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July 23, 2025 • 67 mins
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Epstein
Immigration
Obama The Spy- DOJ Investigation.



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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to standing around with Jeremy Lahey.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
I'm a twenty seven year old transgender woman. I'm I
am a wolf theory and a member of the furry fandom.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
When and how did you discover this inner wolfness?

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Probably around age ten or eleven. I was watching an
anime about wolves and see the wolf running across the screen,
and I'm somehow just intrinsically like, oh, that's me.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
Have you spent any time around biological wolves?

Speaker 5 (00:27):
Yes?

Speaker 6 (00:28):
That sounds dangerous.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
Also, what contexts are you so?

Speaker 2 (00:31):
I was a volunteer with a preserve, and I've also
visited many wolf preserves.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Are you able to communicate with the wolves?

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Am I going to have a conversation with a wolf
in the way that I'm communicating you and I obviously not?
Am I going to read their body language, respond appropriately
to their behaviors and their nonverbal cues? Yes?

Speaker 7 (00:52):
Would you be able to give us an example of
this wolf communication?

Speaker 2 (00:57):
No, I'm not comfortable doing so.

Speaker 8 (01:09):
And wow, someone needs some serious helps.

Speaker 9 (01:15):
God, I felt were wolf for the Chinese menu in
his hands.

Speaker 10 (01:25):
Walking through the streets of Soho in the rain, he
was looking for the.

Speaker 7 (01:31):
Place called he Ho Fo that that was real to
get a big nish child.

Speaker 11 (01:39):
Where hold London? Where was London?

Speaker 9 (01:58):
You hair howling around your kitchen? No better not let
him in?

Speaker 6 (02:07):
You lit an old lady again?

Speaker 11 (02:08):
You lated day last night?

Speaker 6 (02:11):
Were wolves of London?

Speaker 9 (02:13):
And again? Where wolves of thumbs down? Where wolves.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Standing ground? As a production of Lahy media.

Speaker 12 (02:56):
Overnight, President Trump calling for his attorney general to release
more details in the Epstein case. Trump posting on truth socials, saying, quote,
based on the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein,
I've asked Attorney General Pam Bondy to produce any and
all pertinent grand jury testimony, subject to court approval. Bondy
quickly responding, saying, quote President Trump, We're ready to move

(03:19):
the court tomorrow to unseal the grand jury transcripts.

Speaker 13 (03:22):
He's been very clear that he wants all credible information,
credible evidence to be turned over to the people so
that the people can decide.

Speaker 12 (03:29):
The announcement, which came hours after Trump said there would
be no special counsel for the case, appeared to be
in response to growing calls for transparency. For the second
time this week, House Republicans voted down a Democratic procedural
move to force the release of the Epstein files, even
as they advanced their own resolution that calls for the
release of the documents, but the resolution is non binding.

(03:49):
Critics like Republican Thomas Massey of Kentucky slamming the move,
saying Congress thinks you're stupid. The Rules Committee passed a
non binding Epstein resolution, hoping folks will excit as real.
It forces the release of nothing.

Speaker 14 (04:03):
You know, I was under the impression that this summer
was to be the summer of the shark. Well, it's
now become the summer of wtf. This this Epstein thing
is it ain't going away. It's not going away. We've
also got the the whole issue surrounding ICE and deportations

(04:29):
and the protesters assaulting ICE agents. And now we've got yeah,
we've got the debate on Alligator Alcatraz, that human there's
there's now a human rights violations. I apparently it's been
reported that there's been human rights violations. And we now
have information evidence from the d and I via Telsea

(04:51):
Gabbard that the Obama administration manufactured the entire Russian collusion thing,
which was always kind of known, but there was really
no smoking gunner any way of proving it. And now
criminal referrals have been delivered to the Department of Justice

(05:11):
for certain individuals. All right, we got it all here
today on standing ground. I'm Jeremy Lay. It is Wednesday,
July twenty third, twenty twenty five.

Speaker 15 (05:20):
Let's get going.

Speaker 16 (05:21):
So the fbilos of the circumstances surrounding the death of
Jeffrey Epstein. According to the report, this systematic review revealed
no incriminating client list. So what happened to the Epstein
client list that the Attorney General said she had on
her desk.

Speaker 17 (05:39):
Well, I think if you go back and look at
what the Attorney General said in that interview, which was
on your network on Fox News.

Speaker 16 (05:45):
Go ahead, and Roberts said, DOJ may be releasing the
list of Jeffrey Epstein's clients.

Speaker 15 (05:50):
Will that really happen?

Speaker 16 (05:51):
And she said, it's sitting on my desk right now
to review.

Speaker 17 (05:55):
Yes, she was saying the entirety of all of the paperwork,
all of the paper in relation to Jeffrey Epstein's crimes.
That's what the Attorney General was referring to.

Speaker 6 (06:04):
And I'll let her speak for that.

Speaker 18 (06:06):
The DOJ may be releasing the list of Jeffrey Epstein's clients.

Speaker 19 (06:10):
Will that really happen.

Speaker 20 (06:12):
It's sitting on my desk right now to review. That's
been a directive by President Trump.

Speaker 6 (06:17):
I'm reviewing that.

Speaker 20 (06:18):
I'm reviewing JFK files, MLK files. That's all in the
process of being reviewed because that was done at the
directive of the President from all of these agencies.

Speaker 21 (06:34):
As somebody may happen that the victim must be found.
I've got a little list. I've got a little list
of society offenders who might well be underground and who
never would be missed, who never would be missed. There's
the pestilential nuisances, a right for autographs, or people who
are flabby heads and irritating laughs, or children who are

(06:55):
up in dates and floyd with them fled or people
who in shaking hands hands with your life event and
all third persons want spawning TATA dates insist they'd nom
of them been missed, they'd nom of them been missed.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy Lahy Hort we
waiting for let's do it.

Speaker 22 (07:25):
Attorney General Pambondi is in the hot seed over the
Jeffrey Epstein files as the President orders her to seek
the grand jury transcripts, and House Republicans vote to demand
the Justice Department released more information about his case.

Speaker 13 (07:38):
Every single one of the Republicans on the Rules Committee
are for transparency and for releasing the files, just as
the President of the United States is, and they wanted
that to make the crystal clear. Make it crystal clear.
I think their vote tonight did.

Speaker 22 (07:50):
Earlier this month, the DOJ and the FBI released a
memo declaring Epstein's twenty nineteen jailhouse death a suicide and
calling the case closed.

Speaker 23 (07:58):
It's all been a big h It's perpetrated by the Democrats,
and some stupid Republicans and foolish Republicans fall into the net.

Speaker 22 (08:06):
Outrage from both sides followed after Bondi vowed to release
the so called client list, claiming it was on her desk.

Speaker 4 (08:13):
I don't have a lot of confidence her, ma'am. I
think she's way out over her skis.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
In this thing.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
She released that notebook, which was stuff that you and
I would already know. Then when she followed it up
with the lists on my desk and then there is
no list.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
I get tired of that.

