Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Unknown (03:50):
Alright. Hey, folks.
Welcome.
It
is Friday.
Thank
God.
Friday has finally gotten here. Folks, this is Joe Ruse, and welcome to the Joe Ruse Show. We are broadcasting to you live tonight from the asylum
(04:11):
studios
from the pimple on the backside of Texas,
the beautiful city of Eagle Pass,
and we're doing the very best we can to bring you the best quality political talk radio we can muster
without all the bluster.
Alright.
(04:32):
Well,
I think the AC in the studio died.
It is,
it is
07:10PM
here in the studio in the asylum, and it is
a balmy
(04:52):
85 degrees here in the studio.
Had the AC running for quite some time now, folks,
since about 02:00.
And it's 85. Could you imagine what it was when I first turned it on?
I'm not even gonna tell you.
I'm not even gonna tell you.
But that's the way it is here in in Eagle Pass. It's, you get these, these stretches where it's just ridiculously hot for days upon days upon days,
(05:19):
and then eventually
it rains.
And I hear I hear myself. Where am I hearing myself from? Ah, there we go.
Okay.
Let's fix that.
It wouldn't be the Joe Russo without
some kind of a technical problem, would it?
Never
ever get through the opening of a show
(05:41):
without an issue? And, of course, you have the the ticker running across the top there saying we're starting soon and we've already started.
So I really can't wait for this week to end, folks. It's been just a just a week like you wouldn't believe.
Had tons of stuff going on at work. It's been incredibly busy this week. We had
(06:01):
a community based event yesterday, which just sucked up
so much of the work day.
Plus, we had corporate visit. We had about
20 people from corporate creeping around the building.
I gotta be careful what I say. I don't know who's listening from the from from the company.
We'll see. You never know.
(06:21):
And then, earlier today, we had the opportunity
to, to send out a proposal to a sponsor. And, so we'll keep you up to date on that.
Got a bunch of different things going on. So it's a lot. There's a lot going on. And I'll be very honest with you folks. I am absolutely exhausted.
I was seriously considering not doing the show tonight,
but,
(06:44):
we're gonna do it. And then tomorrow, what we're we're gonna do is we're gonna run tomorrow.
We're gonna run the, the interview we did with doctor Teal. So I don't know if you caught that on Wednesday, but that show was just
amazing.
Really, really enjoyed talking to doctor Teal. And,
interestingly enough, it is is so far, it is the highest watched video that we've put out,
(07:06):
and,
our audio is pretty static. It's pretty the same. Not too much of a difference there, but really great to see that there was a a an uptick in the in the views on the audio. So we're excited about that, and we're looking forward to it increasing.
And,
and I hope you were able to check out the show with doctor Teal. It it was really good. I I, you know, it it was a last minute thing. We like, I I don't know if if you watched the show or not,
(07:30):
but, basically, what happened here was I sent out the request, and we were talk you know, chit chatting back and forth with the folks that manage his,
his his his affairs
for a schedule.
And, it just seemed like it was gonna be sometime in the future, like, not not right now. And then yesterday afternoon, I got the message that, he was available,
(07:50):
yesterday. I'm sorry. Wednesday afternoon, he I got the message that he was available
same day. So
had a rush. Had to put everything together and and,
but, the one great thing about talking to doctor Till was is that it was
very, he's very easy to talk to. So we were able to,
connect right away, and it was very good. It was a very good conversation, and I'm really hoping that you guys got something out of it. I mean, we talked about prophecy. We talked about geopolitics.
(08:17):
We talked about
oppressive government.
We we we covered a range of topics
that just
incredible.
Absolutely incredible.
So, we'll run that tomorrow as our as our,
Saturday spotlight.
And then,
I was talking with, our producer, anonymous Angela, and,
(08:38):
I think what we might do is we might be add adding a Sunday show,
not this coming Sunday. It'll be the following Sunday.
And, I I think that,
I kinda feel the tug to do it. So we're we're gonna do that. So,
that's what we're thinking about. So we're talking about. We just gotta work out a few details on it, and then we'll see how it goes. Also, by the way, when we come back and reconvene
(09:03):
on Monday, there's gonna be a different look here.
Different look. I I am I am well well, probably a different look. I am kicking around the idea of, going all American history x here and just
shaving all of this off completely bald and just having the goatee here.
I don't agree with the politics of the character that,
(09:25):
that Ed Norton played in in,
American History X, but,
I don't know. I come kinda liking the look.
I know it's an old movie, but that that bald goatee look never really goes out of style.
And also the the one of the reasons too is I'm getting really lazy
with getting my haircut.
(09:45):
You know? I still wanna do it. I'm just tired. I don't feel like I don't go I do it myself,
and I'm getting lazy doing that. I just don't feel like doing it. So I'm thinking about just, you know, just
just shaving it off completely, going skin,
and, and just trimming down the beard here because I'm getting tired of having the color of this because, you know, I am an old guy. You know, I'm I'm I'm 54. I'll be 55 this year, and and I went all white
(10:12):
very, very early on. I think I was I think I was all white
probably in my in my very early forties.
So I've been dyeing this thing now for for a number of years, and I'm just getting tired of doing it to be quite honest with you. If you watch the show Wednesday night, you'll see that I just let it go for a couple of days and see how white it was. But, we'll see we'll see how it goes. I have I have a number of, voices
(10:35):
expressing their concern and their,
oppose their opposition to the idea of me shaving, but,
I don't know.
It's my head. I'll do what I want. Tear. It'll grow back.
Well, hopefully it'll grow back. My age, you never
know, you know, so
it's just one of those things, but, anyway, I digress and I've wasted a lot of your time here. So, how about we get some housekeeping done? We do have a lot of stuff we wanna talk about, and,
(11:04):
I got stuff from Wednesday night that we didn't get a chance to cover that I wanna talk about,
very quickly and then some new stuff today. And, I don't know how long we're gonna go tonight, to be honest with you. I I'm ex like I said, I'm exhausted, had a rough week.
