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August 8, 2025 • 56 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
One thousand percent. That's the increase in assaults against ICE.
As Trump's deportation continues, Ron Vitello drawns us from the
Department of Homeland Security, and Secretary Kennedy is slashed funding
for specific research into the mRNA vaccine. We'll get to
the science and the politics tonight. Plus Trump's tariffs are
taking effect, and we'll see how the economy is reacting.

(00:20):
And a Brazilian feminist.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Had to find refuge in Europe from her own country.
We'll tell you why. It's all. Next to the Macates Show,
Let's do this. We're shaking up Washington, d C. We're
breaking the fever. Do you haven't watch this guy in television.
It's like a machine. He's great.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Matt Gaates, Happy Deportation Friday. It's generally a good thing
when open borders mayors are losing it. ICE is ramping
up operations. When I go fishing, I usually like to
drop a line where the fish are. Jesse James robbed
banks because that's where the money was, and ICE is

(00:59):
dropped by a home depot or two. Because when you're
looking for illegal aliens, you don't necessarily stop by. Lulu Lemon,
the Department of Homeland Security Secretary Christi Nome recently announced
that ICE agents are experiencing a dramatic spike and assaults
reportedly between eight hundred and thirty percent and a one
thousand percent increase as they're carrying out the largest deportation

(01:21):
in American history. A suspected arson incident occurred at an
ICE field office in Yakima, Washington. Someone threw a rock
through a window and started a fire near the building.
ICE rays in Los Angeles triggered widespread unrest. Protesters hurled
concrete and bricks. Agents used tear gas, pepper spray, and
flash ban grenades to get the crowds to disperse, and

(01:42):
paramount of rock was thrown in an ICE vehicle. It
shattered the windshield and wounded the agent. Two individuals were
arrested for assaulting police officers. One was accused of throwing
a Malotov cocktail and injuring three deputies. And San Francisco
protesters reportedly forced an ICE vehicle to run over at
least one person, causing injury. In Florida, where we just

(02:03):
have the most special of laws, we actually have a
law that allows you to run people over if they
surround your vehicle and intend to do you harm.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
You can check that out.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
ICE ramped up enforcement, expanded detention capacity, including a five
thousand bed tent encampment in Texas.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
They aim for a million deportations each year.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
The federal government does need more people for ICE, and
the recruitment effort never looked so good.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Well.

Speaker 4 (02:25):
Our recruitment efforts to hire ten thousand new ICE officers
has been extremely successful, Lawrence. As of today, we have
over eighty thousand applicants for those ten thousand positions. Already,
people and patriots across this country that say we want
to join, we want to help and be a part
of this effort. It's overwhelming. I would tell everybody go
to join dot ICE dot gov and go there and

(02:48):
sign up be a part of this team that is
helping make America safe again. With President Trump, we've removed
any of the age barriers. We no longer have a
cap on how old you can be or you can
continue at ajteen. Sign up for ICE and join us
and be a part of it. We'll get you trained
and ready to be equipped to go out on the
streets and help protect family.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
Joining us now Senior advisor for US Customs and Border
Patrol Ron Vitello. So, Ron, tell us what is going
on with the deportation agenda this week.

Speaker 5 (03:19):
Well, more of the same.

Speaker 6 (03:21):
We're scaling up because of the resources that are provided
ICE in the big beautiful Bill. We're going to continue
to do what we're doing on the border, and then
they're going to scale up their capacity as well as
ad boots on the ground.

Speaker 5 (03:33):
Right they've got ten thousand net new.

Speaker 6 (03:35):
CBP is going to get eight thousand net new, and
then they're going to expand the detention capability, which is
going to be really important. Scaling up what they're doing
in the interior requires detention beds. That is the quickest
way to get somebody removed, So having that capacity and
building it out as we go along will be really important. So, yeah,
the operations are underway, going to continue to lock down

(03:57):
the border, the numbers are amazing, and then help on
the interior where we can and follow ICE's lead where
they need more help.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
Where do you think you need to get that capacity
to in terms of beds in the interior so that
you've got the deportation infrastructure in place.

Speaker 6 (04:13):
The Director and his team are talking about one hundred
thousand new beds, and by example, you know, it was
funded in the last Biden budget had them at thirty
five thousand. So it's a huge increment to give them
the capability that they need.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
And to what extent are you going to leverage more
state partnerships like we've had in Florida and in Texas,
so that states with the capacity to help you produce
more beds will be able to participate as partners.

Speaker 6 (04:40):
Yeah, So the Secretary has followed the President's leadership on
this christin homes.

Speaker 5 (04:44):
She's gone out and asked.

Speaker 6 (04:47):
For help with her former colleagues and governor's offices and
state houses and you know Texas, Florida, you know their
models of cooperation with ICE and CVP obviously, but then
they're looking for more partners like that to and g
agreements are off the charts in comparison to where they
were before this administration started, and so more of that
across the board is going to be really important.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
Yeah, it seems to be the best way to get
that force multiplier. And we've seen in the states that
have really chosen to be partners a renewed interest in
the federal government as a teammate, because I heard in
Congress all the time previously when you had a state
like Texas or Florida wanting to do the right thing,
they often had their hands slapped away by the federal government.
And so I think, wherever people are on the political spectrum,

(05:30):
you want to see your state government, your federal government
working together. Now there are places where that's not happening.
We saw La Mayor Karen Bass more critical of the
department than ever. What kind of message does it send
to the people who are on the border, securing our
country and engaged in the internal enforcement of our laws
to have such recalcitrants from some other local officials, Well.

Speaker 5 (05:54):
It's very disappointing.

