Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This hour of programming on seven ten wor. He's sponsored
by Toyota City and Mamaranac and Nissan City of port Chester,
proud members of the Integrity Automotive Group. Now former Westchester
County Executive. Rob Astorina on seven ten wore.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
All right, welcome to another week of Rob Asperino here
on seven to ten wor. What a week it was.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Holy good God.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Those scoundrels, thieves, tyrants, murderers, anti Semites, those are the
good ones at the United Nations. Thank god they're gone.
And what a great speech by Trump and bb at
net and Yahoo just took their faces off and shamed
the shameless. But it was so fun to watch. And
of course we got Mamdami, who, as I've said, will
(00:56):
be the next mayor, and I've said this before the primary,
by the way, and I'm gonna bring on somebody in
just a little bit. Who was the mayor of New
York City, the last Republican probably will ever have. That
would be no, not Michael Bloomberg. He rented the Republican line.
He was a Democrat his whole life. Rudy Giuliani the mayor.
He'll be on in just a second. So of course
(01:17):
I can rack up the calls. One eight hundred and
three to two one zero seven ten. That's the number.
You should have it memorized, like your Social Security one
eight hundred three to two to one zero seven ten.
Later on we'll talk about the New Jersey race as well.
Chitarelli is tied with that liar Mikey Cheryl. If you're
(01:39):
not knowing what I'm talking about, of course, this is
this whole story going around that she lied and got
caught in the in the naval academy and wasn't able
to walk for her big graduation. That's a big story,
by the way. And you know I told you last
week when I was in Rome and got to meet
the pope. So you know the Pope is always given
(02:00):
these gifts by just regular people who walk up and
give him things, or heads of state. Well he's been
got a Harley Davidson. So what actually happens with all
these gifts that the pope receives I found out and
I will tell you in a little while. But now
(02:23):
we got to talk about the mayor's race because it's
getting closer and closer. I mean, it's coming up in
like less than forty days, so it's right around the corner.
The polling has really not moved, which is not good
news for anybody who's normal, because Cuomo, as he has been,
has been stuck in the mid twenties. Adams has been
in single digits, which has got awful for a sitting mayor,
(02:45):
and Kurtis Sliwa is stuck in like the mid teens.
But nobody has moved, nobody's broken out, and so Mamdami
is sitting there in the mid forties and he really
doesn't have to do anything, and it's it's frightening what
is about to be and what this city is going
to embark on unless something changes dramatically, and I want
(03:06):
to know if that can happen. So that's why Rudy
Giuliani is with me on seven to ten w R Mayor.
How are you?
Speaker 3 (03:14):
I am very very good, Rob, how are you? And
you're doing a great job, by the way, thank you.
I've been watching your coverage all throughout the selection of
the Pope, and my goodness, you've been terrific.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
Oh, thank you. And I just walked over from Newsmax.
I did my show. I saw you on Newsmax the
other night. With So, I why the hell did you
scare everybody? You got that accident in New Hampshire. Everyone
was praying for you. Scared. I texted your son right away.
Hope he's okay. But so are you okay?
Speaker 3 (03:41):
Now?
Speaker 2 (03:41):
What happened?
Speaker 3 (03:43):
Yeah? I am okay. I was I mean, I was
actually trying to help a woman who was being allegedly
she stopped us, saying she was being beaten up by
her boyfriend. Without getting you through the whole complex story,
I was with Ted Goodman, you know, my guy, and
Ted and I tried to help her. We called the police.
(04:04):
It ended up she got she got arrested for beating
up her boyfriend. Not only that, he went off in
an ambulance.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
Oh my god.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
But as we pulled away we got hit by a woman,
a younger woman, who was distracted by the all the
police cars. But by the time we were finished, there
were two police cars, a fire truck and a and
an ambulance, so the lights were blaring.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
It was.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
It was on a New Hampshire highway. We were coming
home from a from a minor league baseball game and
the car hit us at about seventy five miles an hour.
Oh my god, and I had a seatbelt on, and
I would say I got stomach lash as opposed to whiplash,
and I broke a vertebrae in my back. So I
(04:51):
was at the hospital for about three days. It was
really pretty bad for about a week. And I have
to tell you now, three weeks later, I'm a pretty
good sho.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
You know what, You're a tough son of a bitch.
They can't knock you down. There's no way they can.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
I think I missed one night of my show. I think,
not even sure. I missed the night and and and that,
and that was it.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
They can't get rid of you. I love it. So
let's talk about this mayor's race. I I have said
from that it's beyond sad, it's dangerous. I said like
two or three weeks before the primary that Mamdami was
going to win, and I gave all the reasons why
he had momentum, which is so important. He had He
(05:32):
had people who were were behind him for a cause.
I mean, it's it's terrible, but they believe in this crap.