I'm I'm really hoping to try to get as much done as we can in an hour and because I just wanna go to bed. That's all I wanna do. Like, I don't even wanna I I have a bottle of bourbon sitting out there on the countertop,
(11:28):
that that is waiting to be cracked, and I don't even wanna do that. I am that tired. Like, I just don't wanna do it. So
I don't know. We're gonna try to get this done
in about an hour, maybe an hour and ten. Alright? So, with all of that
stuff said and out of the way, how about we do this? Head over to the website, jorooz.com.
(11:49):
It's right there up on your screen. Jorooz.com.
Open up the web form. Send me over any question, comments, cares, concerns that you have, any any issues that you might be thinking of,
any any particular topic that you'd like us to, to cover. I will tease you with this though. I I've been looking up a number of different things,
and, one of the things that I've been looking up is this thing they that's called the Mandela effect.
(12:12):
And I've been studying this thing a little bit now for the last week or so,
and I am fascinated by it. I I heard another podcast
some time ago talk about it, and I kinda blew it off. And then I was I was going through some of the streaming channels that I have on my TV, and I and I saw a documentary on it. And I was like, oh, that sounds familiar. Let me check it out. So I put it on, and I was watching this thing, and I was like, wow. You know, it, it kinda, it, it really
(12:35):
peaked my curiosity. So,
I'm working on that,
and, that's gonna be a separate show in and of itself. You know, no politics involved that we're just gonna talk
that.
So,
hopefully, we'll be able to get that done. And then also don't and then like I said, you know, gonna try to add on another show next week, so it's gonna be it's gonna be a crazy, crazy thing. And I don't know why I'm telling you all this stuff because I've lost my train of thought here.
(13:01):
But,
but it's Friday. Right? We're allowed to do that. We could we could we could kinda
we could kinda let things slide a little bit. Well, anyway, open up the web form, send me over any questions, comments, cares, concerns, that's where it was, that, you know, we don't wanna, you know, any ideas or suggestions you have that you'd like a topic talked about, let me know about that and we can probably try to do something for you. Any guests that you'd like to see on the show, let me know about those. Just use the web form. If you don't wanna use the web form, hey, that's fine with me.
(13:28):
That's why I pay for a special email address
for the show, infojorooz
dot com. That's infojorooz
dot com. Just you could use that and send this right over to me directly, and I'll be sure to get to it. Alright.
Also, if you would head over to our support page, very, very important. I wanna say thank you, by the way. We had an anonymous one time donation for
(13:49):
20
Well, after PayPal took their cut, it came to $28.56.
So thank you so much for your donation. We really do appreciate that. You know, if if you make it a once if you make it a recurring monthly donation in that amount, and, yeah, we can get you that, we can get you that title.
Just saying, you get that producer title.
(14:12):
Might be something you're interested in. Think about it. Let me know.
So, so thank you again very much. We really do appreciate that. Every penny that we get helps helps us cover all the expenses that we do have with this.
Also,
so you so you can head over to our donation page, make that donation a one time in any amount, or you can sign up for one of our producer tiers. We have our associate producer tier for $17.76
(14:36):
a month. We also have our producers tier for $18.36
a month. And then we have our executive producer tiers which are $25
a month and $50 a month. Now here's the differences. Alright?
Associate producer, producer, all the all the executive, all the producer tiers get one basic
benefit.
(14:57):
That is that you get your name included in all of our show notes,
any emails, anything that we send out. You also get the shout out on every show.
And then
at the producer level,
at the $25
level, you get,
in addition to all of the other stuff, you get to book a segment with us live on the show, a thirty minute segment,
(15:21):
where you get to sit here with us and talk about whatever we're talking about, whatever the subject of the matter of the day is, or whatever your opinion is on something that we've talked about or something you wanna bring up, so we can have a dialogue.
That is available at the $25 a month recurring
donation level. Okay? That's the executive producer level. And then for the $50
(15:42):
executive producer level,
you get all of the same stuff plus you get a beautiful podcast t shirt that we will be very, very happy to send out to you as soon as they are printed. Alright. So we're in the process of that. We got the transparencies over to the printer. They're working on them right now. And as soon as they are ready, we will get them up in the shop. You can purchase them on Sticker Mule, which is that button right down there somewhere.
(16:07):
It says shop. You can just click that thing and, make your purchase. And, we did have somebody make a purchase of a t shirt, so thank you very much for that. Greatly appreciate that. And, look folks, we don't make anything on these on these things. This is, you know, we're we're maybe a couple of cents really because we're not in this for money. We're we're in this to to build a relationship with the audience and to talk about the news of the day and to get your opinions and and your thoughts on the on the things that are important to us. So,
(16:35):
so so none of none of the donations that we get go in my pocket and go to live in the lavish lifestyle
that I live
here in Eagle Pass, Texas, where everything closes at 09:00 at night.
You know, there isn't, there's not much here. I'm I'm not a gambler and there's a casino here. There's the the the lucky Eagle Casino, but I'm not a gambler. I don't go and
(16:57):
I tell people I work very hard for my money. I'm not gonna go spend it at a casino for crying out loud. Instead, I'll invest it in this, you know, every piece of equipment we have here, every microphone, camera, all that stuff, except the chair I'm sitting on,
was all paid for out of my pocket to get this thing going. I don't know how many thousands of dollars I spent
on this, but
(17:20):
it's up there.
And I say this, what I'm sitting on is because the chair was purchased by one of our listeners for us, so we appreciate that. Always appreciate that.
Alright. I'm off on a rabbit trail. It's Friday, folks, and I'm dead tired.
Alright.
So, we went through all the tiers.
You could also donate cryptocurrencies. We have you could, we have our wallet up on the support page. You could donate Satoshis, which are micropayments of Bitcoin. You could also donate,
(17:46):
Texacoin, which I would love if you would because Texacoin is is very affordable right now,
and I am hoping if it keeps on trending the way I'm seeing a trend, you know, this might be a great opportunity for you to get in on an investment. I'm not an investment broker. I'm not giving you investment advice,
you know, enter at your own risk, that whole thing.
(18:07):
I purchased some Texacoin at, like,
$39.40
cents a coin, and as of today, it's like a dollar 3 or something like that a coin. So made a little bit of money on it already. So that's great, and I appreciate that too. And all of that, like I said, goes right back here to the podcast. So you could donate, your Texit coin, your Sats, and all a Sats is is a micro payment of Bitcoin. It's just a little portion of what a Bitcoin is. A Bitcoin right now
(18:31):
is at is a little bit over a hundred thousand dollars a coin.
