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November 18, 2025 32 mins
The future of NYC.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mister mom Donnie goes to Washington, wouldn't you love to
be a fly on the wall in the meeting between
Donald Trump and Zura Mom Donnie. It was the Mom
Donnie people that reached out to the White House asking
for that meeting.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
The mayor of New York, I will say, would like
to meet with us and we'll work something out.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
But he would like to come to Washington meet and
we'll work something out.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
We want to see everything work out well for New York.
That's going to be a fascinating meeting.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
I don't think Donald Trump's going to do anything that
he wants. I think Donald Trump wants to use him
as a bad example for the midterms. In Israel, Mayor
Eric Adams met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin net Yahoo
before the meeting. We just learned from Jordana Miller that
he got a hero's welcome, that they love Eric Adams

(00:50):
in Israel because he's always been pro Israel. And then
he was on Israeli TV and Mayor Adams was asked
if Mayor elect Mom Donnie, is it's an anti Semi.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
I think that when you talk about not doing business
with Israel, not willing to acknowledge that you're going to
march in Israeli DA parade, not being willing to state
you're going to come and visit Israel in other countries.
It sends the wrong message and he has to define that.
But I know those who are part of the DSA

(01:21):
and those who are marched in our streets saying horrific things,
that is a clear sign of anti Semitism to me.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
I guess all socialists want to talk to Donald Trump now. Maduro,
the president of Venezuela, has reached out to him. I
think he's actually just trying to save his life at
this point, because there's reports that Donald Trump has made
up his mind on either a land or air attack
on Venezuela, and that's probably why the president of Venezuela

(01:52):
wants to talk with Donald Trump right now.

Speaker 4 (01:53):
So much, is there anything you're.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Ready to rule out at this point, or ruling out
US troops on.

Speaker 4 (01:58):
The ground, rut anything.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
We just have to take care of it as well.
They dumped hundreds of thousands of people into our country
from prisons. The vote on the Epstein files will come
today in the House, and with the President's backing, it's
expected to pass easily.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
We may get to a unanimous vote. Look, this is
the most horrific, disgusting scandal in American history. You had
Epstein with basically a rape violin thousand plus victims, and
rich and powerful men who raped underage girls or covered
it up.

Speaker 6 (02:34):
And haven't had accountability.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
Yeah, it is all just disgusting. As Democrats in Congress
obsess over Epstein, the Trump administration is hyper focused on
the economy and bringing prices down.

Speaker 7 (02:47):
I think twenty twenty six, thanks to President Trump's signature plans,
is going to be a great year for working Americans.
For the markets. I call it parallel prosperity. Main Street
and Wall Street both do great, but I think Main
Street's going to have a great year in twenty twenty six.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
Well, I hope that's true.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Let's get to Joe Burrell, you, managing director of the
chart World Strategy Group and former Minority leader of the
New York City Council, with us every Tuesday at this time. Joe,
I'm fascinated by this. You just heard bess In talking
about how it's going to be a great twenty twenty
six and the prices will be down and the stock
market's going to be up and they predict all of
these great things for twenty twenty six. That's the way

(03:27):
things are looking right now. But it is incredible to
me that the Democrats with a straight face can say
that things are unaffordable under Donald Trump when inflation has
been pretty good under Trump, but it was abhorrent under
Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
Well, I mean, that's the thing there. You know why
they're saying it because it's working, because unfortunately, affordability is
something that the public does cling on to, and rightfully
so when it comes down to electoral politics, we saw
it play out pretty well Zoora in Mamdani where he
talked about affordability, you know, more than any other candidates,
certainly more than Andrew Cuomo, is certainly more than Eric

(04:07):
Adams and Curtis Leewa. The problem is it's not exactly true, right,
It's not exactly true. What you pointed out is correct.
The CPI was up about twenty one percent under Joe Biden.
That means in the in the term of four years
that Joe Biden was in office, Americans lost one fifth
of their purchasing power to buy everyday items. That's ridiculous.
We've never had that. It was it was, you know,

(04:29):
very palliative to feel that during the Biden administration.

Speaker 8 (04:33):
Now Trump, you have.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
To remember, inflation is far far down in some counts.
Some months it was below the two percent target. That's great.
That doesn't mean prices themselves are going to get rolled
back or come down. It just means that the rate
of inflation is far lower. So it is a tricky situation.
I think that the President is in to be able

(04:55):
to try to explain to people that prices are down,
that inflation is down, with out people actually seeing too
much at at the grocery store. You know, he was
out in front of the McDonald's Impact Summit yesterday talking
about how the price is Thanksgiving is down. That is true,
but Americans are just not going to see the rollback
to pre COVID, to pre Biden prices.

