Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:19):
News Talk eleven TENNY nine to three WBT. It's the
Brett Wittererble Show seven oh four five seven zero eleven ten.
Also reach out at the WBT text line driven by
Liberty Buick GMC. Our telephone number is available to you
if you want to text us or you want to
call in in opine about a number of different things
(00:41):
that are out there happening. So one of the things
that I think is particularly interesting as we sit back
here and we look at the big stories moving and
I want to tell you this. I want to know
where all the chaos and commotion and lunacy is actually coming.
I want to know where this is. We will talk,
(01:03):
We will talk about what happened in New York City yesterday.
We will talk about a number of all these big stories.
But I want to start with being a forward looking person.
All right. I am a forward looking person. I am
an optimist. I am not a pessimist. I don't give up,
I don't quit. I'm not a quitter. I got nowhere
else to go. Oh wait, no, that was from officer
and a gentleman. But the fact of the matter is,
(01:25):
there is so much cool stuff that is going on
here that people don't want to acknowledge. They don't want
to acknowledge the incredible opportunities that continue to exist in
this community and in communities around our country. And why
do you think that is? Why is it that the
(01:46):
only people that seem to be angry, the only people
that seem to be sad, are the people who refuse
to acknowledge successes. Very important to understand. History does not
repeat itself. It reloads with better aim ladies and gentlemen,
(02:09):
in every era, every empire. Power doesn't belong to the strongest.
It belongs to the strategist who makes the chaos his currency.
This is an important lesson for you and your children
to hear. Rome knew this, China knew this, and today
(02:29):
America wields it. When Hannibal crossed the Alps, breathing fire
and elephants, Rome did not panic. Fabious Maximus refused battle.
He sewed confusion, He burned the crops, He kept the
enemy busy while bleeding him dry. The Fabian strategy taught
(02:52):
us some wars are one without a single sword unsheathed.
Then came Scipio at Zama. Hannibal unleashed his war. Elephants
Scipio didn't flinch. He opened the corridors and the ranks.
(03:13):
The Chaos charged forward and crushed its own army. That day,
Rome weaponized confusion like a scalpel across the Far East.
China wasn't fighting battles, it was playing chess Sunzu. The
greatest victory is that it requires no battle. They used
(03:36):
sheet momentum as a weapon, spirit as a shield. Commanders
struck when disorder peaked and the enemy blinked. This was
the warfare as poetry as psychology. Okay, Brett, what's the
(03:57):
big deal with this, with this lecture you're giving us,
Because when we are watching this in real time and
the country is becoming stronger, look around and see what
you see. Donald Trump has turned this ancient doctrine into
a political doctrine. Keep the system off balance, keep the
(04:17):
media guessing, keep the world reacting. That's what he's doing.
Every poll that has come out in the last ninety
days indicates that the Democratic Party is in chaos. They
don't know what they want, but they know they want socialism, communism, radicalism,
free stuff. They are hanging on to late stage Soviet
(04:42):
communism and they're trying to reheat this at the border.
Deportations plan and drop like thunderclaps. Troops deployed not just
to guard, but to remind. Policy changes reversed, revived, renamed.
(05:04):
NGOs are scrambling, courts reel. The disorder has become the
leverage in trade. Tariffs drop like siege weapons. One hundred
and forty five percent here, forty six percent there. Nations react,
they negotiate, they reorient, then they boom and they're suspended.
(05:27):
This isn't economics, this is psychological warfare through unpredictability in governance.
Project twenty twenty five is in a policy, it's a purge.
We're told whole agencies are in the crosshairs. Oversight is dismantled.
Power is consolidated like Rome's manipular formation. Trump's strategy is modular.
(05:50):
It's fluid like China faints, not fainting like hitting the ground,
but fainting in a misdirection. It's a calibrated shock, ragment
and seize control before the counter strike lands. Are you
watching the chaos or are you commanding the chaos? Because
(06:12):
the enemies of today and the empires of today are
not built with bricks and swords. They're forged in tweets,
executive orders, and global flash points go back to the
(06:32):
beginning of what I just laid out for you. From
Scipio's war lanes to Trump's trade feints, from sun Zou's
quiet kill to border blitzes. This isn't random, this isn't
an occurrence. It's orchestrated. It's deliberate, and it's working. The
(07:01):
economy is strong. People understand this. Donald Trump has taken
the position of giving a number of days for the
Russians to try to work this out, and upon seeing
them as an unseerious foes, he's cut the time in half.
(07:22):
It's working. Iran is in chaos. China is doubting, the
EU is an ally buying our energy and deploying our weaponry.
Confusion is not the end of strategy. Let me say
(07:45):
this again. Confusion is not the end of strategy. It's
the beginning of supremacy. The United States has been counted
out more times than you can imagine, and we are
now in a strong position. That storm last night was
(08:16):
rocking me like a hurricane. I'm not gonna lie about that.
I'm looking at the trees in the backyard. I got
my I shouldn't say that. I got my special goggles
making sure the tree is not gonna come down. I'm
willing it the whole time with my mental powers. It
was that that was an ugly storm about midnight last night.
I didn't I didn't like that at all. No fun,
(08:39):
no fun, No, thank you very much. Okay, I don't
want to cause an alarm. I don't want to freak
you people out, but I'm about to tell you a
story that is not It's not fake. This is a
real story. This is something that I think is absolutely
frightening and fascinating at the same time. Isaac said to me, Brett,
(09:01):
you have to share this. I'm going to. I'm going to.
I don't know if you guys are familiar with nuclear power.
So you have nuclear power. Some people call it nuclear power,
some people call it nuclear power. They have discovered radioactive wasps. Oh,
(09:27):
Isaac's about the walk out of the room. Radio Active
wasps discovered at South Carolina Nuclear Facility. Now you know,
when they start trying to build those nests, they start
with the paper and they're trying to build that paper
(09:47):
junk stuff. Man, I've gone through I have gone through
every iteration of chemical warfare with hornets and wasps and
all that kind of stuff. So radioactive wasp nest discovered
early this month in South Carolina by workers who happen
to be working at a nuclear facility, according to a
(10:08):
report from the US Department of Energy. A report states
that on July third, twenty twenty five, really, we're supposed
to believe that, right on the cusp of Independence Day,
we have radioactive wasps. The report states that on July third,
(10:28):
twenty twenty five, workers found a wasp nest on one
of my favorite words in the whole English language. Right here,
they found a wasp nest on a stanchion. I love stanchion.
Just you're driving, you don't have to do it, but
I would encourage you, just when you're freaking out, just
(10:49):
say this word stenchion. Stanchion feels so good to say,
and nobody knows how to spell it, but it is
still such an incredible experience when you say stenchion. It
was found on a stension near a tank at the
f Area Tank Farm at the Savannah River site. When
(11:12):
the nest was probed, Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
who gets that job? In turns they're younger, and they've
got a lot more in front of them. Put an
older guy there who knows. I don't know that that's
the case. I'm making that up, Isaac asked me. When
(11:33):
the nest was probed, it was discovered to be highly radioactive.
According to the DOES report, While it does sound like
something out of a comic book or a horror movie,
the report says that this is not related to a
loss of contamination control at the nuclear facility. Instead, the
(11:58):
wasp nest is considered a victim of legacy radioactive contamination.
You think I'm gonna buy that it's just a it's
just a legacy of a radioactive former thing. I would
love to hear I would just would love to hear
Trump do that. Everybody knows it's a legacy radioactive contamination
(12:20):
back when we won the Cold War. That's why we
have it. The nest was sprayed in order to kill
the wasps. How dare you they killed the wasps? These
potentially nuclear wasps. These could have been weapons for us.
We could have sent them into varieties, you know, veritable areas.
(12:43):
The nest was sprayed in order to kill the wasps,
and then they were bagged as radiological waste. I'm not
gonna make the joke. I could do it, but pat
people are gonna panic if I say it. I'm not
gonna do it. I'm not gonna do it. Do it,
I'm not gonna do it. The report states that the
(13:04):
ground and surrounding area did not have any contamination. So
these are traveling contaminated wasps. What if there's a wasp
that was out out in the area over there, they
never got him. Maybe he's a free wasp. The Savannah
River Site was built in the nineteen fifties near Aiken,
(13:25):
South Carolina, Clemson, That's all I'm saying, and covers more
than three hundred square miles. During the Cold War, the
Savannah River Site produced nuclear material and nuclear weapons components,
(13:46):
so they probably have generations of radioactive this and that.