Speaker 6 (05:55):
Right the men and women on the front line, both
at ICE at CVP, they swore an oath to protect
the country. That means, you know, finding criminals, regardless of
whether it's a blue city or red city, finding those criminals,
identifying them and getting them out of the country.

Speaker 5 (06:08):
And people like her she knows better. She was in
the House.

Speaker 6 (06:11):
She understands how this gets funded, she understands what authorities
ICE is exercising, but she wants to qualify it as
something that only Donald Trump does, or that the people
are doing or somehow, you know, not worthy of her respect.

Speaker 5 (06:24):
As law enforcement officers, they're doing the job that we
asked for.

Speaker 6 (06:28):
This administration is giving the American public what they voted for,
which is a secure border in safe streets.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
We saw Secretary Nome reflect on the fact that there's
been a one thousand percent increase in assaults on ICE
officers and others who are participating in some of the
internal enforcement. Are you seeing that type of activity with
CBP as well on the border, or because there's not
as much activity on the border, maybe that's the safer
place for folks to be.

Speaker 6 (06:57):
Well, the traffic is way down, and so that brings
all the categories of risk down too.

Speaker 5 (07:01):
Right, You've got more agents out.

Speaker 6 (07:03):
Of patrol, rescuing people, stopping drugs, finding people who are
being trafficked, and so, yeah, the op tempo and the
interior and the rhetoric caused by these politicians, as you
mentioned earlier, you know, the confrontations with ICE and the.

Speaker 5 (07:17):
Assaults are way up.

Speaker 6 (07:19):
So we've got to make sure that they have the
right kind of equipment, the right kind of information, and
they do their work safely. But yeah, we're not seeing
that kind of activity on the Southwest border. You know,
the average daily apprehension number for twenty four hours at
CBP is one hundred and forty eight. During the Biden
administration it was well over five thousand. Same border, same work,

(07:40):
mostly the same workforce.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
With a lot of help from the inner Agency.

Speaker 6 (07:43):
But it's a very different scenario on the Southwest border today.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
And what I think is so durable about that ron
is that never again will align politician be able to
say that the job is undoable, that the border is
just so chaotic and so overrun that we just have
to surrender it. We have to give up. It is
an unsolvable problem forever more. The team at CBP now,

(08:07):
the team at DHS now has proven the job can
be done. And once you show people that, whether they're Republican, Democrat, Independent,
or otherwise, they start to say, well, I expect that,
then I expect the job to be done the way
I've seen it successfully done in the past. We also
are really pushing this effort to have more employees come

(08:28):
on board at the department, whether in CBP or ICE.
I have to be careful when I talk about the
fifty thousand dollars signing bonus that is currently being offered
because I'm worried there might not be anyone here to
produce the Matt Gates Show if I say it too often,
but Ron, what type of interest has the Department seen
in new blood and patriotic Americans wanting to come and

(08:49):
serve in such a noble and patriotic role.

Speaker 6 (08:53):
Well, the existing workforce, the morale is off the charts.
They now have the tools that they need to be
successful at the line and in the interior as well.
And we're seeing applications and interest as what you know,
going up record numbers the last month of people who
went online and applied, and I'm encouraging people careers dot CBP,

(09:14):
dot gov take a look at what we're offering. ICE
is doing the same thing. We're going to bring in
three thousand net new border patrol agents, which means we're
probably going to hire about five thousand people in the
next couple of years for the border patrol alone, and
then another five thousand in the Customs and Border Protection officers,
the folks that work the ports for us.

Speaker 5 (09:34):
So we're going to increase those workforces.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
And the ICE is on the hook for ten thousand
netnew on their frontline occupations as well, and the incentives
are powerful. But I would just tell you that what
the mission itself attracts young patriotic people, it really isn't
about the money, and they'll realize that the first couple
of days on the job.

Speaker 1 (09:54):
At that mission is so different at CBP today than
it was during the Biden administration. And it was tragic
to see CBP having to really play out of role,
changing diapers and dealing with these all these unaccompanied miners
who had been sent and then the circumstance where people
were bringing children that weren't even their own. You know,

(10:15):
now CBP is able to get after the bad guys,
use the best technology in the world, activate a real
force around keeping the country safe. We've seen them out
there in San Diego with helicopters, drones. Is there anything
else you would add if there's a young person watching
this and thinking that CBP might be a career for them,
that you would want them to think about as they

(10:36):
were pondering that life choice.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
No, it's a.

Speaker 5 (10:39):
Career that's rich in experience.

Speaker 6 (10:42):
It's an opportunity to give back to the best country
on the planet, and so I would encourage people to
look at it. And now we're in a situation where
you have will, and you have the experience, and you
have all the things we know we always needed on
the border on the policy side, with a little bit
of help from Congress as well. Add to that this
huge investment in the Big Beautiful Bill, which will allow

(11:04):
us to sustain what's going on at the physical border
and add to those capabilities, so the best tech that's
going to be available will be at their fingertips and
they're they're doing a mission that is really valuable for
the rest of the country.

Speaker 1 (11:18):
Ron Vitello, Senior advisor at CVP, Thanks for coming on
the program. We're excited about what lies ahead for the
Apartment Film Homeland.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Security for sure.

Speaker 5 (11:26):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Secretary Kennedy has made major decisions regarding the m RNA vaccine.
He's cut off federal fundings to some of the key
studies and the key grants that we're going into that
vaccine's development. We've got medical investigative journalist Jonathan Otto here
to break down what it means.

Speaker 2 (11:41):
Back in a moment, Viewers are.

