Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
In fact, according to a new bombshell report from the
New York Times, so Molly and migrants in Minnesota have
defrauded nearly one billion dollars and taxpayer funded benefits under
Democrat Governor Waltz's leadership. President Trump is putting an end
to this dangerous America Last approach. His position is rooted
in common sense.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Caroline Levett earlier today, addressing the White House Press Corps
on this first day of December, Folks, it's finally here.
Hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Ryan Schuling live back
with you, having flown in today from Michigan, and man, are.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
My arms tired?
Speaker 2 (00:37):
I know, old dad joke, not even a dad telling
those jokes got him from Thanksgiving.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
From my old man. That's what I'm talking about.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
But the flight from Detroit was delayed for ponderous reasons,
and I go back to an earlier Texter who was
scolding me, and for good reason, Ryan, why'd you go
on Frontier? Well, Frontier is I find out hubbed here
in Denver. It's got his own special carve out in
the a terminal at DA So like United, big hub
(01:07):
here and a lot of available flights and a lot
of them are pretty affordable, and they're direct to Detroit
from here. So all these are all my qualifications and
end up getting a flight and going there. Not too
bad coming back though from Detroit Metro. The delay was
something to do. And I've had this happen before, and
it's very frustrating. If you've had this happen, text me
(01:29):
five seven seven three nine, some kind of paperwork or
the manifest. Now, we were one of the first flights out.
So here's what happened. Late last night. I'm at my
sister Lizzie's in Jackson, Michigan, and we're watching the Denver
Broncos go to overtime against the Washington Commanders.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
It was high stress.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
I wanted to see how that game turned out. But
I went late, late, late into the night in the.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
Eastern time zone.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
This is something I take for granted now that I'm
two hours removed out here in the.
Speaker 3 (01:57):
Mountain time zone.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
But it's getting upwards of like midnight there, and I'm like,
I had my alarm set for three am, had a
rental car, had to drive that back to Hertz, had
a flight scheduled for like I think it was like
five forty five in the morning, had my pal, my buddy,
my buddy Opal Christian Toto lined up to pick me
(02:20):
up from the airport. Luckily I gave my flight information
because we're just sitting there. We bore the plane, everybody's
on the plane. It's a packed flight, no room for
air and idiot me got stuck with a middle seat.
So there I am sitting there and we're waiting, waiting.
We get the update, and again there's some paperwork that's
not we're the first flight out.
Speaker 3 (02:41):
This is my point.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
Why is that not the first order of business that
you would take care of in that moment at that time?
Riddle me that Batman. Not sure what else to make
of that, but there was something else that was delaying us.
So we didn't end up leaving Detroit. I don't think
until about eight thirty in the am. I was on
(03:03):
and off sleeping on the plane, no doubt annoying the
two people one on either side of me. I know,
I kind of doze off into snore mode when I'm
really tired, and I was really tired, and I do
have a machine. I'd use it and it helps and
it works, but I couldn't put it on not on
the plane.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
I'm tired.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
So there was that, and then we finally come in
and I don't know this, it all worked out. I
guess here I am right, but glad I stayed up.
Glad I watched that Broncos victory thrilling in overtime, heard
the Dave Logan call earlier over on KOA, and then
I had to shift back into news mode here as
(03:41):
we start this month of December, and if you celebrate
the days of Christmas like I do, and you're counting
on down and maybe today's that day December. I helped
my sister Lizzie get a Christmas tree. We cut it
down ourselves. I'm talking National Lampoons Christmas vacation style with a.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
Handsaw, and I'll think of that looks a little difficult,
but she.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
And I teamed up, found a perfect tree and took
it back. We used the bungees on top of her
mid size suv and when you know it, we it
did not turn out like Christmas vacation. We got it
back in her place literally the perfect height. I mean,
could not have lucked out better. All worked out for
the best. That was a fun adventure. I hadn't gone
(04:21):
on that in a long time, and glad I got
to share in that with my sister Liz. So I'm
in the Christmas spirit. I'm ready to go. I'm ready
to rock. I am now ready for the Christmas music
that comes along with it. During this holiday season, you're
hearing the commercials, You're hearing the ads, whether it's here
on iHeart er everywhere else. And the part about it is,
(04:42):
I was talking about this with my family too, like
I want the time to breathe and enjoy Thanksgiving. Unfortunately,
in the stores and on the airwaves and the podcasts
and everything else, it seems like as soon as Halloween
turns the calendar to All Saints Day November one, here
comes Christmas for two mins. I love Christmas, don't get
(05:02):
me wrong. I love watching Christmas movies, especially. You know,
I got a list. I'm checking it twice. I want
to watch Bad Santa. I want to watch It's a
Wonderful Life. I want to watch a Christmas story, whatever
your favorite is. Send that along five seven seven three.