Just think about that. You could have gotten in on Bitcoin when it was what I paid for a techsip coin how many years ago, and right now you'd be if you bought like ten, twenty, 30 of them at that price, look where you'd be.
You'd be a multimillionaire
at this point.
So, don't don't miss out on the opportunity. Invest in TeXit Coin. Great stuff. Alright. As a matter of fact, if you go back into our, into our show archives, you'll find a show that I did with Bobby Gray where he explains it all because he is the founder
(19:05):
and creator of TEXID coin. So check it out, great stuff.
Alright,
also thealexjonesstore.com/joe.
Hey look, you know, I got my my my fresh supply of
ultra methylene blue today, and,
I was very, very happy
to partake of it. I needed that boost.
(19:27):
Boost really helped me out today, man. So I've been taking the ultra methylene the the ultra methylene blue now for, oh, it's about a month. And, I'm
starting to feel the real effects of it. Like, a lot of people get it right away, you know, within a day or two of starting to take it, they start getting those prolonged effects.
Within a day or two of me taking it, the most prolonged effect I got was,
(19:48):
blue pee. That was about it. Almost like the color of everything around me or I gotta figure out what that's all about. But,
so, so I've been, like, I've been taking it out, and I'm now starting to feel the effects of
the ultra blue methylene.
It is
you really do get that tingling sensation down your fingers, down your legs.
(20:12):
It does give you that boost of energy. What I've noticed for myself is I I kinda break out into a little bit of a sweat.
And, like, like a sweat enough to where my, like, my hair gets wet from it. So
I know that that's the that's the blue methylene working, and and this stuff is powerful. This is,
pharmaceutical grade stuff. It's not the textile
dye that I I was talking to somebody at my job about it, and they were like, well, don't don't use it to dye clothes? Yeah, but not this. This is this is pharmaceutical grade stuff, not the textile stuff. So, this stuff is safe. It's good to use for yourself. I mean, check with your doctor first. Make sure you can take it, you know, especially especially if you're taking other medications, you don't wanna get yourself,
(20:49):
messed up over that. But try it out. I was
skeptical at first. I tried it out. Right here on the show, we did it the day we did the show with Bobby Gray.
I tried it
out. I did feel a little bit of something somewhere along the way, but nothing crazy.
But the more I've gotten used to it, the more I've been taking it, the more results I'm getting from it. So just head over to that link on on your screen, thealexjonesstore.com/joe,
(21:15):
and you can get yourself in on these great supplements. Now right now at the store,
you can get
on board with this for 50%
off the regular price.
Alright? That's, that's site wide. Third you know, 50% off your
everything on the site. So, so go check it out. And remember, listen, by going there and checking it out, especially if you use my link,
(21:36):
the alexjonesstore.com/joe,
You're helping us out because 10% of your purchase comes right here back, comes right back here to the podcast, and helps us keep this whole thing going. So try it out, I think you're really gonna like it. I also take the ultimate Irish Sea Moss which is fantastic. I've been taking the the ultimate turmeric with the black pepper and the ginger root which is amazing especially if you have arthritis, really good stuff.
(21:59):
The optimal human which is amazing.
90
plus ingredients in this thing,
billions of probiotics.
This stuff
is just
amazing.
I've been taking it now for about three months. I think this is my third month or fourth month on it. I think it's my fourth month. I just got my next delivery.
(22:19):
And, one of the great benefits to it is is that it's helped me lose a little bit of weight.
It's, I use, like, I personally kinda use like a meal supplement, so it it I I, so when it goes to lunch, I
I take a double shot of those of the optimal human and it it fills me up and it keeps me going throughout the course of the day. I don't get the jitters. I don't get anything like that. It's just a steady energy throughout the day. Almost like, you know, when you get one of those,
(22:44):
when you get one of those drinks, those energy drinks
without all the jitters and the caffeine. So really good stuff, really maintains it. So you should really, really try it out. Alright. And just to do that, just go to the alexjonesstore.com/joe.
That's the alexjonesstore.com/joe.
And one of these days, I'm gonna get some video to show you what the stuff looks like. I mean, you've seen me take it. I've taken it right here on the show. We did it earlier this week. We're gonna do it next week again when I crack the fresh bottle,
(23:12):
and, you'll see you'll see what I'm talking about. Good good good stuff.
Alright. Well, we are,
at the point where we're gonna say goodbye to the folks that are watching on YouTube, Twitch, and X.
And, before I do that, I'm gonna invite you to head over to your app store. Download the,
Rumble app because even though we are cutting our stream to you there,
we will be continuing the show here.
(23:34):
So, head on over, take care of that, and, hopefully,
we'll see
you
on, on that end. Alright. Well,
I think, I think that's what that will do it, and we'll be back in about, two minutes to the folks on
Rumble.
Take care. Have a great weekend. If I don't see you on Rumble,
be well. God bless you, and thanks for watching this week. Stay safe.
(24:17):
Just a small town there,
(26:11):
Alright.
And we are back. I wasn't expecting to come back so fast.
Alright. Well, I know I'm gonna get a strike for that on YouTube at some point because,
even though even though we cut the stream to YouTube, what what ends up happening is they,
it stream it it goes over to YouTube music, so as an audio file, so I'm gonna end up getting a strike for that. But that's okay. I don't I don't really care. It's just a lot of fun because that's my president. That's my president.
(26:41):
Alright. Well,
this week, this weekend, actually,
before we get into the news of the day,
this is very important. This is serious. That's why I need to,
you know,
and I'm not trying to be disrespectful. I'm serious. Just
so this weekend is Memorial Day. This weekend is the, is it is
(27:06):
the one day out of the year that we put aside to remember those who gave the ultimate sacrifice
for our liberties
and our freedoms.
From the very first generation
of Americans
to the current generation.
My dad served in the military.
(27:27):
I I know many people
as as close, very, very close friends who have served in military.
I thank them all the time for their service,
even though it annoys them most of the time that you do.
And if you don't believe me, just check it out. You'll, you'll see. See what I'm saying?
But
this isn't that day. Alright. This day is to remember those who gave the ultimate sacrifice.