Speaker 7 (11:47):
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Speaker 2 (13:24):
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Speaker 7 (13:26):
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Speaker 1 (14:00):
Lot on our program about the mRNA vaccine. You'll hear
these types of stories on other news channels because so
many of them are beholdened to big pharmers advertising dollars,
and that shapes their coverage.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
It doesn't happen here.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
We tell you the truth, and the truth is there
have been a lot of skeptics around this mRNA vaccine
for real scientific reasons. Here's doctor Stella Emmanuel discussing side
effects exclusively on our program. What's the best evidence you
have that the vaccine is killing people?

Speaker 2 (14:29):
Best evidence?

Speaker 3 (14:30):
Come on, Matt.

Speaker 8 (14:30):
It's all over the place, from movies like Dice Suddenly,
to the fact that there's excess debts going on all
over the world, to vaccine injury group injured groups all
over the place to people, young people getting heart attacks
and cancers, tuble cancers. Everybody's reporting about excess debt. But
the government and the medical industrial complex they're telling us

(14:51):
move away, move away, nothing to see.

Speaker 5 (14:52):
Yet they've study that they sent out with Modena.

Speaker 8 (14:55):
It's showed that it was a two point seven percent
a a book event. When you see dishmalst excess debts, somebody.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
Should check it.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
But it isn't just practitioners noticing these things with patients anymore.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
It's people with real power in the government. Doctor Robert
Malone was tapped to chair.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
The leading committee that makes vaccine scheduling decisions. Here's what
he had to say on oen's The Real Story yesterday.

Speaker 9 (15:20):
Review the data in these development programs and assess whether
or not these products and the underlying technology platform are
really a good fit for this indication of rapidly mutating
RNA upper respiratory viruses, particularly flu and coronaviruses. And the
answer is no, it's not, and they have better options.

(15:44):
They're just saying for this indication, the science does not
support this technology platform, and it's time to reorient that
money towards better use.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
And now even Secretary Kennedy is getting in on the action.
Directed the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority to terminate
approximately five hundred million dollars in funding across twenty two
RNA vaccine development projects. This included vaccines against COVID nineteen flu,
bird flu. He canceled contracts with Maderna. He rejected proposals

(16:18):
from Pfizer and other major drug companies. He justified the
move by claiming the mRNA vaccines quote fail to protect
effectively against upper respiratory infections close quote. He cited a
wish to shift to safer, broader vaccine platforms that remain
effective even as viruses mutate.

Speaker 10 (16:36):
After reviewing the science and consulting top experts at NIH
and FDA, AHHS has determined that mRNA technology poses more
risks and benefits for these respiratory viruses. That's why, after
extensive review, BARTA has begun the process of terminating these
twenty two contracts, totaling just under five hundred million dollars.

(17:00):
Replace the troubled mRNA programs. We're prioritizing the development of safer,
broader vaccine strategies like a whole virus vaccines and novel
platforms that don't collapse on virus's mutape.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
Joining us now investigative medical journalists to Jonathan Auto. So, Jonathan,
what are you covering with this announcement from the Secretary
on the mRNA vaccines?

Speaker 11 (17:23):
Well, thank you, Matt.

Speaker 12 (17:25):
I'm thrilled that we have a stop to something that
has proven to be arguably the most dangerous and damaging
technology that has ever been invented, let alone then be
put into people under without informed consent and people being
forced to take these mRNA vaccines, which we just saw

(17:47):
with the COVID vaccine, which was arguably that was the
worst thing I've witnessed in my forty one years of life,
and I think it's the worst thing that the world
has ever witnessed, which has caused unsurmountable pain and devastation
of families, which I've been covering for a long time now,
since when I actually produced a film back eleven or
twelve years ago called The Truth of Bat Vaccines, of

(18:08):
which Robert F.

Speaker 11 (18:09):
Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 12 (18:09):
Was in that as a featured guest. I went and
filmed in his home. We were warning about these things
a long time ago, and I'm really glad for this announcement.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
Probably the makers of feentanol would want a word when
it comes to the most dangerous thing to ever be
put in the body. But there was a specific mention
by Secretary Kennedy of some of the respiratory side effects
of this particular vaccine structure.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
Is that what some of your reporting followed as well.

Speaker 11 (18:38):
Yeah, so respiratory issues were prevalent.

Speaker 12 (18:43):
And so if you look at the database that was
set up, which is Veya's Vaccine Advertise Event Reporting System.
This was post the nineteen eighty six Vaccine Actor that
exempted the vaccine manufacturers from liability so they could harm
you and never have to pay a penny. In order
for that liability Act to be passed, then there had
to be a system that would report the injuries, and

(19:04):
every doctor, by law, was supposed to then give that
data to the patient and say, look, A, you're sure
you want to take this based on the data. And
so respiratory arrest has been huge Cardiact issues with my
card items. These are reported injuries. And if you go
to the VEASE system where you look at other interfaces
like open veyors, which gives all the data in easy
summary pages, it's close to two million injuries have been

(19:27):
reported and close to forty thousand deaths, and the underreporting
factor was about one hundred, meaning that like, so for
every one person that reported, there was ninety nine people
that didn't based on a Harvard study that was funded
by the Human Health Services, And so these are.

Speaker 11 (19:46):
Huge things for people to look at.

Speaker 12 (19:48):
So that would mean that we're looking at more like
as many as four million deaths and as many, as
you know, two hundred million injuries. And this is mainly
US data, around roughly two percent plus US data. So
the injuries are diverse, and they range from permanent disability,
to respiratory issues, to permanent heart conditions to neurological conditions.