Speaker 22 (08:28):
It comes, as new Wall Street Journal reporting says, in
two thousand and three, Donald Trump sent a picture of
a naked woman to Epstein for his fiftieth birthday, with
a type written line that read, quote happy birthday, and
may every day be another wonderful secret.

Speaker 14 (08:43):
Now that last part that you heard is the which
has now become a lawsuit that Donald Trump is suing
the Wall Street Journal claiming that the story is completely
false and actually, you know what, I believe them, and
even the anti Christ his nemesis, Michael Cohen went on

(09:06):
national television and said he thinks it's bs. But anyway,
notwithstanding that was just going to have to play itself
out like a lot of lawsuits that Donald Trump Donald
Trump files. But the bottom line is is that the
polling across the board at this stage of the game,
with this whole Epstein debacle, people want answers.

Speaker 15 (09:29):
People do not like to be deceived in any way.

Speaker 14 (09:32):
And this this White House has, as has always prided
itself on being transparent and following through with their promises.
And for the most part, yes, the President's been very
good at that. This is not such a situation. This
situation is growing as John Deane said in Watergate, it's

(09:58):
growing vertically, it's grown horizontally, it's growing geometrically. It's not
going away, and it's not going away until we get
some type of satisfactory answer as to what this siko
was up to and who was involved, who were his clients?

(10:18):
One of the one of the theories, of course, being
floated around. There's many, of course, but one of the
theories floating around is that Donald Trump was on the
client list.

Speaker 15 (10:29):
Well, I like to respond to that, Is it possible? Yes,
it is?

Speaker 7 (10:34):
It is?

Speaker 15 (10:34):
Is it plausible? I don't believe so. And let me
tell you why.

Speaker 14 (10:39):
If Donald Trump, if the if the FBI under Obama
or under Biden knew that Donald Trump was hanging out
with Jeffrey Epstein to have sex with underage girls, I
guarantee you it would have leaked. It would have been
the kiss of death. That is saying it's it's impossible.

Speaker 15 (11:02):
Nothing is. It just doesn't make sense.

Speaker 14 (11:06):
And people in the base, like myself, Maga Basse, were
not satisfied with these answers, and we want to move forward.
This is here, this is Laura ingram At at turning point,
USA Ebolism.

Speaker 6 (11:21):
How many of you are satisfied.

Speaker 22 (11:23):
You can you can clap satisfied with the results of
the Epstein investigation.

Speaker 15 (11:29):
Clap okay, so the White House.

Speaker 14 (11:36):
The President responded, I guess somewhat accordingly when he began
to see the writing on the wall, that the base
was not happy about this, and that overall the country
was not happy about this because we were told we
were going to see all this shit has now Well,
it's in the process that Pambondy, the attorney general, the current.

Speaker 15 (11:58):
Attorney general, wink wink, nudge nudge.

Speaker 14 (12:02):
The current Attorney General, Pam Bondis, is attempting to get
grand jury testimony surrounding Jeffrey Epstein made public. Now, that
is tricky because grand jury testimony is generally completely sealed
unless there's some overriding exigency that relates to the public interest.

(12:25):
There needs to be a strong There needs to be
strong ebb and flow behind the argument as to why
grand jury testimony is to be released, and if it is,
prior to its release, it has to be combed over
very carefully to for redactions, to take out people's names
that are not party to the case, and all that
kind of thing. It's not a one it's not a

(12:47):
one day deal. It's very very involved getting grand jury
testimony made public. Now we may we may get it,
and that's fine, and that is a step in the
right direction. But how long is this whole thing and
going on? And Epstein was when did he commit suicide?
Nineteen twenty nineteen. All this well, the other night I

(13:10):
was watching a movie on Netflix called Scoop about the
Getting the Interview and the infamous interview with Prince Andrew.

Speaker 15 (13:24):
Back in around twenty twenty.

Speaker 14 (13:26):
After Epstein died, and there was some evidence to suggest,
or a lot of evidence to suggest that Prince Andrew
was a quote client of Jeffrey Epstein's, and that he
had been seen whining with him, dining with him, and
allegedly was having sex with a seventeen year old girl

(13:50):
who recently committed suicide.

Speaker 15 (13:52):
Virginia Roberts.

Speaker 14 (13:55):
Well, I've got I picked out some of my favorite parts. Now,
what I'm going to play is the actual interview, not
the not from the movie. Okay, that was what they
were actors. I'm going to play the actual parts of
the interview with Prince Andrew. That stood out to me
because I am of the impression. It all kind of

(14:16):
leads back to him. It it really it leads back
to the royals and what was going on. But when
you listen to these cuts, don't tell me that you
don't think this guy is lying through his windsor teeth.
This interview when it came out, it was it was
a bombshell in England anyway, it was. It was so

(14:39):
bad for him and the Palace that he submit He
made a letter public to her then Majesty that he
would be stepping back from royal duties and at this
stage of the game, they basically told.

Speaker 15 (14:52):
Him, we don't even want you near us.

Speaker 14 (14:55):
So anyway, here here's the first part, and then I'm
gonna I'll cut in him weigh in on what he's saying.
But you talk, you talk about dodging, dodging, this is
this is this is fun to listen to you. Okay, Yeah,
let's go to the first cut.

Speaker 24 (15:10):
As you say, all of this goes back to your
friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. How did you first become friends?
How did you meet?

Speaker 3 (15:19):
Well, I met through his girlfriend back in nineteen ninety nine,
who and I'd known her since she was at university
in the UK, and it would be to some extent
a stretch to say that as it were, we were
close friends. I mean we were friends because of other people,

(15:39):
and I had a lot of opportunity to go to
the United States, but I didn't have much time with him.
I suppose I saw him once or twice a year,
perhaps maybe maximum of three times a year, and quite
often if I was in the United States and doing things,
and if he wasn't there, he would say, well, why

(16:00):
don't you come and use my houses? So I've said
that's very kind, thank you very much.

Speaker 15 (16:04):
Indeed, okay, anything stand out there? Well, it hit me
between the eyes.

Speaker 14 (16:09):
You're a member of the royal family and you come
to the United States and you need someone to give
you a bed for the night. I don't think so
you just rent out the whole top floor of the
uh of the Ritz Carlton or whatever the nicest hotel
in New York is for crying out loud, So of
all the places he could stay, he just happens to

(16:32):
stay at Jeffrey Epstein's house when he's in New York.
Just happens to stay at the house where fourteen fifteen
euar old girls are walking in and out like like
a turnstile.

Speaker 15 (16:44):
Okay, let's let's continue with Randy.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Andy.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
But it would be it would be a considerable stretch
to say that he was a very very close friend.
But he had the most extraordinary ability to bring extraordinary
people together. And that's the bit that I remember is
going to the dinner parties where you would meet academics, politicians,

(17:10):
people from the United Nations. I mean, it was a
cosmopolitan group of what I would describe as us eminence.

Speaker 24 (17:19):
Was that his appeal then was that what you because
you were perceived by the public as being the party prince,
was that something you have said?

