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December 16, 2025 98 mins

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A windstorm knocks out power, highways vanish under floodwater, and looters paddle through neighborhoods in kayaks—then the news cycle pivots to a single incendiary post. We open with the chaos at home and ask a harder question: are we so fixated on words that we miss the deeds reshaping the country?

We dig into Trump’s $10B lawsuit against the BBC and the power of edited narratives, especially when those clips become the scaffolding for impeachment and lawfare. From there, we preview the Epstein files and the uncomfortable idea that “protection” is less about grace than leverage. The Rob Reiner controversy erupts across X, but instead of marinating in outrage, we examine what actually changed while everyone was posting. That’s where the Brown University shooting lands: a likely targeted attack, fumbled details, and a campus with 800 cameras that somehow can’t show a face. When authorities ask us to “check the website,” trust takes another hit.

Then a move with real teeth: fentanyl is formally classified as a weapon of mass destruction. It reframes overdose deaths as national security and empowers deeper coordination with allies like Paraguay on training, intel sharing, and equipment transfers. Pair that with tariffs that pressured China to cooperate on precursors, and a picture emerges where trade, borders, and public health collide. We also surface new reporting on FBI memos suggesting DOJ lacked probable cause for the Mar-a-Lago raid, alongside whistleblower claims of selective enforcement and cooked crime stats. If laws are applied by narrative, legitimacy doesn’t just fray—it snaps.

Culture and education thread through it all. Elon Musk’s example—students knowing George Washington only as a slaveholder—maps to an empathy deficit and a vacuum where fringe ideologies and domestic plots can grow. We cover the LA bomb-plot arrests, a Bellevue ambush in a spotless “safe” city, and why competence and truth-telling matter more than performative civility. In our private segment, we highlight practical wins: Walmart removing dyes and 30-plus additives from store brands without raising prices, and fast-tracked relief that keeps farmers from going under. Finally, we tackle the Senate’s blue slips and filibuster: if one side will nuke norms when power swings, do you lock in durable policy now or wait for a bygone etiquette to return?

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_09 (00:06):
No purpose to start the show.

(00:58):
You see the peasants in thebackground with the keys and
peas walking around.
What are those people?
What are those people?
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofThe Peasants Perspective.
I kind of do look forward tosaying that every single
morning.

SPEAKER_16 (01:15):
I never know how it's going to come in your
mouth.
Sometimes it's like, whoa.
Oh, he just went from likesitting here silently, three
words exchanged, and all of asudden he's like, Well, plus,
some you you used to, you know,we've done this show like, what
are we on like 300 episodes?

SPEAKER_09 (01:31):
Oh, 20.

SPEAKER_16 (01:33):
And you get used to it hearing it a certain way, and
then all of a sudden you do adifferent tone or something.
Like, whoa.

SPEAKER_09 (01:40):
Not AI.
Not AI.
Pony Boy, good morning.
Welcome, welcome.
Yesterday was a really annoyingday.
Two reasons.
Uh, one of which we'll talkabout in the show, but the other
one was I lost power at myhouse, which no surprise.
I mean, we're going through somekind of torrential December.
Sure.
But you find out how importantpower is all of a sudden it goes
out.

(02:00):
It's unusually warm, right?
It was like 57, 60 degreesyesterday.
Fortunately.
Really warm.
Yeah, fortunately.
And uh truly, fortunately.
But we also started the day outwith tons of rain.
Uh, and then we we don't reallywe don't flood here in Kitzap,
at least nothing like what we'reseeing around the state.
Yeah.
But uh, we are subject to windsbecause we're this peninsula out

(02:20):
in the middle of the ocean.
And my house actually has awater view, right?
So I actually put logs on myroof.
I have a metal roof.
I had to put logs up on my roofto hold my roof down because I
went out, I you know, we hadthis wind bluss, and the whole
house, okay.
So I thought, look, sure enough,some of my my roofing is like,
you know, done the thing whereit came up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

(02:41):
Lips.

SPEAKER_16 (02:41):
Let's knock all that back down.
I was gonna say, this is the daywhere you're like, man, those
codes about hurricane clips andstuff.
I mean, it kind of makes sense.

SPEAKER_09 (02:48):
Yeah, exactly.
I'm like, it's it is really forthat once-in-a-decade wind desk.
These are overkill.
It's not overkill the day thewind blows.
Anyways, I had to put uh logs,just some firewood logs, on top
of the roof to hold down thecorners.
Like, eh, put a little 10-poundlog on each roof, that'll
probably hold it down.
So uh we also have had continuedflooding in the uh Seattle

(03:11):
Renton area.
So this right here is a video ofI uh highway 187.
Now I drive this road all thetime.
Oh, right.
This is anytime I head eastside, I end up jumping off I5
and hitting here.
They had to shut it down.
I didn't even know this area wasfloodable.

SPEAKER_16 (03:26):
Look how deep the water is over the road.
Yeah, that's not hydroport.

SPEAKER_09 (03:30):
The highway's built up.
Like and look, it's like holdingthe water back.
There's some kind of levee orsomething right here, some wall.
But, anyways, wild.
Uh this is this is oh geez.

SPEAKER_13 (03:42):
Those are oh geez.

SPEAKER_09 (03:44):
That's that's the roof line.
That's like four or five feettall there.
The water's completely buried.
Um just absolutely crazy what'sgoing on.
Uh I mean, holy smokes.
Holy smokes.
I remember when we used to fliphouses in this area, we would
talk about it.
Well, it's kind of a floodplain.
It was like when are the lasttime I flooded?
Never prehistoric era.

(04:06):
Here's another, here's anotherimage here.
Um just parking lot, just verycouldn't even get their cars
out.
So we're having levees break allover the place.
Tequila just had their dam breakor their levee break this
morning.
It's basically like all thecities over there are having
major, major issues.
Um the Green River uh broke itslevees, so it's all over the

(04:28):
place.
Look at that tractor.
Holy sh.
That's a that's an Osballtractor.
When you need the tractor withthe six, the six-foot back
wheels.
Uh, and then here's the tragedy,too.
You know, people are justhorrible.
Look, looters are now usingkayaks to steal from flooded
properties.
No homish county officials saylooters are using kayaks to

(04:48):
steal from flooded properties.
Man, come on.
Yeah, for real.
We got our own Katrina thinggoing on here.
I didn't I didn't expect I Idon't know why I'm surprised,
but uh, not very cool at all.
Anyways, so that's what's goingon over here.
What's going on in your world?
We're gonna hit a couple thingsbefore we jump into the Rob
Reiner controversy because itwas quite annoying.

(05:10):
That was the other thing, too.
I realized by about 11 a.m.
I was like, I bet you importantthings are gonna happen today,
and no one's gonna catch itbecause everybody's out there,
you know, virtue signaling onthis Rob Reiner thing.
It's like, good.
Doug Wyatt, good morning,Jonathan, good morning, Carlitz,
good morning, friends.
Welcome everybody.

(05:30):
I'm glad you guys are here.
So, a couple things.
Let's just jump into a few uh afew items.
Obviously, Donald Trump pardonedTina Peters, and he was asked
about uh Tina Peters and kind ofthe Colorado situation in
general yesterday, and this iswhat he had to say.

SPEAKER_27 (05:46):
The poorly run state of Colorado with a governor
who's incompetent, and frankly,with a governor that won't allow
our wonderful Tina to come outof a jail, a high-intensity
jail, because she caught peoplecheating on an election and they
said she was cheating, shewasn't cheating.
She went over, she looked at oneof the election scams going on,

(06:12):
and uh because she did that,they put her in jail for nine
years.
The governor of Colorado is aweak and a pathetic man who was
run by Trend de Aragua.
The criminals from Venezuelatook over sections of Colorado,
and he was afraid to doanything, but he puts Tina in
jail for nine years because shecaught people cheating.

(06:35):
And when she walked over and gotinvolved in it, they said she
was cheating, she wasn'tcheating.
She caught people cheating onthe election 2020.
Along with a lot of other peoplethat cheated on that election.
You'll see that coming out moreand more.

SPEAKER_09 (07:07):
You know, six months ago when we did the your
country's run by narco-terroristthing, and then all of a sudden
we went from growing, growing,growing to flat line.
I was reading a little Nietzschelast night.
Really, I was because power wasout, so I figured, oh, why not
read?
And uh Nietzsche, Nietzsche wasdescribing how people don't
really like the truth becausewhat they want is things that

(07:29):
they call truth that make themfeel comfortable.
But when the real truth is uglyand you know, people don't want
to hear it, and that's kind ofwhere I look at this election
fraud thing.
It's it's an ugly truth torealize your country's been run
by narco-terrorists.
We've had presidents who havebeen shoving cocaine up their
noses, we've got dementia.
You know what I mean?
It's like it's hard.
We don't want to believe that.

(07:49):
And uh that's kind of wherewe're at.
We're at a spot where it's like,hey, some of this stuff we can't
continue.
Can't continue this way, right?
Um, this is Donald Trump.
Another thing he did isyesterday he announced his
official lawsuit against theBBC.
And he's, I think the lawsuit's$10 billion, but he's asking,
you know, five billion is liketheir baseline negotiation deal.

(08:10):
Probably will put the BBC out ofbusiness, which is Britain.
So, you know, it'll probably beanyways.
This is the clip that the BBCedited in order to make Trump
look like he was calling forviolence on January 6th.
Now keep in mind, I'm wrapped upin this too, right?
This narrative is what they useto kind of create the consent of

(08:33):
the governed in order to targetAmerican citizens like myself.

SPEAKER_28 (08:37):
We're gonna walk down to the Capitol, and I'll be
there with you, and we fight.
We fight like hell.
We're gonna walk down That's notWe're gonna walk down to the
Capitol, and I'll be there withyou, and we fight.
We fight like hell.

SPEAKER_09 (08:56):
They used that clip to initiate impeachment
proceedings.
Yes, right now, I don't knowthat they ever said, here's the
clip, but this is the narrative.
The BBC put this out there,worldwide news, and everybody
picks it up, and it's called theZeitgeist.
This is just the the thingthat's in the air that we all
fill, the Zeitgeist.

(09:17):
The Zeitgeist was Trump calledfor people to go down to the
Capitol and fight, fight likehell, take your country back.

SPEAKER_28 (09:23):
What he really said was this We're gonna walk down
to the Capitol, and we're gonnacheer on our brave senators and
congressmen and women.

SPEAKER_09 (09:36):
That's a little bit different of a message.
That's the message I've got,right?
So when they're like, well, theTrump president called for
violence, I'm like, I listen tothe whole speech.
In fact, that's part of myobjection to this whole thing
was I showed up in Congress hadalready been dismissed.
Why am I why am I being saidthat I'm obstructing Congress,
right?
That was it right there.
They wanted to run with thatnarrative.
It's anyways, so he's suing theBBC.

(09:58):
I'm sure it'll take a coupleyears and want to do discovery
and stuff like that.
And uh, anyways, this is Trumptalking about because they
won't.

SPEAKER_27 (10:05):
In a little while, you'll be saying I'm suing the
BBC for putting words in mymouth, literally, to put words
in my mouth.
They had me saying things that Inever said coming out.
I guess they used AI orsomething.
Uh so we'll be bringing thatlawsuit.
A lot of people are asking, whenare you bringing that lawsuit?
Even the media can't believethat one.
They would they actually putterrible words in my mouth

(10:26):
having to do with January 6ththat I didn't say.
And the beautiful words that Isaid, right?
The beautiful words talkingabout patriotism and all of the
good things that I said, theydidn't say that, but they put
terrible words.
They actually have me speakingwith words that I never said,

(10:47):
and they got caught because Ibelieve somebody at BBC said
this is so bad, it has to bereported.
That's called fake news.

SPEAKER_09 (10:57):
That's called fake news.
Shantini, Chantini, goodmorning.
Welcome, welcome.
Okay, so now one of the thingsin kind of the WWE that we're
watching here of politics,right?
Which is way more than WWE.
This is like life is on theline.
This is a death match.
We laugh.

(11:18):
We laugh because otherwise wewould cry and it would be a very
depressing show.

SPEAKER_18 (11:21):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (11:22):
So one of the things, you know, we're supposed
to, by this Friday, we'resupposed to have the full
release of all the Epsteinfiles.
So I want you guys to previewwhat should be coming out in
these Epstein files here.
So this is Glenn Prager, he's aJeffrey Epstein investigator
from the Justice Department, andhe's worked in government for a
long time.
And uh, we'll just listen to thebeginning clip here of what he

(11:42):
was caught saying in an Arizonaairport, okay?

