Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Israel jumps ugly with Iran, a US senator plays pantomime
with the Secret Service, and the Democrats violent rhetoric comes
home to roost in a most horrifying way. This week
was not for faint hearts, as you will hear in
our Did they really just say that clips I'm Nancy Shack.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
I'm Ben Parker.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
This is news bite.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
Moments ago, Israel launched Operation Rising Line, targeted military operation
to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's very survival.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
So I want to say thank you to every single
person that has been able to do this. Also, I
want to talk specifically to the rioters and to the
politicians in Los Angeles.
Speaker 5 (00:57):
After two day manhunt, two sleepless nights, law enforcement have
apprehended Vance Bolter.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
Oh my god, So that was Minnesota Governor Tim Waltz.
We the rest of us know him as you know
as Vice President Harris's sidekick in the last election, but
he is, in fact the governor of Minnesota is announcing
that Vance Bolter, who is the alleged assassin of a
of a couple of legislators.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Job.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
But yeah, in Minnesota, he shot a state rep and
her husband and who he murdered both of them, and
he also shot another legislator and his wife. They're still alive,
but both are hospitalized. One I think is extremely serious.
But that's that's what happened, and it was it was very,
(01:54):
very frightening. He got into the house wearing a police uniform.
He was known to these people. He was actually an
assistant in aid to Governor Waltz, had been appointed by
Governor Waltz. And he opened fire on the two that survived,
then ran out. Their daughter called nine one one said
(02:18):
he was shooting. I guess he had must have said
something about, you know, shooting legislators. And they did a
widespread and were able to get to the house where
he was next shooting people. A little too late. He
murdered both of those people. But this was This was
Governor Wallis announcing that he had been found in a
field near his house.
Speaker 6 (02:39):
Cut forty good evening, after two day manhunt, two sleepless nights,
law enforcement have apprehended Vance Bolter.
Speaker 5 (02:48):
That's forty eight hours that law enforcement you involved in
a complex and dangerous manhunt, spent Father's Day away from
their families to her justice for Melissa and Mark Hortman
and their children who spent this Father's Day alone.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
It's very it was just incredibly heart wrenching. But here's
what he does not say. The two A lot of
is being made in the media about these two democrats.
They're both Democrats, the ones who are attacked, you know,
and trying to cast dispersions that this was a politically
motivated assassination. And it was, but not the way you
(03:27):
think it was, because both of these Democrats were supporting
Republican policies. In fact, the legislator that had just been
was killed had crossed the aisle just a few days
ago to vote for Republicans and had stood up and said,
this is what leadership looks like. So he doesn't tell
(03:47):
you that. What he did tell you, what Governor Waltz
did tell you, was this cut forty three a.
Speaker 5 (03:56):
Moment in this country where we watched violence erupt. This
cannot be the norm, it cannot be the way that
we deal with our political differences. Now's the time for
us to recommit to the core values of this country,
and each and every one of us can do it.
Talk to a neighbor rather than arguing, debate an issue,
(04:19):
shake hands, fine common ground.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
Now I found that enraging. And I'll tell you why
I couldn't believe he said that, because he's making it
sound as if he is a great peacemaker. This is
Tim Walls. About three weeks ago, cut forty three a.
Speaker 6 (04:38):
I called Donald Trump a wanna be dictator.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
It's because he is. It's because he is.
Speaker 6 (04:45):
Oh, the governor's being mean, and the governor's speaking out
on that. Well, maybe it's time for us to be
a little meaner. Maybe it's time for us to be
a little more fierce, because we have to ferociously push
back on this. And again, I'll speak to my teacher
(05:05):
colleagues in here. The thing that bothers a teacher more
than anything is to watch a bully, to watch this
bully and to stop it. And when it's a child,
you talk to him and you tell them why bullying
is wrong. But when it's adult, like Donald Trump, you bully.
