Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's time.
From Newport Beach, california,the sun is shining, the beaches
are packed and the waves arerolling in, all while the last
gay conservative prepares toshare more truth with America.
He's America's binary brother,the holiest homo and the gayest
conservative of all time workingto restore common sense
(00:20):
conservative politics in theAmerican household.
Welcome to the Last GayConservative Podcast.
Here's your host, chad Law.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
As your president.
I will do everything in mypower to protect our LGBTQ
citizens from the violence andoppression of a hateful foreign
ideology.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Believe me and we do
believe you, president Trump.
Good morning everyone, orshould I say Merry Christmas.
I don't know about y'all, butevery morning since January 20th
has been Christmas morning forme.
I wake up giddy.
I go to bed excited.
I wake up giddy to read whatTrump and his incredible team
has done.
Next, some I agree with, some Idon't agree with, but the fact
(01:28):
of the matter is is that we areall witnessing an incredible
amount of history, becauseanyone my age or younger
probably, like, let's say, 45 oryounger has never actually
witnessed, in all ofpresidential American
presidential history, acandidate fulfill his promises
within the first hundred days, amajority of the promises within
(01:51):
the first hundred days.
It hasn't even been a hundreddays yet and he's well on his
way.
I mean, he's tackled the transissue in women's sports.
He's tackling the border.
He's tackling the treasury andthe strength of the dollar.
He's tackling the tariffs Everystrength of the dollar.
He's tackling the tariffs,every single thing he said he's
doing.
Yet we still have all of thisfreak out like it's some
(02:12):
surprise.
There are no surprises here,folks.
This has all been everythingthat he said on the campaign
trail, and what's historic aboutit is that I don't care.
Any political election that youlook at after President Reagan.
Not one candidate has everimplemented immediate changes
that are this strong and thiseffective in their first few
(02:34):
days.
Usually, promises on thecampaign trail are withheld
until the very end, especiallyif they have any risk of sort of
voter shakeup.
They're withheld till the veryend of the first term.
More than likely they getpushed off to the second term.
I mean we felt that with GeorgeW Bush His first term was
worthless.
He might have just sat therewith his thumb up his ass, but
(02:55):
in his second term he didderegulate and do some of the
things that conservativesexpected him to do.
We've never had a presidentjust come in and say and start
signing expected him to do.
We've never had a presidentjust come in and say and start
signing.
And he might attribute it tothe fact that he's technically
in his second term and hedoesn't care about votes.
I would disagree.
I think Trump loves thepopularity contest, whether we
(03:16):
want to believe it or not, and Ithink it's a great thing.
I think it's what drives him todo what he can do to help
people.
So I think that he enjoys thespotlight and the popularity.
He is a star, he's a celebrity,but he still doesn't care if he
is ruffling all these feathers,because he knows what's best
for the American people, butit's also because it's all stuff
(03:36):
he campaigned on.
There's nothing new here.
There's no surprises.
I've got to be honest.
I'm still a little unsure aboutthis Gaza proposal.
I'm also unsure aboutcompletely shutting down the
Department of Education on afederal level.
Those are some concerns I have.
But guess what?
We elected President Trump.
He deserves to be able to dowhat he wants to do to garner
(03:57):
the results that he's looking toachieve.
This is the big differencebetween a politician and the
private sector.
And let me tell you something.
I think Joe Rogan said it verywell.
He said this is such aninteresting experiment to see
what happens when you applyprivate sector principles to the
government.
And what we're going to see isReagan already did it.
(04:18):
It's going to take off.
It's going to be incredible.
The results are going to beincredible.
Unfortunately, we have allthese roadblocks in between,
especially in the judiciary,which I want to cover a little
later in the show.
But Trump's been mandated to doall these things.
He's doing them.
There should be no surprise,and it's very, very exciting
stuff.
But the difference between apolitician?
(04:39):
It's funny.
A college professor told methis one time.
He said the difference betweenan entrepreneur and an employee
is if you have a grease fire inyour kitchen, an entrepreneur
will go all over the house tofind rags, baking powder, fire
extinguishers, whatever, inorder to put the fire out.
Meanwhile, a nine to fiver willsee the fire, take his cell
(05:02):
phone, walk outside and dial 911and have someone else come fix
the problem.
That is essentially the samecomparison politicians and
private sector.
In the private sectorbusinessmen, entrepreneurs like
me and you we are driven byresults.
Politicians are driven by means, not ends, and that's what's
(05:23):
been.
The problem here is we're sofocused on how we're doing
things.
By the time we actually get tothe results, so much time has
passed.
Oftentimes we forgot why wewere doing it in the first place
.
I mean, that's certainly how Ifeel about Medicaid and some of
these Obamacare additions thatwe've had.
We were so worried about thewho and the how we didn't even
(05:45):
factor in what the actualresults would be.
See people in the private sectorwho are actually held
accountable to someone orsomething and need their job.
They work from the resultsbackward, and that's what we're
seeing with Trump.
He's saying we're going to havethe best border, the result is
a completely secure border, andthen he backs it out with his
(06:06):
team to get there.
So it's been really exciting towatch.
I love it.
I think he's crushing it and Ithink it's very important to not
get caught up in the liberalcraziness.
Look, the Democrats are losing.
They're spiraling out ofcontrol.
They're not going to get anybetter.
80% of Americans are agreeingwith what's happening right now,
from one issue to the other onaverage.
(06:27):
Don't get caught up with them.
However, I listened to Mike Benzabout this whole USAID thing
and I will say we still need tofocus on the snakes in the grass
, these rhinos, these Cheneytype people, because there are
politicians on both sides thatcame up through USAID and were
trained through USAID.
Guess who's one of them?
