Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What about the homeless guy who's got his sign in
his little cup, but his sign says it's not a tax,
it's a fee.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
I might give him some money, all right. So I
want to give you heads up about what's going on
inside the studio. I completely forgot to mention this earlier
because I come in and I'd already decided that I
was not going to try. Today is the day because
this is although I think technically they could do it Monday.
(00:35):
Let me look at the calendar. They probably technically could
do it Monday. By it and they, I mean the
Supreme Court, but they need to get all of their
opinions out before the end of the term, which ends
on June thirtieth. The new term starts on July first.
So we're getting a box load of opinions handed down today,
(00:59):
and we've got one on injunctions, where we've gotten one
on birthright citizenship, and I made the decision that I
was not going to try to sit here on air
and skim through them. I will tell you that Professor
Turley has said that the first one out of the
box has to do with the nationwide injunctions, and it
(01:26):
appears that well he writes, this Trump administration wins a
pushback by the court on lower court judges. Universal injunctions
likely exceed the equitable authority that Congress is granted the
federal courts. So that is basically saying you probably. I
mean again, I've not read the opinion, so I can't
say definitively, but my guess is and Justice Barrett wrote
(01:50):
this opinion that apparently they're trying to rein in these
district court judges. So that's probably a win for the
Trump administration. The birthright citizenship case has been dropped. There
that we're probably another five or ten minutes away from
six more opinions that range everything from well other injunctions,
(02:13):
printal rights, redistricting, free preventive care. And I just don't
think it's I'm not I can't do a decent enough
job to skim through the opinions and tell you what
they are. I will tomorrow give you on the Saturday program.
I'll give you more in depth analysis of what many
(02:35):
of these opinions mean. But if I see some headlines
from people that I believe trustworthy, I'll give you some.
I'll give you some of that as they get dropped.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
But how can I find that show tomorrow?
Speaker 2 (02:48):
You can find that on Freedom ninety three seven or
AM seven sixty or on three hundred fifty stations around
the country by simply going to Michael says go here
dot com and click for how to listen tab. Or
you could go to your iHeartRadio app and you could
preset AM seven sixty or FM ninety three point seven
(03:10):
and you listen to it that way. Or you could
just search for the weekend with Michael Brown on the
iHeart app and you could do that too. What else
do you want to know?
Speaker 3 (03:17):
You could even make the situation with Michael Brown a
preset on the iHeart app.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
You can, You can certainly do that, and I would
encourage you to do that. Why am I getting a
boatload of Oh? Okay, I thought maybe some lawyers were
sending me some stuff, but no, they have not yet.
All right, So I will, to the best of my ability,
try to tell you a little bit about what they're
doing as we go along. But I just don't want
(03:43):
to get bogged down into I'm trying to read and
talk at the same time, because I can't chew gum
and walk at the same time. So we'll do that dragon.
If you haven't seen just any basic headlines that give
us an idea, like on birthright citizenship, feel free on
the Yeah, just let me know. There was a bill
introduced by Congressman Barry Moore, he's a Republican from Alabama,
(04:05):
that was basically, I mean, pretty simple, pretty straightforward, that
if you get convicted of driving under the influence in
this country and you are an illegal alien, then you
will be deported. That passed the House of Representatives two
forty six to one sixty. That means you had thirty
(04:28):
seven House Democrats that supported it. Now obviously that means
one hundred and sixty Democrats opposed it, including Hakeem Jeffries,
the House Minority leader. The bill was named after Jeremy
and Angel say that this is a couple from the
congressman's district that was killed by an illegal alien drunk driver,
(04:50):
and after an Arizona cop by the name of Brandon
Mendoza who was also killed by an illegal alien that
was driving under the influence. The whole the purpose is
if if you're in the country illegally, and it kind
of goes back to my idea that I don't want
these criminals sent to prison. Just you know, we had
the story about the twenty four year old that you know,
(05:13):
tried to buy a gun illegally and committed some fraud
and social security fraud in terms of a guardianship, and
he's going to trial on those things and if convicted,
will spend you know, X number of years in prison.