Speaker 7 (05:20):
The out of him, back, you push back, You make
sure they know it's not there. Because at heart, at heart,
this is a weak, cruel man that takes it out
and punches.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Down on people. Hello, pot, meet kettle.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Oh and he couldn't, he couldn't. Of course, we couldn't
let the opportunity to go without making some kind of
alignment between Republicans and Nazis. Forty three b.
Speaker 5 (05:45):
Donald Trump's modern da Escapo is scooping folks up off
the streets. They're in unmarked vans, wearing masks, being shipped
off to foreign torture dungeons. No chance to mount a defense,
not even a chance to kiss the love one goodbye,
just upped up by massed agents, shoved into those fans,
and disappeared to be clear. There's no way for us
(06:05):
to know whether they were actually criminals or not. Because
they refused to give them a trial. We're supposed to
just take their word for it. And when duley elected
members of Congress tried to exercise their constitutional right of
oversight at an ice facility, they get shoved around and
threatened with the rest, And when courts told them repeatedly
to knock it off, they brazenly defy them.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
Please stop making stuff up.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
I couldn't believe it. Not only does the governor last night,
when he was talking to people regarding finding this killer,
does not tell people that he actually was one of
those people that was pushing violence in his rhetoric He
also never bothered to tell anybody that the assassin had
pamphlets from the No More Kings protests which he was supporting,
(06:50):
or that he in fact it was his aid, So
none of this things. So he's just the most disingenuine,
hypocritical human being I've ever seen. And it's horrific that
that is now involved in the deaths of two people
and the maiming of two others. It is it is
mind boggling the level of duplicitousness that this man will
(07:16):
go to, and it is it is not just him,
and then to turn around and say, you know, we
need to all shake hands. You've got to be bleepy
kidding me after you say that. And one more cut
for you. This is just another example, okay of what
the Democrats are doing. This is the mayor of Chicago,
Brad Johnson eleven A.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
They are absolutely terrified. And that's look.
Speaker 8 (07:36):
I remember a few stand ups ago when I talked
about what terrorism looks like.
Speaker 7 (07:41):
This is it.
Speaker 6 (07:42):
There should be no question to what our country will
look like.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Have the Confederacy won. We're seeing it on full display.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
They're Confederates, They're they're you know, they're basically racist Confederates.
Is there any wonder that there is so much violence
going on when you have rhetoric like that, this the Democrats, This.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Is the problem, the rhetoric before, during, and after this
particular event. And trust me, there's been a lot of
other events. But that rhetoric is the reason we have
the other things, the problems we have. Look, all you
gotta do is watch. And I'm not saying the other
side is innocent, because there's certainly a lot of bs
(08:22):
coming from everybody's mouth in and around.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Why I don't hear violence, violence?
Speaker 2 (08:28):
Violence? I said bs. I mean there's a lot of
bs that comes out of politicians' mouths. It's part of
their their charm. But but this the thing is, and
and when I don't want look, I don't want to
get into this, but I'm gonna say it anyway. So
when Joe Biden was president, and there were there was
nobody on the right who I knew of who loved
(08:48):
Joe Biden. I mean he was either crazy Joe wacky,
Joe couldn't get up his flight as stairs fell down,
flights just to whatever his problems were, right, and everybody
hated him. And let's go Brandon. But there wasn't this.
There wasn't this. I didn't see anybody going in and
shooting Republicans who sided with Democrats on issues. I didn't
(09:09):
see or hear politicians get up and threaten we got
crap out of them? And what was there who said
beat the hell out of them or something like that
would be okay. So I didn't see that. Now is
there bs? Sure again, politicians, they all ramble and rhetoric
and blah lah lah. But this stuff is crazy. I
(09:29):
watched some of this stuff from before and during it
again after the rallies, right, you had your your, your, your,
no King's rally and it's all just nonsense. Look, I
don't care if you hate Donald Trump, don't care. But
like people were, I went by a couple of these rallies,
(09:49):
so they were smaller ones. I didn't go through the
big cities because I'm not an idiot. Uh, I didn't
want to get involved in that. But I'm went some
of the small ones, and you know, some of the
signs were like trees and this and that. I don't understand. Look,
you can argue, you can disagree. How the hell do
you get treason from enforcing America's laws. I don't understand that.