(06:48):
Aoc.
Guess who's another one?
Liz Cheney, okay, so that justtells you both sides of the
spectrum equally as annoying,inefficient and disruptive.
Those are the kind of people.
Those are the kind of thingsUSAID produces.
Samantha Powers was Obama's lapdog and then she got to run
USAID and she was a rogue,basically intelligence agent.
(07:10):
She thought it was her job totopple governments and do all
sorts of things, and withoutconsidering the humanitarian
impact on the countries that shewas working on, you know, for
example, in Sudan.
I know I'm getting off track,but I'll come back.
Anyways, for example, in Sudan,they've invested millions of
dollars into Sudan to improvethe LGBTQ awareness and
(07:33):
acceptance.
It will never happen maybe 100years from now, more gay people
in danger.
As we empower these gays andtell them to come out and put
literature out there andencourage local officials to be
more accepting, guess what?
The religious overtones and thecultural beliefs will always
(07:56):
supersede that small population.
And what do they do to gaysthere?
They castrate them, they killthem.
They're actually doing workthat's putting more gay people
in harm's way.
And I don't want to just makeit about gays there.
They castrate them, they killthem.
They're actually doing workthat's putting more gay people
in harm's way.
And I don't want to just makeit about gays.
That's just an example.
But what I'm trying to show youis is that sometimes these
interests of America aren'tinterests in humanity.
(08:18):
And what I love is Trump sayswell, you know, they're using
this to kill other governments,they're doing this and that, and
.
And people say, well, yeah,they're using this to kill other
governments, they're doing thisand that, and people say, well,
yeah, but they're starving.
People are starving.
What are we going to do?
And it's like you know whatthese people and everything
existed before USAID.
They're going to figure it outwithout USAID, and Trump isn't
purposely cutting offhumanitarian efforts, but we
(08:41):
have to be able to see what'shappening.
If not, there will be no changeand that's why all of this is
uncomfortable and as we unearthmore stuff, it's going to be
really, really interesting tosee.
Scott Bessent has just beenimpressing me so much.
He had an interview yesterdayon Forbes and you should check
(09:02):
that out on YouTube.
I have some clips that we'll goover after the break.
He's an amazing gay man, but ofcourse, the gay community can't
give him any credit for hisgenius and what he's doing to
inspire and sort of I call breakthe rainbow ceiling, whatever
the hell these people want it tobe called.
Of course they're not givinghim any credit and he's a Nazi
(09:24):
and this, that and the otherthing.
And then, lastly, you know, I'mjust really I talk about this a
lot on the show and I want youguys to think about it?
What is the obsession with BillMaher, megan Kelly, john
Fetterman, james Carville?
Why are all these washed uplosers, who we've rejected in
the past, now making headlinesin conservative publications?
(09:46):
I mean, megyn Kelly has one ofthe worst failed broadcasting
careers in the history ofAmerica.
She's on a satellite radio, ona podcast, which is great.
She wants to support her family, whatever her story is.
However, she hates PresidentTrump.
She did everything she could tohurt President Trump and now I
see all my conservative friendsjust rah-rah with her.
(10:07):
Forget it.
She left Fox News to go to themainstream media and be another
liar, another peddler of thiscrap.
Bill Maher is a crazypsycho-socialist liberal, but
he's figured out that if heplays the middle, he can
maximize his advertising dollars, and so he says some things.
Well, democrats are crazy.
They're loopy.
Because he knows, like we know,that although it seems like
(10:29):
there's a lot more people thatbelieve in some of this crazy
leftist stuff, there isn't, andso he knows he can have the
upper hand.
He's very smart.
James Carville same thingDemocrat, democrat, democrat.
And now we're talking aboutwhat he's saying, how, why
Democrats are losing in this.
Who cares?
We don't need affirmation fromthese people.
John Fetterman is another one.
(10:51):
I heard Gutfield or some otherpeople apologizing the other day
for talking about his mentalcapacity.
Why are you apologizing?
The guy's an idiot.
He's Uncle Fester.
He'll always be Uncle Fester.
His state just went completelyred.
If you guys haven't seen him orknow the name, scott Pressler,
he is the reason whyPennsylvania went deep red.
(11:14):
I mean, the guy is a machine.
He's another gay guy in theconservative movement.
He's got long hair down to hisass.
He's very fun.
We had a good time at CPAC Justa great guy.
It doesn't have a mean bone inhis body.
Every single thing out time atCPAC Just a great guy.
It doesn't have a mean bone inhis body.
Every single thing out of mymouth was offensive in a funny
way.
But the guy has been knockingon every single door.
He's probably talked to morePennsylvanians than John
(11:34):
Fetterman ever did on thecampaign trail.
I mean, scott Pressler isincredible and he has completely
turned the tides inPennsylvania.
This guy is passionate aboutgrassroots voter registration
and voting period.
That's what he does best.
God, I would drive people awayfrom the polls, but no, he
(11:55):
drives people to the polls andhe's turned it red and that's
the only reason why Fetterman isagreeing with some of the
Republican stuff because heknows he's going to lose.
And the only reason why he wonwas because he was going against
a terrible candidate who almostbeat him.
He won by a slim margin againstone of the worst Republican
(12:15):
candidates I've ever seen.
Dr Oz, great guy on TV, dudpolitician, I mean.
He cannot connect with peopleand that's a big difference when
these broadcasters, thesepeople on TV, even like me,
people assume, because we talkall the time, that we connect.
Anyways, dr Oz was terrible.
Uncle Fester lost to Dr Oz andnow he's just trying to show
(12:38):
face by agreeing with somethings that Republicans and
President Trump are agreeingwith, because Pennsylvanians
have increasingly said F you toliberals, because they've seen
what happens to that state.