But but they were motivated and Cuomo they I they
do and Cuomo had all the money. But this wasn't
an air war, and and the experience that Cuomo was
(05:53):
running on was not the experience that people liked, so
they weren't motivated. He didn't have an army like he
didn't even have the party really behind him. So now
we are where we are. And I have been admonished
by too many people who say you, you can't go
on the air and say that that man Dommy's going
to win, because but I said, but I'm telling the truth.
(06:13):
I have to tell the truth the way I see it.
I just don't see anybody catching him. What do you see.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
I can't disagree with you very much. I keep hoping,
and I mean this, I keep hoping for a miracle.
Miracles do happen in politics. I mean, we've all been wrong.
Usually they're wrong. You know, they were sure that they
were sure that Carrie was going to win. They even
(06:43):
were picking a cabinet on the night of the election.
The first time I ran, I lost by a percent
and a half, but I was losing by twelve And
the first time I won, I was losing by six
and I won by two and a half. So that's
a big spread in New York. I don't think I've
ever bet anywhere close to the number I got when
(07:03):
I ran in New York. I was always i would say,
five to six points behind, however, and so I was Trump,
by the way, and almost every other Republican. But that's
too much for Curtis. I mean, Curtis Curtis has I mean,
among other things, he doesn't have any money, but I
don't know that would have made a difference. This guy's running.
(07:25):
I mean, it's tragic to say he's running a terrific
campaign and are terrible. He just hot his campaign. And
maybe because our city is made up of just too
many people that don't care anymore because they mostly don't vote,
and then too many highly brainwashed people like in Chicago.
(07:45):
How do you explain in Chicago sixty five years not
a Republican mayor and on weekends they kill each other
like it's Vietnam, and as be going that's been going
off for the same sixty five years, and they keep
going back, and then they keep coctly the worst Democratic
candidate though that you never.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Thought they could go worse from Lightfoot, and they did.
They went even worse.
Speaker 3 (08:07):
So you know, yeah, this one, this one is someone
was on my show and said, it's really strange in Chicago.
How do they pick the dumbest man in Chicago to.
Speaker 2 (08:15):
Be made you? So when you ran in the eighties,
and I mean I grew up that time, so I was,
I was in high school in college, and you know,
coming into the city, and I saw how horrible it was,
and honestly, it wasn't It wasn't smart of some of
us from from the suburbs to come on into the
(08:36):
city and have to deal with it. But of course
it's New York City. We loved it. And it was tumultuous,
right the seventies were tumultuous. In the eighties with the
crime and everything. You come in and you do exactly
what you're supposed to do as a leader, you clean
this place up.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
But what was the.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
Difference between like the city, the people who lived in
the city then and the people who live in the
city now. It seems to me like a massive difference.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
Honestly, there was a difference. And even though even though
I faced the crime problem that's about four times the
present crime problem, and I faced economic problems that were
equivalent to now maybe worse, maybe probably worse. I had
a one point one million people on welfare and growing.
(09:26):
But I had a population of people of middle class
people who would vote Democrat normally but could change their minds.
Like you know, they only did it three times in
the twentieth century, so not a lot. They did it
for La Guardian, and they did it for Lindsay, who
(09:46):
then became a Democrat the second time around, and then
they did it for me, So at least there was
a history of that. And I've got to tell you,
the Jewish vote, the Jewish vote and the Hispanic vote
probably made the biggest differen So I got the obvious
vote that I would get. I lost the Black vote
the first time around I read against the first black mayor.
(10:07):
I mean both times lost in won. But the second
time against them, I went up to ten twelve percent,
and I'd only been at five. That probably made a difference,
believe it or not. My Hispanic vote was pushing, you know,
forty percent, and my Jewish vote was seventy. Wow, And
(10:28):
it was the fear of crime. It was really over
the fear of crime. And a lot of those people
have now moved out of the city, they don't live
there anymore. So the spread then was five Democrats to
everyone Republican. The spread now is more like seven to one.
(10:49):
The Democrats are considerably more I guess left wing or
and the ones who are all right, I have kind
of lost hope. I still think if you got the
whole city to vote, if you got the whole city
to vote, one of those three guys would probably win,
(11:10):
particularly if just one of them to drop out, meaning Cuomo,
Adams or Curtis. And I really, and I probably feel
this because I'm a Republican, but I think this is
the correct anast both you and I. I think I think
would be pretty honest as Republicans. I think Curtis would
actually have the best chance that the other two dropped out,
(11:31):
because he has the least against him. I just think
people won't vote for Kmo. You know, look, I honestly
i'd vote for Como. Now I would.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
I would throw up and have to vote for him.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
But I mean, you and I have every reason not
to vote, reason yes, but I would vote for him
to save my city. I would vote for Adams even easier,
And of course i'd vote for for for for Curtis.
