts screaming again.
That's how it works. That is how the lemon drop works.
That's what the Democrats do. Okay. They walk down the
street and go, hey, men should be competing against women.
You're like, but wait, that's not true. They have advantage.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
Officer, this dude over here. You're like, all right, right,
just go away.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
I'll give you what I want, okay. And that's how
they've gotten your way forever. And I say that because
they did it with defund the police. Remember that, if
you didn't want to defund the police, they let your
business on fire, through rocks, through the windows.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Do you remember when CNN was telling.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
Us it was a fiery but mostly peaceful protest.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
Fiery but mostly peaceful, straight up okay.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
And if you remember, on the night that happened during
the George Floyd riots, people breached the CNN studios in
Atlanta and we're lighting things on fire. The same network
that was like, no, it's under control, don't worry about it.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
People aren't buying its CNN, you dumb best suits.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
And the reason they were pretending it was under control
was they wanted the Democrats to win the twenty twenty election,
so they were trying to tell us all that violence
was justified and it was a good thing because America
was systemically racist. It was all Trump's fault. You had
to let these people go. You know, Rioting is the
language of the unheard. They would quote Martin Luther King,
never mind that they've disavowed Martin Luther King's signature phrase

(09:21):
of I want to live in a world where we
judge people by the content of their character and not
the color of their skin. The Democrats now reduce everything
to identity and skin color. But the point is they've
gotten their way historically by screaming and yelling until people
feared their outrage wrath enough to just play ball. That's
how the men started competing against women. Nobody in their
right mind thinks that's fair. But there's so much pressure

(09:43):
to play ball that guys like Malcolm Gladwell got in
line because they didn't want the headache. Well, that moment
has changed now. Okay, some people are still susceptible to it, yes,
because it was a viable business model for them politically
for a long time. But that's what watching play out
in Chicago. And the reason I bring this up is

(10:04):
we're gonna have Giano Coldwell on today Gianno Caldwell, like myself,
like a lot of people you hear at Fox, we're
calling a lot of this garbage out with no regard
for how the outrage mob was going to react. Okay,
we didn't do it like Malcolm glad Well. Yeah, it's
good that he comes clean and he realizes this. But
for society to hold up people in his position need

(10:29):
to do it jk Rowling and recognize that if I
can't speak the truth, what chance do little people have?
Like jk Rowling. If history is won by the right,
people will be regarded as like an icon for women's
rights because she stood up for them at every turn
when they've tried to erase biology. And it doesn't make

(10:51):
her a transphobe. It doesn't mean she hates trans people.
It just means she's well aware that being a woman
is not something that should be usurped by anybody who
just wants to decide that they can okay, And she's
not saying kill the trans people. She's not saying don't
be friends with them. She's saying that we have to
acknowledge that this is its own thing and give it

(11:12):
every right to be its own thing. But it can't
happen at the exception of other people. Now, there's so
much pressure to not do that that most people would
just be like, no, I'd rather.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
Have their way.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
But you understand, when they can erase the truth, the
actual truth that there are biological differences between men and women,
that's the slippery slope to them erasing any truth, any
truth they want, And if we're scared to point it
out for fear of a backlash, then you're really truly
living in a tyranny of the minority. When they control
the language, they control the people. That's why the First

(11:46):
Amendment is so vital, and what you're seeing over in
Europe is so terrifying. The arrest of a comedian saying
for talking about men and women being different and decided
those are hateful tweets and now this guy's got to
go on trial today. This is insane. We're just you know,
having an opinion is bananas. But that's why if you
are someone in this country who recognized the importance of

(12:09):
free speech, you've got to not only continue to indulge
in it, but you've got a salute and cultivated environment
where other people are willing to do so just the same.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
And that's where we are on Chicago crime.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
Gianno Cold was a black man who wrote a book
about the Democrats abandoning the black communities in inner cities.
And he wrote this book. The first one came out
maybe five years ago, and believe me, there wasn't a
lot of upward mobility for a black man in the
media defying Democrat party orthodoxy because they trash guys like that.
Think of Byron Donalds, a black man running for governor

(12:42):
of Florida. Do you have any things Democrats have said
about Byron Donald's or somebody like Tim Scott who wants
to win some seers the things they I mean, good God,
did you see the Winsome Sears debate last week with
Abigail Sbambury, that lunatic who basically said, you know, there
was a sign held up outside their debate that if
trans men can't use the women you know, can't use

(13:03):
the women's room, then win some sears. You're not allowed
to use my water fountain.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
What the hell did you say?

