Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from wor.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
From Everywhere USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Fala.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
What's up America, Hey girl, Jimmy Fayla reaching you from vacation.
That's how committed I am to the show. Not so
committed that I'm hosting it today. I'm on vacation. But
that doesn't matter, because Jason Chafits is in the house
and he's gonna drive it like he stole it, and
he can because it's New York City. They don't send
criminals to jail. Take it away, Chafits.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy, thanks so much. He's out west at
an undisclosed location. Won't let us know where he's out
on actual vacation, but thanks so much for joining us
in A big shout out to w b e N
nine thirty AM in Buffalo, the voice of Buffalo News
Radio nine th WBAN. This is day one, so we thought,
(00:48):
you know, it's probably best to just kind of ease
you into Fox Across America, best to just take it
one body at a time. That'll start with me, and
then before you know it, we'll have a Jimmy back
in the seat. But yeah, Oh my goodness, Welcome Buffalo,
New York.
Speaker 5 (01:05):
I think that's just great.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
And big breaking news if you haven't seen it, The
big beautiful Bill has passed the United States Senate at
this point fifty one votes. That's because you had the
Vice President j d Vance breaking the tie. Looks like
Lisa Murkowski of Alaska ended up voting in favor of
the bill. So you had Tillis, you had Collins, and
(01:31):
you had ran Paul voting against it, voting with the Democrats,
ram Paul deciding that Democrats were right on this, Republicans
were wrong.
Speaker 5 (01:42):
But the bill has passed.
Speaker 4 (01:43):
Now it goes to the House of Representatives, and we
do anticipate that tomorrow that big beautiful bill will come
up for a vote in the House. But we'll see,
we'll see what kind of holdouts there are. One who
can give us some great perspective is joining us on
the line. He's the chairman of the the Oversay Committee.
He's like my second favorite chairman to host or to
(02:04):
chair of the Oversay Committee. James Comer from the great
state of Kentucky. Welcome to Fox Across America.
Speaker 6 (02:11):
Hey, Jason, I'm sure Trey Goddy is your favorite behind yourself.
Speaker 7 (02:15):
So I'll take third.
Speaker 4 (02:17):
I'll take no, No, Trey's like third or fourth. Actually
you gotta there's there's a few others that you are
clearly my number two.
Speaker 5 (02:25):
So but I don't know that you could have beaten
that guy from Utah.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
So no, no way. I'm just saying you're doing a
great job as chairman. It takes on a whole set
of other responsibilities. But uh, you're just hearing seeing the
news about the big beautiful bill. Break us down, break
it down. What do you what do we anticipate we're
going to see tomorrow?
Speaker 6 (02:49):
Well, uh, you know, we didn't know whether the Senate
was going to get it done or not. It took
him a day longer, but they got it done. Now,
as you know the bill comes to the House, we've
got about six moderates that are not happy with the
Medicaid changes that the Senate made, so uh, you know
they're they're wanting to file an amendment on the floor.
(03:12):
Then you have the Freedom Caucus, who's you know, they're
not happy about a lot of things. So right now, uh,
you know, the votes aren't there. But once Donald Trump
gets on the phone and starts calling people I think
that many of them will start seeing a lot and
hopefully we'll get it done this week.
Speaker 4 (03:33):
Yeah, I think, you know, having been through this before
and in the past, this is usually what happens is
people talk a big game, but when that votes on
the floor and they're looking around at all their colleagues
and they're all voting for it, and they they look
over and they see Nancy Pelosi and Hakem Jefferies and
and Steve Cohen and these other people voting uh nay,
(03:54):
it's pretty hard for them to say, oh, I'm also
in no.
Speaker 5 (03:56):
And you know, it's it's not perfect.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
If it was a glide path to speed, our founders
would have set it up very differently. You wouldn't have
five hundred and thirty five people voting on something that's
not the glide path for speed. So you know, you
take what you can get, you fight for what you
can fight for. But now it is a binary choice.
(04:21):
It is yes or no. So who's going to come play,
who's going to support Donald Trump and his and his efforts.
Look as Bill isn't exactly what Donald Trump wanted either,
But that's how the sausage has made folks.
Speaker 5 (04:34):
And this is what you get.
Speaker 7 (04:36):
That's right.
Speaker 6 (04:37):
It's very hard to get to two hundred and eighteen
in the House and then fifty one on this bill,
which is better than sixty. But at the end of
the day, you know, I always say the biggest problem
of Congress is there are too many Congressmen. But that's
the way the founders set it up. And you know,
everybody's district's different. The House version of the Medicaid reform
(04:59):
was was better for state thought Kentucky that had Democrat
governors and expanded the Medicaid program. But you know, at
the end of the day, this is what Donald Trump
campaign on. This is what a majority of Americans voted for.
We've been very transparent. We've been you know, discussing this
bill and having hearings and holding public forums for seven months.
(05:21):
This has gone through regular order and you know, at
the end.
Speaker 7 (05:23):
Of the day, it's now or ever.
Speaker 4 (05:26):
Yeah, no, it's it's now's the time, and that it'll
be Wednesday. And it's amazing to me. This is this
is so true about Congress. These things always come up
for the vote right before a holiday, and everybody wants
to get home. They all want to be back for
I remember Nancy Pelosi back in the day, she she
had some like this is nearly an eight hundred billion
(05:46):
dollar bill, And of course it came up on like
I'm going to get the date wrong, but it was
like December twenty third, right, and you know, here it is.
It's coming into fourth of July. Look, Donald Trump has
a full agenda. What he's been able to do as
the president of the United States in the first six
months of his presidency is stunning.
Speaker 5 (06:06):
It is absolutely amazing. So they went with one big.
Speaker 4 (06:09):
Beautiful bill as opposed to two different bills, but all
these other positives like border security and and take You know,
the president was down at uh down in Florida with
the alligator Alcatraz. What what do you think of this
new detention facility that ICE has opened up.
Speaker 7 (06:29):
I think it's great.
Speaker 6 (06:29):
Look, we got to send a message if you're here illegally,
if you're here, uh, and you've committed crimes in the
United States, Uh, You're gonna you're going to be held accountable.
Speaker 7 (06:39):
You're going to pay the price. And this sets an example.
Speaker 6 (06:42):
He secured the border, and that's great, but we've got
a bunch of people, uh in this country who are
very dangerous people because of Joe Biden.
Speaker 7 (06:51):
And the Democrat agenda.
Speaker 6 (06:52):
And look, you know you got to you got to
set example, you got to house them. Uh, And they're
dangerous people. And I think it's I think it's great.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
Yeah, in order to have the sort of beds to
do the deportations and go through the process that they need,
they need the space. You know, somebody said, oh, this
is just to show just you know, alligator alcatrust.
Speaker 5 (07:14):
No, folks, we need the bed space. Ice does.
Speaker 4 (07:18):
Because we still have far too many sanctuary cities and states,
they just won't do it.
Speaker 7 (07:23):
That's exactly right.
Speaker 6 (07:24):
And Jason, another part of this big beautiful bill that
hasn't gotten a lot of attention is the funding in
there to deport the criminal illegals. And that's proven to
be very expensive and it's unfortunate that we have to
come up with money for that. But you know, Joe
Biden and Kamala Harris and the and the Democrat Party
(07:45):
put us in a in a dangerous position. We've got
these criminal illegals that that are roaming the street and
these blue cities and we have to send it back
where they came from.
Speaker 7 (07:57):
And it's it's unfortunately going to cost some money.
Speaker 6 (07:59):
And that's part of the big beautiful mill too that
doesn't get a lot of coverage.
Speaker 5 (08:04):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 4 (08:05):
So you know, hey, if you're thinking about voting against
the bill, you know, and you're wearing that Republican hat,
remember that you're voting for the idea that no, we
don't need the money for this, And that's part of
the reason some of those cuts or maybe at the
bottom line don't look as attractive, because it did do
(08:26):
a lot for border security, the border wall, for the
detention and deportation, and also the military. There are other
places where the President really felt strongly that hey, we
do need to plus it up, and we do need
to spend some more money. Right, let me ask you,
let's transition here a little bit. You're leading the charge
(08:48):
on the auto pen and that investigation.
Speaker 5 (08:52):
I mean, you've now.
Speaker 4 (08:54):
Run into somebody who doesn't want to appear, and I
believe me having been the chairman.
Speaker 5 (09:00):
Oh you don't want to appear. Sorry, but.
Speaker 4 (09:03):
You know I used to be able to tell people
you may not want to appear, but I can unilaterally
sign a subpoena. So what I'm jealous of that you
have right now is you have the ability to enforce it.
And that is something I just quite frankly never had.
Speaker 6 (09:19):
Yeah, it's great. Uh and and I think people know. Look,
we've got the Attorney General now on our side.
Speaker 7 (09:25):
Yeah. Uh. This is a priority for the president, as
you know.
Speaker 6 (09:29):
And and by the way, Jason, you you deserve all
the credit in the world with your oversight project for
discovering the autopen uh and uh and and the.
Speaker 7 (09:39):
Excessive use of that.
Speaker 6 (09:40):
So Uh, Anthony Bernald agreed to come in. So when
we send a letter, they know.
Speaker 4 (09:47):
Explain to people who he is because he is a
postal player.
Speaker 7 (09:50):
Yes, he is Joe Biden's chief of staff. Uh. He
was considered her work husband.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (09:57):
He was in the loop.
Speaker 6 (09:58):
We already know that from attend And he was one
of the people in the inner circle that shielded Joe
Biden from the world that didn't you know, want anyone
to know how bad a shape Joe Biden was mentally.
Speaker 8 (10:13):
So.
Speaker 6 (10:13):
So Bernald's name has already popped up as one of
the key players in the auto pen scandal.
Speaker 7 (10:20):
We sent him a letter.
Speaker 6 (10:21):
He knows that we have Attorney General, He knows I
have subpoena power. We sent him a letter inviting him
to come, he agreed to come, and then he canceled
twenty four hours before he was scheduled to come in
to be interviewed.
Speaker 7 (10:35):
And then I.
Speaker 6 (10:36):
Obviously the next day issued a formal subpoena. So now
he's going to have to come in for a full
blown deposition. But we think that he pulled out on
his agreement to do the interview because President Trump waived
executive privilege and he was obviously going to exert executive
privilege and to not answer our questions.
Speaker 7 (10:57):
And that's just not an that he has now.
Speaker 4 (11:01):
Yeah, and they what they fail to recognize is that
when they do a full on deposition, then it gets
a lot more expensive because you got a pony up
and you got a lawyer up. And it'll be interesting
to see how they ultimately pay for this, if there's
some sort of fund setup or whatnot. But you know,
they'll have a lot of internees in there. But you know,
(11:23):
my experience is the Overset Committee, you can pretty much
ask whatever you want now how they answer, but you're
doing it under oath and when there's an actual script there,
because that does not preclude you from either calling them
back again or from having a public hearing where or
even a classified hearing if necessary. But then there are
(11:46):
lots of others that are also involved, because, yo, if
you have the power of the presidency to use that
and you're using the pen, then the stat that's amazing
to me about this is that it was something like
more than seventy five percent of the autopen usage was
when Joe Biden was in the White House.
Speaker 5 (12:06):
What do you need an autopen when you're in the
White House?
Speaker 6 (12:09):
And the process that they're trying to say they went
through where someone typed up a memo and then Joe
Biden supposedly initialed the memo. Then they would send the
document downstairs, they would take it to the autopen and
bring it back when all he had to do was
sign the document one time. You know, it's not like
there's a stack of document one signature, So you.
Speaker 7 (12:32):
Know, no one in America is going to buy that.
We're going to bring them all in, We're gonna get
them under oath to.
Speaker 6 (12:41):
Answer the questions and we'll learn more about the cover
up and who the inner circle was, and hopefully we'll
be able to determine whether or not Joe Biden even
had any idea who was signing his name to executive
orders and pardons exactly.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
Chairman Comer is from the great state of Tuckey's the
chairman of the Oversight Committee. And good luck tomorrow because
we'll all be watching about that big, beautiful bill. We'll
be right back on Fox Across America. Stay with us
and WBED nine thirty am, Buffalo.
Speaker 5 (13:13):
It's your first break.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
Taking the edge off one story at a time.
Speaker 9 (13:19):
America needs to learn how to light up.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
You're hanging out with Jimmy.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
Well, welcome back to Fox Across America. I'm Jason chaff
It's filling in for Jimmy who's on vacation. Boy, this
is gonna be a good fourth of July, two hundred
and forty nine years of celebration culminating on Friday night.
Can you imagine how great it's gonna be next year
two hundred and fifty at the President's already talking about
the big celebration that we're going to have. Really looking
(13:45):
forward to that. A couple other things happening in the
news that I want to talk about. I did launch
a book and I am going to put it out
there it's uh, They're coming for you, and you'll be amazed.