But they've given up on Cuomo and Adams. They haven't
(12:06):
given up on Curtis. They just don't consider them. So
if anybody has a miracle, it will be Kurts. Yeah,
like the Holy Spirit came down visited everyone and said, hey,
do the right thing.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
For one yes, please, But that would be tough in
a very atheist city as we have right now. And
that's part of the problem too. I mean, when you
ran Dinkins was Dinkins was liberal and you were dealing
with liberals, but liberals, as we knew that they were different.
They were you could have a debate, and they were
about free speech and they were We disagreed with them,
(12:41):
but they were far more sensible. Today we're talking about
hard leftist progressives who really, in many ways truly and
they said it, they say it out loud. Now hate
this country and everything about it. And you've got a
majority of Democrats now identify more with socialism than than capitalism,
(13:01):
and their disdain for America is on display. I mean,
they say it now, so it's not like we're projecting
that on them, and that's very tough to deal with.
So I don't know how we get over these hurdles.
And we're talking with Mayor Giuliani here on seventy away.
Speaker 3 (13:16):
The only way we would get over these hurdles. And
this is not meant that Curtis is a I mean
I've been Curtis's supporter since nobody knew him. And they
used to arrest them, and I was us attorney and
the view and the police would go after them when
I would defend them because the police police were angry
at him. And you know, I love the police department,
but if a human agency. Four my uncles were Cobbs,
(13:40):
but I knew they were jealous them. He was doing
what they were supposed to do. And it wasn't then
the democratic policies in the city like now prevented them
from doing what they should do to keep the city straight.
I don't know if you remember the restaurant rogue situation. God,
I had to be about nineteen nineteen eighty seven, eighty
(14:03):
eight that forty I think it's forty seventh Street right
off eighth Avenue. All these restaurants are there and people
go to them right before a Broadway place Saturday night.
It cats really big. Well, there was crime going on there,
like crazy people getting killed, people getting robbed, and the
comps will do nothing and Curtis brought his people down
(14:24):
there and they got they get basically, they basically get
a Juliani or a Trump. They stopped crying, they stopped it,
and then the police farmer found a reason to arrest him.
I went, I and so I went and helped get
him out. And then when he got when he almost
got killed by the goddies, they made it appear as
(14:45):
if he did it. I went to the hospital and
visited him as the US attorney who knew more about
the mafia than any of them, and said, this is
they're leting this guy get killed. So Curtis is a
real hero. Somehow he can't seem to get beyond whatever
narrative they presented for him. And that's why I keep
hoping if the two of them, the other two ever
(15:06):
had the ever had it just the slightest bit of
love for the city except themselves, and dropped out and
miraculously supported him. You know, I won with the endorsement
of Ed Koch, the former Democratic mayor, and the endorsement
that you carry the former Democratic governor. So I needed
(15:27):
and I was a well known US attorney with a
nine exent name recognition, So it's even then it was hard.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Yeah, that's the point, as bad as it was.
Speaker 3 (15:39):
When I say miracles, those are the kinds of miracles.
And he needs something. He needs something that's going to
get the attention of all the people of the city.
They're gonna wake up and they and take all of
the Curtis Now you know, thirty years later, also you
got to know about Curtis and a lot of those
people in his organization. These are people he saved. Yeah,
(15:59):
he just use them. They don't go about fighting with people.
I don't think it's never been an interesting of them
fighting with anyone in thirty five years. They go and
they get in the middle, and they do on a
regular basis what Daniel Penny had to do on that one,
you know occasion, or my goodness, that poor girl in
Atlanta could have used with the guy's stabner and everybody yawning.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Oh and Charlotte, you're horrible, horrible, absolutely horrible. And we're
talking to Rudy Giuliani here on seven to ten. Wr
I the problem is Cuomo is sitting there with mid
twenties and he's capped out. I said from the whole
for months, he ain't gonna get more than thirty percent.
He's he's he's reached his limit, and ma'am, dommy can
(16:47):
only grow. This is a referendum on Adams, and so
to me, the only you know to reward Cuomo for
taking part in destroying New York and New York City,
I can't see happening. I can't see doing that. And
that's why most people talk.
Speaker 3 (17:03):
I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't see how
either one of them moves right, because the people have
made up their minds about them, whereas in the case
of Curtis Right, they haven't had a chance to make
up him. That's right, because he hasn't had enough coverage
number one. Number two, he doesn't have enough money to
get his story across, so he would need something really
(17:26):
dramatic to happen to him, like the other two deciding
I can't let my city go to a communist. I'm
not gonna be the mayor for sure. How about we
give this guy a shot. Yep, he probably only have
us for four years in a Democrat to get it
back again. But at least we be saved from I
(17:47):
don't the government running grocery stores.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
It's even it's even worse than that. It's just what's
gonna be? What what's gonna be fermented in this city
in four years? I mean were I would beg for
Deblasio to come back. That's how bad it's gonna be.
