Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_13 (00:59):
Where are those
people?
Where are those people?
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofThe Peasants Perspective.
And literally minutes before theshow started, we got
notification that we got somepretty amazing news.
SPEAKER_27 (01:30):
We don't know the
suspect's name or anything about
this person, other than the factthis is a male that was living
in Northern Virginia, arrestedat some point within the last 90
minutes now in federal custody.
I'm told we'll know more as theday moves on.
And as soon as we have theinformation, of course, we will
break in with that.
But just this past October, acouple of months ago, the FBI
(01:50):
put out this enhanced uh videoand pictures of Dude, it's
totally a woman.
I just I cannot buy that that isa male.
No suspect planning pipe bombsnear a bench outside the DNC in
Washington on January 5th, 2021,the night before the attack on
the U.S.
Capitol.
The suspect then placed the sametype of bomb outside the RNC
minutes later.
(02:10):
The suspect, as I said, wore aface mask, hooded sweatshirt,
glasses, gloves.
But using FBI technology, agentstold the public the suspect they
believe is around five footseven inches.
We'll see, Bill, if that ringstrue once we get an identity
later today.
Agents say the two bombs wereplaced between 7 30 and 8 30 at
night.
The bombs did not detonate, butthis is important.
(02:32):
They were viable.
They could have hurt people,they could have killed people.
Those bombs were discovered thenext day.
Over the past four years, agentsvisited 1,200 homes and
businesses, conducted more thana thousand interviews, reviewed
approximately 39,000 videofiles, went through 600 tips.
It's notable the reward bill inDana was half a million dollars,
(02:53):
$500,000.
SPEAKER_13 (02:57):
I just don't believe
it.
SPEAKER_27 (02:59):
No.
SPEAKER_13 (02:59):
Like, first of all,
yeah, the five years to get to
it, right?
Like, oh, this is right aroundthe corner in Northern Virginia.
It's like, come on.
I don't blah I'm concerned.
First of all, are the pipe bombsviable?
Not viable.
Right?
They're viable, but yet theywere set 14 hours when they had
a one-hour egg timer with 20minutes left.
Doesn't make any sense.
They look like a hokey trainingdevice, like identical to the
(03:22):
training devices that you looklike they were made by the ACMA
company.
Yeah, I'm pretty compelled bythe Blaze reporting that this
was a female that was walkingaround at night.
Now, I'm not against the ideathat we don't know, like the
pipe bomber didn't, that's notthe pipe bomber.
SPEAKER_16 (03:37):
That could be.
SPEAKER_13 (03:37):
Right?
I'm not opposed to the idea thatit was another set but quit
trying to sell that video then.
Yeah, it's one or the other.
Like Julie Kelly can't be right.
Well, I don't think that's thepipe bomber at all.
I think it was January 6th, themorning of.
Well, that's possibility.
If that's the lead they're goingwith, then this person that's
walking around disappears.
Why have you been asking for aor offering a half million
(03:59):
dollar reward for a figure thatends up not being the suspect?
So we'll wait and see.
But uh to me, man, oh man, Ijust smell Patsy, Patsy, Patsy
all over this.
So we'll wait and see.
Like evidence is evidence, comesout, you know.
I mean, like, I can change myopinion, no problem.
But uh okay.
(04:22):
So that kind of calls intoquestion, you know, Steve Baker
when he's like the high-levelintelligence was like, oh my
gosh, this is one of ours.
You know, I don't know.
So that broke we were playingthe intro when I saw that pop up
on my phone from uh a J6 chatthread that I have, right?
And I pulled it up while we werein the intro.
(04:43):
So I don't know anything aboutit other than ah, we're about to
find out the identity.
They arrested them 90 minutesago, which probably means really
truly within minutes we could befinding out the name and
identity, and then the internetsluice will go to work.
So good morning, everybody.
Good morning, Mata Isel.
Good morning, Bree Ageur Fraser.
I got so many weird names inhere.
(05:05):
These are hard names for me topronounce.
John Atis, good morning, PonyBoy, good morning, Eva Razel.
Eva Razel, you'd think I'd havea bunch of like Latin people in
the chat.
SPEAKER_16 (05:14):
I just assume you
knew who all these people were
and knew how to say it.
I I don't know who all of themare.
SPEAKER_13 (05:20):
Uh I think I know
who some of them are.
I like, yeah, I don't know.
Who knows?
Sometimes I think I know whosomeone is, and then someone
will be like, I was this othername, and I'm like, oh, then
whoops, I've been talking tosomeone else as if they were
you.
Uh, anyways, totally fine.
I love all the vanity names.
I just don't have a cheat sheetto know who everybody is.
Okay, so something else happenedyesterday.
(05:42):
There was an op-ed that was uhposted, or really it was a
letter that was written by uhwho Hugo Chavez's former chief
of intelligence who then becameMaduro's chief of intelligence.
Okay.
And he's currently sitting in aprison in New York on federal
drug drug charges.
And Emerald Robinson hadexplained here we have the head
of intelligence for Venezuela,and he's never been debriefed by
(06:03):
the FBI or anything.
They're just rolling him throughthis trial, not asking anybody
around them about anything.
Now, I know how this goesbecause you think he, you know,
a high-level terrorist who ledthe riot on January 6th,
allegedly in their paperwork,right?
That they would haveinterviewed, say, the people I
traveled with.
Nope, no interest, don't care.
They've got enough, they don'tneed it.
So this was what was going onwith this uh intelligence,
(06:25):
former intelligence head, justnever debriefed.
So they've gotten to him, andnow I think he's in some kind of
witness protection-y type thinggoing on there, which it's
called protective custody.
I'm assuming he was probably inthat already, but he wrote this
letter to the president of theUnited States that was published
in some newspapers yesterday.
My name is Hugo CarvalhoBarreos.
For many years, I was ahigh-ranking member of the
(06:46):
Venezuelan regime.
I was a three-star general,trusted by both Hugo Chavez and
Nicolas Maduro, and served asthe director of military
intelligence and a deputy in theNational Assembly.
Today I sit in an Americanprison because I voluntarily
pled guilty to the crimescharged against me, a
narcoterrorism conspiracy.
I write to atone, telling the tthe f the full truth so that the
United States can protect itselffrom the dangers I witnessed for
(07:07):
so many years.
I publicly broke with the Maduroregime in 2017 and fled my
country, knowing that I facedcriminal charges in the United
States.
In so doing so, I became theenemy.
Knowing the risk, I acted withthe strongest conviction to
dismantle Maduro's criminalregime and bring freedom to my
country.
Today I see the need to addressthe American people about the
reality of what the Venezuelanregime truly is and why
President Trump's policies arenot only correct, but absolutely
(07:30):
necessary to the United States'national security.
Narco-terrorism.
I personally witness how HugoChavez's government became the
criminal organization that isnow run by Nicolas Maduro, uh,
DeSodado Caballo, and othersenior regime officials.
The purpose of this organizationis known as the Cartel of the
Suns is to weaponize drugsagainst the United States.
(07:52):
The drugs that reached yourcities through new routes were
not accidents of corruption, norjust the work of independent
traffickers.
They were deliberate policiescoordinated by the Venezuelan
regime against the UnitedStates.
This plan was suggested by theCuban regime to Chavez in the
mid-2000s and has beensuccessfully executed with the
help of FARC, ELN, Cubanoperatives, and Hezbollah.
(08:14):
The regime has provided weapons,passports, and impunity for
these terrorist organizations tooperate freely from Venezuela
against the United States.
Trendeagua.
I was present when decisionswere made to organize and
weaponize criminal gangs acrossVenezuela to protect the regime.
Among them the group known asTrendeagua.
Chavez ordered the recruitmentof criminal leaders inside and
outside of prisons to defend therevolution in exchange for
(08:36):
impunity.
Hugo Chavez died.
Maduro expanded the strategy byexploiting criminality and chaos
abroad to target Venezuelanpolitical elites, exiles, and
artificially reduced crimestatistics within Venezuela.
Gang leaders were instructed tosend thousands of members out of
the country.
This was a coordinated throughthe Ministry of Interior and the
Ministry of Prisons, theNational Guard, National Police
(08:58):
Forces.
Trem Diagua became the mosteffective and fastest growing.
When the Biden Harris openborder policy became widely
known, they seized theopportunity to send these
operatives into the UnitedStates.
They now have obedient armedpersonnel on American soil.
To finance their operations,they were explicitly instructed
to continue kidnapping,extorting, and killing.
Every crime they commit on yoursoil is an act ordered by the
(09:18):
regime.
Counterintelligence andespionage against the United
States.
I was present when Russianintelligence came to Caracas to
propose to Hugo Chavez thetapping of submarine internet
cables that connect most ofSouth America and the Caribbean
islands with the United Statesfor the purpose of penetrated
United States governmentcommunications.
In 2015, I warned Maduro thatallowing Russian intelligence to
(09:39):
build and run a secret listeningpost on Lorchila Island would
one day invite American bombs.
He ignored me.
For 20 years, the Venezuelanregime sent spies into your
country.
Many are still there, somedisguised as members of the
Venezuela's opposition.
Cuban intelligence showed metheir networks inside your naval
bases on the East Coast.
They bragged about having sentthousands of spies overseas for
(10:00):
decades.
Some now career politicians.
U.S.
diplomats and CIA officers werepaid to assist Chavez and Maduro
in remaining in power.
These Americans acted as spiesfor Cuba and Venezuela, and some
remain active to this day.
Smartmatic in your elections,Smartmatic was born as an
electoral tool of the Venezuelanregime, but soon derived into a
(10:21):
tool that would help the regimestay in power forever.
I know this because I placed thehead of IT of the National
Electoral Council, CNE, in hisposition.
And he reported directly to methe Smartmatic system can be
altered.
This is a fact.
This technology was laterexported abroad, including to
the United States.
Regime operatives maintainrelationships with election
(10:42):
officials and voting machinecompanies inside your country.
I do not claim that everyelection is stolen, but I state
with certainty that electionscan be rigged with software and
has been used to do so.
People of the United States makeno mistake about the threat
posed by allowing anarco-terrorist organization to
roam freely in the Caribbean andthroughout Latin America, doing
everything possible to harm theAmerican people, to finance
(11:03):
anti-American anti-Americanismacross the continent, and to
facilitate the operations ofother terrorist organizations
and enemies of the United Stateswithin Venezuela and now within
your borders.