I don't get it.
I don't, I, I, I, scott, I saidScott, you're turning the state
red.
I don't understand.
This is the only state thatwhen the Eagles, when their team
(12:58):
, goes to a championship, thecity has to come and Vaseline
the telephone poles because allthe Eagles fans, these crazy
animals, will climb thetelephone poles and then fall
off and injure themselves andall kinds of bad stuff happens.
How stupid these are the peoplethat vote for John Fetterman,
but we're giving him all thiscredit for being fair and closer
(13:20):
to the middle.
It's all an act.
And so what happens is we takeour eye off the ball, someone
like John Fetterman and we say,oh, he's cool.
Meanwhile there's Republicansthat are doing even more
undermining, so it's all justone big distraction.
Okay, okay, I'm done rantingthis morning.
Let's take a quick break andwe'll be back after these words.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
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Speaker 4 (14:11):
God, I was just
smiling.
All day the last couple days Iwatched the interview with Scott
Besant.
I've met Scott a few times.
What a great guy.
Him and his husband arefantastic and I just I love that
Trump never once touted that hewas gay.
You know, that is the difference.
(14:32):
He's not gay.
He happens to like the same sexin bed.
That's it.
It's a teeny, tiny aspect ofsomeone's life.
And you hear the gay community,because you know the gay
community's job is to force usto believe that being gay is a
(14:52):
handicap, that it's going to beharder to get jobs, it's going
to be harder to get into schools, people are going to be meaner
to us.
That's not my experience at alland maybe I got lucky and I
know there is still homophobiaaround the world everywhere.
But the reality is is thatbeing gay is not a handicap or a
(15:13):
hindrance and it's certainlynot the same as race, because
you can't see someone's gayness,so you don't know if they're
gay or not, unless they bring itup or flaunt something right in
front of your face that youhave to make that assumption.
So I love how Scott hascompletely denied that he's been
(15:38):
picked or pushed because of hissexual preferences and because
he's the best person for the job.
I mean, the guy has anincredible resume.
I don't know if you guys know alot about Scott, but he was the
chief executive officer andchief investment officer of Key
Square Capital Management.
It's a global hedge fundfocused on investing he founded
(16:02):
in 2015.
Prior to that, he was the chiefinvestment officer at Soros
Fund Management.
The guy's been on the left andthe right.
When you look at his politicaldonation history, he's donated
to Democrats like Obama andTrump From 91 to 2000,.
For nine years he was themanaging partner of the Soros
(16:23):
Fund in the London office.
He's from South Carolina.
He received his bachelor's fromYale.
Him and his family created theMcLeod Rehabilitation Center at
the Shriners Children's Hospitalin Greenville, south Carolina.
He served as a RockefellerUniversity trustee, member of
the executive committee andchair of the investment
(16:45):
committee.
He also supported the HarlemChildren's Zone in New York City
.
He's a member of the EconomicClub of New York and Council on
Foreign Relations.
Scott is a member of the FrenchHuguenot Church in Charleston.
I did not say that right, butyou guys figure it out.
Did not say that right, but youguys figure it out.
(17:06):
Besant is a longtime advocate,supporter and mentor of
financial literacy and educationprograms.
Now listen here.
He, his spouse and his twochildren reside in Washington DC
and Charleston, south Carolina.
That's on the Trump website.
That's his bio.
(17:27):
Nothing about gay rights,nothing about LGBTQ.
What's amazing is is that andwhen you talk to Scott he he
thinks, just like we do, thatgayness is, is, isn't, shouldn't
define us and it's not ahandicap.
However, bear in mind that hehas forged his way through a 99%
(17:52):
white, straight frat boyindustry, if you will, which is
Wall Street or banking finance.
It's all straight white guysout of the Ivy Leagues.
So being gay and being in thatenvironment probably was not
(18:18):
easy in the 80s and 90s, whenthings were still a lot rougher
and a lot less understood.
So that should be celebrated aswell, because, just like when a
woman breaks the glass ceilingand becomes the first senator or
the first CEO or the firstwhatever, should be the same
thing for Scott, because he hasforged a path in the financial
industry that will now allowother gay guys who want to
(18:39):
succeed in banking aninspiration, a path to follow
and a story that says being gaywill not hinder your ability to
be successful in finance.
When I know for a fact many ofyou listening to me right now,
many of you gay guys listeningto me right now, probably
(19:00):
avoided or never thought therewould be opportunities in the
finance market.
I know I never thought I wouldever be able to get along or be
in the finance market.
One, I hate math, but two, mypersonality, everything about it
.
See, when you're gay, peopleautomatically want to victimize
you.
Oh, you're going to have a hardtime getting into banking.
Oh, you're going to have a hardtime on the football team.
(19:23):
If you're a gay guy in thelocker room, oh, you're going to
have a hard time on thefootball team.
If you're a gay guy in thelocker room, oh, you're going to
have a hard time withRepublicans and conservatives.
They're going to take away yourrights.
Everything's a hard time.
What's harder, what's morevictimizing?
And so oftentimes younger gayguys get it in their heads that
there are certain limitations onthem based on their sexual
(19:44):
orientation.
And there isn't.
And Scott Pescent is a geniusexample of this very thing.
He got hired based on merit,but he's still diverse.
Go figure, the two aren'tmutually exclusive.
And the way he talks abouteverything is just so simple,
smart, eloquent.
(20:05):
Let's have a listen.
Speaker 6 (20:06):
Not because of my
sexual preference, not because
Treasury secretaries with greeneyes do better.
This is my third try at publicservice.
The President Trump chose mebecause he believes I'm the best
candidate.