Do you have Do you have a couple of minutes
to hold on? Do you have like two minutes to
hold on? Because I have a couple of questions.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
I mean, I can't imagine. I hate even playre publicly.
You know, somebody's got repeated to me a couple of years.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
Hold on one second. I got a couple questions, including
about Tollmy that I got to ask you, So hold
on all right, thank you. So I gotta tell you
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(18:42):
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materio contractors. All right, we will come back with America's mayor,
Rudy Giuliani. You're gonna talk to him about James Comy
and he was a former prosecutor. How would he deal
(19:26):
with this? How would he make sure that Cami was
found guilty?
Speaker 3 (19:31):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (19:31):
And plus I want to ask him something about Donald Trump.
So stick around, folks here on seven to ten WR.
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Leros TG dot com. America's mayor and the best we've
ever had in New York and probably the last Republican
that we will see maybe in my lifetime. Rudy Giuliani
with us here on seven to ten wor so. The
Komy indictment happened the other night. Of course, the left
(20:59):
is going crazy because they totally forget what they put
this country through over the last ten years, what they
put you through. And the President of the United States
and anyone associated with him, and Letitia Jaye, I mean,
the list goes on. It's so horrible. But so the
indictment came out. I'm sure you read it. Took about
a minute. But anyway, yeah, very very good.
Speaker 3 (21:21):
It's a brilliant indictment. I'm going to tell you why
in a minute. Having done about you know, a couple
four or five thousand of them, the fact that the
fact that it's a short indictment in a very important
case tells me they got a much bigger case. This
is the beginning. This is this is the introduction to
a fairly large novel.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
So you think like a superseding indictment, more charges.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
Later, every every every time I had a big case.
When I started with a two count indictment, you were
probably finished because what I was planning was to turn everybody.
And I had a series of other indictments in mine.
You may see four or five more of these, and
then you'll get a look the politicians. Rob It's not
(22:07):
like going after the mafia or terrorists or even sophisticated
Wall Street you know, entrepreneurs and whatever these guys craft.
I had. I had a very famous mafia political defenciler,
one of the top trialers. Uh tell me, when he
represented a congressman that I convicted. God I liked you know,
(22:31):
I hate those mafia guys because they heard Italian so much.
He was Italian, But I represent him and make a
lot of money. And I tell you why. At least
they don't punk out. You know, you know you're going
to have a trial. He almost got a crying on
the witness stand. He said, every politician I have, they
(22:51):
want the first thing. They want to figure out, who
can I can I ride out my mother?
Speaker 2 (23:00):
This is the first dominant.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
There a bunch. There are a bunch of characters here.
They've all been treated like you know, princes. They're going
to start getting treated like what they are, alleged criminals.
And if we got a good prosecutor or a couple,
not going to be hard to flip two or three
of them. You know, it happens both on the Republican
side of the Democrats side. Don't think I ever had
(23:22):
a political investigation without flipping a few people. So that's
why that two count indictment is there. I mean, this
could this could roll up into a major case when
you consider if the crime is trying to remove a
lawfully elected president with fraudulent testimony purchase testimony purchase a
(23:46):
purchase scheme. That's the core of it, right, the steel
Docky purchase for one point one million money could go
back to the people, not just Hillary. You've got thelaw
firm involved. The law firm laundered the money. Perkins Coe.
They made, they made, They lied and said it was illegal.
(24:08):
V It wasn't illegal. See, it was money, and it
was money in order to purchase a frame up and
to use it against Trump. UH. Cooperating in that effort
were Ukrainians. So the Russian collusion is the mirror image
and the flip on the Ukrainian collusion, which is, by
(24:29):
the way, what Marxists do all the time. They trained
to do it. You can read it in nineteen eighty
four if you want. They figured the best thing to
charge you with is what they do because they know
how to charge it. So Hillary was getting a lot
of help from the Ukrainian gupn Our embassy there was
known as her headquarters. The single contributor to the Clinton
(24:54):
Library is are Ukrainians. That's kind of they're selling not
the richest people in the world world, right, small country.
They were pouring stuff into her campaign like crazy. People
forget the Ukrainian Ambassador to America in October of twenty
sixteen endorsed for presidents the ambassador. So these are just
(25:18):
the little snippets of how entwined the Ukraine was in
her election in a way that turned out Russia wasn't
in his. And even what they were alegend about Russia
collusion isn't a crime. These people put money in, changed identities,
threatened people. I have all the evidence. This is why
(25:42):
they tried to destroy me. I gathered the evidence a
year and a half before the election, and I brought
it to the Senate. They don't want to do anything
with it. They didn't want to go after another senator.
I gave it to the State Department and they found
a way to bury it. Zelensky has it all. Alenk's
got more than I have. I always thought when when
(26:03):
Biden met with him, he and Zelensky asked for money,
Zelenski would say, gee, Joe, you don't want me to
put out those other pictures. Do So there's a big
case there in which in which Komy plays. You know,
he loves the top guy, but he plays a big role.