SPEAKER_14 (11:47):
It's not he's not protecting himself, there's
nothing there.
But he's protecting a lot ofpeople because Trump's not
saying it's a host, it's uh thecase, like a hoax or something
like that.
He's been on the plane, youknow, many times.
It just was never on the planewith the kids.
I've seen the IT and I'veinterviewed all the victors.
There's never been an instancewhere Trump wants a plane with

(12:09):
these kids.

SPEAKER_13 (12:11):
We're on the same road, but that can't be someone.

SPEAKER_09 (12:20):
Overheard that's it right there.
And we've known that for awhile, right?
Bon Gino came out and said hehad a whistle, Secret Service
Agent whistleblower who waslike, dude, I asked to be taken
off the detail, right?
Because they were doing thatwith kids on the plane, yeah.
So in another episode of paintTrump with their sins, right?
Now Trump's protecting people,right?
Who's he protecting?

(12:42):
Good question.
There's in my mind probablypeople that he has leverage
over.
People he has leverage over.
It could be that he doesn't wantto destroy the system
completely, right?
We're already kind of goingthrough a crisis of a country
right now because Joe Biden, theauto-pin president, the
illegitimate president thatwe're talking about.

SPEAKER_16 (12:59):
I was talking with my wife about this actually last
night because we were having awell, this is what the Democrats
are doing, and this is and itand it was like a head reminder
like this is not aRepublican-Democrat issue.
This isn't we're all of ourcongressmen are all guilty and
they're all in it, and they'reall tainted, and they all have
problems.
And and he's just trying to getthe Republican Party behind him

(13:22):
to use that as an engine todestroy the Democrats, and then
he's probably gonna have to turnaround and destroy some of the
Republicans after he's donedoing that.

SPEAKER_09 (13:30):
Yes, yes, which is why the Republicans are like,
you know, like we don't want,you know, let's delay for time
because maybe when the dambreaks, it'll be after the
midterms, you know what I mean?
And we'll maybe I'll escape.
And he'll let us escape all theway to 2028 because he needs our
support.
The reality, the ugly, uglytruth.

(13:52):
Bill Clinton was a cokehead.
Bill Clinton did felonousactivities on a regular basis,
up to and including allegationsof murder, okay?
An illegitimate president withhigh crimes and misdemeanors.
Bush.
Bush Jr.

(14:15):
Weapons of mass destruction,Patriot Act, Obama, a false
president.
Elected for the first time wehad the president officially
elected by the fake votingmachines.
The first time that they meddledin an election was in the Iowa
caucus, in order for BarackObama to beat out Hillary
Clinton in that caucus, andthat's when he got the momentum

(14:37):
shift.
Okay.
Then you come up on Trump andthe miraculous 2016 story where
somebody went into a closet andstarted breaking computers that
probably, you know, set off thealgorithm or delayed the
algorithm enough that Trumpcould win, and or he just
overwhelmed the system, right?
They were they were hoping theycould do that 2% margin thing

(14:58):
and he won by 4% or whatever itwas.
And then we get to Joe Biden andthe 2020.
The stark reality that we havebeen led by gangsters, thugs,
and criminals since 1992.
Do you get a tax refund?
Do you see what I'm saying here?
All of that executive authorityis vested in the person of the

(15:21):
president.
So Donald Trump is at oncetrying to get justice and
accountability while at the sametime trying to preserve the
system that we love and cherishand have put our life, blood,
sweat, and tears and energy intothis thing called America.
While he's surrounded byjackals.
While he's surrounded byjackals, exactly.
Now you mentioned, you know, whois he protecting?

(15:42):
Well, people he has leverageover.
Imagine Nancy Pelosi, who reallyspearheaded two separate
impeachment challenges againstDonald Trump that were
completely fabricated, 1,09.7%based in hoax.
She was interviewed and had tosay this about Trump.
This term, where Trump has takenthe gloves off and is actually
doing anything, she's like, oh,I don't think there's anything

(16:04):
to impeach Trump.

SPEAKER_25 (16:05):
Just to make sure I understand you, this should not
be the agenda of Democrats.

SPEAKER_00 (16:11):
He crosses the border again.
But I that's not an incidentalthing, you say, we're gonna do
that.
No, there has to be cause.
There has to be reason.
We had review, this was a veryserious historic thing, and our
founders knew that there couldbe a rogue president, and that's
why they put impeachment in theConstitution.

(16:32):
They didn't know there'd be arogue president at the same time
a rogue senate that didn't havethe courage to do the right
thing.
That's that's bipartisan in theSenate, but it wasn't enough.

SPEAKER_16 (16:44):
Just to make sure I maybe I was wrong about Nancy
Pelosi.
I mean, this makes it seem somuch more serious when they
actually tried to impeach him.
What the heck is she saying?

SPEAKER_09 (16:58):
You led two hoax impeachment scandals against
Donald Trump.
And now you're like, weshouldn't run on it.
He hasn't really done anything.
This is really serious.
It doesn't rise to the level ofimpeachment.
Um, does he got a strangleholdon you?
Or are you just seeing thewriting on the wall?

SPEAKER_16 (17:14):
Like, yeah, what's going on here?
Yeah, what is going on?

SPEAKER_09 (17:18):
So, okay, so now we're gonna get onto this Rob
Reiner thing, because of course,this just oh, what is I hate it
when my little bar shows up onthe computer knows you don't
want to watch it.
So this is the Rob Reinercontroversy.
Let's go ahead and read this.
Now, Rob Reiner tragically waskilled in his home, apparent,
allegedly by his son.
Okay.
It's very, very sad.

(17:40):
I want this, I want this to goaway.
How do I let me do somethinghere?
Don't don't show this.
I'm I'm off.
Uh I just want my doc to get offthat screen.
Let me see.
Okay.
Well, okay, here's Rob Reiner.
No, I want this to I want it togo away.

(18:01):
I do want it to go away.

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(18:48):
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SPEAKER_09 (19:01):
Nice.
You're you know, we've read thatad so much, you're starting to
get real smooth.
Like, you know, like eventuallyI'll just have it memorized.
Pretty soon you'll have itmemorized.
Marty Easel, solo son, we're inCabo.
Hey, we have an internationalpodcast today.
Crossing international borders.
Okay, so Rob Reiner wasmurdered.

(19:22):
Yeah.
And the next morning DonaldTrump posted this.
And this caused.
Oh my goodness, it just clogged.
It was like Twitter X almostbecame unbearable.
I just seeing this post over andover again.
A very sad thing happened lastnight in Hollywood.
Rob Reiner, a tortured andstruggling but once very
talented movie director andcomedy star, has passed away

(19:43):
together with his wife,Michelle, reportedly due to the
anger he caused others throughhis massive, unyielding, and
incurable affliction with a mindcrippling disease known as Trump
derangement syndrome.
Sometimes referred to as TDS, hewas known to have driven people
crazy by his raging obsession ofDonald President Donald.
J.
Trump, with his obvious paranoiareaching new heights as the
Trump administration surpassedall goals and expectations of

(20:06):
greatness, and with the goldenage of America upon us, perhaps
like never above before, may Roband Michelle rest in peace.

SPEAKER_16 (20:14):
That is pretty harsh.
That's the first time I've heardit.

SPEAKER_09 (20:18):
Fair enough.
Now, had he said, now, had hechanged this, these two words
right here, due to the, if hewould have just said, uh,
instead of due to the anger, ifhe would have just said he had
anger or he he caused anger orsomething like that, right?
If it wasn't due to, so thiswhole thing makes it look like

(20:39):
he was murdered because he hadTDS.
Right.
Does that make sense?
So it does now.
I'm not saying I like this, no,right?
But at the same time, as the daywent on, I was like, I don't
care about this anymore.

SPEAKER_16 (20:50):
No.

SPEAKER_09 (20:51):
It doesn't even actually make the top 10 list of
most offensive things Trump hassaid or done, right?

SPEAKER_16 (20:56):
Yeah, I was actually hoping that we wouldn't even
talk about this ever again.
We can't not talk about it,right?

SPEAKER_09 (21:01):
We can't not talk about it.
So let's jump to Trump becauseyou posted it, and oh my
goodness, right?
Everybody and their dog wantedto virtue signal and act like,
ah, you can't do that.
I I have real well, we'll getthere in a sec.
Okay, so this is Trump.
He's asked about it.
You know, do you want to take itback?
A lot of Republicans are upsetyou've said it.

(21:23):
Mr.

SPEAKER_01 (21:23):
President, a number of Republicans have denounced
your statement on True Socialafter the murder of Rob Reiner.
Do you stand by that post?

SPEAKER_27 (21:31):
Well, I wasn't a fan of his at all.
He was uh a deranged person asfar as Trump is concerned.
He said uh he liked he knew itwas false.
In fact, it's the exact oppositethat I was uh a friend of Russia
controlled by Russia.
You know, it was the Russiahooks.
He was one of the people behindit.
I think he hurt himself.

SPEAKER_09 (21:50):
Did you hear that?
He was one of the people behindit.
Let's cut let's get back tothat.

SPEAKER_27 (21:55):
And yeah, career-wise, he became like a
deranged person, Trumpderangement syndrome.
So I was not a fan of Rob Reinerat all in any way, shape, or
form.
I thought he was very bad forour country.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (22:10):
I thought he was very bad for his country.
Now he said that, right?
And he, you know, he was behindit.
And it's like, what do you meanhe was behind it?
Yeah.

SPEAKER_16 (22:16):
Can we just play that part again?
Maybe I missed it.
Oh, I just delete.
I just go back.
Sorry.
So what did he say he wasbehind?

SPEAKER_09 (22:24):
He's saying he's behind it.
So this was behind what?
Huh?

SPEAKER_16 (22:27):
Behind what?

SPEAKER_09 (22:27):
Russia Gate.
Oh.
Yeah, he was a part of it.
So the C the CIA uh three, thisis from Mike Benz, and uh he
posted this quite a while ago.
Okay, so the December 21st,2022, uh he posts this.
It's not a typo, seven livingCIA directors, Michael Hayden,

(22:49):
James Wosley, Leon Panetta,David Petraeus, Michael Morrall,
William Webster, and RobertGates on the board of the group
deputized by DHS to censor youropinions about male and ballots
during the election cycle.
And then it ties into this grouphere.
So this is uh Committee toInvestigate Russia.
Actor and producer Rob Reinerhas served as the organization's
director.
Whoa.
Full list of advisory boardvendors remains publicly

(23:10):
available at the committee'swebsite.
Advisory board Max Boot, heardthat name before, military
historian and foreign policyanalysis, James Clapper, former
National Director ofIntelligence, Evelyn Farkas,
PhD, former director ofSecretary of Defense for US
Ukraine, Eurasia, GeneralMichael Hayden, former director
of the Central IntelligenceAgency and the National Security
Agency, uh, Michael Morrell,former actor, director of the
CIA, Leon Panetta, and RobReiner, director, actor, and

(23:35):
activist.
Wow.
Yeah.
I had no idea.
Yeah.
So then it goes here.
However, the Atlantic Capitalrepresent uh this is Atlantic
Council, which, if anybody who'sfamiliar with that, they're, you
know, another one of these cabalgroups represents a powerful
faction of U.S.
foreign policy establishment inthe displaym diplomacy, defense,
and intelligence spheres.
It has seven former CIAdirectors currently currently

(23:57):
serving on its board, the sameones I just named, who and Rob
Reiner sat on it with them.
Zelensky's barisma council uhsigned cooperative agreement,
tying the whole thing into thethe Russia gate scandal.
So Rob Reiner's actually in thethick of it here.

SPEAKER_16 (24:13):
Wow.

SPEAKER_09 (24:14):
Yeah, totally unknown by us.
He also was the one for anybodywho's a QAnon person, right?
Right when Trump was thrown outof office in 2020, January 2021,
the Biden administration startedusing Black Rock or Black Castle
or Castle Rock Studios orsomething like that.
And that's where Biden was doinghis little phony press

(24:34):
conferences.
That was like the fake pressroom thing that they did where
they built a studio and theydidn't let Americans know they
weren't really doing the fakeOval Office.
Yeah, Rob Reiner started that.
That was his thing.
So he's absolutely in the thickof it.

SPEAKER_16 (24:48):
Wow.