He has a deep understanding offinancial markets as opposed to
most politicians, so he wants tobe involved in the conversation
(20:27):
.
He has very well formedopinions.
He has a lot of private sectorfriends.
All taxes are passed on toconsumers and I think what's
interesting about taxes is theyaren't necessarily inflationary.
They're one time administrativeprice adjustment.
Month Tariffs cause a strongerdollar, so a weaker dollar with
(20:47):
tariffs is the.
It's an economic abnormality.
Speaker 4 (20:53):
I love his response
to the last question.
I didn't want to put too muchin, but the reporter on CNN is
asking him Scott, if we dotariffs, it's going to weaken
the dollar.
Um, Scott, if we do tariffsit's going to weaken the dollar.
He's like what are you talkingabout?
Economics 101, tariffsstrengthen currency.
We've never seen it in history.
The reverse.
So what you're asking about isan economic abnormality that
(21:17):
doesn't exist.
Boom, this man is the type ofgay guy that all gay guys should
be striving to be.
He puts his family himself, hisreligion, his work all in front
of being gay.
But the gay community can'thandle that because, again, they
thrive on victimization.
These elite groups like theTrevor Project or GLAAD.
(21:39):
They only survive because gayguys are depressed and suicidal.
If gay suicide stopped, theTrevor Project would be obsolete
.
They need gay guys down andthey need us depressed and they
need us suicidal.
So the donations keep coming.
That's the best way to alsodrive guilt amongst people for
(22:02):
donations, talking about suicideand the deaths of young people,
and Scott and myself and manyother gays in the movement have
said we're not doing that, we'renot getting involved in all
that.
We think there's other thingsthat can benefit the gay
community, and the mental healthof gay guys would be a hell of
a lot better if they didn'tthink of their sexuality like a
(22:23):
handicap.
So I love it.
I mean, he's married, he's gottwo kids, he's super smart, and
what I love even more is the gaycommunity cannot handle it.
Let's have a listen.
Speaker 7 (22:34):
My Nick says wait,
scott Besson is gay, he is and
married and has children.
Yesterday when I brought thisup you up, he, if he's confirmed
, would be the highest rankingLGBT person ever to serve, to be
appointed and confirmed by theUnited States Senate.
(22:55):
And I said I'm kind ofconflicted about this.
Speaker 8 (23:01):
Bessette lives in
South Carolina with his husband,
john Freeman, and their twochildren.
After his nomination, the logcabin Republicans released a
statement quote Trump'sselection of Besant, who is also
openly gay, married and has twochildren with his partner, is
also a reminder of PresidentTrump's love and respect for
LGBTQ Americans.
I would like to get credit forend quote.
(23:23):
I would like to get credit forreading that with an absolutely
straight face.
Speaker 9 (23:26):
You deserve it.
You deserve it, honey.
I'm sorry, extra points fromMark today, holy crap.
Speaker 8 (23:31):
And this glowing
endorsement, though, is from a
group of people who weren't evenallowed a table, not a booth,
not even a seat at a table or abooth at the Republican
convention, and the desperationfor acceptance there is just
palpable.
Speaker 9 (23:49):
Scott Besson is a
married gay man with kids who
has no qualms working with themost anti-LGBTQ plus cabinet
ever and trust and believe.
If you look at all of thepeople that have been selected
to work for Trump, it is veryclearly an anti-queer group of
people.
We have someone right now whois fighting against a trans
congresswoman's ability to usethe restroom, and here you have
(24:10):
a gay man, a billionaire.
This guy is rich, rich, rich,who is willing to look beyond
all of the other issues that thecommunity has because of money.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
First of all, not one
of these idiots said why he
shouldn't be a treasury pick.
Not one of them talked aboutany behavior or anti-LGBTQ
rhetoric.
No, it goes right back to Trumpand it goes right back to
Trump's evil, anti-gay cabinet.
I'm going to make a statementthat I've made before and it
(24:41):
really upsets Democrats when Isay this.
But Trump is the mostgay-friendly president not just
Republican, but gay-friendlypresident of all time.
First of all, gay marriagewasn't a big issue and gay
rights weren't a massive issuethrough the 90s.
Bill Clinton, I mean, didn'treally have to deal with a lot
(25:04):
of LGBTQ stuff.
Barack Obama was anti-gaymarriage when he ran the first
time.
Then he switched.
Biden has a history ofhomophobia and gay slurs and
just horrible, horrible rhetoricagainst the gay community.
And then here comes DonaldTrump, which again.
(25:25):
When you ask people what is soanti-gay about Donald Trump,
what does he do that's anti-gay.
What do they say?
Well, the trans militarydoesn't let trans people serve
in the military.
Trans and gay are not the same,as you can see with people like
Caitlyn Jenner, who's a womandating a woman even though she
was a man.
You understand her sexualpreference didn't change, but
(25:48):
her gender did.
The two are not mutuallyexclusive and I know I'm
preaching to the choir, to allof you out there, but my point
here is is that not one of thesepeople queer news, lgbtq news
advocate can name anything thatshould disqualify Scott Besant
from being someone we're proudof in the community?
(26:09):
He's willing to put all theissues in our community aside
for money.
It's all about the money.
It's all about punishing peoplefor being successful.
I mean you should see thepeople on these YouTube channels
.
I mean talk about degenerates.
These people just sit aroundand it's the worst, worst
(26:30):
production value and they justtalk nonsense was hired based on
merit and happens to be gay aswell, because he just proved
that even without DEI, gays canget to the highest position in
(26:55):
the financial universe.
What he is right now he'srunning the US Treasury, the
reserve currency of the world,and this is the big difference
between DEI and Merritt.