Speaker 3 (13:09):
That was on a sign that was straight up on
a sign like, hey, we'll go back to black segregation
is if one is the other. And the problem is
when you create these massive social pressure campaigns, a lot
of people of prominence are susceptible to them. They just
want to be on the right side of the mob,

(13:29):
so they'll abandon principle for convenience. And that's how women
found themselves in the situation that the Riley Gaineses of
the world did. Okay, they're suddenly getting changed in a
locker room with a biological man, as Riley said on
the show, a fully intact, biological man is now naked
in the women's room. You know, ten years ago you

(13:50):
would have considered that a sex offender. Now you're supposed
to call that a teammate. But nobody thinks that's okay.
And the reason we're back in a position to stand
our ground is free speech. One Elon Musk bought Twitter.
Trump won the election. We've kind of legalized speech again. Now,
to be clear, it was always legal, and freedom of

(14:10):
speech truly does mean that the government can't arrest you
for what you say. We've had that, but we've seen
a lot of behind the scenes manipulation where people will
in fact lose jobs, people will in fact pressure corporations
to get somebody to represent them who conforms with what
the mob's agenda happens to be. Now, the good news
is those people are losing power, Okay. The bad news

(14:31):
is they can always get it back if people lose
their balls and stop telling the truth. And that's what
this segment is about. We're going to bring on Gianna
to have our own conversation. But I play that Malcolm
Gladwell clip because Malcolm Gladwell very late. He has found
Jesus very late in the service, but he recognizes that
if a guy like him, who's worth tens of millions
of dollars can't tell the truth, a guy like you

(14:52):
or me has no chance. So I appreciate him doing that,
and every one of you out there listening is also
a Malcolm Gladwell. Somebody else, no matter how broke or
beat up you think you are, I promise you there's
somebody in the world right now that was it ten
times worse. You know, in your obligation to pull them
up and to help out and create that greater good
of society is to keep speaking the truth, not like

(15:13):
your truth, not like their truth, just good old fashioned
the truth.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
This thing is gonna become God gets you and when
the Son of Man comes you're listening to this.

Speaker 3 (15:28):
Earlier in the show, me to play it one more
time before Giano Caldwell gets here.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
It is Stephen A.

Speaker 3 (15:33):
Smith on News Nation, summing up the situation in Chicago
that's been going on, not just for this summer, not.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
Just for this year, but for decades.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
Here.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
It is Stephen A.

Speaker 4 (15:43):
Clip seven in terms of what has been transpiring through
in the streets of Chicago. It has been going on
for years. It was going on before Obama was in office,
it was going on when he was in office, it's
been going on since he's been in office.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
I recall seeing.

Speaker 4 (15:59):
A black couple on national television asking for military assistance.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
That's how bad it has.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
Been in Chicago, and one administration after another has either
been incapable or unwilling to do anything about it.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
It is shameful. And black folks in that.

Speaker 4 (16:19):
City have been getting killed for years, and I'm disgusted
at the level of ineffectiveness or unwillingness that they've aught
that they've executed and getting better things done and making
it better for the law abiding citizens is Chicago.

Speaker 1 (16:34):
That's Stephen A. Smith saying, brad as hell. And I'm
not trying to take this anymore, but give them credit.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
Man.

Speaker 3 (16:42):
Back to the conversation we're having earlier about people not
wanting to take those positions because there's a lot of
social pressure to be like shut up, play along. But
like the literal shut up play along aspect of this
is allowing and furthering the idea that all these people
just get hilled and you're just supposed to be indifferent
to it.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
As JB.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
Prisker said, he's like, Wow, you know, the big cities
have crimes, That's what he's talking about. It's so like
like you're just supposed to be like, Okay, listen to
this one clip twelve.

Speaker 8 (17:07):
You're going to hear people especially Patton. This past weekend,
fifty four shot, seven dead. They're going to say the
city's not safe. Would you ask your friends to ride
the l after midnight or after, you know, nine o'clock
at night, even to come down to the city from O'Hare.