Speaker 1 (05:18):
It's not happening, right, And I think Donald Trump and
Scott Besson understand that better than anybody. And that's why
they're talking about giving back these dividends and stopping the
tariffs on certain food items so those prices go down.
But the honest to God truth is, prices never really
go down as a matter of fact, it's not even
good for the economy if prices start to go too

(05:40):
far down. And so this is going to be a
difficult thing to maneuver around, especially since they're getting blamed
for it now. But I have a feeling they're going
to have to deal with this coming up to this.
Don't you agree? It may end up being the number one.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Issue look at it, and you have to remember the
Trump administration is doing something different. They're they're using tariffs
as a you know, a stick and carrot approach to
foreign policy, uh and and foreign trade. I think that
ultimately benefits Americans. I think that ultimately on on shores,
more manufacturing. It ultimately on shores, more service industry jobs,

(06:17):
et cetera. However, you can tie that, and the Democrats
are doing it fairly effectively. You can tie it with
cost raiss because you know, I don't I don't think,
even me as a Republican, we should live in in
sort of the world where the truth is and the
truth when you put tariffs on things, there is a
downstream cost and that that is real. And that's why

(06:38):
the administration is changing its tune on coffee and you know,
and other and other sort of commodity food prices because
they see the impacts and they could actually provide quick relief. Ideally,
what we should see happen very soon is the price
of coffee and other items and beef like that come down.
But it also is an acknowledgement that the tariffs do

(06:59):
you know, to the Democrats point, the tariffs do increase costs.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
It is fascinating to me all of these things that
Zora and Mom Donnie promised that we knew were false promises,
all of a sudden already are not coming true. Childcare Nope,
can't do that. Freezing the rent, Nope, can't do that.
Everything he's talked about for some reason, of free busses

(07:23):
another one, Nope, can't do that.

Speaker 4 (07:25):
Right now.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
It is amazing how he keeps smiling and keeps saying
it's possible when everybody is looking at him, including Kathy Hochel,
saying no, it can't happen.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
Well, And that's, to be honest, I'm more scared of
that than anything else, because he has to justify his existence,
He has to justify his election to the radical progressive base.
All these things he can't do. You know, he's still
not going to be able to do him financially or
legally or on the jurisdiction of the charter that still

(07:59):
is going to record wire him to go back and
deliver results for radical progressives. That means, and I've been
saying this for months, that you're gonna look at the
radical city Council and whereas Eric Adams was vetoing or
threatening to veto some crazy bills, you're gonna see Mom
Donnie deliver on his you know, goodie item for progressives

(08:20):
through the city Council. And and you know right now,
he can't do rent freezes, but there's nothing saying that
the city Council can't pass laws like they're passing they're
trying to pass now where you have to give nonprofits
the first right of purchasing buildings, you can basically the
seize private property when people put it upper sale. Those
are all things that the city Council, in conjunction with

(08:42):
the mayor can do. And that's where you know, that's
what I'll be watching, you know, as someone who freelances
for the Post. Now, that's what I'll be watching to
see how I can cover that in opinion pieces. And
I think that's what people should be watching to see
what they should genuinely be scared of. Absolutely is the
home of ideas.

Speaker 4 (09:01):
You talk about freezing the ramp.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
What are some other examples that you witness that got
killed by a veto that would get through.

Speaker 4 (09:09):
Now what should we be scared of?

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Oh, I mean, I mean you take anything. Take policing
for example, Right, the city Council has the power to
implement new rules on policing. So it could be, for example,
that police have to fill out more forms whenever they stop.

Speaker 6 (09:24):
And search somebody.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
It could be that the police department gets defunded. Right,
we haven't heard defund the police for a while. But
now the city council can get creative and say, well,
we're only going to fund these kinds of police units,
not those kind of police units that we perceive as bad.
You know, it could have different quotas on hiring. It
could have, you know, different ways of jailing people on

(09:46):
Rikers Island. We can go through the process of jailing,
of closing Rikers Island, replacing it with the community jails
that was already passed, but the city council could actually
accelerate that timeline. The City Council could could essentially, you know,
accelerate the the timeline people get released from those jobs. Wow,
there is no limit to.