The regime I serve is not merelyhostile, it is at war with you,
using drugs, gangs, espionage,and even your own democratic
processes as weapons.
President Trump's policiesagainst the Major criminal
(11:24):
regime are not just justifiedbut necessary and proportionate
to the threat.
He may even be underestimatingwhat the regime is prepared to
do to hold on to power.
They have contingency plans forevery extreme scenario to ensure
they never relinquish control.
I absolutely support PresidentTrump's policy towards Venezuela
because of itself, it isself-defense and he is acting
based on truth.
(11:44):
I remain ready to provideadditional details about these
matters to the United Statesgovernment.
Hugo Carval Carvala Bajios.
Wow.
SPEAKER_16 (11:54):
Wow.
That was a long letter.
Thanks for reading the wholething.
SPEAKER_13 (11:57):
Hey, listen, you
know, this is our nation, this
is our country.
Right?
If if we have been taken over bya Venezuelan cartel, I mean, I
thought I would have been sayinglike Muslim Brotherhood or any
other, you know, Russian SPRussian spies.
Turns out it was Venezuelaacting on behalf of Russia and
China and all the otheradversaries of America.
Hezbollah's involved with this.
SPEAKER_16 (12:19):
Is there any way
that we can um like um back up
this letter?
I mean, has he said anythingpublicly at all?
SPEAKER_13 (12:27):
Uh nothing in that
letter has not been what was
reported four years ago by guyslike Rudy Giuliani and Sidney
Powell who brought this issue tothe forefront and were literally
destroyed for doing sure.
SPEAKER_16 (12:39):
And we're lapping it
up because it's exactly what we
want to hear, but uh yeah,confirmation bias.
Sure.
And so that's what I'm trying toguard against.
Is there any way that we can,you know, confirm that these
words came from him?
Uh I mean, because this is aletter that could easily be
crafted by anybody.
SPEAKER_13 (12:55):
No, this letter was
published in newspapers, it came
from him through the prisonsystem mail.
I don't think there's any doubtthe letter originates from him.
Okay.
The doubt might be that he'slying to try to get a pardon or
something like that.
Right?
That he's he's this is too goodto verify.
Take it at face value, and awaywe go.
SPEAKER_16 (13:11):
It's a perfect
moment to leverage a letter like
this because it's in jail.
SPEAKER_13 (13:14):
Yeah, I mean, he and
we're you know hot to trot on
Venezuela.
Right.
SPEAKER_16 (13:18):
But the contention
of Then all of a sudden he's
gonna make positive statementsin a letter about Trump and
Venezuela and voting, and it'slike it's all very tidy.
SPEAKER_13 (13:26):
Well, yeah, it is.
It really is.
SPEAKER_16 (13:30):
I guess we'll just
have to take it.
SPEAKER_13 (13:32):
One of the things
one of the things that I've
realized going through this isoftentimes the initial
conspiracy theory ends up beingthe thing the whole time.
It's just we overcomplicated.
It's like, what is it, Occam'srazor or whatever law?
It's like, you know, whatever,whatever the most likely
situation is the most likelysituation.
And then there's that wholeidea, don't chalk up to some
grand conspiracy what can beexplained by stupidity.
(13:54):
But then you get to a certainpoint and you're like, they
can't all be this stupid, right?
It's like 98% of judicialdecisions go against Donald
Trump.
And then they get one at theSupreme Court.
They can't all be that stupid.
They can't all be able to dothat.
SPEAKER_16 (14:06):
I'm on board with
it.
I'm on board.
I'm just like, when I see theseletters, it's like, damn, you
know, these are all two perfectletters.
SPEAKER_13 (14:13):
Absolutely,
absolutely that could be.
Now, Giuliani recently wassaying this again, these people
have been vindicated one timeafter another.
SPEAKER_00 (14:21):
So little time to
change this place and get it on
the right track so that it sothat it survives as the great
nation that we were given.
And that we live up to our toour challenge, our our
obligation, our birthright,which is to uh turn this country
over greater than it was turnedover to us.
That's that's what we had sofar.
We're not there.
We're not there yet.
(14:41):
So there's a lot of work to bedone.
You stay with us and we'll talkabout that work that has to be
done.
Luckily, we've got a presidentwho wants to do it.
Unfortunately, he has tremendousforces arrayed against him.
And it really takes an imassiveamount of thinking and analysis
to see through it.
And I want to help you withthat.
Okay, boom.
SPEAKER_13 (14:59):
Yep.
I mean, we've got dude.
The guy's bankrupt.
He's through criminal and civilprocedures the last four years.
I mean, this Ruby Freeman, who'son tape saying that she
essentially rigged an electionon behalf of other people and
was worried that they weren'tgonna cover for her.
Like, literally, Harrison Fordgets his pardon and the case
(15:20):
gets dismissed, and he startsreleasing tape that he was
prevented by a gag order fromreleasing.
And yet Ruby Freeman sued RudyGiuliani and got like 150
million dollars, which basicallymeant they got all of his cars,
rings, and you know, bankaccounts, you know, took his
apartment.
Like the cheater won.
Our judicial system propped upthe cheating party.
(15:40):
You know, it's unbelievable.
Uh, I was gonna start out theshow with this today.
Uh, Stephen Miller was on withJesse Waters, and uh Pete Buttig
apparently said that anybody inthe world would be allowed to
watch his children except forStephen Miller.
SPEAKER_15 (15:54):
He just said anybody
could watch my kids except
Miller.
SPEAKER_06 (15:57):
Well, I think I
think in fairness, he's worried
that if uh babysitter uh babysatis kids, they come back after a
couple hours and they would say,Daddy, why don't you send the
military into Minnesota to helpus with the Somali refugee?
SPEAKER_15 (16:11):
Miller, you you
constantly you're trouble.
I bet people just try to containyou at the White House.
SPEAKER_13 (16:18):
Don't let Miller off
the leash.
Go spend a couple hours withStephen Miller.
Daddy, why don't you send theboats into Minnesota to help
with the refugee crisis or theSomalis?
What a good sense of humor.
He's the one that everybody'slike overly concerned that he's
a Nazi, right?
Probably a little, man.
He's American nationalists.
(16:39):
That's Scott Bessett was uh wasreally debunking this idea.
It's hilarious how the left isrunning with this Trump's got
dementia, he's breaking down,he's getting worse every day.
There are like legit headlinescoming out of like New York
Times and WAPO and places likethat, claiming that Donald Trump
is mentally declining.
SPEAKER_29 (16:58):
And it's yeah, I've
seen him.
SPEAKER_13 (17:00):
He's 80 years old or
79, and you know, oh, so he
stutter steps on occasion.
I stutter step.
You know what I mean?
Like it's not that big a deal.
Give me a break.
Or, you know, he had thediscoloration in his hands.
Come on, man, everybody goesthrough some rash or something.
You know, the guy's old, ofcourse he's got a Joe Rogan went
through one.
He's not dying.
(17:21):
Scott Messen's like, thispresident works around all of
us.
SPEAKER_08 (17:24):
Sean, uh he'll he'll
call me.
Uh Scott, the uh I didn't wakeyou, did you?
No, sir.
I'm always awake at 152 on aTuesday.
And I can tell you we we we didthe the trip to Alaska, we did a
round trip one day, and we wearrived back, the rest of the
cabinet, Secretary Rubio, uhSecretary Lutnick and I, you
(17:46):
know, our batteries are out.
We land the uh at Andrews, andthe president's, oh, it's
morning in Europe now.
I I think we had spent probably20 hours in the air in Alaska,
and he said, Let's start makingphone calls and call the
European leaders.
Yeah.
So we had to sit on the we saton the tarmac for two more hours
(18:07):
while he made phone calls.
He never stops working for theAmerican people.
It's incredible.
I want to talk.
SPEAKER_13 (18:16):
So that's that's our
dimension-riddled president.
The the whole, you know, one ofthe things that explains so much
of the Democrats' narrative thatthey push is whatever Biden did,
right?
It's the projection.
We're gonna paint you with oursins.
So Biden was dementia-riddled,Biden wasn't showing up to
cabinet meetings, Biden washaving this.
(18:37):
Let's say Trump did it.
Let's make sure we balance outthe headlines.
It's ridiculous.
It really is ridiculous.
Um, this issue with Venezuela, Iam absolutely convinced by the
president himself, as he tweetsout Laura Logan's interview with
Gary, the CIA operative, uhPatrick Byrne's you know, media
tour.
Trump tweets out an InfoWarsinterview with Patrick Byrne and
(19:00):
uh Alex Jones, right?
Trump's truth social is reallyrude.
Like he's on this one.
In fact, if if we get militarytribunals, Trump is telling us.
I mean, he's boasting like memeafter meme after meme.
Nothing changes till thesepeople get arrested, you know?
So he's definitely on it.
The question is, is he gonnahave some help?
Because the narrative is thisidea that Trump is a war
(19:22):
criminal and the people aroundhim are war criminals.
SPEAKER_07 (19:24):
Was this
self-defense?
And how do the rules ofinternational waters play into
whether this was a war crime?
SPEAKER_15 (19:32):
Yeah, in my opinion,
no.
This is not self-defense.
And no matter where you do thestrike, if it's not
self-defense, then it's illegal.
And look, I have a lot of that'swhy we call this Department of
War, not the Department ofDefense, right?
Right of sympathy, but thegeneral idea that when we send
our service members out intocombat, they got some very
difficult decisions to make.
And you look at what was goingon in Iraq and Afghanistan, and
(19:56):
you're you're stopping someone.
Do they have a gun?
Do they have a suicide vest?
Are they a threat?
When you were in the middle ofan insurgency with roadside
bombs and car bombs and all ofthat, even in the aftermath of
the Afghanistan pull-up when wehad that suicide bomber kill 13
service members and hundreds ofpeople in Kabul, and we did that
strike against a car that wethought was a threat that turned
(20:18):
out not to be a threat.
I have some sympathy for that.
SPEAKER_13 (20:22):
But people on a
Nobody was court-martialed for
that, by the way.
You killed a completely innocentperson because they had water
bottles in the back of theircar.