Now we can get into that mode now. But I
gotta have that.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Heartbeat for Thanksgiving and.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Then traditionally, I don't know This is the way I
grew up on Black Friday. Now it's off to the malls,
and it's off to the stores, and now you go online.
There's the sales Cyber Monday sales that are going on
now today, So make sure you cash in on those
if you can. But now I'm in that holiday spirit.
I am ready to embrace it. We got about a
foot of snow on Saturday.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
It looked like Christmas out there.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
It doesn't always happen that way back home either, that
you get that Christmasy weather and feel, and the temps
drop to the teens and the twenties. I know I
got cold here too, but it was like boted snow.
It looked like, you know, your typical white Christmas landscape.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
It was perfect for the task. And just had so
much fun with that.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
And I wanted to start the show on that upbeat note,
because for here we go, we're descending.
Speaker 3 (06:11):
Into the world of tim Walls.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
When and your text five seven seven three nine, So
as Caroline Levitt read there, it was a report, and
you know, that bastion of conservatism, the New York Times reporting,
here we go Somali migrants, some in this country legally,
some with questionable status, many of them ripping off the
(06:37):
taxpayers of Minnesota, defrauding a fund to the tune of
nearly one billion dollars with a B.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
Benefits. And whenever anybody tells you, well, these benefits the
use taxpayer fund benefits. They don't go to illegal aliens.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
They sure as blank do they do. And in this
case they were caught red handed. And if it's either,
it's the Robert de Niro Ace Rothstein exchange with the
guy the nephew that he fires from the casino. Either
he was too stupid to recognize the fraud was going on,
or he was in on it.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
Either way, you're out. Great scene. Love that scene. And
Tim Walls had a peculiar.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
Explanation for all of this. Let's go to that right now,
because what does he do? What is the typical move here?
I'm gonna give you one guess. I'm not even gonna
give you two guesses, because you're gonna get.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
It in one guess.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
What is the move here by a Democrat when cornered
on an issue of import like this scandal like this,
it's deflect and project to Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
Yes, you got it? Did he do that?
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Let's find out you and me. Maybe he didn't, Maybe
he surprised us. Maybe he threw us a curveball.
Speaker 4 (07:56):
Maybe Speaking of the smaller community, President Trump is targeting
them and your state and party, citing fraud is the
reason for his crackdown. Dozens of people of East African
descent have been charged, convicted, and sentenced for stealing more
than a billion dollars in taxpayer money from government programs
during COVID Okay, as you know, Governor, that is more
(08:19):
than Minnesota spends each year to run its Department of Corrections.
So I want to give you a chance to respond
to this. Do you take responsibility for failing to stop
this fraud in your state?
Speaker 2 (08:29):
I mean, pretty straightforward question there, right, And she cites
accurately good job. Kristin Welker always wanted to give credit
where credit is due when the mainstream media actually does
their job accidental or otherwise in journalism. These are East
African Somali migrants who have set up shop in Minnesota,
Minnesota very inviting to that community, in particular ilhan Omar
(08:53):
and scores of others. And they were charged, they were convicted,
they were sentenced in this fraud.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
It happened, and.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
It happened within that specific community, as Welker accurately states.