Speaker 6 (10:03):
Stupid ideas in the.

Speaker 4 (10:06):
Education.

Speaker 8 (10:06):
I mean that the.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
City Council could make rules for the Department of Education
that we've never seen before. Go on the Progressive Caucus website.
If people want to have some objective this morning, go
on the City Council Progressive Caucus website. Read they're telling
you what they want to do. Read the website, have
you know, and then tell your kid the ghost story

(10:28):
like it's it's the legendary power.

Speaker 4 (10:31):
Now I see it now, all that stuff can happen now.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
Joe Borelli, managing director tart Well Strategy Group, shouldn't be
laughing and former City Council Minority leader with us every
Tuesday at eight oh five. The six seven craze is
getting a little bit ridiculous. Now they're talking about giving
tickets to students who use the phrase we'll explain next,
plus tickets to see air supply come back. You'll remember

(10:54):
a little bit earlier, we got to talk back from
a woman that said that the GLP won drug is
a miracle drug and it's worked miracles for her and
I wondered out loud how much weight she lost on this,
And here she is.

Speaker 9 (11:09):
I've been on zet bound since June twenty eighth. I
lost twenty five pounds. I no longer have my sugar addiction.
I can stop eating when I want to. Also, I
experience a little side effect. But this is a miracle drug.

(11:30):
And if I had to pay five hundred dollars for
the rest of my life.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
I would, Yeah, but you shouldn't have to. I mean,
I think it's such a miracle drug. And I compared
to the vaccines during COVID and the polio drug, I mean,
we certainly subsidize those drugs because there are such life
saving drugs. These are life saving drugs too, and they're
probably saving as many lives as just takes longer. And

(11:57):
look at all the people to call and say, you know,
go out more, just lose weight on your own and
all that stuff. It's easier said than done for a
lot of people. So you're right. I'm definitely a free
market guy, except that the prices of these are exorbitant,
and I'd love to see them justify those prices.

Speaker 8 (12:16):
The best thing about this revenge quit wording is it's
so snowflake. And for these young kids, yes, I know
people that have just walked out of jobs.

Speaker 4 (12:26):
They just quit.

Speaker 8 (12:27):
It's not revenge. The company doesn't care. The company was
there before you, the company was there after you. They
do it because they think, oh my goodness, I got
the company.

Speaker 6 (12:37):
Stop you quit, you didn't like the job. You moved on.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
That was responding to Jacqueline Carl's story earlier about revenge
quitting and the fact that I said, I never even
heard of it before gen Z and she said, no,
it's it's always happened. As a matter of fact, she's
done it. And so how do you want to respond to.

Speaker 4 (12:54):
Him, I didn't revenge quit. Oh I thought you said
you revenge quit. You wanted to, Oh you wanted she
found a job.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
So she just, oh, yeah, I gotta listen better. But
uh yeah. So he says that it's it's just snowflakes.
That's that revenge quit. Nobody really cares, and it doesn't
affect the company at all. All right, now, let's get
to six seven. Another new term, another gen Z term.

(13:23):
I liked this one more. Even though it means nothing,
it comes from the well, here's where it comes from.

Speaker 10 (13:29):
It comes from a song by the rapper Scrilla in
which six to seven is repeated.

Speaker 11 (13:34):
It's uses shorthand for something that's okay, Like that movie
was kind of six seven.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
And here you go, here's Scrilla six on a highway
and he says that he's just in the middle of anything.
He just says it. So now it's been picking up
across the country. We've talked about this before. Uh In
in one town, in typical Neoe County, they are giving
out they take tickets to kids who say six seven

(14:03):
because they guess they disrupt class.

Speaker 12 (14:06):
First ticket of the day. Oh no, hey, Indiana code
six seven, it's now against the law to.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
Use the word six seven unless using.

Speaker 12 (14:14):
It in a map problem with someone's age.

Speaker 13 (14:22):
It was definitely silly. And you know, the kids, they
knew these police officers, they were the school resource police officers.

Speaker 4 (14:29):
But I think that was fun.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
No, it is fun. By the way, six seven's in
the dictionary now. And at basketball games, you would tell
me your story about that.

Speaker 13 (14:38):
Yeah, I'm a season ticket holder at Seaton Hall, so
I go to a lot of college basketball games. As
soon as the score, if anybody you know scores sixty
seven points all the kids go six seven. It's definitely
become a thing.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
One of the first videos of that happening in a
basketball game and starting the phrases this one.