I mean, you couldn't have done it without him. The
(26:25):
first four months they had to Steel dossier. The FBI
concluded definitively it was unsure. They dismissed Steele as an informant,
and they paid him off to shut up Komy. Knew
all that when Komy was validating him as telling the
truth in it, and what I consider a Shaker affidavit
(26:45):
a Pizer AFFI, David, when you when you? I helped
to establish Fizer in the Ford administration as a sociated
Deputy Attorneys General. I might have written the first couple
of affidavits ever against Russians. Every time time I did it,
I felt a weight on my should. There's unlike any
other search war and I ever went for because nobody
(27:05):
was ever going to challenge it. I could take away
a person's private privacy just by what I wrote. And
all my people were trained by Attorney General Levy. This
is more sacred than anything you do. And by the way,
if you screw it up, we're gonna lose it and
you're gonna hurt the country. Comy works for me. I
(27:26):
trained him for three years. By the time he was
doing what he was doing, I already knew he was
a scoundrel. The Martha Stewart case was his case. The
only prosecutor that brings to Martha Stewart case is a
prosecutor that wants to see the regular faced on television.
That wasn't a real case. It was a one count.
(27:46):
It was a one count inside a trading case by
a woman who ever came inted a crime before. And
there even was a general rule we followed. And nobody
did more inside of trading cases than I did. I
almost invented it. So he's not gonna tell me what
the rules of inside of traded cases are. He knows
he accomplished as US attorney about five percent of what
(28:06):
I did. And yet and yet they made they made
a Deputy Attorney general. And it must be that he's
tall and he smiles. I call him James Cardinal Comy.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
Well now, but but you don't know well yeah, but
you don't know it. He's now been beatified. He's on
his way to sainthood from the left. So the so
but but the practical part of this, though, I want
to I'm interested in what you think about this. The
case is going to be in northern Virginia. Obviously, the
jury pool is probably gonna be pretty left. It's a
(28:39):
it's a very bo and they're gonna try to move it.
They'll try to move it, but it would be interesting
to d C. Well could it's not gonna be worse.
Speaker 3 (28:48):
Well, yeah, it could be worse. They're going to try
to move it to d C because they're gonna.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
Say they're gonna say that, well, that's where the information
was recorded in d C, and that where it became perjury,
whereas the government's going to say, no, it's when it
came out of his mouth in Virginia.
Speaker 3 (29:06):
DC would be worse in Virginia. Virginia is tough. DC's impossible.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
But what about the people who work in the US
Attorney's Office. You got to figure a lot of them
are careerists who are probably Democrats who live in and
work in DC, who hate Republicans but hate Trump more
than anything. They're they're this new US attorney appoint it's
probably to make sure this happened, let's be honest. And
(29:32):
so now what how are they going to move forward
with a case that probably a lot of them don't agree.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
With, Well, they don't agree with the case the US
They could leave.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
The office, yeah, which they should have.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
The FBI has scored them out. I mean, we don't
get to disagree with the US attorney. Uh, he's the
one who decides not You also, look, people want to
play this game. There's a big difference between what they
did and what we're doing. What they did is frame people.
I didn't commit a crime of any kind, neither of
the Trump, neither that any of the people that are
(30:07):
indicted in Georgia by that criminal or in Arizona in
a ridiculous case that's been half dismissed already, and the
judges basically told the government to dismiss the case. It
doesn't seem to have the you know what, that dismissed
it himself, right, I was indicted with nineteen other people
(30:28):
for free speech. I didn't do anything. I didn't touch anything.
I didn't destroy anything. I didn't hurt anybody. I didn't
punch anybody. I didn't do anything. I advocated for my client,
which I am morally obligated to do as a lawyer.
I'm morally obligated to give him the benefit of the doubt.
(30:51):
Not true. I mean, if there's something and it could
be true or not true, I got to argue that
it's true. It's an obligation of mine. I think I'm
the only lawyer in America that's ever been indicted for
enthusiastically representing their clients. I mean lawyers. Lawyers are even
(31:12):
I didn't lawyers have even men, according to court opinions,
entitled to lie on behalf of their clients if it's
close enough to something that has to be argued in
court legitimately. So I was framed. Everybody else was framed.
And if he can't see, the president was framed four times,
(31:33):
my goodness, four times, four times in one year. These
people are really guilty.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
These people are dangerous. We've got a cancer grown country
committed some of.
Speaker 3 (31:46):
The most serious crimes in the history of our republicving
trying to remove a lostfully elected president based upon purchase
testimony with the cooperation of a foreign government is about
as close to treason as you're going to get. If
it isn't treason.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
No, I've been saying that we're we're in I don't
think people realize it because they're too busy on Instagram
and TikTok of how how close we are to losing
this country. Because there is a very dangerous element that
is getting more and more powerful and it's you know,
we're going to see him put his hand up in January.