So here's Tim Walls and how he tries to spin
out of it.
Speaker 5 (09:11):
Well, certainly I take responsibility for putting people in jail.
Governors don't get to just talk theoretically. We have to
solve problems. And I will note it's not just Somali's.
Minnesota is a generous state. Minnesota's a prosperous dates, a
well run state, or triple A bond rated.
Speaker 3 (09:27):
But that attracts criminals. What okay, Hugh Hewitt has a
great response to this.
Speaker 2 (09:35):
I'm gonna play in a moment, but I wanted to
pause it there so you and I could collect our
thoughts and our breath in that breathless commentary from Tim Walls.
We are such a welcoming state, we are such a
generous state that naturally that attracts criminals, and not just
Somali criminals, but criminals of all shapes, sizes, colors, creeds, nationalities, origins, religions,
(09:58):
all of it comes to Minnesota. That's not a good thing,
Governor Walls. And then I try to compare that, let's say,
to a Republican led state like Texas with Governor Greg
Abbott or Florida with Governor Ron DeSantis. Could you imagine
in a million, trillion, bazillion years them rolling that.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Out as some kind of excuse or justification.
Speaker 2 (10:20):
No, they would say, not only isn't it excusable, not
only is it intolerable. We're gonna get to the bottom
of this fraud. We're gonna root it out. Fraud, corruption,
anything that's going on in this government that's wasting our
taxpayer dollars in this state. I'm gonna see to it
as governor that that is taken care of. But no,
(10:40):
he's like, well, you know, blank happens, and then you
deal with it.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
That's what I'm getting from this. Correct me. If I'm wrong,
those people are going to jail. They are.
Speaker 5 (10:49):
We're doing everything we can, but to demonize an entire
community on the actions of a few.
Speaker 2 (10:54):
They did it. This specific group was in on it.
It was a collective skill, and just because it happens
to be all from the same group doesn't make us xenophobic, racist,
or whatever else you want to cast upon the accusers here.
Governor Walls, that is a dodge, that is a deflection.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
That is classic woke shielding. It's lazy and as you
heard of Lator Kelly say.
Speaker 5 (11:21):
This president has cut a lot of inspector generals. He's
cut programs that could help us tackle us on.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
So we are. It's a state problem. Deal with it.
It's a state problem. It's state funded.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
Why do you need federal intervention funding, supervision, oversight enforcement.
Minnesota's state legislature, Minnesota's state law enforcement. You the governor,
you should be on top of this. It is a
state issue. That is the whole notion of federalism in
(11:53):
the United States of America.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
Take it on.
Speaker 5 (11:55):
We'll put folks in jail. I don't care what your
nationality is. I don't care who your religion is, your color,
if you're committing crimes. These are programs that were meant
to serve students with autism, to housing, and to making
sure people had enough to eat. There's a reason Minnesota
ranks as the top lowest childhood poverty, best place.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
For children to live.
Speaker 5 (12:15):
People are taking advantage that they're going to prison. That
is totally disconnected with demonizing an entire group of people
who came here fleeing civil war and they created a
vibrant community that makes so they.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
If they flee a civil war and create a vibrant
community based on fraud and corruption and ripping off the
Minnesota taxpayers, they get a free pass.
Speaker 3 (12:34):
I don't understand the point that he's making here.
Speaker 5 (12:36):
It's Minnesota in this country better. But that's Donald Trump
to flat humanizes come up with those solutions. He's not
going to help fix anything on fraud. My god, there's
a big difference between fraud and corruption, and corruption is
something he knows about.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
What is the big difference between fraud and corruption? Is
he saying that fraud massive as this is a billion
dollars almost in Minnesota, that somehow that's less bad than
whatever he defines his corruption.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
This is madness.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
And you know who agrees, the Minnesota Department of Health Services,
their own DHS. I don't think that's a Republican led organization.