You know what I'm talking about?
So the advocate where the 13people were killed, 13 service
members on our way out ofAfghanistan.
So we went and targeted theterrorist.
Turns out it wasn't theterrorist, it was just some
(20:42):
random dude that was unloadingwater bottles from the trunk of
his car, and we blew them out ofthe sky with a drone.
And then they're like, oopsies,and then later they go and
they're like, Well, this guyactually did it, but he's still
on the run.
And it's like, dude, you where'sthe court martialing?
SPEAKER_15 (20:58):
Quote in the middle
of the Caribbean, carrying
cocaine are not a direct threatto the lives of our service
members for Americans.
Okay, but you forgot the wordmy.
SPEAKER_16 (21:11):
They're carrying my
cocaine.
Miller responds to this.
SPEAKER_18 (21:16):
Dems are just trying
to protect terrorists.
SPEAKER_06 (21:20):
Stephen Miller.
All right, Miller, have you everheard of a controversy like this
in your life?
No.
This is the first time I canever think where a major
political party has sided withnarco trafficking, murdering,
terrorist scum.
You know, you play one of thoseuh clips from a Democrat who
said, Oh, there's no such thingas a narco-terrorist, they're
(21:42):
just narco-persons.
And these narco-terrorists inour hemisphere use the same
tactics.
They use rape as a weapon.
They skin people alive, they cutoff their heads, they burn them
to death.
These narco-terrorists, if apolitician opposes them, they
(22:03):
kidnap their family.
If they don't give them whatthey want, they murder their
family.
You can go to the Border Patrolhere in the United States and
you can say, draw me a map ofthe border, and on the Mexican
side, tell me which cartelcontrols every inch of
territory.
And the border agents canliterally say, mile by mile,
which cartel controls whichsection of the border.
(22:24):
Not the Mexican government, theydon't control it.
Which cartel.
When President Trump declaredthese organizations, foreign
terrorist organizations, thatwasn't just a talking point.
That wasn't just a buzzword.
It was a promise.
A promise from this president touse hard American power to kill
and to stop these terrorists,these enemies of the United
(22:47):
States, from killing ourfamilies, from killing our
children, from taking over ourcommunities.
SPEAKER_13 (22:54):
And my perspective
on drugs radically changed when
I was in prison.
And I don't know that I was everpro-drug.
I just didn't know how big aproblem it was.
I didn't understand the carnagethat it leaves behind in
society.
And when I got into prison and Iwas like, oh my goodness, this
is carnage.
You know, there's a fair amountof prisoners that could have
that need rehab more than theyneed prison, right?
(23:14):
But there's also the dealers.
So there's a completelydifferent world.
Now, this topic should be thelast time we hear from it.
We shouldn't hear anymore aboutdouble tapping drug boats in the
middle of the Caribbean, right?
Because ABC, who had anexclusive story on this, the
leak, that there was a doubletap, that the survivors were
clinging to the boat.
Well, the Pentagon did theirreport, they got their IG report
(23:37):
out and they released it.
SPEAKER_12 (23:38):
And turns out
tonight, new information.
According to a source familiarwith the incident, the two
survivors climbed back onto theboat after the initial strike.
They were believed to bepotentially in communication
with others and salvaging someof the drugs.
Because of that, it wasdetermined they were still in
the fight and valid targets.
(23:59):
A JAG officer was also givinglegal advice.
SPEAKER_13 (24:04):
This backs up the
entire second strike.
Yes, I mean so basically thewhole thing fall, you know, they
got back on the boat, got on theradio, the Pentagon, and
intercepted a message.
Hey, come help us and rescue us.
Still in the fight.
It's like so we should be done,right?
This should be over.
SPEAKER_16 (24:24):
Well, that's not the
only information that they would
be transmitting.
They would be letting otherpeople know, hey, they're
blowing up boats over here, gosomewhere else, or exactly, or
come rescue us, or whatever thecase is.
SPEAKER_13 (24:35):
Either way, they
didn't put up the white flag and
say, Come rescue us.
No, they they went back andsaid, Hey, you guys come rescue.
Right?
So this is war.
SPEAKER_16 (24:44):
Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (24:45):
This is war.
That's the thing you have torealize.
And Dan Crenshaw, who, you know,I'm not a huge fan of, but he
was a former Navy SEAL.
SPEAKER_31 (24:51):
I can't recall any
time in my history doing
counterterrorism operationswhere we we we strike a group,
whether that's a building or aboat or a vehicle, and then we
were like, oh well, they'resurvivors, so we have to go, we
we can't kill them.
Of course we killed them.
SPEAKER_13 (25:06):
I can't recall them.
Of course we killed them.
We were gonna kill them on thefirst strike.
If we missed, we finished thejob.
Listen, man, war is war.
I oppose it vehemently.
I wish that we didn't have to doany of this.
I wish Hugo Chavez and Trumpcould strike a deal, and Hugo
Chavez could go retire on anAntarctic island or something
like that.
Right.
SPEAKER_16 (25:26):
And let's not do any
killing anywhere ever.
SPEAKER_13 (25:28):
Yeah, that'd be
great.
But that's just not the world welive in, right?
You don't know what it's like togrow up in a Somali
pirate-dominated society.
You don't know what it's like tolive in abject poverty in the
third world of Brazil.
I served my mission there.
I know the temptation thesepeople have for a better life.
Anybody can provide a betterlife.
They're not loyal to theAmerican flag, they're not loyal
to the Brazilian flag, they'reloyal to their dinner table and
(25:51):
their bellies, right?
And that's what you're dealingwith here.
You're dealing with people whohave decided that Maduro is a
nation state, that he issovereign, that he has the
ability to declare life anddeath, and that strong man is
going to attract other peoplewho want to live that life, you
know, and feed their families.
And if that's the only way tofeed their families, that's what
you're gonna do.
SPEAKER_16 (26:10):
Right.
And they don't got a Starbuckson the corner, they can go get a
minimum wage job at.
SPEAKER_13 (26:15):
No, but but at the
same time, there's choices that
people make, right?
There's choices that peoplemake.
The vast majority of Venezuelais begging for Americans to come
and and rescue them from Maduro,right?
Vast majority, it's like 80%support.
Okay.
Why is that?
Because Maduro is destroyingtheir country.
SPEAKER_16 (26:32):
Why have these, you
know?
Well, they're tired of the drugeconomy ruling their entire
country.
SPEAKER_13 (26:36):
When you listen to
Patrick Byrne, who they went and
flipped some of these peopleinside of Venezuela, these
high-level people, and you know,why are you flipping?
And they're like, Well, we'recommunists, we believe in all
this stuff, and we totallybought the vision.
But COVID happened.
So they were they saw COVID,they saw what was going around
the world, the lockdowns, andthey were like, oh whoa.
(26:57):
That this is not like wealready, you know, they live in
Venezuela, their cousins andfriends are losing weight,
eating cats and dogs, runningfrom the cannibals.
So when they saw COVID, they sawthe same cabal that they're
working with, that they've beenable to institute that type of
totalitarian control, and thenignoring the population their
paradigm got tested in adifferent way.
(27:17):
All of a sudden they're like,oh, this isn't the utopia that
we were trying to build.
Right.
And that's why they flipped.
SPEAKER_22 (27:23):
Right.
SPEAKER_13 (27:24):
You see what I'm
saying?
There's a well, I don't evenwant to say there's a decent
argument.
I'm gonna bypass decent argumentfor why socialism is a reality.
Like, we the people is asocialist program, right?
The so you can see why peopleare drawn to it.
I understand why people aredrawn to it.
However, the carnage that comesfrom it, a lot of people that
(27:44):
were hardcore socialists,collectivists, communists, once
they see the end result, theybail.
SPEAKER_18 (27:50):
Okay.
SPEAKER_13 (27:51):
Now, one of the
things, too, that you have to
keep in mind, and we deal withthis every day, is we pay clips
from the media and we kind ofdissect who's saying what and
what's their intention andmotivations and stuff like that.
Anybody who listened to the newsgrowing up before the advent of
the internet, there's a goodchance that we all lived under a
Psyop.
Oh, yeah.
(28:16):
Right.
And this is where you get thespace race and whether we did or
didn't go to the moon and likethat, right?
Well, for people that grew upwatching TV to get their
information.
SPEAKER_14 (28:25):
So if you talk to
your parents, every news anchor
that they remember from theirchildhood, there's like a 90%
chance that was a uh actual CIAoperative.
And this is documented, releaseddocuments.
Guys like Walter Cronkite, likeone of the most famous news
anchors of all time, talking tothe CIA to engineer reality.
(28:45):
And they're in the business ofengineering reality, and you
just have to understand that somuch of our reality is
engineered.
It doesn't mean you walk aroundlike a schizophrenic thinking
that everything's out to getyou, everybody's targeting you.
It just means like you seesomething happen on the news,
you see something happen in yourlife, and you just have one
word.
Just memorize this one word whenyou when you anybody listening,
(29:08):
when you when you hear thatstuff or see that stuff, maybe.
Maybe.
They say, Oh, this happenedtoday because of this one thing.
Maybe.
Just maybe.
You don't have to say there'ssome global cabal and like I
need to drill down to the endand go break into the bohemian
grove and like figure out allthe sh that's going on.
You don't need to do all of it.
(29:28):
Just maybe.
That word can protect you fromso much of the the that's going
on with with engineered reality.
So if you talk to your parents,every news anchor that they
remember.
From the Venezuelanintelligence, maybe right.
SPEAKER_13 (29:43):
You know what maybe
means?
Maybe means doubt.
Doubt, exactly.
Maybe.
Right?
Maybe that's the case.
Maybe you're lying to me.
Maybe you're telling me thetruth.
I'm gonna have to triangulatethis.
I'm gonna need more points ofcontact.
I'm gonna wanna know youroriginal sources.
Because if I got 19 peopletelling me something strong.
True, all citing the same oneguy.
I have one guy telling me what'strue.
(30:04):
I have a bunch of mocking birdstalking to me.
SPEAKER_16 (30:06):
Right.
I guess it's that it's that isthe exactly why I was like, that
letter you read.
I was like, well, do we have anyother thing to back it up?
SPEAKER_13 (30:13):
The reason the
letter, for me, the reason the
letter is relevant is it goesall the way back to 2020 when
almost instantly they're like,Yeah, where'd these machines
come from?