SPEAKER_09 (24:48):
Okay.
Which again makes you go, huh?
Here's another thing about RobReiner.
Okay.
Now this is Al Franken.
Do you remember her Al Franken?

SPEAKER_16 (24:56):
Oh yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (24:56):
Yeah.
Al Franken, comedian turned.
And I have to admit, when I wasin my 20s in college, my dad
always used to say, and this isthis was this way growing up, if
you're gonna read a book on one,you know, with one opinion, you
have to read the other.
Thank you, dad, for screwing upmy brain.
I could have just been a normalperson, played on one team, but
instead I had to, you know, moldmy brain to be able to see one

(25:20):
topic from both.
Two paradigms.
Yes.
And that was really good.
But my dad at the time he wassaying that was because, you
know, I was in college and he'slike, I don't want to be a
lefty, so you gotta read theseright-wing books.
So he would send me books fromlike Bill O'Reilly and Beck, and
I'd be like, Great! And then I'dgo out and buy a book by Al
Franken, okay, and I would readthem side by side.
Sure.
Al Franken was better at what hedoes than Bill O'Reilly.

(25:42):
Let's put uh Bill O'Reilly or umSean Hannity.
He was well cited in his books,kind of funny, and wasn't wrong
on his analysis of the war inIraq and stuff like that.
Okay.
So I had a little bit of respectfor Al Franken in the regard
that he at least articulated hispolitical viewpoints in books,
right?
Now, turns out as I grew up,he's an idiot.

(26:07):
But this is Al Franken doing aroast of Rob Reiner.
Now, you know how this stuffgoes.

SPEAKER_18 (26:13):
Sure.

SPEAKER_09 (26:13):
Right?
A little element of truth andevery little thing, and it makes
it kind of funny, and you knowwhat I'm saying?

SPEAKER_16 (26:18):
Well, some of it's a little funny because it gets a
little close to the bone.

SPEAKER_09 (26:21):
A little close to the bone.

SPEAKER_15 (26:23):
Rob was routinely beaten by his father, Carl.
On a typical night, Carl wouldslip into Rob's bed, roll him
over, swab him down, and saysomething like, I'm thinking

(26:44):
about hiring Maury Amsterdam toplay Buddy Sorrell.
What do you think?
Well, the success of the DickVan Dyke show changed things
dramatically.
Uh Carl started inviting many ofhis famous friends to son.

SPEAKER_09 (27:08):
Rob was just referring to Rob.
So apparently his dad hadsomething to do with the Dick
Van Dyke show.
And uh there's Al Franken just,you know, joking at a comedy
roast about child rape.

SPEAKER_16 (27:20):
That is so funny.
Ha ha ha ha.

SPEAKER_09 (27:22):
Ha ha ha ha ha.
Yeah.
So it starts to make you kind ofquestion like, what's the deal
here, right?
Well, let's get into it.
So here's Rob Reiner and hisson.
Now, his son has dealt withserious drug addiction since he
was a teenager.
He was homeless as a teenager.
Um, you know, real, real tragic.

SPEAKER_23 (27:38):
And so turns out it was his son that did the
killing, allegedly.
Rob Reiner and his wife,Michelle, are dead.
It's unbelievable.
Happened in Brentwood in areally nice community here in
Los Angeles.
Saturday night, TMZ reported aloud argument between Rob and
his troubled son, Nick, at ConanO'Brien's Christmas party.

(27:59):
The LAFD were called to the homeon Chadbourne Street at 3 30 on
Sunday.
They arrived to find two slainbodies.
Uh, I got this from a friend wholives in the community.
I heard that the son, Nick, wentinto his parents' house, stabbed
both mom and dad, and that thedaughter, I guess, lives on the

(28:20):
property or at the house or inthe backhouse, and that she
found them, and that the mom wasstill alive, and apparently she
called the ambulance and went inthe ambulance with her mother.
Michelle died in the ambulance,but had enough time to tell her
daughter that it was Nick, theirson, who stabbed them, and
that's why they figured it outso quickly, and he's in custody.

SPEAKER_09 (28:43):
So he's got a four million dollar bond.
Uh unlikely anybody's gonna cometo his you know, bail on that
one.
But given just, you know,connect your own dots there.
Connect your own dots ongenerational trauma, passing it
on, kids that are drug addicted,why are they drug addicted?

(29:03):
You can connect dots, right?
This is not a healthy family.
Despite his great TV shows anddespite his great documentary,
or not documentary, although hewas producing a documentary
about Trump and Russia, butdespite his, you know, his
talent in Hollywood, he lived adepraved, very messed up life.

(29:25):
And he was, in fact, a part ofthe entire narrative, right?
Because they brought in themovie director to direct the
show, the Truman show that we'veall been living through.
It really makes you just go,huh.
Maybe Trump is not that off hisrocker here, right?
He drove people crazy.
Allegedly, the night before hewas murdered at Conan O'Brien's

(29:47):
uh Christmas party.
Uh Rob and his son got into avery heated, loud, boisterous
argument.
And then the next day thathappened.
So really sad.
Now, this feels a little crass.
I don't like what Trump did.
It would have been nice if hejust said nothing at all or just
said R.I.P., you know, whatever,but instead, you know, kind of

(30:08):
turned MAGA on its head, andeverybody's trying to make
statements, and we don't want tobe the thing we hate, right?
They danced on Charlie Kirk'sgrave, and so we feel like we
can't dance on other people'sgrave.
And I'm like, well, that mightbe true for me, but Trump Trump
can do whatever they he wants.
Because you got to remember, ifRob Reiner is associated with
all of that, Rob Reiner directlycontributed to the bullet that
flew past Trump's head.

SPEAKER_16 (30:30):
Period.
And not just the bullet, allkinds of bullets.
Everything.

SPEAKER_09 (30:33):
Lawfare, trying to lock him up, the squat and cough
when he got booked, everything.

SPEAKER_16 (30:38):
So I if you look at it in that perspective from
those eyes, it's kind of veryminor what he did.

SPEAKER_09 (30:44):
That's why I said doesn't even make the top ten
most offensive things he's done.
Charlie Kirk never came out andlike openly went, Tyler
Robinson's up, you know.
It just Charlie spoke his mind,spoke his truth, openly debated,
and then that happened.
Now, right.

SPEAKER_16 (30:58):
It would have been it would have been as if
somebody wanted to complainabout Charlie Kirk complaining
in a text about the guy thatkilled him.

SPEAKER_09 (31:04):
Yeah.
Now, Rob Reiner, when CharlieKirk was murdered, did get on
Piers Morgan and was like, hey,I don't want this political
violence.
It's not good.
That kind of thing, right?
Oh, great.
Well, let's rewind the tape alittle bit to when Rush Limbaugh
died.
Right?
Rob Reiner came out and dancedall over Rush Limbaugh's grave.
So to me, it's like, I don'teven care, right?
But it sucked up so much of thenews feed yesterday, I was like,

(31:29):
oh my goodness.
I mean, or dude, they could passany law they wanted right now in
the legislature.
The media will not be there tocover it because they're all on
X, you know, trying to gotcha tosome conservatives.
This is my take.
Okay.
This is my take.
I share it with this guy.

SPEAKER_07 (31:48):
So after Donald Trump's recent post about Rob,
aka Meathead, I love it.
The left is waking up to thefact that MAGA is no longer
interested in taking highground.
As Napoleon Bonaparte once said,high ground is only useful for

(32:10):
artillery.
You see, due to prolongedleftist violence, censorship,
and their insatiable love forpolitical unaliving, as with Mr.
Kirk.
MAGA has no regard to leftistgrievances.

(32:31):
Our condolences for them areabsent.
This is cause and effect.
And the left is waking up tothat.
Again, dear boy.
Taking high ground is onlyuseful for artillery.

SPEAKER_09 (32:44):
And I think that's where we're at.
This is a zero-sum game.
Somebody has to lose, somebodyhas to win.
And the people who hold theirpunches are gonna lose.
The Democrats have not heldtheir punches.
They've been willing to stealyour vote.
They've been willing to put yourfamily members, for some of the
people listening, in jail.
Right?
They've been willing to takeshots at political figures.
They've been willing to plantevidence.

(33:05):
Look at Cheryl Atkinson, right?
Planting child pornography onher husband's computer.

unknown (33:09):
Fact.

SPEAKER_09 (33:10):
Right?
In order to stop her reportingon Fast and Furious.
Why?
Because they were about to openthe border and they wanted to
arm the cartels a little bitmore sufficiently.
Okay.
This stuff is this is what we'reup against.
So Greg Gutfeld on his show,Gerald Ford, you know, typical,
this is horrible that Trump didthis.
Gerald, you're on the wrong sideof every freaking argument.
And Greg Gutfeld basicallycountered him and said, listen,

(33:32):
words don't matter, deeds do.
Yep.

SPEAKER_31 (33:35):
So sad.
If Joe Biden had said this aboutanybody, I would have attacked
him and said he was completelywrong.
I do hope the president comesback and corrects himself.

SPEAKER_09 (33:42):
Um Joe Biden said nasty things about me.
Remember the red speech?
Do you remember calling Trumpsupporters garbage?
I mean, who cares?

SPEAKER_06 (33:50):
He was asked to and he didn't.
And I think the thing is, youdon't have to like the things
that he says all the time.
It is why in my filter, Trump isalways words versus deeds.
I don't have to like what hesays.
In fact, I can hate what hesays, but I can also think in
his brain, he's going, uh, thisguy compared me to Hitler.
He put a target on my back.

(34:11):
I don't like him.
It's like, well, if it were me,I'd go like that.
I'm sorry he's dead.
But he can't let that go.
We don't have to like it.
I just look at the deeds, but Iget why you're upset.

SPEAKER_31 (34:21):
It's wrong.
I didn't say I know you can, Idon't disagree with you, but
it's wrong.
And we should be able to callout right and wrong.
We tried, we talked about on theshow this morning this earlier.
That's wrong what he did.

SPEAKER_09 (34:30):
Okay, see this man right here?
This is a man right here whodenied the border was open
because Biden said it wasn'topen.
So do we care about the words ordo we care about the deeds?
The deed was the open border.
The words were it's not an openborder.
Yesterday, Hakeem Jeffries, notone dollar of Medicaid money
goes to illegal immigrants.
Your words don't match reality.

(34:50):
It's the Truman show.
Bring in the producer, bring inthe director.
Maybe we can get the zeitgeistto just think that um open
border is closed, that up isdown and left is right.
Or whatever we say.
Whatever we say, right?
But again, virtue signaling, andof course, panickins on the
right and pollsters.
Oh my gosh, Trump's gonna lose10 points because of this.
No, they won't.
No, no, they won't.

(35:11):
No one's gonna care in a coupledays at all.

unknown (35:13):
Right?

SPEAKER_18 (35:14):
I didn't care immediately.

SPEAKER_09 (35:15):
Yeah, you didn't care immediately.
I was more annoyed by it.
You know, I I I actually put outa post like, oh, this is kind of
gross, not my thing.
But then by the end of the day,I'm like, do it again, Trump, do
it again.

SPEAKER_16 (35:26):
You know, I watched so little news, it didn't annoy
me.
Oh man.

SPEAKER_09 (35:31):
Okay, it was also really frustrated because I had
no power and I have no cellserver in my house.
So like the last image.
Oh my god.
Well, every time I would getclose to the window or something
in my news screen would update.
Of course, this is all the thehigh click engagement.
So I'd have to scroll through 97of his posts before I could find
anything that wasn't about RobReiner.
Oh my goodness.
Okay, so on to another topic.

(35:52):
We had the shooting at BrownUniversity the other day.
This is wild.
So they took a suspect intocustody, followed his phone, he
drove from Wisconsin.

SPEAKER_16 (36:01):
You're gonna have to tell tell me the story because I
know nothing about this really.
Well, I don't even know whereBrown University is.
It's on the East Coast, right?

SPEAKER_09 (36:09):
Rhode Island.
It's one of the it's I thinkit's the most expensive school
in the country.
It has a student body that islike 99% left.
There's literally a handful ofconservatives or Christians that
openly attend this school.

SPEAKER_17 (36:21):
Okay.