(10:11):
And this is the thing. They're saying things and people
are looking at it and going, yeah, Donald Trump's treeson
is no, I don't think so. Listen, if you're opposed
to his policies, fine, but you can't just ramble up
why is it a treason? Is that that that the
puppet masters were running to Joe Biden? Nobody said that.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
I mean, here's the problem. If you say these things
to rational, reasonable people, they they're not going to pick
up a bat and beat somebody to death with it.
It's the problem that we have is that a certain
percentage of the population is not rational and reasonable. It
may be small, but they're each one of them a
ticking time, by the way, And when you use phrases
(10:51):
like you just heard you know, the Confederacy, or racists
or Nazis like both you heard Johnson and walts Hugh's,
then you're lighting a fuse on the crazies. And that
is what has happened in Minnesota. So when Tim Watz
says can't we all just get along, he needs to
look at himself in the mirror. He is the one
(11:12):
responsible for what happened in Minnesota.
Speaker 2 (11:14):
They're great at ruffling people's feathers, getting people crazy, and
then when the crazy turns to super crazy, they go, oh,
you got to get a little.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
Yeah, yeah, for like two minutes, and then they're going
to start again. How long until Waltz gets back out
there and starts.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
I also r play Devil's Advocate to a degree. Look,
there are some people who are going to protest, and
they're being peaceful protesters. There are there are also some
of these people going to these rallies who are just
they don't give a crap. They're going to the rally
to be a troublemaker. And then there's the people in
the middle who follow the troublemakers. You know, like I
(11:50):
have two dogs. When one starts barking, the other starts barking.
When these trouble makers go to these rallies and start
flipping over cars, there is a group of people who
maybe didn't intend to flip over cars, but they're like, growing,
let's let's burn some guards. So and then and then
you get the politicians who go out there and say
we gotta fight back and punch and swing and blah
blah blah. What does that sound like.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
I think it comes down to a single word, to
be honest, it's stupid. No arrogance, Oh, I like stupid better.
I'm not surprised. So I think arrogance is I think
that Tim Waaltz, for instance, is arrogance extensive. Nobody's gonna
call me on the fact that I just said two
weeks ago what I said, nobody can say or shouldn't say.
Johnson said, say, nobody's gonna call it. Nobody's gonna call
(12:32):
us in the bad. We can behave as badly as
we want. Nobody's gonna call us on it. And it's
not just them this. There was a I was shocked
by this. There was this moment in New York City
with these protests and a lot of these people, these
younger people have been brought up to the universities in
the past twenty years, who think that their bleep doesn't smell,
that they can do whatever they want, they can impede
(12:52):
on anybody else's rights, that whatever they want is the
way it should be, and God help you if you
do something that pisses them off. But no, no, no, no,
they don't. They don't have any respect for anybody else's rights.
They are arrogant. And this is a tape of New
York City protesters had blocked the road. This woman, this
(13:13):
black woman, gets out of her car. And the reason
why I emphasized the fact that she's a black woman.
I wouldn't normally do that except for the fact that
these people that you see now block in the way
are the same people who are doing Black Lives Matter
and who were saying that you know that the rest
of us were racist because we didn't support Black lives matter.
So here they are block in the road. This single
(13:35):
mother gets out of her car. She has a disabled
child in her car. She's trying to get to work
to support herself and her disabled child. And she says
to them, can you please move because I just need
to get to work, and they laugh in her face.
Cut one hundred, just.
Speaker 5 (14:04):
N how is it the people protest?
Speaker 1 (14:11):
How do you like y'all feel about stopping a black
woman from going to work? Oh no, so you don't care.