Speaker 4 (15:05):
It's good, clean fun. It is.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
It is just fun and six seven really means nothing now,
Jacqueline Karl with the eight thirty News Jacquelin Larry.

Speaker 10 (15:14):
The House will likely soon vote on releasing all of
the Jeffrey Epstein files. The Chamber is expected to take
up procedural measures today which could start to pay the
way to force the Department of Justice to release all
of the Epstein investigation files. It comes as newly released
documents show President Trump mentioned in Epstein emails dating back
to twenty eleven. Now, the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade is

(15:37):
shaping up to be a wicked good time.

Speaker 14 (15:40):
Several other musicians are set to perform, including Kobe Calais,
Sierra and Shaggy. That's in addition to the more than
five thousand volunteers, thirty four balloons, twenty eight floats, and
a special appearance from Santa Natalie Migliori WR News.

Speaker 10 (15:56):
Would you like to talk to dead relatives anytime you like?
Well you can now. According to The Independent. Former Austin
and Alli star Callum Worthy is facing backlash after launching
an AI app called two Way that lets people create
digital versions of dead loved ones. The app's viral promotional
video shows a pregnant woman talking to an AI recreation

(16:20):
of her deceased mother, who then appears throughout the child's life,
giving advice and support. The app is currently free during
its beta testing phase, but will later require a subscription.
What do you think would you do it?

Speaker 1 (16:34):
You know, the first reaction when you read this story
was I cringed and I started rubbing my head. But
as I think about it, you know, if if that's
a way somebody deals with grief, if that's the way
somebody reconnects with somebody they loved, you know, to each
his own, let them do it.

Speaker 10 (16:52):
It sounds so strange now, but I think it's going
to be. These things are going to be so common
it's not even going to make the news.

Speaker 4 (16:59):
Yeah, yeah, I agree with you.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
I think that let people do what they want to do,
just so they're not hurting anybody.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
Else, But it isolates our society a lot more. I think, well, that's.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Already happened, right, Yeah, you ever see. Yeah, you gotta
be around kids of a certain age. You can't even
get them to look up at you. Thanks so much,
Jacqueline carl Dead. Yeah that's right. Congratulations to Jody Schintel
from Long Island who just won a pair of tickets
to see Air Supplies fiftieth Anniversary tour December sixth a
Flagstar at Westbury Music Fair. Tickets on sale now at

(17:32):
ticketmaster dot com. You get another chance to win tomorrow
at a twenty five. What are we going to find
in the Epstein files? I have a feeling that WOR
and Fox News host Jimmy Fala may have some thoughts
on that. We're going to talk with Jimmy next. And
Woor congratulates all of our five thousand dollars winners and

(17:54):
Iheartradios thank a teacher promotion powered by donor's choice. There's
still time for you to nominated teacher making a difference
and maybe they'll be one of our next winners of
five thousand dollars to make over their classroom. Help us
say thank you to the educators who are shaping our
future by nominating your favorite teacher now at iHeartRadio dot com.

(18:19):
Slash teachers so whose names are in the Epstein file?
Who should be nervous right now? Let's talk to Jimmy
Fayla about that. Jimmy Fayla WR hosts from nine to
midnight on Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla and host
of Fox News Saturday Night with Jimmy Fayla on the
Fox News Channel. Most importantly, he joins us every Tuesday

(18:44):
at this time, Jimmy, I'm sure, like everybody else in
the country, you're fascinated by these Epstein files.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
Who's nervous right now?

Speaker 8 (18:53):
Apparently a lot of people because Twitter and the rest
of the Internet is not working.

Speaker 6 (18:58):
I mean, think about that.

Speaker 8 (19:00):
Trump tell Congress last night around eleven screw it released
all the files. I got out of bed this morning, like,
oh I got to see this. There's nothing to say. Man, so.

Speaker 6 (19:14):
Roundabout Way tells us a lock a hud.

Speaker 4 (19:17):
Yeah, they've already been kind of naming names. Trump certainly has.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
He's trying to distract and point to everybody else, you know,
because I think that people were looking at him for
a while and he said, no, I got nothing to hide.
He goes and he said, I you know, I don't
want to speak out of school. But I think Bill
Clinton and Larry Summers might be worried.