SPEAKER_09 (36:22):
And there the that handful of people happened to be
gathered together to kind ofcelebrate the first day of
Hanukkah and the holidayfestivities.
And it was also a little bit ofa um, I don't know if it was a
political event, but the fewstudents that were involved in
like campus Republicans werethere.
And uh ultimately what happenedis nine, uh two are dead, nine

(36:43):
were injured in the shooting.
So they were targeted.
They were targeted.
Okay.
Yes.
Now, uh speaking of targeting,we'll get to that in a moment.
So the shooter yelled somethingwhen he shot.
Now, presumably we all assumeit's Allah Akbar.
But now and it would have madesense with the guy they arrested
from Wisconsin because yes, hewas a Muslim, right?
Okay, but now we don't know whoit is.
They've released that guy.

(37:04):
So despite the fact that hedrove with guns, could have just
been he drove with guns.
He's former military, he justbrought his guns with him to
college.
You know what I mean?
Like I would do the same thing,you know.
But I also have my couch, youknow what I'm saying?
Like what do you want with me?
My laundry.
Yeah.
So uh, but and so he got away.

(37:27):
Now there's allegedly like 800cameras, but the only images
they've released, you know, forus to help find the shooter are
literally just a guy in allblack, like no face shots, no.

SPEAKER_17 (37:36):
So they don't want him to be found.

SPEAKER_09 (37:38):
It's bewildering.
It's bewildering.
So this is the Fox Newscommentary on it.

SPEAKER_08 (37:43):
I mean, they got the guy's height, they got his
weight, and they go, Well, youwant to update the country on
what this guy's ID looks like?
And they go, We'll put it on thewebsite.
Right.
You have millions of peoplewatching the press conference
live, and you don't want to tellanybody?
You say, Oh, I'll put it out ona website.
Come on.
Is the guy 220?
Is he Caucasian?

(38:04):
What?
They didn't even do it.
And then they get the timelinewrong.
Like Dana said, hey, we'relooking for tips on someone that
wears black.

SPEAKER_09 (38:13):
Please flood our inbox with tips.
Does it hit$50,000 reward?
Who is this?
Well, I'm gonna see everybody.
I saw some guys wearing black.
I'd like to send a tip to allmales in Rhode Island.
Please investigate, right?

SPEAKER_16 (38:26):
So he's totally right.
This guy's totally right.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_08 (38:29):
I can't hear a word he said.
Everyone's trying to back off.
No one knows what's going on.
It's three days later, after agunman walked into an Ivy League
University building and murderedthe vice president of the
College of Republicans, killedtwo people, injured 11, and
walks away.
We don't know where he is, wedon't know what he is, and
doesn't seem to be thatconcerning to the people that

(38:51):
were delivering that pressconference.
This was a premeditated targetattack.
The guy was casing the facilitybeforehand.
They have 800 cameras at thisuniversity.
They didn't have a camera at theentrance to the building so you
can see who goes in and out ofthe building.
This is stupid.
I feel bad for the people ofProvidence.

(39:12):
I feel terrible for the peopleof Brown University.
And they have to get thistogether.
It was 20 minutes after theshooting took place that they
even sent out an alert to thestudent body.
They never even had any sirensgoing off on campus.
They didn't even do it.
They blew it.
And then they got the wrong guyand said, oops, okay, well,

(39:34):
never mind.
And then they say, Trust us, theplace is safe.
Well, I'm sorry.
No one trusts you guys.
It's a mess up there.
And I really hope they get thisguy soon because every day that
goes by, you know what I mean.

SPEAKER_09 (39:46):
They got the guy's kids are still just walking
around campus with a guy whojust maliciously went in and
shot the Republican Party oncampus.
Right now, this is Mark Halperinon the morning meeting, and he
got a tip.

SPEAKER_20 (39:58):
Are telling me that the family.
Of um uh I just need to look upher name.
I apologize.
Ella Cook.
Thank you, Mark.
Thank you.
Thank you.
That the family of Ella Cook,the Alabama, a young woman who
was a sophomore, uh, has beentold that she was the target of
of what happened at Brad.
I have no idea whether that'strue.
Uh there's other theories aboutwhy the person did what they

(40:20):
did, but now that we don't knowwho the the assailant is, it's
it's it's it's gonna be harderto say.
But if it's true that she wastargeted, that's a big story
because she was one of the mostvisible conservatives on that
campus.
Don't know that it's true, butprobably most of you don't even
know that that that's beingalleged because you'd have to
follow certain accounts on X orhave sources as I do who are

(40:41):
telling me that.
So um uh uh Amber, if if she wastargeted, and again, we don't
know that, but if she weretargeted, uh, what would the
implications of that be?

SPEAKER_24 (40:51):
Well, I'll start with a couple of of things that
I think lend credence to thattheory, which is one, typically
when we see maskful shooters,they don't just stop and walk
away, right?
Usually they keep going untilthey're apprehended by police,
shot dead, or they killthemselves.

SPEAKER_20 (41:08):
Yeah, Amber, let me just stop in.
I should I should have beenclear.
She was the the number twoperson at the young Republicans
branch on Brown's campus.
So that's that's why that's whysome people are concerned if she
were targeted.
Go ahead, Amber, I apologize.

SPEAKER_24 (41:20):
Right.
Well, and and the other thing isif the police are telling Brown
students that they are safe,they don't have to shelter in
place anymore, but they don'thave a suspect in custody, I
think that also suggests thatthis was some kind of targeted
attack.
Um sadly, I wouldn't besurprised.
Um you know, when I was oncampus at Georgetown, I was

(41:40):
chair of the CollegeRepublicans.
I had to report multiple threatsagainst me uh in my final two
years on campus.

SPEAKER_16 (41:51):
Alright, I got a little bit of a hot take on this
one.

SPEAKER_24 (41:54):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_16 (41:55):
So I'm just gonna say that if you're not willing
to help people identify thisguy, this is a hired assassin.
He's an assassin.

SPEAKER_09 (42:09):
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you know, in our currentzeitgeist, if he'd have said
Allah Akbar, we probably wouldhave heard that.
And they did arrest a Muslim whotraveled, and so it connected.
But now they're like, oh, itwasn't that guy.
I'm sure they just interviewedhim and he had great alibis and
he had a res, you know,whatever.
And he's like, right?

(42:30):
Probably destroyed his life.
He's probably gonna have to suewhoever leaked his name to the
press, okay?
But now it's like, oh, this issome entity on right violence.
If it was targeted against her,why?
Is this an ex-boyfriend?
Or is this someone who walkedinto the room on campus where

(42:50):
all the conservatives would begathered by that time?

SPEAKER_16 (42:53):
You know what I mean?
This is definitely trying tosend a message.

SPEAKER_09 (42:55):
And given that Providence and This is just like
a Charlie Carrick killing.
Yeah, and given that Providenceand given that uh the school is
so left, the fact that theydon't want to say someone came
on their campus and potentiallytargeted the conservatives.
Tells me they know who it is.
Or the motive.
They know what he yelled out,right?

(43:17):
You know, Charlie 2.0, I don'tknow, who knows?
But the fact that they won'ttell us what he yelled out is
like, hmm.
Okay.
Now you're leaving a lot ofspeculation because half half
the world speculates it'sanother Islamic attack, and the
other half of the world speculis now going to speculate that
this is.

SPEAKER_16 (43:33):
Well, if you want to go full conspiracy, a lot of
people would just say, well,they just want you to think what
you want, but they it doesn'tmatter as long as it foments
anger enough to kick somethingoff.
Yep.
Yep.

SPEAKER_09 (43:44):
So again, I don't know the answer.
I hate these stories with everyfiber of my being, but it's part
of the calculus that we have todo is we kind of are analyzing
the world around us.
You know what I mean?
You've we've got a realbreakdown in law and order, and
we have a real breakdown inpeople just being, and here's
the thing, I know this is like aphrase the leftists, being
empathetic, right?

(44:04):
We're not being very empathetic,right?
We're not understanding thatlike we might disagree on tax
policy, we might disagree on awhole host of things.
But at the end of the day,you're a human being, I'm a
human being.
We have to agree to disagree andlive our own lives.
That was that's supposed thatwas supposed to be the beauty of
America, is we can agree todisagree and still be neighbors,
just build a taller fence.
Okay, but the violence, youknow, that that is the uh

(44:29):
natural outflow of people notbeing able to resolve their
differences with words andballot boxes.
I want to make this point.
When you can't resolve yourdifferences with words, you go
to the ballot box.
And then when you can't resolveit at the ballot box because
your elections are being stolen,and the people who have won the

(44:49):
argument and who have the actualmajority of the country behind
them can't implement policy orchange anything, it's going to
result in this on both sides.
It's the natural consequence andoutflow, which makes you wonder
when these countries likeVenezuela, Russia, Iran, China,
and they play the long game, ifthat's not the whole point.
Let's get these guys to be ateach other's throats.

(45:12):
A weak America, a dividedAmerica is America that cannot
police its borders and cannotpolice the world financial
system, et cetera, et cetera, etcetera.
So let's move on from that.

SPEAKER_16 (45:22):
You can't make your own bed.

SPEAKER_09 (45:24):
You can't make your own bed.
Yep.
So let's move on from that.
Uh, just the news reportedyesterday.
FBI to give Congress bombshellmemos warning the Biden DOJ
didn't have probable cause toraid Trump home.
Surprise.
Surprise! In another episode ofConspiracy Theorist Bat in a
thousand, Attorney General PamBonnie and Director Cash Patel

(45:46):
are preparing to turn over toCongress bombshell emails
showing the FBI warned that theBiden Department, Justice
Department did not have probablecause to raid Donald Trump's
home at Mar-a-Lago, but theprosecutors proceeded anyways.
The emails are going to beturned over as early as Tuesday
to the Senate House JudiciaryCommittee ahead of a planned
deposition from ex-specialprosecutor Jack Smith.
So brilliant.
Let's send the stuff that theyneed to prepare one day before

(46:09):
the guy shows up.
Now he was scheduled to comepreviously, so assuming he had
come previously and testified,you know, he wouldn't have been
able to address this.
But now they're going to atleast be able to ask him,
assuming our representativesthat are going to be in that
committee hearing, which isgoing to be behind closed doors,
assuming they actually prep forthe meeting, right?
Which more and more where it'slike, I don't know if these guys

(46:30):
prep.
The memos show that the FBI'sfield office does not believe
quote, does not believe theyestablished probable cause, end
quote, prior to raiding Trump'sFord home, according to one
source of direct knowledge ofthe memos.
It has long been rumored thatsome FBI agents disagreed with
the decision to raid Trump'shome and to look for classified
documents at the request of theNational Archives.
What?

(46:50):
Yeah, that, you know, this isagain, how deep does the
corruption go?
The National Archives, like, weneed our classified documents
back.
They're not yours, man.
The raid became a flashpoint inthe battle between Biden and
Trump ahead of the 2024election.
The Committee on the Judiciaryis continued to conduct
oversight of the operations ofthe Office of Special Counsel,
wrote Jim Jordan.
Due to your service as specialcounsel, the committee believes

(47:10):
that you possess informationthat's vital to its oversight.
So he's supposed to testifytomorrow.
We'll see how that goes.
But, you know, just you know,another thing, FBI covering up.
What's fascinating to me thereis the chain of command.
So right now with Trump, he hascertain departments that just
will not do what he asked themto do.
But yet here you had the BidenDOJ where the FBI goes, hey, we

(47:33):
don't have probable cause.
He's like, Ah, that's okay, doit anyways.
There are no cops.
The cops that are supposed to bein charge of following the law
and arresting lawbreakers andconspirators are working for the
guy.

SPEAKER_16 (47:46):
Right?
There are no laws, there areonly causes.
Or do they just do it on theirown?

SPEAKER_09 (47:49):
It's it's it's really great to say that you
have to have probable cause toraid someone's house.
That's a great law.
But if you don't follow it, thenall you really have is power.
You just have who's willing todo it, right?
And clearly the Bidenadministration was willing to do
it.
It kind of does make you wonderwhy, right?
Why?
So here is John Solomon again.

(48:11):
That was that last article isfrom just the news.
Here's John Solomon again.
Apparently, the FBI has beencovering up for political
leaders for a while.
No surprise there.

SPEAKER_25 (48:20):
Look, this is reminiscent of exactly what they
did under with Hunter Biden andwith Joe Biden when they were
being investigated.
I read, you know, I read the uhdepositions where you had inside
government officials who werewhistleblowers who came to the
table and they said, This ishappening now.
We were told we could not uhfurther investigate, we couldn't
ask certain questions, weweren't able to get information

(48:42):
that we needed, you know,documents, investigations were
told to stop.
We were taken off of cases.
Um, this is prevalent in theFBI.