Ma'm dommi and those of his ilk who have infiltrated
(32:25):
our government, and they are being powered by this leptist
movement of stupid people, ignorant people, especially younger people. But
I mean it's not something to joke about anymore. I
mean this is really dangerous stuff happening in this country.
Speaker 3 (32:39):
Ye. There's no more room for joking. No, and there's
no more room for being intimidated by They are saying, oh,
you're taking vengeance.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
Yeah, and they're violence and their violence.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
No, no, we're not. We're saving the justice system. That's
what we're doing. Yep. I don't want vengis against any
of these people. I want justice, yep.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
And there and they're.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
Proof to come out. I don't. I don't have any
doubt what the facts are I got on tape. Well,
I can prove I can prove to you the money
that Biden got that he got away with on tape.
You know, you know who's the best witness against Biden's son.
His son says on a on an email, I gave
half my money to my my father for thirty years.
Speaker 2 (33:22):
Yeah, well, the auto pen took care of that for him, Yes.
Speaker 3 (33:27):
But not not not for the truth of what happened.
The man was getting bribed for thirty years. Every every
penny that that drug addict god came from a foreign country.
Half of them our enemies, and they went to his
old man as a senator or vice president. That's about it.
I mean, I could take a first year law student
and convict somebody of that. Biden is so guilty, it's
(33:49):
absurd what he got away with. And then let's just
go right down the line all the people that helped him.
How about the people that covet up that he was
a dangerous president who didn't know what's button depressed?
Speaker 2 (34:00):
No, I know, yeah, no, there's no question. And you
know you wouldn't know it if you watch then n
R MSNBC, which I do on occasion because I want
to get angry before I go to bed. Last thing,
last thing. Tell me something funny about Donald Trump or
something about Donald Trump that we don't know about.
Speaker 3 (34:20):
Oh gosh, I don't know if I should do that.
I can tell you, I can tell you. I can
tell you that when I went through a very difficult
divorce and there were issues with my children. The guy,
the guy who helped bring my son back to me
with Donald Trump, that's great, no wonder.
Speaker 2 (34:42):
I love him, and by.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
And Andrew, Andrew considers him. Andrew now is running FIFA
for Help for for for HH and he Homeland Security.
And I got a little choked when I said that.
But you know, for about a year a year and
a half, Andrew's a great golfer and was a professional golfer.
(35:05):
He was sponsored by Donald Trump. But Donald used to
play golf with them all the time. I still does.
And he would say, you know, your father really loves you,
and you know, I don't know if you know this
would be paid for everything and all he ever does
ask about you. And we got back together and now
it's like we're very very close. But I credited Donald
(35:27):
for doing that and missed the president. I used to
call him Donald, and you don't forget something like that.
So when he was in trouble being charged with what
I knew was something untrue Russian collusion, I was in
law practice. Then I walked out of a law practice
where I was making four to six million dollars a
year and I said I'm going to defend him, and
(35:50):
I thought I was doing something noble because it was unpopular.
I grew up in an era in which lawyers had
defended unpopular causes were heroes, and I became satan.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
Yep, Rudy, I I think, thank you for sharing that.
That's really cool. I think the world of Trump too,
and I've told stories to be a.
Speaker 3 (36:10):
Very very good man. Is he is for some reason.
Maybe maybe they have to do that because they don't
want any of that to get through. I mean, he's
popular anyway. If all that got through, my goodness, Yep.
I can't tell you the number of people that come
up to me and tell me a story like I
just told you just the end of the day. I'm
in New Hampshire for the for the summer, coming back
(36:31):
in about a week, and I just got somebody in
New Hampshire tell me how he helped her. He was
up here during the first primary, heard about somebody being sick.
He got them into the right hospital, kept after it.
Can yousee Biden doing that? Biden won't even remember he
put him in the wrong hospital.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
Yeah, or he charged them something to do it.
Speaker 3 (36:51):
Yeah, Hunters show.
Speaker 2 (36:54):
Up, Rudy, It's so good to hear you on the
air with me. I appreciate it, and you know how much, well,
you know how much I love you and your son,
and Andrew and I. It's crazy we ran against each other. Well,
we're both in a primary with four people, and we
couldn't ever say a bad word about each other, Nor
(37:14):
did we in that primary in twenty twenty two for governor.
I hope to God that Andrew runs again for something,
because he should be in public service. He is terrific
and you should too.
Speaker 3 (37:25):
But you're doing a great job for Newsmatch obviously well
here too, but you're doing a great job for news Match.
Your coverage is not on and compelling.
Speaker 2 (37:34):
I appreciate that, and it's good to talk to you.
Thanks you, thanks for coming on. Feel better and let's
hope for that miracle in the mayor's race. Rudy Giuliani.
Speaker 3 (37:44):
I know you're a very religious man, but we Prian.