Speaker 3 (17:27):
That's also a bit of a stretch. I don't know
why I've collected that title, because I don't I never
have really parted. I was single for quite a long
time in the early eighties, but then after I got married,

(17:49):
I was very happy, and I've never really felt the
need to go and party, and certainly going to Jeffreys
was not about partying. Absolutely not at.

Speaker 15 (18:04):
This point in time.

Speaker 14 (18:06):
In the interview, I had sort of an image of
then Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth watching it, which she probably
did thinking to herself, oh God, just you know it
is and it's about to get worse.

Speaker 15 (18:23):
It really is.

Speaker 14 (18:24):
And of course, looking back in retrospect, I'm sure that
quote Prince Andrew, the Duke regrets ever sitting down with
Newsnight in London doing this because they had everything when
they sat down for the interview.

Speaker 15 (18:38):
It was not an ambush.

Speaker 14 (18:40):
But once again, as we continue, you'll get you'll get
an idea of what this whole lifestyle.

Speaker 15 (18:47):
Was like with this guy Epstein. All right, let's continue
with the Prince Andrew.

Speaker 24 (18:52):
He was your guest as well in two thousand. Epstein
was a guest at Windsor Castle and at Sandringham. He
was brought right into the heart of the Royal family
at your invitation.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
But certainly at my invitation, not at the Royal family's invitation.
But remember that it was his girlfriend that was the
key element in this. He was the as it were,
plus one to some extent in that.

Speaker 24 (19:19):
Aspect, I'm original thinking you threw a birthday party for
Epstein's girlfriend, Girlen Maxwell at Sandringham.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
No, it was a shooting weekend, a shooting weekend, just
a straightforward, straightforward shooting weekend.

Speaker 24 (19:33):
But during these times that he was a guest at
Windsor Castle at Sandringham the shooting weekend. We now know
that he was and had been procuring young girls for
sex trafficking.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
We now know that at the time, there was no
indication to me or anybody else that that what he
was doing. And certainly when I saw him either in
the United States. I know, when I saw him in
the United States, or when I was staying in his

(20:11):
houses in the United States, there was no indication, absolutely
no indication. And if there was, you have to remember
that at the time, I was patron of the NSPCC's
full stop campaign, so I was close up with what
was going on in those time about getting rid of

(20:35):
abuse to children. So I knew what the things were
to look for, but I never saw them.

Speaker 24 (20:40):
So you would have made that connection because you stayed
with him. You were a visitor, a guest on many
occasions at his homes, and nothing struck you as suspicious.
Nothing during that whole time.

Speaker 14 (20:53):
He invites him to his daughter's eighteenth birthday party, knowing
that he was wanted by the police.

Speaker 15 (21:07):
In Palm Beach for sex trafficking of miners.

Speaker 14 (21:13):
Now, his daughter was not a minor at the time,
she's eighteen But why would you invite someone who's wanted
by the Palm Beach police for sex, trafficking of miners
and statutory rape come to a party at your invitation
where there's.

Speaker 15 (21:33):
Very very young girls around. Does it make any sense
to me? I don't know. I mean, this is inductive,
deductive reasoning, I guess you could call it, but very
very strange. Let's continue.

Speaker 24 (21:49):
Just for the record, You've been on his private plane. Yes,
You've been to stay on his private island. Yes, You've
stayed at his home in Palm Beach. Yes, you visited
Gellen Maxwell's house in Belgravia in London.

Speaker 25 (22:04):
Yes.

Speaker 6 (22:06):
So.

Speaker 24 (22:07):
In two thousand and six, in May, an arrest warrant
was issued for Epstein for sexual assault of a minor.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
Yes.

Speaker 24 (22:15):
In July, he was invited to Windsor Castle to your daughter,
Princess Beatrice's eighteenth birthday.

Speaker 3 (22:23):
Why would you do that? Because I was asking, Glen.
But even so at the time, I don't think I
certainly I wasn't aware when the invitation was issued what
was going on in the United States, and I wasn't
aware until until the media picked up on it. Because
he never said anything about it.

Speaker 24 (22:43):
He never discussed with you the fact disgusting that an
arrest warrant had been issued. So he came to that
party knowing police were investigating him.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
Well, I'm not sure was it police? I don't know.

Speaker 24 (22:56):
You see, this is the problem that I'm beach police
at the time.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
But I mean, I'm afraid he See. This is the
problem is that an awful lot of this was going
on in the United States, and I wasn't a party
to it, and I knew nothing about it.

Speaker 14 (23:06):
It just it just gets worse and worse as it
goes along, and then she whacks him with this one.

Speaker 24 (23:13):
The guest was John Brockman, the literary agent. Now he
described seeing you there getting a foot massage from a
young Russian woman. Did that happen? No, you're absolutely sure
or you can't remember, absolutely sure. So John Brockman's statement
is false.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
Well, I wouldn't. I wouldn't. I don't know, mister Brockman,
So I don't know what he's talking about.

Speaker 24 (23:38):
But that definitely Wasn't you getting a foot massage from
a Russian girl in Jeffrey Epstein's house. No, it might
seem a funny way to break off a friendship, a
four day house party of sorts with a dinner. It's
an odd way to break up.

Speaker 3 (23:55):
Different way I put is that that's a very stark
way of putting it. You're absolutely right. But actually the
the the the truth of it is is that is
that I actually only saw him.

Speaker 6 (24:10):
For about.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
What the part that the dinner party, the walk in
the park, and probably passing in the passage.

Speaker 14 (24:21):
Okay, all right, you did you What happened was is
you told him I can't be seen with you anymore.
But but you stayed for three more days inside his house.
I mean, oh, I might have seen him walk in.
You're staying in his house. You just told him that
you do, you don't want to be associated with him anymore.

(24:42):
But you're you know, you're just staying at the house
for a couple of more days. That's all, no big deal,
all right. And then this is when this is when
she she moves in for the kill, if you will.

Speaker 24 (24:52):
July of this year, Epstein was rested on charges of
sex trafficking and abusing dozens of underage girls. One of
Epstein's accusers, Virginia Roberts, has made allegations against you. She
says she met you in two thousand and one. She
says she dined with you, danced with you at Tramp
nightclub in London. She went on to have sex with

(25:15):
you in a house in Belgravia belonging to girle And Maxwell,
your friend. Your response, I.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
Have no recollection of ever meeting this lady, none whatsoever.

Speaker 24 (25:26):
You don't remember meeting her? She says she met you
in two thousand and one. She dined with you, she
danced with you, you bought her drinks. You're in Tramp
nightclub in London, and she went on to have sex
with you in a house in Belgravier belonging to Girleine Maxwell.

Speaker 3 (25:48):
Didn't happen.

Speaker 24 (25:49):
Do you remember her?

Speaker 3 (25:52):
No, I have no recollection of ever meeting her. I'm
almost in fact, I'm convinced that I was never in
tramps with her. There are a number of things that
are wrong with that story, one of which is is
that I don't know where the bar is in tramps.

(26:14):
I don't drink. I don't think I've ever bought a
drink in tramps whenever I was there.

Speaker 24 (26:23):
Do you remember dancing at Tramp?