SPEAKER_09 (48:50):
Um, they so basically what she's saying, and
it's both the Clintoninvestigations and the Hunter
Biden laptop investigations,whistleblowers were coming out
being like, hey, we have athere, there.
Hey, we actually have probablecause right here.
And they're like, no, no, don'tinvestigate it, leave it alone.
And then over here, they'relike, hey, we don't have
probable cause.
They're like, guns are blazing,deadly force.
Yeah, full steam ahead.

(49:10):
Full steam ahead.
Okay.
Cash Patel really campaigned forTrump as a surrogate saying that
he was going to turn the FBIinto a mausoleum to the
weaponization of government inthe deep state.
He wrote a book calledGovernment Gangsters.
And here he is in government.
And I I gotta tell you, man, Idon't know that he has control
of the gang.
Right.
I think James Comey and JohnBernon and those guys left some
gangsters behind.

(49:31):
You know what I mean?

SPEAKER_25 (49:33):
Have this deep interstate that is protecting
folks like Clintons, folks likethe Bidens.
And I think what you're seeingunder the Trump administration
is they're saying enough isenough, we're gonna expose it.
So, you know, thanks be to CashPatel, to Pam Bondi for looking
at it and for what Jim Jordanand James Comey continue to do
by asking these questions, andfor my own chairman, Jason
Smith, who's going after andasking these questions.

(49:55):
We need to have morewhistleblowers that feel safe,
that they can come out and tellus exactly what's happening
within this state.
But let's not ignore that it'shappening.
And it's this is just the tip ofthe iceberg.
You're gonna see more and moreof these uh uh horrible uh
examples of corruption come outas we investigate it further.

SPEAKER_09 (50:12):
I love seeing this reminiscent of exactly what I
would like to see is someexamples of accountability.
It it's really getting annoying,right?
I mean, it's good for it's goodfor the podcasts, it's good for
business, it's good for dailycontent, you know, expose,
expose, expose.
But I'm I'm kind of tired of it.
I I really would like to seesome examples of accountability.
I'd like to see what that lookslike.

SPEAKER_16 (50:32):
Yeah, it'd be really nice if we could just wrap the
show up.

SPEAKER_09 (50:35):
Yeah, we don't look, we're done.
America, friends! No morecorruption.
I this is super frustrating forme because in my particular case
with January 6th, I didn't arguethe case, right?
I didn't argue the facts, Ididn't argue, you know, oh, you
led the mob.
I didn't leave nothing.
Oh, you destructed Congress.
I showed up 30 minutes late.
You know what I mean?
Like the whole thing wasridiculous.
And I just said, okay, I'll takeit.
Yep, I'll be accountable.

(50:55):
I even said that, Judge, I'm anaccountable man.
Right?
If I committed a crime, I'll dothe time.
I expected to pay a$50 ticket.
So I accepted my licks, Iaccepted my punishment, even
though I didn't feel like it wasfair.
Sure, I complained, I wrote someessays, I did what I was
entitled to do in my own defenseto the public and my friends and

(51:16):
family, right?
But I took my licks.
So I'd like to see some otherpeople take some licks.
I'd like to see them actually beheld accountable for this stuff.
I hope it's coming, but theclock is ticking.
We have 24 days until thestatute of limitations runs up
on any crimes related to J6.
It's over after that.

(51:36):
It's over after that, and thenwe no longer will have examples
of accountability.
We will just have somedisclosure about how they fucked
my life up.
That's all we'll have.
Sorry, Dad.
I know you tune out when I saythe F-word.
Okay, but that's all you'regonna end up with.
Right?
These people are so corrupt.
The District of Columbiaspecifically, while I'm rotting
in a prison for a non-crime,guess what they were doing?

SPEAKER_11 (51:57):
Let a House Oversight Committee now
releasing a report accusing theoutgoing DC police chief of
manipulating data toartificially lower crime
statistics.
Bill Melusian, looking at thenumbers, he's live on the That's
all they did.

SPEAKER_09 (52:11):
They manipulated data to say we have white
supremacist crimes all over thecountry.
It's the largest segment ofcrimes.
Yeah, because you got 2,000 opencases on January 6ers.
And you're categorizing us aslike white supremacist
criminals, which is probably oneof the reasons why, by the way,
why they didn't arrest the pipebomber, who may or may not be
the pipe bomber, everybody wasblack.
Right?
Manipulating crime statistics ofactual criminals.

SPEAKER_10 (52:39):
Bill, good morning to you.
Those House Oversight CommitteeRepublicans say the bottom line
of what their investigationfound is that the outgoing DC
police chief was essentiallycooking the books on crime data
and trying to make the city seema whole lot safer than it really
was.
Now, those House Republicans saywhat their investigation
consisted of was interviewingall seven commanders of DC Metro

(53:00):
Police's patrol districts,including a former commander
who's currently suspended forallegedly tampering with crime
stats in his own district.
And these are some of theconclusions they've made in
their report.
They alleged that DC MetroPolice Chief Pamela Smith
pressured commanders to reportlower crime stats by any means
necessary.
The commanders testified thatChief Smith even pushed them to

(53:21):
pursue lesser charges thataren't publicly reported, even
for serious crimes, and sherequired certain crimes to be
reviewed by her office.

SPEAKER_09 (53:30):
Meanwhile, in the building next door, they're
pushing them to increase thecrimes and overcharge January
6th defendants.
In the same courtrooms wherethey would be prosecuting real
criminals in DC, they weremaking room on the docket for
me.

SPEAKER_10 (53:43):
Now the report also says police commanders testified
that Chief Smith punished themand retaliated against them if
they tried to report accuraterising crime data, even berating
them in meetings andindividually to pressure them
into reporting those lower crimefigures.
Now, in a statement on thereport, House Oversight
Committee Chairman James Comersays in part, quote, Chief

(54:05):
Pamela Smith coerced staff toreport artificially low crime
data and cultivated a culture offear to achieve her agenda.

SPEAKER_09 (54:13):
Do you remember when Biden would give his speeches
and they would say things like,we'd be like, hey, I think
crime's up in town.
I think it's getting prettyviolent out there.
No, violent crime is down.
I mean, we're hardly seeing any.
I mean, this is the lowestmurder rate we've ever seen.
Yeah, because you're notcharging murder.
You're charging, you're chargingpeople with assault instead of
murder.

SPEAKER_16 (54:30):
That's the same outfit that would say is a
mostly peaceful protest whilethe buildings are on fire.

SPEAKER_09 (54:38):
A mostly peaceful protest.
Yeah, exactly.
It's true.
Okay, so the other thing thatDonald Trump did yesterday, and
this is a really big deal, inthe White House, while everybody
was out barking about RobReiner, the dirt bag who was
murdered by his son, okay, whileeverybody was whining about

(54:58):
that, Donald Trump marched intothe White House a whole wall of
top military brass.
And then he made thisdeclaration.

SPEAKER_27 (55:09):
Today I'm taking one more step to protect Americans
from the scourge of deadlyfentanyl flooding into our
country with this historicexecutive order I will sign
today for formally classifyingfentanyl as a weapon of mass
destruction.
Which is what it is.
No bomb does what this is doing.

(55:29):
200 to 300,000 people die everyyear.
That we know of.
So we're formally classifyingfentanyl as a weapon of mass
destruction.

SPEAKER_09 (55:42):
Today that changes the game big time.
Now, of course, millionRepublicans like Massey and uh
Massey and Rand Paul are like,you can't just reclassify drugs
as weapons of mass destruction.
That's not fair.
Hey, listen, man, two to threehundred thousand people dying,
that's a weapon of massdestruction.

SPEAKER_18 (56:02):
Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (56:02):
Whatever laws you have that don't define it as
that, while we were out givingour blood and sacrifice, and my
friends were losing legs andlives overseas looking for
yellow cake.
Yeah.
They should have been lookingfor fentanyl next door.

SPEAKER_16 (56:14):
If freaking MMs killed that many people, that
company would be shut down.
They'd take them off the shelf.
And they'd be thrown in jail.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (56:21):
Fentanyl is second only to the mRNA vaccine.
So that's coming down the pipe.
It's probably need another 10years for that really to mature.
But I imagine that, you know,really unfortunate stat.
Yeah, unfortunately.
Yeah.
Fentanyl is only second fiddleto the mRNA vaccine as far as

(56:45):
mass death that it's causes,right?

SPEAKER_16 (56:48):
Um, so they get a Fauci thrown in jail.

SPEAKER_09 (56:53):
Jeez.
So this is this is reallyimportant because this fent this
war against fentanyl, A, itaffects all of us.
Like Ron, I know that it'sprobably a, you know, I don't
know how close you get, but youlost a brother to fentanyl.

SPEAKER_18 (57:04):
Yes.

SPEAKER_09 (57:05):
Right?
We've all lost somebody tofentanyl.
I remember one time I wassitting in in a Philadelphia
detention center back when I wasin prison.
And uh when I showed up there,it's all blacks, all Mexicans,
and there's like six white guys.
So we show up, and uh, you know,white guy has to come down.
Who are you?
What are your charges?
Why are you here?
Because they got to decide ifthey need to beat me up or not.
And I'm like, oh, I'm gonna do agreen sixer, like, oh, okay,

(57:25):
cool.
No, we know about that.
So uh, anyways, but the guy thatwas the shot caller sometimes
it's just like those funnythings that come out of your
mouth.
You know, like it's a veryserious.
I had to talk go talk to theshock caller in prison.
Um, and I was talking to theshock caller.

(57:45):
Now he was a fentanyl dealer,right?
And he would just buy it,literally, he would buy fentanyl
online.
Just he'd go to a website andhe'd put in his Visa card and he
would buy fentanyl and theywould send it in the mail, and
it would show up at his house ina package, and he would take it
out and then he would put itinto pills.
He had a pill press and hedistributed a lot of fentanyl.

SPEAKER_16 (58:03):
And you found out that it was really cheap to buy
and really profitable.

SPEAKER_09 (58:08):
Yes, and he himself was an addict as well, right?
And so, anyways, when he cameinto prison, he was all skin and
bones and he'd put on someweight because he'd been there
almost a year and sober, and hewas actually one of those guys,
he's like, Listen, I'm adifferent person sober.
He's like, you know, I neededthis.
I'm gonna go to prison for 15,20 years.
What I did was wrong.
Like he was very, you know,repentant about it.

(58:28):
Like he'd gotten clear,clear-minded in prison.
It's unfortunate that he got inthat position.
But fentanyl was just like nobig deal.
And one time and we weretalking, because he grew up
literally like we were in thehigh school, the prison was in
his high school.
Like, he's like, This is myneighbor.
I this is it, right?

SPEAKER_16 (58:46):
I can almost smell my mom's cooking.

SPEAKER_09 (58:48):
Yeah, he's like, the federal prison was actually
close, or the Fred, the FederalDetention Center is closer to my
house than the jail that I wouldhave than the county jail.
So he's like, in his graduatingclass in high school in downtown
Philadelphia, he was like, youknow, graduating class of 900
people or whatever.
He's like, he's like, I stoppedattending funerals when I was

(59:09):
about 25 or 26, and I'd attendedlike 35.
And he's like, and those werejust the friends I had.
He says, I think my graduatingclass has already had like 200
people die.

SPEAKER_07 (59:17):
Oh wow.

SPEAKER_09 (59:18):
I mean, we're talking generational
devastation.
These are war statistics.
This is no different than youlook at like the death toll of
youth in Paris during World WarII or World War I.
It was it's taking an entiregeneration of kids.

SPEAKER_16 (59:33):
It's taking the future generations too.

SPEAKER_09 (59:35):
Yes.
Um in terms of the So thecutting down on fentanyl
obviously is a big deal, andTrump is using all the tools
that he's had available to it.
Up until now, he's used economictools to fight terrorism.
Sounds like or fight fentanyl.
Sounds like he's got some moretools now with the military.
He brought the military brassin.

SPEAKER_16 (59:53):
Weapons of mass destruction.

SPEAKER_09 (59:54):
Weapons of mass destruction.

SPEAKER_16 (59:56):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (59:56):
Right.
That was no like.
I I showed the image with thefentanyl in half.
I should have just showed himtalking.

SPEAKER_16 (01:00:03):
Everyone behind him was Yeah, we I didn't see any of
that image.

SPEAKER_09 (01:00:06):
So Yeah, it was pretty cool.
So this is Scott Bessett talkingabout fentanyl and how tariffs
tie in together.