I could be wrong, but I think I'm right. And
John Roberts Fox News reads their statement.
Speaker 6 (13:21):
Speaking of lazy and listen to what employees of the
Minnesota Department of Human Service say about all of this.
Tim Walls is one hundred percent responsible for massive fraud
in Minnesota. We let Tim Walls know of fraud early on,
hoping for a partnership and stopping fraud. But no, we
got the opposite response. As staff, we first hand witnessed
and observed fraud happening, yet we were shut down, reassigned,
(13:43):
and told to keep quiet.
Speaker 3 (13:45):
Sometimes more boom.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
Wow coming off the top rope with that one, Roberts
now directs the question on Tim Walls his culpability in
this as governor.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
Does he have any ownership over it?
Speaker 2 (13:56):
Does he have any responsibility for it?
Speaker 3 (14:00):
It answers. John Roberts here.
Speaker 6 (14:01):
Wants himself just said, you know, I'm a knucklehead sometimes.
Is this one of those occasions?
Speaker 7 (14:07):
Yes, especially when you say we are a well run
state and therefore we attract criminals. Those two things don't follow.
Well run states do not attract criminals. Dysfunctional states attract criminals.
Correct bureaucracies without inspector generals, prosecutors who let criminals go
free without bail. That kind of thing attracts criminals. That's
the Minnesota way under Tim Walls.
Speaker 3 (14:30):
It sure is.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
And there's an election coming up, just like hearing Colorado
next year midterm elections both for Congress and a lot
of governor's seats Colorado's and Minnesota's, and hopefully Minnesota can
nominate a Republican that has a strong chance of winning
and can capitalize on this massive issue. Wallas was not
done deflecting. In his interview on Meet the Press with
(14:53):
Kristin Wilker, he offers up the following about Trump ranting
on Thanksgiving.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
Well, here we.
Speaker 5 (14:58):
Got a guy on thanksg where we spent time with
our families, We ate, we played yachtzi, we cheered for
football or whatever. This guy is apparently in a room
ranting about everything else.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
This is not normal behavior. It is not healthy.
Speaker 5 (15:13):
And presidents throughout time have released a couple things. They've
released their tax returns, not Donald Trump. And they've released
their medical records, not Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
And look what about Joe Biden's medical records? Where were
those his entire presidency? They were hidden, shielded, redacted, dumbed down.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
We'll get to that though. On Donald Trump. The MRI
is one thing.
Speaker 5 (15:36):
But I think what's most concerning about this is, as
your viewers out there are listening, has anyone in the
history of the world ever have an MRI assigned to
them and have no idea what it was for?
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Well, Trump, I think is half joking about that in
this edition of Trump's Hot Takes that you're about to hear.
But the White House responded to these demands for the
MRI results to be released, and they were today, and
what they showed was a complete and total clean bill
of health for the forty seventh President of the United States,
who was in remarkable condition for a seventy nine year
(16:10):
old human.
Speaker 3 (16:13):
And here we go, we'll roll.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
Into these MRI results A little down a summer, It's
(16:35):
time once again for another edition of Trump's Hot Takes,
churning the forty seventh president's epic interactions with a fake
news media.
Speaker 8 (16:43):
He asked about my Mr.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
The governor, the incompetent governors. So if they want to
release the show came with.
Speaker 8 (16:58):
Perfect.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
It's like my phone call, Oh I got it peached.
It's absolutely perfect.
Speaker 9 (17:03):
So if you want to hear about it, if you
want to release it, do you want to have it released?
New station fairly failing?
Speaker 3 (17:09):
Do station fail?
Speaker 10 (17:11):
Do station if you allows you, by the way, but
if you want to have it release or releasing absolute.
Speaker 3 (17:19):
Want releasing?
Speaker 9 (17:20):
No?
Speaker 3 (17:20):
No, no, what for anybody?
Speaker 10 (17:22):
I have no idea which is an mright, what part
of the body.
Speaker 3 (17:26):
It wasn't the brain because.