It became an EPA Super Fun Site in nineteen eighty nine,
with clean up and environmental remediation going on. Ever since
the rece years, National Nuclear Security Administration has begun work
on a facility there to produce new plutonium cores for
(14:08):
America's nuclear weapons. Let's make nuclear wasps again. Let's make
nuclear wasps great again. Well they, I mean they wiped
them out. All you get the NNSSA. I don't know
what that means. Plans to build at least fifty new
plutonium cores per year in the new facility. I want
(14:31):
to tell you something. This is not the weirdest story
I have on the day. I have something that is
much weirder, that is actually kind of I'm going to
level with you because I like you people, very scary
story and I don't know how to unpack this because
(14:53):
if this is what they're saying, this is, this is
something that none of us has ever seen. If it's
just a bunch of hooey, then that's one other thing.
But I gotta tell you, I'm gonna beginning of the
second hour, I'm gonna share with you the only story
(15:14):
that I have that I think is weirder than this
that we just had, and there's a conspiracy tied to it.
It's not abstain, it's not money, it's none of that.
It's as Beet Jensen would say, literally, something we cannot control,
(15:37):
like a zero point zero amount of control. I gotta share.
I'll do it top of the hour, I promise, Yeah,
(16:05):
about thirty minutes when I'll reveal the other really freaky
story that's out there. But in the meantime, let's talk
about inflation. Let's talk about what happened last night in
New York City. Obviously a terrible, terrible story. Watching the
City of New York descend into this sort of situation
(16:28):
is just an absolutely horrible thing. My wife and I
were both there on nine to eleven. You know, we've
spent a lot of time in New York City. I
love the City of New York. I think it's phenomenal.
I would not want to live there at this stage
of the game, especially with Mamdani coming in potentially to
become the mayor. And did you know he came out
(16:49):
and gave a speech last night because he's still over
in Uganda with his wife. I think he was at
a wedding. I think it's his wedding, and he came out.
He was like, Oh, I don't worry about Everything's gonna
be totally cool when I take over New York. It's
gonna be incredible. This guy is a full blown whack job.
I'm sorry, but that's this guy. The worst thing that
(17:11):
ever happened to the City of New York was a
guy called Bill de Blasio, who should have been put
in a padded cell instead of being elected to be
a mayor. And from that point on the city has
gone to garbage. And when you think about, uh, this
particular character who drove in from Las Vegas and was
(17:35):
carrying some pretty heavy military gear. Uh, and he and
he was able to go and kill a couple of
police officers who were incredible people. And and and you
had people who were bystanders who couldn't believe what they
were seeing. And and this, this this active shooter situation
(17:56):
is not taken seriously, uh by CNN because CNN couldn't
even identify who the guy was, like, what does he
look like? They couldn't even agree on what he looked like.
That's a cable channel. Aaron Burnett should be sent out
to the overnight hours or something. But between her and
the you know, the guys who give you the information,
(18:19):
they were saying, it's a white male who's going around
trying to shoot people or is shooting people. And then
you look at him and you go, wait, no, who
said that? Where does this come from? How does this go?
Doesn't make any sense to me in any way, shape
or form. But nevertheless, you ended up with innocent people
(18:39):
being killed in a city that has suffered greatly, especially
under the tutelage of Eric Adams, to a certain degree
of Kathy Hochel, who's one of the most incompetent human
beings walking the earth today. You know, I was watching
a conversation with Curtis Lee where we had him on
a couple of weeks ago, maybe it was ten days ago.
(19:01):
We had Curtis Sliwan with us and we were talking
about what needs to happen in the city of New York.
So New York City is supposed to have about forty
one thousand police officers. Forty one thousand, I mean, New
York City is a huge piece of territory. The one
thing that is interesting about them is they actually have
(19:24):
the ability to shut Manhattan down, Like you can shut
it down, you can close the bridges, you can close
the subway systems, you can do all that sort of stuff.
We know that because that's what happened on nine to eleven.
Everything came to a standstill and people had to start
hoofing it to get into the outer boroughs and into
New Jersey, et cetera. But they're supposed to have forty
(19:47):
one thousand plus cops. They have thirty thousand. They're down
like ten thousand cops. And does anybody want to guess
why they're down ten thousand cops. Well, yes, that's true.
You do have police officers from the Northeast, specifically New York,
(20:07):
but in other jurisdictions who have come into Charlotte to
work here. Right, They've they've said, I'm not going to
stay over in New York or Philadelphia or Boston or
any of these other places. I'm gonna come to a
place where I'm going to be respected, and I'm going
to try to come and work in Charlotte, right, and
other environs. But they're down like ten thousand cops. The
(20:31):
only way you get rid of ten thousand cops is
because you have lies that are told about law enforcement.
You have people who refuse to respect private property and
civil liberties, and it's just it's a it's a free
for all. You have a free for all with these
people on these on these stupid mopeds that go around.
(20:52):
They rob people, they rate people, they you know, they
do all kinds of horrible things to people. And so
when you look at this and this building that was Housing,
or is Housing the NFL, Blackrock, KPMG, any number of
very high end institutions, and you get summoned out to
(21:20):
go be a cop to respond to a forty four
story building where there is an active shooter situation and
you have to clear every part of the building and
so every elevator, every nook, every cranny, every office, every closet,
(21:47):
you name it. You don't know. Is this the free
Free Palestine people, Is this Al Qaeda? Is this somebody else?
We don't know? And it suddenly it shows up as
a guy who said he had CTE and felt like
he had to go and shoot people in New York City.
(22:11):
I mean, this is this is a weird story, Like
this is one of those weird stories where it's a
precursor to a bigger terrorist attack like that. That was
one of the things that I was thinking about last night,
and I was listening to a lot of John Gilliam
and he was, you know, he was very suspicious as
to what's going on here, Like this seems to be
(22:32):
like Okay, We're going to put a car right in
the middle of an intersection and then I'm going to
take an M four that is like gold plated with
a suppressor and a bunch of AMMO, and I'm going
to just go walk down the street and go into
the building. I guarantee you, in almost any other jurisdiction
there would have been an immediate reaction. There was some
(22:54):
reason that there wasn't an immediate reaction for some reason,
and you ended up with people who lost their life
protecting people that they didn't even know. Law enforcement officer
from Bangladesh with two beautiful children and another baby on
the way, and he lost his life because he ran
(23:16):
into the wrong kind of person, a person who is
immediately in the business of attempting and succeeding to murder
fellow Americans. And that is that's a tragic shame. That
(23:37):
is a tragic shame. But I got to say something
about this. This individual, no doubt, has family, just like
these individuals that we see. They have families like crooks
who tried to kill Trump and the other weirdos that
we hear about from time to time. Why do we
(24:00):
ever hear press conferences from the families who are responsible
for what they have raised and who they have raised
and why they have raised in that way? Is that strange?
They always love to run up to the cop or
the politician that does the wrong thing and stick a
camera in their face. They never do it when it's
somebody who has birthed, somebody who went out and decided
(24:23):
they were going to be part of a of a
killing cult.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
What is that?
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Why is that? It doesn't make any sense. Somebody has
to know something about this. Look at Coburg. Something's going on.
(24:50):
This doesn't make any sense. Something is definitely going on. James.
Welcome to the program. James. What's on your mind today?
Speaker 3 (25:03):
Yes, I'm just probing the radioactive wasp ness.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
That is, you got to understand that the radioactive wasps
are are are serious. Okay, They're very serious, and I
think that's I will be nervous when we get into
a radioactive kind of a bat cult. But I I'm
I'm really worried about the radioactive uh you know, hornets
and and and whatnot there and all the detritus. I
(25:29):
don't I don't like it, Jim, I don't like it
at all.
Speaker 3 (25:31):
You got we had the Spencer's Tarantula's and Winston's gate frogs.
What's next. You definitely have to keep your your guard up.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
You have to keep your guard up.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
Indeed, yes, sir, you've the infestation that is going on
your airways.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Is just well, it's not it's not an infestation. It's
it's you know, there's a lot of like a lot
of bad stuff goes on. You know, you're in California.
You see you see the news at night. I see
the news at night. You know, there's a lot of
stuff to be worried about. But there's also stuff that.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
I'm seeing firsthand. I am so disgusted at what is
going on here. You have a lot of things being built,
a lot of things being done, and most of them
are just these little cracker boxes. Then you have people
sitting on the streets just with all of their garbage,
(26:21):
and then you have people like Todd Glory who just
continue to guess light everybody and they're just eating it up.
It's just it's just astounding how people just will they will.
It's like peeling off a piece of your skin and
then another one.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
No no, no, no, no, no, it's not it's not like
it's not like peeling off a beezier skin. What what
this is is this is the frog thing that we
heard about for forty to fifty years the idea of
all you do is just put the frog in, and
then he gets acclimated, and he gets acclamanted. But by
the time he realizes, oh my gosh, I'm getting cooked,
he's done. It's over. And that is what has happened
(26:58):
exactly the problem in our culture today, the problem in
our society today. Okay, it's not racial, it's not economics,
it's none of that. Do you know what it is?