(27:53):
And to go even further than that, think about the families,
especially from all the modern conflicts that our country is engaged in and has been engaged in.
This is,
it's it's it's it's a difficult time
for those families who who've lost
loved ones, family members,
(28:14):
close friends.
And while we as Americans
go out and use this particular holiday
as an excuse
to drink,
to have a cookout. Not that there's anything wrong with it. I'm not saying that.
(28:36):
But that's
not the focal point,
and it shouldn't be the focal point of what this day
represents. And and this is one of those days that irritates me because
or holidays, I should say, that irritates me because,
you know, we'll spend a whole month
(29:00):
celebrating
Sodomites,
but we only give a day
to remember those that were lost and that have fallen,
to defend the liberties that we have, to live the lifestyles that we have,
(29:21):
and the lifestyles that we choose.
So, of course, before we get into the stories that I have lined up for us for today,
I would like to just take a moment,
just a minute,
(29:41):
to remember those who have given the ultimate sacrifice.
(31:12):
Alright.
Let's see what we got today.
What I'm gonna do is before we get anywhere else, I'm gonna I'm gonna start I wanna go back to what we started talking about on,
Wednesday night,
before we, before, Doctor. Thiel joined us.
(31:35):
And we were talking about,
Donald Trump
hosting
the President of South Africa at the White House. And I played a clip for you of the press conference that took place in the,
in the Oval
Office and,
how,
the
the president of South South Africa
(31:55):
who,
let me see what is,
Like, I know his name, but I can't say it without reading it. You know what I mean?
It's it's just one of those things.
Let me see.
(32:16):
Cyril
Ramaphosa.
So
president Ramaphosa
of,
of,
South Africa was visiting the White House,
sat with Donald Trump,
and what
what President Trump did is
while this, the South African president was denying any type of genocide
(32:38):
against the Afrikaners,
the white South African farmers,
the president rolled out,
you know, the video.
And, I don't have the video for me here right now,
but,
there are,
it basically showed the, the president
or or the the the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighter Party, the the the EFF,
(33:04):
Julius Malema,
you know, chanting and singing, kill the boar, shoot the boar, kill the farmer. Now now the boar is is, is is is the South African word for farmer.
So,
kill the boar,
kill the farmer, shoot to kill,
and, you know, other
other phrases that,
(33:25):
you know, to incite the crowd into into violent reactions.
Now
the South African president, of course, you know, he tried to kinda downplay what Malema was saying, and and he said that didn't represent the government policies.
But
but then president Trump actually brought out something that was very important to bring up. And he said that South Africa passed a law
(33:47):
that allowed
the expropriation
of land without any compensation.
Now if you don't know what that means, and maybe if you don't understand that, basically it means is that they can the government can come in and take the land away from
the the white African farmers,
and give it
to whoever they want to without compensating
(34:09):
the people they took the land from. People who have actually owned that land
for
hundreds of years,
generational ownership of the land.
And then when these white farmers
put up the fight,
(34:30):
I'm not saying with arms, I'm not talking about physical fight, when it they they they're slaughtered.
And whether it's the government itself of South Africa doing it or not, I that I I can't say. I don't know if they,
you know,
(34:51):
fund or contract out with,
EFF or any of the other radical left organizations in South Africa, racist organizations in South Africa that would that are committing these atrocities,
but I don't exactly see the South African government doing anything to stop it either.
(35:11):
So here's a clip of, of just some proof
of the persecutions that took place or take place.
There's nothing you can do. There's nothing this parliament can do.
With or without you, people are going to occupy land. We require no permission
from you, from the president, from no one.
(35:32):
We don't care. We can do whatever you want to do. Who are you to tell us whether we can occupy land or not? We are going to occupy land. Yes. South Africa
occupy land. That's who we are. Honorable member. Want to do. Speak up. Who can withdraw my membership from this ruthless parliament? Honorable
Yes.
Yes. Honorable member. Must never be scared
(35:53):
to kill
a revolution.
Demand that at some point, there must be killing because the killing
is part of a revolutionary
act.
So to kill
Yamasa,
kill the poor,
(36:33):
The mayor of DA in PE
is a white man.
So these people, when you want to hit them hard,
go after a white man.
They feel a terrible pain
because you have touched a white man.
Not because Mashaba and Soli will not be touched.
(36:55):
They will be touched. Don't worry.
But we are starting with this whiteness.
We are cutting the throat of whiteness.
Shoot to kill
him. Kill
(37:36):
I
I I don't know what's going to happen in the future. I'm saying to you, we've not called for the killing of white people, at least for now. I I can't guarantee the future. Yeah. But, I mean, you'd understand somebody watching that, especially as it gets shared on Twitter, they freak out. It sounds like a genocidal
(37:58):
cry babies.
(38:35):
We will expropriate land without compensation
whether they like it or not. If they object, they can seek refugee in America.
(39:56):
So that was some of the video that,
not all of it, but some of it was, video that was presented to the South African president by, president Trump.
But yet this this government of South Africa says that there is no persecution,
(40:19):
there is no genocide,
that
these farmers that are fleeing
are cowards.
Cowards because they're not sticking around to get killed
for something that had nothing to do with them in the first place. And then they say that those songs and those chants and those dances and stuff that they were doing,
(40:42):
those are all
remnants
of,
the struggle
from apartheid
that took place.
And president Ramaphosa
of South Africa, of course, hides behind
(41:02):
Nelson Mandela's teachings.
Oh, if these are the teachings of Nelson Mandela, then, man,
we've been lied to all the years.
Well, after looking at the videos that were showed, they answered a couple of questions. Here's Donald Trump answering some questions, from the press,
(41:31):
at this, at this meeting at the Oval Office with the South African president. My name is Sherwood Reitz from South African Broadcasting. If this Afrikaner resettlement issue is resolved,
we're gonna go into a a room after this. You guys are gonna talk. If it is resolved, what is the potential for the future looking relationships between The United States? It's gotta be resolved. It should be resolved. It's I mean, it's it's a little bit bad when you see a stadium with a hundred thousand people in it because that means it's
(41:55):
more than just
a little movement. It's a pretty big movement in South Africa. So it has to be resolved.