(20:10):
And yeah, a lot of people you would know people
that are suffering as a result of this technology, and.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
I wonder how many of them don't know themselves. You know,
when you see people all of a sudden getting blood
clots or getting the shortness of breath challenges, you wonder
whether or not and you hate to ask, but if
someone is having a challenge with a particular condition and
they took the vaccine, what's the best way for them

(20:37):
to know if they've been vaccine injured?

Speaker 11 (20:39):
Yeah, well, their tests.

Speaker 12 (20:42):
There are various blood tests that you could do and
from teacher opponent the dimers like you're looking for inflammatory
mark as you're looking at seeing cardiologists and getting various tests.

Speaker 11 (20:54):
But you know what I think is so.

Speaker 12 (20:56):
Important, Matt, that people do because people then get stuck
in a system again and then get prescribed to medication.
And so what are the natural therapies that can help
people in these states?

Speaker 11 (21:05):
And do you mind me mentioning some of the things
that people can do today? Amazing?

Speaker 12 (21:10):
Well, okay, So the European Society of Medicine published a
study showing a complete reversal and sixty two out of
sixty two participants and this was long COVID and it
was called as a photo bimodulation study. There's been about
one hundred million patients treated on red light therapy to date,
no real side effects ever recorded.

Speaker 11 (21:30):
This was a red light therapy study.

Speaker 12 (21:31):
Over all their organs and they were longer sessions than normal.
There were sixty four to eighty four minute long sessions
and they gave two sessions to all participants and all
acute symptoms had recovered. And long COVID, by the way,
is either COVID long COVID, as it implies, but most
often it's vaccine injuries.

Speaker 11 (21:50):
And then after two more sessions, then.

Speaker 12 (21:53):
All sixty two people get complete resolutions, so total resolution
of every symptom, and sixty of those occurred within a
single week.

Speaker 11 (22:01):
And the criteria was specifically it was total.

Speaker 12 (22:05):
Resolution of disapne disapne a shortness of breath which you mentioned,
oxygen above ninety seven percent in the blood without the supplementation,
cognitive function restored, executive function restored, emotional deficits restored, and
digestive issues resolved.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
That seems like very promising research to continue following. And
what was so interesting about what you said, and I
think it absolutely is true, is so much of the
long COVID is actually just a misdiagnosed vaccine injury or
vaccine side effect. And like, isn't it just so rich
that they're even blaming COVID on the things the vacs

(22:41):
he did, Like they blamed everything on COVID. Now even
the vaccine injuries are blamed on long COVID. I do
want to ask, though, about what Secretary Kennedy's decision means
in the analysis of other vaccine therapies. He has replaced
the critical panel that sets the vaccine schedules that was
previously very captive by big pharma. Now you've got a

(23:02):
lot more scientific, method minded people making those decisions. So,
as someone who knows Secretary Kennedy, who's done journalism surrounding
his work, where do you think he's head in next?

Speaker 5 (23:13):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (23:14):
Yeah, Well, look, there are things that are very eye
opening if you look at what research he's published with,
people like doctor Brian Hooker, who was and is the
chief science officer for the Children's Health Defense and they
published a book called vacs Unvaxed.

Speaker 11 (23:29):
Let the science speak, and people should look at that.

Speaker 12 (23:31):
It's roughly about one hundred and five studies the vaccinated
versus unvaccinated studies showing the difference and the health outcomes
of children especially.

Speaker 11 (23:41):
And so to answer your question, Matt, this.

Speaker 12 (23:45):
Book reveals more about what he's hot to me really says,
because this is the work that he's published with people
like doctor Brian Hooker, who the movie vax was made
around the injury of his son with autism after the
MHO and so they there was a lot of heartfelt.

Speaker 11 (24:04):
Research, a lot of doctors that.

Speaker 12 (24:06):
Put their everything on the line to get that research
and that information out there. So yes, I do think
he's going to do a lot, by God's grace, to
actually confront the whole system, including double blind Placibo studies,
because if those happen. While some people would say, yeah, well,
he's still pushing the vaccines, but if he gets double
blind Placibo studies and people see how damaging they are,
because those double blind Placibo studies don't they're not published.

(24:28):
They probably do exist, but they are not published, so
the public don't have them, and they would be so
damning to the vaccine companies. It would get to the
point where people boycot the system and they look at
the vaccine excipient summary, They look at all the ingredients
in the vaccines and say, I actually would go to
jail if I put these ingredients into my child. But
then why is it now legal for them to be
injected with this?

Speaker 2 (24:50):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Wow, Well that sounds like a lot coming and a
real change. And you always wonder with some of these
reformers who haven't spent their whole life government, when they
get control of these agencies, are they really going to
make the changes or will they get Stockholm syndrome and
fall sympathetic to their captor. Will they believe what everyone

(25:11):
around them is saying? And I gotta say with this
Trump cabinet, I mean, this Department of Homeland Security doesn't
look anything like it did under Biden. The Department of
Justice vastly different. But when you look at the way
Secretary Kennedy has built lasting change in HHS, I really
think we're going to be a healthier populace for generations
to come as a consequence of his work. Investigative medical

(25:31):
journalist Jonathan Otto, thank you for being on these stories
and we look forward to having you back on the
program sometime soon.

Speaker 11 (25:37):
Thank you so much, Matt, I appreciate you.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
And coming up, President Trump has made big moves on trade.
We've got Anthony le Bruna from the American Principles Project
here to break down the industries and the jobs that
are most likely to see a major impact.

Speaker 7 (25:50):
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(26:12):
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visit OANN dot com daily. And if you'd like to
show support and wear some support for One America News Network,
then visit our online store for the latest shirts, hats
and mugs.