Do you know what it is? It's the first group
of people who have had to live under the notion
of one thing and one thing only, judgment. Like people
(27:21):
are given judgment as a gift. I believe that considerably right.
So you don't eat raw chicken, you don't jump off
a roof, you don't do things right, so you have judgment.
Everybody is born with judgment. Now it can be warped,
no doubt about it. People can be, you know, unfortunately
(27:42):
incapacitated for a variety of reasons. But people do not.
You get told every day, don't judge, don't judge that,
don't judge this, don't judge that. No, I am going
to judge because otherwise I'm gonna eat food that's gonna
kill me or I'm gonna get assaulted, or I'm gonna
do We need to bring back we need to make
judgment great again.
Speaker 3 (28:03):
Right, And I'll tell you a person that has good judgment,
and that is my son, Jimmy of San Diego, who's
just enjoyed a trip to New York. Wow, laid over
in mcaren an hour, stayed in the airport. Yes, he
basically went in the reverse footsteps of this maniac. He
just got out the day before of They stayed at
the hotel and upper on the Upper West Side. They
(28:26):
went to a movie at in the Times Square, which
see a movie. They didn't go down to the Lower
West Side for whatever reason. But see this man, this man,
and he is a man. Now that's a yes, performed
exercisees sound judgment. He took the room that he lived in,
the computer that he had, the phone that he had,
and he got excited to one of the great institutions
(28:49):
of education here in San Diego. And the difference between
him and the guy went the exact reverse direction that
he went, is that my son did one thing, and
it's the words of the great Santini. My son eats life, okay,
because if you don't eat life, it will consume you.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
That's exactly right. You have to be in charge. And
that's a great point, jim I appreciate that, and all
the best to Jimmy Jr. Man add he's a wonderful
young man. I got to spend time with him back
back in uh February January February. And so the thing
about this is we have to call stuff out. They
want you to call out stuff that's not important. We
(29:31):
need to call stuff out that is important. All right,
wide open borders, that's not a good move. People taking fentanyl,
people laying in the street dying from drug overdosis. That
is not something that should be happening in our culture.
You should And I'm sorry, and maybe you're gonna disagree
with me on this. I believe in involuntary commitment. If
(29:54):
you are a danger to yourself or others, you shouldn't
be allowed to just like sit on a sidewalk or
in a free way or do stuff like that. You
should You should go stand in front of a judge.
They will adjudicate whether or not you need to get help,
whether you like it or not. And then when you're sober,
then you can make decisions again. I mean, this is
(30:16):
this is the problem. It's not hard. It just takes commitment.
Everybody wants to say the same thing. I don't know anything.
I mean you heard, you heard that that terrible incident
that took place in Cincinnati over the weekend, right, and
there are people who want to take advantage and they
want to sit back and they want to say this
is a racial thing, it's this, it's that the other thing.
(30:38):
But the reality is only one person called it in
as an assault. Nobody called in and said, hey, these
people are beating getting beaten up, Like why would you
ever want to live in a society like that? You
seen old ladies's getting mugged. Everybody's all like, you know,
I love I love this, I love this. When you
(30:59):
see these horrible shits situations, you want to know what
the single worst thing that you see this somebody's getting
assaulted and this is all you hear. Oh no, oh
go help. I don't need your moaning. I need you
to go and help these people. I would not just
(31:19):
stand there and moan and make a video. All right,
coming up. I warned you, I warned you, and it's
coming something out of this world. Literally, dudes talk eleven ten,
(31:48):
ninety nine three WBT. It's the Brett Literable Show. Seven
O four five seven zero eleven ten. It is great
to be with you, all right. So I'm gonna start
off with a story that I would typically not lead
with this, but I think this is an important thing
given the stuff that's going on all around the world. Okay,
(32:08):
so we've got you know, tariffs, got the tariffs worked out,
We've got a trade deals getting worked out. We've taken
out the nuclear capacity of the Iranians. We've got a
whole bunch of stuff that is happening. But there is
this story that is circulating, and it is it's a
legitimate story. It's a real story. It's not anything that's
(32:31):
like made up. It's not spooky weird stuff. I mean
it is spooky weird stuff, but for a completely different reason.
And so the story goes like this interstellar comet is
only the third known object to visit from beyond our
Solar system, and it's coming at us. Dubbed the three
(32:56):
I three you know Roman numeral eye Atlas. The comet
poses no danger to Earth and will remain roughly one
hundred and fifty million miles away as its speeds by.
Now this is the I'm sorry, this is the NBC
(33:17):
write up, which means they're going to soft soap this
because they want to get back to Mayhemon dissension In
the Cities. Astronomers are rolling out to welcome matt for
a newly identified visitor from beyond our solar system. The object,
thought to be a comet, is only the third ever
confirmed interstellar visitor to pass through our cosmic neighborhood. The comet,
(33:41):
they say, poses no danger to Earth and will remain
about one hundred and fifty million miles away as its
speeds by. The interstellar comet was first spotted Tuesday. Wait
a minute, Tuesday, but they know, oh, it's not going
to get anywhere near us Tuesday. It was spotted Tuesday
(34:05):
at the Asteroid Terrestrial Impact Last Alert System ATLAS, and
they got to always used the you know, they got
always used the acronym. The NASA funded Survey Telescope, which
is actually made up of two telescopes in Hawaii or
some people call it Hawaii, one in Chile, and a
(34:27):
fourth one in South Africa, is designed to scan the
entire sky several times each night, searching for asteroids that
could pose a threat to Earth. But there's no threat
to Earth one hundred and fifty million miles and there's
no chance at all. Don't worry about it. It's okay.
Researchers combed through archival data from three different Atlas telescopes
(34:47):
and the Zwiki transient facility at the Palomar Observatory in California,
and they found corresponding observations that helped confirm the discovery. Okay,
this is all great, right, this is all just fine.
It's wonderful, it's awesome. The comet is about four hundred
and twenty. Of course they did this in California. It's
(35:12):
four hundred and twenty for twenty million miles, moving quickly
from the direction of the constellation Sagittarius, NASA said in
a blog post about the discovery. Sagittarius is a prominent
constellation in the southern hemisphere that points towards the center
(35:32):
of the Milky Way galaxy. So all this is fine, right, everything,
All of this is fine. But here's the thing. Okay.
Earlier this month, astronomers made a fascinating discovery a mystery
object with interstellar origins, now dubbed as the three I atlas.
(35:53):
As scientists race to get a better understanding of the
rare visitor, it is only the third confirmed thing. As
we were talking about one particularly eyebrow raising possibility see
MSNBC doesn't write this one particularly eyebrow raising possibility beyond
(36:13):
the mainstream suggestions of it being either a comet or
an asteroid, as championed by Harvard astronomer and alien hunter
Ave Lobe, is that it could have been sent by
(36:37):
an intelligent extraterrestrial civilization looking around in the neighborhood, taking
a look around in the neighborhood, driving by, slowly looking
first four sale signs. What do we got? Oh? Is
that a planet with water on it? Do you say
(37:00):
we go buy that again? In a yet to be
peer reviewed paper, Lobe analyze the possibility that the that
the that the object is Are you ready Isaac's about
to walk out the room? Lobe analyze the possibility that
(37:21):
the object is quote alien technology coming to our neighborhood
to see us, highlighting it's unusual trajectory and what he says,
maybe attempts to break itself, meaning like hitting the brakes
(37:46):
to have a closer look at Earth and Jupiter also
emphasized that it also might just be a commoner space rock.
The orbitable path of the three I atlas has some
very unlikely combination of characteristics which could quite easily have
(38:11):
been simple coincidence, as extremely strange as that ostensibly becomes.
But Leeb Loeb, who previously wrote an entire book about
the possibility of an interstellar object first observed in twenty seventeen,
(38:31):
may have been sent to us by an alienation. Look,
you guys got to deal with this. I already dealt
with this. I've been sitting on this, and let me
tell you something. Here's what's very interesting. Late last night,
when I was looking at the horrible stuff that went
(38:51):
on in New York, somebody posted on x and I
can't remember where I fought, where I saw it or
found it, and they said something like this, by the way,
this is what the post was. This, by the way,
dot dot dot. If they tell you that something is
(39:12):
going to be doing a fly by next week, just
understand that they're covering something up. No impossible. The idea
of alien probes wandering the cosmos may sound strange, but
(39:33):
humans have sent out a few of our own. Both
Voyager one and two have officially left our solar system,
and Pioneer ten and eleven are not far behind. So
it's not a stretch to think that the alien civilizations,
if they exist, would have launched their own galactic explorers.