It'll be the end of the country if it's not. Potential for the relationship moving forward? I hope so. I that's why I'm here. November. No. I mean, I'm not here for my health. I'm here to see what happens.
No. I'd like to see. I have friends. I I can tell you Ernie Els and Retief Goosene, they
(42:18):
feel so strong that they wanted to be here on behalf of South Africa, not on behalf of me.
Now the other thing too that you need to know about this is that,
the left, of course,
is completely
apoplectic over the fact that,
that The United States is extending
(42:39):
the, the welcome mat basically to, these South African refugees
who are coming here for
actual
legitimate
asylum purposes.
Not like the millions of people that crossed over the border illegally
into under the previous administration that claimed that they were looking for asylum or claimed that that that that there was a there was a need for political asylum when there actually was not,
(43:05):
just got through here illegally.
Now
big difference.
Right? Big difference. But, of course, the left is going nuts about this because why? Because they're white. That's why.
They're white.
That's the issue.
(43:26):
These are people that are coming here that are actually bringing something to the table. These are skilled
farmers.
Tell me, what country
in the world
doesn't need
an abundance of skilled farmers to work.
So they are they are quali they are they are bringing something here. And listen, I don't wanna hear about, you know, setting some kind of a bar for for admission to the country. You know that Australia does that?
(43:54):
If you can't prove to Australia that you can benefit their society, their culture, and their and their development,
they don't let you in.
Did you know that?
This is the only country in the world that throws the doors wide open and says,
come.
We don't care. We'll take care of you.
(44:15):
The only one.
You try crossing into Mexico illegally and find out what happens to you.
And I'm not talking about from The United States. I'm talking about from their southern border. You try to cross into Mexico
illegally.
(44:36):
Man, you're gonna find out the hard way that that is not the best idea.
I don't know what it is with the left and their infatuation
with bringing in the worst of people.
(44:59):
The worst.
People who are just a drain on the resources of this country
that contribute nothing.
I saw a great image,
and I wish I I wish I had the foresight to grab it and hold on to it.
A great image
(45:20):
of
a woman
that was here,
presumably from Mexico,
but has been here for years.
Years.
Wrapping herself around with a Mexican flag here in this country,
(45:44):
one that she is probably drawing off
of the public tit feet,
whatever.
Getting probably getting every service imaginable.
And after being here for years,
generationals,
(46:04):
wrapping herself around a Mexican flag,
and then you have these South
African
Afrikaners,
these white farmers here for ten minutes,
and every single one of them was standing there holding an American flag.
That's the that's what you want.
That's the type of person that you want in this country.
(46:26):
Someone that's gonna come here and embrace
the American culture, that's gonna embrace the American lifestyle, that's gonna
embrace what America is all about.
I'm telling you, I, you know, I I work down here by the border. I have, you know, my regular job.
(46:47):
A lot of the people that I work with cross over from Mexico to to come here to work. They have the the work visas and so on and so forth.
Great. I don't care
about that. I really don't.
But don't come here
and start telling me how great it is there,
(47:13):
how much you love
there,
wherever there is, whether it's Mexico or or or or some European country or wherever,
South American country, whatever, central wherever.
Oh, my country was better. My well,
what are you here for then? Go back.
Go back to your country if it was so great.
(47:35):
Make your country better
instead of coming here
and feeding off the public trough.
(48:05):
But these South
African
asylum seekers come here, and the left loses
their damn minds.
And I'm gonna show you something in in in just a minute.
From when Senator, Senator, from Secretary Rubio
(48:26):
went before the Senate to testify.
I'm gonna show you, I'm gonna show you some clips from that. You may have seen them already, you know, it happened Wednesday,
I get it, but you may have seen them, but it's worth it's worth showing again.
But, here's Donald Trump at, taking questions
at the Oval Office. You're taking people's land We have not. From them. We have not. And those people, in many cases, are being executed.
(48:50):
Yeah. They're being executed.
And they happen to be white,
and most of them happen to be farmers. Mhmm. And that's a tough situation. I don't know how you explain that. How do you explain that?
They're taking people's land away,
and in many cases, those people are being executed. And in many cases, it's not the government that's suing. It's people You know? That kill them and then take their land, and nothing happens to them.
(49:14):
But we have thousands of people that wanna come into our country. They're also going to Australia
in a smaller number. Mhmm. But we have thousands of people that wanna come into our country,
and they're white farmers, and they feel that,
they're going to die
in South Africa, and it's a bad thing. Yeah.
(49:36):
Now the the the interest well, where that clip got cut off, he went later on into,
the South African president was trying to say, no. No. No. No. No.
That's not happening and so on and so forth, and that's when the that's when president Trump rolled out the camera. I'm sorry, the TV with the,
with the video of, the the persecution that takes place over in South Africa of these of these white farmers.
(49:58):
But,
here is the, South African president, taking some questions.
So you denounced that type of language in the video that we saw? Oh, yes. We've always done so. As government,
as my own party,
we are completely opposed to that.
We, in 1955,
adopted a document which said South South Africa belongs to Paul who lived in it. But why wouldn't you arrest that man? That man said, kill the white farmers. Kill the white farmers. And then he danced, and he's dancing dancing, and it's kill the white farmers. I think I'm not sure, but I think if somebody got up in parliament and started saying, kill
(50:38):
a certain group of people,
they he would be
in he would be arrested
very quickly.
That man is going all over South Africa,
and that's not a small party. That was a stadium that holds a hundred thousand people,
and I hardly saw an empty seat. That's a lot of people. That's a lot of representation.
And those crosses,
(51:00):
we have dead
white people, dead white farmers mostly.
And you take a look at Australia. They're being inundated, and we're being inundated with people that wanna get out. And
their farm is valueless.
It's valueless.
And they just wanna get out with their life.
And
it this is a very serious situation.
(51:24):
Now
he said
that they wanna get out of there with their lives.
The same man that's sitting next to president Trump,
Ramaphosa,
went on,
(51:46):
was or was being questioned by a a a news person in in South Africa
and actually called those farmers
cowards
for leaving the country
to protect them to protect their lives, to protect their families
as if they should be expected to stay there
to be killed.
(52:15):
This is terrible.
This is just this is just unbelievable.
And just as an example of how the left is about this, this is from, this is a clip from,
(52:41):
secretary of state Marco Rubio testifying before congress,
the senate.