Venezuela?
Oh, Venezuela.
And then all of a sudden it juststarts popping.
And this is where Sydney Powelland Rudy Juliana are like, you
need to get the militaryinvolved, you need to go over
here, you need to get themilitary, you know, you need to
grab these machines, back, youknow, all this stuff.
(30:35):
They obviously figured out thatthe the IP address for what was
manipulating the machines was inSerbia.
You know, they went and did thework and they've revealed it.
Unfortunately, they're spendinglike Patrick Byrne is going on
Emerald Robinson, Alex Jonesevery day, and a couple other
shows, and they're just fillingthe bean.
They're happy.
They're like, truck's got theinfo, we're surrounding
Venezuela, we're finally there.
(30:56):
That's the point, right?
This whole time there's beenthis brewing thing, they figured
it out, but they're not tellingus the truth.
This is about drugs.
Venezuela's been at war with us,they've used the drugs as a
weapon.
That's their private andcorporals as the drug dealers,
right?
The generals and the lieutenantcolonels, they're the ones back
in the room dealing with theelection software to make sure
they're soft on crime drugs,drugs.
(31:17):
So the guys that they'vedeployed into the United States,
literally, this is a militaryoperation, that when they go
into prison that they're takencare of and then they get out
sooner to come back into thefight.
That's one of the other thingsthat I want people to
understand.
When you put a cartel memberinto prison, you're not doing
anything to them.
No, okay, they're deployed.
We we send our soldiers overseasfor 18 months at a time
(31:42):
repeatedly, right?
And that's part of thesacrifice.
They signed up for Trendai Aguaand Cartel de Souls.
They left their family andwhatever, if they had one.
SPEAKER_16 (31:52):
They're already in
prison.
They're in prison on day one.
SPEAKER_13 (31:54):
This is just a
deployment.
SPEAKER_16 (31:55):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (31:56):
You know what I
mean?
And they've got friends inprison that take care of them
and they have funding.
I've seen it.
They get funding from theoutside.
Where's that money coming from?
A lot of money from the cartels,guaranteed, gets funneled
through the BOP just to buycommissary.
It's a very cheap expense for acartel guy.
Oh, you went to prison?
$300 a month pays for that guyand is going to keep him really
happy in prison.
You know what I mean?
(32:16):
And it's just a deployment.
A lot of these guys view it justthat way.
It's a deployment.
The guys that cross the borderand get re-entry charges and get
a year and a day, get out in youknow, eight months.
It's like it's just part of thegig.
SPEAKER_18 (32:27):
Yep.
SPEAKER_13 (32:27):
Now, one of the
things that's also going on over
at the White House, excuse me,not the White House, is the
Pentagon, is they've completelyrevamped their media reporting.
Are you and we talked about thisbriefly, like for minutes, five,
six weeks ago.
So the Pentagon kicked out APNews, Washington Post, New York
Times, kicked them all out andopened the door for new
registrations.
(32:48):
And so now we have a bunch ofindependent media in the White
in the Pentagon with presspasses that are official
Pentagon correspondents.
People like Laura Loomer is nowsitting in the Pentagon getting
brief getting you know mediabriefings.
Matt Gates is now an officialPentagon reporter.
Okay.
Now remember, most of your TVanchors, many, many, many of
(33:11):
them have CIA mockingbirdconnections, willing or
unwillingly.
And so MS Bow, formerly known asMSDNC, formerly known as MSNBC,
Morning Joe and Mika had this tosay.
SPEAKER_20 (33:26):
And you don't have
the major American newspapers in
there.
And he actually thought hethought he could get away with
it.
He thought he could get awaywith doing whatever he wanted to
do inside the Pentagon becausehe has a news, he has a news
source run by a Chinesereligious cult reporting on him
(33:46):
instead of the Wall StreetJournal.
SPEAKER_09 (33:48):
Laura Loomer has a
desk in the press room at the
Pentagon now.
Not the Washington Post.
Washington Post delivering thesestories.
SPEAKER_01 (33:56):
All right.
Um on that note, uh joining usnow, MS Now political analyst
and contributing writer to theAtlantic, Eugene Robinson.
SPEAKER_13 (34:09):
So we have Laura
Loomer sitting at the Pentagon
desk.
We have to get our news from herinstead of the Washington Post.
Basically, what Hegset finallydetermined was you guys are
doing propaganda work formilitary contractors in the
Pentagon.
So he basically cleaned house.
Matt Gates is in there.
He wore his representative MattGaetz jacket, and that was mess
(34:32):
all the people's representativejacket.
He's like, I worked with theseguys for eight years.
I'm gonna wear the jacketanywhere I want.
He was also asked, um, MattGates at one point said
something pretty derogatoryabout people that go to abortion
clinics, women that go toabortion clinics.
So, you know, for better orworse, this is what we now have
reporting on military news.
SPEAKER_25 (34:52):
Is it safe to say
that based off of your comments,
you're suggesting that thesewomen at these abortion rallies
are ugly and overweight?
Yes.
What do you say to people?
SPEAKER_16 (35:00):
Okay, so we've we
have you not seen that it goes.
They couldn't change the cameraangle to get that lady on the
back.
SPEAKER_25 (35:09):
Is it safe to say
that based off of your comments,
you're suggesting that thesewomen at these abortion rallies
are ugly and overweight?
Yes.
What do you say to people whothink that those comments are
offensive?
SPEAKER_30 (35:20):
Be offended.
SPEAKER_13 (35:22):
All right.
SPEAKER_30 (35:23):
Hot take.
SPEAKER_13 (35:24):
Anyways, it's pretty
funny.
Sometimes you gotta shame them.
All right.
So that's that's good news.
I mean, I like this.
I liked that I saw thehighlights yesterday of Laura
Loomer and Matt Gates and acouple other independent media
sitting in the Pentagon askingquestions.
They need to be cross-examined.
Now, the funny thing about it isbecause of the way Trump has
staffed everything, the peopleanswering questions are also
(35:45):
former like influencers.
So it's almost like friendsanswering questions of friends.
But the good thing is they allwant to get to the bottom of it,
right?
This is the new generation ofpeople.
These are most everybody that Isaw there's like 40 or younger.
They're my generation.
I became oh man.
In college, I got kind ofblackpilled.
And one of the things that kindof blackpilled me was this
(36:07):
mockingbird media concept.
The fact that you had so manypeople that give us our news and
the narrative that were CIAoperatives.
And it was like, oh duh.
I mean, it was like they hadthese congressional hearings.
How many people are members ofthe media?
Well, all of them in studentgroups and we have student
papers, like basically anythingthat's considered media and
influential, we're we're we'repushing an agenda through it.
(36:30):
And the Senate was like, That'sso bad of you.
You shouldn't do that.
And they're like, Yeah, you'reright, we shouldn't.
But it worked.
They never stopped.
You know, there was noresolution telling them to stop.
And it was the same thing withMK Ultra, by the way.
All this revelation, they wentand burned half, literally, the
guy, the CIA director, I can'tremember his name, but he went
to the the church hearings, wentback to the CIA, and he ordered
(36:52):
80% of their files burned.
Burned, destroyed, right?
So we don't even know the extentof MK Ultra, but we do know one
thing.
They never agreed to stop doingit.
Okay, they never agreed to stopdoing it.
Uh, it is also reallyinteresting, too, with the
Venezuelan connection.
One of the things he says isthere's politicians that are
actively on the cartel'spayroll, including some of the
(37:13):
prominent anti-cartel,anti-Venezuela, anti-Cuban lobby
that they've been co-opted.
This is a tale as old as time,right?
Who's Boeing gonna send theircorporate spies to?
The regulator, the regulator,right?
This is like tail as old astime.
That's why our founding fathersbuilt a system that's supposed
(37:34):
to have a lot of checks andbalances to try to sniff out
those conflicts of interest.
Some of our some of ourindustries have been entirely
captured, regulatory capture,right?
Pharmaceutical, defenseindustry, entirely captured.
Uh, the homeless industrialcomplex, dang Phil, Sherfills
have captured in Seattle,Florida, and San Francisco, or
not Florida, uh, Minnesota andSan Francisco, you know what I
(37:55):
mean?
Totally captured industries.
So exposure of it is really allyou can do, right?
These corrupt politicians thatyou honestly look at and go, how
could you, how could you imagineall the politicians that are all
in on the double tap hoax thatyou're you need to be taking
these guys as prisoners of war.
Why are we blowing up boats andnot interdicting them?
(38:17):
When I hear the Venezuelan guyssay there's people in your
country that are paid by thecartels, I have this vision of
this short, curly-hairedoptometrist named Rand Paul.
It makes no sense why he'sagainst this.
I understand he's a libertarian,but he knows interdiction
doesn't work.
He knows it doesn't work.
He knows that these we're at warwith these guys, he knows
(38:39):
they're killing Kentuckians,right?
So why is he pulling the, youknow, I'm just against war
generally card?
Is it his shtick?
Could be.
He has historically been a longanti-war advocate, but sometimes
you start asking these guys, doyou ever defend your nation?
You know what I mean?
Or are you just kind of a rollover until it's over kind of
guy?
SPEAKER_16 (38:58):
Or can we get
straight to the point?
SPEAKER_13 (38:59):
Are you on their
payroll?
Are you on their payroll?
Yeah, it really makes youwonder.
Now, when it comes to theSomalis up in Minnesota,
apparently their attorneygeneral was on the payroll.
SPEAKER_11 (39:20):
In those recordings,
the attorney general.
SPEAKER_26 (39:24):
Stage your point of
order.
It is the policy and theamendment.
Representative Niska.
SPEAKER_11 (39:37):
Thank you, Mr.
Speaker.
The attorney general was askedin those recordings to use his
authority to protect businessesunder investigation for
wrongdoing.
And rather than distance himselfor remain neutral to allow the
legal process to unfold, heresponded in those recordings,
of course.
I'm here to help.
Mr.
SPEAKER_28 (39:54):
Speaker, point of
parliamentary inquiry.
SPEAKER_30 (39:58):
State your point of
parliamentary inquiry.
SPEAKER_28 (40:00):
Mr.
Speaker, there was a point oforder, and I didn't hear a
ruling or any resolution of thepoint of order.