Speaker 4 (14:19):
About stopping black people from going to work.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Look at this, She'd been there for three hours. She'd
been stuck on the street for three hours in a
traffic chain.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
Because of that, Just move, First of popably paying no
no work.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
You should have seen that woman's face. I mean, this
is a guy who's probably never had a job, and
that that is what I'm talking about, that arrogance which
turns into violence at some point. They don't always no
big deal. I can throw a brick through that bodega
in my own neighborhood less than a mile from my
house this weekend is a a kosher grocery store.
Speaker 8 (14:59):
It is.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
It has been there for sixty years. Everybody in the neighborhood,
whether they're Kosher or not, goes there because the food
is very good and they're kind people. They give you know,
their food at the end of the day to the
Senior Center or to to help, you know, elderly people
who have no money, or to the Veterans Center. They're
they're incredibly kind, good people. Somebody this weekend through a
brick wrapped in a note that said free Palestine through
(15:23):
their plate glass window in the front of the store.
That is I mean, it's it's not just criminal. It's
like I can do what I want and you have
no rights. The rest of you are worth nothing. That
is what they are. That's what they've been fed by
the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party lives it, and it
looks to me like they're going to die by it.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
I have ideas what you can do to people like
that when you catch them. But here's a question, and
it's a serious question with a bit of sarcasm. How
do you know and when does it go from a
peaceful protest to a not peaceful protest to a riot?
Because you can have people being a little pushy, chovy.
That's not a riot, but that's not peaceful. So I
(16:05):
really want to know, and I don't know if there is.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
As soon as you stop people from being able to
go to work, I think you're crossing the line there
into riot. And I think that was becoming a riot
right there right there.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
Well, I look at I mean, and maybe i'm just
a little more I don't know, uh, lenient, But I
look at that. You know that's not peaceful, but it
isn't a riot yet. If now, if you flip that
woman's car over and light it on fire, you don't
have to go that far. I don't know where the
riot starts.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
That's what I'm saying to you, is that you don't
you don't have to light something on fire to start
a riot.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
Sure.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
I grew up in Washington, d C. I have seen many, many,
many riots, and they start with people basically deciding that
their rights are more important than whoever it is is
in the street. And that's that's where it starts. It
doesn't start with the sign holding or the chanting or
the none of that. That's fine. Nobody has a problem
(16:56):
with any of that. Make your you know, God bless you. You
want to stand out in the hot sun and do that,
you know, feel free, and I'll listen to you for
a while. And then you want to tell me about
your thing, fine, no problem, and then I'm going to
move on. If you stop me from moving on, then
it becomes a criminal issue. And that's where the beginning
of the riot starts, because you are actually legally impacting
other people. That is what we're now. You can also
(17:19):
have once you get to that. What happens is once
the police have to move in. That is a riot
that has become a ride. You don't have to have
torching the building, flipping a car, sending people to the
hospital to have a riot. You can have a riot
and not light the town on shore.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
By the way, that's another thing. You just you just
reminded me of something that that is a real bad
peef of mine. It's probably worse than a pad pief.
So you have these people, okay, no more of this,
no more that they get their signs. Everybody's quiet, and
then it gets a little rougher, and then it gets
a little rougher, and then it gets so rough that
you have to call the cops in. And then the
(17:55):
cops come in and to try to quiet people down.
What's the first thing you hear from theseuckleheads, Well, the
cops came in and started a riot. Well no they didn't.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Yeah, stops your respondent.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
Listen, some police are not perfect. Obviously there's there's issues
with police, but this is not that, and knock the
crap off. Look if you're flipping shit over or even
if you're just pushing and shoving people, if you, first
of all, if you're blocking a public road, the police
should come in and kick your ass out of the street. Look,
I am all first Amendment. Look, get your permit or
(18:27):
or march down the street with your sign, stand in
the park. When you start blocking roads and and and
in this case, that woman getting to work. But this
we've seen this on interstate highways. They block the roads.
As if interstate highways at rush hour weren't bad enough,
you got to stand in the middle of the road
or change yourself. Oh that's the great one. Whin they're
doing They pain themselves together or to the guard rails.