At the end of the phrase says, you are entitled to entrance as a refugee if you demonstrate a well justified
fear of persecution. No. No. You're not entitled to your allow. A different standard based upon the color of somebody's skin. Would that be acceptable? Well, I'm not the one arguing that. Apparently, you are because you don't have the fact that they're white and that's why they're not that that would be unacceptable. That's The United States. Very easy thing. The United States has a right to pick and choose who they allow into The United States. Even based on the color of somebody's skin. No one's you're the one that's talking about the color of their skin, not me. These You're refusing farms were being burned down and they were killed and hit with the color of their skin. Well, I'm because they were I think you've demonstrated enough. If you are not Well, you've
(53:22):
demonstrated
enough because you think anyone should be allowed into this country for any reason because they made a certain criteria. Said that? We are going to prioritize
people that come into our country on the basis of what's in the interest of this country. That's a small number of people that are coming. But not particularly You said this week and that But in other cases, it's harder to vet. In other cases, it's more difficult. And by the way, The United States submits people every year. A million people come to this country every year legally. A million. And now year come to this There is one group of other people that have an easy pass into this country. For the first time, this administration
(53:51):
has said Afrikaners get an easy pass and refugee programs for the remainder of the world are shut off. And you can't say to the American public that we should apply this statute in in an even handed way. No. I think it should be applied in a way. And you shouldn't be shocked. It says it should be applied in the national interest of The United States. Our immigration policy should be based on the national interest of The United States. Period. End of story. If there is a subset of people that are easier to vet, who we have a better understanding of who they are and what they're going to do when they come here, they're going to receive preference. No doubt about it. There are a lot of sad stories around the world. Millions and millions of people around the world. It's heartbreaking. We cannot assume millions and millions of people around the world. No country can. So you have to have a process of deciding who do you prioritize, who do you allow in. We do it all the time. We do it in our immigration system now under our current laws. Unfortunately, it's primarily based on family connection and not on what they're going to contribute toward to the society from a merit standpoint. That should be changed, but that'll require statutory changes. But the bottom line is,
(54:49):
this notion that somehow we have to accept anyone who wants to come to The United States
is absurd.
No country in the world has an immigration policy like that. Why And no one is arguing that we should. I yield back, mister chair.
Thank you very much.
But that's exactly what he's arguing.
Exact because
there are very, very few
(55:13):
illegal immigrants that came through under the Biden administration
that actually had a need for refugee or asylum status.
Very, very, very few.
Handfuls.
This is a a legitimate
need
for protection.
(55:38):
You saw in the video all of those white crosses that which represented
a murdered
white African farmer.
You saw the video
of Malema or Malima
(56:01):
dancing around singing praises about killing even though they say, well, these these are just folk songs, you know, that, you know, that that hearken back to the days of, yeah, apartheid.
If there was any particular group of people that needed
(56:21):
asylum right now, it's this the, the Afrikaners.
Even you even have CNN
calling for genocide. Explaining
that this is not true. What the video show is Julius Malema, the far left the far left opposition leader of South Africa. His party is called the economic freedom fighters, and it also showed former president Jacob Zuma.
(56:44):
What
Julius Malema was singing, kill the boar, kill the farmer, was an anti apartheid song
from the struggle against white minority rule in South Africa. They've explained that this is not a literal attack call to attack and kill the farmer because of the historical nature of that, but it's been weaponized by groups in South Africa and increasingly by the Maguire in The United States
(57:07):
to essentially
misrepresent what is going on in the country, Boris, Brianna.
Also of note, Larry, can you
So so CNN
is calling for genocide without really calling for genocide.
Did did you catch that? Oh, it's just, you know, the it's just an anti apartheid song. It doesn't really mean anything.
(57:33):
Bullshit.
I call bullshit.
If you saw the video, you would know that this is not
some just
rally,
just,
you know, singing some song about anti apartheid. No. That's not what this is. These are these people
(57:54):
are going out and killing
these farmers
because of the color of their skin. They have said it repeatedly. And if there's one thing that you need to learn about the left, whether it's here in The United States or it's in Europe or in Africa or wherever it is,
they will always tell you what they're going to do.
(58:16):
You take them seriously. When they say they're going to kill something or someone,
take it seriously.
You heard Malema in his own words saying,
we're not talking about killing white people. Not yet.
(58:37):
But that's what you're doing.
Don't look over here. Look over here. This is what we're doing here, but don't look back here.
But I do have to say this about Marco Rubio.
Most improved player?
Yes. Absolutely.
I am thoroughly impressed with Marco Rubio and how how much he has come around
(59:01):
to,
to to understand and embrace,
I guess, the MAGA
mindset,
the the,
I I just I look at I look at him and I look at JD Vance, and I see the future of the Republican party,
and I would not be surprised if you see a Vance Rubio ticket in 2028.
(59:21):
I I honestly, I would not be surprised at that at all.
And I think that would be a great ticket if especially if if
the two of them keep going the way they're going. Just
absolutely
fantastic work.
Fantastic work.
Since, since we were talking about,
(59:43):
secretary Rubio
Let me just make sure I got everything here.
Oh, yeah. So before I go on to that,
so,
Julius Malema
made a post upon on on x,
about the meeting here that took place with the South African president, President Trump, and he says, a group of older men can meet in Washington to gossip about me. No significant amount of intelligence evidence has been produced about white genocide. We will not agree to compromise our political principles on land expropriation without compensation
(01:00:18):
for political expediency.
So in other words, they're not gonna give up.
They're not gonna change their position
on taking people's land without compensation
because they're white.
And, of course, the EEF statement in its up in and of itself,
(01:00:41):
the the EEF statement on the joint press briefing by Cyril Ramaphosa and Donald Trump
regarding conditions to South Africa and, CIC
Julius
Malema.
The EEF is proud that its legislative
and political agenda
led by the president and commander in chief Julius Malema has shaken the corridors of imperialism in Washington.
(01:01:06):
Our commander in chief can be considered in the lines of great revolutionaries as Donald Trump in his illiterate rants has called his arrest for daring to call for land expropriation without compensation.