Speaker 13 (28:08):
Friends, were just killing us on trade. Not anymore, Not anymore.
We're making you know, we're taking in trillions of dollars,
and we're respected, and we're settling, you know, through trade,
even a little bit here, less here than in some
but through trade, I got things settled.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
President Trump is touting his historic trade deals during remarks today.
He slapped reciprocal tariffs on over sixty nations, including a
stinging fifteen percent on the European Union, Japan, and South Korea.
He's vowing to end decades of America getting ripped off.
These duties, which took effect yesterday, are projected to rake
in a whopping fifty billion dollars a month for Uncle Sam,

(28:51):
totaling two point seven trillion over the next decade, per
Yale's budget. Lab India's Mody, and Brazil's Lula are joining
forces to battle back. Lula Mody yesterday to coordinate a response. Now,
India's duties rose a stinging fifty percent over their Russian
oil buys. India's responded by pausing plans to buy US arms.
According to a report in Reuters, Trump took to truth

(29:13):
social saying tariffs are having a huge positive impact on
the stock market. He also warned radical left courts of
ruling against these tariffs, claiming it would cause an economic
downfall not seen since.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
The Great Depression of nineteen twenty nine, joining.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
Us now executive director of the American Principles Project Anthony
la Bruna. So, Anthony, the tariffs are in effect.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
What are you seeing?

Speaker 14 (29:35):
Well, you know what, I just got to say this first.
You know, these courts do not care about the everyday
American people right now. They're looking to score political points
for the Democratic Party ahead of the ment terms, and
you know if they're going to be successful. But with
overturning these tariffs, they're the ones who should be held
accountable for the economic downturn here in the US. You know,

(29:57):
President Trump is doing everything human only possible as the
leader of our nation and as.

Speaker 15 (30:04):
The leader of the free world, to ensure.

Speaker 14 (30:07):
That America has a proper putting in the global markets,
and so we're seeing some great things. You know, from
the very beginning when he announced on Independence Day there
our liberation Day, we saw a huge hike in spike
in the stock markets, and we've seen that continue, and
we've seen major US companies and leaders in our markets

(30:31):
side with President Trump and get on board and working
with the President in this administration to deliver.

Speaker 15 (30:37):
For the American worker and the American people.

Speaker 1 (30:40):
It's going to be ten billion dollars rolling in pretty
soon as a consequence of these tariffs on a regular
recurring basis. All of that money that accumulates from the
TARAF fund, how do you think it should be spent?

Speaker 14 (30:54):
You know, I've heard some buzz online of people saying,
you know, people should inherit some tar checks coming their way.
You know, look, I think we should focus on putting
that in the economy and stimulating that for the everyday
American family.

Speaker 15 (31:09):
We're gonna see that in some major major.

Speaker 14 (31:13):
Markets, one being energy. Two also with Heck and focusing
on AI. You're seeing trillions and dollars in investment come
back to the US. They're leading countries like India, China,
and that's overall a good positive impact for American workers.
And that's President Trump's main mission is he wants the
American worker to be the best working force across the world,

(31:38):
and that's where he's really going to put us in
a place for success.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
We have seen a lot of that investment you just
referenced from other countries seeing the value in America, seeing
that America is.

Speaker 2 (31:51):
Hot on fire.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
But I think it's also probably the tariffs, right, I mean,
one of the reasons President Trump is always announcing another
investment in America from somewhere else is that people are
seeing if you want access to the American market, that's
what you where you have to put your your production,
that's where you have to put your assembly. And so
with with that happening, you know, do you expect you know,

(32:12):
certain uh, you know, certain sectors like tech to be
enhancing the buying power of Americans and the work opportunities
for Americans who are getting those stem degrees and opportunities.

Speaker 14 (32:25):
I think there's a real opportunity for us to go
gangbusters here, especially with tech, especially with energy.

Speaker 15 (32:30):
You know, that's something the US should be focusing on.

Speaker 14 (32:33):
What you know, this administration has made A major priority
is focusing on our energy grid, and there's gonna be
a lot of work to come from that. And we're
not sourcing that out of the United States. We're not
going to Mexico, We're not going to Canada, China, or India.

Speaker 15 (32:47):
We're bringing that home. We're bringing that to Detroit.

Speaker 14 (32:48):
We're bringing into these forgotten cities that the Biden administration
continued in the Obama administration, even the Bush administration who
allowed them to die on the vine.

Speaker 15 (32:58):
So what we're going to see here is we're going
to see a lot of jobs start to form.

Speaker 14 (33:01):
People are going to have the opportunity to go back
to work, which is what is really good for the
American soul. American people, you know, it's good to put
in a long day's work, provide for your family, and
provide for your loved ones. And I think that's what
we're going to see here with what President Trump is
doing with tariffs here. And as you said, that's why
all this investment is coming to the US. It's not

(33:23):
because President Trump is the president alone. It's his actions.
They speak louder than words.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
And I wonder if we're seeing a new era of
tariff policy where the tariff amount is it just achieved
through a purely economic analysis, right. Look at Brazil, they
are likely to get more tariffs as a consequence of
some of the anti democratic actions of their government. Look
at India, because they are buying all this Russian oil.

(33:52):
President Trump is holding them accountable. So what do you
make of kind of the way tariffs are changing in
their operative in their operative function to also service these
other foreign policy goals the United States.

Speaker 14 (34:07):
Well, I think it's important to you know, point out
the one fact is how is Brazil and India coming
to the table. They're being very hostile. They're looking to
team up together and go after the US and and
hurt the American worker. And you have a president who's
not going to stand for that.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
You know.

Speaker 15 (34:21):
One of the things that I would say is that,
you know, President.

