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December 2, 2025 12 mins

Donald Trump declared that all executive orders from the previous administration signed by autopen are now “null and void,” claiming that roughly 92% of Joe Biden’s directives were signed using that automated signature device. Legal analysts on air and off are already pushing back.  They are pointing out that autopen signatures have long been considered legally valid and retracting them wholesale could spark chaos in federal policy, court rulings, and administrative precedents. 

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is the d You can show you a twenty
twenty five edition that and it's almost over to it's
almost over a couple more weeks here, Do you know
what I was? I was uh Neil de grass Tyson
was talking about how when you're younger, remember the days seen,
your summer last forever, but when you're older, yep, and
it's not. It's because generally, by the time you get older,

(00:22):
you've experienced enough things where your mind doesn't have to
catalog it. So time is the same. But you know,
if you're when your kid, everything's new, and you know
it's your your mind is is cataloging everything, it's learning everything.
But after you've been around for a while, you're like,
I've seen all this. But I also think it's your perception,

(00:43):
right because you you I'm telling you what he said
scientifically is the reason for people like like, it feels
like it just feels like the new year started a
week ago. But he said, scientifically, the scientific reason for
that is that you when you're younger, you have like
summer used to be in the endles summer, you'll have

(01:04):
in the summer. Now you've got summers three days. Yeah,
you know, but and I thought that that was kind
of crazy, but he said, yeah, scientifically, your brain, you know,
it's like a spune. So when it has seen so
many things, summers are new, you're excited about it. You're
seeing things for the first time, you get over. I
have seen all this. I don't need to I don't
need to remember it. I don't need to remember it.

(01:25):
We are entering rare territory, and we're gonna talk a
lot about that. First off, I hope everybody had Thanksgiving.
I had to cold last week for my Thanksgiving. That
was Oh that sounds fun. The rest of us got
full and you got it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, oh yeah.
So when somebody say I'm full of they're lying. I'm
not at all. But only I would have a cold

(01:47):
and nice to be disclose to Thanksgiving. That's crazy. That's crazy,
all right. Happy birthday, Jane, i'mnay, Happy birthday, and of
course it's cyber want to forget that. I have no
idea what that means, you know, skip heads on the run.
Happy Birthday agenda. Janew Money had birthday, Zoey Kravitz had
birtha DeShawn Jackson, who Delaware State led into a winning
season I think to a championship right right skip yeah,

(02:09):
division Yeah. Happy birthday to Sarah Silverman of course a
very woman. Happy birthday the Bet Miller to the Chanel Imon,
Happy birth of the Golden Brooks. Have birth to the
least a Fisher, didn't she that?

Speaker 2 (02:22):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Yes? How yeah, it was a documentary. Yes, Happy Birthday,
the uberday. Uh, they played My Children, Berry Gordon, temptationous
at Birthday to Charles Michael Davis, Gray's Anatomy and the
Game Had Birth to Brian Michael Cox, producer and writer
from Mariah Usher and the Guinness World Record her for
the longest consecutive period of charge success. Had birthda to

(02:44):
Gary Payton the second. Happy birthday of course, possibly, of course,
to Richard Pryor. I saw a thing when he was
on with Johnny Carson. Uh today it was I think
it's did you see that I did? It was? He's
just a brilliant man, the best that ever did it.
Happy birth to the lou Rawls. Jasmine got her voice
from him. Happy birthday to Billy Paul. Happy birthday to

(03:05):
Vesta Williams. Congratulate and happy birthday of course, possibly the
Pablo Escar. We got a great show lined up for you.
We got ninety seconds of ninety hits with Dj Luciam.
I have a little note from the ged section plus
the Jazz Report. It's the deal Hughgey Show. So over
the weekend, President Trump announced that the airspace around Venezuela

(03:25):
is effectively closed out. If you've not been paying attention,
there's a shroud of controversy around the attacks in Venezuela.
There have been an admiral that resigned. They were, of
course at least five or six Democratic lawmakers who reminded
people who are in the military that they don't have