As a result, the EEF is concerned
by this call that something must be done to stop the EEF president from chanting a liberation
heritage song. That's
(01:01:28):
all they seem to portray that it is when is quite
obviously
not.
Let's see what else we have here tonight because we're already at the hour, so probably go a little bit longer than usual.
Let's let's stick with Senator Rubio, Secretary Rubin, I keep on saying Senator, sorry, Secretary Rubio. So, he was up on the Hill on Wednesday, I already played that one clip for you about, the Afrikaners,
(01:01:59):
So I'm not gonna go back into that one again, but I I do have two additional clips that I wanna play for you.
So Marco Rubio came ready to fight.
You know, he is not backing down. And again, like I said earlier, I I have to give him a ton of credit.
Most improved player,
incredibly impressed,
Vance Rubio twenty twenty eight.
(01:02:20):
That's what I see.
So here he is testifying before con before the senate,
and, he was talking to,
Van Holland, the, the gentleman,
from Maryland who took the taxpayer funded trip to sip margaritas with a, with a terrorist,
wife beater, human trafficker,
drug trafficker,
(01:02:41):
gang banger, member of MS thirteen.
Mister chairman? You may I didn't ask Senator, please let, the secretary I'd be happy to, but then I can respond to his Your time's up, senator, and,
willfully used, I might add. Your your remarks do not represent the view of this committee. Well, mister chairman Jerry, please Well, I'd like to I can't respond to everything he said because much of these are untrue, but I'll go through a few. First of all, I'm actually very proud of the work we've done with USAID. For example,
(01:03:07):
I don't regret
cutting $10,000,000
for male circumcisions
in Mozambique. I don't know how that makes us stronger and more prosperous as a nation. I raised I don't regret psychosocial support services I raised your hand, mister secretary. Can I respond to Senator?
Senator, I'd ask you to suspend. You had seven straight minutes. I I chose to use my time that way, mister chairman. That's my right to use Please suspend that way, secretary Rubio. Well, I can go on. I mean, there's other things here. We spent $227,000
(01:03:35):
for Big Cat's YouTube channel from USAID.
We spent $14,000,000
for social cohesion in Mali, whatever the hell that means. So I can go on and on. I got the list here and there's more. I didn't even bring the whole list. In the case of El Salvador, absolutely.
Absolutely. We deported
gang members. Gang members, including the one you had a margarita with. And that guy is a human trafficker, and that guy is a gang banger, and that and and the evidence is gonna be clear in the day that the president of the secretary of chairman,
(01:04:04):
he
can't make unsubstantiated
calls like like that. Secretary Rubio has the floor. You Secretary Rubio should take that testimony to the federal Senator United States because he hasn't done it under oath. Here's another point. Okay?
There is a division in our government between the federal branch and the judicial branch. No judge and the judicial branch cannot tell me or the president how to conduct foreign policy.
(01:04:27):
No judge can tell me how I have to outreach to a foreign partner, what I need to say to them. And if I do reach that foreign partner and talk to them, I have under no obligation to share that with the judiciary branch. Just like a judge cannot order me to negotiate with the foreign minister of Russia, they cannot order me to negotiate with the foreign minister or the president of El Salvador. And if I did negotiate with them, which we have responded to them, and we've told them, we've had communications with the president of El Salvador, I am under no obligation
(01:04:52):
under our division of powers in this country, and to share with the let the with the judicial branch, how I conduct the diplomacy of The United States. It would actually be counterproductive.
If I started sharing with courts, or frankly, with the media, my conversations with foreign leaders and all of their details, no foreign leader would talk to me again, and we would break trust with them. So I I have complied with every court order. What I won't comply with is an order to disclose
(01:05:17):
what I'm saying and what we're talking about with a foreign leader, because then they won't talk to me. Diplomacy doesn't work that way.
I don't about the student visas, let me say this. I don't deport anybody, and I don't snatch anybody. The state department does not have officers in the street snatching everybody. What I do is revoke visas. And it's very simple. A visa is a it's not a right, it is a privilege. People apply for student visas to come into The United States and study. And if you tell me that you're coming to The United States to lead campus crusades, to take over libraries, and burn down try to burn down buildings and acts of violence. We're not gonna give you Is that what miss Ozturk did? We're not gonna give you a visa. Did, mister secretary. And every single one of these things is back to the governor. The bottom line is if you come here to stir up trouble on our campuses, we will deny you a visa. And if you have a first amendment of five to will revoke The United States. And we're gonna do more. There are more coming. We're gonna continue to revoke the visas of people who are here as guests and are disrupting our higher education facility. People are paying money. These kids pay money to go to school, and they have to walk Right even on the opposite edge of the tools. Here on the street. Disrupting the foreign policy of United States. I wanna do more. I hope we can find more of these people. Mister Scott. The other day the other day, some guys led a riot. I forgot what university it was. And I asked, please, can you find the arrest records of all the people that were arrested at that riot at that campus? Because if any of them have a visa, we're gonna revive it. I feel so much safe. Alright. Let's stop. People like miss Ozturk, miss secretary. We've had enough we've had enough time on the subject. Thank you very much. And we're gonna move to senator Lee.
(01:06:45):
You heard the that that that idiot from Maryland. Alright? And I don't care what
educational background he has. I don't care,
what school he went to. I don't even care that he's a flipping senator.
Alright? That means nothing to me. I am not impressed by that stuff. Alright?
This man is a constitutional idiot.
Either that or he is so blinded by his political bias in his party's direction that he doesn't understand
(01:07:12):
that the first amendment does not apply
to noncitizens
of The United States. No part of the constitution
of The United States applies
to anyone who is not a citizen
of The United States.
They are also here on a guest visa.
(01:07:36):
Guest.
How would you like it if you invited somebody to your house
and they started causing all kinds of trouble,
breaking your stuff,
messing the house up,
crapping on the floor,
going through your cabinets, pulling out all your personal stuff, going through, you know, just being a general nuisance.
(01:08:02):
And you ask them to leave, and then you're told by the government, no. You can't ask them to leave.
They're entitled to be there. No. They're not. They're guests.
They're guests.
And we have a government that's in place that's supposed to remove those guests when they violate our laws.
(01:08:23):
Just like
if an American was overseas and broke a law and say, oh, let's see.