Speaker 3 (26:26):
No, that couldn't have happened, because the date that there's
being suggested I was at home with the children.

Speaker 24 (26:34):
You know that you were at home with the children.
Was it a memorable night on.

Speaker 3 (26:40):
That particular day that we now understand is the date
she's the tenth of March. I was at home. I
was with the children. I'd taken Beatrice to a Pizza
Express in working for a party at I suppose sort
of four or five and the afternoon, and then because

(27:02):
the Duchess was away, we have a simple rule in
the family that when one's away, the other one's there.
I was on terminal leave at the time from the
Royal Navy, so therefore I.

Speaker 15 (27:15):
Was at home.

Speaker 24 (27:15):
Why would you remember that so specifically? Why would you
remember a pizza Express birthday and.

Speaker 9 (27:20):
Being at home?

Speaker 3 (27:20):
Because going to Pizza Express in Woking is an unusual
thing for me to do, a very unusual thing for
me to do. I've never been, I've only been through
working a couple of times, and I remember it weirdly distinctly.
As soon as somebody reminded me of it, I went, oh, yes,
I remember that. I have no recollection of ever meeting

(27:46):
or being in the company or the presence.

Speaker 24 (27:48):
So you're absolutely sure that you're at home on the
tenth of March. She was very specific about that night.
She described dancing with you and you profusely sweating, and
that she went on to have.

Speaker 3 (28:02):
Possibly there's a slight problem with with with with the sweating,
because I have a peculiar medical condition, which is that
I don't sweat, or I didn't sweat at the time,
and that was yes, I didn't sweat at the time
because I had suffered what I would describe as an

(28:25):
overdose of adrenaline in the Falklands War when I was
shot at.

Speaker 14 (28:29):
Okay, I've had enough, I mean, please seriously. But the
reason I wanted to play that is because to me,
it all really does. Like I said in the beginning,
it kind of leads back to him a little bit
because it show it shows you what rich and powerful
people can do and yes, get away with it. So

(28:52):
are we going to get a full list of all
the individuals that we know we're engaging in this kind
of behavior.

Speaker 15 (28:59):
Probably not.

Speaker 14 (29:01):
It's the saga is going to continue, But the administration
has responded to the heat.

Speaker 15 (29:07):
There's no doubt about it.

Speaker 14 (29:09):
All right, I'm Jeremy, lady. This is standing ground, this
is mojo fiber radio. My email standing Ground one seven
seven six at gmail dot com. Standing Ground one seven
seven six at gmail dot com. Follow me on Twitter
at Lady Jeremy j E R E m Y. That's
at Lee l E A h Y Jeremy j E
R E m Y. When we get back, we will
move on too well, Alligator Alcatraz and all other things

(29:34):
immigration related.

Speaker 15 (29:35):
All right, talk to you on the other side.

Speaker 24 (29:37):
Another guest was John Brockman, the literary agent. Now he
described seeing you there getting a foot massage from a
young Russian woman. Did that happen? You're absolutely sure or
you can't remember?

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Absolutely sure?

Speaker 24 (29:54):
So John Brockman's statement is false.

Speaker 3 (29:57):
Well, I wouldn't. I wouldn't. I don't know, mister, and
so I don't know what he's talking about.

Speaker 24 (30:02):
But that definitely Wasn't you getting a foot massage from
a Russian girl in Jeffrey Epstein's house. No, you've stayed
at his home in Palm Beach. Yes, you've visited Gillen
Maxwell's house in Belgravi in London. Yes, you've been on
his private plane. Yes, you've been to stay on his

(30:23):
private island.

Speaker 8 (30:24):
Yes.

Speaker 9 (30:30):
The play.

Speaker 19 (30:37):
Our guests are arriving on time two the second.

Speaker 9 (30:41):
They always do and you're always as a miracle.

Speaker 1 (30:45):
My dear tattoo.

Speaker 26 (30:46):
When each guest is playing fifty dollars for a three
days stay on fantasy Island, he or she deserves miracles.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
You're listening to standing ground with Jeremy Lady.

Speaker 25 (31:35):
Are you or your loved ones suffering from illnesses such
as TDS also known as Trump derangement syndrome. Do you
dismiss or deny the current issues facing our country such
as historic inflation, illegal immigration, corporate corruption, World War three escalations,
and the chronic disease epidemic. If so, you might be
struggling from TDS. Introducing independence Independence allows you the freedom

(31:59):
to finally think independently once again, Instead of believing everything
you hear from the mainstream media, independence allows for constructive,
critical thinking.

Speaker 10 (32:08):
I used to hear people on the news say things
like Donald Trump and the movement he has encouraged are
a threat to democracy, and.

Speaker 24 (32:15):
I instantly believed it.

Speaker 10 (32:17):
With independence, I now realize the media is run by
the Democrat elite, who are a corrupt oligarchy that sensors
free speech, silences political opponents, supports forever wars and abandons
democracy by anointing its candidates.

Speaker 15 (32:30):
Independence may not be for everyone.

Speaker 24 (32:32):
If you enjoy being lied to.

Speaker 25 (32:33):
About your president's cognitive abilities, support or willan totalitarianism, or
are excited about communist fiscal policy, independence may not be
right for you. Common side effects of independence may include
an awakening of rational thought, successfully identifying propaganda, freedom of choice,
loss of hatred, anti narcissistic behavior, and love of democracy.

Speaker 18 (32:55):
I used to blindly hate whoever my party was running
a gift. I didn't care about facts policy because I
was hopelessly indoctrinated. With independence. I'm much more interested in
policies that uphold democracy, and I truly care about the
help of our country and its citizens.

Speaker 25 (33:09):
Ask your doctor if independence is right for you, and
enjoy your freedoms.

Speaker 6 (33:13):
Once again.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
Your listening is standing ground with Jeremy, Lady.

Speaker 14 (33:22):
I think that I am familiar with the fact that
you are going to ignore this particular.

Speaker 6 (33:25):
Problem until it swims up and fights.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
You on the ass.

Speaker 27 (33:45):
When history looks back on this time in our country,
when history looks back on you, how would you like
to be remembered.

Speaker 6 (33:53):
A good person, but a person that saved our country?

Speaker 1 (33:56):
I really believed our country is going down for the fall.

Speaker 7 (33:59):
I don't know it ever could have come back.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
It was very close to the edge.

Speaker 14 (34:03):
I agree on all right, welcome back to standing ground.
I'm German, lady. This is Mojo Fiber Radio. The situation
with these mass deportations, which is, I've got some great
audio of Pierce Morgan with Joy Reid that's Psychotic, formerly

(34:24):
of MSNBC, whose show got canceled because she sucked. Now,
while on the issue before I dive into this, the
immigration issues, an alligator Alcatraz and all the whining from
the left, okay, is I just quickly want to weigh
in on the firing, well, not the firing, Yeah, the

(34:45):
cancelation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The response
from the press has been this buzz are kind of well,
this is what happens under Trump. Uh, it's it's Trump's

(35:08):
too powerful, and some have even suggested the cancelation of
the Late Show is a violation of the free speech
clots of the First Amendment.