(39:55):
Something to think about. Keep the dry way open, she.
Speaker 4 (40:14):
Calls me, laughing with David mass Gearstones, I'm covering two
fast News Talk eleven ten nine three WBT.
Speaker 1 (40:25):
More information coming up out of the shooting that took
place in New York City, NYC shootings. NYPD officer killed
three others dead in midtown building home to Blackstone and
the NFL. The lone gunman, identified as Shane Tomorrow, walked
into a midtown Manhattan office building on Monday and opened fire,
(40:48):
killing four people before turning the gun on himself. And
so this is a story that is going to be
front and center for a long period of time. This
is not a story that is going to go away quickly.
And the reality of this story, by the way, is
(41:09):
that it needs to be investigated. We have to figure
out what it is that really happened here. New York
City Mayor Eric Adams provided new investigative details regarding the
firearms used in the Midtown Manhattan mass shooting. This was
just in the last half hour forty five minutes, saying,
(41:30):
we have discovered through our investigation that the weapon that
was used was purchased by an associate of the perpetrator,
Adams said during an interview on Fox News is the story,
and he also purchased the firearm that was found in
the car by using a carry permit that he had
(41:53):
received in Nevada. Adams said, two teams of detectives are
going to Las Vegas to identify and question the associate. Well,
that's going to be a person that's going to be
probably chock full of information because if if there is
a reason why this individual purchased the firearm in lieu
(42:16):
of the person who was going to use the firearm,
well that that must mean something was a miss. Remember,
this person was talking about being a victim of CTE.
He was saying that, you know that that it had
affected him and these sorts of things. Was he perhaps
(42:36):
under the care of a doctor, Was he perhaps under
the care of a psychiatrist, Was he, you know, under
the care of of of somebody else. Had he maybe
said things in the past that were seemed to be
dangerous worrisome, what have you. That's that's a very important point.
And everybody knows. I mean, you should know. If you
(43:01):
don't know that, you know, you shouldn't be buying firearms
for somebody who is not allowed to possess firearms. I'm
not saying that that was the case with with mister Tamora,
but you know that this is this is one of
those really tricky situations where you know, people, if you're
desperate enough, I guess you could, you could do that.
(43:24):
The problem is going to be and I don't know
that New York City is going to be able to
charge this person if he's not in New York, I
don't I don't know if that that could be brought
as a charge, but certainly, certainly probably in Nevada he
could get charged with with some of this ugly stuff.
And it's this is this is a problem. You know,
(43:46):
this is a huge problem when you think about people
who are just you know, gutting out there and getting
getting their hands on guns who maybe should not have firearms. Oh, Brett,
how can how can you judge? How can you judge
whether or not that they're supposed to not do this
or do that or any of that sort of stuff. Well, look,
we're starting to get more information on the people who
(44:08):
have lost their lives at the hands of this vicious killer.
An employee killed in Midtown rampage was id'ed as a
Cornell grad after crazed madman took elevator to the wrong floor.
A twenty seven year old Cornell grad tragically landed in
the Park Avenue killers crosshairs because he accidentally took the
(44:29):
wrong elevator to her employer's floor and encountered her and
shot her dead. This is a twenty seven year old woman,
her whole life in front of her, all of this
in front of her, looks like an absolutely wonderful person.
And this demon who came in to that building was
(44:50):
responsible for taking her life, a person she probably never
laid eyes on. And that is that. That is the
problem here, that is the problem. We're getting to know
other people who lost their who lost their lives. A
(45:12):
man named Wesley Lapatter Patner among four people killed in
the New York City shootings. And again, if you are
if you are doing this as a as a as
a cover up, because this person is not allowed to
have a weapon, you know this is this is a
real problem. And yet in these last hours, this is
(45:36):
how crazy New York has gotten. In these last hours.
A man was walking around the Bronx in the in
the neighborhood that they were in with a with a
gun just hanging from his from his situation there. Less
than twenty four hours after deadly shooting, man was arrested
(45:57):
after he was spotted walking around a Bronx neighbor and
broad daylight with what appeared to be a long gun.
Less than twenty four hours after a mass shooter killed
an NYPD officer and three others at a luxury park
office tower, The unidentified man was nabbed shortly after police
arrived at fourteen oh two Nelson Avenue around twelve thirty
(46:20):
to Canvas the Highbridge neighborhood. According to the NYPD officials, no,
he has not yet been charged by it. Maybe he
was just still taking it out to air it out
and walk around. I mean, you just never know. You
just never know. Richard, Welcome to the program. What's on
your mind? Richard?
Speaker 5 (46:39):
Richard, Hey, I don't retire from the Bronx. I know
that Harriet Nelson Avenue, that's for four or fourth pleasing
and you know, the pattern here is mentally no people
getting their hands on guns or whatever, you know, whatever
reason to get their hands on it, sometimes legally, sometimes easily.
And then you know, the top that was in the
lobby days just got the ambushed. And a lot of
(47:02):
these buildings, whether there's a building or school, you have
to have somebody on the outside and you have to
have somebody on the inside in the least if you
engage the guy, the guy inside has a chance.
Speaker 1 (47:15):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (47:15):
But he took everybody by surprise in day.
Speaker 1 (47:18):
Yeah, and I think part of it is that the
time of day in which this was happening as well,
because you know, it was later in the night and
maybe things were we were you know, unwinding.
Speaker 3 (47:29):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
You know the way it would go. Very important analysis there, Richard,
and I always appreciate your calls. There's talking eleven TENBT. Okay.
(48:01):
Bad decisions are being made in a lot of different locations,
a lot of bad decisions, people not thinking with what
you're supposed to do. I heard about this, but I
was tipped off by John Stewart on this one. I
have to give him credit because he did send this
over to me. So a secret service agent protecting Trump
(48:24):
tried to sneak his wife onto a transport plane to
go to Scotland. Yeah yeah. President Trump confirmed Tuesday that
a Secret Service agent tried to sneak his wife onto
a transport plane accompanying the President's Air Force one jet
(48:45):
to Scotland last week. The latest misstep for the beleaguered
protective agency. Wouldn't you think it might be a little dangerous,
Trump asked reporters on his way back to Washington after
five days on the other side of the Atlantic. That's
a weird deal, the president said, confirming that he was
informed of the matter, before expressing confidence that Agency Director
(49:10):
Sean m. Curran would take care of it. The incident
was first reported by the Herald newspaper of Glasgow. You're
not going to get on this plane, which reported that
the Dallas based agent flew his wife to Maryland, where
(49:30):
she received an official briefing and was bust bust like
on a bus, not bust busd bus seed to Joint
Base Andrews ahead of Trump's departure, before being discovered and
told to leave. That's I mean, that's that's rough. The
(49:52):
US Secret Service is conducting a personnel investigation after an
employee attempted to invite his house a member of the
US Air Force aboard a mission support flight. Secret Service
spokesperson Anthony Googliemi told the outlet in a statement prior
(50:14):
to the overseas departure, the employee was advised by supervisors
that no such action was prohibited, and the spouse was
subsequently prevented from taking the flight. No Secret Service protectees
were aboard. There were no impact or to overseas operations.
(50:36):
Several planes usually accompany Air Force one on presidential trips,
carrying Secret Service agent's equipment and other support staff. I mean,
if you wanted to go and hang out, you could.
You could have bought a ticket, put her on the plane,
got go flight to Gatwick or or wherever, and then
(50:59):
and then go uh to go hang out. I mean
you probably wouldn't get in trouble for that. I mean,
you know, maybe you would. I don't know. But this
is a problem for the Secret Service because the Secret
Service is sitting here saying, you know, we got some
we got a lot of heat. Thomas Matthew Crooks shot
the forty fifth and the forty seventh president in the
(51:19):
right ear at a July thirteenth campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania,
forcing agents to shield him while a counter sniper returned
fire and killed the eighteen year old gunman. Scathing Senate
probe of the security ellapses found that the Secret Service
(51:40):
denied at least ten requests for additional resources. To this day,
I don't understand that whole deal. It doesn't make any
sense to me.
Speaker 6 (51:52):
What are you.
Speaker 1 (51:54):
And especially it's like you're in the Secret Service, like
you know that there's everybody's look at you. It's a
real problem. Oh, Brett, hindsight is twenty twenty. Yeah, yeah,
you're right, it is. It's twenty twenty. But then why
are we and how come this is happening? They just
(52:14):
keep coming back. It's a problem. Stan, Welcome to the program.
What's on your mind? Stan?