(03:47):
to obey a lawful order. There was course a much
ranker from the Department of Defense, Pete Hesmith himself, talking about,
you know, bringing in Mark Kelly and re enlisting him
so he could then court. So now we find out
that the potential for that is that they say that Headsmith,
it is being alleged. And there are two bipartisan committees,

(04:11):
one in the Senate and one of the Congress that
will investigate whether he gave an order to kill everybody.
So there was an initial strike, then there was a
second strike, and it's called a devil tap. That means,
and it's against the Geneva convintion, that means, you can't
kill somebody once you've already rendered them helpless. They can't.
They're not a threat to you anymore. It's interesting in

(04:32):
this way, but Trump bypassed Venezuela. He bypassed the Congress
for this war in Venezuela. So we don't know the
legality of that there. But if this in fact, this
Secretary of Defense gave this order, that is either an
act of you know, either that as a war crime
or murder. So a lot going on, But I think

(04:55):
the more salient point about all of this is everything
I think we have seen in the last six to
eight months, I think it's fairly safe to say is
a distraction from the Epstein report. It's also distracted about
how bad the economy is going. But the first time
in this nation's history there's not an inflation report, a
gross domestic product report, or a jobs report that tells

(05:18):
you how bad things are. And the last time tars
were implemented this way, in the nineteen thirties, there was
in fact that that was in fact that it caused
a great it called a depression. So I believe there
was a distraction for all of the things how bad
the economy is going, and the potential and the specter
of the Epstein file. Donald Trump has talked about going
to war with Venezuela, and he also talked about going

(05:41):
to war with Nigeria. And we know for sure the
one thing in America, you never have to prove anything
you say about black and brown people. You can say
they're rapists and they're murderers. You could say they eat dogs.
You could say that they raped and murdered people at
Central Park. You can say anything and they'll believe it.
My point is that all of this is a distraction.

(06:03):
We know that these talks about going to war with
two by black country and the Brown country. My only
question is how many people will have to die, how
many people will have to be hurt, how many people
will have to lose their lives because this man is
on the f sing list. That's a little note from
the ged sensum. It's the DL Huge Show, She's jazz,

(06:26):
It's the Jazzy report on the d L. Hughley Show.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
Trump announced that all orders signed by former President Joe
Biden via auto pen are null and void. He can
that if he tried to argue that he was involved,
he would.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
Be charged with perjury. He can't do that either.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
Using the autopen is legal, according to an investigation back
in two thousand and five by the Justice Department under
former President Bush, which found that the president need not
personally perform the physical act of affixing his signature to
a bill.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
Here's the thing, you, Your Supreme Court said anything a
president did, he could team. Okay, so he's he has
the same amenity you have. So all of this is
just talking you. Donald Trump is mister from color purple.
So the orange is a new color purple. The way
he talks to women and the way he's mister from

(07:17):
the color purple. And in this nation, it's something that
the the the highest office in the land is held
to the lowest standard. If I talked to you like
that at work, they would get rid of me. If
you're if you were in a relationship where a man
talked to you like that, they would say he was abusive.
They would say that he was verbally abusive. They would
say he was emotional, right, piggy. We just called the

(07:41):
person in the oval also talk like that. We call
him president.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
Yeah, Well, the shape of your block can help predict
whether or not you are at risk for diabetes. Other
aging factors shrinkage or inflammation of the glutes may reflect
frailty sitting time factor deposits and diabetes risk. Researchers say
the shape of the butt, rather than the size, it's
more closely tied to underlying metabolic chap.

Speaker 1 (08:08):
Yeah, the first you got that you're gonna do all right?
I guess shut up. Thank you for that. So a doctor,
she tested her roommate and best friend's boyfriend. He was
a room rate and it is her best friend. They
lived together. She tested her boyfriend for STD and didn't
tell her. So listen to this. I need to talk

(08:29):
to you. Why did you have something you want? And
I saw that she was adopted with testing him. Did
you have this conversation with I didn't have a conversation.
I have to pay for work right here.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
We have to take a look at it.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Typically. Now you were supposed to tell me as my
roommate and friend, and I know that I'm your roommate,
I'm your friend. It doesn't matter about your license. You're
about to lose your friendship of twenty.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
Of my license and I tell you everything was pupplet
to tell each other everything something that she's.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Trying a job, my job and my health is on
the line. I possibility this is your old mother early
as a friend, okay, with.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
A friend over my job and my career.