Was there a resolution to it?
SPEAKER_30 (40:10):
I'll remind the body
that there was no ruling made by
the speaker as to the point oforder that was just stated.
Representative Niskan.
SPEAKER_11 (40:19):
Thank you, Mr.
Speaker.
Construction.
The attorney general in thoserecordings uh even urged the
individuals, let's go fightthese people.
He was offered campaigncontributions during that
meeting, uh, contributions thathe later accepted.
SPEAKER_13 (40:34):
Okay, there you go.
So you got Keith Ellison, theguy who holds up the Antifa
book.
It's just an idea, right?
In Minnesota, who's on tapeaccepting bribes.
Right?
Now, this Somali stuff is justblowing up.
Uh Somali warlord received$28million in Maine care funds
while building a paramilitaryforce.
(40:56):
Abdullah Ali was paid over$28million from Maine care, Maine's
version of Medicaid, fundedjointly by the state and federal
government while running forpresident of Jubaland and
funding a paramilitaryparamilitary force in Somalia.
Ali used the funds raised in theU.S.
to purchase weapons, munitions,and supplies for his fighters.
That's why your proctology examwas so expensive.
(41:19):
They were really screwing you upthe ass, right?
Man, man, I thought we weretalking about Minnesota.
You know who's next on the list?
Ohio.
Right?
If there's a Somali in yourneighborhood, check their
financials.
SPEAKER_16 (41:34):
Man.
SPEAKER_13 (41:35):
These guys didn't
bring wealth over from them with
from Somalia.
If you've got a Somalian that'sfirst generation here driving a
BMW or something like that,check his Snap card.
You know what I mean?
This is wild what's going onhere.
Now, uh Tom Emmer, is thatright?
Tom, yeah, Tom Emmer fromMinnesota, he railed on Governor
(41:56):
Waltz.
SPEAKER_21 (41:57):
I'm just grateful
that you're reporting it.
And the reason that it's gettingreported is because Donald
Trump, President Trump, finallymade this a national issue when
he sent out a truth a coupleweeks ago.
We've been trying to sound thealarm in Minnesota for more than
three years.
Everybody's focused right now ona billion dollars plus in fraud
that has been stolen fromMinnesota taxpayers, and a lot
(42:19):
of it allegedly has been sent toAl Shabaab back in Somalia, a uh
a terrorist group.
But you know what we're nottalking about today?
Do you realize that uh, youknow, it's not that all Somalis
are committing crimes, but 80%of the crimes being committed in
the Twin Cities in Minnesota arebeing committed by Somalis.
Huh?
Huh.
80% of the crime are beingcommitted by one group.
SPEAKER_13 (42:42):
But don't talk about
it.
SPEAKER_21 (42:44):
It's just individual
choices.
And by the way, uh the FBI hasbeen investigating Somali gangs
in the Twin Cities now formonths.
Uh I am grateful that PresidentTrump has raised this to a
national issue.
This is uh it's it's kind oflike uh a small version of what
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris weredoing at our southern border for
(43:04):
the last four years.
Tim Wallace is as corrupt as theand incompetent as the day uh is
long.
You got a billion dollars offraud.
It's you got the largest fraudcase in the pandemic fraud case
in the country.
SPEAKER_13 (43:18):
I'm just he went on
Fox News and had a similar
tirade.
Now, you know, Ilan Omar, she'sfighting back.
She just cannot believe howstupid Americans are.
These people are just idiots.
SPEAKER_23 (43:30):
I I really, you
know, I'm I'm at the point where
it's become really hard to havean intellectual debate with any
of these people because thelevel of stupidity that they are
displaying every single day isfrankly embarrassing, not just
um in in Congress, but as asAmericans.
And the fact that these peopleare allowed to say uh just the
(43:51):
the most ridiculous things uhtells you that the the dumbing
of the United States has arrivedbecause how else do we get Trump
presidency again?
SPEAKER_16 (44:02):
What is a video?
SPEAKER_13 (44:05):
Ma'am, ma'am, um
ma'am, the Somalis are stealing
from us blind.
Well, you guys are dumb.
Well, how do you think we endedup with a Trump president?
Well, because he spoke outagainst people just like you.
SPEAKER_22 (44:20):
They have a
representative, Ilhan Omar, who
they say married her brother.
It's true, it's a fraud.
She tries to deny it now, butyou can't really deny it because
you know, it just happened.
She shouldn't be allowed to be acongresswoman, and I'm sure
people are looking at that, andshe should be throwing the hell
out of our country.
(44:40):
And most of those people, theyhave destroyed Minnesota.
Okay.
Minnesota, you have anincompetent governor, you have a
crooked governor, he's crookedas hell, but he's incompetent.
Uh Waltz is he should beashamed.
That beautiful land, thatbeautiful state.
And all they do is complain,complain, complain.
You have her, she's alwaystalking about the constitution
(45:02):
provides me with uh go back toyour own country and figure out
your constitution.
All she does is complain aboutthis country, and without this
country, she would not be invery good shape, she probably
wouldn't be alive right now.
So Somalia is considered by manyto be the worst country on
earth.
I don't know.
I've never I haven't been there,I won't be there anytime soon.
(45:26):
I hope.
But uh what Somalia, what theSomalian people have done to
Minnesota is is not evenbelievable.
It's not even believable.
And a lot of it starts with thegovernor.
SPEAKER_13 (45:42):
A lot of it starts
with the governor, and enabled
by people like Elon Omar, andfrankly, Tom Emmer, he doesn't
get a pass in this either, forsure.
Now, Elon Elon Omar is sweatingbullets.
So she this is yesterday.
She was on CNN, and uh turns outshe's aware that the
investigation is expanding.
First of all, federalprosecutors say 59 people body
(46:03):
language is critical on thisone, micro expressions, smile on
her face, the insincerity of howshe says this stuff.
SPEAKER_04 (46:11):
Okay, pay attention
to investigating these schemes
so far.
Americans at large stole tens ofbillions of forms of aid during
the pandemic all over thecountry.
Minnesota's fraud scandal standsout, according to federal
auditors.
What are you hearing frominvestigators right now?
SPEAKER_23 (46:27):
Well, I've been
following the cases uh closely
as they've gone through um thecourts, uh, and we know that
there are more indictments umpossibly coming.
Uh, I think that number might goup to 73, is what I'm hearing.
SPEAKER_04 (46:40):
Okay.
Can you shed any light on why uhthe fraud got so out of control
in Minnesota?
SPEAKER_13 (46:48):
I think what
happened um is that you know,
when when you I think we broughta bunch of degenerate low IQ
people, statistically andfactually, from Somalia that had
no example of a properly runcountry, and we dumped them into
Minnesota, and then we enabledthem to rob us blind.
SPEAKER_23 (47:05):
I that's then we
gave a bunch of money.
You're oftentimes relying onthird parties to be able to
facilitate.
And I just think that a lot ofthe COVID um programs that were
set up, uh, they were set up soquickly that a lot of the
guardrails did not get created.
SPEAKER_04 (47:26):
Now, obviously,
whatever the ethnic group, the
actions of a few dozen shouldnot impugn an entire community
of thousands of people.
SPEAKER_13 (47:34):
Not when you're
stealing billions of dollars and
the whole community'sbenefiting.
That's not how it works.
Pony Boy goes, I love Miller.
Biden's ruled on camera.
Yeah, he did.
Uh they're talking about astutter.
Keyword says he allowed.
What does she mean that they'reallowed to say anything they
want?
She's talking about Ilan Omar.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you're supposed to beable to say anything you want.
(47:54):
I don't know.
Okay, so we played a little clipyesterday where on the PBD
broadcast the guy was revealing,like, hey, that guy that went
and shot the uh the uh HouseSpeaker Melissa Holman Hortman,
the Speaker Emeritus.
You know, remember that therewas only one Democrat that voted
to end healthcare for illegalsin Tim Waltz's run, Minnesota?
Who was it?
Melissa Hortman.
(48:15):
She was murdered by Vance Boltuh Boltzler, who claimed Waltz
also wanted him to kill AmyKlobuchark.
Anyways, Jonathan Turley kind ofseconds that it's like, you
know, has anybody looked intothis whole Tim Waltz told me to
do it allegation?
I don't think so.
Oh yeah.
Now, with the Somalis who'vebeen allowed to come into this
(48:36):
country just almost unvetted,right?
We also find out thatAfghanistans came in unvetted,
but some of them were actuallyvetted and then waived in.
SPEAKER_29 (48:44):
It turns out that
the Biden administration very
quietly created an exemption formany low-level right for this
Taliban.
You heard me right.
Taliban civil servants wereallowed to come to the United
States, hundreds of them.
This news comes in the wake ofthe Afghan national was charged
with attacking the two NationalGuardsmen and killing one of
them in DC, right near the WhiteHouse.
So how did it work?
(49:05):
Well, the Biden-led Departmentof Homeland Security and the
State Department announced inJune 2022 that it had put
together new exemptions forpurportedly vetted applicants
who would otherwise be blockedfrom the United States,
including some former Talibangovernment workers.
I'm not making this up.
It's in writing.
The policy allowed hundreds ofAfghans to come to the United
States when they would haveotherwise been barred due to
(49:27):
terrorism-related ties.
Inadmissible standards.
They were set aside so thatthese uh folks could come into
the country.
Another giant glaring securityrole.
Now, the exemptions were forAfghans who had worked as civil
servants under the Taliban bothbefore 9-11 and after August
2021, when the government felland the Taliban retook control
(49:50):
of the Afghanistan country andits government.
SPEAKER_13 (49:54):
So, yeah, you know,
we just waved them in.
It's like uh another thing, notonly did we have the pipe bomber
arrested about 90, about 100 andyou know, what is it, 115, 20
minutes ago, something likethat.
Still don't see his name poppingup on anything trending.
But today we are also expectinga new Letitia James indictment.
SPEAKER_10 (50:14):
Again, we just got
some news, and you probably
haven't seen this because itjust broke.
Um our own colleague, Kendalaneyand MS Now, that uh Tish James
is going to be re-indictedtomorrow, it appears, in
Norfolk, Virginia.
With an assistant U.S.
attorney, I think, being broughtin from Missouri to handle the
charges.