Speaker 15 (35:19):
No, no, it's very simple. Believe me.

Speaker 14 (35:23):
I've been on shows that have been canceled radio, okay,
and the reason they get canceled is because your ratings
aren't good enough and they can't make money, so the
show gets shit canned.

Speaker 15 (35:36):
It's simple.

Speaker 14 (35:38):
Stephen Colbert, we used to be great, like in the
mid to late nineties.

Speaker 15 (35:43):
I loved him. He came out every night, and he
wasn't funny anymore.

Speaker 14 (35:52):
He's just an angry TDS whining pussy and he couldn't
take a night and just have fun and keep it light.
That's what's happening to late night TV in recent years, really,
just in the last eight years. Trump is living rent

(36:12):
free in these people's brains, the hosts, the writers, the producers,
the executive producers, and it doesn't work. And advertising, they
don't want to pay a lot of money to a
show that doesn't get a lot of viewers.

Speaker 15 (36:28):
Simple as that.

Speaker 14 (36:30):
But if you're with me, and you're with the generation
of when late night TV was actually funny, when you
would watch like Johnny Carson, Generation Next Members Johnny Carson,
you'd watch him, but you went to bed with a smile.
You didn't go to bed angry with your blood pressure

(36:53):
through the roof. I mean, I just stop watching Stephen
Colbert because I was like, you're not funny anymore. You
You're just angry, that's all. It's a huge it's a
huge a grievance counsel at eleven thirty at night or
whatever time he came on. Listen to a cut. I
dug this one up. This is Johnny Carson being interviewed

(37:18):
by Mike Wallace. This is in around nineteen seventy six,
seventy seven.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
Listen to this.

Speaker 28 (37:26):
Do you get sensitive about the fact that people say
he'll never take a serious controversy.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
Well, I have an answer to that. I said, no.
Tell me the last time that Jack.

Speaker 28 (37:36):
Benny red Skelton, Benny comedian used his show to do
serious issues. That's not what I'm there for.

Speaker 3 (37:46):
Can't they see that?

Speaker 9 (37:47):
But you and I do.

Speaker 28 (37:48):
They think that just because you have it tonight's show,
that you must deal in serious issues.

Speaker 3 (37:54):
That's a danger.

Speaker 28 (37:55):
It's a real danger. Once you start that, Do you
start to get that so important feeling that what you
say has great import and you know, strangely enough, you
could use that show as a form you could sway people,
and I don't think you should.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
As an entertainer, guy was.

Speaker 14 (38:09):
A class act and he knew exactly what he needed
to do when he went out there every night. And
taped that show, and that was simple, be funny, do
funny skits. Did Johnny Carson do politics, Yeah, he did
political satire.

Speaker 15 (38:25):
But it was never nasty.

Speaker 14 (38:28):
I mean, I can't even remember the last time watched
I watched Stephen Colbert. I mean it as soon as
Trump got elected, he just went off the rails. So
to blame Trump and to blame all these other external
exogynous forces for the reason that the Late Show's being
canceled is just silly. You're being canceled because you suck. Okay,

(38:52):
moving right along, as you probably suspected this was going
to happen eventually, is that there would be some congressional
delegate or whatever that would go down to Alligator Alcatraz
and go and look for human rights violations. They won't
they won't put a delegation together to go out and

(39:13):
visit all the prisons and prisons in the United States
to see if they're up to code. But they just
want to go down to Alligator Alcatraz to make sure
everything's in order. And of course they're not going to
come out and say, hey, looks fine to us, everything's
within regulation, it looks like it's safe, it's clean all
that kind of stuff. They've got to come out and

(39:35):
what lie. Here's here's a I call her brillowhead. I'm sorry,
I just can't help it. Brillohead Debbie Wasserman shul.

Speaker 29 (39:44):
They are essentially packed into cages wall to wall humans
thirty two detainees per cage. That is the only thing
inside those cages are the their bunk beds, and there
are three tiny toilets. They essentially drink, they get their

(40:10):
drinking water, and they brush their teeth where they poop
in the same unit.

Speaker 14 (40:15):
That is completely false. No, there are two different delivery
systems back and forth. So no, that was one that
AOC tribe when she visited the border years ago and
the border agent. They had a border agent on video
go into one of the holding areas and show the
toilet and the water and all that. It's just complete crap.

(40:40):
Well anyway, I get I guess my understanding. My feeling
is that the people on the left and this delegation whatever,
they want to spend your tax dollars and put illegal
immigrants in cremlians and violent ms thirteen members up at
fancy hotels or something. Day there was a report filed

(41:02):
the other night and it showed what they're getting for dinner.
I mean, I got to tell you, it's like do
you ever see a commercial for food and your stomach
starts to growl?

Speaker 15 (41:13):
Okay, Well this was not like.

Speaker 14 (41:18):
What do you call it, you know, just macaroni and
cheese thrown on a piece of cardboard with a peanut
butter square and some fruit cup and of milk like
they get in prison. This was like glaized chicken rice
with shrimp and come on, and anyway, here's here's Roonda
Santa's responding to all this shit.

Speaker 30 (41:36):
It is a center to process illegal aliens and then
to provide a pad to deport them from the runway.

Speaker 6 (41:44):
That's right there.

Speaker 30 (41:46):
We did not create the four seasons.

Speaker 6 (41:48):
That's not the intent of this.

Speaker 30 (41:50):
All the standards are a lot higher than what it
was even required air conditioning.

Speaker 14 (41:56):
The average temperature I think has held at about sixty
four degrees, which is very comfortable. No, there's no worms
and maggots in the food. Those are all Those are
all lies things that are being floated. They have, they
get three meals a day, They have twenty four to
seven legal counseling. They have access to to religious services

(42:18):
if they want to, they've got I'm telling you something
right now. When they call it, when they call it
a concentration camp, I really want to puke. I don't
think people at Auschwitz were granted twenty four to seven
legal counsel. Do you never mind practicing their religion? I
just it's it's crazy, Okay. Here's here's Christy Nome with

(42:43):
Christian Welker on Meet the Press responding to potential human
rights violations.

Speaker 31 (42:52):
What do you say to these lawmakers who argue this
is not humane treatment of individual of humans.

Speaker 27 (43:01):
Well, our detention centers at the federal level are held
to a higher standard than most local or state centers
and even federal prisons. This is a state run facility.
At Alligator, they have a stuffed into a ja A contrast, Well,
I've been there and I've seen these rooms that they
are in. I wouldn't call them jail cells. I would
call them a facility where they are held, and that

(43:22):
are secure facilities.

Speaker 24 (43:23):
Democrats have called them cages.

Speaker 27 (43:25):
I wish they would have set that back during the
Biden administration and back when Democrats were in the White
House and they were piling people on top of each
other on cement floors.

Speaker 14 (43:34):
That's true. And also, look, it's a detention center. It's
not a it's it's it's not a luxury suite on
the French riviera.

Speaker 15 (43:47):
Is that is that what they expect?