(18:48):
And no kidding, that's not peaceful protesting. That's again back
to my original word, stupid.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
Yeah. So, and it's not just the people, the protesters
in the street who are doing this. And this next
example I'm gonna give you, I think is probably even worse.
This is a US Senator, Alex Padia from California. Now,
you know, I expect a US senator to hold themselves
(19:19):
some certain level of comportment in public, but that's apparently
very old fashion of me. That doesn't That doesn't happen anymore.
Homland Security Secretary christynom was giving a press conference in
la regarding the fact that they are going to be
there until they have fulfilled the list of warrants that
they have to get illegal alien criminals out of out
(19:44):
of the out of the area. So she's giving this
press conference. Well, there's a US senator who decided to
go to the press conference and his credentials got him
into the room, but nobody in the room knewho he
was because they didn't expect him. So he's in there
and he says he has a question. But here's the thing.
This is afterwards, I'm telling you he says he had
a question. But what he does is in the middle
(20:05):
of her, in the middle of the statement that she's reading,
he tries to interrupt her and starts shouting. And so
the Secret Service, not the FBI or Department of Justice,
the Secret Service, who, if nobody knows, is actually the
Department of Treasury, and they are the ones who have
to protect cabinet members and members of the White House
(20:25):
take him out because he was heading four. They didn't
know who he was, he wasn't on their list, and
he was shouting, gesticulating, and heading towards the Secretary. They
took him out, and this is when that particular moment happened.
Cut thirty two.
Speaker 4 (20:40):
So I want to say thank you to every single
person that has been able to do this. Also, I
want to talk specifically to the rioters and to the
politicians in Los Angeles your I also want to talk
about specifically how many of our ice agents have been
(21:04):
docks for doing their duty.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
Okay, so out a presser afterwards. This is Alex Padia
saying he just wanted to ask a question.
Speaker 9 (21:12):
Cut A while I was waiting for the briefing with
General Guillot, I learned that Secretary of NOME was having
a press conference a couple of doors down the hall
since the beginning of the year, but especially here what
(21:33):
she had to say to see if I could learn
any new additional information. And at one point I had
a question, and I'm emphasized, just as we've emphasized the
right for people to peacefully protest and to stand up
for their First Amendment rights, for our fundamental rights. I
(21:54):
was there peacefully. At one point I had a question,
and so I began to ask a question. Yes, I
was almost immediately forcibly removed from the room. I was
forced to the ground and I was handcuffed.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
I know you have stuff to say. I gotta say.
I gotta jump in first. I have to because I've
been to a gazillion press conferences as a credentialed journalist,
as a reporter who has questions, because we go there
with questions right with all kinds of people. I've been
with senators and governors and mayors and police chiefs and
(22:30):
everybody else. It doesn't matter. I've been to these things.
If I in the middle of a presser thought it
was time for me to start asking my questions, they
would kick my ass out of the frickin' presser too.
So enough, if he had a question, great, he could
have waited to the end. Maybe you wouldn't have got
to ask it. But this is not how you behave
at a press conference.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Then get to interrupt the statement.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
New journalists know that, yeah, this is a First of all,
he's a senator who.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
Again, he can't interrupt? Is this She's not on a
witness stand, she's this is a cabinet member. It's her presser,
she's reading her statement.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
And nobody. Look, he's in his own state right, and
hardly anybody knows who the hell he is he? First
of all, I didn't either. In fact, when I first
heard a California senator, I thought he was a state senator,
because I'm like, who is he? And I think I
know most of the senators because we talk about them
in the news, of course, and obviously there are some
(23:27):
lawmakers who are well more well known. I mean most people,
even not from Massachusetts, no Elizabeth Warren for example, but
who And again he didn't just wait till she was
done and say any questions. He just said, Eh, I'm
who I am. I'm gonna ask my question whatever the
hell I want that right? There is problem number one,
and it's problem number one. This is why I interrupted
(23:48):
at the beginning, because I've been to a million press
conferences as a real credential journalist, and you don't do that.