Speaker 9 (17:27):
They took a COCTI says, and I as they.
Speaker 3 (17:29):
Got a perfect part which you would be incapable of. Dude,
if everybody you do which you would be incapable of doing.
Oh my.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
So the White House with this evaluation of the president's
MRI reads as follows this from Kelly Meyer News. The
purpose of this imaging is preventative. President Trump's cardiovascular imaging
is perfectly normal. There is no evidence of arterial narrowing
and pairing blood flow, or abnormalities in the heart or
major vessel. Overall, his cardiovascular system shows excellent health. His
(18:04):
abdominal imaging is also perfectly normal.
Speaker 3 (18:07):
Summary.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
This level of detailed assessment is standard for an executive
physical at President Trump's age and confirms that he remains
in excellent overall health. That is quite remarkable, especially given
his diet steady of Big Max and diet cokes. And
I'm not recommending that for the rest of us. This
guy is a medical marvel. His genes are off the charts.
(18:29):
I mean, both of his parents live to be very
old into their nineties, I believe, so that would bode
well for the president. But simply remarkable that his cardiovascular
imaging is perfectly normal. But this does answer the question,
is an MRI always a brain scan?
Speaker 3 (18:45):
The answer is no, this was for his heart.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
I had one of these done myself again, routine maintenance
check up, preventative, et cetera, just to kind of see
where I was at. And I think President Trump is
in better shape than I am. And that makes me
feel a little self cane, but.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Makes us feel very good for the state of our country.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
Well joining us, we're a little bit worse off without
this man in Congress. Former Representative Louis Gohmert, Republican Texas
joins us. And another bombshell coming out about the Biden
dojy spying on members of Congress.
Speaker 10 (19:33):
Back in the eighties and nineties, if we needed somebody
to report we had an indictment, we would call their
lawyer and say you need to report at nine or
ten or one tomorrow, we have an indictment. And they
would show up the jail because they knew if they didn't,
they'd come pick them up at home. What that's turned
into now is it's actually the tactics of the Gestapo
(19:59):
use the middle of the night wee hours of the morning.
You bust in, you drag them out of bed, and
you don't let them even put on clothes. What happened
to the FBI You drag them out in front of
CNN or some other liberal media that you leaked the
information illegally too before you did the search, and so
(20:20):
that they could film it in their underwear. What happened
to our Justice Department?
Speaker 3 (20:24):
That was not the way they were.
Speaker 10 (20:28):
They had some decency about them, but they become so political.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
We missed him dearly in the House of Representatives. And
of course the interest song you heard there by the
Kingsman Louis Louis he was ten years old, I believe
when that came out, so we can have him reflect
on that as well. But what you heard in the
clip was from just over three years ago, in the
wake of the marl Lago raid by Jack Smith, and
(20:53):
of course that followed a few years previous to that
a similar rate in which CNN was tipped off of
Rogers Stone Own, a former Trump associate as well.
Speaker 3 (21:02):
This follows a pattern.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
It's a pattern that Louis Gohmert identified and it's one
of the comments on and his latest for front page
mad which you can find entitled Arctic Frost Spying on
members of Congress is a constitutional crisis. He joins us
now on Ryan Schuling Live, the Great Louis Gohmert, thank
you so much for your time, Louis.
Speaker 8 (21:21):
Brian is great to talk to you, and thanks for
that lead in. And actually, when I was twelve, I
was in the first band in East Texas and we
played that song and some people didn't know what the
words were. They thought they were X right, But actually
we were twelve and we could do it, and we
covered it quite well. But the FBI, the DOJ, there's
(21:46):
still too many in there that should not be in
there because they helped bring it to the low depths
of depravity that it reached in pursuing Gestapo tactics. But uh,
it's to this Arctic frost. Uh. The mainstream media is
not covering it at all. And Ryan, I appreciate you
(22:08):
covering it.
Speaker 9 (22:09):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (22:10):
I know some it's been talked about, but people have
got to understand how critically a big deal this is.