See, a DEI hire gay man is PeteButtigieg, and the press
release, everything, the bio,everything that you read about
(27:15):
Mayor Pete starts out with himbeing gay.
Nothing that Scott puts out isabout him being gay, and it's
not that he's not proud of it.
He doesn't want it to deterfrom his successes.
He doesn't want anyone to beable to say he only got that job
because he's gay, when everyoneknows.
That's why Pete Buttigieg gotthe job of Secretary of
(27:35):
Transportation as part ofBiden's DEI cabinet.
How well did that work out forhim?
Oh no, chad, he would have wonif he didn't drop out.
These people are so freakingstupid I just sometimes I just
wonder what, where, how do thesepeople function in life?
I mean, it's just, this isbasic black and white stuff here
(27:57):
.
And so the most homophobicpeople are the homos that are
slurring Scott Besant, notTrumpers.
They just can't stand it thatsomeone's successful without
riding a freaking rainbow intothe White House or in to the
Treasury or in to the Capitol.
Because these people are soweak, their only characteristic,
(28:18):
their only existence in life istheir gayness.
It's sad how empty, and that'swhy most of them end up in bars,
you know, until they're way tooold.
And that's why we don't have alot of, you know, great family
gay men in positions of powerthat we can look up to.
You know and I also want toaddress the idiot who said this
(28:39):
is coming from a group of peopleso desperate to fit in they
couldn't even get a table at theconvention.
Well, first of all, unlikeDemocrats, we don't fly the
rainbow flag at our convention,because it's not about that.
No one, no group, private grouplike log cabin Republicans or,
(29:00):
let's say, the conservativecoalition or TP USA no private
group can sponsor or have atable at the Republican
convention.
However, the galas and theevents at night include everyone
and the attendees of theconvention include everyone, had
(29:22):
nothing to do with the factthat they were gay and to prove
it, I'll tell you this Trump hashosted now, I think, three or
four years in a row, the logcabin Republican, a conservative
organization and you guys knowI don't always agree with them
and hardly ever do, but aconservative gay organization
hosts their annual gala atMar-a-Lago for free every year,
(29:46):
because President Trump wantsthem to have an incredible time
and he wants to support hisLGBTQ constituents.
But there is no homophobia.
There's no problems in the gaycommunity other than the typical
stuff that they continuallycreate, which is drug addiction,
mental health, suicide, becausepeople are constantly finding
(30:06):
outlets to get thisvictimization of being gay off
their back because they've beentold how hard life is going to
be.
Listen, I've gone way tootheoretical here, for for
comfort.
I don't mean to get too gayrights and you know gay stuff on
the show.
I try not to make that a majorfocus of the show in the title,
(30:30):
but this was just too much,because I was expecting people
to come out and celebrate Scottand instead they came out and
just did everything they couldto diminish his success, destroy
his family, because they don'tcare.
All they care about is theirprecious community of victims.
(30:50):
So make sure you and everyoneelse around you understands that
the person running the reservecurrency of the world right now
is a married gay man with twokids who lives in the South and
supports Donald Trump and hassupported liberal candidates as
well.
That should be something wecelebrate as a nation and we
can't keep confusing transissues with gay issues.
(31:13):
You know I don't agree withNancy Mace about trans using the
restroom on Capitol Hill.
I've already said just build abunch of individual stalls.
They stay cleaner, they'renicer.
I hate public restrooms.
I don't care what gender youare.
We need more bathrooms, youknow, and that's fine.
I don't think she should bedying on this hill of trans
(31:33):
using the restroom on CapitolHill on that literal hill.
But that's her prerogative Ifshe thinks her constituents will
agree with that and continuallyvote her in because of that
stance, that's her prerogativeas a politician, but that's not
Trump's prerogative.
It's not Scott Bessette'sprerogative, it's not my
prerogative.
So make sure you always hear,because the only homophobic
(31:54):
stuff that people are talkingabout now is literally trans.
That's it.
All the other gay issues arepretty much diminished, other
than what they continuallyperpetuate.
I'm going to take a quick breakand we'll come back after these
words.
Speaker 10 (32:11):
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Ron's been on it since he wasborn.
I did a lot of research.
They're an American company.
They're based in the Midwest.
When you call, you talk to nice, sweet Americans who want to
help you.
I get asked to represent otherpet insurance companies all the
time because of Ron and Lemonade, true Panyin, humane Society,
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all of those.
They're all big scamsunderwritten by traditional
insurance companies that willfight you tooth and nail to get
you paid.
Pets Best turns the paymentsaround, works with many
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(34:02):
I highly suggest you check themout.
I tell everyone there's twothings you have to have when you
own a Frenchie but I actuallythink it could be applied to
every dog which is never kibbleand always have them on the best
possible health insurance.
So I want to get into the USAIDthing a bit.
Mike Benz, who is just aphenomenal researcher,
(34:26):
journalist, broadcaster I don'tknow what title he takes, but
everything he does is incrediblebecause he does everything with
so much fact and detail that itcannot be rebutted.
He doesn't come out with athought or an opinion until the
facts are 100% there.
Unlike me and most of mycolleagues, we come out swinging
and hope the facts catch up tous a little bit later, based on
(34:48):
what we're hearing, sources etc.
So this guy is incredible andhe has been working on USAID
forever and he's been on Benny'sshow, he's been talked to
Jordan Peterson, he's been onalmost all the Daily Wire shows.
He's was on AmericanConservative University.
So I highly suggest, if youwant to get deep into this USAID
(35:10):
stuff, to take a look at MikeBenz, like Mercedes Benz.
There are a couple of thingsthat I do want to touch on,
though, about this USAID thingthat I think is very important.