Speaker 6 (17:24):
Look, big cities have crime, there's no doubt about it.
But let's just pay attention to what President Trump is
doing targeting show. He's overlooking god red states that have
much higher crime rates. J. B.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Pritzker, there's a slop.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
There's a real slop.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
It's coming from me.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
We're going to get into it with Giano Caldwell, a
guy with a lot of family out there, grew up
up there and is not happy what's happening. Thrown some
challenge flags. The NFL season kicks off tonight. It wouldn't
be a football game without a challenge flag. So Gianno
Caldwell comes by to watch.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
The instant replay after this on Fox Across America. There
it is Fox Across.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
America with Jimmy Fala. Fyron Donald's on the show earlier.
He's gonna be the next governor of Florida. This next
guest is I believe the senior correspondent to bottle service
in Florida, which is not nothing. Joining us now from
the champagne room, Gianno Caldwell on the show.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
Hey man, that's right. It's good to eat your voice. Brother.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
I know you gotta come up to New York do
some TV.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
Man. Yeah, I'm ready, I get to you know you
invite me, no stopping her friend. She only invites you
when she's broken up with her next boyfriend.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
Ah, that's not true. You were here, you had your woman.
I think you got hit on by my aunt a
lot one on the.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
Last time you were here. Yeah. You don't even know
this because I didn't even want to tell you, but
there actually was a fight between your aunt and my
girlfriend because your aunt was telling her, no, I'm taking
him on.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
Whoa and fran You gotta be careful with that one.

Speaker 3 (19:01):
Those listen women in their seventies have strong hands, Like
I get groped at these meet and greets.

Speaker 1 (19:06):
I was talking about this yesterday.

Speaker 3 (19:08):
Man, I'm not kidding like I got my I was
in like Potstown like two weeks ago. My left butt
cheek is so sore. Can I joke about it on stage?
But I think that makes it worse because then they
do it to be funny.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
You know, but these are strong women.

Speaker 3 (19:24):
Because they've been like kneading dough and cooking their whole lives.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
You don't want to mess with that.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
Yeah, you do not want to? Really do they pitch
your butt?

Speaker 1 (19:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (19:33):
You know why this started. It started because of a story.
I was doing a gig in Butte, Montana, and is
that correct? I think that's where we were, and second
to last person at the meet and greet, I felt
a big right hand on my butt cheek and in
my ear I hear, I just got to know what
a TV ass feels like.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
I'm not kidding, And I go, I was, ye know.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
I go, I'm sorry if it wasn't the one you've
been fantasizing about, and he.

Speaker 1 (19:59):
Goes, no, it was. It's like, wait a minute, what's
happening here? But anyway, so you know, I've been there.
As Bill Clinton would say, I feel your pain. I've
been there.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
I thought, are you no?

Speaker 1 (20:11):
Imagine that?

Speaker 2 (20:12):
No?

Speaker 1 (20:12):
I'd like to think my show will be on past this.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
Monthay sterne stories like.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
Oh that's funny, Uh, well give me this, Giano. You've
written some pretty successful stories in your own right. You
wrote take it for granted about how the Democrats have
kind of turned their back on the black vote.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
And me and you have been talking about this for
five years. We say that black votes.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
Matter to me. Actually that's true. They didn't turn it
black on the black vote. Uh. The only thing they
care about is I know that's true. Fair.

Speaker 1 (20:42):
Fair, Yeah, they didn't abandon that.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
They just you want your vote. We're just not gonna
do anything for you.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
Nothing, You get nothing.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
And I'm watching this like the Chicago thing play out man.

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Yeah, but they're really trying. Even Stephen A. Smith kind
of called them out on it last night.

Speaker 3 (21:00):
He's a politicians and the Democratic Party have been indifferent
for decades. This is not like this summer thing. And
that's what they're trying to make it sound like. I mean,
you know, this firsthand just predates even Obama's time in
Chicago politics.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
But it didn't get any better when he came to town.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
Right. And that's the thing. And you know, I'm actually
on Mark Levin this Saturday. Oh, get out on this show. Yeah, Life,
Liberty and Levin. So I'm excited to do that and
join you guys on Saturday. What is it Saturday at
a PM. That's at the.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
Time of the show, right, Yeah, Life, Liberty and Levin.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
Yeah, Life, Liberty and Levin. That's a big deal. I'm
very honored. And the conversations that we're going to discuss
are around Chicago and the violence there, and the fact
that there has not been a president to my knowledge,
that actually cared about Chicago, especially to the expent of
President Donald Trump. Obama didn't. He didn't do anything for Chicago,