And as I said, I don't want him to do that.
I want him sent back to Venezuela, which real happens
to be from. Well, I believe the same thing about
(05:34):
these drunk drivers. It's essentially the same thing. And Congress
actually I know Shocker was trying to do that. They
were trying to say, if you get convicted of drunk
driving d UI, I don't care what's first offense or
your third offense, you get convicted. Once this bill passes
of a d UI, you will be deported. And some
(05:56):
Democrats actually joined in doing that, twenty seven thirty seven Democrats,
which is not bad. I mean, considering Democrats, I'd say
that's not bad, Congressman said after the bill passed in
the in the House. It sends a clear message if
(06:17):
you are a guest in this country and you break
our laws and put American lives at risk by driving
under the influence. There will be consequences. Now. It just
shows speaking of the one hundred and sixty Democrats voted
against the bill, it just shows that if it comes
to anything about holding illegal aliens accountable, even if it's
killing our own people in drunk driving cases, they're against
(06:40):
any kinds of reforms on immigration. I think he makes
a great point. Those one hundred and sixty Democrats see
it more important that you're here illegally, that we continue
to support you in jail, as opposed to just saying,
(07:01):
you know what, we don't care what country you came from.
You came here and you broke our criminal laws. You
were duly convicted, you got your criminal due process, and
now we're going to send you back home. I think
that's a very reasonable piece of legislation, and considering the
nineteen ninety six Immigration Reform Act, there is no requirement
(07:25):
for them to get any additional due process, So send
their asses back home. At a press conference promoting the
One Big Beautiful Bill, which is currently in the Senate,
Trump held a press conference joined by Joe Abraham. He's
an angel dad who's twenty year old daughter was killed
by a Guatemala illegal alien in a hit and run case.
(07:49):
Trump said that the Reconciliation legislation would provide the Border Patrol,
Ice and other agencies with all the resources they need
to end this invasion once and for all.
Speaker 4 (08:00):
Here today is angel Dad, Joe Abraham, the angel. Mom's
an angel dad, Dads. These are incredible people. They lost
their precious twenty year old daughter, Katie in a hit
and run after she was struck by an illegal alien
from Guatemala. Katie was stopped at a traffic light, rear
ended full force, going sixty seventy miles an hour, right
(08:23):
into the back of her car where she stopped, and
she died immediately. And her killer, I think you could
really say, the killer fled the scene.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
And Joe, we will end.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
This invasion once and for all, and we're always going
to remember the memory of Katie, that beautiful, beautiful twenty
year old daughter of yours.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
Where's Joe around here?
Speaker 4 (08:45):
Joe come here, Joe, come here.
Speaker 2 (09:07):
You let me just say, you know. Trump shows real
compassionate about this. He brings the father over. The father's
holding a portrait of himself and his daughter together, and
Trump takes the picture, looks at it, holds it up
to the crowd in the east room, and then kind
of makes this gesture to you know, with his hand
(09:28):
to his eyebrow, kind of like I just I can't
believe this, and hands it back and acknowledges the father's grief.
He's really serious about this stuff.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Hey, just imagine what our former president would have done.
He probably would have tried to introduce the dead girl. Yeah,
exactly exactly. You know, Dad, you and your daughter stand up.
That's exactly what Joe would have done. Blame.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
I mean, he's really touched by this. He really bugs him.
He can't much.
Speaker 4 (10:00):
Also with us, as Sarah Stuart from Kerrville, Texas, who
lost her brother to the fentanyl epidemic that has inundated
her small town. Our bill provides billions and billions of
dollars to stop fentanyl and other illicit narcotics. We're also
charging other countries like Mexico, Canada, and China billions of
(10:21):
dollars in taxes that we put on because they've allowed
people that are selling fentanyl to go through their countries
or in the case of China, they send it here
and paying a lot of money at least, but would
rather stop it. I think we're doing a big job
of that, but would rather stop it and other illicit
narcotics pouring across the border and stealing more American lives.