It's a little bit scary. It'll this book will scare you.
I did the audio. I did that book itself. But
this book's about how data is being weaponized to push
(14:09):
you your family out of the economy, how the nefarious
left is using it as a bludgeoning tool. If you
think that the you know they're just going to let
Donald Trump and conservatives just go on their merry way. No,
the left is really going to come after you, and
they do it through dbanking, through social credit scores to
(14:30):
affect the elections. Like I said, four hundred and fifty footnotes,
a lot of research here. I would really encourage it.
I love it if you would actually go and look
at it. It's called They're Coming for You. It literally
today is day one of the sales I did the
audio book. I have the hard copy, so they're coming
(14:50):
for you if you have a chance to pick that up.
A couple other things in the news, I need to
mention Jimmy Swagger, age ninety passed away. You know, I
feel sorry for anybody who passes away. You don't want
to hear and see that. But there was a time
when Jimmy was Swagger, was all over the news all
the time, and he passed away. The other one that
(15:14):
I really feel bad about is this Karen Drummond. Drummond
I think is how you pronounced her name. She was
the woman who was set on fire there in Boulder, Colorado.
You had this lunatic just go on this rage and
lighting people on fire. That's the allegation. She was eighty
(15:36):
two years old and she's there in Boulder voicing her
support for Israel and gets attacked and viciously attacked and
lit on fire.
Speaker 5 (15:46):
I can imagine how horrific.
Speaker 4 (15:49):
I hope she wasn't in pain for the last I
don't know what has it been, thirty days or so,
maybe it's shorter than that. But she passed away today,
and so the charges against the alleged perpetrator of this
murder have been upgraded because she has now passed away.
I'm sorry to hear her go. But let's end this
(16:09):
little segment here on a positive note. And that's what
I call the Disney Dad. So somehow someway and the
truth will fully come out at some point. They're on
this Disney cruise and this young girl I think she
was five years old, somehow goes off the fourth floor.
Now I don't know exactly what happened, but it sounds
(16:31):
like from all accounts thus far, that dad evidently saw
this happen or heard it happen, and he too jumped
overboard to go save her.
Speaker 5 (16:42):
And he did. I mean, that is one.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
I mean, it's hard enough to jump off a diving
board and not have that hurt when you land. Imagine
being four stories up on a cruise ship. You're five
year old, You're on a Disney cruise. It couldn't be
more happy and fun and everything else. And then she
goes overboard and Dad has to make us decision, and
you know, I didn't even think about it. It looks
(17:07):
like he just launched himself into the water. They were
out in the water, at least some news reports say
about twenty minutes treading water. They were finally seeing Disney
cruise ship launches a rescue boat. The rescue boat goes
out and gets them and they both survived. So hats
off to the Disney dad for doing the right thing.
(17:27):
I can't even imagine the horror that was going through
with that family. People that were just watching that poor
little girl at age five. I don't know how she
went over the edge of those things, but she did,
and it was it was hard. That had to be
hard to watch. But congratulations to the Disney dad for
pulling that heroic feet. We're listening to Fox across America.
(17:51):
We appreciate you being with us. Don't go anywhere, because
we're going to be right back. Stay with us Fox
across America. The Jimmy Paillias singers joining us for that introduction.
Speaker 5 (18:05):
Listen.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
I appreciate you joining us on Fox across America. Jimmy's
doing the vacation thing, so I Jason david'son filling in
for him and thrilled to have on the line joining
us via zoom. Here, I guess is Elizabeth Pipkow. She's
the former GOP national spokesperson and all around good person.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
We can see you.
Speaker 4 (18:26):
You're on camera. Welcome to joining us. Elizabeth Pipkow. Doesn't
look like she can hear us. Well, Elizabeth about to
join us. There she goes, Now she's smiling it.
Speaker 5 (18:40):
There we go. Hey, thanks for joining us.
Speaker 4 (18:42):
This you know, breaking new technology video technology that we
have on Fox across America. So Elizabeth, thanks so much
for joining us on the show. No, she can't here.
Speaker 5 (18:55):
We're trying to break through.
Speaker 4 (18:58):
You would think during COVID we would have figured this out,
but no, we're just around Jimmy's. You know, high tech
gurus are more busy working on the singers than they
were the actual connection. But we will figure this out.
One of the things I wanted to talk to her
about is the craziness that is New York City because
(19:18):
you have this mom Donnie, who has secured the Democratic nomination,
at least through that first ballot. And you know, Cuomo
is a big name in this town, in New York City,
but oh my goodness, no, but this Mam Donnie has taken.
I mean, we could go through a whole list of crazy,
crazy position he's taken. Let's go to cut sixteen. This
(19:40):
is HAKEM. Jeffery's talking about why he has not yet endorsed.
Speaker 10 (19:46):
You mentioned the diversity of your district, including a lot
of Jewish constituents. Mom Donnie has made comments that some
have said veer towards anti Semitism. His initial statement after
October seventh, he criticized the Israeli government, but didn't criticize
hamas he defended the use of the word globalize or
the phrase globalize into fada, and he even said that
(20:09):
the Israeli Prime Minister Nato should be arrested or he
would if he were mayor, he would arrest Natanyao if
he visited New York City.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
Do these things concern you?
Speaker 11 (20:19):
Globalizing the antifada, by way of example, is not an
acceptable phrase, and he's going to have to clarify his
position on that as he moves forward.
Speaker 4 (20:29):
Well, I'm just telling you this is going to be
a continuing issue because the positions that Mam Donnie has
taken wanting to be the mayor of the largest city
in the United States of America is quite stunning, and
I just think that's going to continue to be an issue.
So we're trying to get Elizabeth Pipko up and she
might come back with us here in the next segment
(20:51):
or so. But in the meantime, we're going to take
a caller and the caller I believe is from New Jersey, Maryland,
and the name of this person is.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
Perk.
Speaker 5 (21:03):
Perk from Maryland. What's up? What's on your mind? Thanks
for calling it.
Speaker 12 (21:07):
Hey, Jason, how you doing today.
Speaker 5 (21:09):
Good good.
Speaker 7 (21:10):
I just wanted to.
Speaker 12 (21:11):
Say how much I loved your book, The Puppeteers. I've
read it, I got the audio book. In fact, it
should have been a to do list for those Yes,
you should have just hated one to Elon and said
do everything in here and we'll be a lot better.
Speaker 7 (21:28):
So I'm looking forward to your new book.
Speaker 12 (21:29):
And your new book is what's the title of it again?
Speaker 5 (21:32):
They're coming for you.
Speaker 12 (21:34):
Oh yeah, well that's that's the fact. If I gave
the books of my stupid brother in law and asked
him if he had read it yet, he's like, no,
brother in law.
Speaker 5 (21:46):
They tend to be a little stupid, So I get that.
Speaker 12 (21:48):
Actually I call them my bother in law bothering.
Speaker 5 (21:52):
There you go.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
Well, listen, I'm glad that you've you read The Puppeteers.
I've I've written four books. That was my fourth one.
But this fifth one, this will scare you. It really will.
And I hope whether it's on audio, maybe he just
needs to dumb it down form a little bit and
just listen to it as opposed to read it.
Speaker 5 (22:10):
But you could do.
Speaker 4 (22:11):
Either one, and I hopefully enjoys it because if nothing else,
no matter where you are in the political spectrum, I
think people need to be aware of how pervasive the
technology is.
Speaker 5 (22:23):
It's more than Hey, if you and.
Speaker 4 (22:25):
I were talking on the phone and I said oh,
or just even not even talking on the phone, just saying, hey,
you know, I'm thinking about buying a couch and then
you start having a discussion on the couch.
Speaker 5 (22:34):
Isn't it amazing how.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
Every ad that you see online is suddenly about couches.
Speaker 7 (22:40):
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Speaker 12 (22:42):
And in your book The Puppeteers, I found myself several
times saying out, well I knew it, I knew it.
Speaker 5 (22:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
Well, this new book they're coming for you has four
hundred and fifty footnotes. So if you have any question
about what is this real? Where did this come from?
Is that just a theory? No, No, it's so well documented.
That's why it takes me a you know, a year
and a half to put the whole thing together. So
good luck, Perk. I've got to have you call more often.
(23:12):
So thank you so much for Colin. I do appreciate it.
But we're going to try now to go back to
Elizabeth pipcow our tech giants here have unplugged and then
plugged it back in, which is usually the way you
solve all tech problems. So let's try getting Elizabeth. There
she is, Can she hear me? Now she's got the
full smile on.
Speaker 5 (23:33):
There you go.
Speaker 4 (23:35):
I started this segment, well, first of all, thanks for
joining us. I do appreciate it, and you and I've
chatted a little bit in the past. You've done it
a spectacular job being the spokesperson. But I want to
get your hot take on what in the world is
going on in New York because this mom don me
has kind of taken the political left by storm. I
(23:59):
still think he's going to be a big fat loser
in this, but it is New York and there's crazy town,
and he's taken some radical left positions. What's your take
on the phenomenon that's happening here in New York?
Speaker 1 (24:14):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 13 (24:15):
I mean, if I wasn't born and raised in New
York City, I feel like I might have a little
bit of a different take. Right, there's a lot of
Republicans out there saying New York should get exactly what
they voted for, right, they should get their socialism and
they should see what a few years looks like under
Mom Donnie, and then you know, maybe they'll vote correctly.
I'm not that bitter just yet, because it's my home too,
(24:35):
and I want to go back home so badly, and
I can't imagine going there when you know the mayor
of the city that I love so much is a
proud socialist, a proud socialist who doesn't like our country,
A proud socialist who we all know is an anti Semite,
a proud socialist who I think stands against most of
the values that all Americans hold near and dear to
their hearts. So I'm really sad about the entire thing,
(24:55):
but I'm not surprised. I'm actually shocked how many people
are surprised. So many people that told me that Angrow
Cuomo was a shoe in I remember people telling me
now that Bloomberg is backing him, no one can beat him.
But the fact is the parties have both changed. It's
not just a numbers game anymore. And when you run
a failed campaign with a guy who's not very popular
to begin with against someone who's actually able to get
(25:17):
people to support him, I mean, the fact is the
only part of the Democrat Party that has any support
left is that radical super left progressive socialist faction of
the party. I mean AOC and Bernie Sanders can get
thirty thousand people to come to a rally, the rest
of Democrats can't. So I knew right away this guy
was a threat. I knew that he had a very,
very good shot. And the fact is, I think enough
(25:37):
people stayed home thinking that he didn't have a chance,
and that's why the results swung the way that they did.
But it's also because the only people left on the
Democrat side who want to go out and want to
rally and want to vote, especially when it's one hundred
degrees as it was in New York on election Day,
by the way, is those that support socialism.
Speaker 14 (25:53):
It's those loud young people on Twitter.
Speaker 13 (25:56):
They're incredibly radical, They're incredibly scary, and that's kind of
the only thing that Themocrats have left, which is what
we've been warning about forever. But now New York is
going to learn, and I think the whole world is
going to learn by seeing it happen in New York City.
Speaker 4 (26:08):
Well, zaar on, mom, Donnie, I think personifies how radical
left they went. I mean, they've taken positions from oh,
let's just have government run grocery stores.
Speaker 5 (26:20):
You know how well that.
Speaker 4 (26:21):
Goes, because yeah, they run the Department of Motor Vehicles
so well in the state of New York. And one
of the things is they want total redistribution of wealth.
They want to confiscate that wealth. And here's Mom Damie
talking on Meet the Press with Kirsten Kristen Welker cut fourteen.
Speaker 5 (26:41):
You are a self described democratic socialist.
Speaker 14 (26:46):
Do you think that billionaires have a right to exist?
Speaker 15 (26:50):
I don't think that we should have billionaires because, frankly,
it is so much money in a moment of such inequality,
and ultimately what we need more of equality across our
city and across our state and across our country. And
I look forward to work with everyone, including billionaires, to
make a city that is fairer for all of them.
Speaker 4 (27:09):
So it doesn't think there should be even be billionaires,
because we wouldn't want to have success. But decipher what
you hear him saying in that response, I.
Speaker 13 (27:18):
Mean, I just hope people realize that. In the same
what twenty thirty seconds he said, I'd look forward to
working with billionaires, but I also don't believe we should
have billionaires. So I'm not sure what exactly that means,
except for the fact that he wants to eliminate anyone
in this country that has any form of success, redistribute wealth,
as he has said it himself, to make sure that
those in white neighborhoods pay more of their fair share
of taxes. I think the entire thing is ridiculous. If
(27:40):
he had run maybe fifteen years ago, he would not
have had a chance in a Democrat primary, and the
entire party, no matter if they were in New York
or elsewhere, would have stood up against him. And I
think the party isn't a really really sad point in time.