Where it's not just that they got a grand jury
subpoena without probable cause and started grabbing up all of
our phone data, and we're not sure what all they got.
(22:33):
That that's ongoing and with the help of Tom Fitton's
Judicial Watch and Sean Donaghan that they're they're they're they're
doing some more digging for us. But and Graffley's not
through I know the Judiciary Committee in the House. They
were mainly looking at what they did did and grabbed
(22:54):
on Jim Jordan's stuff. But uh, and initially there was
no information about me. But Grassley's people called and said, hey,
you were in the middle of this too. So anyway,
the way it's it's not just Article for the Protection
(23:15):
from inappropriate search and seizure unless there is probable cause
that a crime was committed. This individual probably was involved.
You have one testimony of that. It goes beyond that
because you also have a congressional privilege. And I know
(23:35):
some people reacted, you know, adversely that oh so they
think they're about the law. No, no, no, it's part of
the Constitution's part of the law because constituents contact us.
And there were Jim Jordan and I were talking about
members of the FBI and the DOJ who were contacting
us and saying, hey, there are members of the DOJ
(23:57):
that are supporting perjurory get demanding that we sign affidavids
that we're telling them that's not true, that didn't happen,
just so they can get warrants and that kind of thing.
And then to find out they were grabbing our phone information,
finding out who contacted us. There is a reason for
(24:22):
that privilege, that congressional privilege. That DJ is not supposed
to be able to grab that data without a third party,
and historically it's been house counsel with the House representatives.
You have a warrant for a member of Congress to
search their office, get all their files and stuff. First
(24:43):
you present a house counsel. They grab everything. They don't
let a house member get in there. They grab everything,
and then they go through it to figure out what's privileged,
what's constituents private information, what's whistleblower information, and they don't
allow the DOJ to get that, and then they turned
that over. But here they just blew past all of
(25:06):
that and why because they're apt to find anything. It's
the Stalin technique. Show me the man and I'll find
a crime. I'll create one if I have to. And
that is exactly where they were going this is a
scary stuff for keeping a constitution.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
His latest op ed featured in Front Page mag entitled
Arctic frost spying on members of Congress is a constitutional crisis.
He's correct now, he was correct then many mocked him
as being some far right radical that was kind of
making something up out a whole cloth. But the puzzle
pieces fit here. Louis gohmert our guest, former congressman, of course,
currently Senior Fellow for Political Statesmanship with the David Horowitz
(25:49):
Freedom Center, and himself a former judge and also a
JAG attorney for the US Army of veterans serving our country.
So so many angles that you know this law inside
and out from Louis, and I want to kind of
pin down on that detail that frustrates so many of
us out here in the conservative movement.
Speaker 3 (26:06):
You mentioned Jim Jordan, We've heard from James Comer.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
We've seen these details uncovered, and it goes from the
Raid of roger Stone, the Raid of marl Lago, the
Russia collusion hoax based on the drunken ramblings of a
Russian dude in a bar that became the Steel dossier
for which there were Faiza warrants secured by James Comy
that led to a couple of years that you're very
(26:31):
familiar with, in which the Mueller investigation played out at
hamstrung President Trump's first term and then now spying on
members of Congress.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
The whole rub here, though, Louis, is that.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
There are no consequences for these individuals.
Speaker 3 (26:45):
We just saw a judge at frog and that.
Speaker 8 (26:47):
Is the problem. Yeah, the problem. You put your finger
right on it. If we had had consequences back when
some of these things were starting, then I don't think
we would have ever gotten to Arctic fraud. But nobody
was held accountable. And actually back in five and six
I mentioned in my article William Jefferson, and he was
(27:10):
guilty of sin and they got appropriately a warrant to
search his house, found ninety thousand dollars cold hard cash
in his breezer. They had probable casts to do that.