Speaker 14 (34:23):
Trump wanted to do this in the first administration, but
you had individuals, you know, at the US Department of
Commerce and other agencies who actually worked against these tariffs.

Speaker 15 (34:32):
You know, I was at the Department of Commerce.

Speaker 14 (34:34):
I know firsthand of you know, when you impact or
you implace a tariff, you work through the court system
between that country or they're in their company, which is
you know, the US and a company maybe in Brazil
or India, and our you know, political appointees and career
civil servants were you know, caving on every lawsuit. How

(34:55):
do you impact and how do you emplace these tariffs
on countries and goods if the people that are in
charge of enforcing it don't have the backbone to do so.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
It's such a good point, and it is the fundamental
difference between this administration and President Trump's first term. There's
so much more policy alignment, and that alignment goes deeper
into these agencies. I mean, heck, last administration, we have
members of the cabinet who were working against President Trump.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
Now cabinet totally aligned.

Speaker 1 (35:27):
That creates a sub cabinet that's working together and making.

Speaker 2 (35:31):
All of that work.

Speaker 1 (35:32):
So we expect that to be all going forward. The
best of the best, Anthony le Bruna at the American
Principles Project, Thanks as always for coming on and sharing
your expertise.

Speaker 15 (35:42):
Thanks Matt.

Speaker 1 (35:44):
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I've Remectin now starts at just two dollars a cap.
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(36:05):
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Belongs with you.

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They've got over two hundred medications and they're working hard
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Matt with promo code Matt ten. And coming up, we'll
go over the headlines of the week with our very
own vish Burah. You won't believe where Congress is off to.
We'll chat about it after a quick break.

Speaker 7 (36:49):
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(37:32):
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Simply go to the app store search out forn. Then
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(37:55):
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(38:15):
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Viewers are always asking me how can they watch OAN live?

Speaker 2 (38:29):
The solution is simple.

Speaker 7 (38:31):
It's a streaming platform called cloud tv now it's spelled
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The live package is only two dollars and fifty cents
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(38:52):
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Speaker 1 (39:01):
It's Friday, So joining us now is my on again,
off again employee. He's a booker here at the Matt
Gage Show and worked on Capitol Hill for me and
the recently incarcerated George Santos Vish Burah so Vish. We
saw lawmakers get their one big beautiful Bill Act pass.
They had been in Washington for weeks and weeks on end,
and when they are let go from Washington and have

(39:21):
an opportunity to interact with the people they care about most,
where did they.

Speaker 2 (39:26):
Go, Matt? They went to Israel. So the August recess.
You know, it's not something that's written into law, but
it's pretty much become the norm and kind of actually
legalized in nineteen seventy where they said this is supposed
to happen thirty days before September. And the point of

(39:46):
the August recess, as we all know, is for lawmakers
to go back to their districts, meet with their constituents,
hear them out, see what's really grinding their gears right
at home, right in their district, for the people who
they work for. And as soon as August hits in Congress,
what do our Republican lawmakers do? They hop on the

(40:07):
first thing smoke in a Tel Aviv. Are you kidding me?
I mean, I'm almost I want to ask someone at Apak,
did you guys set these guys up, like like the
pr around this, the optics around this. Already we're at
a fever pitch as to why we're so entranced with
doing everything that's possible for Israel. And during this period

(40:30):
where lawmakers are supposed to go answer to the people
that they work for, they go, they go and meet
with bibe Net and Yahoo. I'm sorry, it's just unforgivable.

Speaker 1 (40:40):
Maybe they are meeting with the people that they work for,
their actual contituents. So I remember sitting next to your
old boss George Santos, and I said, what work are
you gonna get done over the August recess? And he
said he was gonna get his eyes done and he
was gonna get lip fillers and he was And no, no, no,
not that kind of work done. We're gonna get done

(41:01):
town hall meetings. But we also had lawmakers before jetting
out of town sending a message to Treasury Secretary Scott
Besson that they would like him to wrap Ireland on
the knuckles.

Speaker 2 (41:12):
Why they want These lawmakers, mostly Republican who signed onto
this letter, They are urging Secretary Bessont to go and
wrap up Israel, and I mean wrap up Ireland, investigate
Ireland because Ireland is possibly supporting BDS sanctions on is
What is BDS. BDS is the international movement known as boycott,

(41:35):
divest and sanctions, meaning any sort of initiative or effort
to boycott products from Israel, to divest from companies in
the economy in Israel, or to sanction Israel in any
way through official action. Well, so this is the movement
that Mike Kuckaby leads. That's you know, I've already pledged
my allegiance once to the Great Leader of the BS Movement,

(41:59):
Mike Huckaby.

Speaker 1 (42:00):
And that's because Mike Huckaby said, when Zionist Christians wanted
to get their visas approved to come and to where
the Holy Land, as is entirely expected, the Interior Ministry
in Israel wasn't granting those visa requests at the time.
Mike Huckaby said people should boycott their trips, divest their
donations to Israel pro Israel groups, and that he was

(42:20):
going to sanction that government with the holding of visas
for those who wanted to go to the United States.
So maybe lawmakers will be on Mike Huckaby next. But
from the great Paradise of Ireland to the paradise of Malibu, California.