(21:57):
and violence was high back then. Things have gotten worse now,
but still till and all, this guy didn't give a
care there were people dying in the streets back then.
He never even mentioned a word of it, awareness or anything.
So this becomes a very unique set of circumstances. I
don't think there's any president or politician that has made

(22:17):
these kind of strides as Donald Trump has. I believe
that this is a very unique moment in our history,
and I believe Donald Trump is a once in a
century or a lifetime kind of figure, somebody who says,
forget the establishment. I'm just gonna go do what's right,
regardless of the political pushback that I may get. And

(22:37):
he's getting it. But at the same time, there are
some folks that are coming around like Marion Bowser, DC's mayor,
and you know, I'm seeing some viral things and Governor
What's Moore is looking to work with President Trump on
the crime issue. I don't know if that's true or not,
but that's what I'm seeing on a lot of social

(22:59):
media today. So but if that be true, that's great.
They're seeing that his policies are effective's lowering crime. People
are happy and they're satisfied, and they know they have
high crime areas. For example, Baltimore was Kimberley Klasik who
were in for Congress. That made extraordinarily a popular topic
where President Trump was tweeting about it along and often.

(23:21):
So this is an interesting set of circumstances and I'm
very thankful for the president willingness to tackle this very
important issue. To my heart.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
Amen, we're talking to the great Giano Caldwell Caldwell Institute
dot org. If you want to help out make a difference.
You've been fighting this fight for a long time. You're
getting some air cover from Trump, and I feel like
you know, as people who get on the air, its
goofy as me and you are okay.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
One of the things that makes this work for us.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
I'm not goofy.

Speaker 3 (23:48):
Yeah, I don't know, man, I've hung out with you.
I've hung out with you, fair okay. But as people
who have like a legitimate interest in the world well
being of other people, which is rare in politics, nobody
actually cares, you know, especially not most of these politicians.
Trump has a human element to him that it's more

(24:10):
apparent in this second term because he's been around now
and you can't cartoon him the way they did in
the first term. And what's so funny about even the
first term when they were saying like he was like
some fringe lunatic that came out of nowhere. The dude
just hosted a show on NBC for sixteen years. Like
do you remember when they yelled at Jimmy Fallon because
they were like, he normalized Donald Trump by having him

(24:30):
on the Tonight Show. I'm like, dude, Trump was hosting
a show that had higher ratings than the Tonight Show.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
So like, how did he normalize them? But that was
the scam.

Speaker 3 (24:39):
And I feel like, at the very least, when you
hear things like Wes Moore might want to play ball,
what Muriel blauser, you know, was kind of rolling with
us now is I think we're starting to, ever so
slightly get back to a human place in our politics,
where it's okay to agree on certain things because the
truth is they affect all of us. Nobody carjacking someone

(24:59):
in DC who the person voted for, unless they're driving
like a PRIs then you probably know.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Oh my gosh, and you're so right about that. And
you're right. I can't be goofy when I hang out
with you, but it's usually because I call contacting your office.
All the weed you smoke, I love that.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
Whatever you call the TV show you're like, yeah, Jimmy,
Jimmy was smoking weed in his office again.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
Okay.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
I want to be very clear about this because I
run a class operation. I am doing nothing in that
office during the day besides drinking bourbon. Nothing, and I
will not stand for these allegations. Yeah you cannot, that's true.
We'll listening to a lot of rap music in my office.
You can't smoke in a building in corporate America, or
I would be smoking cigars for real.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
There you go, wanting to ruin a good bit thing.

Speaker 3 (25:46):
No, no, no, you can say it. I'm just this is
for you and me. I don't think anybody believes me.
I think they think I'm smoking.

Speaker 2 (25:51):
Bout bro is all a joke. But what isn't a
joke is the lives that are being saved in Washington,
d C. Do to think that, thanks in part to
Donald Trump's policies and his actions. What isn't a joke
is the lives that need to be saved in Chicago
because the politicians there in Illinois, in Chicago itself, the

(26:11):
city have made matters quite dangerous YEP and employing policies
like the Safety Act, which became law which eliminates cash
bail in Illinois, employing policies like the no chase policy
with Chicago police need to call their supervisor to chase
someone either on foot or in car. They'reby the suspect

(26:32):
that's gotten away by the point they get their approval.
There's much danger when it comes to progressive policies and
it's implementation in cities and especially to those who are
the demographic of African Americans. We see that we see
oftentimes those who are involved in violent crime, the perpetrators
are black and the victims are as well. Most times,