I think it's answering a lot ofquestions for us that I've had
throughout the years, and it'salso really showing how low the
(35:32):
Democrats are willing to go inorder to scare Americans and
people around the world.
So USAID may have beennecessary in the 60s and 70s
when it was launched, but withthe advancement of technology, a
lot of these pro-democratic orsort of governmental insertions
we're making in other nationsare irrelevant and not necessary
(35:54):
because of technology andcomputers.
So not only is some of thequote-unquote good work that
they've done which we've yet tosee.
Maybe it was with Americaninterests at heart I say it's
Obama's interests at heart orSamantha Power's interests at
heart but maybe, let's just saymaybe they did have the best
(36:16):
interests of American security,american people, et cetera, at
heart, and so they begin totopple governments and do things
that traditionally would bewithin the CIA and the State
Department.
And the reason why they do itthrough this aid is because look
how well it's marketed.
I mean it sounds like it's theRed Cross.
It's free from congressionaloversight.
(36:39):
It's not an executive agencyeither.
So it has.
It lives in sort of a gray areabetween an NGO and a treasury
sort of sub agency, but withrecent judicial rulings it kind
of seems like it's not a.
Judges are making the argumentthat it's not part of either the
executive branch or thelegislative branch, which
(37:01):
therefore opens up a lot ofjurisdictional issues.
Obviously, the way it was setup this way was so it could be
sort of a backdoor way to dorogue things, sort of like what
we do with bio labs in othercountries etc.
It's just a rogue way ofpushing a democracy overseas,
(37:22):
but with that comes war, diseaseand everything else, and then,
with whoever has the checkbook,comes their ideals, because
nothing's being voted on,nothing's being confirmed, the
budgets are very, very unclear,vague, and so this discovery is
huge.
Huge because, just like we sawwith the Ukraine and the Biden
(37:45):
crime family, this seems to beanother arm of politicians on
both sides that truly hasallowed them to funnel money to
other politicians.
But let's just hear what MSNBChas to say about this.
Speaker 11 (38:02):
By the time we come
on the air tomorrow, usaid could
be minutes away fromeffectively being shut down
completely.
Nearly all remaining staff willbe put on paid leave on Friday
and all staff located overseaswill be brought back to the
United States.
The only question now is what,if anything, survives of this
agency.
It is a result of a brutal buteffective disinformation
(38:25):
campaign initiated by Elon Muskand cheered on by Donald Trump,
by Republicans, by right-wingmedia, under the guise of
cutting taxpayer spending, whatthey call radical left projects.
Make no mistake that DonaldTrump is kneecapping America's
global standing around the worldby gutting this organization.
(38:45):
It has saved countless lives,it increases goodwill around the
world and, perhaps mostimportantly, it counters
adversaries like Russia andChina.
It keeps them from gaining moreinfluence and power throughout
the world.
So what Trump and Musk aredoing, with the Republicans
cheering them on and those overat Fox News, is to gut the
(39:06):
program in the name of savingless than 1% of the federal
budget.
Speaker 4 (39:11):
Isn't it funny how
somber she sounds, what Trump is
doing with Fox News and therest of the federal government,
like she's been crying all dayover USAID, first of all, how
sick of her to say for less than1% of the entire federal budget
.
1% of the entire federal budgetis massive, massive.
(39:34):
That could go towards so manythings.
And, sure, maybe the agency hassaved lives, maybe the agency
has done good, but it's nolonger relevant.
We don't need these democracywarriors out in the world.
We don't need 10,000 people outin the world when we have a
(39:56):
State Department and the CIA anda bunch of other truly
governmental agencies that arefunded to do some of this work.
And a lot of this work isclandestine and clandestine.
A lot of this work isclandestine and very, very
secretive.
And it shouldn't be becauseit's our money.
(40:17):
So for her to sit there and go.
Well, what they're doing isthey're kneecapping in China and
Russia.
That is not true.
But notice how she doesn't nameone initiative, one thing that
has saved countless lives.
And, honestly, if you'rethinking you want to attribute
some sort of kneecapping or lackof growth for Russia and China
(40:42):
to USAID, they've grown biggerthan they could ever grow.
They have influence everywhere.
China's taking over allthroughout South America.
China is taking over in theMiddle East, working with the
Saudis more than we are, sinceBiden screwed that up.
So no, they haven't stoppedChina and Russia.
They haven't done much good andthey're putting lives at risk
(41:06):
every day, and I don't care ifthe lives are not democratic
lives, if they're socialists orwhatever.
It's not our job to fundinternational campaigns that end
up in military situationsthrough a diplomatic agency.
It's insane.
So the person who ran theagency, samantha Powers I don't
(41:30):
know if you guys have ever seenher or heard her she is another
Common Core degenerate who lookslike a piece of leather with
two pieces of bologna flappingfor her lips.
She is fugly and her IQ isalmost as bad as her looks.
Have a listen.
Speaker 11 (41:51):
Here's how former
USAID Administrator Smith of
Power described it last night onMSNBC.
Speaker 3 (41:56):
American strength
resides in the goodwill we buy
MSNBC.
American strength resides inthe goodwill we buy.
But also our security residesin our ability to squash that
Ebola outbreak in Uganda, tomake sure that those flights
that come from Kampala don'tcontain people with Ebola who
bring that disease elsewhere.
So they root against America,they root against democracy.
(42:17):
Therefore, they root againstUSAID and are thrilled that it's
the United States governmentitself that is taking this
agency off the field.
But the other reason they'recheering is that USAID does
really important democracy work,really important
anti-corruption work, supportingindependent journalists,
training them to make sure thatthey can go out and about and
(42:39):
cast sunlight on what is goingon in those countries.