Speaker 2 (52:20):
Okay, I want to ask you a question. This is
about New York City and now, of course any other
place that tried to so this guy was able to
just take any off fifteen scope and as ale and
just walk down the street. Yes, but New York City
is short eleven thousand police officers. Yes, they are not
prosecuting calm basically speaking to the extent that it needs
(52:41):
to be. They are basically made it as difficult as
they can for law abiding citizens to get firearms. Yes,
and they don't believe in deporting illegal of the and criminals.
My question is, how is this going to work out?
Speaker 1 (52:56):
Well, it's not gonna it's not gonna work out. Well. See,
you have of when when you look at the amount
of manpower uh in law enforcement, because there are there
is the NYPD right, there are the poor authority cops.
That's another group of people. There are other law enforcement
(53:17):
officers uh there as well. Because because because it's it's
a constant they they I heard an estimate that where
they said there is a threat every month at any
given point in New York City. And so the reason
why you want to have like ten thousand more cops
is not to you know, not to be running operations
(53:39):
all the time, but to be present and visible because
that's what the that's what stops people from wanting to
commit crimes. They see a cops standing there and he's armed,
and you're going to go try to do something stupid.
He's probably going to be able to grab you and
take you into custody and so and so. They Yeah,
but but you're right, they have got the witches brew
of the worst possible things. Illegal immigration, people that they
(54:04):
have not vetted, uh, criminals who walk the streets, and
of course a lack of law enforcement that that needs
to be the number that they need. And it's it's
it's a terrible reality. I mean, it's just awful all
the way around.
Speaker 2 (54:18):
So if you were in New York City, I mean,
would you just take the chance to arm yourself with them?
Speaker 1 (54:23):
No? No, no, I would not. I look, I would not.
I would not carry a gun in New York City.
They if they catch you with it, you're gonna go
to You're gonna go to prison. Like they there their
rules on you know, the their their laws. They will
put you in prison if you're carrying a gun that
(54:45):
you're not supposed to carry in the in the city.
But if there's criminals and there's gangsters, and they don't care,
and you know they're gonna do what they're gonna do.
I mean, I don't I don't know what the the
answer is just to stay the hell out of New
York until it gets back back together. I mean, it's
just there's no other But I don't understand any other
way you can do. I I lived there for a
long time. I lived there from nineteen ninety three until
(55:12):
nineteen ninety nineteen ninety eight, almost nineteen ninety nine, and
I was there when Rudy Giuliani took over as mayor,
and there was an immediate improvement all all the way.
It's just it was instantaneous cops on horseback in the
Bronx things like that. And then and then when once
(55:34):
my wife and I had had children, you know, we decided, okay,
we're gonna go across. We're gonna go across the river
into New Jersey where it's a little bit more reasonable
except for the taxes. But you know, it's it's it's
a tough it's a it's a really tough thing. You know.
I used to go gallivanting morning, noon and night, you know,
late into the night. Never thought about it when I
(55:55):
was when I was a younger guy and I was
single and you know, going out with my friends and stuff.
But I never thought about carrying a gun like ever
ever because there were always cops around.
Speaker 2 (56:06):
So so do you think with all the people running
Eric Adams and Mumdani and Leland, do you think it's possible.
Lee will win this.
Speaker 1 (56:16):
I wish you. I can tell you this with with
everything in my heart. Curtis Sliwa is a magnificent person.
He is somebody who is serious about getting that city
back on the right track. I mean, in many ways,
this guy when you walk down the street and I
(56:36):
have I've done it with him, I've ridden the subway
with him. He is mobbed by people love him. People
come up to him and they say, you know, we
want you to win so badly because the streets are
not safe. He rides the subway, he does all this
sort of stuff. And you know, Eric Adams is Eric Adams.
I don't trust. I don't trust Eric Adams to be
(56:59):
able to this off. I worry that Mam Donnie is
going to be somebody that's going to be a factor,
and and Cuomo just needs to just go away. So
that's awful. It's awful, And unfortunately there's going to be
a blowback here because if Mom Donnie wins, get ready
for a massive X you know, ex filtration UH from
(57:21):
New York and then and that area, there's nobody else
that I would rather dig with. Then my good friend
Bath Troutman joining us on the program. Oh, it is
so good to be with you. How are you my friend?
(57:43):
It's it's a pleasure to have you here back on
the show.
Speaker 6 (57:45):
Oh, I'm so excited to be back with you. And
I totally dig being on the Share with you.
Speaker 1 (57:50):
It's always fun. Looks it's one of these things is
really fun. I mean, I just I love it.
Speaker 2 (57:54):
All right.
Speaker 1 (57:55):
I want to ask you. I want to ask you
a question, as they would say, I want to ask
you a very important question. And the question is, Okay,
what is your biggest priority? Now this I'm taking this
for a very specific reason. What is the biggest priority
If Beth Troutman gets to pick a policy that needs
(58:19):
to happen nationally, what is your pick? What do you
want done?
Speaker 6 (58:27):
Oh my gosh, that is a fantastic question because there
are so many. The first the first thing that came
to my mind, and I would love to well, okay,
there are there are there are two things I would
kind of like to see happen.
Speaker 1 (58:41):
I'll give you two. Go ahead, Yeah, you can do two.
Speaker 6 (58:43):
Change happening one. And I've read a couple of books
on this. I would love to see a fair tax.
I would love to make a system that is far
less complex and that includes, you know, all of the
(59:03):
things that people are concerned about. You know, if people
are out there making money on the side that they're
not claiming. You know, if you end up having a
fair tax, all of that stuff gets into the system.
I would also love to see term limits. I would
really love it if we continued to get new ideas,
(59:25):
new blood people who aren't necessarily career politicians, and more
the kind of people who are who want to serve
because they want to see real change happen and because
they know that they're not consistently trying to raise money
and trying to get reelected. Those are things that I
think could make a big change in how people feel
(59:47):
about how Washington works and how people feel about politics
in general. You know, the tax system now, I think
it depends on where you fall within the taxckets, whether
or not people feel that the system is fair or
feel that people pay their their fair share, or if
they feel like they pay too much, and then you know,
(01:00:09):
feel like they don't have necessarily representation and how that
money is spent in used. It's why what Elon Musk
and Grok was doing. We just call it groc which
is his sure, which is his AI on X. But
it's why what he was doing was so I think popular,
because people wanted some transparency and how tax dollars were
(01:00:34):
you know, being spent, especially when people feel like they
work like crazy and their tax dollars are taken out
of their check, you know, every two weeks or however
often people get paid. And then at the end of
the year, you put together this entire tax filing system
that you're filling out what feels like a questionnaire that
somebody else already knows the answer to, but you're having
to draw you know, seventy five lines in forty seven
(01:00:56):
thousand different directions, and then you're paying more on top
of it, you know, in your and then you can
go to jail if you don't do it right exactly all.
You know, all of this stuff I think makes people
feel uncomfortable about the process, and so I'd love to
see things streamlined. And then I would love to see
people who are in Washington who can't just stay there
and make billions of dollars and do insider trading and
(01:01:20):
have these careers that last forever. But instead I think
that that would weed out some of the bad actors
and put people in place that really want to make
some meaningful change. And some of the best politicians get
get their policies enacted when they're laying ducks.
Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
So here's the question, then, Okay, would you include in
the in the term limit picture and would you put
an age limit in?
Speaker 6 (01:01:52):
I think so. I think that it would be important
to all, you know. I mean, there are so many
different ages, such a sure, such a convoluted thing. Because
if you look at somebody and I know that he's
not a popular politician for the right by any stretch
of the imagination, but Bernie Sanders is still doing pretty well.
(01:02:14):
It's pretty darn spunky, and he's, you know, in his eighties,
whereas some people in their early seventies don't seem to
be doing well or don't seem to be as cognitively,
you know, alert, as they used to be. So that
one's a tough one as to where you would draw
that age limit. But I think if you have term limits,
you probably aren't going to see the older folks kind
(01:02:36):
of jumping in at the beginning of the term limit cycle.
I think most people end up aging out in politics
after they've been there for years and years and years
and years and years and years. I think that's how
you end up with some of the folks who have
been there forever, who are older than some of the
other representatives. It's because they have been there forever. And
(01:02:57):
I think with term limits, people will naturally age.
Speaker 1 (01:03:00):
I think that's a really cool idea. And I seriously,
I really do think that that's a really cool way
to kind of break this apart and to figure out
how how could we do such a thing here?
Speaker 6 (01:03:10):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
And I think I think, look, there's a lot of
ways you could. You could mix things up. You could,
I mean, heck you could. You could make everybody who
would be of a certain of an age right where
you're an age of majority, all the way up to
whatever thing you could. What if you drafted ten percent
into the Congress where you you had to go, you
(01:03:32):
had to shut your business down and go do your
job like that would be like that would be quite something,
you know, all the way around.