(26:55):
especially in the city of Chicago. So with those considerations
in mind, you know, there needs to be a real
and true focus here, and I think Donald Trump is
doing just that.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
Amen, we're talking to Giano Caldwell. Uh, and this is
all of this stuff matters. And I think that's another
issue though. They don't like Trump going into these neighborhoods
where it might predominantly be black on black crime, because
if he's actually making big improvements, that highlights the fact
that they didn't, you know, they have there's no way
to there's no way to you know, misconstrue this. The

(27:25):
Democrats have had no interest in anything remotely resembling black
on black crime because they don't think it's politically viable.
You know, they'll focus on anything else, but they don't
see that as a lane for them.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
How else could you.

Speaker 3 (27:38):
Justify it going on for as long as it has
without them doing something about it.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
And that's the thing. This isn't. This isn't about demonizing
black people.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
And I think that needs to be extraordinarily even closer.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
Yeah, if my brother was black he was murdered by
another black person, should I should Should I say that? Oh,
it's okay. For that person to murder my brother because
he's black. That's ridiculous. Yep. It's never okay, no matter
what the color of the person is, no matter that background, gender, religion,
whatever the case may be. Violence is wrong in every

(28:10):
sense of it. So how could they it all decide
not to even talk about an issue that impacts the
community that supports them in droves. That's a problem. We
got to get back to talking about the family structure,
parents in a home, and I know there's you know,
in this era, especially when it comes to black men,
there's more black men taking care of their children. So

(28:30):
like that, that's really good, But we got to do
so much more in the black community to develop and
push our community for this so we don't have these
issues which sometimes stem from poverty.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
Amen.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
And you know what, there shouldn't be any concern whatsoever
because when it comes to this stuff, these are not
race issues, as you said, these are human issues, and
that's what we're trying to bring back.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
We're trying to bring back humanity to politics.

Speaker 3 (28:53):
As crazy as it sounds, Trump's probably leading the way
on that. And it sounds crazy to say because at
ten o'clock at night he's tweeting meme about Adam Schiff's
pencilneck and JB. Pritzker being a sumo. But that's also
real and relatable, so he gots it. Listen, you're doing
great work. Good luck on life, liberty and livin this weekend.
That's exciting stuff and I'm sure our booker will reach

(29:16):
out soon once we make the piece between and Fran
and your girlfriend.

Speaker 2 (29:20):
No friend is good. Thank you so much for your time.
And also, if there's anybody in the Chicago Land area,
I'm having an event on September twenty fourth in Chicago.
You can get your tickets. They're free at Caldwell Institute
dot org. Again Caldwell Institute dot org. Please go there
and support our efforts. And of course, my most recent

(29:41):
book out The Day my Brother was murdered, My Journey
through America's Violent Crime Crisis, available now wherever you get
your books. Oh should I get my Instagram to my
social media?

Speaker 1 (29:50):
It wouldn't be you if you didn't.

Speaker 2 (29:52):
Okay, and please follow me on Instagram, Twitter, also x
Facebook at Giano Caldwell g I a NL Caldwell Caldwell
excellent stuff.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
I'd love to stand chat, but I'm going to smoke
weed in my office. I'll see it. Take care of man,
You're the best. You're listening to the man with a
fashion sense that's all his own, looks like a gay
bag lady. He's Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
You're listening.

Speaker 3 (30:28):
American Eagle stock up twenty five percent since Sydney Sweeney's
boobs went viral.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
Hubbab.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
That is a report that we caught on Fox Business
earlier today. The era of outrage is dead. Couldn't come back? Yes,
it absolutely positively can. But there's one place where we
have defunded the joke police. That is certainly this radio
show Fox Across America and of course my TV show,
Fox News Saturday Night with Jimmy Payler. One update I

(31:01):
can give you on the show is a mayorial candidate
who's being pressured by Donald Trump to drop out of
the race has agreed to complete his case on my
show this Saturday night.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
We will have that exclusive Saturday Night at ten pm.

Speaker 3 (31:17):
Right now over in West New York, New Jersey, we
have Sandra who has her own hot take on the election.

Speaker 8 (31:23):
Yo, Sandra, Oh well, I didn't expect to be called.