The party has changed. This is no longer the party
of JFK. Obviously, but it's not even the party of
Bill Clinton. It's not even the party of Barack Obama.
And more, the party is different. It is radical, it
(28:02):
is crazy, it is anti American. It's what we've been
warning about on the Republican side for such a long time.
And I'm actually sad to see this happen because the
only people left who want to go to the polls,
who want to rally and support anything in our country
are those that are super super radical and really stand
against everything that I think makes this country great. So
it's a really really sad point in time. I'm hoping
(28:23):
you're right and he will be a giant loser in November,
but unfortunately, I don't know if that's going to happen.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
Yeah, it is New York City, so look out, Elizabeth.
I want to get your take on the Senate just
past the big beautiful bill. They had to bring in
the Vice president for the tie breaker, but I think
that was anticipated. Now it goes over to the House
of Representatives, and it'll be interesting because they did. The
Senate did make a couple of changes, and my guess
(28:47):
is that some conservatives or some others may say, oh,
I don't like that, But now are they going to
flush this bill and bypass and have one of the
largest tax increases ever in the history of the United
Slime States? For go everything that they did on border
security and national security. To me, I understand where the
(29:08):
President's coming from. But what do you take on what's
going on right now?
Speaker 13 (29:13):
Well, look, it's I mean, the situation truly has been
changing every minute. I mean I woke up and it
took me a couple of hours to kind of catch
up on everything that had happened overnight.
Speaker 14 (29:22):
Things have changed this morning.
Speaker 13 (29:23):
As we know, the bill did just pass I think
in the last forty five minutes or so. Now it
goes to the House, and I mean, obviously they're going
to be folks that have concerns. The bill is different.
It's not the same bill that had originally gone to
the Senate. There were changes that have been made. But
at the same time, like you said, I don't think
they're going to give up being able to put this
on the President's desk and get a major piece of
(29:44):
legislation signed, a major victory not just for the Republican
Party and President Trump, but a major victory for the
American people who deserved these tax cuts and these changes
that Donald Trump campaigned on. So I do think the
bill will pass. I've been saying that for quite some time.
But I hope people are paying attention to the process
because we had a beautiful process. This doesn't happen in
countries around the world. It happens in America, where you
(30:05):
have senators on both sides of the aisle coming to
the table telling you what they think is wrong, fixing
things along the way, and the more that you have
the more disagreement that you have, the more work that
means went into the bill to make it the perfect
piece of legislation for the American people.
Speaker 16 (30:19):
So it's actually been fun to watch.
Speaker 13 (30:21):
I assume the Senators that spent twenty four hours working
on it yesterday might not think the same, but it's
been fun to watch. It's good to witness democracy literally
an action in front of our eyes. And I'm hoping
it ends with a nice thinggn that you're by President
Trump on July.
Speaker 4 (30:33):
Well, it's exactly what the founder's envision As I said
earlier this hour. If you is they wanted a glide
path of her speed, then they would have never designed it.
You'd have a monarchy, or you'd have some sort of king,
or you know, just a dictator. But when you have
four hundred and thirty five plus another one hundred in
the Senate and they all get the weigh in, guess what,
(30:55):
you've got some contention, and we're supposed to do things,
like you said, in this country, we're posted debate. But
at this point it's yeah or day. You know, the
time for those individual votes and doing what you want
in the committee and convincing your colleagues. If you haven't
gotten that done by now, you have a choice. It's
yes or no that I guess you can vote present
(31:18):
and look, there may be some weak need who can't
just bear to vote for it.
Speaker 5 (31:25):
Leadership will come to them and you watch.
Speaker 4 (31:26):
I bet there's a couple votes up there that are
just present, which is one way to get to the
majority without having to have them vote no.
Speaker 5 (31:34):
So we'll see where they're at.
Speaker 4 (31:36):
But yeah, this is going to take the power of
the presidency, some personal phone calls from the President to
say are you in? Are you at You're gonna kill
this bill because it's all on you, brother. That's what's
going to happen at this point. Last thought it is
it is no.
Speaker 13 (31:52):
I'm excited to see it. Like you said, these are
a lot of individuals from around the country. They don't
just show up there themselves with different opinions. They show
up there with the opinions of their own constituents. I
actually think it's a beautiful thing to see. I've loved
seeing the negotiations, the debates from both sides of the isle.
I've loved seeing Democrats try to paint this as a
bill that it's not actually what it is to try
to scare people and then seeing people do their own
(32:13):
research and realizing what's actually in the bill and how
many campaign promises President Trump is about to actually make
our reality. So I'm excited for it. Like you said,
it's yeh or nay at this point, I think We're
all going to have a lot to celebrate on July fourth,
apart from, of course America's birthday and the greatest day
of the year. But I'm excited for it. Like you said,
Donald Trump's about to show the country how powerful he
(32:33):
is and how powerful the American people are now going
to be thanks to these tax cuts in this legislation.
Speaker 4 (32:38):
Yes, Elizabeth Pipko, thanks so much for taking time out
of your day and joining us on Fox across America.
Speaker 5 (32:44):
Stay with us, everybody. We'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
The show that welcomes people from both sides of the
aisle home.
Speaker 9 (32:51):
I don't care where you come from, I.
Speaker 11 (32:52):
Don't care what so this is just secure as it gets.
I mean, if a criminal alien were to escape from
here somehow, and I don't think they will, you've got
nowhere to go.
Speaker 5 (33:02):
I mean, what are you gonna do? Trudge through the swamp?
Speaker 11 (33:05):
And dodge alligators on the way back to fifty sixty
miles just to get the civilization not gonna happen. So
not only that is a secure it also takes this
deportation mission out of the hair of our local and
state law enforcement. This has no impact on Florida residents,
but some of that stuff kind of have an impact
(33:26):
on them if it's in more populated areas. And so
logistically this really answers the call. You don't know, all
you need is a little bus to move them, you know,
about two thousand feet that way, then get on a
plane and they're gone.
Speaker 4 (33:39):
That's Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida. President Trump is in
Florida at this moment. Alligator Alcatraz we open for business
in less than twenty four hours. Secretary of Homeland Security
Christy Nome is also joining the President and Governor DeSantis
during this facility. I think it can house something like
(34:00):
five thousand people. And let's understand that this is a
cleanup operation. You know, you had Joe Biden, Kamala Harris,
and really Obama before that, who just opened up the
borders and let these people flow in by the millions.
So in order to detain, go through the adjudication process,
(34:21):
and then deport them is going to be a major operation.
This is a huge find and a piece of land
that would be otherwise not very well utilized. And you know,
it's got a cute name and everybody's going to make
issue of it. But they but this country needs beds
because in order to deport all these people, where you
going to put them?
Speaker 5 (34:41):
Now?
Speaker 4 (34:41):
The country is largely run by county jails, but they
only have so many facilities, and they only have so
many beds, and there are others that are going on. Look,
if you commit a heinous crime, you got to be
serving your time. But if you also one of those
criminal aliens who's here illegally, then all of a sudden
you've got to be deported. There's got to be a
(35:03):
place in a process. Those flights are expensive. There's an
app out there. You know, people can self deport, get
the thousand dollars, accelerate the time in which they can
be involved and engaged.
Speaker 5 (35:14):
But I got to tell you, I think.
Speaker 4 (35:17):
This is a really important part of what's going on,
and I applaud Governor DeSantis for coming up with a
viable solution to it and The amount of time that
he took in order to quickly put this up and
erect this facility and get it going and moving is
really really impressive. Unfortunately, it's needed because we have a lot.
(35:39):
We have millions of people that are here that need
to be deported, and this is an innovative way to
do it. That's why the President's there. Thanks for joining
us on Fox Across America. Don't go anywhere. We got
a lot more coming Fox Across America.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
From Embry Where USA, Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayala.
Speaker 4 (36:03):
Welcome. Hey, I'm welcome. I'm Jason Chafits. I'm filling in
for Jimmy. Jimmy's doing the vacation thing. And maybe you
are too. Maybe you're on the way to a vacation,
maybe you're wrapping up work, maybe you're already on vacation,
hanging out, laying on the beach, or doing something fun.
This is one of my favorite times of the year.
You know what, You combine the warm, nice weather with Yeah,
(36:23):
in some places it's raining and pretty tumultuous, but you
combine that with the patriotism of.
Speaker 5 (36:29):
The red, white, and blue.
Speaker 4 (36:30):
I love it when it falls on a Friday, whether
you're going to a.
Speaker 5 (36:33):
Concert or parade or something.
Speaker 4 (36:37):
I hope you're having a good time in loving America.
You know, there was a there was a poll out recently,
a Fox poll, and Republicans generally were feeling great about
the country. They love the there's a surge of patriotism,
and but for the Democrats there's like this dropping in patriotism.
M I wonder why if you don't love your country,
(36:58):
if you have a trouble with the red, white, and blue, Yeah,
you're probably feeling pretty grumpy. But my message to you is, yeah,
you can leave, you can go somewhere else. If you
have to wave another country's flag, go there. Well up,
you get there, and that's probably where you belong. If
you can't love the country and all the service and
all the sacrifice and all the freedoms that we enjoy.
(37:21):
This is the greatest country on the face of the planet.
And one of the reasons is the greatest country on
the face of the planet are people like my next guest,
Mike Cirelli. He's a retired US Naval Seal officer. Sir Mike,
thanks so much for joining us on Fox Across America.
Speaker 9 (37:41):
Well, dude, thanks for having me. I appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (37:43):
Yeah, no, listen, you're joining us. Also, for those of
you watching on Fox Nation or can see the video
of this, Mike Cirelli's got this beautifully decorated place that
he's located himself.
Speaker 5 (37:56):
I really like the way you've decorated.
Speaker 9 (38:00):
You're talking about my background. We just moved into our
headquarters office. We are still in transition. I'll get some
more work up there shortly.
Speaker 4 (38:07):
Well, loosen up the tie a little bit. Fox across
the Waka Jimmy would never handle a tie like that.
I appreciate the respect, but I'm just telling you on
this show, with this radio show, yeah, they don't do
ties very well.
Speaker 5 (38:23):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
Now we're.
Speaker 9 (38:26):
We're gonna have a good conversation here.
Speaker 5 (38:29):
Listen.
Speaker 4 (38:29):
First, I want to talk about this new show you have,
and this is really important because I think our kids
grow up they don't understand the service, the sacrifice, the.
Speaker 5 (38:40):
Wealth of.
Speaker 4 (38:43):
Patriotism that surged through so many people through our two
hundred and forty nine year history. And you have this
brand news series, the Unsung of Arlington.
Speaker 5 (38:53):
You host it. Tell us about what we're going to
see if we watch this on Fox Nation.
Speaker 9 (38:58):
Well, Jason, let me go a different way about this one.
You know, I'm most like most Gen xers. Their their
grandfather served in World War Two, didn't really have any
ties to the military, grew up in the Bay Area
of California, randomly joined the military, and you're exposed to
(39:20):
just some of the most amazing Americans. I mean characters,
did I mean some of the stories I have, probably
some unfit for media. I couldn't imagine a life without
the military. It's like part of my DNA now and
mainly the men and the women. And I often say
I don't miss the circus. I missed the clowns, and
(39:42):
that was one of the clowns the men and women
I served with. But you also, especially during the Global
War on Terror, in my experience, you know, we lost
a lot of brothers and sisters and arms, and what's
hard to swallow is that a lot of them go unmentioned.
And the Unsung of Arlington is a small but beautiful
(40:04):
attempt to tell some of those stories, five in total,
because these are legacies that should not remain buried with
those who gave their lives for our country. And Fox Nation,
we know Fox Nation, Fox Nation puts out pro American,
very beautiful, well well orchestrated content and I could not
(40:25):
have been happier to tell these five stories. What bothers
me is that we can't tell more. And that's my
ultimate goal. I can make a living off of telling
the stories of our fallen because within these stories you
just get all these lessons that they left behind on
how to live just a beautifully impactful life.
Speaker 4 (40:43):
Yeah, if you haven't been to Arlington National Cemetery, you
need to either yourself, your family, whatever you should take,
take the hours that it takes and walk through. It's
a very somber place. It's very uplifting, it's very patriotic,
and you look at the sea of people who have
given their lives and read some of those names on
(41:07):
those crosses, and you go see the tomb of the
unknown soldier. And I've been to some of some of
the military cemeteries. I went to Tunisia, visited the one
in tunis I've been to France. You go outside of
Normandy and visit that facility. It's just it's amazing how
(41:27):
many people and if you really let it sink in,
particularly younger generation, they need to be taught this. They
need to experience it and feel it and understand that
a lot of these people go in and serving their country.
They're young, they're seventeen years old, some of them sixteen
years old, and some of them were a little bit older,
but they put their lives online and it gave the
(41:50):
ultimate sacrifice serving their nations. So again, tell us about
your tour of duty, and again, if you can give
us any more insight into these five that would be great.