Speaker 6 (19:37):
Yeah, let's rid.

Speaker 8 (19:38):
And apparently Larry Summers is because he announced he's stepping
back from all of his public activities at Harvard and
the Times and everything else. Think about this, man, Okay,
you know to the Bill Clinton point is Epstein, and
we know this to be true.

Speaker 6 (19:54):
This is confirmed.

Speaker 8 (19:54):
Epstein had an oil painting of Bill Clinton wearing Monica
Lewinsky's drast framed at the top of the stairs.

Speaker 6 (20:02):
In his house.

Speaker 8 (20:03):
Now, I say that because imagine the type of friendship
and bond you have to have with a buddy.

Speaker 6 (20:09):
To be okay with that.

Speaker 8 (20:11):
You know, like some guys go on spring break, get
drunk and get attached on their ankle together, what do
you have to do on spring break to not only
get like, instead of an ankle tattoo, No no, no,
we're doing an oil painting at the top of my stairs.
Like that had to be a no.

Speaker 6 (20:26):
No.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
I agree with you. I have a feeling that we are.
You know, everybody says it's gonna be a big nothing burger.
Everybody says, you're gonna take a look at it, You're
gonna be disappointed. There's not that much stuff in there.
I disagree the fact that they've been trying to hide
this for a long time. There's somebody in there. I
don't know who it is, and I know we've talked

(20:48):
about a couple of names, but there's somebody.

Speaker 6 (20:51):
Yeah, there certainly is.

Speaker 8 (20:53):
And it seems like we should be asking Democratic Congress
women because they were texting Epstein an awful lot. Now
you saw that back and forth and the court case.
I'm like, you know, you could speed this up. Instead
of releasing the Epstein files, just release your CAXT messages,
you know, just your data plan. It's crazy, but yeah,
you know it's something. I mean, you know, there was

(21:14):
one of the emails leaked last night said Hillary might
have been having an affair with that Vince Forster guy
who mysteriously died.

Speaker 6 (21:20):
Again.

Speaker 8 (21:21):
We don't know how much of this is true, how
much of this is strategically written. But the one thing
I can tell everyone listening is if you're looking for
a job as a food taster, half of Washington, DC.

Speaker 6 (21:32):
Is hiring right now.

Speaker 4 (21:36):
You know what, You're absolutely right.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
We have to watch what who dies over the next
week or so or the next couple of weeks because
I might.

Speaker 8 (21:45):
Be the hottest gift. Yeah, the hottest gift, the hottest
Christmas gift in Washington is a guy who will start
your car for you.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
Oh, come on, that's funny. Natalie made a bad face.
That is that's funny. Badly Hey once gets me about
zorin Mom Donnie. Right now is he's finding out extremely quickly.
He's not even merry yet, and already all of the
things he's promised. Kathy hokl saying Nope, not going to
do that. Nope, You're not going to do that. So

(22:13):
the child cares out for right now. The buses are
out right now because there's no way he can get
the money for it. Why is this such a surprise
to everybody?

Speaker 8 (22:24):
I know, it's so funny because we all, you know,
we saw the whole thing coming. And you know, I
think for Mom Donnie, and I think for the people
who voted for Mom Donnie, I think they needed to
have this moment because what happened was his election was
that wild.

Speaker 6 (22:41):
Night of drinking for some New York Wers.

Speaker 8 (22:43):
You know, when you go out and you have this
really wild night, you wake up the next day and
you go, what the hell did I do? Okay, you
start looking at the pictures and your phone and you're like, wait,
we voted for what they get on someone Okay, and
you all know this to be true, and we discussed this.

Speaker 1 (22:59):
On this Okay, I'm gonna take your analogy. I'm gonna
take your analogy in one up it. You turn in
the band and you see somebody there and go, oh
my god, what the hell did I do? That's what's
happening with Momdani.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
Yes, you know that.

Speaker 8 (23:13):
You know that night of drinking. Okay, will you drink
so hard that your Apple facial recognition software won't open
your phone the next day?

Speaker 6 (23:26):
Okay?

Speaker 8 (23:27):
That's what's happening to young voters. And I love that
they learned it. The night of the election. We discussed
this on the show. He had that fricking cash bar,
and that tells you everything you needed to know. Free
buses and control all the good stuff. Anyway you want
to bud light, that'll be thirteen.