Speaker 6 (01:03:41):
You know, I would I would secretly love that. I'd
throw my name into that.
Speaker 1 (01:03:46):
No, they're just gonna call you like jury duty. It's
gonna be like, hey, Beth, you gotta go do two
years up at d C. Good luck.
Speaker 6 (01:03:53):
You know what that has happened to me. I got
I had to serve on a grand jury and that
was a year of my life. You know what. I
would jump in and uh and do that in a heartbeat.
And I think there's something to be said of having
people go up and see the process from the inside.
I mean, think about either the tweet that or the
post on X that that bon Gina put out a
(01:04:14):
couple of days ago about being suddenly on the inside
and seeing how things are working, and that he doesn't
want things to work that way. And I think there's
something there's something to be said. Nobo an outsider who
was a podcaster and who had certainly political ideas and
thoughts and and and wanted to share them. And then
now he's on the inside and he's seeing.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Yes, he is the cry he is right. Quickly, what
do you got tomorrow? Real quick?
Speaker 6 (01:04:38):
Tomorrow we have Teresa Payton talking tech headlines with us.
We also have Scott Huffman, a political science professor from
Winter University, to break down a lot of well maybe
what you and I were just talking about.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
Great stuff. Looking forward to it. Thanks so much, my friend,
we'll talk. We'll talk next time. News Talk eleven ten, nine,
(01:05:10):
nine to three WBT Brent Winterbole Show. Good to be
with you, Stay dry, be careful when you're driving out there,
all the sort of stuff of the things that you
need to pay close attention to. Let's dip into some
of the sound as we enter into the third hour
of the program. I'm going to start in the New
York City picture, and this is Richie Torres. Richie Torres
(01:05:33):
is a member of the Congress and he wants more
gun control in New York City.
Speaker 7 (01:05:39):
Cut nine please, But despite the progress we've made toward
reducing crime, New York remains a prime target for terrorism.
My understanding is the city faces an average of one
terror plot a month. And I find it to be
absolute insanity that we allow weapons of war to just
flow freely on the streets of America. And even though
New York State and New York City have the strictest
(01:06:01):
gun laws in the nation, those gun laws can only
take you so far if guns can easily cross state boundaries.
Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
So then why don't you take scumbags and put them
in jail? I mean, I'm sorry, but like, why don't
you take criminals and put them in jail for very
heavy sentences like rape, murder, what have you make Make
a minimum make a minimum of forty five years if
you rape somebody, If you make it fifty five years
if you murder somebody, No getting out of jail, none
(01:06:29):
of that. I know you guys want, especially you progressives.
I know you progressives want criminals to walk the streets. Basically,
it's a try, it's a it's a triad. Okay, So
here's the triad. Ready. The first is criminals walking the streets,
the second is illegals walking the streets, and the third
I think is probably more abortions. I mean, that's what
(01:06:55):
it seems to me. And I'm talking to Richie Torres.
I'm not talking to the people of Charlotte here. I'm
talking to Richie Torres, who is sitting there saying, we
got the toughest laws in the world, but we still
have a lot of criminals. Because you don't want to
put criminals in jail. Where do criminals belong in jail?
You steal, you rape, you murder, you assault, you do
(01:07:18):
all that kind of stuff, you need to be in
jail for a heavy amount of time. In fact, you
know what I think should happen. I think that the
federal government ought to take over the prisons in New York.
I think the Feds should take it over, and they
should say nobody gets out, nobody gets out. We're not
letting you go out. You're not gonna go in front
(01:07:40):
of Mershawan, You're not gonna go with Alvin Bragg, You're
not gonna go with any of these other whack jobs.
You're gonna have to figure it out, because we're going
to We're going to deprive you of the fifth column
of criminals that are walking the streets. That's the problem.
If you do not understand this, Richie Is, and I
(01:08:01):
know you're a smart guy, Richie torre Is, you need
to emphasize the fact that bad people need to be
incarcerated and not come out until they have been rehabilitated.
And some of them are never going to be rehabilitated
because they are that dangerous. They are that dangerous. Rick
(01:08:24):
Scott's got a great idea. Rick Scott, Senator from the
state of Florida, cut number ten. Rick Scott's got an answer.
Speaker 8 (01:08:34):
Go Socialism becoming a growing threat here in America. A
support for Socialist candidates like Zora Mumdani are on the rise.
A New York Times piece called Mamdanni's message is already
playing outside New York City reveals that voters in big
blue cities are becoming more receptive to his kind of policies.
The Democratic Socialist has called for abolishing medical bills, defunding
(01:08:58):
the police, rent freezes, all well, claiming capitalism is theft.
Florida Center Rick Scott had an idea to fly aerial
ads across New York City skies over the weekend, encouraging
residents to relocate to the Sunshine State and escape socialism.
Joining me now is the man himself, Florida Senator Rick Scott,
Senator very funny. I give you props for the banners
(01:09:21):
over New York City. And many people here in New
York City that are residents are very concerned that if
Zora Mundani becomes the mayor of New York City, it's
going to be wealth destruction and property destruction.
Speaker 9 (01:09:34):
Well, first off, my heart goes out to the people
that the families that people lost their life yesterday and
the people that are still in the hospital in the
shooting in New York City. But look at the difference
between Florida and New York. In Florida, we want opportunity. Okay,
New York is going to reduce your opportunity, people like
Mom Dommie. They're going to kill your opportunity. Social libents
has never worked anywhere, whether it's your economic opportunity, whether
(01:09:59):
you're education opportunity, whether your public safety opportunity.
Speaker 6 (01:10:03):
Were not.
Speaker 9 (01:10:03):
Now in Florida is talking about defunding the police. In Florida,
we're talking about more jobs. We're talking about making it
at a place where companies can do well, where you
can come like me, a kid that grew up in
public housing, can go be anything they want to be.
Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
In New York, it's gonna it's.
Speaker 9 (01:10:18):
Gonna be a redistribution of wealth.
Speaker 3 (01:10:20):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (01:10:20):
They're going to take away money from the rich and
give it to everybody else, which always destroys all the
wealth and wherever it happens.
Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
Hmmmm. Okay, this is a this is a good this
is a good approach. However, I want to edit one
thing on his approach. Your approach over there, uh there
in Florida, you have got to make sure that you're
not inviting criminality into Florida. You're putting a big sign up.
People are seeing the big sign get out of get
(01:10:47):
out of New York, or get out of California, get
out of Chicago, all these places, and you're gonna you
have to be careful. You have to be careful because
there are going to be people who are not coming
for the best possible motives. They're coming in for the
best ability to bring about harm. And that I'm just saying,
(01:11:09):
you gotta be careful, especially as a senator. You know,
you gotta like welcome people with business, welcome people with opportunities,
welcome people with all that sort of stuff. That's that's
what you gotta do. But the fact of the matter is,
you know who are you inviting in? You have to
be very very careful. By the way, I got a
comment a WBT text line driven by Liberty Buick gmc
(01:11:32):
uh age. Limits is wrong, wrong, wrong, in the uh
in the Congress, in the Senate. Why why, why why
do you come on? Do you want Joe Biden legislating
in the House or the Senate? Do you want I mean, really,
come on, let's let's let's do this. Let's let's let's
(01:11:53):
do this. I mean, it makes it makes a lot
of sense. I think there are people who were probably
a little bit past prime, and I I think the
people who are pretty closely past prime are just not
the people. Oh somebody else said they didn't like that answer. Okay,
well that's that's fine. We're not always going to agree.
(01:12:14):
But look, I don't have the power to tax you.
I don't have the power to make you do this.
This is just an idea that has been floated out
and I've got two people who don't like it, and
that's okay. I respect you for this, you know, coming
up in a matter of moments. Tom Homan absolutely spit
(01:12:35):
in truth.
Speaker 6 (01:12:36):
I feel so.
Speaker 4 (01:12:37):
Good, half feel so numb.
Speaker 1 (01:12:39):
Yeah, there's talk eleven ten ninety nine, three WVT. It's
the Brett Winter Bowls Show. We are having some technical
issues when it as it relates to our F signal,
(01:13:01):
but our AM signal and our streaming is still stout.
So I just had to make that announcement for you all.
A little bit of wisdom, just a little teeny tiny
bit of wisdom, and I think this is something that
should be emphasized. The strongest man Samson and the wisest
(01:13:22):
man Solomon in the Bible were defeated by lust. Let
that sink in people, just a little something something that
I want to spread with you here a little bit.
Okay's break break it down for you. Tom Holman. Tom Holman,
this is a guy who is able to withstand the
(01:13:47):
barbs that come his way. And this is cut number eleven.