Speaker 9 (42:02):
Yeah, absolutely so.
Speaker 7 (42:04):
One.
Speaker 9 (42:04):
You know, you talk about stepping on these national cemeteries,
it's like you feel the weight of sacrifice on your shoulders.
It puts things into perspective. They quite literally died for
for our freedoms. And you know diplomacy, and you know diplomacy,
giving your career, it only goes so far, and sometimes
(42:25):
you've got to utilized force to secure peace. And these
men and women did not shrink from the duty that
their nation put upon them, and they gave their lives
for it. You know, you talk about these individuals on
the unset of Arlington. Chaplain Charles Pierce again a name
that is relatively anonymous to the public. He is the
individual who created the grave registration system to make sure
(42:52):
that the families of our fallen have closure by repatriot
repatriating are there in burying them properly. At Arlington, where
this hit me so hard was even when we were filming,
I went to go visit some brothers who were laid
to rest. Uniquely, some of those brothers are buried together
(43:17):
in one tombstone called the Extortion seventeen tombstone. It says,
here live the men of Extortion seventeen. They all got
individual tombstones, but some of their remains couldn't be identified,
so they put all of them. Because thirty one Americans
were killed on board a helicopter that was shot down
in Afghanistan, they put the remains they couldn't identify in
(43:38):
one grave site labeled Extortion seventeen. And that's all because
of the Charles Peers And I didn't know that name
stepping into this series. And I consider myself a student
of military history, and you learned so much. We covered
Medgar Evers, which is a perfect example that sometimes the
true battles are not fought on the battlefield, but here
(43:59):
at home. He was a civil rights warrior who was
unfortunately gunned down in his own driveway fighting for you know,
civil rights for the African American community, and hearing his
story and about how he decided to make that his
life was he saw the French free soldiers, black french
Men fighting alongside white french Men considered equals. So it
(44:24):
goes into stories I got, and it's just as you
dive in. And again, I didn't know all the people
we cover. John Glenn, he's the goat. We all know that.
He's a name that we recognize. You learn, you learned
so much. I mean that's student students of history. If
you truly are a student of history, you learn lessons
(44:46):
that even apply to modern day life.
Speaker 4 (44:50):
So this Fourth of July, again, as I've said, it's
one of my favorite holidays. It's just a great time
of year for the for the country and the red,
white and blue and the flag and.
Speaker 5 (45:01):
And all that it symbolizes.
Speaker 4 (45:02):
And there's nothing better being somewhere, and they do a
flyover and it's just like wow, you just you know,
you just feel the chill down your spine. It just
makes you proud to be an American and and you
know it's just for me, it's just an amazing time
and I love it. But then I read stories about
these people that are going to want to protest because
(45:23):
they've got some political agenda. Now there's nothing more American
than protesting and doing it in a civil way. But
it does bother me that they try to take away,
you know, Flag Day, Fourth of July, these other holidays
and try to make them into their own because they've
got a political agenda.
Speaker 9 (45:44):
You can't hear stupid. Yeah, it's just pure It's pure
ignorance based off a lack of perspective. And again, I
credit the military for showing me different cultures, third World cultures,
war torn cultures where depression is a real thing. Anyone
who says they feel oppressed in the United States, they're
They're entitled to their opinion, but they truly used. Usually
(46:08):
from my perspective or my opinion, they lack perspective on
how good we have it. You know, I always ask
myself why am I never around when these people are
burning flags? Like why why are why aren't I and
my friends around because we would handle that really quickly.
I do agree with you a First Amendment right, freedom
to speech, freedom to protest, to fight for what you
(46:29):
believe in in a respectful, professional manner. But we see
what's going on in LA. You know, I would love
to start a group of veterans that just deploy to
these these protests to handle things that doesn't probably build well.
And my mom would would probably scold me for saying this,
but sometimes you just need to uh to bring the
(46:50):
force on these people and not allow them to conduct
this social denancy which was is becoming a rampant across
our nation, to destroy other people's property or to assault
officers like we sometimes need to go back to the
days where the police pulled out their batons and beat
them back. That's my opinion. I'm just you know, I'm
(47:15):
a Californian. I hate to see what's happening in LA.
I hate to see some of these protests, and I
think at the end of the day, it's just a
lack of ignorance and perspective.
Speaker 4 (47:24):
Yeah, I think a group of former seals could probably
take care of business pretty pretty quickly there. And you know,
you keep pushing and spitting on people, there's gonna be
some pushback and they shouldn't be surprised by that. I'm
not advocating for any sort of violence in any way,
shape or form, but if you're going to be committing
violence and I then you know somebody needs to step up.
(47:47):
And anyway, Mike Sirelli, former Navy seal, You've got this
great special on Fox Nation, the Unsung of Arlington. I
encourage everybody check it out and thank you. Thank you
for your service, to your sacrifice and the people that
you know that lost their lives serve in our country.
(48:07):
That's a special time of year. Fourth of July are
two hundred and forty ninth. Wait till two hundred and
fifty next year. Oh my goodness, gonna be a big one.
Mike Sirelli, thanks so much for joining us.
Speaker 9 (48:19):
All right, go crazy, Thanks Jason.
Speaker 5 (48:21):
Thank you. We'll be right back. Stay with us.
Speaker 1 (48:24):
He's the show that tells climate crazies the truth.
Speaker 6 (48:28):
We cannot run the greatest economy by putting Ferry, Dush
and unicorn.
Speaker 4 (48:32):
You all right, welcome back to Fox across America. I'm
Jason Chief, it's feeling in for Jimmy. And joining us
right now is Jonathan Fahe. He's the former acting Ice director. Sir,
thanks so much for joining us. Appreciate it, Thank you,
thanks for having me. Hey, you're during your time, they
never had alligator Alcatraz.
Speaker 5 (48:51):
What do you think of this new place?
Speaker 7 (48:53):
I love it.
Speaker 17 (48:54):
It's such a great idea, and there's so many things
that are that are interesting about this. One is just
sort of the democratic apoplectic reaction to it has always
worth a lot of entertainment value. But it really just
shows that one Donald Trump is taking this issue seriously
and illegal aliens are going to be deported, and you
(49:15):
know they are using all the resources available to do
so and to do so efficiently. So I think this
is not only a good way to hold people to remove.
Speaker 7 (49:24):
Them, but it's also another thing that Donald.
Speaker 17 (49:26):
Trump is doing that he's been the most effective at
with this administration. Has been the deterrent aspect of this.
Nobody's coming across the border, and much of that is
because we have the border patrol securing the border, but
the messaging from Trump, President Trump and the Trump administration
has been so strong that people aren't even trying to
(49:49):
come in anymore and people are starting his self deport
So everything about this is a positive and again the
high entertainment value of democratic reaction to everything Trump says
and does. It's certainly worked a lot as well.
Speaker 5 (50:02):
Well.
Speaker 4 (50:03):
Certainly there's some things, you know, in jokes and you
can see all the memes showing up on the internet,
But the reality is we need the beds, right, I
mean because exactly the deportation, the ro of this portion
of this equation is really important because if you're going
to deport, they're not going to self deport.
Speaker 5 (50:20):
They're part of the criminal element.
Speaker 4 (50:22):
You've got to be able to house them in order
to get them together, get them on a plane, and
get them back to wherever they came from.
Speaker 17 (50:29):
Yeah, exactly right. You have to make the most of
the resources we have and.
Speaker 5 (50:33):
Be creative and be willing to be creative to.
Speaker 17 (50:36):
Maximize bed space and other things. Because we have the
you know, the build that looks like it's passing and
it's going to add a lot more resources for ice,
but even before they get implemented, there's a lot of
time that will be in that point. So this is
a creative way to use resources, and they're going to
use all of them. And that just shows the commitment
(50:57):
to this and you really go back to you know,
see all the reaction of the Democrats to some of
these things, but the reality is the only reason he
has to do so much of this is because Joe
Biden and Alejandro Mayorcis opened up the border and encouraged
people to come in to break our laws with the
you know, impl implication that they would get essentially citizenship
(51:21):
or amnesty in which they tried to give them in.
Democrats still want to give all the illegals for here amnesty.
At least it seems like from you know, the way
they're reacting to everything Donald Trump was doing.
Speaker 5 (51:32):
Yeah, they brought him in by the millions. What do
you think of this?
Speaker 4 (51:35):
You know, now there's this app that's been developed to
give people heads up that there may be an ICE operation.
I can't even imagine. You put your life on the line.
It's hard enough job, you're the former acting ICE director.
What does this do? I mean, this is so anti
law enforcement. It's stunning to me that Apple even allows
(51:56):
that to be an app on their on their on
their platform.
Speaker 17 (52:01):
Yeah, that's a really good point about being on the platform,
because the sole purpose of this app is the thwart
and essentially obstruct Ice from doing their job, which is
their job that they're required to do. And it's pretty
amazing to me that there isn't more outcry, really on
the Democratic side. Because you do think at this at
(52:23):
very least makes it, you know, easy for people to
get away from ICE and get away from being.
Speaker 7 (52:28):
Deported when they're supposed to be deported. But the worst
part about.
Speaker 17 (52:32):
It is we have these ICE agents that the assault
rates on ICE agents. I'm sure you've talked about it
a lot. They're up about five hundred percent. This shows
they're far greater danger. And I think a lot of
it is because of the rhetoric that's coming out of
the Democratic Party, but they're already facing higher degrees of
the assaults, and this puts them at greater danger because
(52:52):
you know, if they're trying to arrest somebody or anything else,
that eliminates the you know, element of surprise and other things.
So are going to be putting nice agents in danger
by doing this.
Speaker 7 (53:03):
It's really disgraceful.
Speaker 17 (53:05):
And you know, there's nobody on that could even claim
at this point that the Democratic Party is anything but
an open border's amtsty party, because you haven't heard one
Democrat that I know of speaking out against this. And
the other thing is, I don't think there's a single
Democrat that's spoken up in favor of Donald Trump on
this as far as the border security because they all
(53:27):
claimed before the election they were in favor of border security. Well,
it's unquestionably true.
Speaker 7 (53:33):
He's given us that.
Speaker 17 (53:34):
Why isn't there any praise for him because we know
the truth.
Speaker 9 (53:37):
Is they never wanted it.
Speaker 17 (53:39):
They wanted mass illegal immigration and mass amnesty, and that's
that's been.
Speaker 5 (53:43):
Their play all along.
Speaker 17 (53:45):
But it really is revealing these last few months.
Speaker 4 (53:48):
Jonathan fayhe former acting ice director on Fox Across America.
Stay with us, We'll be right back. Nothing like getting
a little Duran durand a kid just kicked off. I'm
Jason Chief. It's filling in Jimmy. He's already doing the
vacation thing. The guy works as hard as anybody here
at Fox. So I'm glad to get it. Get him
out west, get him a little fresh air, or get
(54:09):
a little rest those bones.
Speaker 5 (54:11):
A little bit, and just be with his family. Good
for him.
Speaker 4 (54:14):
I hope you are too. Hope you're going to have
a wonderful Fourth of July. Two hundred and forty nine
years this country. It'll be a great year this year,
but imagine next year, two hundred and fifty years. Oh,
that's just gonna be so great. We've got Victoria Sparts
who's joining us. She's a congresswoman, and boy, we got
a lot happening still in Congress. Normally they want to
(54:37):
be out on vacation, I know, because they used to
be in Congress. But you know, they still got work
to do because now the United States Senate has passed
the big beautiful bill. They did it with one vote,
getting the Vice President jd Vance over there to break
the fifty to fifty die. But Congresswoman Sparts, thanks for
joining us on Fox across America.
Speaker 5 (54:58):
Now it's going to happen.
Speaker 18 (55:01):
Thank you Jason for having me. As you know, that
was the original plan. I mean the close of the
Senate for the Senate to jam the House before the
fourth of that life.
Speaker 7 (55:10):
That's right.
Speaker 18 (55:10):
So that's as a road net that works in Congress
and works very well. Now we're going to see if
the House will be willing to hold the ground, to
hold the Senate to the minimum framework, or the House
is going to fold and that's going to be a discussion.
Speaker 5 (55:26):
Well that's interesting. You got you. You're a little more
I don't want to say pessimistic, but.
Speaker 4 (55:32):
Maybe foreshadowing that they may not just swallow this because
that term. It's not an official in the jet in
the dictionary, but I can tell you members of Congress
and their staff understand what a jam is if if
you want to jam the House or jam the Senate,
you basically pass the bill, leave town and dare them
to not do anything while you're already out on vacation.
(55:52):
They just kind of jam it and say no, our
vote was strong enough. But you're telling me that you
think there's going to be a pretty vibrant discussion before
they put that bill up to vote. What's that, what's
that going to look like? And where are you on this?