Speaker 1 (09:11):
Why my life with him?

Speaker 2 (09:14):
He's sitting on you when he's fuss around and he's
getting you're that's why really to help me?

Speaker 1 (09:19):
All right, you don't have no loyalty, and I have loyalty,
and you probably also have loyalty for my job. It's
the loss.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
It's a federal crime.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
But the doctor wrong for not telling her best friend
about her boyfriend. That's the question with that. I will
say this, if the doctor could lose her license that way. Yeah,
it's clearly a hippo, clearly clearly a hip of a
twenty year friendship. Though, hey, man, for a dude, you
ain't gonna we don't know if you're gonna be waiting
while I'm gonna blow my whole residency for a dude.

(09:50):
You can wear a year. You can do it. I'm
not gonna do it. It is out of the deal.
You will show your twenty twenty five edition a doctor.
She has a roommate, and her roommate happens to be
her best friend. She tested her roommate's boyfriend for an
STD and didn't tell her friend. First off, this is
not just the question of somebody who works at the

(10:11):
post office in the nail Salona, the kiosk at the mall.
Whoa you know? This is somebody who is a professional doctor.
She's a I don't got to say professional and doctor.
She's a doctor and she can she could very much
lose her license.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
Well you can.

Speaker 3 (10:25):
You're not supposed to share some information, nothing like that.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
That's crazy. And so what I think she probably could
have done is to refuse to do it, like when
he when he.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Said, said you go to somebody else. Now it's still
would it came up? Because then your girlfriend with why
didn't you tell me? He came in an askettest even
though you didn't do it, I can't tell you. You're
not supposed to tell what the results are. But she
looked through her stuff and that's how she found out.
She found the paper I think founded in her boyfriend stuff.
Found the paper and with her.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
What was the result? He and chlamythia?

Speaker 2 (11:02):
Damn yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
I know. Girl named Clymydia. Does you know her? So
who do you think was Who do you think was
that far? We're gonna go to our social media platform
especially Okay, what are they saying out that she was
a doctor wrong for not telling her best her best friend.
So we got Gregory from Massachusetts. Gregory said, on a
personal level, I get it. On a professional level, it
was wrong. Yeah, well, baby, I'm not getting ready to

(11:26):
lose my whole life's work because you mad.

Speaker 3 (11:28):
Not gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
Because let me tell you something.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
When you try to go get another job and it's
in your record that you violated hippa.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
Oh no, if you lose a license, ain't no more job.
It's appeal for committee. It ain't a new job. I
get another friend. Wow, Well, if you're that dismissed by
your friend, it was the friendship was never really worth it.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
But but well, if it was my friend, first of all,
I would have never done the testing. I would have
went to my girlfriend and said, let me tell you
what your man had a nerve the audacity to ask
me to do. You better send them on down to
that clinic down the street.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
That's the breaking of a law too.

Speaker 2 (12:02):
If he requested medical service from you as a doctor,
and you tell somebody.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Else's not if it's in the house. But he don't
listen to everybody out here you want to.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
I'm just saying, well, I'm not your doctor either, you
know not?

Speaker 1 (12:16):
All right, Well, don't listen to that. If you are,
you can't go to course, say Jasmine saying no, well,
I he wants.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
Me to do something to violate hippo and I'm not
going to do it. That'll if she's a smart friend, right.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
You should say anything about it. You should check your man.

Speaker 3 (12:34):
No, you can say it. You don't have you can
you don't have to say what he asked. But you
can say he's a lawyer. But I will suggest this.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
You can say research you are on this subject. But
I will say this, do not listen to this broad
Just say that. That's all I can say. I can
give you my official assessment of this particular interaction. Do
not listen to this broad
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