Speaker 14 (43:49):
Well, anyway, I figured to be fair and be objective
in my reporting and my information. I sent down my
chief marketing agent and associate producer G. Gordon Grady down
to Alligator Alcatraz to tour the facility himself.

Speaker 1 (44:08):
Now. G.

Speaker 15 (44:09):
Gordon Grady, he's really good.

Speaker 14 (44:11):
If I call him, he can, He'll get down to
the White House, he'll get to the Capitol.

Speaker 15 (44:16):
Any anything I need, he'll feed me. Not necessarily have
him on the air.

Speaker 14 (44:19):
But anyway, he went down and he toured Alligator Alcatraz
and filed this report.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
Get ready again, there were one hundred and twenty tables.
Each had its own Scotch salmon, and had that been
a fire, the guests kind of sprinted it out with
three hundred and sixty bubbles and finteach public. Sometime during
the day, the chef's found time to bake one hundred
and twenty seventieth anniversary takes one per table.

Speaker 15 (44:58):
Thank you very much, Thank you. G Gordon Grady for
that great report.

Speaker 14 (45:05):
Okay, very good, well done, Thank you very much, And
to all my listeners down at Alligator Alcatraz, I want
to wish you ram and noodle wishes and hot pocket dreams.

Speaker 15 (45:19):
Okay, now you guys know who Joy Reid is.

Speaker 14 (45:25):
Joy Reid was the moron, the idiot over at MSNBC
who show got canceled and then she blamed it on
you guessed it racism. Anyway, she was on with Pierce
Morgan not too long ago, and this cut went viral
where she's been on bitching about mass deportations and that

(45:46):
it's out of control, and you know, the whole Trump
is Hitler and Nazi, all this kind of Gestapo stuff whatever.
And I like Pierce Morgan a lot, and I don't
think this is an ambush. I think he's asking her
a really fair question. And actually she's not the only one.
It should be posed to post to everybody on the

(46:08):
left who still to this day think that Barack Obama
walks on water.

Speaker 19 (46:13):
All right, here you go, you know how many people
Barack Obama deported in eight years?

Speaker 6 (46:18):
I'm sure you're going to.

Speaker 19 (46:19):
Tell me, Well, what do you guess?

Speaker 6 (46:22):
I don't. I don't know and don't care.

Speaker 19 (46:24):
You don't know and you don't care.

Speaker 6 (46:26):
You've just given me because you're trying to make the
issue enjoy.

Speaker 1 (46:31):
You just joy.

Speaker 6 (46:34):
The point is joy. You just get joy, not women joy.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
Let me finish.

Speaker 15 (46:41):
Babies, joy, enjoy joy you've just.

Speaker 6 (46:45):
Given I'm sure it's your main issue.

Speaker 19 (46:48):
You've just given me joy joy. I'm trying to finish
my sentence. You've just given me a lengthy monologue attacking
Donald Trump the aggressive deportation policy. And I've simply said
to you, there was a Democrat, a black Democrat, president

(47:08):
of the United States for eight years. I'm simply asking,
given that you're obviously all over every detail of the
Trump deportation policy, and given you on the airways in
America on a daily basis through Obama's tenure, how many
people did he deport in eight years?

Speaker 9 (47:26):
I do not know.

Speaker 6 (47:27):
You'll tell me. I'm faud I'm sure it's probably more
than a million people. I'm quite certain.

Speaker 29 (47:32):
I think each two million, it was three million, Okay,
And your point being, what my point being.

Speaker 19 (47:41):
Are you as shocked by that as you are claiming
to be by Trump?

Speaker 6 (47:45):
It is not deporting them wait a minute, the majority
were brown.

Speaker 14 (47:52):
It's it's the topic that no one on the left
wants to talk about.

Speaker 15 (47:58):
They don't want to talk about it.

Speaker 14 (48:00):
Barack Obama, the dear Leader, the Messiah, rounded up and
threw out three million of them. But they don't they
don't want, they don't want to talk about it. It's
kind of like Franklin Roosevelt, the liberal darling FDR.

Speaker 15 (48:17):
Which, by the way, he was a good president in
many many regards.

Speaker 10 (48:20):
He was.

Speaker 14 (48:21):
No one ever wants to talk about Franklin Roosevelt on
the left anyway. You read books, historical books about Franklin Roosevelt,
and there might be a little mention of the internment camps.

Speaker 15 (48:34):
The left that protect their own. And there's a prime example.

Speaker 14 (48:39):
Franklin Roosevelt, after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December
of nineteen forty one, signed Executive Order nine zero sixty six.
I can't believe I remember that, but I do. I'm
sick of that. I need help, I need to, okay whatever.
Under his nine zero six six executive order, he rounded
up and put it internment camps one hundred and twenty
thousand plus Japanese Americans, many of which were executed and

(49:02):
their bodies were dumped out in the ocean. They died
of malnourishment, They did medical experiments on and were sexually
abused and declassified under four yer requests in the mid
to late nineties determined that Franklin Roosevelt knew what was
going on in the interment camps and did nothing to

(49:23):
stop it, and the Joint resolution was passed in every
surviving individual who was in an internment camp got a
tax deferred payment I think of forty thousand dollars and
an apology from the United States. But they don't want
to talk about it because it's Franklin Roosevelt. They'll talk

(49:45):
about Donald Trump, they'll call isations Gestapo and all these
other things, but they don't want to talk about Barack
Obama's three million that he threw out. And just as
in the F four mentioned, they didn't want to talk
about FTR and the internment camps, just saying all right,
up against the clock when we get back, which I

(50:06):
probably should have done in the beginning. The elephant in
the room right now, which to me is actually a
pretty big story, and that is evidence seems to suggest
right now that Barack Obama former president of the United States.
I hate to disappoint his supporters because I know he

(50:28):
was the first black president. But just because he's a
black president doesn't mean that he is not capable of
breaking the law. That he was involved in a plan
to undermine the Trump administration when they got in by
claiming that the election was stolen through a Russian hacking,

(50:49):
and all this to somehow I'll call I'll say it
to somehow protect quote Hillary's legacy that she really won
and she got screwed, and talk about Trump set himself.

Speaker 15 (51:03):
It was not a smooth transition.

Speaker 1 (51:05):
It was not.

Speaker 14 (51:06):
It was a very rocky transition because when as soon
as Barack Obama left the White House, they had this
whole thing planned out, how for four years they were
just going to go after a more two couple of years. Anyway,
investigating the Trump collusion with Russia turned.

Speaker 15 (51:22):
Out to be complete BS.

Speaker 14 (51:25):
So now there is evidence that has been delivered to
the Department of Justice as criminal referrals requesting criminal investigation
of James Comey, James Clapper, John Brennan, and Barack Obama
himself and probably others. All Right, we'll get into that

(51:45):
upon our return.

Speaker 31 (51:47):
What do you say to these lawmakers who argue this
is not humane treatment of individuals of humans.

Speaker 27 (51:55):
Well, our detention centers at the federal level are held
to a higher standard than most local or state centers
and even federal prisons. This is a state run facility
at Alligator, they have a stuffed into they have a contrast.
But I've been there, and I've seen these rooms that
they are in. I wouldn't call them jail cells. I
would call them a facility where they are held, and

(52:16):
that are secure facilities.