Speaker 18 (56:06):
Alison Jason, I think everyone is agreed there are a
lot of good things, and the text cuts are good
for the economy and border security, supporting the militaries. There
is no disagreement about that the challenges will have, how
we're going to be paying for it, that the text
cuts actually lost, that we have the money and the
funds are going to insolvent, and everything else, how we
at least can break even so we don't add to
(56:28):
the deficits. And I think the House created the framework
that the Speaker committed, he committed actually not to put
bill on the floor violate the framework. And this bill
will the roughly at least half a tally short of
this minimum framework you know, where it assumes grows, but
it cannot do the more than two and a half
trillion attributed to gross And right now, I mean I
(56:49):
haven't seen all of the final amendments. I think it's
gotten a little bit worse, probably not much, but it
will be at least half a trillion short of that framework.
So the discussion is right now is Speaker is going
to still put it on the floor in spite of
you promised he wouldn't do it. And then Republicans that
you know, what part of that are they going to
be vote known this rule? So and that's going to be,
(57:11):
you know, very challenging things. But I think, you know,
looking at that, we're going to pass this bill. If
it's not this week, it's going to pass late in July.
I know the President wanted before the course of July.
And if we can make it work, that's great. If not,
we can wait a little bit. But it's going to pass.
It's going to be a good bill and we'll make
it more beautiful.
Speaker 4 (57:31):
So process wise, it's going to pass a rule. Then
that rule's got to be brought up, I my am
assuming leadership doesn't want any amendments, and so that rule
vote is going to be an interesting.
Speaker 18 (57:43):
One, that's right. The one on the floor is going
to be very interested though, because there are a lot
of buss that I thought we needed to do even more.
I felt, you know, that that was the minimum requirement,
didn't really look into a lot of fraud in the
system that you know, we have to deal with or
we'll go bankrupt in the country. But that was a
minimum requirement. A lot of House members signed the latter
(58:06):
you've seen that overtuity members and now they will have
to make a decision, and the Speaker has to make
a decision is he going to bring to the floor
because him and Leader will committed not to bring it
to the floor. If they're doing that, they're violating an agreement,
and they will have to decide. All of us will
have to decide how we're going to be voted, you know.
So that's going to be a tough one.
Speaker 4 (58:27):
Interesting So that happens in plays out on Wednesday. I
don't think many constituents, if the bill has not passed,
are going to understand when they remember of Congress comes
home for the fourth of July. I think they're going
to say, you haven't done your work yet, You're gonna
have to stay there. And it's painful that that is
away from people's family. That's usually the compulsion that gets
(58:48):
a whole lot of people to reconsider. And also the
President of the United States when he starts leaning into
this and making calls. It's amazing how persuasive Donald Trump
could be at that very moment. Is are you going
to have to be on that call list? Or are
we got these same usual suspects.
Speaker 18 (59:07):
Well list, and I think there are a lot of
They've been invite has been making calls and they have
good discussions with them. I shure it with President and
my thoughts, and I think it's important for us to
have communications and the President, I understand he would like
to have it before the course of July. But it's
not a mass or is not The wall is not
going to end, and not much is going to change
if it's not. So I think we need to understand
(59:28):
that it's going to pass in July. It's going to
be very good Bill. I think it's going to be
important Bill. But if we have to work out a
few things. We can make it work. And I think
it's important to understand this is going to be really
the only major bills that are going to pass this Congress,
and I think it's important to make it right even
if we wait a week or two. I mean, text
(59:48):
cuts are not expiring till the end of the years,
or is nothing there as urgent. We have some still
rooms with that ceiling, which another conversation, so we still
have a room. It doesn't have to be the only
reason they try to pushes on July force, and we
don't even have to be there. We can all go
July Force and come back.
Speaker 7 (01:00:04):
You know.
Speaker 18 (01:00:04):
There is the only reason it's pushed because there is
you know, the Senate wants to jam us, you know,
and for the House boat before the July Force. That's
the only reason that it works like that. There is
no other legitimate reason to do it before July Force.
Speaker 4 (01:00:20):
You're on the House Judiciary Committee. I was on the
House Judiciary Committee, and Judiciary has jurisdiction on homeland security.
Even though there's a Homeland Security Committee, they're really the
jurisdiction particularly and immigration falls with House Judiciary. What the
President's been down in Florida visiting the so called Alligator Alcatraz.
(01:00:42):
What's your take on the move there? It did open
up five thousand beds. I think people start occupying that
starting tomorrow. What's your take on it?
Speaker 18 (01:00:51):
Well, listen, I think it's important for us to know
to enforce the law and to secure our country and
secure our boarding. Next is that we don't have illegal
criminals here coming here legally destabilizing the kind of roaming around.
So I think President was being making some tough stance.
I think President was supporting and a lot of these
(01:01:13):
decisions by Supreme Court because we cannot have this lawlessness.
We're the rule of law country and that's what we
differentiate us from anarchists. And we cannot let cartels run
our country which is really unfortunately it's been happening under
last administration, and control our border. So I think it's
important what he's doing. It's important to support border security,
(01:01:34):
which do actually will do, and give more funding to
proper causes. We just need to make sure that we
come after bad stuff, that we have money for the
good staff, and I think that's extremely important and the
law enforcement and what President doing is the border. It's
great and unfortunately we have this law so broad that
the committee never dealt with them to tighten them. That
(01:01:54):
allows them administrations to abuse it like what's happened in
the previous one. That is actually failure Congress not to
pass battle laws. And I think last Congress we had
missed opportunity to tighten them. So it will improve under
this president, but hopefully at some point Congress will step
up in actually past battle laws that we cannot have
(01:02:15):
next president abuse them again.
Speaker 4 (01:02:17):
We're talking to Congresswoman Victorious Sparts from Indiana's fifth congressional district.
Speaker 5 (01:02:24):
Congresswoman, when you we were.
Speaker 4 (01:02:26):
Talking about this with the former Ice director, you see
that there's an app out there now that gives warning
for when there's an ice operation or ice officers around.
What's your take on that? What do you what do
you think should be done? I mean Apple's putting this
out there on their platform for goodness sake.
Speaker 18 (01:02:45):
Oh, I think you know we need a start really
common and a lot of this big tech company so
been have a lot of political power. They collect a
lot of data and they abuse data. So I think
that's another issue, is that Congress, you know that not
dealt with How do we need to make sure that
we don't have powerhouses of data collections that are able
(01:03:06):
to use even if they want and their own judgment.
We thought that how they did a lot of censoring,
how they did a lot of abuses, less Congress and
less presidency, and right now they actually intervening in law
enforcement operations. So I think we need to come and
start investigating that. But also how Congress can do better
(01:03:26):
data protection and privacy that they don't collect as much
data as on all of us, and I think that's
something that you know, we haven't dealt with. And actually
that is one of the issues that I was disappointed
that we haven't addressed it as judiciary when I served
the next.
Speaker 5 (01:03:41):
Well, that's why I wrote this book. It's out today.
Speaker 4 (01:03:43):
It's called They're Coming for You, and it is all
about the data and how the data is going to
be weaponized to come after us. And you're right, this
is an example of that. And I think people are
very naive to how much data is flowing in and
out of government, how the government is collecting data. Then
they're selling the data, but then they're also buying the data,
(01:04:04):
which is is just crazy because that's how they get
around the need for warrants and surveillance and other things
that we limit law enforcement from doing. But then then
they can just go buy it and they say, oh, well,
that's not an invasion of privacy.
Speaker 5 (01:04:20):
We bought it on the open market.
Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
But on the other hand, it can be used for
nefarious intent like oh, I don't know, targeting ice officers,
doxing them. You have video now of these people just
taunting these people in Portland saying that they're going to
dox their federal employees. And you know, these are law
enforcement officers just trying to do their jobs for goodness sake.
(01:04:43):
I hear Democrats are just crickets on this, but I
do think Congress should and could do more on this
very topic.
Speaker 18 (01:04:51):
Yeah, and I think would rob the ball in this issues.
That'sn't the biggest issue because data is actually property. I'm
kind of supposed to protect people's rights to life, liberty,
and property, and it's a new type of property. We
never define it. We never really did proper protections, and
we have to so we're actually abandon our job protecting
the people and their property. We still want to make
(01:05:13):
sure that we have innovations and AI working where it
needs to be, but also stop up of users and
prevents the data collection that with AI and quantity computers
will allow to some of the companies and governments to
and including foreign governments, to manipulate people and it's very dangerous.
Speaker 5 (01:05:30):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (01:05:30):
Absolutely, we're going to talk a little bit more about
that again. My book is They're coming for you Today's
day one of those sales, and Congresswoman Victorious sports I'm
glad to hear you talking about it because those are
the types of things that really should be deal dealt with.
When I was in on the House Judiciary, in the
House Oversight Committee, boy, we tried to deal with facial
recognition and data collection and whatnot. But boy, it's it's
(01:05:55):
hard because very few members of Congress actually have a
background in this, and it's tough to deal with. But listen,
we appreciate on Fox across America you share your perspective.
Hope you have a wonderful fourth of July and we're
looking in great fascination as to what happens tomorrow with
that one big beautiful bill. Victorious parts Indiana's fifth congressional district. Congresswoman,
(01:06:19):
thanks for joining.
Speaker 18 (01:06:19):
Us, Thank you for having me Jason, Happy Independence Day.
Speaker 5 (01:06:23):
Yes, yes, stay with us. We'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
And speak to Jimmy now upright, Triple eight seven eight
eight ninety nine. Ten. You're listening to Fox Across America
with Jimmy Taylor.
Speaker 19 (01:06:41):
You're listening to Fox Jason Chafe. It's filling it for Jimmy.
And we're going to take some calls right now if
you can. I think we got Freddy down in Florida. Freddy,
what's happening?
Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
Hello?
Speaker 20 (01:06:54):
Hello, And I have a I want to say, I'm
sorry you caught me a little up.
Speaker 4 (01:07:00):
Well, you've been waiting a little while. I appreciate you
waiting because we had a couple of guests. But Freddie,
you're up now.
Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
All right.
Speaker 21 (01:07:06):
I'm a former New York in Florida now many years.
Speaker 7 (01:07:11):
But what I wanted to do was a.
Speaker 21 (01:07:12):
Little bit concerned about that election or potential up there
for Mama Donnie. I think if the election were more binary,
we'd have a much better chance of squelching his attempt
to become mayor Eric Roberts Eric Adams Mayor Adams has
to become a Republican and then have a primary for
(01:07:33):
that position with Curtis Sliwa who I grew up.
Speaker 20 (01:07:35):
With, by the way, or vice versa.
Speaker 21 (01:07:39):
Maybe Curtis takes the range and Adams bows out, but
you need one against the other. I think if you
have all three, you increase the odds of this fellow,
the socialist, getting the reins.
Speaker 5 (01:07:53):
No, I think there's a lot.
Speaker 20 (01:07:54):
Of a mechanism.
Speaker 4 (01:07:56):
Yeah, there's some mechanism, like you know, each state and
the city gets to kind of do things their own way.
I think there's beauty and smart in that system. But
I do not like rank choice voting. And it's true
when you diversify and you have so many people at
the final it's not a choice between one.
Speaker 5 (01:08:18):
Two or three people.
Speaker 7 (01:08:19):
Get you.
Speaker 4 (01:08:21):
Spread people out to thin that they start dividing the vote,
and you know, Cuomo stay in the race, he'll take
some Democrats who instead of voting against Mom Donny would
vote for somebody like that as opposed to say and
Eric Adams. So I don't know how it's going to
sort itself out, but you make a just a keen observation,
(01:08:42):
which is, yeah, there's got to be a more solid
way of doing that. But you know, he did get
what is it, fifty six percent of the vote is
pretty impressive actually on the Democratic side of the aisle,
but it's been taken over by the Socialists, and I
think that's happening wide. I don't think that's a New
York only phenomenon.
Speaker 20 (01:09:03):
What do you think, Well, I agree wholeheartedly with what
you're saying, but I think there's more a closet Republicans
up in New York than of years past.
Speaker 4 (01:09:18):
Yeah, I mean, look how well Lee Zelden, Look how
well Donald Trump did? I mean Zelden, you know, was
starting to become really viable there, and I.
Speaker 5 (01:09:27):
Think that's true.
Speaker 4 (01:09:28):
I don't know if it's as true, you know, right
in the heart of New York City as opposed to
upstate and other parts of the of the state that
smoothed it out a little bit. But Freddie, I'm going
to try to get one more call from Florida and
before we go to break here. So thanks for sharing that,
Thanks for holding on for it. That does Let's try Wally,
he's also in Florida. What you're what are you thinking about?
Speaker 5 (01:09:50):
Wally?
Speaker 8 (01:09:51):
Hey, Jason, I think the election of Zohon Mom Donnie
as a mayor would be a great thing for the
country and My observation is that he will show the
liberals and progress and what poor leadership and financial mismanagement
can do to even a great economy like New York.