Speaker 2 (37:46):
We are. We are Rudy Giuliani here on seven to
ten wo or What a great mayor he was. I God,
I wish he were running now. All right, I got
a couple of things I want to tell you about
what the Pope does with the gifts that he receives.
It's really interesting. And also these immigration judges are being fired,
thank god, and they're whining like little babies, and there's
(38:08):
a good reason why they're getting fired. Plus, of course,
in Jersey, chitterally tied with Eryl in a new poll
that that state is winnable. New Jersey is winnable, and
she's a horrible, horrible candidate far left being portrayed as
like middle of the road. So a lot to talk about,
(38:29):
but don't go away. And I gotta tell you about
AG Williams painting.
Speaker 3 (38:33):
Williams painting a G.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
Williams painting the people just to do the job right.
Speaker 2 (38:42):
Oh yeah, nineteen oh six is when the company was founded.
If you've been in business in this horrible state of
New York for business, if you've been in business since
nineteen oh six, I would say, then then you are
a successful business. In fact, they're so successful they're in
the Westchester County Business Hall of Fame. So it's time
(39:05):
to paint your house. Still got time while the weather
is decent inside or out, obviously, but I would give
them a call a G. Williams because they know how
to paint. They have expert craftsmen that will come over
and fix the stuff that needs to be fixed. So
give them a call because they've been doing this forever.
(39:29):
They'll give you a quote. Don't use a cheap contractor.
They're licensed their professionals. Agwilliams Painting dot com. Agwilliams Painting
dot Com.
Speaker 1 (39:44):
Ag Williams Painting the Popillam just to.
Speaker 3 (39:49):
Do the job right.
Speaker 2 (39:50):
I talked right over that woman singing, Hey, how could
I do that? All right? More of The rob Astorino
Show on seven to ten wor I love Larry's show.
In fact, I love it so much I go on
every Friday morning at seven o eight. So make sure
you listen to Lowry Mente every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
and then of course Mark Simone right after him. The
whole lineup is great to we faila listened to Jimmy
(40:14):
yet if you don't, if you didn't know he's on,
He's on at nine o'clock at night weeknights. Make sure
you follow me on all the social media Facebook, X
and stuff, get her and if you miss any of
today's show, or if you want to listen to Rudy's
Rudy made some pretty strong comments there and really good stuff.
(40:35):
And I love that story about Donald Trump getting him
and his son back together. That's really that was really heartwarming. Anyway,
if you want to listen to it or send it
to somebody, go on the app the iHeart app to
the Rob Astarino Show, or of course you could always
listen to us live right here on the good old
radio or seven to ten woor dot com, no matter
(40:59):
where you are. I was coming over here after my
NEWSMAC show and walking across Fifth Avenue, and this couple
accosted me in a good way. They were from Mineola,
and they they said they watched me on TV. They
listened to me on w o R today. They were
in the city just kind of having fun. But they
(41:20):
generally and that's I still love that when people say
hi and come up to me, and hopefully you tell
your friends about the show, about this show, about the
NEWSMAC show. I should have offered to take Rudy to
the Pleasantville Diner. He would have loved the rice pudding there,
or to Domini's on Arthur Revenue, where he is like God.
(41:41):
He's Giuliani is like God on Arthur Revenue. Still trust me,
picture is up everywhere. He would have drawn such a
big crowd. I gotta take him to I gotta take
him there my treat. Oh, let's see. Oh. So you know,
I was in Rome several weeks ago and I had
the great fortune of meeting Pope Leo. And I explained
(42:04):
last week how it works, and you know, it's called
a batchamano, which basically means kiss, kiss the hand, and
you know, you go up there, you get like a minute.
It wasn't a private audience, but it was a after
his Wednesday afternoon, the general audience is what they call it.
But anyway, got a chance to meet with him. My
pictures posted on Instagram and I think on Facebook from
(42:27):
last week the picture I had with him. So it
was a really nice moment and I was kind of interested.
I didn't ask him this, but I had a private
tour of the of the archives, the Vatican Archives when
I was out there. Very very cool and so we
got we got to areas where the public never goes
and saw we didn't open them up, but saw where
(42:51):
all of these very old documents dating back many many
many centuries, and the significance of them and really just
really cool. So one of the things that happens all
the time. When you know, when dignitaries, when foreign leaders
get together, they usually give the gift to each other.