Speaker 2 (42:35):
A new notice out to residents tell us about it.
So you gotta think one of the ritchiest zip codes
in all of California, in all of America, they get
a notice today from the government of California stating that
these residents in these areas need to start boiling their
water because it's not drinkable, it's highly infested, it's dirty,

(42:58):
it is not clean drinking water. And let me tell you, Matt,
I too have boiled water to be able to drink
on a regular basis. It was in a place called Hydeira, Bad, India, Okay.
And the fact is is that the one of the
ritziest zip codes that all of America is now has
to boil their water in order to be able to

(43:19):
drink it. That is a third world problem. And what
is the California government doing to right now to address
the most immediate need. They are trying to redistrict lines
in their state so they could squeeze out a few
more Republicans out of Congress to draw in just a
few more Democrats. That's what they're worried about, as opposed

(43:41):
to literally not having clean water in the one of
the richest zip codes in their states.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
I wonder when redistricting is going to take on the
energy of disaster response, like, oh, well, we allowed that
neighborhood to burn to the ground because we weren't willing
to build the reservoir and we allowed the homeless to
mess with all the fire hydrants. So maybe we shouldn't
have that in the district of one of our more
preferred candidates.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
And yeah, that sounds wild.

Speaker 1 (44:05):
If if you're having to boil water in California, you
need to start rethinking your voting choices.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
Okay, and I would would hope that would happen. But
we do have some good news. We have heroic news
for truth justice in the American way.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
The newest enrollee in I's sign up program, Dean Kine
Superman joining Ice.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
Are you here for it? I am totally here for it.
Not only the reason why that I'm here for it
is because it teaches a valuable, valuable lesson that our best,
our brightest, our strongest, like Dean Kane, also known as Superman,
is out there on the front lines deporting illegals from
this country. And it's even more of a statement, Matt,

(44:46):
you know why because Superman is an illegal immigrant himself,
except he's completely assimilated. That's the point. Because these illegals
are not assimilating like Superman, like Clark k They have
to go, and Superman is gonna do it himself. I mean,
look at him. He grew up on a farm, he

(45:06):
started wearing flannel. He even pursued a bright career in
fake news for the Daily Planet. This guy is the
American dream and now he's wearing an ICE uniform. I
am proud. I am proud. That he is out there
on the front lines for it.

Speaker 1 (45:20):
From faster than a speeding bullet to faster than a
speeding caravan.

Speaker 2 (45:24):
And you don't have to leap tall.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Buildings in a single bound if you can leap the
wall and go after the cartels. Is there another superhero
you would prefer in ice than Superman? Like?

Speaker 2 (45:34):
Would you take Batman? Would you take? I think Superman's
the one you go with, right, I think you know what?
The flash just because the speed would go up on
the deportations.

Speaker 1 (45:42):
Okay, So we asked folks to send us emails, and
we got one from a viewer which asks, in part
about the elephant in the room, why do government employees
have an oath that appears to be falsely agreed to
by those who readily war against their oath with impunity,
enemy on the payroll? It appears the oath it needs
amending to include consequences or eliminated entirely vish Burah, are

(46:07):
you here with the oath coming with consequences and violation
of the oath being something more stringently policed.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
Listen, I am really glad that these questions are being
asked right now by the least insane Matt Gates Show
viewer in America who is asking these questions? Look, I'm
not sure what the who's warring against the oath, who's
taken the oath.

Speaker 1 (46:31):
The people that are screwing our country, the people that
are deficit spending, the open borders people. I am here
with this email sentiment that the oath is being violated,
that we do need to police it more seriously, and
you know what, we'd probably have a better country as
a result. Vish Burah, producer on The Matt Gate Show
and star of the v Block. And for folks who
want more of our discussions, you can always get more

(46:53):
on The Anchorman Show, something we are very proud of
here at One American News. And when we're back, I've
got an incredible story of a Brazilian feminist who is
having to seek refuge in Europe because she referred.

Speaker 2 (47:05):
To a man as a man. All.

Speaker 7 (47:12):
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Apple TV, and Amazon fireTV all have in common. The
answer is that all three platforms offer you the ability
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Speaker 2 (47:29):
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(47:52):
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can also enjoy the latest in breaking news videos by
VISITINGA and N dot com. Make sure you stay informed
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to show support and wear some support for One America
News Network, then visit our online store for the latest shirts, hats,

(48:12):
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(48:33):
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One America News Network has launched a twenty four to
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(48:56):
Talk forty five. So why is it branded for. He
talked forty five. Well, free talk because you will not
be censored for expressing your opinion there, and forty five
because forty five is a really lucky number. So join
us at free Talk forty five and express yourself with
no fear of cancelation.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
Ever, we've been talking a lot about Brazil on our
program recently. That's because they're a very important country economically,
and their government has gone completely insane.

Speaker 2 (49:32):
Listen to Eduardo Bolsonaro.

Speaker 1 (49:34):
He's a member of their National Congress and they're trying
to throw his father, the former president, in jail.

Speaker 3 (49:40):
Brazil is the only one case that I know that
the Supreme Court is judging people like regular in common people.
It doesn't happen in regular democracies, It doesn't happen in
other countries in the West. Alishandjas and his team clearly
persecuting right wing people, trying to jail them, I mean,
and jailing them because their political opinions, because their postes

(50:04):
on social mediamuris is decreating. They arresting the house, arrest
against Jeri Bosonato basically because Bosonado was supporting people on
the streets in a manifestation against Alejos. That's just unbelievable.
Alejmalis is running. He's spinning up as much as possible,

(50:26):
as fast as possible to condemn Jeri Bosonado before the
next year election, arresting the leader of the Pulls, which
is Jerry Bosonato that is clearly going to win the
next year election if he can run.

Speaker 5 (50:39):
Brazil is not going to have.

Speaker 3 (50:41):
A regular election next year, and likely there is a
high risk that the United States is not going to
recognize our election because you have some other issue issues around,
and it will be very it will be very bad
for Brazil if we receive the semi treatment of Venezuela
with the necro dictatorship of Nicolas Maduru.