(01:10:11):
And I just think it'd be a great lesson for
the country to let him, let him do his thing,
and he'll return New York City to the nineteen seventies.
And then we can also see with good leadership, how great,
how quickly you can turn that around.
Speaker 4 (01:10:27):
Well, it's amazing because I think the principles of our
country just basic capitalism, which he says he's opposed to
the idea that he wants to, you know, go after
the white neighborhoods, that he wants to have government run
grocery stores. Yeah, they're very you see how that's.
Speaker 8 (01:10:44):
What But that's that's actually what people need to see
in reality.
Speaker 5 (01:10:49):
Yeah, I heard.
Speaker 4 (01:10:52):
I've read this post by Charlie Kirk, who I really
follow and admire and one of the smarter people out there.
And always, I don't know if you follow ver, we're
watching what he does. But he'll answer any question from anyone,
and he has a nice, good debate back. And Charlie
Kirk said, you know what, but I love America too much.
I love New York and it's worth saving and fighting
(01:11:13):
for rather than just letting it be an experiment. And
I think there's probably a little there's a lot more
truth to that, So I think I probably personally I
follow a little bit more into the Charlie Kirk camp.
Speaker 5 (01:11:26):
But Wally, I hear you.
Speaker 4 (01:11:28):
Some people say, hey, let it fail, let us show it.
But you know what, people are going to flee this city.
They can't do business in this city. If you're Jewish,
I don't know why you would reside here. It's just unbelievable.
How radical left. But I think this is a bigger,
broader problem for Democrats because I think he personifies with
AOC and some others how radical left the Democrats of
(01:11:50):
today have been. I'm Jason chafit's filling in for Jimmy.
This is Fox across America. Thanks so much for Sharon,
part of your day with.
Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
Us from every Where USA.
Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
It's Fox across America with Jimmy Bayla.
Speaker 4 (01:12:09):
Hey, it's actually Jason Chafe. It's filling in for Jimmy today.
We got a great hour coming up. I really do
appreciate you joining us. I think you're gonna have fun.
I think all the kids are gonna like it. You know,
Jimmy's got these cool buttons. I'm just not really adept
(01:12:30):
at hitting these buttons to make all these sound effects.
Sorry for the delay there, but he's there's nothing like Jimmy.
But you know what, he's out west. He's taken a
little R and R with his family, and good for him.
And I hope you're going to enjoy the holiday because
fourth of July it's one of the best two hundred
and forty nine years folks. Next year two hundred and
(01:12:51):
fifty woah, now that's gonna be a good one. Also,
want to highlight my book, They're coming for you.
Speaker 5 (01:12:58):
It's out today. Today is day one.
Speaker 4 (01:13:01):
This is my fifth book, four hundred and fifty footnotes.
This is about how deep state spies, NGOs and woke
corporations plan to push you out of the economy. Folks,
if you don't understand how they're using data and manipulating it,
how they're they're not just gonna let people like you know,
maybe our conservatives support Donald Trump, people that you know,
(01:13:22):
maybe bought a gun, maybe bought a Maga hat, maybe
shopped at Cabella's or something place like that. You think
they're just gonna let them live their life without no, no, no,
without disruption. No, they're gonna put social credit scores on you.
They're gonna do dbanking as they have. They're gonna affect
elections with this data. They're using data more than you
(01:13:43):
can imagine. And it's not just Hey, I was talking
to somebody about buying a couch and all of a sudden,
all the ads on my phone starts showing up. We're
for couches. It's much more nefarious than that. It affects healthcare,
it affects voting, it affects lots of things. And that's
why I wrote this book. They're coming for you. It's
out now. I did the audio so you can listen
(01:14:05):
to my voice read it, or you have the hard
copy in the books, and today is day one. It's
available for sale, so I encourage you. I wrote it
for a reason because I want everybody to kind of
see what I'm seeing, which is the deep state in
action and these NGOs and they're woke agenda. They may
have Donald Trump in office, but you know what, they're
(01:14:25):
still working at it, and they're going to come for you,
and they're going to get you if you're not paying attention.
So that's why this book's out and I hope you
enjoy it. I think it'll do quite well. All right,
we are jumping into things now because we have Emily
Sturge joining us. She's from Cancer Campus Reform, a reporter
(01:14:47):
for Campus Reform and there she is up on the
screen if you're watching on Fox Nation. But thanks so
much for joining us on Fox across America. Emily appreciate it.
Speaker 14 (01:14:56):
Hey, Jason, I'm so excited to be here. And congratulations
on the new book.
Speaker 4 (01:15:00):
Well, thank you, thank you very much. You know, we've
talked about the fourth of July. It's like one of
my favorites. You know, whether you're at the beach, or
e're up in the mountains, or just at home, or
maybe you're at work. You're one of those people that
are working. You know, it's still just the greatest country
on the face of the planet. And what's really interesting
is to me is to watch and see the surge
(01:15:23):
of patriotism.
Speaker 5 (01:15:24):
Is it going up? Is it going down? Is it?
Speaker 4 (01:15:26):
And tell me about younger people, because there seems to
be a refreshing surge of patriotism with younger people, which
is great to see.
Speaker 22 (01:15:35):
There certainly is I Generation Z is very excited this
week to party like some patriots. The fourth of July
is such an exciting time to celebrate America's independence. And
as a reporter for the leadership and Suit's campus reform,
I'm talking to Generation Z every single day I'm on
the ground, and just within the past week, I have
talked to dozens of my peers and ask them if
(01:15:58):
they've noticed this renewed sense of patriotism, and so many
of them excitedly said yes.
Speaker 14 (01:16:04):
I heard from members of.
Speaker 22 (01:16:05):
My generation say that it feels like it's okay to
be patriotic again. They said, it feels like it's okay
to be Christian again. And I'm noticing this revival in conservatism,
this revival in faith, and this revival certainly in patriotism
amongst so many members of my generation. It's certainly so
exciting to see.
Speaker 5 (01:16:24):
Well what do you attribute that to? I mean, I
think it's great.
Speaker 4 (01:16:27):
You know, people waving the flag feeling good about their country,
which I hope has also means they're feeling good about themselves.
They feel good if they see a law enforcement officer
or maybe somebody in the military. But that's all good,
but why, Like, I'm glad it's there, I just don't
know exactly why.
Speaker 22 (01:16:44):
Well, their optimism for this country certainly goes hand in
hand with their optimism for this presidential administration.
Speaker 14 (01:16:52):
And CBS actually.
Speaker 22 (01:16:53):
Did a poll earlier this year where they asked members
from all of the generations their optimism levels under this administration,
and believe it or not, the generation that.
Speaker 14 (01:17:03):
Was the most optimistic was Generation Z.
Speaker 22 (01:17:07):
Sixty seven percent of eighteen twenty nine year old said
that they were hopeful of the.
Speaker 14 (01:17:12):
Things that they would see under this administration.
Speaker 22 (01:17:14):
And I've talked to so many members of Gen Z
who consistently bring up the economy.
Speaker 14 (01:17:18):
They want to see the American dream.
Speaker 22 (01:17:20):
They want to see houses become more affordable, they want
to see the ability for them to get good jobs
after college graduation, and so many of my peers believe
that the Trump administration is going to make that easier.
I really think that that's driving that optimism level. But
I do want to point out I've seen both my
peers on the left and the right have this renewed
(01:17:41):
sense of patriotism. I don't think it's necessarily partisan. I
think patriotism should be bipartisan, and it does go hand
in hand with the Trump administration, but I do certainly
see it on the left side.
Speaker 5 (01:17:52):
So I have a.
Speaker 4 (01:17:53):
Little bit of a theory here, and part of that
is that younger generation boy right at the heart of
when they were reaching adulthood and maybe in college or
even high school, that's when COVID hit right, and it
was so restrictive and you couldn't socialize, you couldn't do
all those things that normally teenagers do. And so this freedom,
(01:18:16):
they start to appreciate it more when there aren't the
restrictions that having to wear masks and you can't go
to class, and you can't do this, and you can't
do that. And so all of a sudden, Donald Trump's
here and people are feeling more free. More freedom equals
more patriotism. Would I be wrong?
Speaker 14 (01:18:33):
No, that's certainly a great point.
Speaker 22 (01:18:35):
And I want to point out how the left took
over our education system. It took over Hollywood, it's taken
over our books, our movies, everything about our culture, our churches,
and members of my generation felt like we were being
choked by the left at every aspect, every angle of
our lives. And yes, it's that aspect of freedom under
(01:18:59):
this administration, and that I'm hearing that people say it
feels okay to be proud of this country again. Our
education system around the age of middle school high school
for many of us, was when DEI and critical race
theory LGBTQ. That ideology was infiltrated throughout our education, throughout
our courses, throughout our admissions requirements, throughout our graduation requirements.
(01:19:23):
And as we've seen this administration work to remove some
of that DEI and as we've seen more and more
states past anti DEI legislation remove some of that from
the education system, that also adds to some of the
patriotism that I'm seeing. It feels like it's okay to
be proud of this country again once we're removing that
ideology that for so long taught members of gen Z
(01:19:44):
that we had to be shameful of this country.
Speaker 5 (01:19:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:19:48):
It's interesting too because I think retailers of you know,
and marketers have started to understand this too, that everything
didn't need to be a rainbow, that it was okay
to do the red, white, and blue, and that people
gravitate that. I see people working out walking around in
different parts of the country wearing a shirt that says
USA or red, white and blue. And we're not even
(01:20:11):
to July fourth yet, which is great that it should
just happen.
Speaker 5 (01:20:14):
On fourth of July or Flag Day or Memorial Day.
You know, I.
Speaker 4 (01:20:18):
Would hope that would permeate above and beyond just a
particular day.
Speaker 22 (01:20:25):
What certainly is and for young women like myself, we've
been sporting American flag sweaters this whole summer on TikTok.
That is the fashion trend of the summer for young women.
It's so exciting to see. And then on the other hand,
with young men, we've seen this military recruitment boom.
Speaker 14 (01:20:44):
It's been so exciting.
Speaker 22 (01:20:45):
After Trump was elected in the November election, just within
that next month, we saw ten thousand new recruits in
the army.
Speaker 14 (01:20:54):
It's so exciting to see.
Speaker 22 (01:20:56):
And I talked to one young man recently who said
that he plans to join the military because he said
there's no better commander in chief to join under then
President Trump.
Speaker 14 (01:21:07):
Again, that young man brought.
Speaker 22 (01:21:09):
Up the removal of DEI, embracing war fighting, embracing strength.
It feels like America has its backbone again. And so
I heard that from that young man man, and I've
heard that throughout my generation. Once again, that goes right
back to the renewal on patriotism.
Speaker 4 (01:21:25):
Yeah, and it's also this you know, toxic masculinity. You
hear that tossed around, and it's okay for like men
to be men and you know, instead of having to
show a real feminine side of things. You know, I
think there's this you know there, and it happened in
Hollywood too, to surprise, you know, look at Top Gun Maverick. People,
(01:21:50):
I think went to that and saw that in mass
It was one of the most popular movies, certainly a
box office box office success where people thought, oh my gosh,
we like Tom Cruise in that role fighting for his
country and doing something dynamic and exciting and loving his
country all at the same time.
Speaker 5 (01:22:11):
Imagine that. What a formula.
Speaker 14 (01:22:14):
Imagine that.
Speaker 22 (01:22:15):
And it just goes to show how comical the left's
twenty million dollar campaign to try to win over young men.
Speaker 14 (01:22:23):
That campaign is.
Speaker 22 (01:22:24):
Just comical because the Left has been unwilling to talk
to young men for so many years and instead has
fed this narrative that masculinity is toxic, and then they
act surprise when young men turn their backs on that ideology.
Speaker 14 (01:22:41):
Guess what young men believe in common sense?
Speaker 22 (01:22:44):
Young men turned their backs to chaos, chaotic gender ideology,
chaotic open borders, a chaotic economy under the previous administration.
It's really not shocking at all when you think about
those things.
Speaker 4 (01:22:57):
Yeah, you know, it's Tim Walls that was going to
be the Democrats answer to masculine men. And you're write
this twenty million dollars. Twenty million dollars the Democrats were
going to spend to try to figure out how to
communicate with men, and that that is just almost it's
just not natural. But what's not natural, I think is
(01:23:18):
taking men and injecting them into to women's sports. I mean,
they went through that whole gyration, and look, I to
continue to have that debate and fight so hard, and
then the other thing is to fight so hard for
people who are committing crimes, who are here illegally, as
opposed to taking the side of victims. Again, this is
(01:23:41):
kind of piling on, but I think all these factors
continue to add up in favor of the good old
fashioned red, white and blue.