Speaker 24 (52:17):
Democrats have called them cages.

Speaker 27 (52:19):
I wish they would have set that back during the
Biden administration and back when Democrats were in the White
House and they were piling people on top of each
other on cement floors.

Speaker 1 (53:08):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy Lahy.

Speaker 6 (53:12):
How's the election made you feel?

Speaker 8 (53:14):
On a scale from one to ten, with ten being
Nazi Nazi not. My name is doctor Nick Peterson, and
I specialize in those suffering from TDS Trump derangements.

Speaker 6 (53:25):
Hello, I'm doctor Peterson.

Speaker 8 (53:28):
How are you well?

Speaker 1 (53:29):
Donald Trump is a felon Nope.

Speaker 8 (53:31):
I asked how you were doing. The majority of Americans
can mentally handle election results on both sides of the aisle. However,
there's this small, albeit growing group of I don't want
to say Americans, but people that are just disconnected from reality. Fascist,
and honestly, it makes diagnosing these people a whole lot easier.

Speaker 1 (53:52):
I just check their social media.

Speaker 8 (53:56):
Gone are the days me just search your symptoms on
web md home by yourself.

Speaker 3 (54:01):
How they record their symptoms and post them for the
world to see.

Speaker 1 (54:05):
The haircut is also a dead giveaway.

Speaker 3 (54:08):
So what brings you in today?

Speaker 1 (54:10):
Oh? I don't know.

Speaker 8 (54:11):
Maybe it's the orange democracy destroying Putin love and dictator
all right, so mental illness. They are completely blind to
the fact that their observed actions and ideologies were a
big factor in their party's loss. Let me ask you this,
do you even know what democracy is?

Speaker 1 (54:30):
Follow up question?

Speaker 8 (54:31):
Do you know how Kamala Harris became the nominee?

Speaker 5 (54:34):
I know you're a.

Speaker 6 (54:35):
Deplorable Nazi fascist bigot?

Speaker 8 (54:39):
Okay. Needs turns out that calling half the country Nazis
for four years was not a winning strategy, and yet
somehow not even Cardi b could save them. Do you
realize what I'm going through?

Speaker 1 (54:55):
Yep?

Speaker 8 (54:55):
Delusions. I am losing my right to vote on where
you get in, your information will be Goldberg.

Speaker 26 (55:02):
Well what's the remedy, you might be wondering. Well, if
you ask me, it's a history lesson in Jesus. But
the pharmacy doesn't offer those. I prescribe them a brain
and I send them to trybrain dot com for more information.

Speaker 1 (55:14):
Well, i'll show you.

Speaker 8 (55:16):
I'm moving to Canada.

Speaker 6 (55:17):
That'd be great, and I'll be shaving my head.

Speaker 8 (55:20):
Oh that's now. And one last thing, I'm going on
a sex strike.

Speaker 11 (55:25):
You're a loss.

Speaker 1 (55:28):
Oh no, your list today is just standing ground with Jeremy. Lady,
if they hate him, why do they listen? Most common answer,
I want to see what he'll say next.

Speaker 29 (56:05):
Well.

Speaker 32 (56:05):
Director of National Intelligence Tulty Gabbert says she has identified
quote overwhelming evidence to show how Obama era officials manufactured
the Trump Russia collusion hoax after he was elected in
twenty sixteen.

Speaker 6 (56:18):
Here is d and I Gabbard on what she.

Speaker 33 (56:20):
Found over one hundred documents that we released on Friday
really detail and provide evidence of how this treason is
conspiracy was directed by President Obama just weeks before he
was due to leave office, after President Trump had already
gotten elected, creating this piece of manufactured intelligence that claims

(56:44):
that Russia had helped Donald Trump get elected contradicted every
other assessment that had been made previously in the months
leading up to the election that said exactly the opposite.
So the effect of what President Obama and his senior
national security team did was subvert the will of the
American people, undermining our democratic republic, and enacting what would

(57:08):
be essentially a year's long coup against President Trump, who
was duly elected by the American people.

Speaker 14 (57:16):
Where this is going to go, We have no idea
whether or not this is actually going to bear fruit.

Speaker 7 (57:22):
Now.

Speaker 14 (57:23):
I guess one could argue that Telsea Gabbard has already
bared fruit, right, and that's why it has been sent
over to the Department of Justice. But a lot of
people on my side of the aisle and the Trump
supporters and all that and think, you know, look, I'm
not for targeting anybody that was innocent of anything. But

(57:43):
if there was criminal, serious criminal wrongdoing, which there appears
to be, right, what's the what's the what are the
Democrats love to say?

Speaker 15 (57:53):
No one is above the law. I had someone say
to me yesterday, this is great.

Speaker 3 (57:59):
I'm going to leave them no, aimless.

Speaker 15 (58:00):
To avoid serious embarrassment.

Speaker 14 (58:03):
Was having a phone conversation a lefty and we have
a conversation and said, oh, so you, what do you
think is going to happen? You think they can just
go and arrest Barack Obama. I think arresting a former
president looks really, really bad.

Speaker 15 (58:18):
And then she said yes, she said, and there's no
precedent for you.

Speaker 6 (58:23):
I said, think really hard.

Speaker 14 (58:26):
One other former president was arrested. I think three times
you guessed it, Donald J.

Speaker 15 (58:32):
Trump. But leave the dear leader alone. Oh god no.

Speaker 14 (58:37):
But anyway, at this point, we are now asking the
question regarding the Steele dossier and all this and and
whatever was what the game the guy I forget there,
I call him Austin Powers.

Speaker 15 (58:48):
I think Trump will say his name in a minute.

Speaker 14 (58:50):
Who wrote the whole dossier cooking up this whole thing
that it was a Trump Russia collusion. But I think
we now need to beg the question that Howard Baker
asked during the Watergate.

Speaker 15 (59:02):
Proceedings, what did the president know.

Speaker 3 (59:05):
And when did he know it?

Speaker 14 (59:07):
Now, obviously all this stuff is being is being reviewed
by the DJ and whether or not you know they're
going to issue a kpist for a rest warrant for
Barack Obama. Probably not, and if if, if they do,
you can be rest assured that it will be what

(59:27):
racially motivated.

Speaker 15 (59:31):
So anyway, look on top of that, this is not
a good summer for the Democrats.

Speaker 12 (59:37):
Right.

Speaker 14 (59:38):
Look, I'm not saying we haven't had our hiccups. I mean,
like I built, I did the billboard, the opening of
the program about the Epstein thing. I mean, come on,
let's get this thing. Let's get this thing over with.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
Guys.

Speaker 15 (59:47):
You've been we've been talking about it now for years.
Let's do it.

Speaker 7 (59:50):
Right.

Speaker 14 (59:50):
So, I've got my I've got my grievances with the
Trump administration. But overall, the Democrats are having a really
bad summer. You've got You've got this whole thing now
that's become a pretty big, big deal. And you also
have the individuals who have been subpoened by House oversight

(01:00:11):
and are pleading the Fifth Amendment when asked whether the
President Joe Biden.