Speaker 4 (23:45):
Dollars, I know.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
And then he asked for money, after saying he was
gonna give free everything that he begged for money for
his transition team. We let did nobody else see this coming.
Of course this was of course it was going to
be like this.

Speaker 8 (24:02):
Yeah, a thousand percent. So I find that part funny,
but it is that reality. Like you said, everybody's wishing
up in bed. They woke up in the morning, they
looked at the ceiling, they didn't recognize it, and then
they turned to their left and said, what the hell
those thirteen dollars butt LIFs. I don't know, I drank

(24:23):
too many.

Speaker 4 (24:24):
I do love that zorin.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
Mom Donnie's going to go down to the White House
to meet with Donald Trump. Allegedly they haven't said a
date or anything like that, but both of them have
talked about it. Both of them have said, yes, Donald
Trump loves these moments. He loves to do this, to
play with somebody, like a cat playing with a mouse
before he kills it. He's I don't think Mom Donnie
realizes what he's walking into.

Speaker 6 (24:48):
Yeah, And it is a.

Speaker 8 (24:49):
Bad sign that Pete Hegseath is offering Mom Donnie a
boat to get down to Washington.

Speaker 6 (24:55):
He can sail down the river. We'll get you there
a little quicker.

Speaker 8 (24:58):
Now. He doesn't know, I mean, and he wants the
relevance just the same. And you know, I think there's
a part of him that really covets that meeting with
Trump for that reason, because he wants to be resistance guy.
But the problem with all of the resistance guys is
if nobody who votes for you has anything to show
for it, the resistance only goes so far. When the

(25:20):
rent is due. You know, you can't call up the
landlord and be like, hey, man, I know I don't
have the money, but did you see the resistance?

Speaker 6 (25:26):
You know it's not going to work.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
No, it's not going to work at all. I just
want to bring up one last thing about the the
Epstein files. It was you know, you had this shutdown.
It was horrible for the Democrats at the end when
they got angry, they proved that it was all their faults.
America suffered, and then all of a sudden boom, all
these letters come out about the Epstein files. And how
about the media. I heard this analogy before. The media

(25:51):
is like the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park. They just turned
to movement, anything like look over here and there and
they're looking over there. That distraction worked. We're not talking
about the shutdown at all.

Speaker 8 (26:05):
Yeah, they definitely wanted to move on from the shutdown.
And it makes sense when you say the media is
lake the dinosaurs, because if you look at senior Democratic leadership,
they are the actual dynamy as.

Speaker 6 (26:15):
Humor burning Pelosi.

Speaker 8 (26:18):
So it's like a hand in hand thing what they.

Speaker 6 (26:20):
Got going on there.

Speaker 8 (26:21):
So it does make sense they do want the diversion
what happened here, and someone really club, I mean, someone
who works than the White House told me this last night.
I don't want to out them because I don't know
if this was exclusive or not, but essentially Trump knew
he had to release this stuff six months ago and
really didn't want to because he thought the selectively leaked

(26:42):
emails would be used to make him look bad, even
though there was no overall smoking gun that would bring
him down. Okay, but he didn't really want them out
there for that reason. He just didn't want to give
them a day and day out trip trip trip where
they could sort of wrongfully accuse him through selective omission.
But he knew it was going to come to this,
kind of resisted it so the Democrats would beat.

Speaker 6 (27:02):
The drum louder.

Speaker 8 (27:03):
And now they've built it all the way to a
crescendo where they're the ones that are going.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
To get hit by the waterfall.

Speaker 8 (27:09):
Yeah. Now on this little log flum ride to Epstein Island.

Speaker 4 (27:12):
Yeah, God, it makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Jimmy Faylo WR hosts from nine to midnight Fox Across
America with Jimmy Fayala joins us every Tuesday at eight
thirty five. Thanks a lot, Jimmy. Congress votes today on
releasing the Epstein files.

Speaker 4 (27:24):
WRS.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
Natalie Migliori asks if New Yorkers want answers or if
it's off the radar.

Speaker 4 (27:31):
Her Beat on the Street is next.

Speaker 8 (27:33):
Now it's sevent ten WARS Beat on the Street with
Natalie Migliori.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
So the media right now is obsessed with the Epstein files.
How about people on the streets of New York. Well,
Natalie Mgliori gets her beat. Hey, Hi, Natalie, Natalie Migliori
gets her beat on the street right now, Natalie.