You don't do that.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
So here's my question. Okay, go ahead, Yeah, because I
agree with every syllable you uttered. He here's my question.
Is this our truth retrol for this week? This is
why I'm asking the question. He knows, as you said,
any junior reporter knows, that's not how you behave at
a press conference. You wait to you, at least, even
(24:16):
if you're a US senator and think that you have
presidents over the reporters in the room. You wait until
she's finished. You don't interrupt her in the middle of
her statement. So so as he's doing that, that comes
to other Democrats. Okay, responding to this, This is Chuck
Schumer on the Senate floor cut.
Speaker 9 (24:34):
Fifteen A with that objection.
Speaker 10 (24:36):
Mister President, I just saw something that sickened my stomach,
the man handling of the United States senator. We need
immediate answers to what the hell went on? I yield
the floor.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
I got your answer.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
See, so, no the outrage. He was just asking a question.
Then here's Congressman Seth Moulton of Massachusetts cut thirty five.
Speaker 11 (24:58):
Well, first of all, I picked up the phone and
called I have a couple of friends who are FBI agents,
So I called one of them because it was apparently
FBI agents who pushed him to the ground and handcuffed him.
And I said, what on earth is the FBI doing
arresting the United States senator? And he said it was
embarrassing and it certainly shouldn't have happened. So I don't
know the full circumstances of the interaction. I've seen one video.
(25:21):
I haven't seen it from all perspectives. But anytime that
federal law enforcement is arresting the United States senator for
asking a question doesn't feel like we live in a democracy.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
Why he was arrested, it wasn't the FBI, it was
it was in fact, that Secret Service, who are responsible
for the security of Secretary Nome. He rushed at Secretary Nome,
was starting to trying to interrupt her, trying to get
into the camera angle, and that's when he was taken out,
not by the FBI, but by the Secret Service. Now
even seeing it, so the party line is now he
(25:51):
was mild man or guy, just trying to ask a question.
You heard it, Did it sound to you like he
was just going, excuse me, excuse me, Secretary? Can I
interrupt you for Did you hear any of that? No,
he was shouting at her. For all they know, he
was a lacked out protester who'd gotten in there. Now
even CNN is finding it a little hard to buy
(26:13):
the Democrat line here. This is Josh Campbell, he's the
CNN security correspondent, Cut thirty six.
Speaker 12 (26:19):
It's easy to think about this as one incident, but
actually from a law enforcement perspective, we're really looking at
three separate incidents that happened within a short period of time. First,
you have the DHS secretary who is addressing the press.
This was not a Q and a period, and she's interrupted.
She's interrupted by someone who is speaking very loudly, and
so her security detail confronts what we obviously now know
(26:41):
to be the Senator, and at that point he is
now going to be escorted out. You can't interrupt something
like that that's already in progress without having those consequences.
But the second incident, in my view, happens the moment
as officers are trying to lead him out, he then
turns and walks back towards kind of into those agents.
At that point from a security detail perspective, that we're
(27:02):
taking this person out against their will, We've asked the person,
and again, this is all happening very quickly, But the
moment he then turns into them, they realize this is
not someone who is going to comply.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
Bengo. That's CNA Bengo.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
That is that is an anti Trump network, if ever
there was one, And then they're no friend to Christino.
And that is how ridiculous the Democrats have become. And
I really think it should be truth to Tol. I
think he knew what was happening. He was looking for
the camera stuff. So I'm asking, I'm asking you, Ben,
and I'm asking do you think he do you think
(27:35):
he really thought he was going to ask a question,
or is he trolling everybody and just trying to create
a scene for the for the press.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
Not not to you, but I have said to other
people this definitely appeared like, Hey, look at me, I'm
doing this, this this show for you people. So I
think he knew exactly what he was doing the minute
he walked into that building, the minute he walked into
that room, the minute he opened his mouth, and the
minute he was yelling and screaming and refusing to I
think he was putting on at least. I'm sure he
(28:04):
had questions for no, don't get me wrong, but yeah,
he was like, I know how And I think in
the back of his head. I don't want to say
what he was really thinking, but I believe in the
back of his head he was like, and my friends
like Chuck Schumer are going to defend me. I mean,
he might not have been thinking.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Well, absolutely, I think he's gonna I think he's thinking,
this is a great press, press opportunity for me. He
didn't have any freaking questions. You gotta be, you gotta be.