(10:44):
And thank you, Sarah. Will not rest until that fight
is done. We're going to get that fight done.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
Sarah.
Speaker 4 (10:51):
Stuart is where Sarah.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
By Sarah, you car than good guy.
Speaker 5 (11:07):
I can see that. And she's holding a photo too,
good guy. I can see that. Good guy. He really
does care about these issues. Trump also is out. He's
had a busy week as usual.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
He's spearheading this peace initiative in the Middle East. He's
got the support of Benjamin Ettanya, who to begin ending
Israel's war in Gaza, and he wants to do that
within two weeks. This is a man on a mission
in a hurry now best I can tell. The plan
includes a bunch of different components, all of which are
(11:44):
trying to aim at stabilizing the region, fostering and some
sort of diplomatic relations between the Arab States and the
Jewish State of Israel, probably involving the Abraham Accords to
some degree. But according to the Israeli newspaper Israel. Hey
OLM involves four Arab nations, including Egypt and the UAE
(12:04):
who they would step in and ad minister of the
Gaza Strip in place of Hamas. I think that's actually
pretty smart because the Egyptians have been very adamant about
closing off and I forget the name of the southern
tip of the Gaza Strip, but they walled that off.
They will not let those refugees out because they don't
(12:25):
want them any more than any other Arab country does.
And the idea of now the IDEF will continue to
have to provide security, there's no doubt about that, but
in terms of just administering, you know, making sure that
you know, whatever you know, relief supplies come in actually
get distributed to the people of Gaza. I think it's
a pretty good idea to have countries like, you know,
(12:48):
whether it's two, four or all these Arab countries, to
have them come in on some sort of consortium and
have them do that administration. I think that's a really
good idea. The remaining Hamas leadership are going to be
exiled and the Israeli hostages that are currently still being held,
(13:08):
which is just unbelievable to me, they will be freed,
and then they're going to expand their efforts to facilitate
immigration for Gaza residents that want to leave the region,
that get vetted and that really want to go. You know,
they're shopkeepers or they have some professional or they do
some business and they really do want to go to
(13:29):
a foreign country. They're going to start trying to find
them foreign countries where they could go to, but just
not everybody. They're going to be vetted. So it's a
very organized process. It does include expanding the Abraham Accords
to bring countries such as Syria and Saudi Arabian to
a formal relationship with Israel. Israel has expressed their openness
(13:52):
to resolving the Palestinian issues under some sort of two
states framework. I want them to be careful about that,
and that's contented though upon the Palestinian authority enacting their
own reforms and in turn, we as the United States,
would recognize limited Israeli's sovereignty in Judea and Samaria in
(14:13):
the West Bank. Now all of that is post the
Twelve Day war between Israel and Iran, in which we
targeted those nuclear weapon sites, and now that you've got
the Iranian threat diminished. I'll just use that word. Israel
and the Arab States now appear more willing to sit
down and make concessions for peace and to normalize their relations.
(14:37):
I think you know, I heard General Jack Keane on
Fox News on Fox News Headlines this morning talking about
how he has asked some of the Israelis about Hesba
Lah and whether or not, you know, do they still
have all their rockets? And the people in Israel, whether
it's Masad or IDF, are telling General King that they
(15:01):
still have hundreds of thousands of rockets and they could
still be shooting those of us. But their intel says
that has Belah and Hamas for that matter. Now that
is now that Iran has been essentially decapitated, Israel controls
their airspace, We've decimated the armaments that the IRGC uses,
(15:25):
that all of these proxies have lost their will to fight.