Speaker 9 (31:27):
On but I'm so happy you did. I just wanted
to say, Jimmy that his name is Everett garn To
and he's the mayor of New Jersey and Garfield. Guess what,
he's not going to be a Democrat anymore. He's going
to become a Republican and he's going to endorse Jack Chattarelli.
I was so happy when I learned this. You know,

(31:49):
it's great. They're waking up and we need all the
help we can get, and he's going to help him
fundraise and help him win.

Speaker 3 (31:55):
All right, Listen, if Jersey could go red that there's
hope for the hulk on Okay, Chicago, you know, places
like well, California is going to be a mess for
a few more you know, go rounds. But the point
is a lot of people are just waking up and
focusing on issues like crime and stuff that have nothing

(32:15):
to do with Republicans or Democrats. It's just good guys
and bad guys. You got to stop the criminals so
the good guys can go live their lives. So that's
where this thing is headed, Sandra, and I wanted to
take your call because I just know there's a lot
of common sense out there where you are, and I
needed some to get me through this last break. You
were kind of like a little like a like a
five hour energy for a five minute radio segment. So

(32:36):
don't ask me what I'm going to do for the
next four hours now that we're getting off the air.
But great stuff as always, and let's do it again soon,
all right.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
Girlfriend, thank you so much, Jim, I.

Speaker 3 (32:46):
Love you, I love you more, Sandra. There she goes
the great Sandra. So Sandra is fired up because she
believes the Democrats could lose the state of New Jersey,
something they've had a monopoly on for quite some time,
and if they do, it's kind of a bell weather
to where things are trending nationally. The Democrats. You only

(33:06):
have to do one thing if you want to make
it in politics, like straight, like literally one thing. You
have to pretend to care about the people voting.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
That's all you gotta do.

Speaker 2 (33:15):
That's all.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
You don't have to follow through on anything.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
Has that any been Has anyone been following politics for
like the last fifty years? Okay, everybody runs on everything
and the minute they get into office, they don't do anything.
That's just how white folks will do it. Because you
can fundraise off these issues. If the problems go away,
the fundraising goes away. But they aren't nobody care. I mean,

(33:37):
come on, if politics had a motto, it's rerun muh noney,
it just want more.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Money, you know. So if you solve the problem, are
you going to get more money for it?

Speaker 2 (33:48):
You know?

Speaker 3 (33:50):
So what's happening now is a lot of these people
who've gotten away with just not caring. You know, people
we talk about who make one hundred and seventy thousand
dollars a year in Congress and are somehow worth thirty
million dollars. You're like, what's going on here? It's shenanikins.
I don't know what's happened. But the point is that
was a lifestyle that worked. It worked for decades. But

(34:12):
the game is changing now. And it's changing just because
there are very basic obligations that governments have to their
constituents that are not being fulfilled. Like, you know, you're
in charge of a federal government, you gotta protect your citizens.
Did they protect the citizens by letting twenty one million

(34:32):
people into the country illegally?

Speaker 2 (34:35):
No?

Speaker 3 (34:36):
According to their own DHS, five hundred thousand kids went
missing three hundred thousand people were poisoned and killed by fentyl.
That's not protecting the country. It's not a government fulfilling
its obligation. And people were like, hey, well, that's kind
of bias. Pay a lot of taxes live in America,
that you mean something. So people started to revolt against
that faction of the government. Then came this other faction
of the government, which was running on identity, which was like, hey,

(34:59):
you got to vote for us, yes, because the Republicans
don't care about those people. But then you take a
closer look at who cares and who's done what in
terms of providing there's really only one group of people
telling you we don't need to crack down on violent crime.
It's just part of doing business. Shut up and move on.
What is this, hitler? What are you trying to cancel
the midterms? And a lot of people who aren't Republican

(35:19):
are just hearing that and they're being like, wait, really,
do they really just say we shouldn't bring in the
troops to lower the murder rate in DC and Chicago,
because again, the troops aren't out there stopping carjackers. They're
not out there writing people tickets tackling them, throwing them
into purp vans. They're just out there having a presence
on the street because their very presence is a deterrent.

(35:39):
And a lot of people are mobilizing towards that train
of thoughts because they'd just like to go to the
grocery store without getting mugged or jumped to carjacked.

Speaker 2 (35:49):
Not me.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
I pay money to get beat up on Craigslist, but
I'm a different demographic when it comes to voters. I'm
also the guy telling you the show's over. Pay up,
get out. We'll see you here tomorrow for the win.

Speaker 1 (36:02):
This has been a podcast from WR
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