Speaker 22 (01:23:50):
It certainly is. And as a reporter who's focused on
the education system. I have seen this firsthand. I've seen bathrooms,
locker rooms, safe space, sorority houses on college campuses become
infiltrated with men. Women's safety, women's privacy is being overlooked
by university administrations throughout this country. And finally we have
(01:24:13):
a presidential administration who's even willing to look into these
issues and look into these specific situations. For example, the
University of Wyoming that was the first university to allow
a man into a sorority back in twenty twenty three.
The Biden administration looks the other way. And now we
have a presidential administration that is looking into this and
(01:24:35):
instead of a Pride Month, this administration looked at June
as title nine months and spoke directly to those young
women in that sorority at the University of Wyoming. Are
talking to them about their situation and fighting for them.
It feels great to have an administration fighting for common
sense and common good.
Speaker 4 (01:24:53):
Well, Emily Sturge, I hope you have a wonderful fourth
of July. You're working with campus reform, do some great work,
great reporting. We love having you on Fox across America. So,
Emily search, thanks so much.
Speaker 5 (01:25:08):
For joining us.
Speaker 14 (01:25:09):
Thank you so much for having me. Jason.
Speaker 5 (01:25:10):
All right, everybody stay with us. We're going to be
right back.
Speaker 3 (01:25:14):
If you're listening to them, did you talk about I mean,
as the Senate bill stands.
Speaker 4 (01:25:19):
If you assume there's no changes, which is what they're saying,
is that something you can.
Speaker 23 (01:25:23):
Do to pass We're going to pass this because we
want to do it the other and I have prevailed
upon my state crowleagues to please, please please, whatever it is,
we're close.
Speaker 1 (01:25:34):
To the house.
Speaker 23 (01:25:35):
Products is possible, of its very consistent in the three beginning,
and you know, continue to do that.
Speaker 1 (01:25:39):
So there's still a lot.
Speaker 4 (01:25:40):
Of amendments and a lot of a lot of game
to play yet, and we're.
Speaker 9 (01:25:44):
Hopeful do you need change it?
Speaker 7 (01:25:46):
Like, will you change it?
Speaker 1 (01:25:47):
If they don't change it, we'll.
Speaker 23 (01:25:49):
See what the final product is. I'm very hopeful and optimistic.
As always, we will deliver. We will get this job done.
We'll see what happen.
Speaker 4 (01:25:57):
Not as Speaker Johnson now in context, that was Speaker
Johnson before the Senate did pass a substitute amendment and
passed the bill. So earlier today, the big beautiful bill
passed the Senate. You had JD Vance the Vice President
cast as the President of the Senate cast the deciding
vote fifty and you had Senator Tillis from North Carolina.
(01:26:24):
You had Senator Collins from Maine, and you had Senator
Ran Paul from Kentucky vote against it. Lisa Murkowski, who
was long thought to be a no out of the
state of Alaska, she voted in favor of it. So
she voted in favor of bringing the bill up for discussion,
but then also did vote for final passage, which surprised
(01:26:46):
a lot of people, including myself. So that now puts
it into the House's seat. Now they have a two
step process in the House. The first is they've got
to pass a rule bill. Now, the rule bill is
going to be such that they're not going to want
to have many amendment votes, if any. You know, in
an ideal world, leadership just gets to bring whatever the
(01:27:07):
Senate passed up for a vote. But I don't know
that they have the votes to do that. They may
want to have some amendment votes. Now this gets to
be really, really tricky, particularly for Tom Emmer, who's the
is the whip. He's been the whip in the past,
I should say, and the whip has got to figure out.
(01:27:31):
That's their job. Between the majority leader, the Speaker, and
the whip. Can they bring this vote up and if
they change it and then they pass it, then it
goes back to the Senate. You could play ping pong
like that or back and forth for a long time.
But the President, i think, just wants to see the
bill pass. Now there is a lot of discussion about
(01:27:54):
well what about this or what about that. You know,
when you bring it up one big beautiful bill and
it has to pass, they're committed to making a pass.
Not everybody's going to get what they want. This is
the this is the challenge for Republicans. Democrats are really
good at just lining up by lemon lemon like lemmings
and just doing whatever the leadership tells them to do.
(01:28:16):
Republicans by nature and they're very dna. They're independent thinkers.
They want to have it their own way. But you
got to also recognize and come into balance here that
the idea that hey, this is a team sport folks
and there founders, Yeah, they wanted it to be contentious,
but at some point you got to come together on something.
And that's what makes it difficult, because if you wanted
(01:28:40):
a glide path to make this as easy and smooth
and quick as possible. That's not what our founders in
vision are founders in visioned that there would be a
lot of debate, there would be a lot of discussion.
But there comes a time, right the year before the
fourth of July, where yeah, you're not going to get
everything you're going to want in that bill. But do
you have no or do you vote yes? You got
(01:29:02):
three options as a member of Congress. You can vote present. Hey,
I was there and I watched it, which is kind
of a chicken way to go. Or you can vote
for it, or you can vote against it. And this
is where you have to weigh. It's never a single
subject clean bill like it probably should be. But the
process of reconciliation to bring together the Senate and the
House together, oh that is a tough one and so
(01:29:25):
you have to look deep and hard. I personally think
there's a lot more good than there is bad, and
this is a step forward. It's not the only thing
that can ever pass. But boy, if you don't do it,
vote with the Democrats.
Speaker 5 (01:29:37):
Yikes.
Speaker 4 (01:29:38):
If you're gonna have one of the biggest tax increases
ever that's not something I would want to do.
Speaker 5 (01:29:43):
I'm Jason. J Fit's filling it for Jimmy Faily. I
stay with us. We got more.
Speaker 4 (01:29:50):
If it's filling it for Jimmy, and Jimmy's really going
to regret this because we have livened up this program
if we can change that shot. Because joining us in
Studa Studio is Deborah Leah, who is just a delight
to talk to you. Last time, I guess toasted you
were here, Madam Mayor, I should probably call you because
you grew up in the city. You know you'd actually
(01:30:12):
like to be mayor at some point. Right absolutely, but
there's some craziness happening right now.
Speaker 16 (01:30:16):
I think it's paving the way for me. It is
God's plan.
Speaker 4 (01:30:20):
You're young, but you're determined, like you're totally focused on
what you want to do.
Speaker 16 (01:30:25):
The Republican Party has like dissipated in the last few years,
and I just don't think it's good for Republicans to
pick up and leave from any state that we're in.
It it's not going to help move the country along,
to continue to create these red and blue zones that
are so divided. I think we need to stay. We
need to fight and we need to tell people it's normal.
People think differently. You don't have to cry about it.
Speaker 5 (01:30:42):
Yes, that's right.
Speaker 4 (01:30:44):
You look, you made a really good point last time,
and I'm sure it's even more true now with this
mom Donnie who's come on to the scene. The guy
is like personifying the crazy radical left. Is this socialist
on a Marxist type of attitude that is really toxic.
And some people say, oh, well, let New York just
(01:31:06):
live like that and they'll see how bad it is.
But others like Charlie Kirker out there saying no, let's
go fight for it because it's worth fighting for.
Speaker 5 (01:31:14):
Where do you come in on this.
Speaker 16 (01:31:16):
I'm definitely on the first side of things where I
think we need to fight for or sorry, on the
Charlie kirk side of things, or I want to fight
for my city. But I also think that people need
to recognize no offense to people in Ohio or anywhere else.
This is not a small town that, oh, we can
just leave it alone. You know who cares about New
York City. This is the biggest, most diverse city in
the entire country. This is the business hope. The New
York Stock exchange, like everything happens in New York City.
(01:31:38):
It's representative of how healthy the country is, I think,
And so I think it's not smart to just pick
up and leave. And how much confidence that say in
our abilities and our platforms if we don't think that
they're reasonable enough for everyday people to accept them. We
know that the left platforms are outrageous, and the average
normal human being should like the Republican policies more than
the Democratic policies. So we just need to do better
(01:31:58):
at messaging and make it more digestible for the average
New Yorker, which I think we can do.
Speaker 5 (01:32:03):
Yeah, you know, bothered me. They don't meet the press.
I think.
Speaker 4 (01:32:06):
Actually, Kristin Welker did a decent job of drawing out
how radical he is in wanting to target white neighborhoods,
about wanting to have government run grocery stores, about you know,
not being able to call out the anti Semitism and
calling for a worldwide intifada.
Speaker 5 (01:32:25):
She did, I thought a decent job of drawing that out.
Speaker 4 (01:32:28):
What I didn't like about it is they didn't let
like Eric Adams or somebody else who is a little
bit more reasonable also have a platform to talk about things.
Speaker 16 (01:32:38):
It's pretty crazy that we might have our first independent mayor.
I don't know if an independent has ever won any
major election in this country, but this would definitely be
a change in our tides. And I'm hopeful that he could,
you know, kind of change history with this, because it's
our only option. But if I could just hit a
button and reset every single candidate in the New York
mayoral election, I would have gladly done that a few
months ago, because it's just unfair. We've seen this with
(01:33:00):
politics across the board. I'm young. I still have a
belief of the krem Dela crop should be representing us
in the society, the best, the brightest, most accomplished, and
we keep going for these like low level people like
Mom Donnie who have no experience. They have really just
no experience in business and running a company, in leadership,
in legislation, and anything that it requires to be a
leader of a major group of people, just to be
(01:33:21):
a leader period. And so I don't understand why we
keep nominating these people who are just like the worst
of society, like Andrew Cuomo. Oh my god, even hearing
his name for the last couple of months, I was
like nauseus every time I would see his ads on Hulu.
I'm like, almost paid for a subscription. But if she
couldn't get me to pay for a subscription, then Cuomo
can't either.
Speaker 4 (01:33:39):
Well, that was part of what I saw, you know,
from Afar. I don't live in New York, but as
I saw it, I thought Andrew Crolomo, I mean, could
there be a worst candidate with such a bad brand?
I mean, Cuomo used to be the ticket to the show.
Just because you are a Culomo, you had this credibility.
But Andrew Cuomo, I mean, did did Mandamie sneak through
(01:34:03):
this or prevail just because Cuomo is bad? Or because
the radical left is really getting more and more organized.
Speaker 16 (01:34:11):
I think it's a mix of both. And I think
it's time that conservatives recognize that it's not just Oh,
they had a great social media campaign, which Momnani did.
He had a great campaign. Objectively, like we could say
Obama was a great politician in the sense of he
lied straight through his teeth and passed agendas that no
Americans wanted to see pass, like the rand nuclear Deal.
But specifically, if Momdanni he did run a great campaign,
(01:34:33):
he was very gen Z talking keywords. He got that
famous model Emily rad Jakowski to get behind him, the
celebrity the podcast election. It worked for Trump, which shows
that is the way to reach gen Z and like
the new voter block in America that are showing up
to the polls and crazy numbers. But at the same time,
I don't understand why the left or the Democratic Party
thought Cuomo was gonna get any votes. This guy was
(01:34:55):
a disgraced governor. Kathy Hochel, our current governor, was only
governor because he had just step down for nursing, being
a serial killer with nursing homes, horrible policies, and many
sexual assault allegations against him. I don't think they're allegations
anymore because they were settled with the Department of Justice,
and he settled with them, so I think at that
point you can say he committed the crime. Yeah, but
allegedly for all legal purposes over here, for tect us
(01:35:17):
from lawsuits. I can't believe that they wouldn't run somebody
better than him, And then they think New Yorkers would
just forget We're still living in Cuomo times. The bail
policies that we have that's all Cuomo. That was Cuomo's fault.
The reason that criminals can just walk away. Those illegal
immigrants who beat up police officers, police chiefs, they just walked.
That was Cuomo. And so for him to think that
we're just going to forget about that, like we're goldfish.
(01:35:39):
We hit our head on the glass. Oh who is
this guy? Some people were like that, that's how we
got thirty percent of the Democratic vote. But I can't believe.
What do you think, Why didn't they put somebody better
than that?
Speaker 4 (01:35:48):
I don't have anybody think, well, look, money is part
of it. Name idea is hard. You get a big
media market, it's hard to buy your way into it. Yeah,
you have to come up with something creative. I think
celebrity does bring that because it brings the eyeballs and
social media. People have to be more savvy and how
they do that.
Speaker 5 (01:36:06):
And I think.
Speaker 4 (01:36:08):
Conservatives or Republicans say, oh, it's New York City. But
I mean, look how well Lee Zelden did. Look how
well you know Donald Trump did in this state. The
surge in the trajectory was moving in the right direction.
Speaker 5 (01:36:22):
But you it's like.
Speaker 4 (01:36:24):
Margaret Thatcher, right, She once said, first she got to
win the argument. Then you go win the vote, and
the Republicans and Conservatives in this town, you're an exception
to this. They've got to be able to articulate issue
by issue on why you be better off with the
conservative as opposed to this radical left. Oh, we're just
going to start buying up the private property, make it
(01:36:47):
all public. We're going to go out there and have
these grocery stores that are run by government.