So it shows just how much the Iranians and the
Mollahs were influencing, whether it be the Huthis or whether
it be Hesblah or any of the other organizations, the
terror organizations. Now that Israel pretty much controls Iran, that no,
(15:51):
they're not worried about that so much, and I think
that's what's allowing Trump to get some of these new
things pushed. And I think that's why Netanya, who's willing
to all along with it. I also think I was
thinking about this as I was hearing Keen talk about
how his biologist has lost the will to fight. If
they've lost the will to fight and they've received billions
(16:13):
of dollars from the Iranians and that money's dried up,
the the IRGC has probably lost some of its will
to fight too. So the longer we go from the
bombing on what was it Saturday night or Sunday night,
(16:34):
the longer we go out from that time period, I think,
the more opportunity there is for some sort of internal
revote within Iran. Now, whether that's the military, civilians, outsiders,
I don't know. But with the Ayatolas still remaining in
(16:54):
his bunker, coming, you know, popping his head out like
some sort of gopher or a mole, just long enough
to make a statement about, oh, yeah, you know, we
fired back. You know, we fired back on the Americans.
We won, you know, we won this war? What bull crap?
Nobody in that country believes that, Nobody.
Speaker 6 (17:11):
Good Friday Morning Dragon and Mike, Yeah, this is your
favorite Jew uber. What are all the Jews that live
in New York? How can they vote for this guy?
Speaker 2 (17:23):
Wow?
Speaker 6 (17:24):
This is kind of scarce the leep out of me
that so many Jews voted for this guy. I guess
because there's so many Jews, they should have voted against him. Anyway,
have a good weekend.
Speaker 3 (17:37):
I have the answer.
Speaker 2 (17:38):
But it's a joke. It is a joke.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
It is a joke.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
The Jews just want the free stuff. Keep ass Jews
just wanting everything free, right so they can turn around
and charge us for it. There's a stereotype, you know,
racist joke for poor old Jews. I actually have a
theory about that. I think if if you understand those
(18:07):
the New York Jews who are Democrats, and unfortunately I do,
I've got I've got a lot of Jewish friends in
New York that are on the left and on the right,
and they are entrenched. And for example, some friends of
ours whose parents are obviously Jewish, their sole source of
(18:31):
news is one of the networks ABC, CBS or NBC
in New York times that's the only place they get
their news. And I think there is a they suspend
disbelief and think that, oh, you know, yeah, this guy's antisemitic,
and we'll go vote for you know, Clomo, or we
just you know, we're just tired of this, We're not
(18:51):
going to vote at all. Or they just don't believe
it's going to happen. They don't believe it will happen,
which I wasn't gonna talk about this, but I think
I will frame on it. You know, the mission statement,
if you will, for lack of a better phrase, post
(19:14):
World War two and post Holocaust was never again. But
his I know many people here never again, and they think, oh,
we're never going to allow the Holocaust to occur again.
(19:35):
I think that's only one of two parts of never again,
and nobody ever thinks about the second part. The first
part is, yes, we will never ever again allow some
group of people like the Nazis to try to exterminate us.
And that's about as far as most historians, political science, zionists,
(20:04):
people that aren't really steeped in history think that's all
it means. It means so much more than that, and
judy Ism and our favorite you can correct me if
I'm wrong, and I'd like to hear what you think
about that about this, but never again also has to
(20:26):
do with, if you understand the Holocaust, other than some
of the uprisings in the ghetto and the attempts to escape,
the attempts to create some sort of underground effort to
(20:48):
fight back, fight back, the resistance, whether it be the
French resistance, the Jewish resistance, or anything else. Never again
also means that they will never allow themselves to voluntarily
or willingly be exterminated because many Jews during the Holocaust
(21:10):
just I know that they had guards, and I know
that they had They were forced onto the trains, they
were forced into the ghetto at the point of a
banet or a rifle. But they just did it. They
just went along. Now I'm not saying they wanted to.
(21:31):
I'm just saying that that's what they did. And part
of never Again is also that we will never again
do that. We will resist, we will oppose, we will fight.
And I think that part of the never again mission
(21:51):
statement is lost on too many people. And I think
that's why people like Benjamin Nett and y'all, who are
all the other great prime ministers of Israel, have fought
so strenuously to protect that Jewish state and to protect
their population and their people. They are now willing to fight.
(22:15):
That's why the idea from Massade, that's why they're so
damn good at what they do, because never again means
we're going to fight back. We're never going to just willingly,
even at the point of a bayonet, just get put
onto a train and then just willingly walk into the showers.