SPEAKER_04 (01:00:15):
This is really a national security issue.
When when you think about it,the the way President Trump has
been able to use his AIPA powersfor national security, if the
Supreme Court goes the otherway, it will be a loss for the
American people.
That President Trump look at thedrop in fentanyl deaths.

(01:00:36):
Because President Trump was ableto put fentanyl tariffs on the
China, Mexico, Canada.
We we have seen a substantialdrop in the deaths.
China is cooperating on fentanylfor the first time in more than
a decade.
When China attempted to put anexport control on rare earth
magnets, President Trump said heput on a 100% tariff, and they

(01:00:59):
immediately came to the tablethat we are rebalancing trade.
And this year, for the calendaryear, we are going to shrink the
deficit by several hundredbillion dollars.
So economic security is nationalsecurity.
So this ruling is really anational security ruling.

SPEAKER_09 (01:01:18):
And if they rule against the administration, they
will be ruling against nationalsecurity and and if you look at
what has happened to the UnitedStates really over the last 30
years, go all the way back tothe fall of the Berlin Wall when
we no longer had the enemy tofight and we became the
hegemonic power, right?
Well, if you go back at thatmoment and you start plotting
things out on the chart, right?
Increase in social benefits,extra spending, you know, um,

(01:01:41):
really embarrassing the WhiteHouse with Bill Clinton.
That was a big deal.
The Monik Lewinsky scandalinternationally, that was like a
big deal.
Like it really discredited theWhite House and it made other
world leaders look at the UnitedStates as kind of a joke.
Okay, like it was a bigger dealthan sometimes we let on.
History will tell that story.
There's a lot of leaders aroundthe world that are like, we
don't take them seriouslyanymore.
Because the facade of BillClinton having been this, you

(01:02:04):
know, picked himself up from thebootstraps or from broken
broken, right?
So you go through, but you plotthe policy decisions.
You plot, you know, you youstart looking at all the
different scandals, and you getinto 9-11 and and you know, you
just plot it all along, and youthink if you were to destroy a
nation that was the hegemonicpower of the world that you
couldn't defeat on abattlefield, how would you do

(01:02:24):
it?
If you were to map that out, itpretty much, it pretty much is
going to describe the last 30years.
All the things you had to do todestabilize the world.
Now, there were some seedsplanted.
Obviously, the communists hadinfiltrated education and these
different things, but they tookthose seeds and they just
watered them.
Yeah, no conservatives in theuniversity.
Let's do that for 60 years andsee where we go.

(01:02:45):
Yeah, let's get, you know, allof our politicians bought off
and insider stock trading.
Yeah, let's see where that takesus.

SPEAKER_16 (01:02:51):
Let's take God out of everything.

SPEAKER_09 (01:02:53):
Let's let's uh do a crime bill that devastates the
inner community and destroys theblack family, and then we're
gonna add meth to it, which nowwe're gonna destroy inner
cities, right?
And and it's like, oh, and bythe way, your own government is
trafficking drugs.
Okay, so you do all you map itall out, and you're like, whoa,
we were really invaded by a mindvirus at the very least.

(01:03:16):
But if anything else, it was byall the foreign actors that got
involved with this, which moreand more were, you know, slowly
but surely being revealed.
Now, Marco Rubio, Donald Trump,everybody, they are building a
coalition around the world ofleaders who want to fight this
it, right?
They want to fight whatever itis that's really destroying our
sovereign, not America'ssovereignty, but sovereignty of

(01:03:37):
other nations around the world.
Yesterday, Paraguay and theUnited States signed a very
important cooperation agreement,and this was on the backdrop of
declaring fentanyl a weapon ofmass destruction.
So when you pair all this stuffup and you look at these
agreements, because it's aweapon of mass destruction, that
gives the military a lot ofauthority and a lot of
capability to go in and partnerwith these nations and provide
resources to fight it.

SPEAKER_29 (01:03:59):
Status of forces agreement it demonstrates our
shared commitment to security,regional security.
Well, the the biggest threat inthe Western hemisphere that we
face is a threat oftransnational criminals
networks, transnationalterrorist uh networks.
We've said this if you see it inour uh in the document we put
out just about 10 days ago inour national security strategy.
If you look at the fundamentalproblem in the hemisphere, the

(01:04:21):
most serious problem we have inour hemisphere is these
transnational terroristorganizations who are not
ideologically terrorists in manycases, but are financial and
economic in their basis, butnonetheless are operating as
terrorist organizations andthreaten the stability and
security of the region.
It's a problem we see inmultiple places, and we need
strong partners to confront it.

(01:04:41):
We need strong partners in theregion that understand that
that's the biggest threat in ourhemisphere and are committed to
working with us to confrontingit.
And we can do it in a way thatalso respects the sovereignty of
our partner nations.
So what we signed today is astatus of forces agreement that
allows us to formalize apartnership that already exists
and that we want to build upon,that allows us to train
together, that allows us toadvance uh the transfer of

(01:05:04):
equipment that they need fortheir own security, to allow us
to share intelligence in realtime, to allow us to operate
together when necessary.
And in the case of anycontingencies, by the way, this
this includes having anopportunity to very quickly
partner on humanitarianresponses, be it's natural
disasters or anything else.
So we're excited for this to dofor ability to do this today.

(01:05:24):
Paraguay is among our strongestallies in the world, but
certainly in the region, and wewant to continue to find
concrete ways to work togetherand operate together.
And by the way, this extendsbeyond the security realm.
This is not just a securitymatter.
This agreement is aboutsecurity, but we also want to
extend and expand ourcooperation on the economic
front.
Uh, there's a lot of goodthings, positive things

(01:05:45):
happening in Paraguay,tremendous potential to make
Paraguay a richer country and doso in partnership with American
economic interests in a way thatfurther binds our two countries
together and makes us stronger.
So we're very grateful for that.

SPEAKER_09 (01:05:58):
That's pretty cool.
I kind of feel like right now,you know, in South America,
you've got Lula in Brazil, whoLula is a bad news bears, real
bad news bears.
And they're kind of trying tofigure out, you know, they're
kind of surrounding them.
You got Argentina, now Paraguay,and you know, Chile over here,
and we're gonna get Venezuela.
It's happening.
It's like they're kind ofpinning that in.

(01:06:19):
Uh just so you know, Brazilexclusively votes on Dominion
voting machines.
Exclusively.
No paper ballots or anything.
It's just go in, hit thebuttons.

SPEAKER_16 (01:06:30):
Hit all the buttons you want.
You can smash them like a like.

SPEAKER_09 (01:06:34):
In fact, you don't even need to show up, dude.
We'll just vote for you.
Algorithm's preset.

SPEAKER_16 (01:06:39):
And if you get three things in a row, tech pot.

SPEAKER_09 (01:06:43):
Now, uh Elon Musk had this to say about school
indoctrination.
And I think, again, there's somany things that I sometimes,
you know, every day I saysometimes I hate these kind of
negative topics, but it has todo with perspective.
We just have to see with cleareyes, right?
Public education is a struggle.
Why?
Because it doesn't teach youanything really valuable.

(01:07:04):
Elon Musk used this as anexample.

SPEAKER_33 (01:07:05):
The amount of indoctrination that that's
happening in schools and anduniversities is I think far
beyond what parents realize.
Let me give you an example thata friend of mine told me, which
uh you know, his uh daughters uhgo to high school in in the Bay
Area, and he he was asking themlike, you know, who are the
first few presidents of theUnited States?
Uh the name Washington, uh, butand I said, Well, what do you

(01:07:26):
know about him?
Well, he was a slave owner.
What else?
Right.
Exactly.
Like, uh, okay, that's maybe weshould know more than that.
You know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Slavery is obviously a a ahorrific institution, but we
should still know more aboutGeorge Washington than that.
The amount of indoctrination.

SPEAKER_09 (01:07:43):
You know, when I went to the uh George
Washington's house in MountVernon, I was surprised at how
much they talked to us aboutslavery.
It's like, hey man, we get it.
Like it's okay.
Because of this guy, weeventually got rid of the
institution.
Like, it's all right.
Like, not everything can befixed in one generation.
You know what I mean?
And I think that that's one ofthe things that we have to
recognize with Donald Trump.
Like, a lot of these problems,he ain't gonna fix them all.

(01:08:05):
He's just changing thetrajectory so that we can fix
them down the road.
He's giving you and I, Ron, thetools to be able to have an
election that matters, that ourcampaigning will actually make a
difference, that when we go outand volunteer and door knock,
that the results will bear fruitin the ballot box, right?
And then we can change policy.
He's just trying to rebuild thedam and stop the bleeding,

(01:08:28):
right?
So that this is incrediblyimportant because while we're
fighting all these internationalmonsters, we have domestic
monsters as well.
Now, this is this is a um uhthis is arrests that were they
thwarted a terror plot in LA.
And this is basically collegekids that were planning a
bombing in LA.

(01:08:48):
Now, there's allegations thatthere were informants and
Whitmer kidnapping plot 3.0,right?
I don't care about all that.
Whoever's involved with this,they had a mindset that allowed
them to get caught up in it.

SPEAKER_34 (01:08:59):
Defendants are Audrey Carroll, 30 years old.

SPEAKER_09 (01:09:02):
The pictures, I think we have them some So 30
years old, you know, not thatold.
Just probably got out ofcollege, still probably hanging
around campus.

SPEAKER_34 (01:09:09):
Somewhere, we'll put them up here.
Audrey Carroll, 30 years old,Zachary Aaron Page, 32, Dante
Gaffield, 24, and Tina Lay, 41,each from the Los Angeles area.
Each is charged with conspiracyand possession of an
unregistered destructive devicein violation of Title 26, United
States Code Section 5861D.

(01:09:32):
We intend to file additionalcharges in the coming weeks as
we finish reviewing theevidence.
The defendants are all radicalanti-government members of the
Turtle Island Liberation Front,which, according to their own
social media, is ananti-capitalist, anti-government
movement that calls for theirassociates to rise up and fight

(01:09:53):
back against capitalism.
One of the leaders of theorganization, defendant Audrey
Carroll, helped organize an evenmore radical faction of the
group called the Order of theBlack Lotus.
Each of the defendants chargedtoday was also a member of the
Order of the Black Lotus.
Carroll described this group toher co-conspirators as

(01:10:13):
everything radical.
As detailed in the federalcomplaint, which we will now
make public, in November 2025,Defendant Carroll created a
detailed bombing plot to useexplosive devices to attack five
or more locations acrossSouthern California on this
upcoming New Year's Eve.
Carroll and her co-defendant,Zachary Page, led the effort to

(01:10:36):
obtain and build the bombs andto recruit others to join in
their plot.
Carroll's bomb plot wasexplicit.
It included a step-by-stepinstructions to build IEDs or
improvised explosive devices andlisted multiple targets across
Orange County and Los Angeles.
Carol also made clear herdesires.

(01:10:57):
She said, quote, what we aredoing will be considered a
terrorist act.
Carol and Paige also discussedplans for follow-up attacks
after their bombings, whichincluded plans to target ICE
agents and vehicles with pipebombs.

SPEAKER_09 (01:11:11):
Carol's In my opinion, where did this start?
Believing George Washington wasnothing other than a slave
owner.
Right?
You got an ad?

SPEAKER_16 (01:11:18):
Yeah.
Go for it.
Let's do it.
Oh no! What?
What is that?

SPEAKER_09 (01:11:24):
Refresh, refresh! Don't anybody go away.
We need every listener to hearthis ad.
Otherwise, they won't let usread it.

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SPEAKER_09 (01:11:39):
Well, you pull that up.
There's one other.
This is a sad story.
This is local.
This is Bellevue just across thebeach sound from us.
I got it.

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SPEAKER_09 (01:12:51):
Pow.
Ooh, that sounds tasty.

SPEAKER_16 (01:12:53):
Yeah.
Buttery.

SPEAKER_09 (01:12:55):
Okay, so this is a little bit of a sad story.
This is local here, Bellevue.
Um, not something you wouldexpect in Bellevue.

SPEAKER_12 (01:13:00):
We're following some breaking news out of Bellevue
right now.
A man is now charged withstabbing a police officer before
another officer shot him.
This happened at the BellevueTransit Station.
You'll recall on Friday.
Court documents say thatMohammed Bangora made a false
911 call about domestic violenceto lure officers there.
Police say that he slashed anofficer's face with a knife and

(01:13:22):
then stabbed him twice in theback.
And that's when police sayanother officer shot Bangora.
Both were taken to the hospitaland both are expected to
recover.