Um, her indictment, of course,was thrown out because the judge
found that Lindsay Halligan, uh,who had been brought in
(50:35):
specifically to indict her inComey, uh, was not actually
constitutionally appointed, andtherefore the indictment was
thrown out, although withoutprejudice, so they can
re-indict.
Um, this appears to be one ofthe areas that they there is
quite a bit of focus, which isto get revenge on who they ever
they want to get.
SPEAKER_13 (50:53):
Oh, that's what it's
all about.
Let's get revenge on whoeverthey want.
Now, they did have to bring anattorney out of Missouri to come
do this.
Missouri is the center of theconservative universe.
A lot of people think it'sFlorida.
It's not Florida, it's Missouri.
Your most populist, solidconservative attorneys, the
think tank of conservatism, trueMAGA conservatism, is clearly
(51:14):
centered right on Missouri.
Schmidt, Hawley, two of the bestpopulist MAGA uh senators there
are, they are not acolytes orsycophants of Donald Trump.
They're legit populists, right?
Um, Andrew Bailey, who's now thedeputy director of the FBI,
co-director or whatever,alongside Bon Gino, he was the
attorney general there.
Schmidt was the attorney generalthere prior.
(51:36):
Ed Martin's coming out of there,Mark McCloskey.
You've got a whole bunch ofthem.
It is, it is like, you know, theRepublican mafia runs Missouri.
You know, it's not it's notbeing run by Democrats.
So uh Missouri is a very bigpowerhouse state when it comes
to American populism.
Florida has a lot of goodconservatives coming out of it
too, but they're kind of thatboomer conservative.
(51:57):
Like, I don't care if you'regay, stay off my lawn and keep
my home equity intact.
Missouri is a little bit morelike, hey, let's go to church
this Sunday, you know.
SPEAKER_16 (52:05):
I always picture
Florida as a bunch of retired
New Yorkers that are justlooking for a tax shelter.
SPEAKER_13 (52:11):
There's a lot of
that.
There's a lot of Cubans.
Now, again, Florida's a very redstate right now.
It's no risk of flipping blue inthe next cycle or two, right?
And neither is Missouri, really.
But Missouri is that homegrownfarmer populist type of
conservatism, right?
The true peasants, I would lookat it.
I look at Florida as those areeconomic conservatives, you
(52:32):
know, like you said, avoidingtaxes in New York, moving down
to Florida, that kind of stuff.
Um, one of the things DonaldTrump did yesterday was he
pardoned Representative Henry uhKohler, C-U-E-L-L-A-R.
I'm not exactly sure how topronounce his name.
So he was indicted under theObama administration.
He stood up against the openborders and he's like, I'm from
Texas, we got to close ourborders.
(52:53):
This is not good.
Almost immediately, he wasindicted for um allegedly
accepting roughly 600,000 inbribes from Azur Bajani Energy
Company and a Mexican bank.
Right.
So the Obama administration cameafter him.
He was getting closer and closerto his trial.
He was one of the threeDemocrats that was currently
under indictment.
(53:13):
Well, Trump put out a coupletruth socials and he's like,
listen, he stood up against hisparty, Biden administration
targeted him, and so he pardonedhim kind of suddenly.
Okay.
And he posted a letter thatKohler's children sent to him
basically saying, look, Bidenweaponized the DOJ against our
dad.
I know he's a Democrat, but it'sbecause he stood up against the
open border stuff.
(53:34):
Well, this pardon came down, andall of a sudden everybody's
like, What?
SPEAKER_06 (53:39):
Do you agree with
the president that the Biden
administration targeted you onpurpose with these parties?
Absolutely.
SPEAKER_24 (53:44):
Uh absolutely.
You know, we looked up how manytimes I got on national TV and
national media.
It was over 150 times.
So I was very critical of theadministration, the Biden
administration.
I tried very hard to get them tounderstand the border.
I lived there, uh, they justwouldn't uh take it.
(54:04):
And after that, I startedcriticizing them over 150 times
national media, doesn't includethe local media.
The timing uh of this was verysuspect.
Uh, you know, uh 40 days beforean election.
Uh if you recall, I was havingthat uh uh primary race where
they spent$20 million againstme.
(54:25):
Uh and uh more things that we'lltalk about that is makes it
very, very suspect.
SPEAKER_13 (54:31):
Yeah, they targeted
their own.
How do you think they get themto all vote in a block?
It's because if you step out ofline even a little bit, you
could be targeted by aweaponized DOJ.
And then I'm sure he was dealingwith all kinds of shenanigans.
Right here locally, you run foroffice, you get bullet casings
in your mailbox.
You know, and if they're doingthat locally, imagine what
they're doing at the nationallevel, right?
(54:51):
Tar targeting him.
Now, I don't know if he took abribe or not, but it sounds like
it's standard practice in DC.
You know what I mean?
It sounds like it's atarget-rich environment for
bribe takers.
Right.
So I don't know.
He was on with Brett Bearfurther explaining himself.
I would not be surprised if thisguy ends up flipping parties.
Wouldn't surprise me one bit atthis stage.
Now, did Trump I don't from whatI understand, there was zero
(55:13):
communication between him andthe White House.
He wasn't asking for a pardon orcommutation or anything.
It was kind of petitioned on byhis children and other people.
SPEAKER_24 (55:21):
But either way, you
can see he feels a lot lighter
right now.
Look, I'm a conservativeDemocrat and I work across the
lines, and I'll I want to seethe president succeed, President
Trump.
Uh, and it's good for the forthe country, and I will work
with anybody.
Now, we might have somedifferences, but but if I can
work with them, I will work withPresident Trump.
(55:43):
But you're gonna file as aDemocrat in that district.
SPEAKER_17 (55:46):
That is correct.
SPEAKER_24 (55:47):
And and I and as I
told some of my Republican
friends, I think I vote betterthan some of the Republicans in
the caucus.
But you do want the Democrats towin the majority.
SPEAKER_17 (55:59):
Oh yes.
SPEAKER_13 (56:00):
Oh uh, maybe not.
I might flip if they win themajority.
Maybe the red Times he knows.
SPEAKER_24 (56:07):
He knows how dirty
his party is.
SPEAKER_13 (56:09):
Yeah, he knows.
SPEAKER_17 (56:15):
Do you think the
president expects something from
this?
You know, for the people who saythere has to be some quid pro
quo, there has to be something.
Like he expects a vote, heexpects a change in party,
something happened.
That's what the critics outthere would look at this and
say, Look, of course, that'swhat the critics are gonna say.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_24 (56:32):
Do you think you
expects something?
No, look, you know, the thepresident, look, I I really felt
for him on some of the chargesthey filed against him.
I think it was very unfair.
Anyone that goes through thisweaponization like they did on
President Trump and certainly onmyself, uh, you know, I don't
want to wish anybody to gothrough this type of
(56:52):
weaponization.
SPEAKER_17 (56:54):
You had problems
with your Democratic colleagues
on the issue of immigrationnumerous times and you fought
that.
And I will still probably.
But how do you think yourDemocratic colleagues are gonna
accept this, talk about this?
You heard a couple of themthere.
SPEAKER_24 (57:06):
Well, you know, uh I
I think uh Hakeem uh uh you know
was was fine.
Uh Lloyd Doggett, I love LloydDoggett, but Lloyd Doggett is
Lloyd Doggett.
Uh and uh and that's all I gottasay about Lloyd Doggett.
We had differences uh before.
Uh too bad he didn't sayanything nice uh about it.
Uh but uh but again, look, thethe liberal democrats are still
(57:28):
gonna have a problem with mebecause they, you know, some of
them don't believe inbipartisanship.
I I work with Republicans.
In fact, in my elections, thereason I win is because I get
the independents and I get themodern Republicans a crossover,
and I will get that again.
SPEAKER_17 (57:44):
But just two more
things.
One is if you want the Democratsto have the majority, you know
that the Democrats really willtry to push back and overturn a
lot of the president's policies.
SPEAKER_24 (57:56):
Well, you know, it
depends.
You know, there are some thingsuh that I agree with the
president.
Like, for example, if you wantto deport uh criminals, I'm with
you.
I'll stand with you.
I uh I support detention betsand all that.
Uh but you know, issues liketerrorists, I think we need to
be a little careful and reviewcertain things.
(58:17):
So there'll be some things thatI have supported the
administration on.
Uh and uh, you know, it justdepends.
I don't want to go through alaundry of things, it just
depends on the issue on thecase.
SPEAKER_13 (58:28):
Pony boy, I'm
curious what you think about
this guy, right?
He's he's I don't know if he'sclose to your district or not,
Texas is a big place.
Yeah, but what do you thinkabout him, right?
He's a he's a Hispanic American.
SPEAKER_16 (58:40):
He's a conservative
Democrat.
How many of those are there outthere?
SPEAKER_13 (58:44):
There used to be a
lot of them, right?
There used to be a lot of them.
I used to consider myself aconservative Democrat.
I mean, like, truly, truly, likeI don't.
SPEAKER_16 (58:53):
But how many are
left?
SPEAKER_13 (58:55):
It's so difficult
because you say Democrat and you
associate, you know, whatevernow.
But 20 years ago when I was incollege, you what you wanted me
to get on board with JohnMcCain?
You know, gone, man.
Like, no, I'm not doing that.
Hope and change, hope andchange.
You know, we all have to learn alesson from time to time.
So it sounds to me like he'sbasically saying, I'm gonna
cross over the aisle, I'm justgonna keep the D in front of my
(59:16):
name.
Well, he's wearing the remote.
He's gonna have to probably havea better voting record with
Donald Trump than Thomas Massey.
SPEAKER_17 (59:20):
Yeah.
You know how this processusually has worked, that there's
a long process, there's a apardon system, there's a a group
that weighs in on it.
Um how did this think?
How do you think, do you thinkthere was a process here, or do
you think that that thepresident he obviously has the
constitutional authority, butpeople who question the process?
SPEAKER_24 (59:43):
Look, I'm not gonna
second guess the precedent
except to say to the president,President Trump, thank you.
SPEAKER_17 (59:48):
Yeah, that's the
message.
SPEAKER_13 (59:50):
That's it.
That's all you need.
Thank you.
Yeah, thank you, thank you.
There was an injustice done,even if there was a real crime.