They probably had probable costs to get a warrant to
search his office. But instead of going to House Council
and making sure they didn't get something that was privileged,
(27:33):
they just went wanted to send it. This was Moorish,
director of the FBI. They wanted to send us message
to Congress and just smashing your face. They came in
in the middle of the night and took everything out
of his office. And I was part of the meeting
when all these attorneys from the White House, the DOJ,
(27:55):
the House Counsel, the House Council going, you have no
right to do that. You took up stuff that was privileged.
Oh no, But the judge approved our plan where we
would have people in our office that would view it
and make sure we'll give back things that are privileged.
And so that was appeal to the DC Circuit Court
(28:16):
of Appeals and they said, no, you can't do that.
It's got to be a third party, it can't be
somebody in the DJ.
Speaker 9 (28:22):
But there were no consequences whatsoever for that. And Muller
got away with that. And he got away with so
much when he was director of the FBI, and then
he got away with so much when he was Special Counsel,
and he was never held accountable. And then the judges,
(28:42):
you know, the FCE a.
Speaker 8 (28:43):
Judge, you bring up the warrants, you know, going after
Trump for a year. They got four different warrants, and
one of them an FBI agent lied in the affidavit. Now,
I'm telling you, when I was a felony judge, if
some lawyer had lied in an affidavit knowingly that first
(29:05):
of all, you're going to be found in contempt. It's
been six months in jail just selling the contempt, and
then we'll worry about prosecuting you in how many years
you get in prison after that? But the Viza judge
didn't seem to be bothered at all. We're not holding
the judges accountable for all of their wrongdoing, and so
(29:26):
these things have got to be done well, you've got
to hold people accountable. Just as you're pointing.
Speaker 2 (29:32):
Out Ryan Luis gohmert our guest his article artic Frost
spying on members of Congress is a constitutional crisis, and
the subhetter there what I learned about FBI spying in
and out of Congress. Louis informing us in this interview
that he was, in fact a targets Senator Grassley's office
has pointed out final question here, Louis, appreciate your time.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Really look forward to the next.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
Visit as well, and that is when somebody like Eric
Swaalwell or so many members of the left are warning
about you've heard it before, the same refrain. Trump is
an existential's threat to democracy because he's weaponizing the DOJ
against his political opponents. Has there ever been a bigger
example of projection that you've ever seen?
Speaker 8 (30:16):
That's none that I've ever seen before, projection, gaslighting. Yeah,
this is the best example you'll ever find. Exactly, You're
dead on right, lions, exactly.
Speaker 3 (30:29):
So where does it go from here? Louis? We have
the frustration.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
I know you were doing the good work in the House,
and unfortunately there are very few members of Congress that
I would say that about that. He really had the
intent of getting to the bottom of this and making
sure people are held accountable. Who can do that? Is
it going to be a Congressional committee? Is it going
to have to be Pam Bondi, the AG's office, the
current DOJ?
Speaker 3 (30:52):
What does that look like?
Speaker 8 (30:54):
Well, you know, we're seeing some clean up by the
heads of these departments, but that's a check and balance
that comes from Congress. And during my eighteen years in
the Judiciary Committee, we didn't do enough oversight and hold
these people accountable and refer them for prosecution, not nearly
(31:16):
like we should have, and as a result, people got
away with stuff. I mean, heck, look at the lowest
learner in the scandal in the irs. Nobody was held
accountable for that. We voted to hold their colder in contempt,
but there were no consequences. Maynor wouldn't allow us to
do anything about that. And we have oversight over all
(31:40):
of the judges except the Supreme Court. That we brought
them into the world as my constitutional are you, professor said,
and we can take them out. We can change their jurisdiction.
You know, we have control over their ethics, and we
have not brought them in and held them accountable. Both
Burg and these others they should have accused themselves. They've
(32:04):
shown so much bias they should not be in any
case where they've shown bass. And I've tried during my
eighteen years, during the years wearing the majority, let's bring
in these judges and question them about their bad behavior.