Tom Homan on the truth about deportation.
Speaker 10 (01:13:55):
Go seven zero percent of people were arresting a criminals,
heart stop seventy percent? Who are the other thirty percent?
The other thirty percent are national security threats like we've
wrestled over three hundred Iranian nationals. These are people who
are national security threats based on intelligence, based on other information.
These are people we have to take off the street,
(01:14:16):
that we have to deport. Who's the rest of that
thirty percent? These are people who had they had due
process at great taxpayer expense, and the judge ordered them removed.
A federal judge said it must be deported. So our
job is to deport those people. So we're executing the
laws issued by Congress, enacted by Congress. We're arresting seventy
percent criminals and the rest are national security threads. And
(01:14:37):
those were final orders. But the left will make you
seem like we're arresting, you know, innocent people, disappearing people,
kidnapping people. But the facts are the facts. Isis prioritizing
public safety threats and national security threats, and the numbers
prove it.
Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
So so all he's doing is following the laws as written.
All it would matter is that you just have to
do that. And I know, it's like, it's crazy, right,
it's crazy, it's wacky, it's all this kind of stuff.
But he didn't get drawn into this effort. But for
(01:15:20):
the people who have violated the country's rules, we have
rules in this country. And look, I have traveled around
the world. I've spent time in a variety of places.
I have spent time in Mexico. I've spent time in
adjacencies to Mexico. And the reality is you would not
(01:15:47):
have to have deportations but for the fact that people
commit crimes, and the crime, the first commission of the
crime is coming into the country illegally. Like that's not
that's not like a parking ticket, that's not even like
a five five miles over the hour kind of ticket.
(01:16:09):
You violate the federal law of the United States if
you come into the country without proper paperwork, without proper vetting,
without any of that stuff. You ever see somebody who
gets arrested in a supermarket or a big store and
(01:16:32):
they they are stealing things from the store. They're there,
they're trying to shoplift, and then they get caught, and
then the water works begin and the people start crying,
and why are you doing this to me? And why
are you calling the police, and why are you what
you're doing. They're doing it because you're committing a crime.
Now you can go and be like New York, or
(01:16:53):
you can go and you can be like Los Angeles
or San Francisco or Seattle, and you can go and
you can say, you know what, we don't want to
have any laws when it comes to the issue of
stealing things. We don't believe that stealing is bad. You
should just be able to come into somebody's house and
(01:17:16):
take what they have because you want it, just like
you want to go into the United States and you
want to be in the United States and you want
to commit crimes in the United States. Well, the predicate
of all of that, it's very easy to understand. The
predicate for all of that is violating as the first
(01:17:37):
effort to come into the United States. I assume that
people in the sound of my voice live in places
where there are people who live around them. You have neighbors.
Are you allowed to go into your neighbor's house in
the middle of the night. That would be a your
(01:18:00):
bad decision, especially given the ways that people protect their properties,
their domiciles. But you're not allowed to go just go
through a window into somebody's house and then sit at
the kitchen table and say, where's my French toast? You can't.
You don't get to do that. They will either throw
you out of the house or they'll call the police.
(01:18:23):
Whose fault is that Tom Holman is doing his own job.
Tom Holman is doing his own thing. All that sort
of stuff is happening, and then what do you end
up with? What he does. He's enforcing the laws. He's
not even really enforcing the laws himself. He's going out
there and what's he trying to do. He's going out
there and he's saying, hey, listen, yeah, let's go round
(01:18:47):
five people up for fun. That's not what he's doing.
That's not what he's doing at all. What he's doing
is he's saying, listen, I got warrants. I got these warrants.
This person is is a known has Bola member. This
person is is a known Ebola member. Uh. This this,
(01:19:08):
this person over here is stealing all kinds of stuff.
This person over here is a sports guy. Uh you
know you just you name it. I mean, it's it's
all that sort of stuff that's going on. And Tom
Holman doesn't wake up and go, let's go round up
five people today. You know why he doesn't do that.
It's a waste of his time. It's a waste of
(01:19:31):
his I'm gonna go get five people today. Really, who
are you gonna go get that? I saw a guy
at the at the circle, K. I saw somebody over
here looking at a at at at a at a billboard.
I'm just gonna grab them and deport them. Are they Americans? No? Really,
I'm just getting rid of everybody. That's not how this works.
(01:19:53):
This is this is the problem. When you go back
in time to the defund the police concept, Like I
have to go back and try to figure out when
the heck that even started. If you if you went
(01:20:15):
in nineteen forty five, at the end of World War two, okay,
and you went at the end of World War two
and you were were youpatriated back to your home, right,
So now you're living in Charlotte. Now you're living in Charleston,
Now you're living in Boone, you're living in any of
(01:20:38):
these places. And you just came back from fighting the war.
And you get there and somebody comes in and steals
your truck or your car, or they steal they steal
your still or whatever it is that they're doing. Okay,
(01:20:59):
and you make contact because you're you're a solid person.
You're not gonna just beat the you know what out
of them. You're gonna call the police. You're gonna get
the sheriff down there to prosecute the person. And the
sheriff shows up and says, sorry, we defunded the police.
Nobody gets arrested anymore. Could you Could you imagine how
(01:21:24):
you people who are old enough that you had a
World War two vette in your life, and if you
said that to pop or to Grandpa or great grandpa,
you know what, the sheriff doesn't arrest anybody anymore, doesn't
take him into custody anymore because they defunded the police.
(01:21:44):
That guy would go to the VFW or someplace else
and say, Okay, guys, here's what we gotta do. We're
gonna take shifts, not Adam shift. We're gonna take shifts,
and we're gonna drive around. And if we see people
stealing stuff from people, we're beating people up, we're gonna
have to kind of help him out because this is
(01:22:06):
not right. What would they say? What would George Washington say?
What would Abraham Lincoln say? What? What would Bill Clinton say?
Speaker 6 (01:22:21):
You know what?
Speaker 1 (01:22:21):
Bill Clinton would say? Hold on, pull that over bull,
pull her out over it there. I just want to say, Hi,
no way wrong. Oh. Tom Holman's not out there just
grabbing randos. He's not grabbing randos. He's going out and
he's enforcing the laws just like it's always been. And
(01:22:47):
if you don't like it, then you know what you
should do. You should go to the White House, send
a letter and say I want to be the guy
in charge of cutting people loose, and then just wait
and see what they say to you. So I'm saying
makes perfect sense.
Speaker 3 (01:23:10):
Suffocate it.
Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
News Talk eleven ten, not a nine three WBT. It's
the Brett Winterbull Show. It is good to be with you.
Here today seven oh four, five, seven zero eleven ten.
All right, CNN with this story brought to you by
Caitlyn Collins, because everybody likes Caitlyn Collins on the CNN.
Here we go, get ready for this. Maxwell offers to
(01:23:45):
testify before the Congress, but with major conditions, including immunity.
Jeffrey Epstein's accomplice Julane Maxwell, has offered to testify before Congress,
but with major conditions, including immunity, according to a list
(01:24:08):
of her demands sent to the House Oversight Committee by
her attorneys, House Oversight Committee Chair Comer subpoenaed Maxwell to
testify next month. In a new letter sent to Comer
on Tuesday, Maxwell's attorneys said they initially decided to invoke
(01:24:28):
her Fifth Amendment rights, but then offered to cooperate with
Congress if a fair and safe path forward can be established.
Her attorneys noted Maxwell is currently appealing her conviction to
the Supreme Court and argued that any testimony she provides
(01:24:49):
now could compromise her constitutional rights, prejudice her legal claims,
and potentially tanked a future jury pool. Compounding these concerns
are public comments from members of Congress that appear to
have prejudged Ms Maxwell's credibility without even listening to what
(01:25:12):
she has to say or evaluating the extensive documentation that
corroborates what the letter says. So here's what she wants.
This is what she wants to tell her story. A
grant of formal immunity, the interview cannot happen at the
correctional facility where she is serving her sentence. To prepare
(01:25:37):
adequately for any congressional deposition and to ensure accuracy and fairness,
we would require the committee's questions in advance. Surprise questioning
would be both inappropriate and unproductive. The interview would be
(01:25:58):
scheduled only at after the resolution of her Supreme Court
petition and her forthcoming habeas petition. So what she's trying
to do is push this thing all the way back
because the Supreme Court. Supreme Court is not going to
be able to act on this until October at the earliest,
(01:26:21):
when the justices will be scheduled to return from a
summer break. I gotta say something, and I've wanted to
say this for a very long time. I don't understand
why the Supreme Court justices don't work a full year.