This is one of the things Ithink Nietzsche said.
He said the criminal, theCriminal cannot see the gravity
of his crime because he's beenthrough the system.
Like everything that thecriminal does to society, the
system does in spades back tothem.
Right.
They can't they cannot feel badfor their crime because they
(01:00:12):
can't get over feeling bad forwhat's being done for them, done
to them.
You know, now there's some truthto that.
Again, I don't disagree with theconcept of jails and prisons at
all.
Okay, uh, so that that waspretty brilliant.
We're gonna listen to one lastthing on this topic.
This is Stephen Miller, who isour black pundit who speaks to
the sports world.
This guy is extremelyinfluential in the black
(01:00:35):
community.
Uh, when I was in prison, theblacks, the blacks would watch
this guy's show on the differentsports channels.
I don't even know.
Is he an ESPN guy?
I don't even know where he wherehe calls home.
Now he's got straight shooterwith Stephen A.
Smith with the American flagthing with the thing.
He's clearly getting ready forsome kind of political run.
And he's he's found a lot oftraction when he makes political
commentary in addition to hissports commentary.
(01:00:57):
Well, he is commenting on thispardon, and he's like, Trump is
smart.
SPEAKER_03 (01:01:01):
Democrats look when
they now try to attack Trump
because they say he pays noattention to that.
How do they look now when theysay he doesn't provide
leadership?
How do they say, how do theysound now when they accuse him
of lawlessness?
SPEAKER_13 (01:01:19):
I mean, at some
point, what's significant about
this list, if you're apolitician and you're getting
laced up by what you believe isa corrupt FBI or a corrupt
situation, because he pardonedGeorge Santos, he's not even on
this list, right?
SPEAKER_16 (01:01:33):
Oh, yeah, he is,
he's right there.
SPEAKER_13 (01:01:34):
Did I miss Oh, I I'm
sorry, I missed it.
Right.
Trump's got your back.
Show some loyalty, break withyour party, Trump's got your
back.
SPEAKER_16 (01:01:44):
Yeah, right.
SPEAKER_13 (01:01:44):
That that is a huge
him pardoning this guy creates a
riff in the party because thisguy's got at least one loyalty
to Trump.
Unlikely to impeach.
You know what I mean?
If that's the political game youplay, so he took a bribe or
didn't take a bribe, who cares?
I mean, we care, but who cares?
So it's pretty significant thatTrump's doing this.
(01:02:04):
Biden didn't do this, they lettheir guys rot.
You know who's still sitting injail?
Menendez and his wife.
SPEAKER_16 (01:02:10):
I'm noticing one
name up there, uh, Rod Black.
Yeah.
Where's that?
Where how do I recognize thatname?
SPEAKER_13 (01:02:19):
He was the governor
of Illinois.
Uh he was on the uh apprenticewith Trump.
Uh but he spent nine, nine orwhat, ten years in prison on a
20-year sentence.
Yeah.
Trump pardon.
He's the one who came out andsaid, I'm a Trumplican.
Or a Trumpan, or he says I'm aTrump Trump Trump uh Trumprat,
(01:02:40):
Trump crat or whatever.
SPEAKER_03 (01:02:41):
The man credit.
He's shrewd as hell.
He really is.
I mean, he is giving theDemocratic Party lessons.
Lessons.
I mean, school is incessant onhow to manipulate minds and coax
(01:03:03):
folks into thinking along thelines of his way of thinking.
You can't sit up there and talkabout how everything is partisan
when the man sits up there andlets you off the hook and you're
on the opposite party.
Now, granted, that samerepresentative fuller was the
same guy that spoke out againstthe Biden administration when it
came to immigration issues andour borders.
So, again, that falls in linewith Trump, and we get that
(01:03:25):
part, but he's still a Democrat.
He's still somebody if we'rewatching and paying attention to
the politics that have beenpervasive in our country over
the last decade or so.
Everybody's voting along partylines.
SPEAKER_13 (01:03:38):
Now all of He has
the Capitol building in his
background and not a basketballcourt.
SPEAKER_03 (01:03:43):
All of a sudden,
when that man has to stand up
and vote on certain issues, areyou sure he's not gonna vote in
favor of Trump?
If he wins re-election and heends up back to being a
representative, are you surehe's gonna side with the
Democrats?
How much support do you need?
What have I been saying aboutthe Democrats?
(01:04:04):
Get away from the far left, movetowards the center.
Trump beat him to it.
That's what he's doing.
That's what he's doing.
It's brilliant.
Absolutely, positively brilliantpolitics.
SPEAKER_13 (01:04:23):
Nothing compares.
Nothing compares.
Trump's taking the middle.
He's gonna take theseconservative Democrats because
they're gonna be like, look, I'mnot that.
I'm not Mandami.
I'm not that.
I'm a conservative Democrat,right?
I mean, I'll let you still haveyour abortion, but let's close
that border.
It's gonna be interesting.
All right, guys, it's time forus to jump over in private here
(01:04:43):
for a second.
Hopefully, by the time we're inprivate, I'm gonna keep checking
on the scaffold, or not thescaffold man, the uh the pipe
bomber.
He should be arraigned anyminute now.
Um, sounds like it's a man fromNew York.
Apparently, they had this guypinned a couple years ago and
then they let him off the hookand now they're back around.
It's got um anarchistideologies.
I don't know.
(01:05:04):
We'll see.
Hmm.
I'm highly concerned.
Highly concerned this is anarrative.
Let's get an Antifa guy to havedropped the pipe bomb.
Very well could be true, right?
But how do you get 90 somethingpercent gate analysis and get
the Intel people to be like,yeah, that's it.
This the coincidence, it'salmost too much.
SPEAKER_16 (01:05:22):
Well, I remember the
very first split second I saw
the video, I was like, that'sgotta be a woman.
SPEAKER_13 (01:05:27):
Walking with the
yeah, yeah.
We'll find out, we'll see ifthey admit to it or whatever the
case is.
But I unfortunately,unfortunately, my trust in the
system is so low.
Like, I'm not fully convincedTyler Robinson killed Charlie
Kirk.
And I'm not, and I don't followCandace Owens or any of those
people.
I'm just like, dude, there's toomuch.
(01:05:47):
That's just too funny, it's toohairy, you know.
And of course, in the judicialprocess, you don't get a lot of
evidence put out until trial,allegedly, right?
Usually stuff gets leaked outwhen you're dead to rights.
SPEAKER_16 (01:05:58):
Well, I've never
seen so many crime scenes get so
much attention andreconstruction so fast.
I just couldn't believe my eyes.
SPEAKER_13 (01:06:06):
And it's and it's
the same thing that happened
with Tyler with uh crooks whenhe shot Trump.
They're up there pre- it's likethis doesn't happen.
And the FBI doesn't do that,they hire third parties.
Why is the FBI agent up theredoing that?
Because he's under the controlof the agency, he's not gonna,
you know, say, oh, I was therewas more bullet casings than
they counted, or you know,there's not gonna be any of
that.
So it is very suspicious.
(01:06:27):
Here we are.
We wait.
I'm glad I got my pardon.
It's over for me.
I just couldn't sit back andwatch.
All right, so we're gonna bejumping over to the private, and
we're gonna be talking, we aregonna be talking more G6.
We've got some statements byDonald Trump, and uh hopefully
by the end we are going to knowwho the pipe bomber is.
If not, we'll definitely knowtomorrow.
One last thing before we go,Ron.
One last thing.
SPEAKER_16 (01:06:47):
Also, please chat in
the premium.
We want to understand what theexperience is like for you.
SPEAKER_13 (01:06:52):
Yes, if you're
sticking around on premium, let
us know you're in there.
That'll also let us know kind ofwho's sticking around, right?
Right, because usually in the bythe time we get to you know,
toward the end of the show, alot of you guys are you know
doing your thing or whatever.
Yep.
So, anyways, uh, we'd appreciatethat.
Last thing before we go, DonaldTrump yesterday got rid of all
of Biden's green deal stuff forcar regulations for exhaust
(01:07:13):
standards and things like that.
And he also opened the door forcompanies like Honda and Toyota
that make all these cool carsoverseas.
You don't really travel overseasvery often.
No, but when you go overseas,you'll see these cars, you're
like, Man, I wish we had thatthere, like small trucks,
sometimes big trucks, dieselToyotas, like all these
high-lexes.
Yeah, all these cool rigs.
And Donald Trump's like, whycan't we have those here?
(01:07:34):
Well, because we don't allowthem here.
SPEAKER_22 (01:07:36):
He's like, I'll fix
that.
The other things we're doing areseparate from this meeting, but
I think everybody would agreewith it.
Uh, if you go to Japan, where Ijust left, and if you go to
South Korea and Malaysia andother countries, they have a
very small car, sort of like theBeetle used to be with the
Volkswagen.
They're very small, they'rereally cute.
(01:07:58):
And I said, How would that do inthis country?
And everyone seems to thinkgood, but you're not allowed to
build them.
And I've authorized thesecretary to immediately approve
the production of those cars.
So you'll be able to buy theyreally are they're actually some
of them are really beautiful,actually.
If you take a look, uh Honda, uhuh some of the Japanese
(01:08:20):
companies do a beautiful job,but we're not allowed to make
them in this country.
And I think uh you're gonna dovery well with those cars.
So we're gonna approve thosecars.
Would you like to say somethingabout that?
SPEAKER_13 (01:08:31):
We're not just about
the other things we're doing,
etc.
So that's great.
That's actually like a big deal.
You want to talk about freedomof choice?
You can have any car you want,just build it here.
Oh, that's so much better thanthe regulations of size and
everything.
So that's pretty awesome.
Uh, basically, car manufacturersare gonna be able to make cars
that they believe they can sell.
There's no longer any fuelstandards, consumption
(01:08:51):
standards, or anything likethat.
People are not attracted toHallelujah.
Yeah, people don't want vehiclesthat blow off a lot of stinky
smoke and stuff like that.
The market won't support it,right?
But what the market will supportis very high gas mileage
vehicles, like these little carsyou're talking about.
They get like 80 miles to thegallon, and they're not hybrids.
SPEAKER_16 (01:09:07):
I'm wondering if the
uh problem has been that there's
uh these cars are probably verylight, they probably have
problems with safety standards.