Speaker 4 (42:44):
So I had to play that
clip because here she is, she
has the opportunity, the soapboxin front of all of her people,
samantha Powers, who just sounds, looks and acts like an idiot.
God, she's sad, but and whatdoes she talk about?
Ebola and training journalists.
(43:05):
Okay, it's not USAID's job totrain journalists to report
things from their politicalperspective, especially someone
who worked for Obama forever.
It's not nonpartisan, it'stotally partisan.
97% of the money spent was forDemocrat causes, still leaves 3%
(43:28):
, which is quite a lot forRepublican causes.
But this agency has been usedto mold the media Globally and
domestically, and she justadmits it.
Right there.
We do great democracy work.
We train journalists.
Well, your idea of democracy andmy idea of democracy are very
(43:48):
different, because her idea isObama's idea of democracy, the
common core idea of democracy,the Black Lives Matter idea of
democracy, the critical racetheory, democracy.
That's your democracy, not mine.
Why do you have full rangepower to spread your opinion of
(44:10):
democracy through journalistsand then for you to sit there
and say USAID is responsible forcontrolling the Ebola breakouts
?
We've been working on that forso long, since before Samantha
Powers was born, and if peoplewere flying over here with Ebola
on the plane, they'd be soup bythe time they landed Another
(44:30):
falsity.
And what she fails to addressis some of this other cultural
stuff that has nothing to dowith aid.
Iraqi 20 million dollars,sesame Street I know you guys
have heard all of these thingson the news so I'm not going to
go through it, but what I wantyou to understand is this is a
person with full range to doanything, who has grown up and
(44:54):
been groomed by the most liberalpeople on the planet.
So her idea of democracy is notour idea of democracy, and the
way she thinks our tax dollarsare better spent is not the way
we think our tax dollars arebetter spent.
And that's what democracy is.
By participating in what shewas participating in the first
(45:16):
place, she was being ananti-democratic.
She was running an agency as arogue off-the-books agency to
push political ideals.
Ebola, hunger yeah.
Where are all the reports ofall these starving people?
Since USAID has gone down?
And, by the way, whoever saidanything about ending
(45:37):
humanitarian causes?
By the way, whoever saidanything about ending
humanitarian causes?
Elon Rubio, who's now the headof it, and Trump have all come
out and said listen, we're notshutting everything down.
I'm sure they're doing somegood work.
We're just trying to figure outhow it needs to be managed and
how the money needs to beorganized so the taxpayers can
understand what they're spendingon.
And people like ElizabethWarren who have said before just
(46:01):
because you pay your taxes, itdoesn't give you a right to see
everything the federalgovernment is spending money on,
and I disagree, and so did ourfounding fathers.
This is a travesty, but it'salso part and parcel for what
Trump said he was going to do.
Speaker 6 (46:19):
I'll go deeper on
this when we come back right
after these words.
Speaker 12 (46:35):
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Speaker 4 (46:54):
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I'm back.
Got a little distracted overthe commercial break.
I ran to use the restroom sofast that I sort of lost my
place here, so just catching mybreath.
Uh, one thing that I do want tosay is that this is the only
(47:15):
way.
If you're a little bituncomfortable with shutting some
of this stuff down, which Iknow most of you aren't but it
is a little scary to think thatpeople could go unfed or you
know actual causes that we allagree on.
Like you know, child hunger orsomething could be affected.
I don't think it will be, butit's a little scary to think
about.
Funny, we talked about sleepnumber.
I was last night I'm I finishedthe Super Bowl and I'm sitting
(47:42):
in bed and I've got my new sleepnumber climate.
We're so in love with it when Isleep completely cold and I
mean sleep's totally warm.
But I was watching reruns likeI usually do to go to sleep, and
house was on last night andthere was a really interesting
episode.
I like I get geeked out on someof those medical dramas but and
I have no idea if this iscorrect treatment or anything
real.
But there's an episode where akid comes in.
(48:05):
Of course they can't figure outwhat's wrong with him, this,
this and this.
By the end of the wholediagnostic.
They believe that he has thesemicro, either cysts or tumors or
something like I said.
I was in and out ofconsciousness in his brain, but
they were too small to show upon the MRI.
So the only option that theyhad the treatment was to drain
two thirds of his blood and thenwatch on the MRI or on the
(48:27):
imaging machine as they pump theblood back into the body and
wherever there's a hiccup willlight up on the screen and they
can fix it.
Folks, that is exactly whatwe're doing right now in the
federal government.
I've always said thegovernment's about three times
the size I believe that it needsto be.
So it's funny that it's twothirds, because that's exactly
(48:49):
what Trump is doing.
He's saying look, we've got todrain the blood out of the brain
in order to see where theissues are, and there's nothing
wrong with that.
That is the only way to do anappropriate audit.
It is a big rat's nest behemothof finances and money and
dollars printed and et cetera.
(49:10):
The only way to be able to lookat something moving that fast,
with that many moving parts anddependencies, is by stopping it,
and so what I loved was is theytook two thirds of this kid's
blood out, basically put himdown to die and then brought him
back to life and cured him byremoving all those little issues
that were messing with thebloodstream in his brain.
(49:32):
That's what's happening here.
We've got to drain this bloodand then put it back so we can
see where it's going wrong.
That's the only way we're goingto be able to make this
decision.
And for a judge to sit there andsay, oh, we got to put this on
hold and to limit Doge's accessto the treasury that is so far
(49:53):
out of their scope.
These men in black I mean MarkLevin.
One of his best books, men inBlack, you should read it talks
about the Supreme Court, but Ibelieve it could apply to the
entire federal judiciary thesepeople are God-complexed freaks
that think they're bigger andbetter than the president of the
United States, than theCongress, than anything, because
(50:15):
everything ends with thejudiciary.