Speaker 5 (01:36:52):
Where is that ever worked?
Speaker 16 (01:36:54):
Never ever? And they say, oh, it's not like Cuba.
Oh it's not like Venezuela. We're going to do it
differently out here. It does not work. It's never worked.
We believe in capitalism, especially in New York City starting
a business. Absolutely, That's why I don't want him. He
doesn't represent Mam Donnie zoron Mom Donnie, does not represent
a shred of values in New York City. We believe
in hard work, We believe in family values. We believe in independence.
(01:37:16):
You know, you can choose to send your kid to
a private school, you can send them to a public school.
It's your life to live in New York City and
make something of yourself. They say, if you can make
it here, you can make it anywhere. If you cannot
afford to live in New York City, truly working jobs, roommates, whatever,
there's always a way to make it work, get four roommates,
whatever it is. But if you truly can't, why do
we have to build social housing for you to live here?
There are plenty other states in the United States of America,
(01:37:38):
much warmer states too, where people probably won't die in
the winter being cold on the streets, where you can
live or build them in the suburbs. Why does it
have to be in Manhattan, in New York City? Why
can it not be like I don't know, Upstate New
York's places like yeah, Syracuse, who freezing cold places. The
city is for hustlers. The city is for people who
are electrically entrepreneurs who want to make thing of themselves,
(01:38:00):
and we don't need to create room for people who
don't share that value. That's why you move to New
York City. And that's that. But as you said earlier,
I think that this is a challenging point that we're
at where people hear buzzwords and then they just get
turned off. So if we're campaigning against Mom Donnie, he's
a socialist, he's anti American, he hates cops, the lefts,
the leftists, and like the Democrats in New York just here,
(01:38:22):
conservatives don't like him. Okay, he must be good. And
it's really complicated to break through that nuance now because
we treated nuance for clicks and that's just where we're
at right now. But said this with Jimmy last time.
If he does, when I had my numbers off the
last time with my age, but I think it'll be
the greatest comeback ever. It'll be the Obama to the
next Trump, whoever will be mayor in New York City,
and I'll be twenty nine. And then I said it
(01:38:43):
was gonna be twenty seven last time, but I'll actually
be twenty nine after the math wrong. And I think
that could be the way. If the city really goes
so downhill and it's horrible, that will be like the
Giuliani two point zero post nine to eleven revival of
New York City. But I don't want to see that.
I would much rather not see that. I don't want
crime to go up. There was like a shooting a
few days ago at Pride two days ago, two girls
(01:39:06):
under seventeen years old were shot in the face. That's
not normal to hear about in this city. Like it's NonStop,
there's always violent crimes, and it makes you scared to
go out. I don't want that. I want people arrested,
and I think normal people do too.
Speaker 4 (01:39:19):
Being pro law enforcement should not be a radical idea
that this anti ice sentiment that is out there. I mean,
there's even this app out there that kind of warns
you when ice is in town.
Speaker 5 (01:39:31):
What do you think of that?
Speaker 16 (01:39:32):
I think that's pretty crazy, and I don't understand how
our government is not shutting that down because there is apple.
Speaker 5 (01:39:38):
Let it be out there exactly plotform or like the Internet.
Speaker 16 (01:39:41):
There was an ex account that was docksing ice workers
a few weeks ago in California where they lived and stuff.
Ice workers are normal Americans who are just working a
job like me, and you know, they're regular civilians, and
I feel really bad for them, honestly that the entire country,
not the entire country, the craziest in this country suddenly
are treating them like they're modern day Nazis and things
like that when they're enforcing the laws of this country.
(01:40:03):
If you don't like the laws of this country, you
can book a flight out of it. This is not
North career there for it's called Expedia. Okay, you can
leave this country if you want, and so people that
want to come here and change the laws. I just
don't understand that Mom Donnie is no different than Rashida
to leave. I've been able to vote. I'm twenty five
years old. I've been illegally able to vote longer than
(01:40:23):
Mom Donnie has been a citizen. So how can he
now be the mayor of New York. There are so
many laws in this country on Senate, on House Republicans,
how long you have to be here before you can
be a citizen, before you could run. I don't understand
how we don't have that for mayor of one of
the largest cities. And maybe the New York State legislature,
if it wasn't so literally extremist left, maybe they could
pass something to protect that. But the thing that Mom Donnie's,
(01:40:44):
all the platforms that Mom Donnie represents have been in
the New York State Legislature for a couple of years now.
It really has shifted, and he does represent a large
swath of radical New Yorkers.
Speaker 4 (01:40:53):
Okay, so this latest video that I saw of him.
He's trying to eat his food with his hands and
try to be It's just like, oh, I don't need
a fork, because that's how I as a But he
grew up in a household that was far different than that.
It's not as if he came from you know, this
is how he's always eaten. It just looks so canned
(01:41:15):
to me, so fake. It just I don't know, maybe
other people saw it that way. I know there are
people that's the way they eat, But when he was
trying to do the rice with his hand, it just
didn't make sense.
Speaker 16 (01:41:27):
Yeah, the listeners, if you're listening, you should know it
was a Chipote label with sour cream. It was not
like a case idea. It was fully a Chipot label
with sour cream. I don't know. Everyone takes like twenty
forks from what I see every time they go to Chipotle,
So him not taking any fork, like that's just weird
and gross. He's digging his hands in and like smushing.
That was just I don't understand that. That's a little
(01:41:49):
nauseating to me, But real New Yorkers know who eats
in public like that.
Speaker 5 (01:41:53):
He was faking it.
Speaker 16 (01:41:54):
Yeah, he also ate on the subway, and everyone was commenting,
like New Yorkers think it's disgusting and annoying when people
eat smelly food on the subway, Like you're pretending you're
such a New Yorker, you're opening up god knows what
fish on the subway, Like that's a hate crime on
I go.
Speaker 4 (01:42:08):
On airplanes a lot, and there was this video I
saw on Instagram where somebody decided to open a packet
of tuna fish, like okay, I can't move, You're sitting
in the middle seat. And I just felt for this video,
like that poor person.
Speaker 16 (01:42:24):
I would personally sue.
Speaker 5 (01:42:25):
Tuna fish just permeates this.
Speaker 16 (01:42:29):
It's bad enough when you have like the babies on
the airplane and they're making their spice.
Speaker 5 (01:42:33):
They can't help it, you know.
Speaker 16 (01:42:34):
Then it's like okay, it smells, but like whatever.
Speaker 4 (01:42:36):
So when I was in Congress, i'd fly back and
forth a lot from Utah. It's in DC DC back
to Utah. And one time I was all dressed up.
They couldn't help it. I was in a tie. I
usually dressed down just because it's a flight.
Speaker 5 (01:42:49):
I want to be comfortable. But I'm sitting in economy, yes,
and I was in economy.
Speaker 4 (01:42:54):
I was sitting in the window seat and I am like,
got my headphones on, my eyes are closed, just trying
to chill out, and all of a sudden, I just
this woman next to me had in the middle seat.
She had decided that she wanted to put on some
hand lotion, and she had this bottle and she opened
up the bottle and the pressure just exploded on me.
Speaker 5 (01:43:16):
Oh my god, my nice suit and everything.
Speaker 4 (01:43:18):
She's trying to wipe it off of me, and I'm
just like, just leave me alone, Like it was so gross.
Speaker 5 (01:43:24):
At least it was just hand lotion. It wasn't tuna fish.
Speaker 7 (01:43:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:43:27):
I know. If it was tuna fish again, I would
sue because that would be traumatizing. But that's still pretty traumatic.
I once. I probably shouldn't admit this to people at home,
but I went to one movie my whole life. I
went alone. I really wanted to see Wicket. All my
friends had already seen it. It's three hours, Like we're not
sitting through it again. She's like, okay, I'm an adult.
It's assigned seats like there was only singular since us.
(01:43:47):
I'll go alone. Let me get some popcorn, let me
treat myself. I never get butter on my popcorn. Ever,
it's like an extra hunt, like five thousand calories. I'm like, okay,
a little sprinkle of butter. Walking to my seat and
it's one of those reclining seats. I trip. My popcorn
flies in the air, buttered well, like a blanket covers
the guy next to me, who I to sit next
to you for three hours? And I feel that woman
(01:44:09):
because I start picking the popcorn off him. I felt
like one of those like mothers in the wilderness eating
the bugs off their kid. I felt so bad and
it was hot butter all over him. So bless that
woman's heart. I hope you got a dry.
Speaker 5 (01:44:20):
Clean that poor guy.
Speaker 4 (01:44:21):
He just well, I don't know what that single do
is go and to watch Gus with his parents? Wicked? Okay, yeah, okay, whatever.
That's pretty funny. Listen, I could chat with you for
a long time. I love your perspective, love your energy.
We need more of that in this country, especially you know,
younger generation stepping up and doing things.
Speaker 5 (01:44:41):
So I love your perspectives. So thank you so much
for joining us.
Speaker 4 (01:44:45):
Deborah Leah, how do we find you?
Speaker 13 (01:44:48):
Like?
Speaker 5 (01:44:49):
You're on Twitter?
Speaker 16 (01:44:50):
I'm on Twitter, I'm on Instagram. I'm not really on
TikTok so much these days, mostly Instagram.
Speaker 5 (01:44:55):
And but it's the Deborah Leah yes right, d E
B r.
Speaker 16 (01:44:58):
A because I'm young, and then Eli I but you
got it.
Speaker 5 (01:45:02):
It's the the Sorry.
Speaker 16 (01:45:04):
The regular one was taken. I tried pursuing this woman
shedding posted and see.
Speaker 5 (01:45:08):
That old well.
Speaker 4 (01:45:08):
I like that people remember THEE now that we say
it and highlighted like I had Jason Chafitz and what
was I going to It was available, but I went
with Jason in the house because nobody was going to
spell Chafits.
Speaker 7 (01:45:19):
I like that one.
Speaker 5 (01:45:19):
The Debra you can get through LEA l e A.
That's easy enough.
Speaker 4 (01:45:24):
Thank you so much for joining us on Fox across America.
I hope he cross pads again. And maybe maybe Jimmy'll
show up one of these times that you show up,
so thank you.
Speaker 16 (01:45:33):
You can't. I don't look like Jimmy.
Speaker 5 (01:45:35):
No, just step up. That's a good way to get
the latter part of our show. Thanks for joining us.
We'll be right back. Stay with us.
Speaker 1 (01:45:43):
It's America's number one radio lunch day to get your
hands out of my fry.
Speaker 4 (01:45:48):
Well, thanks so much for joining us on Fox across America.
I'm Jason Chafit's filling in for Jimmy. Like said, he's
out on the West Coast with the family doing a
little rest and relaxation. I hope you enjoy the fourth
of July. I've touted it the whole time, and I
appreciate and letting me pimp my book. They're coming for you.
They are coming for you audiobook, hard copy book. It
(01:46:10):
is literally day one of the lunch so hope you
have a chance to check that out if you want
to see how data is being manipulated, sold, bought by
your government, how the left is using it to come
after you and your family push you out of the economy.
It's a little bit of a scary read, but boy,
if you're not aware of it, you'll never be able
(01:46:31):
to fight against it.
Speaker 5 (01:46:32):
Let alone be part of that coalition to help change it.
Speaker 4 (01:46:35):
And boy, if you're not aware of it, I think
you'd be shocked by some of the things that happen there.
Speaker 5 (01:46:40):
So they're coming for you.
Speaker 4 (01:46:42):
It's out today and I appreciate your consideration there. Again,
probably the most important thing I can leave you with
here is well First of all, thanks to Jimmy and
his team. They always put together good fun show with
great guests.
Speaker 5 (01:46:55):
I love them.
Speaker 4 (01:46:55):
They make things so easy. But I also want people
to understand, you know what, the United States of America,
it's the greatest country on the face of the planet.
We really have the best country. And I hope you
can wear the red, white and blue, put that flag
out in front, enjoy the country, love the country. Hopefully
you get some nice, good sunny weather, maybe some beach weather.
Speaker 5 (01:47:16):
Maybe it's pouring rain in a thunderstorm.
Speaker 4 (01:47:18):
I don't know, but this country, a lot of people
have sacrificed to make sure that you've got the freedoms
and the liberties and the peace and the safety and
the security.
Speaker 5 (01:47:30):
Let's keep fighting for it, America. I really do enjoy it.
Speaker 4 (01:47:33):
Thanks Jimmy, enjoy your time away and look forward to
having Jimmy back soon. Until then, I'm Jason Chafitz for
Fox Across America.
Speaker 5 (01:47:43):
I have a great one.
Speaker 1 (01:47:50):
This has been a podcast from wor