They probably, you know, thecurrent safety standards that
we're they're forced to buildto.
SPEAKER_13 (01:09:20):
Uh it's possible,
but they allow them in Europe
and they have even higher safetystandards there.
So these things are basicallyairbags.
Okay, when you get in, like Ithink that might have been the
reason back in the Geo Metrodays, but I think at this point,
like smart cars are considered,you know, they they meet crash
test standards.
Sure.
I don't think they're waivingthose standards.
It's almost exclusively dealingwith the emission standards,
(01:09:42):
okay, which causes them to beheavier cars, more back pressure
on the engines, more fuelconsumption to get the lower
emission standard, so it'scounterproductive.
You know what I mean?
I think they're basically sayingjust make a lightweight, fuel
efficient car.
So that'll be great.
All right, now we are jumpingover into private.
Okay, while we're doing this, Ijust want to I gotta I gotta
(01:10:04):
know.
Is this guy did yet?
Scroll through here.
I don't see anything.
Gosh, it's amazing.
Donald Trump was asked, this isa while back when he was um
still running for president.
He was talking about J6, and youknow, there's a couple figures
that he'd like to know about.
SPEAKER_22 (01:10:19):
Whatever happened to
Scaffold Man, you know who
scaffold man was?
He stood on a scaffold tellingeverybody to go, and nothing
happened to him.
Whatever happened to Ray Epps?
Now, I don't know anything aboutRay Epps, but it was sort of
strange the way he was talking.
Where is he?
What happened to him?
Babe, whatever happened toScaffold Man?
Yeah, what happened to him?
SPEAKER_13 (01:10:36):
So, people that
aren't familiar with Ray Epps,
let me just kind of briefly Ohboy.
Um the the the thing about RayEpps, he shows up on January 5th
and he's filmed with a lot ofother influencers.
There's Baked Alaska, there's acouple other people that are all
in Alex Jones, they're allconcentrated somewhere doing a
(01:10:58):
late night January 5th rally.
And Ray Epps is filmed inmultiple spots going around
tomorrow.
We have to go in the Capitol.
We have to go in the Capitoltomorrow.
That's where our problems are.
We have to go in the Capitol.
And Baked Alaska, who later didget charged with misdemeanor
charges and spent 60 days inprison, was like, he started
saying, What are you, a fed?
Fed, fed, fed?
Got the whole crowd to chantfed.
SPEAKER_18 (01:11:17):
Ray Epps is sitting
there.
SPEAKER_13 (01:11:18):
No, you gotta go in
the Capitol, right?
And he sticks with it.
The next morning, Ray Epps doesnot go to Donald Trump's speech.
He shows up walking around theCapitol.
A couple things are going on.
The pipe bombs get discovered.
That causes police and firstresponders to kind of head
towards the pipe bomb scene.
Second, I mean, minutes afterthat happened, Ray Epps, Ryan
Samsel, and James Grant.
(01:11:39):
I know James Grant.
I was in prison with him.
Okay.
On the left hand side of RayEpps, on the right hand side is
Ryan Samsel.
Ryan Samsel has a previouscriminal record.
Okay.
He's a little bit of, he's oneof those rambunctious guys.
And if he was here with me, Iwould hope he would admit that.
Okay.
He tends to be a little bit onthe say it with my fist kind of
(01:12:02):
idea.
Okay.
SPEAKER_19 (01:12:03):
Okay.
SPEAKER_13 (01:12:03):
So Ryan Samsel gets
whispered into the ear.
Ray Epps whispers into his earand tells him something.
There's been allegedly he saidwhat he said.
I don't know what he said, butright when he says it, Ryan
Samsel then pushes the gate,which pushes into a female
officer, and then he kind ofcollapses on the female officer.
James Grant comes over and hetries to pull Samsell off the
(01:12:26):
female officer.
I don't think there was punchingnecessarily, but you know, there
was a pinning down, pulls heroff, and then that kind of, you
know, stops, and then theycontinue up to the building.
And at that point, they kind ofseparate.
Ray Epps, after that happens,right before this happen is
happening, as it's happening,there is somebody pulling up the
snow fencing around the Capitol.
The snow fencing was therebecause it was a construction
(01:12:47):
site for the scaffolding.
It wasn't barricades.
It was literally plastic greensnow fishing on fencing on
T-posts.
So someone went through andpoop, boop, boop, pulled up all
the fencing, piled it up.
I took a picture of it when Ileft the Capitol.
Go back to the episode fromJanuary 8th, 2021.
You can see the picture of it.
Okay.
(01:13:08):
Ray Eps moves up.
Ray Epps then comes around andgoes to a different part of the
crowd, and there's a sign thatthey that gets picked up, a big
huge, you know, sign, Trump 202020 sign or something like
that.
And they start crowd surfing itup the crowd towards the Capitol
building.
Ray Epps is touching that sign,pushing it, doing the whole
thing.
Pretty much everybody whotouched that sign got a 111B
(01:13:30):
assault with a deadly weaponcharge because the sign was
construed as a weapon.
However, not Ray Epps.
Ray Epps went uncharged.
He was on the most wanted listfor a moment and then he came
off of it.
Number 16.
Just came off of it.
Right.
And then about a year later, ayear and a half later, when
Tucker Carlson starts digginginto J6 and he features Ray
Epps.
Who's this Ray Epps guy?
(01:13:51):
Suddenly they run out and arresthim, and he gets charged with a
singular misdemeanor.
Now, to my knowledge, not oneother January 6er out of the
1,580 of them got charged withone singular misdemeanor charge.
He quickly took a plea deal.
All within a matter of months,he took a plea deal.
He had James Bosberg as hisjudge.
Oh yeah, it's James Boseberg,who then says, You've suffered
(01:14:13):
enough.
Your life has been exposed.
Hello, all of us have had ourlife's exposed.
Sentences him to one yearunsupervised probation.
Man, I wish I could have beenRay Epps that day.
Holy cow, one year supervisedprobation.
Yet when you look and stack upwhat he did, I said one, two,
three, go and push the gate.
(01:14:34):
He whispered in Samson's ear,co-defended on his left,
co-defended on his right, pushedthe gate, except Ray Epps didn't
get charged.
They got charged on the sameindictment, but Ray Epps, the
guy who actually said the youknow, go word unindicted for a
long time, never indicted onthat stuff.
SPEAKER_16 (01:14:50):
So and then he
disappeared from the FBI's most
wanted list.
SPEAKER_13 (01:14:54):
That tells you
everything you need to know.
But again, now we're gonna gowatch this pipe bomber thing,
and it's like, you know, alsodisappeared from the FBI's radar
suspiciously.
So we'll see.
Uh another thing, Donald Trumpin one of his rallies was
talking about, J6, was askingwho are the informants in the
crowd?
SPEAKER_22 (01:15:11):
Exactly.
How many of those present at theCapitol complex on January 6th
were FBI confidentialinformants, agents or otherwise
working directly or indirectlywith an agency of the United
States government?
People want to hear this.
How about the one guy?
Go in, go in, get in there,everybody.
(01:15:32):
Get in there, go, go, go.
Nothing happens to him.
Did any of these individualsplay any role whatsoever
improving or facilitating theevents at the Capitol?
Exactly.
How many of those present at theI want to know?
SPEAKER_13 (01:15:47):
And the number went
from 20 something, and now we're
up to 275 agents got sent intothe crowd.
It's a pretty big deal.
I am super curious.
I just, there's nothing new onthis pipe bomber thing.
It's just man in custody, uhanti uh anarchist ideology.
Um, let's see.
The suspect in custody is BrianCole of Northern Virginia.
(01:16:09):
How fast can we achieve uharchive all of his social media
and internet presence?
Ready, set, go.
Uh let's see here.
We've got a we do have a we dohave a news blurb on it.
So let's see, this is the firsttime we're hearing.
SPEAKER_02 (01:16:24):
Great hoodie.
And he's been identified uh as aguy named Brian Cole, C O L E.
Video footage released by theFBI showed the unidentified
person placing the pipe bombsnear the two headquarters more
than 16 hours before lawenforcement even found them.
(01:16:46):
He was wearing a gray hoodie,Nike Air Max speed turf
sneakers, a mask, glasses, andgloves.
But his identity had long beenunknown.
They finally made an arrest.
Um and look, a guy, I don't knowwho Brian Cole is, I guarantee
you.
Keyboard warriors are searchinghim right now.
Brian Cole is said to be thename of the man arrested.
(01:17:14):
And he's been identified asBrian Cole.
SPEAKER_13 (01:17:20):
Well, we know.
Brian Cole! I don't feel goodabout this.
SPEAKER_16 (01:17:25):
I don't know either.
SPEAKER_13 (01:17:26):
I don't feel good
about this.
I feel like um yeah, I don'tfeel good about it.
SPEAKER_16 (01:17:34):
I guess we'll just
wait and see what gets
manufactured.
SPEAKER_13 (01:17:37):
Yeah, I guess we'll
wait and see.
Um he's been ID'd as Brian Cole,and then he's an anarchist.
Think Antifa.
I'm also hearing there will be apress conference at 1 p.m.
Eastern, so that's 11 our time.
I'll be watching that.
I'm sure a lot of January 6erswill be watching that.
You know, no pipe bomb.
I s no pipe bomb.
(01:17:57):
I spend January 6th sitting onthe opposite side of the
reflecting pool from theCapitol.
I would have no reason to walkup on the lawn.
And if I would have, I wouldhave walked around and you know,
gone to the front and touchedthe building where it was
completely possible.
No pipe bomb, no securityincident.
No security incident.
They have they're properlystaffed to hold the line, right?
(01:18:18):
Then there's a whole series ofcascade, unlocked doors.
I mean, everybody was set upthat day.
Um, I s we'll see.
We'll find out.
All right, guys.
That's it for today.
Thank you so much for stickingaround.
Carlitz, welcome.
Thanks for hanging around.
Hello, Privates, theUnoffendables.
All right, guys, we will talk toyou again tomorrow.
Bye.
SPEAKER_05 (01:19:03):
What do I give them
that card?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37, I'm not all.
But I can't just call you Matt.
But if I call Jesus, I'm sorry,you always try to win.
(01:21:22):
Just because some voice has beena little bit of a system.