SPEAKER_09 (01:13:31):
So when suicide by cop he's a Muslim man.
Oh, okay.
So this was this was a this wasa trap, right?
Brought him in in order to dothis.
Now, we show a lot of citypictures and a lot of things
that you see in the cities, andAmerican urban areas are
decaying.
You know, like unless you knowTrump sent the military in,

(01:13:51):
they're pretty dirty.
Bellevue's not that city.
No, Bellevue's a lot of money.
Seattle and Bellevue are onecity separated by Lake
Washington with a bridge inbetween.
Okay.
Two bridges.
Okay.

SPEAKER_03 (01:14:01):
Yep.

SPEAKER_09 (01:14:02):
Seattle is old town.
It's got the urban decay thatyou would normally see.
The Detritus.
Bellevue is where Bill Gateslives.
Yes.
And where Amazon's based.

SPEAKER_16 (01:14:13):
And like, you know, that's a beacon on the hill.

SPEAKER_09 (01:14:15):
It is a beacon on the hill.
It is a very clean city.
Posh.
It is a very rich city.
Yes.
It is uh hoity toity to the max.
Okay.

SPEAKER_28 (01:14:23):
Yep.

SPEAKER_09 (01:14:24):
So if you notice here, this is the transit
center.
Do you see a single piece oftrash on the ground?

SPEAKER_16 (01:14:30):
Bubblegum.
Is there even any spit?

SPEAKER_09 (01:14:33):
Is there even none?
This is a this is a differentcity.
Okay.
So I'm pointing this out thateven in areas like Bellevue,
which pride themselves on beingclean and basically having a,
you know, the city council isessentially the the most uh you
know biggest HOA you'll evermeet, okay, with a lot of Karens
on it, it it doesn't exempt youfrom Islamic terror and from

(01:14:55):
people who do this kind ofstuff.
You know, when you send yourkids off to college and they get
indoctrinated into believingthat George Washington was a
slave owner and nothing else,and that everything downstream
from that has to be bad, you'regonna get kids involved in Black
Lotus terror groups and thingslike that.
So, okay, guys, I have aninteresting story.
We've got some really great newsthat's happening.

(01:15:17):
I maybe we should like do thegood news in the beginning.
I don't know.

SPEAKER_17 (01:15:20):
Um yeah.

SPEAKER_09 (01:15:22):
Well, yeah, maybe we should.
So we're gonna jump over intothe private now.
We're gonna be talking aboutagain, great news.
Walmart getting rid ofartificial dyes.
We're gonna be talking about uhfarmers getting these bailout
loans early, which a lot likeapparently there's a significant
statistic of farmers that arenot going to be filing chapter
11 this year.
This is like a last secondbailout that they've been years

(01:15:44):
and years and years, and thiswas it.
Like they hit the end of theline, Trump's first term, and
he's able to bail them out.
That's a big deal.
And uh we're gonna talk a littlebit about blue slips and Mark
Wayne Mullins has flipped on thefilibuster topic.
But before we jump into theprivate, I just want to read you
or share with you a reallyinteresting headline that I saw.

SPEAKER_17 (01:16:03):
Okay.

SPEAKER_09 (01:16:04):
There's an assumption, we're peasants,
right?
The family value thing, likewe've kind of got this culture
where, you know, get married,have a handful of kids, raise
them, it'll be great.
Apparently, in China, that ain'tnecessarily the case.
Chinese billionaires havingdozens of U.S.
born babies via surrogate.
In a closed Los Angelescourtroom, something wasn't

(01:16:24):
right.
Clerks working for family courtjudge Amy Pellman were reviewing
routine surrogacy positions whenthey spotted an unusual pattern,
the same name, again and again.
A Chinese billionaire wasseeking parental rights to at
least four unborn children, andthe court's additional research
showed that he had alreadyfathered or was in the process
of fathering at least eightmore, all through surrogates.
When Pellman called Jubo in fora confidential hearing in the

(01:16:46):
summer of 2023, he never enteredthe courtroom, according to
people who attended the hearing.
The maker and of fantasy videogames lived in China and
appeared via video, speakingthrough an interpreter.
He said he hoped to have 20 orso U.S.
born children through surrogacy,boys because they're superior to
girls, one day to take over hisbusiness.
Several of his kids were beingraised by nannies in nearby
Irving as they awaited paperworkto travel to China.

(01:17:07):
He hadn't yet met them, he toldthe judge, because he had been
too busy with work.
Pellman was alarmed, accordingto the people who attended the
hearing, surrogacy was a tool tohelp people build families, but
what Zhu was describing didn'tseem like parenting, he said.
The judge denied his request forparentage, normally quickly
approved for the intendedparents of a baby born through
surrogacy.
Experts say the decision leftthe children he'd paid for to be

(01:17:30):
born in legal limbo.
The court declined to comment onthe Shu case.
The Zhu Xu, an online megaposter but real-life recluse,
has rarely spoken with reportersand hasn't been photographed in
public for nearly a decade.
Representative Shu's company,blah, blah, blah.
Um so it so it goes on to sayhere, apparently this is a huge
trend.
Um some Chinese parents,inspired by Elon Musk's 14 known

(01:17:50):
children, pay millions insurrogacy fees to hire women to
help U.S.
um help them build families ofjaw-dropping size.
Zhu himself calls himselfChina's first father, is known
in China as a vocal critic offeminism.
On social media, his companysaid he has more than a hundred
children born through surrogacyin the U.S.
Another wealthy Chineseexecutive, Wang Hu, hired U.S.

(01:18:13):
models and others as egg donorsand have to have 10 girls with
the aim of one day marrying themoff to powerful men, according
to people close to theexecutive's company.
This is MSN, by the way,reporting this.
Okay.
Other Chinese clients, usuallyseeking more typical numbers of
babies, are high-poweredexecutives lacking time and
inclination to bear their ownchildren.
The market has grown sosophisticated, as experts say,

(01:18:33):
that at times Chinese Chineseparents have had U.S.
born children without steppingfoot in the country.
A thriving mini industry ofAmerican surrogacy agencies, law
firms, and clinics, deliveringagencies and nanny services,
even to pick up newborns fromhospitals, has risen to
accommodate the demand,permitting parents to ship their
genetic material abroad and geta baby delivered back at the

(01:18:54):
cost of$200,000 per child.
The growing Asian market forinternational fertility service
has drawn attention of Americaninvestors, including Peter
Thiel.
So family office is hacked viawas backed by a chain of IVS
clinics across Southeast Asiaand recently opened a branch in
uh Los Angeles.
So it goes on to describe thebabies born in the US are

(01:19:15):
citizens by virtue of the 14thAmendment.
The 2020 department moved uh,you know, Trump's move into curb
that.
So it goes on to say, you know,we're not Costco.
The founder and CEO of IVF USA,a network of fertility clinics
in the US and Mexico, that caterto wealthy Chinese and partner
with surrogacy agencies.
Uh, babies brought back to Chinaas you uh so basically it helps

(01:19:36):
them fall outside the country'sone child policy penal penal
system.
Sure.
And of course, you get this niceAmerican citizen that, you know,
based on all the welfarebenefits you could get, because
dad's not technically in thepicture.

SPEAKER_16 (01:19:46):
But maybe dad can come visit.

SPEAKER_09 (01:19:48):
Yeah, anchor babies.
Uh so it goes on to describehere, this is actually a really
big deal.
There's it's suspected that someof these Chinese oligarchs have
thousands of children.

SPEAKER_16 (01:20:00):
Thousands of children.
What are they doing with them?

SPEAKER_09 (01:20:02):
Marrying them off.
Girls for future leaders.
The Chinese government usuallyturns a blind eye to citizens
who pursue surrogacy abroad.
This is talking about Wang.

SPEAKER_16 (01:20:10):
I mean, this is almost like it sounds like a
rich guy that has a stable fullof stallions.

SPEAKER_09 (01:20:16):
Yeah, that's exactly what this is.
That's exactly what this is.
Now I've got this video that Ipulled uh with Elon Musk.
Let me uh actually it's worth uhit's worth showing.
Let me find it real quick.
So the article goes on.
Basically, that this is like ahuge deal.
I mean, you've got thousands andthousands of kids that are being

(01:20:37):
born via surrogacy to theseforeign uh you know billionaires
and and people like that.
So let me see if I can quicklyfind this video of Elon Musk
because when we talk aboutfamily, Elon's got a big family.

SPEAKER_16 (01:20:50):
He does have a big family.

SPEAKER_09 (01:20:53):
Yeah, he does have a big family.
I've got this video of himsitting with his child and uh he
his telling his kid it's time togo to bed, and his kid's like,
I'm not going to bed.
And he's like, Well, I gotta goto bed.
And he's like, You don't go tobed, and he's like, Yeah, I do.
It's cute.
It's one of the it's a genuinefather, right?
Father knows father.
Like, you know, when you seesomeone with that kind of in
Portuguese, the word wascarinho, like that kind of

(01:21:15):
amazogy, that's the otherPortuguese word.
Sometimes Portuguese words makemore sense in my mind, but you
know, that that real emotionalconnection to a kid, even just a
little child, and laughingabout, you know, well, I don't
want to go to bed, Dad.
Well, we all have to go to bed,you know.
It's so cute.
That is absent from some ofthese surrogate parents.
You know what I mean?
Oh no, I'm just trying to raisean army.
Uh I'm just trying to marry offall my daughters to rich people

(01:21:37):
to have longer influence.
Oh, I want a hundred kids totake over my business.
You know what I mean?
Like, wow.
Anyways, big deal.
All right, guys, it's time forus to jump over to private, and
then we are gonna hear somegreat news about Maha and um,
you know, blue slips and allthat kind of stuff.
So we'll talk to you guystomorrow.
And of course, you can cheat ifyou want to hear this and you
don't have Rumble a premium, youcan go listen to it on one of

(01:22:00):
the audio players.
Talk to you again tomorrow.
Bye.
And we're instantly into theprivate.
Okay, yes.
So this is the uh this is a bigwin for Maha.
This has to deal with Walmart.
Again, anything Walmart does isgoing to affect millions and
millions and millions ofAmericans.

SPEAKER_11 (01:22:20):
So the nation's biggest retailer embracing the
Maha movement, Walmart currentlyworking on making its store
brand food free of food dyes and30 other ingredients.
From Bentonville, Arkansas, theheadquarters for Walmart, Fox
Business is Kelly Saberia islooking at that.
What'd you find out, Kelly?

SPEAKER_02 (01:22:40):
Hi, Bill.
Welcome to Walmart's CulinaryInnovation Center.
This new building is 23,000square feet where food
scientists, chefs, and peoplelike you and me taste test these
foods.
Now, this is a massiveundertaking as the nation's
biggest grocer, and each ofthese products has its own
unique challenges.
Take candy, for example.
Not only are they taking out thecolors of the original product,

(01:23:04):
but they're also working outboth the taste and texture,
which we know is equally asimportant.
And it's one of theirtop-selling categories.
So let's take the sour worms,for example.
They have titanium dioxide inthem, and now they'll take that
out, which removes that top ofneon.
New versions use things likespirulina and turmeric for the
color.
I gotta tell you.

SPEAKER_09 (01:23:24):
I gotta tell you.
Hold on, hold on, hold on.
When I was in prison, and I'msorry that I didn't get this in
the private, because thisgentleman I'm talking about
actually retweeted the showtoday on X.
I got notified on my phone.
So he this is when I was inprison with this person who's
now out, clearly a J6er.
And uh, anyways, he used to getMMs because it had this titanium

(01:23:47):
whatever, and he was like, youknow, there's two things that
need titanium, the human bodyand the F35.
It's the same exact thing.
But he used to buy the MLMs, MMspecifically to supplement with
that.
So even though they're mentoringit here and it's like hilarious,
apparently, you know, there'ssome need for a micro amount.

SPEAKER_02 (01:24:07):
If you can believe it, I think the new version
actually tastes better than theoriginal.
So I asked, how will Walmart?
Walmart, such a big companypresent in nine out of ten
homes, change the way Americanseat.
They tell me their decisions aredictated by the consumer, not
the other way around.

SPEAKER_21 (01:24:23):
Customers are turning over that package, that
bag, or looking digitally atthose ingredients more than they
ever have.
More than half of the customersare actually very in tune and
looking at those ingredientlabels.
And they wanted simplicity.
They wanted transparency andthey wanted things they could
pronounce and that theyunderstood.