He might have had a question about questions, he wasn't
there to ask questions.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
We will agree to disagree, and that he might have
had a question, I got questions for well, you know what, you.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Pick up the phone and your call Secretary Nome, because
he can. He could have done that.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
If any question, he go ahead office in Washington.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
He doesn't have to go to her office. He's the
head of the committee that funds homeland security. All he
had to do was pick up the phone and call
her with any question he's and he has and he
knows that. So you've got to be nuts.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
I'm just saying there's a million ways he could get
in touch with her that don't include That was not
about it, oppressed, That was not about it. It was
just showmanship. He wanted to put on a show. And
and and not only that, I think, uh, it certainly
seems this way. Not only did he want to put
on a show about himself, Hey look give me And
(29:19):
he wanted to damage he wanted to be damaged Christie Nome.
And I don't mean damage, I just mean like in
terms of her performance or her oppressor. Uh.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
And and so I wanted to make somebody the cabinet
look like a fool.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
It doesn't like and look, unless you're stupid, which again
back to my word, unless you're stupid, you gotta see
through that this was not just this is not as
simple as he was just trying to ask a question.
No stop stop, stop.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
Please, And you would think that that was like the
big story of the week.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
It wasn't.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
It really was good. You know what the big story
of the week was.
Speaker 3 (29:51):
Well, moments ago, Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, targeted military
operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's very survival.
This operation will continue for as many days as it
takes to remove the threat.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Correct me if I'm wrong. But back in March, the
NSA Tulsey Gabbard testified in front of Congress, and I
believe that she said this. Cut nine.
Speaker 13 (30:25):
The ICY continues to assess that Iran is not building
a nuclear weapon and Supreme Leader Kamini has not authorized
the nuclear weapons program that he suspended in two thousand
and three. The ICY continues to monitor closely if Tehran
decides to reauthorize its nuclear weapons program.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Now, Bib Natanyahu did an interview with Brett Bear on
Fox and Brett Parr said, so, you know, were we wrong?
Cut six.
Speaker 14 (30:50):
B Fulcy Gabbard testified on Capitol Hill saying that everything
had been suspended since two thousand and three and had
not restarted. That the nuclear program had not been restarted
by the Iranians. So did something change from end of
March until this week? Was the US intel wrong?
Speaker 8 (31:09):
The intel we got and we shared with the United
States was absolutely clear, was absolutely clear that they were
working in a secret plan to weaponize the uranium. They
were marching very quickly. They would achieve a test device
and possibly an initial device within months and certainly less
than a year. That was the intel we shared with
(31:30):
the United States. I think we have excellent intel in Iran.
I think we've proven that and that is something that
we couldn't possibly accept.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
And that's something President trumpas said to no nukes for Iran,
But he really he summed it up pretty well at
the end of the interview, cut sixty.
Speaker 8 (31:48):
Whether it would be six months or twelve months or
thirteen months as immateial. Once they go that route, it's
too late and we will not have a second Holocaust,
a nuclear holocaust. We already had one previous century. The
Jewish state is not going to have the Holocaust made
it on the Jewish people. It's not going to happen
never again. Is now and we have to act now.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
Yeah, and it's not they have and around's also building
ballistic missiles, so it's nothing to do with a lot
to do with Iran, but with ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads.
There's nobody, nobody who's listening to this. I don't care
where you are is safe?