Maybe in Russia,
where that guy that plays basketball for the WNBA,
what's his name?
Brittney Griner,
or at least that's what he goes by.
(01:08:44):
Was arrested for,
drug possession.
A guest in the country.
Ended up in jail,
and the previous administration
negotiated
to get
(01:09:05):
a drug dealer, the the, you know, the druggie
dude
out of jail and gave them somebody far,
far worse
in exchange.
(01:09:28):
I don't know, folks. I I
if you're if you're listening to this and you're living in Maryland, why do you keep put why do you put this man in office?
Is does he represent you?
I mean, he's fighting like hell for a terrorist. He's fighting like hell for,
(01:09:49):
a gang banger. He's fighting like hell for a human trafficker. He's fighting like hell for a wife beater. He's fighting like hell for a drug dealer. He's fighting like hell for an MS thirteen member. He's fighting like hell for a noncitizen.
What has he done for you?
(01:10:11):
What has he done for you?
Vote to raise your taxes?
Vote to make you less secure?
I think the best moment came, though, when, secretary Rubio
(01:10:32):
just totally dropped the mic.
Totally had a mic drop moment here.
You have shown
through your words and your actions
what the answer is. And I have to tell you directly and personally
that I regret voting for you for secretary of state. I yield
back. May I respond?
You may say. Well, first of all, your regret for voting for me confirms I'm doing a good job based on what I know. That's just a flipping statement, mister secretary. Can I respond, mister chairman? You may
(01:11:00):
That's not a flipping statement.
That's an accurate statement.
We used to have a thing in in in my job back in New York and say, you know, if if they're not complaining about you, you're not doing your job right
when I worked in law enforcement.
Same principle. Same thing.
(01:11:22):
Absolutely right. Total
mic drop moment for secretary Rubio. That's why I'm telling you that I am incredibly impressed with
how Marco Rubio has turned himself around.
Well, in other news, let's see.
(01:11:42):
Oh, the Biden auto pen.
I'm kinda in a way, I'm glad this isn't going away,
because this is this is incredibly important.
So
if you remember correctly,
going through, we talked about this quite extensively earlier on in in in the show,
(01:12:03):
not today, but in in previous shows that, you know, about this whole, autopen thing with the signing of pardons and other bills and
and and executive orders and such. And the question was, who was
signing these things with the auto pen? Because there's a lot of stuff
that apparently Joe Biden was not aware of that were being signed off on.
(01:12:27):
The auto pen was being used frequently,
even when Joe Biden was physically out of Washington DC.
So a the question has been, and the question will continue to be,
who is actually responsible
for
approving
all of the the the the the the horror shows,
(01:12:50):
the travesties
that
Joe Biden signed into law?
I mean, this thing
just keeps getting bigger and bigger and bigger and goes deeper and deeper and deeper.
Now the House Oversight Committee,
has an is planning an investigation into to the Biden White House use of the automatic
(01:13:12):
pen the autopen, which if you don't know, basically, it's just it just takes these the actual signature
of the person,
the president, whoever,
and,
it, it it's like a signing machine. It automatically
signs
executive orders, pardons,
whatever.
(01:13:35):
And as they've been examining all of these these orders
that, that that Joe Biden signed, he that they're finding that the majority of them have been you have been signed by AutoPEN.
And again, like I said, mostly when he's been out of town.
So who is the one responsible for approving all of the horror shows that Joe Biden
(01:14:01):
allegedly signed
into law?
James Comer's oversight
committee
is trying to get answers from the various left wing characters in Biden's inner circle on Thursday.
That would be yesterday.
Comer sent out requests to speak with the following,
Neera Tanden, who is the, we mentioned her a few times, the Center for American Progress leftist who directed Biden's Domestic Policy Council,
(01:14:28):
Anthony Bernal, who was Jill Biden's advisor, Jill Biden's not Joe,
Ashley Williams who served as quote deputy director of oval office operations.
Annie Thomasini who served as Biden's,
deep, deputy chief of staff.
And then the man who had the absolutely unfortunate and unlucky job of being Joe Biden's physician,
(01:14:49):
Kevin O'Connor.
Now question, is Comer actually gonna issue subpoenas
and force these guys to to to, or these folks to to testify?
He has the ability to do that. He has the authority to do that.
I don't know what just happened. I don't know if you still see me, but
(01:15:16):
my camera just went out. Give me one second. Try to get this thing back.
(01:15:39):
Alright. Well, apparently, my camera is out,
so I I do apologize for that.
Let me see if I
can fix this really quick.
Since you can't see me, I'll get up.
(01:16:22):
Alright. I don't think the, I think the camera's out.
It's just not even picking up the camera.
Alright.
Let's see. Let me try this. I'm sorry folks. This is,
again, would not be my show without
some kind
(01:16:42):
of a technical problem here.
You know what? Just give me a second, and, we'll be back in we'll be back in a minute.
(01:20:34):
Alright, folks. Well, apparently, the, something happened with my computer here, and it's not even picking up the
any of the cameras that I have connected at the moment. So,
so I guess I'm gonna take that as a sign from the gods that, I need to shut up for tonight.
So, we're gonna say goodnight, and, again, thank you folks for watching and for well, at least until you couldn't.
(01:20:56):
And,
I look forward to, being with you guys again
on Monday. Now don't forget, what we're gonna do is tomorrow, we are going to
run
our,
our Sunday I'm sorry. Not Sunday. Our
Saturday spotlight episode,
and, we'll be able to, you know, get that thing up and running. We'll work on this,
(01:21:17):
this computer problem. At the moment, I think it's the computer itself, not
the studio or the camera.
It's just not picking up anymore at this point. So, so we're gonna say goodbye at that, and,
again, I'm sorry for the technical problems. Again, it would not be a show of mine without some kind of a frigging problem.
But,
we'll be back on Monday. Don't forget to check out tomorrow night's show, tomorrow afternoon's show rather, when we, replay our interview with doctor Theo.
(01:21:45):
Alright. Well, on that
happy note,
hope you guys have a great Friday night, have a great weekend, and we will see you back here on Monday at 7PM central time. Until then,
keep Texas
safe. Make Texas
independent again,
and
(01:22:06):
God bless you, and have a great weekend.
Good night, folks.