SPEAKER_02 (01:24:41):
The part that I found most fascinating is the
idea that they're aiming to keeptheir costs exactly the same.
70% of their portfolio is pricedunder$5.
And all of this feels especiallyimportant as we round out the
holidays this month.
There are so many things that weneed to entertain.
And right now, 90% of theirfleet of products already has

(01:25:01):
this dive-free promise.
Now, what's going to happen withthe rest of the products?
By January of 2027, Walmart saysthey will have this promise
finished and ready for theirconsumers.

SPEAKER_16 (01:25:13):
Okay.
We got a year, right?
January.
Are we the stupidest people?
Are we the stupidest species?
Because it's like, we're gonnatake the dye out, but you're
still coloring it.
Well, what are you coloring itwith?
Well, something else.

SPEAKER_09 (01:25:28):
That's that's a conversation for another 40
years from now.
Yeah, that's Maha 2.0.

SPEAKER_16 (01:25:34):
If it makes something a color, isn't it a
dye?
No matter what it's made out of.
Yeah.
Whatever.

SPEAKER_09 (01:25:41):
So Donald Trump a while ago made a promise to
American farmers that he wouldbe taking some of that tariff
money and getting it out to thefarmers.
And there was a lot of concernthat they wouldn't get the money
in time.
Well, turned out they startedgetting some checks.

SPEAKER_05 (01:25:51):
Hydro did point to some real benefits to this aid
package.

SPEAKER_32 (01:25:55):
You have your entity structured properly and um, you
know, you can maximize thedollars you're getting back out
of these payments, then uh youknow that's that's income that
you can show the bank and youknow possibly get get your loan
prolonged instead of having tofile a Chapter 11 bankruptcy and
you know, you get to farmanother year.

SPEAKER_05 (01:26:15):
I mean He also shared that he feels like
farmers' voices are finallybeing heard.

SPEAKER_32 (01:26:19):
These payments weren't supposed to come out
until October of twenty-six, andso for them to recognize that
there is an issue and get someof that money from October moved
up to now is that's a a hugeplus and a win for us.

SPEAKER_09 (01:26:35):
It's it's such a big deal because it staves off for
what's reportedly potentiallythousands of farmers, it staves
off bankruptcies that wereslated for this year.

SPEAKER_16 (01:26:45):
Probably some foreclosures.

SPEAKER_09 (01:26:46):
Yeah.
Farmers have not had an easy jobin ever.
Ever?
Ever.
It's never been an easy job, butit has barely been profitable
for a couple decades now.
And a lot of these farms are onlast gap.
I mean, we've already lost a lotof farms.
There's been so muchconsolidation.
It's it's it's actually one ofthe, you know, history will view
it as one of the great tragediesof the American experiment is

(01:27:08):
consolidation of the farmlandand control of the food supply.
I was listening to a podcastyesterday on Sean Ryan's show
about a Russian spy, and she wastalking about when she was a
kid, she used to go stand infood lines with her mom in the
Soviet Union.
And, you know, that those wereall of her memories.
Like all of her memories, herkid were standing in food line
for six, seven hours at a time.
And you had to go stand in linewith your parents because there
wasn't any food.

(01:27:28):
And if they didn't have, like,you know, the mother had to
bring her two kids and be like,I need three pieces of bread and
three pieces of meat, and youknow, they wouldn't give it to
her just saying kids werearound.

SPEAKER_16 (01:27:38):
Right.
I got six kids at home.
Prove it.

SPEAKER_09 (01:27:40):
Prove it, exactly.
And so that was that was how shewas raised, and that led to
wanting stability, whicheventually was why she kind of
gave herself over to the stateor was taken by the state,
however you want to consider it.
But you know, I was hearingthat.
I was like, man, that's that waswhat the American experiment was
supposed to avoid, right?
One of the problems with theGreat Depression was farmers had
excess production and weredumping it because they weren't
profitable.
They were like, I'd rather putthe milk on the ground than you

(01:28:02):
know, sell it for nothing.
And uh, we've got a decreasedsupply, so the demand goes up,
right?
That's how productive Americanfarmland is and American farmers
are.
That we actually have theopposite problem.
We have an overabundance of foodas opposed to their.
Now, they could have had anoverabundance of food, but their
policies weren't shit.
So, anyways, that's a really bigdeal.
I'm glad to see it.

(01:28:24):
I hope it's not on the margins.
I hope it's really impactful,and I really hope that we turn
the tide on, you know, thedegradation of the American
farmer 100%.
Trump was asked about blue slipsbecause he's having a hard time
getting his attorneys and hisjudges um put in, which by the
way, apparently the Republicansin the Senate are really, you
know, putting a bee, you know, apin on their chest, and they're

(01:28:47):
like, we've confirmed morejudges in the last 10 months for
Trump than we did the entirefirst Trump term, which was
record breaking.
Right.
And then of course Biden brokethe record because he put even
more judges in, right?
But now they've got a lot of, Idon't know where these judges
are going.
I'm like, how many judges areretiring?
I mean, I don't know.
I thought aren't like seatsfilled.

(01:29:07):
You know what I mean?
Anyways, they're throwing a lotof judges out there, and that's
good.
The problem is, is all thesejudges, record-breaking amount
of judges wrong, all going tored states.
Not going to states like ours,not going to blue states.
Why?
Yeah.

SPEAKER_30 (01:29:22):
Blue slips, Mr.
President.
Leader Boon doesn't seem like hewants to get rid of blue slips.
Will there be consequences forthe Senate?

SPEAKER_27 (01:29:29):
Well, I think they should get rid of blue slips
because uh as a Republicanpresident, I am unable to put
anybody in office having to dowith U.S.
attorneys or having to do withjudges.
In other words, if you have one,not two, you don't need two,
just one.
If you have one Democrat uhsenator, well, we have a lot of

(01:29:50):
them.
You have one Democrat senator ina state, it is not possible to
appoint because of blue slips.
A judge, it's not possible toappoint a U.S.
attorney.
You see that happening.
And I think it's a disgrace.
I think blue slips are adisgrace.
They've long since uh I mean,they're not, they should not be
relevant anymore.

(01:30:11):
Well, this is a different worldthan it was 15, 20 years ago.
You know, that was a gentlemanand gentlewoman world.
This is a little bit different,unfortunately.

SPEAKER_09 (01:30:21):
That's the point.
All you met Romney fans, that'sa different world.
Okay, it's a different world.
This is a zero-sum game.
There will be a winner or aloser, and the loser will
probably go to jail.
So this is Mark Wayne Mullen,again, one of these senators who
kind of saved the day.
He is one of the early senatorsthat understood the Venezuelan
role and the election fraud andthe demand machines.

(01:30:41):
He made sure the right peoplegot involved and got, you know,
confirmed to Trump all thisstuff.
So this is one of those senatorsthat I don't really care that he
invested in an irrigationcompany with uh smart meters.
Okay, even though Trump postedthat on his true social, I don't
care as much about that, uh,although I don't like smart
meters, but because he's kind ofstarting to get it.

(01:31:03):
And when it comes to thisfilibuster issue and the blue
slip issue, I think he's comingalong.

SPEAKER_22 (01:31:07):
Nuke the filibuster in the Senate.
The argument being that ifDemocrats ever win back, they're
gonna do it anyway.
So um, if Democrats win theHouse, they they end the Trump
agenda, essentially, for thefinal two years of his
presidency.
So get everything you can doneget done, if you're not worried
about politics, in the next ninemonths, nuke the filibuster and
act the agenda.

SPEAKER_03 (01:31:28):
Well, the president has said that.
He's talking about all the timeto nuke the filibuster.
Problem is we're still playingpolitics.
It's an argument to be made.
I I I kind of leaned on the sideof for a little bit of going,
well, Will, should we reallynuke the filibuster?
Because once you do that, it isnuclear.
It goes nuclear, it opens thedoor wide open.
And I was like, why would weopen the door wide open for the
for the Democrats?
But I was in a meeting with youknow with leadership just

(01:31:49):
recently, uh in fact last week,and I brought this point up,
guys.
Does anybody in this roombelieve that the Democrats
aren't going to nuke thefilibuster?
And if and if they do, whatthey're going to do is they're
going to go after all thecourts.
They're going to try to pack inthe courts, not with 13, not
with 11, but now they're saying23.
And you're going, okay, if theyif we know they're going to pack

(01:32:10):
the court, if we know we thinkthey're going to make
Washington, D.C.
a state, Puerto Rico a state,maybe Guam a state, and that why
wouldn't we just go ahead and doit anyways?
Because we're not interested inthe politics of it.
We're interested in the policyof it.
Why wouldn't we install goodpolicy?
The argument was then, well, butthey will undo everything we
did.
To which I said back to them islike, okay.
I love that.

SPEAKER_09 (01:32:29):
We're not interested in the politics of it, but we're
interested in the policy of it.
They're wanting to use don't dothe policy it's bad.
Don't do it, you know, what itdon't do it, don't do it.
It'll be bad politics.
Don't get rid of the blue slips,it's bad politics.
Yeah, but what about policy?
The judges they put in placewith that whole blue slip thing,
garbage.
Garbage.
Garbage human beings.
I'm I'm literally, there aresome judges that are garbage,

(01:32:52):
right?
You can go look at lots of opensource research about it.
It's like, ha ha ha, I don'teven know how these guys
maintain a law license.
And they're federal judges?
I know it sounds stunning, andI'm trying not to cast stones or
allegations on anyone specific,but you know, go do some of the
research on these people thatgot confirmed in the last four
years.
Okay.
So that's what they're gonna do,even more and more and more.

(01:33:14):
Remember, the Senate was held bythe Republicans, which kind of
held Biden at bay.
Had they not had a RepublicanSenate, they would have packed
the court, you know, it wouldhave gotten worse.

SPEAKER_03 (01:33:24):
How do we know they'll undo everything we did?
Because if it's sound policy andthey do undo everything we did,
and it put us in havoc, thenmaybe it'll backfire on them.
Because if we believe they'regoing to do it, then why don't
we just go ahead and get it doneand do what the president's
wanting us to do to put all thispolicy forward?
And so there was a conversationthat's taking place that's

(01:33:45):
saying, well, maybe we don't doall the filibusters, but we just
do it when it comes toappropriations.
Well, that's where the policy ismade to appropriations, anyways.
I think that's a sound policyfor us to have a serious
conversation about because weonly have three years here.
And the president is laserfocused on setting a foundation
for the golden age to be rushingin and set it up for whoever the

(01:34:08):
next vice or the nextpresident's gonna be.
Is it gonna be JD?
Who's who knows?
I'd say right now, JD's probablythe front runner, but if you set
the foundation, a solidfoundation for somebody to build
on, because you don't have toworry about a mid uh a
re-election, which is theadvantage that the president
has, then let's go all in.
And I'm in that favor whereyou're at right now is let's go
all in.
Let's get this thing donebecause we're not gonna get

(01:34:30):
immigration policy done um withbipartisan support.
It's not gonna happen becausethe Democrats are never gonna
give us a win on this.
Um, you're not going you werenot going to have good sound
policy when it comes toreforming the Unaffordable
Healthcare Act uh with the withre with the Democrats.
They're not they're notinterested.
I mean, we see what they'vedone.

(01:34:50):
They they want to do a cleanthree-year extension on a failed
policy that has a 90 90% um uhfraud rate on it.
That's that's horrible.
10% is horrible.
This is 90% fraud rate on it,and yet they want to do a
three-year clean extension onthe premium tax.
And so we know they're notinterested in it, so we need to
do it by ourselves.
And so I my position on thefilibuster has changed.

SPEAKER_09 (01:35:12):
Oh, but I hope they get rid of it.
I was early on, don't get rid ofthe filibuster.
It's how we stop the Democrats.
And now I'm like, actually,they're gonna do it if they ever
get power, and we probably won'tbe able to fully fix the
election system.

SPEAKER_16 (01:35:26):
And it'll be over.
It'll be over.

SPEAKER_09 (01:35:28):
It'll be over, exactly.
So, all right, guys, that's itfor us today.
Thank you for sticking around.
We'll pray the Rosary Daily saidlearn civics and attend trade
school.
Absolutely.
That is a good life plan.
All right, guys, we'll talk toyou again tomorrow.
Bye.

SPEAKER_26 (01:36:03):
Matt, sorry, what do I clip in that card for now?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37, I'm not old, but I can'tjust call you Matt.
You could say this.
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