Speaker 15 (27:57):
Good morning, Larry. Yeah, today be the day Congress votes
to release the Epstein files in their entirety. After really
years of unanswered questions and redacted documents, do people still
want the federal government to pull back the curtain on
the late discrete financier and convicted sex defender Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 12 (28:18):
I want to say, yeah, it's just it's a very
confusing topic. It's touchy, it's controversial. You know, our minds
can wrap around anything surrounding things that I've heard regarding
the files. But I do think we need some transparency.

Speaker 4 (28:32):
Ah, yeah, I want to see the Epstein files.

Speaker 11 (28:35):
Of course we still care.

Speaker 16 (28:36):
Of course I don't care about that stuff in the beginning. Yeah,
but as of right now, no, I don't.

Speaker 11 (28:42):
I don't care. It's all because you can't believe anything anyways,
So it just it doesn't matter if they release something
you don't know if it's truth anymore.

Speaker 15 (28:52):
The lack of trust come to move forward with a
bill that would force the DOJ to disclose records related
to Epstein as best effort. That comes months after Republicans
stalled the vote. The President has gone from making it
a campaign promise to discouraging the vote to once again
calling for the files to be released because, like he

(29:14):
said on Sunday, we have nothing to hide. No shortage
of reaction to the back and forth.

Speaker 9 (29:19):
He's the master of a spin, so I think he's
doing damage control when he's trying to deflex.

Speaker 4 (29:24):
But we'll see what's in themselves.

Speaker 9 (29:26):
Hopefully it'll come out.

Speaker 11 (29:27):
Well, they probably figured out something to redact something and
you know, cover it up government.

Speaker 4 (29:32):
Especially this one.

Speaker 16 (29:33):
Is out there now, so I don't know if you've
maybe you just pushing for it to make it seem
like he got ninees a hut, but it is what
it is.

Speaker 12 (29:40):
At this point, it's on all fronts. As far as
the transparency, I feel like we need to do better.
I feel like that'd be a nice first step at least,
just to get some information out there so people can
protect themselves.

Speaker 15 (29:52):
You know, Larry, Some people already had their questions answered.
Maybe that's why they don't care, while others think there's
still so much more to know.

Speaker 16 (30:01):
I wanted to know, is trump name wasn't the I
think you already came out that his name is in it,
But hey, it is what it is. Trump's oppressed that.

Speaker 4 (30:08):
Clearly there's more. They would have been released a long
time ago.

Speaker 10 (30:11):
Who knows, we won't be able to see them either.

Speaker 11 (30:14):
I have a lot of questions, but I don't know.

Speaker 13 (30:16):
I guess, like I assume they would be releasing the
juiciest stuff first to get people's attention.

Speaker 11 (30:20):
But who knows. I guess there could still be more
out there.

Speaker 12 (30:23):
I honestly just think putting the list out there would
kind of be enough, be done with it and move on.

Speaker 8 (30:31):
One problem.

Speaker 15 (30:32):
Larry and anonymous White House official had said, there is
no list of pedophiles who worked with Jeffrey Etsy, and
that's the latest death comes out, And maybe that's where
the problem lies for the public.

Speaker 12 (30:43):
Even if they released it, take it with a grain
of salt, and it's just one more thing that kind
of make your own judgments about what's going on around us.

Speaker 11 (30:51):
I don't trust the government anymore, and I don't trust
even the media anymore. Sometimes it just feels like it's
really biased. So I like pretty things and nice people,
you know what I'm saying. I just don't want to
deal with that.

Speaker 15 (31:03):
Yeah, that lady's coat was really nice too, I gotta
say Lowry, But I think there's just a lack of
trust between especially when it comes to these files. I
think there's just been so much convolusion around it that
people don't know what to believe, what the truth is,
if they're going to see the whole truth.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
Yeah, no, I agree with you. I don't think releasing
the files is going to be the end of that.
There's going to be legal cases, There's going to be
a lot of people trying to protect themselves. The fight's
going to go on and on and on again. What
was so nice about the coat?

Speaker 15 (31:36):
It was like pink and purple and like a pea
coat is I don't know. I feel like she was
so tall to this lady that I was like, you
know what, I don't think I could rot that. But
I loved her coat.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
I get it. I understand. Thanks a lot.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
Natalie Migliari is back with us at the same time tomorrow.
What does Rich Lowry from the National Review think of
the release of the Epstein Fires. We'll go to find
out after the nine o'clock News
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