Speaker 15 (01:00:17):
Was mentally competent.

Speaker 14 (01:00:20):
They just subpoened KJP, the first black, first lesbian, White
House Press secretary. I don't know if you knew that
or not. And she will probably herself plead the fifth.
But look, I want to be clear about something. Speaking
of BRIDGERD. Nixon, I want to be perfectly clear. Just
because someone pleads the Fifth doesn't mean they're guilty of anything.

(01:00:42):
So James Comer, who's the Chairman of House Oversight, came
out two weeks ago and said, no, no, no, they're
pleading the fifth. Well, you know you might have to
plead the fifth one day, James. It's they're following their
advice of their counsel. I forget what justice what justice
said it, but I think I got this right. Any

(01:01:03):
lawyer worth his salt will always advise anyone who's been
accused or being suspected of doing anything criminal not to
say anything to anyone under any circumstances. And I believe
that is good, sound legal advice. So pleading the Fifth
Amendment doesn't mean you're guilty. Pleading that the Amendment is

(01:01:25):
your right, and it's also a form of protection from
what you guessed it self. Incrimination goes way way back.

Speaker 15 (01:01:34):
All right.

Speaker 14 (01:01:34):
Here's Donald Trump in the Oval Office responding to this
shit the court.

Speaker 23 (01:01:37):
President Obama absolutely called Telsea Gabbert what they did to
this country. In twenty sixteen, starting in twenty sixteen.

Speaker 6 (01:01:47):
But going up all the way going up to twenty twenty.

Speaker 23 (01:01:50):
In the election, they tried to rig the election and
they got caught, and there should be very severe consequences
for that. You know, when we called Hillary Clinton, I said,
you know what, let's not go too far here. It's
the ex wife of a president. And I thought it
was sort of terrible and I let her off the
hook and am very happy idea. But it's time to

(01:02:13):
start after what they did to me, and whether it's
right or wrong, it's time to go after people. Obama's
been caught directly. So people say, oh, you know a group,
it's not a group. It's Obama. His orders are on
the paper, the papers are signed, The papers came right
out of their office. They sent everything to be highly classified.

(01:02:36):
Well the highly classified it's been released. And what they
did in twenty sixteen and in twenty twenty is very criminal.

Speaker 20 (01:02:45):
It's criminal at.

Speaker 23 (01:02:45):
The highest level. So that's really the things you should
be talking about. I know nothing about the other but
I think it's appropriate that.

Speaker 9 (01:02:52):
They do go I asked you about that.

Speaker 19 (01:02:54):
As president.

Speaker 5 (01:02:55):
Tulci Gabbert has submitted a criminal referral to the Department
of Justice. From your perspective, who should the DOJ target
as part of their investigation? What specific figures in the
Obama administration?

Speaker 23 (01:03:09):
Well, based on what I read, and I read pretty
much what you read, it would be President Obama. He
started it, and Biden was there with him, and Komi
was there, and Clapper, the whole group was there, Brendan.

Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
They were all there in a room right here.

Speaker 34 (01:03:26):
This is the room.

Speaker 23 (01:03:27):
This is much more beautiful than it was then. But
that's okay. I have nice pictures up that came out
of the vaults. They were there for a hundred years.
This is much more beautiful. We have the Declaration of
Independence now in the room, which wasn't here. I guess
people didn't feel too good about putting it here, but
I do. But you know what, if you look at

(01:03:48):
that those papers, they have a stone colt and it
was President Obama. It wasn't lots of people all over
the place. It was them too. But the leader of
the gang was President Obama. Barackluse and Obama. Have you
heard of him?

Speaker 15 (01:04:03):
Did you notice that?

Speaker 14 (01:04:04):
Trump and that I'm sure it was a slip up,
but he referred to Hillary Clinton as the ex wife
of a former president.

Speaker 15 (01:04:12):
Well, when you think about it, he's probably.

Speaker 14 (01:04:14):
Not too far off base, right because I mean they
come on seriously. But anyway, notwithstanding where this will go,
I don't know. We'll have to wait. We'll have to
wait and see. It's it's a waiting game. But I
will admit it. I will admit it. If these individuals,

(01:04:35):
these these cretans Obama clap or comb or that dirt
bag and Brendan that other piece of you know what. Look,
they're not gonna purp walk them, but it would be
nice to see their mugshots.

Speaker 15 (01:04:49):
It really would, it really would. I'm sure they're not
the only ones.

Speaker 14 (01:04:53):
But yeah, they're saying that Barack Obama was the ringleader,
and you say, well, what could they potentd Shall he
be charged with? Okay, I'm not gonna do an Anderson
Cooper here, like when it was Trump and the initial
part of the investigation into some campaign finance thing right
on TV Anderson Cooper the first day, could he spend
time at rankers? I'm not going to say where do

(01:05:15):
you think Barack Obama's going to go and do his time?
You know, I mean, we don't know what's gonna happen.
We'll have to just wait and see. That's just that's
just the way it is. But notwithstanding I I do
admit it would it would be nice. It would nicold
be nice to see, but not nice to see. Nice
to see that they're held accountable as well, say, well,

(01:05:36):
what could they be charged with? Well, the Espionage Act
for one, uh and violation of the the FISA Act,
the Foreign Intelligence Servants Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act beg your
pardon passed on to the Carter administration that bars bars
political campaigns from spying on each other or finding a
way to spy on them. We know now that that

(01:05:59):
administration and everyone's surrounding or as the liberals say in
Barack Obama's.

Speaker 15 (01:06:04):
His orbit, I got it want to be cool?

Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
Is orbit?

Speaker 15 (01:06:07):
It is orbit optics orbit.

Speaker 14 (01:06:11):
Okay, that were up to no good. So we'll just
have to wait and see how this thing pans out.
But it's pretty it's pretty captivating evidence. Okay, with that,
I'm German, lad, this is standing ground, this is Mojo
Fiber Radio.

Speaker 15 (01:06:21):
Till next time. Take care.

Speaker 7 (01:06:23):
The biggest scandal was when they spied on my campaign.
They spied in my campaign. There's no real evidence of that.
Of course there isn't all over the place, leslie. They
spied on my campaign, and they.

Speaker 24 (01:06:35):
Can I say something.

Speaker 13 (01:06:36):
You know, this is sixty minutes and we can't put
on things we can't.

Speaker 7 (01:06:41):
Verify because it's bad for Biden.

Speaker 24 (01:06:43):
We can't put on things we can't very.

Speaker 7 (01:06:46):
They spied on my campaign. We can't verified they spied
in my campaign.

Speaker 15 (01:06:51):
They got caught.

Speaker 6 (01:06:53):
What ain't nobody's spine like us? Why he said so
one to your plans away?

Speaker 3 (01:07:07):
So what's all of us?

Speaker 34 (01:07:09):
There ain't Nobody can't be the frange under the of
the range does be? Fuck nobody's fine.

Speaker 11 (01:07:30):
Side.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Ending Ground has been a production of Lakey Media, said
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