Speaker 2 (32:24):
Well, and I was going to say so, there are
a number of reasons. Look, Israel obviously wants to defend
itself and rightfully so, just as we would or any
other country would. But it's not just Israel that needs
to be worried about, and not just Iran. There's a
lot of countries that want to get their hands on
nuclear weapons who can't. Can't. You can't for a number
(32:48):
of reasons. So you got to stop the first one
so that you can then stop the second one or
the third one. And the whole world should be behind this. Listen,
even if you are not pro Israel so to speak,
really you want to ran what you want North Korea maybe,
(33:08):
maybe Iraq, maybe Afghanistan, maybe Kazakhstan maybe whoever. You want
all these people to have nukes and start firing them
at you. I don't give a crap what your religion
is I don't care if you're Israeli or freaking Palestinian
or anybody else. You want a nuke landing on your
freaking front yard. So this is not a This is
not just a Jewish Israel issue, and people need to
(33:29):
stop thinking that it is, because I don't want a
nuke from any country in the Middle East landing on
my front yard. And I'm not Jewish.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
And that's from crazy people who think that dying is
not a problem because you know, they get gets yeah,
when they die. And and look, first of all, I
wonder what the virgins get. So you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (33:51):
It's like gonorrhea. All right, So listen, if the President
Trump has said a million times, look, if you build
the nuke, or you're gonna build a nuke, we're gonna,
you know, we're gonna kick your ass basically. So and
then this anybody who's surprised, like, oh my god, I
can't believe Israel launched a missile or missiles at Iran?
What were they thinking? First of all, a couple of
(34:14):
days before this even happened. I think it was the
White House that made the actual announcement or came out
of the White House, that something was bruin, something was
afoot right, like like Iran is gonna get it's it's
head handed to it because it's a bunch of ding dongs.
And then it happened, and everyone went what what? Why
did that? What is is Reel doing? Are they out
(34:34):
of their mind? First of all, not everybody's saying that,
and nor should they. But this wasn't like a total surprise.
I mean, some things come out of left field. This
came out of maybe shortstop. This was not a huge
surprise given what Iran's been doing. Iran, Iran, I don't
even know how to say their name anymore. It's changed
so many times over my lifetime.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
I think either is except okay.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
So I you know, we knew this was coming, maybe
not when it was coming exactly or how it was
coming exactly, but come on, this is something that's been
bubbling and brewing hot recently and warm simmer for a
long time. So anybody who says, well I'm surprised about this,
(35:16):
get your head out of the sand, go back to
one of your protests and then throw rocks at cops
or something, because it's just it doesn't make any sense.
I knew it was coming, and I'm an idiot.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
Yeah, well, I think we all kind of knew when
President Trump moved the Marines.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
Away from away from.
Speaker 1 (35:29):
Anything that was you know it basically out of missile
range and their families. It's like, okay, something's about to happen.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
No, listen, Ron, listen if you if you're tired of existing,
hit some American targets.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
When you're missing some of them. He said, you've got
sixty days to make a deal. On the sixty first
day is Reel attacked. So you know, it's not like
you didn't give your heads up. That's all I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
That's what I'm saying. Is too too though, Like I know,
we moved the troops to keep them safe and all
that stuff, and well he should have, but it really
is this, hit an American target with one of your missiles,
ran and see what happens.
Speaker 1 (36:04):
Pox Romana.
Speaker 2 (36:05):
We don't want our targets hit, but it's.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
Called Pax Romana the Romans. If you hurt any Roman citizen,
it didn't matter what status they were, you were dead.
They basically not just you, They took out your whole village.
So anywhere outside of Rome if you hurt a Roman citizen,
you were dead. And through that they kept the peace
(36:28):
because people knew if they bleeped with the Romans that
the hell was common. So everything with stays go for
quite some time. It worked, It worked for for a
very long time. Let us know what you think of
this week's show. Feel free to contact us Ben and
I on x at news by three or on Facebook
(36:48):
at news Bite. We upload a new episode every single Monday,
and assuming that World War three doesn't break out between
now and next Monday, there'll be a new one then too.
Have a great week. I'm Nancy Shack.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
If World War three breaks out, we will have a
show and it will be a damn good one. On
Ben Parkers, this is Newspite