But I'm telling you that David Horwitz Freedom Center have
started something called the Judicial Accountability Project, where we're gathering
(32:27):
up the information dossier's if you will, we're going to
provide to the Judiciary committees in both houses and say
you've got to call them in and hold them accountable
for all this impropriety and impeach them, remove them. You
don't have to wait for a high crime or misdemeanor.
(32:48):
The article pre section one says that they hold their
office only during their good behavior. And you show nobody
has taken that position. Clea that I hear of? Uh
there are, Well, you're going to commit a high crime
and miss met treason, you know, a bribery. No, they
(33:08):
only get to sit there and during their good behavior.
If it's bad, listen, impeach them and remove them. And
that needs to be done with the judges. And you
do that to two or three, I think you'll see
a whole different situation in the federal judiciary. And we
do that to some of these prosecutors, We do that
to some of the fy Eye agents. We do that
(33:30):
to some of the people that have come before us
and lied. I mean, just sit there as some of
us did, and have people Peter Strock my words, sit there.
You get that look like I know I'm lying. You
know I'm lying, but you can't do anything about it.
That's why I finally said, I can't ever wonder if
(33:52):
you had that same smart hundreds of times you lie
to your wife, and then everybody went nuts. But when
you're testifying, credibility is always an issue. It's always germane,
It's always relevant. But the Democrats went nuts. But he
did you know, he might out like he was always
selling the truth. Well he wasn't. He's a liar. So anyway,
(34:16):
these people have got to be exposed, nailed, accountable, and
that Congress has been more interested in SoundBite and we
got to get to the We got to hold them
accountable and have some punishment for wrongdoing, and we have
not done that.
Speaker 3 (34:34):
As he touched down.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
Currently Senior Fellow for Political Statesmanship with the David Horowitz
Freedom Center. His latest for Front Page mag artic frost
spying on members of Congress is a constitutional crisis.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
You can follow him on x at Rep. Louis Gohmert.
Speaker 2 (34:47):
I wish I could talk him back into running for
the House, but here we are. You can find out
more online too at Gomert dot com. That's gohn e
rt dot com. Louie Gomert, great talking with you. Hope
it can be the first of many conversationtions going forward.
Speaker 8 (35:01):
I look forward to it, Ryan, Thank you. And most
fun I ever had at a summit was the Western
Conservative Summit of twenty fifteen. The audience was the best
I've ever spoken to. It was incredible. I've had a
lot of great memories in Denver. I look forward to
having more.
Speaker 3 (35:20):
He's one of the great ones.
Speaker 2 (35:21):
Louis Gohmert joining us here on Ryan Schuling Live, wrapping
up our number one after this, let's get some text
now to round out our number one here on Ryan
Schuling Live. Our thanks to Louis Gohmert for joining us
in that previous segment, making this one a little bit shorter.
But we got plenty to get to in our number two,
so let's go to it. Christmas movies. We turned that
(35:42):
calendar to December. Die Hard, Oh, I know this is
fodder for talk radio. It's cliche, maybe the conversation, but
I will argue to the death that Die Hard is,
in fact, yes, a Christmas movie. There's so many Christmas
themes throughout it. And here's the key, here's the kicker
to argue against somebody who would contend other The climactic
scene with Hans Gruppa and John McLain depends upon there
(36:08):
being the holiday season and spirit in their midst, because
if it wasn't there wouldn't be the materials there for
John McClain to do what he needs to do to save.
Speaker 3 (36:18):
Holly and send Hans.
Speaker 2 (36:21):
Often I could tell me Plaza Building about forty floors
and stories to his death. Sorry spoiler alert, but that
movie came out in nineteen eighty eight, so it's on.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
You if you haven't seen it yet. Coming up in
our second.
Speaker 2 (36:32):
Hour, an incident at a town hall in Grand Junction,
Victor Marx confronted on his stance an abortion, going to
try to call balls and strikes on that one, and
a special guest who interacted with them.
Speaker 3 (36:44):
Coming up on Ryan Schuling Live