(43:15):
When our US ambassador to the Holy See, Brian Birch,
who was a great guy, when he presented his credentials
to the Pope, I think it was about two weeks ago,
he gave a gift on behalf of the United States
to the Pope. And they exchange gifts. So even like
general audiences, when members of the public go up there,
(43:36):
like the people who were online with me to go
meet with the Pope, a lot of them had things
they were giving to the Pope, whatever it was. Some
of them wanted their things blessed, whether it's a rosary
or they had a book written about the Pope and
he signed it. Stupid me, I couldn't believe it. I mean,
I didn't think of that. So the Pope has always
given gifts. So someone that stands behind him and when
(43:58):
they give it to him, he's like, thank you, and
then he gives it to the guy, and you know,
they just it's like boxes and boxes of stuff. So
I heard this story. There was all this. This was
sometime early this year and there were all of this
this noise in Rome, like loud noise of motorcycles, hundreds
(44:19):
and hundreds of motorcycles, and Pope Francis was listening to
this loud noise and he was like, what is going
on out there? And eventually they found out. They told him, oh,
there was like a Harley Davidson convention, or like the
hogs were in town and they were going around. Now
(44:39):
it might I think it was Hell's Angels actually, and
he was like, you know, what's this. He goes, well,
why don't you have them come over? And they're like
Hell's Angels coming to the Vatican. And so Pope France
was intrigued and he he invited Hell's Angels and they
went to the Vatican. So they had all these Harley's.
(45:01):
So Harley Davidson the company found out about this and
they literally made a specific Harley Davidson all white and
they shipped it within a day to the Vatican for
the Pope to present to him. So Pope Francis had
this this Harley and I actually saw it, and so
(45:25):
Pope Leo also was given when he became Pope a
Harley Davidson's all right so like, you're not gonna see
this guy in all white. Yeah, with these monkey handles
going around Rome, not gonna happen. But what does happen
to like the Harley Davidson, or what happens when somebody
(45:46):
gives something to the Holy Father Unless it's really personal
to him, he's likely not gonna keep it. Now Janix Senner,
who was the number one tennis player in the world,
and Popo Leo is a huge tennis fan, so when
Sinner went to the Vatican to meet with the Pope,
(46:06):
he gave him a tennis racket. Popo Leo kept that.
He loves it. He loves tennis. He still plays tennis,
by the way. So the Harley Davidson, those are auctioned off,
and a lot of these gifts that are given to
the Pope, they're returned directly to the people who give them,
Like an organization that might give something, the Pope will
(46:28):
bless it or sign it, and they'll give it back
to that organization, so then they can auction it off
to raise money. That's what happens, and that's what happened
with the Harley Davidson and so many of these other gifts,
which is pretty good. I mean, that's really pretty cool.
That's how they raised money. It's not like the Pope,
you know, needs a new Harley or any Harley whatsoever.
He's got the Pope Mobile. I gotta tell you about this.
(46:52):
This race in Jersey is it is heating up. Chitdarelli
is getting momentum at the right time. She is being
exposed mike Y Cheryl for the far leftist that she is.
If you think Murphy is bad, wait till she gets
in there. I'm seriously, don't be mesmerized by these commercials.
(47:13):
Look into who they really are, how they vote, their history,
who they hang out with. She will be the worst
thing for Jersey if she is elected, Jack Chitderelli will
be an excellent governor. So now this is all hullabaloo
about you know whether or not and she wasn't. She
(47:35):
was not allowed to walk at the naval graduation. And
by the way, to her credit, she served in the military.
Thank you for doing that. We honor her for that.
But she's running for governor and before that for Congress,
and everything she's done is fair game. So apparently someone
associated with the Chitdarelli campaign did a freedom of Information Act.
(47:59):
It felt, you know, about her records, and somebody in
the National Archives released them, never should have, but did
release them. So the campaign didn't encourage them apparently to
do it. This guy did it on his own. And
by the way, it's called opposition research. Every campaign does it.
It's the first thing you do as a candidate before
(48:20):
you announce. You do your own opposition research on yourself
to see what the worst thing about you that that
could come out would come out. So she must have
known this is gonna be there, and she's coming up
with like a bad excuse. Well, I didn't rat out people.
It's a lot more than that. It's a lot more
(48:40):
than that. So she I mean, she's in a no
win situation here because she's she's the only one that
could release her records and she doesn't want to do it,
but she better because it's only gonna get worse for her.
One other thing here, by the way, if you're on
if you're like going on vacation, the state Department comes
(49:04):
up with all these lists all the time where you
should not go. So just in case you are planning,
like for the Christmas holidays to go away, here's where
you shouldn't go Afghanistan. They have a whole list of
places that you would never go to anyway, if you
have half of brain, like Iran, Iraq, South Sudan, Venezuela, Ukraine.
(49:27):
Who's going to Ukraine right now? With Russian bombs bawling? Anyway,
Just thought i'd bring that to your attention. I will
be back here next Saturday one o'clock on Newsmax, and
then of course four o'clock here on seven ten WOR
Enjoy your weekend. Go Dolphins on Monday night. Someone's got
to win that game. Battle of the week. W eak
(49:50):
Jets Dolphins take care.
Speaker 1 (49:52):
This hour of programming on seven ten WR. He's sponsored
by Toyota City and Mamaranak and Nissan Sai of port Chester,
proud members of the Integrity Automotive Group,