We're not going to do that because doing that resulted
(22:37):
in almost half the entire world's population of Jews being killed, murdered, slaughtered.
So when when Net and Yahoo and the Kanesse realize
that the Iranians were that close to weaponizing all their
fissile material, it was never again. No, we're not going
to sit back and wait for them to attack us.
(22:58):
We're going to be on the offense. And I think
that's I think that's why they did what they did.
And I also think that's why even though there's a
cease fire, don't read a ceasefire a cease fire in
its most raw vernacular. It is just both sides, both
sides have stop shooting. Just the status quo. It is
(23:21):
what it is. We're not going to shoot each other anymore. Well,
think about what the status quo is between Israel and
Iran right now. They control the airspace. They've demolished, you know,
probably a majority, if not more than a majority, of
the rocket launchers, the missile launchers. They they they've destroyed
(23:42):
almost entirely, almost one hundred percent the air force, and
what little air force remains they can't take off because
they control the sky. The Israelis control the skies. The
Jews control the skies.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
Over over Iran.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
So they're they're never again in in in in modern times.
Not that World War II wasn't modern times. I mean
today means we're not going to sit back and just
let allow it to happen. We're going to affirmatively, proactively,
offensively go against them and stop it before they do
(24:13):
anything to us. And we know that there's risk at that,
We know that they will launch some lobs, some rockets
in and we know that the Iron Dome can be
overwhelmed if they so choose to do, which the Iranians
chose to do. But you notice that even when the
Iranians started targeting civilian populations in Israel, Israel did not
(24:34):
target civilian populations in Iran. They focus solely on the military. Now,
why would they do that out of the kindness of
their hearts? Well, yes, partly because they don't believe in
just killing civilians as these animals the Mullas do. Instead,
it was we're going to strategically attack them so that
they cannot further attack us. And that's part of That's
(25:00):
a whole bunch of what never again means. Now, how
do we pull that contention over into New York and
an anti Semite being elected. There is a difference between
(25:20):
not all, but some, and in particular, I would say
New York Jews, particularly those who are members of the
Democrat Party, that are different from the Jews who have
made the trip back and are establishing their homes and
their businesses, their industries and everything else to take that
(25:41):
small area of land and turn it into a solid
democratic government in the Middle East. The New York Democrat
Jews have been to a certain extent brainwashed by the Democrats.
The Democrats take Jews for granted in New York. And
(26:04):
then when you think about those, particularly the older Jews
who liberal members of the Democrat Party, they get their
news from the New York Times, they get their news
from one of the networks, and that's those are the blinders.
And when they're not in New York and they've gone
to Florida for the summer or Florida for the winter,
(26:26):
and they're down there, what are they doing. They're still
watching the networks which available nationwide, and they're still reading
the New York Times. So they live in a bubble
and they cannot They probably they're probably waking up today
going wow, how did that happen without looking inward at
themselves and realizing that because you were so blinded, either
(26:53):
by your hatred of Clomo or your hatred of Mandami,
that you just chose not to vote. When you look
at who elected Mandami, it wasn't necessarily young people. It
was white educated liberals. Well, Jews are a subset of
that group. I don't think they actively voted for him,
(27:16):
but I think they just set it out. I haven't
seen them. I'd have to research and find the numbers,
but I'd be curious of those self identifying Jews who
somehow you know, in a poll or otherwise, how many
of them actually voted for him. I doubt very few.
So the white the limousine liberals of New York. The
(27:39):
guilty white limousine liberals are the ones that elected Mondami.
I think Jews will learn their lesson from it. I
think they'll wake up and realize the more that comes
out when we get to the general election for mayor
of New York and all of his anti Semitic remarks
become part of the general discussion. Oh, I think they'll
(28:00):
wake up. I think they'll wake up. And Eric Adams,
I think Clomo will withdraw. I don't think he'll try
to dilute by jumping into the Independent Party. And I
think that Eric Adams will probably get re elected.