You're getting paid Mondo money you're getting. You're getting a
whole bunch of stuff. You know, all this great stuff
(01:26:43):
that you get to do. You're a Supreme Court justice.
Probably get out of you probably get out of parking
tickets and all that sort of stuff, no doubt about it.
But the fact of matter is Congress takes a recess
for a month. You should take a recess for a
month and then get back to business. Why are we
(01:27:03):
doing first week in October? Well, what is this like
some kind of a grandeur thing. It doesn't make any
sense to me. You guys got to work. Judges work
like regular judges work. I'm sorry, did I miss something
like that? The courts are shut down during the summer.
Are the courts shut down during I don't think they're
(01:27:24):
down there, they're shut down during the summer. I mean,
you want to get paid all the big money, you
want to be all famous, you want to do all
that sort of stuff. Then why are you Why are
you only working? You're you're you're you're like off for
like three months. What are you? A school teacher? And
school teachers have to come back in and get they
(01:27:45):
believe you me, school teachers they got to come in.
First of all, they got to take their room apart.
And then you have people that decide they're going to
come in the room and then mix it all up
for the next year. And then what happens is you
you have to go in the and set it up
all over again. I mean, my gosh, come on, and
what if you get transferred to another school? Now it's
(01:28:05):
like that's on you. But this whole thing, like so
she's she's she's pushing the tune here. You already got convicted,
Like what are you doing? You know you want to
know what the Congress should do? Here, here's what I
would do if you want to, Like if I was
Comer Coma And by the way, Comer m I can
(01:28:31):
go this way that way with that guy. I'm not
I'm not a big fan of Comer. No, I didn't
say Gomer. I didn't say Gomer Pile Comer, Congressman Comber
from they're all from Kentucky. By the way, you noticed this,
Massi's from Kentucky. Comber's from king Kentucky. Where else is h? Yeah,
(01:28:54):
that's right, So you got I'm gonna do this right.
Massi's from Kentucky. Comber's from Kentucky. Mitch McConnell's from Kentucky.
It's like a Kentucky mafia. No, I'm not hating on them.
I'm just pointing it out. If I were running the show,
if I were Homer, I'd say, you know, okay, you
(01:29:15):
know what we're gonna do. We give you a blanket immunity. Boom,
start talking. We're gonna give you a blanket immunity. Boom,
We're gonna take depositions. Start talking. They won't do it
because it's like, oh, you gotta go to the Supreme Court.
What if the Supreme Court refuses to hear it? What
if the Supreme Court decides we're not gonna hear it? Now,
(01:29:35):
what are you doing? These are the challenges. These are
the challenges we're dealing with. And everybody thinks that she's
gonna be like this magical font of information. She's every
bit of a sketchy person as the other one was,
and everybody else that's involved with this, I mean, this
is let's be honest here for a minute. How do
(01:29:57):
we know she's gonna give you the truth. If she's
the last man standing, last woman standing, she could make
up whatever business she wants to make up. You don't
know if it's truthful. This is the problem.
Speaker 5 (01:30:12):
This is why.
Speaker 1 (01:30:14):
The best advice I could give anybody coming up in
the world today, Like, if you're twelve thirteen years old
and you're coming up in the world and you're doing
your thing, and you're going to school and you're doing
all this kind of stuff. I'm telling you right now,
you get the sense that somebody's talking to you and
they're sketchy, go the other way. Do not deal with
(01:30:37):
sketchy people. Just be with straight up real people who
are honest, truthful, etc. Stay close to your church, stay
close to your ethics, stay close to all that stuff,
because anything that you think is going to be a
shortcut ends up being a miserable bypass. You don't like that,
(01:31:00):
and you're not gonna like it. Dre's Talk eleven ninety
(01:31:26):
nine to three WBT. Oh, it's getting thicker. Details emerge
about the note that the high rise shooter left Adams
of the Governor of the governor. The mayor in New
York says an associate helped him buy gun parts. Oh boy,
(01:31:48):
this the guy. They're gonna hang this on the guy
who helped him, and that should be the case, because
if he if this guy was not eligible to have firearms,
then what's going on here? You're not to go out
and build weapons. Mm, this is no good. This is
this is absolutely no good.
Speaker 2 (01:32:11):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:32:11):
And now, look, I do know that a number of
people are are interested in maybe getting into the world
of illegal immigration abatement abatement. So I'm not saying that
you're trying to become somebody wants to be a part
of the illegal immigration business. But it's this. The Trump
administration has unleashed crucial recruitment campaigns with massive bonuses to
(01:32:37):
bolster the ICE the ICE ray ranks. Guess what the
bonus is. This bonus is something. DHS is offering fifty
thousand dollars signing bonuses as Secretary Gnome vows to arrest
(01:33:01):
and deport the worst of the worst. The Department of
Homeland Security is launching a major recruitment campaign as the
agency seeks to grow amid mass deportation efforts and new
funding from the Trump backed congressional spending bill. The funding
(01:33:22):
in the spending bill, dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill,
provides funding to hire ten thousand new ICE agents. DHS
is launching the Defend the Homeland campaign, featuring posters depicting
prominent figures including President Donald Trump, Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons,
(01:33:46):
and DHS Secretary Christino. The Biden administration let in this
is quote the worst of the worst from around the world.
Thanks to President Trump, ICE is now empowered to go
after these heinous individuals, arrest them, and deport them. My
message to law enforcement, we will never abandon you. We
(01:34:08):
are doing everything we can to keep you safe, said Christino.
In addition, the ICE America needs you. The web page
features imagery of Uncle Sam and says your country is
calling upon you to serve. The website touts three key
(01:34:29):
roles deportation officer, criminal investigator, and general attorney, but there
are a variety of listings on the federal government's job
site that it links back to. The agency is touting
fifty thousand dollars signing bonuses plus student loan relief plus
(01:34:54):
law enforcement availability pay of twenty five percent for homeland
secure purity investigations, special agents administratively uncontrollable overtime for ICE deportation,
so you're getting like as much overtime as you want.
Basically is what they're offering special agents, administratively uncontrollable overtime
(01:35:21):
for ICE deportation officers and retirement benefits. You must be
at least twenty one years of age, with varying age
maximums for certain positions. Now that all sounds like a
really nice offer. But here's here's the challenge. Right, here's
the challenge. You think about it. They are gonna they're
(01:35:43):
gonna dox you, They're gonna come and try to find you,
They're gonna, you know, all that stuff that's going on.
Perhaps maybe if you live in a place where it
may be very difficult to be doxed or very difficult
to be found, I mean, maybe that would be something
that you would want to consider. Your country is calling
on you to serve at ICE and defend the homeland,
(01:36:04):
Lions said in a statement in the wake of the
Biden administration's open border policies. The dedicated men and women
of ICE now face unprecedented challenges in removing millions of
criminal aliens from our country. Thanks to the One Big,
Beautiful Bill, we now have funding to recruit and hire
Americans who want to patriotically serve the country. So that's
(01:36:30):
the that's the storyline of this. That is the storyline
of this, and you've got a lot of interesting stuff
happening here. One commenter talking about this said, raise the
federal lee range to a realistic fifty instead of thirty five,
(01:36:51):
and these services would be inundated with strong applicants. Fifty
today isn't what it was in the nineteen fifties when
these age requirements were put in place. So they're saying,
go hire experienced people who know how to get this
job done. It's kind of kind of interesting. But this
(01:37:14):
is I imagine, I imagine because of all the money
that's gone into that big beautiful bill, as they call it,
I imagine you're going to see a whole lot of
other things that are going to start to pop up
as well, which is gonna be kind of interesting all
the way around. All right, In terms of the Epstein story,
I've come across an interesting story, and I can sum
(01:37:37):
it up here very quickly. No, I can't, because now
it is gone. President Trump says, Jeffrey Epstein stole Virginia
Jeffrea from him when she worked at the Marra Lago spa,
meaning Jeffrey Epstein said, Hey, you're gonna go with me.
You're not gonna work with President Trump, then just Donald
(01:37:59):
Trump when she was working at the Mara A Lagos, SPA.
That's an NBC News poll right there. We'll see how
that stuff starts to develop over the next couple of days.
And beyond those are the big stories that are out
there moving, and these are the stories that are very
very important that we have to pay close attention to.
And so just remember one of the most important things
(01:38:20):
that can happen is this. You charge your own course,
you keep your nose clean, and you behave yourself and
that's really that's the secret to success. Now, a lot
of other people do a lot of other things. Don't
be those people. Be a solid person and you will
(01:38:42):
reap the rewards or maybe not still be a good person.
Thanks to Isaac and Lannie and each and every one
of you. I'm Brett Whatitable News Talk eleven ten nine
nine three w