Speaker 1 (51:02):
This corruption and the erosion of the rule of law
has been noticed by international observers, including journalists growing Glenn Greenwald,
who I spoke with on our Anchorman podcast this week.

Speaker 16 (51:13):
This huge leak of documents from Arice's office, the Supreme
Court judge that has been censoring, imprisoning political opponents, putting
them in exile, that showed massive abuses of power. Like
I can't overstate what a tyrant he is. It's really
a kind of a mental on this. At this point,
people are genuinely petrified of criticizing government official and for

(51:33):
good reason that you wand up in jail. You want
up having your life destroyed. He freezes people's bank accounts,
their assets, and there's so many people in exile. You
do get to the point where I think you can
say Brazila is under a judicial tyranny or judicial dictatorship.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
And if you think this all sounds like normal politics
in the Global South, buckle up for this story. Isabella
Siba is a Brazilian feminist graphic designer. You'd think the
worst things should she ever did was used too many
pastel filters on Instagram.

Speaker 2 (52:03):
But no, no, no, no. Her real crime she said
something on the Internet. That's it. Words came out of
her mouth and now wait for it, she's facing twenty
five years in prison. Twenty five years for talking.

Speaker 1 (52:16):
I think al Choppo got less time for building a
drug empire with tunnel submarines and probably a loyalty program.
But you say one biologically true thing about someone with
a pronoun preference and you get locked up faster than
George Santos can say, Katara, she didn't burn down a
government building.

Speaker 2 (52:33):
A rig An election.

Speaker 1 (52:34):
She said, hey, isn't it weird that the most voted
woman in Brazil is not a biological woman. And then
the Brazilian justice system said, well, that's social racism.

Speaker 2 (52:47):
Social racism. I don't even know what that means.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
That sounds like what happens when a sorority at Yale
chooses too many white girls. Now Brazil's Supreme Court is
ruling that misgendering someone is legally equivalent to a racial
hate crime. I mean, I love Brazil, great steaks, beautiful beaches,
everyone dances like they're trying to shake a credit card
out of their jeans.

Speaker 2 (53:08):
But this, this is bananas, and not.

Speaker 1 (53:10):
Even the good tropical kind. So this poor woman, Isabella
is getting canceled harder than CNN. Plus she said, to
flee your country to some European nation and say, you know,
please help me. And they're having to deal with this
and grant asylum on the craziest of terms, like is
this the first political asylum asylum case in history for

(53:32):
hurting someone's feelings? We've officially moved from sticks and stones
may break my bones to words might get you extradited.
Imagine if George Carlin came back from the dead to
day he'd walk on the stage and say there are
only two genders and then get tased by the diversity
police before he could hit the punchline. Let's talk about

(53:52):
the politician. Isabella offended Erica Hilton, the most voted woman
in Brazil.

Speaker 2 (54:00):
Plot twist, Erica was born a man. Look, I'm not.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
Here to take away anyone's trophies, but like if I
entered a five K and drove it in a Ford
F one point fifty, I shouldn't get to beat the
guy jogging in sneakers and take home the metal.

Speaker 2 (54:16):
That's not winning. That's drag racing. Literally.

Speaker 1 (54:19):
And Isabella, she's not some raging conservative. She's a feminist,
like a Birkenstocks and bookstore readings type feminist. Let's be honest.
This isn't about protecting anyone. This is about control. They
want to see how far they can push the envelope.
Oh you believe in chromosomes?

Speaker 2 (54:35):
Straight to jail?

Speaker 1 (54:36):
You said XX and X y out loud off to
Gitmo baby. And at this rate, web MD is going
to be treated like four Chan. Meanwhile, in America, the
people attacking Isabella are the same ones yelling. Free speech
is sacred so long as it's at a drag Queen's
Story hour, at a kindergar garden with government grants.

Speaker 2 (54:55):
Bring a Bible, you're a terrorist. Bring fitch NEETs and
hormone therapy for toddlers. They throw you a parade.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
Don't get me wrong, I support free expression. If a
grown man wants to dress like a neon flamingo and
change his name to glitter Tits, go for it. Live
your best life. But I also support someone else's right
to not go along with your delusion. That's how freedom works.
One person can wear a wig and another person can
say that's not real.

Speaker 2 (55:24):
That's a wig.

Speaker 1 (55:25):
But apparently not in Brazil. There wigs are sacred. Misgendering
is sacrilege. And Isabella, she's now the Rosa Parks of Reality.
Instead of sitting at the front of the bus, she
just said, you know what, that's.

Speaker 2 (55:38):
A dude, And how insane.

Speaker 1 (55:40):
Is it that the only place protecting her is Europe,
the same content where you get arrested for iproper recycling,
where cows have more legal rights than Christians, And yet
somehow they're like, yes, Isabella can come here, and we're
not that crazy. Think about how nuts it is that
the truth is now contraband ology is verboden. Women are

(56:02):
like Blockbuster video. We remember them fondly, but no one
knows what qualifies anymore. And if saying he's not a
she can get you twenty five years, then honestly, just
lock up every seventh grade science teacher in the world
right now, and while you're at it, arrest my grand
grand She still calls Caitlin Jenner Bruce and doesn't even
know what TikTok is. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is

(56:24):
where we are in twenty twenty five, a world where
gender is fluid, but your speech better not be, at
least not in Brazil. That's all the time we have.
We'll be back Monday, nine eastern six Pacific. Make sure
to sign up for the OAN Live app if you
haven't already, follow me on ex at Matt Gates and
email us the Man Gates Show ata dot com.

Speaker 2 (56:43):
We'd love to continue hearing from you. Stay right here,
fine point what Chanelle Rihann is up next. Let's go
get him
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