Speaker 3 (28:15):
Right.
Speaker 5 (28:16):
I can't believe you let dragons say that joke on
their god.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
We gotta send him back to the fourth floor.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
Wait, wait a minute, sending back to the fourth floor.
Speaker 3 (28:28):
I think he knows what he means.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
He knows. I think he knows what he means to.
I have no control. He's the producer. I'm just the
guy yammering behind the microphone. I have no I have
no control over what he says or when he says it.
I can't. I can't control any I can't control anything
(28:51):
from here back there? Can I?
Speaker 3 (28:52):
Yeah? But I can control this I can turn you off. Yep,
that's fat turn you on. I'm quite aware of that
off and nobody's the.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
Exactly, But there is nothing when I look at my options,
I mean, I can if you're not paying attention, I
can get your attention by talking. That is true. I
can do that. I can talk to the news booth.
I could mute a caller. I could. I could just
play it next to them if I just wanted to stop,
(29:22):
I just I can just do that. Otherwise I'm I'm
I'm screwed. I can't also change what you hear in
your headphones. Is right now, you're hearing program. You can
change that's yeah, offline. Well that might be good. I
could do that so listening to Well, no, but i'd
still hear you, though, because you still control what I hear.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
Correct, Yeah, I can control no matter what.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
Right. Yes, By the way you left, you left a
story on the console. Did you actually? Of course you
didn't read it? Why are you asking me if I
read them? Well, I I just thought maybe you left two.
One was about poop in Japan, which I assume you
did at some point on the trip.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
Correct, okay, and yell, it was about North it's they're fantastic.
Do what they've got the best toilets. They're fantastic, aren't they.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
I mean it's like computer screens. How much? What do
you What would you like for the bidet to do
for you today?
Speaker 3 (30:22):
What fragrance would you like in the air, temperature of
the water that hits.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Your butt would you like? Right? What's the water pressure?
You prefer? Everything? You can bustly imagine the.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
One from right to left or left to right, front
and back back to front.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
Yeah, we're just all around, just a little bit of everything.
And then you left a story about North Korea wants
to open a beach for tourism.
Speaker 3 (30:47):
Yeah, so that's all I needed to know. So you
went to the DMZ, right, No, so you did not
go to the DMC soul Mandy and Chuck they they
toured the DMZ because check was stationed there for a while.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
Oh okay, okay, Well the d is a pretty interesting place.
But this beach that they they're going to open is
up on the far north part of the east coast
of the country. And obviously I've never been there, but
I've read about it, and you know, we've seen satellite
photos and stuff. They're only going to allow Russians. The
(31:21):
the elite like government workers that live in Pyongyang, they're
going to be able to go, and maybe they might
open up to some Chinese people. So I was curious,
like what the facilities were going to be like, well
for North Korea, which is not saying a lot, but
for North Korea, they'll be somewhat nicer than you would
(31:43):
if you stayed in a regular hotel in Pyongyang, but
it also comes with the usual surveillance of.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
Course, until you get to so I wouldn't expect anything
less right, and I'm sure the beach will too.
Speaker 2 (31:57):
It was they're open. Let's see a capacity for twenty
thousand visitors, cater exclusively for domestic tourists starting July one,
no confirmed timeline for the international visitors. Russian tour groups
(32:17):
can start arriving as early as July seven, so there
will be a gradual opening to foreigners, but for adventure
travelers from the United States probably not yet. You can
get an eight day tour package for about forty dollars,
which would include visits to Pyongyang and Mascaron, the ski resort.
(32:39):
They do predict some Chinese tourists who made up ninety
percent of North Korea's pre COVID visitors. They'll probably start
that back up again. What would it be like to
visit the high rise hotels with views of the Pristine Beach,
because well there's nobody there breaking news before we had
(33:01):
to a break here.
Speaker 3 (33:01):
Supreme Court fax parents in LGBTQ book dispute.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
Well, Yahoo, you've got two good decisions so far. You know,
the minority in the court is just apoplectic right now.