Look, we expected some of thisstuff, like birthright,
citizenship, etc.
But for a federal judge to comein and tell Trump that he can't
give people a buyout option whoare employees of agencies that
report into the executive branch.
The EPA is what we call anexecutive administrative agency.
(50:37):
It's an agency that supportsthe executive branch.
Health and human services, samething, education, treasury all
of these places where you seepeople being confirmed for these
positions.
They all fall under PresidentTrump.
Therefore, so do all theemployees.
So if he wants to offer them abuyout to get paid until
(51:00):
September, which is nine monthsa nine-month buyout with
benefits a judge cannot come inand say he can't do that.
That is so wrong and it setssuch a bad precedent because the
judge is interfering in theexecutive branch's business and
no laws are being broken.
These are just political judgesthat love to have their names
(51:23):
on the magazines and don't doanything or listen or even
consider the arguments beforethey publish these raging
decisions or holds that make nosense.
A federal judge can't tellScott Besant he can't go on to
the treasury payment system.
A judge can't tell Donald Trumpthat he can't appoint an
(51:46):
outside contractor to review allthe payment systems.
And it's happened a lot.
Presidents have privatecontractors and private
consultants all the time in thisstuff, and for those of you who
want to sit there and say, well, it's all the American
confidential records, blah, blah, blah.
No, it's not.
First of all, it's not.
And second of all, do you knowhow many times all of our IRS
(52:09):
systems, treasury systems,experian, transunion, target,
walmart have been hacked?
We've all been hacked.
Your information is out there,no matter what.
I don't care if you've had lifelocks since 1949.
We've all been hacked.
There's nothing elon can dowith the information.
There's no way he can enrichhimself.
So all of these things are justmajor fear tactics to get us to
(52:34):
think that we're killing people.
We're gonna let ebola come over.
We're no longer saving lives.
China and Russia are going totake over in USAID's place.
All bullshit, all bullshit in adesperate attempt to cover up,
for me, the biggest finding,which is what I said.
(52:54):
I would mention.
Look these crazy DAs likeGeorge Gascon that just set all
these criminals free, the sameguy in New York, that crazy one
in Missouri, fannie Willis inAtlanta, all these crazy DAs,
the Soros DAs they've all beenfunded out of USAID.
(53:16):
Because I didn't understand howthese people were raising so
much money with such unpopularviews, even after their
popularity tanked while theywere in office for reelection.
I couldn't figure out where themoney was coming from because I
knew like in LA there's tons ofrich people, but even all the
liberals hated him, hated him,but he was able to come up with
(53:40):
millions and millions of dollars.
So what Mike Benz exposed wasthat there's a direct connection
.
You can see it.
There's been millions ofdollars over 10 millions of
dollars sent to George Soros'smain NGO, non-governmental
organization called the titleproject or the Title Wave
Project, something like that,and from there they fund little
(54:04):
political campaign packs likethe Justice for All Pack, and
from there that pack then fundsindividual DAs, Because Title
Foundation does internationalwork.
Usaid is paying them to dointernational work, but the
money is ending up in theelection coffers of these crazy
(54:24):
left-wing DAs.
That's how you win an electionwithout being popular.
So even if there's $2 millionworth of fraud, that should be
enough to shut something downbecause it's money that's wasted
.
And for these networks on theair to go, only 1% of the
federal budget Well, listen,after being with presidents the
(54:48):
last, however long, that havebeen nothing but add to the
deficit and run up debt likecrazy.
I think even 1% were headed inthe right direction.
And if that was happening atUSAID, think about all the other
organizations that that'shappening.
And then what about the secondround of organizations that
USAID has been paying?
Who's going to investigatethose?
(55:09):
Because those aren't part ofour treasury system.
We can't go in there.
We can't audit.
However, we do have built inmost of the time, audit
responsibility and audit sort ofavailability with every private
contractor we've ever dealtwith from a federal level.
I don't know if USAID followedthose procedures and we have the
(55:30):
ability to audit, but those areall questions that we should be
asking.
The most important thing toremember is the hysteria is
hysteria.
You can expect it, elizabethWarren.
All these people talking aboutElon being a shadow government
you know he's got it all.
Everything he's doing is all inthe open.
Anyone can look at it at anytime.
I don't feel like there's anysort of weird missteps happening
(55:52):
and I feel this is everythingthat we should be expecting out
of Trump.
But, as Mike says, don't worryabout the crazy liberals, worry
about Republicans that are stillsnakes in the grass.
I mean, one thing he talksabout is USAID has a sort of
fellowship program that bringsyoung people up through the
ranks in politics.
(56:12):
Well, aoc and Liz Cheney bothcame up through USAID Tells you
what kind of people they put out.
Tells you what they learnedthere.
So if that's how they peoplethey put out, tells you what
they learned there.
So, if that's how they'reputting out politicians, think
about what they're doing withjournalists.
But there is going to be ahandful of Republicans that try
to block this.
There's going to be a handfulof Republicans that try to
create a block by siding withDemocrats and falling back on
(56:36):
the humanitarian efforts.
Watch those rhinos.
They're still there and I'mtelling you, I'm telling you
right now, they're going to bethe problem.
I mean, honestly, I don't trustMike Johnson.
As far as I can throw him, heseems to be doing a good job at
this point, but we never know.
On Capitol Hill, funding bills,the president's budget, we're
(57:00):
all waiting.
Cabinet members, everything'sbeen slow rolled.
So you have to wonder, with allof the power that we gained in
the election, with the Senate,the House some could say the
Supreme Court and the executivebranch, why are things still
moving so slow?
Well, because there's alwaysgoing to be in a kink.
There's always going to be akink in the chain with our party
(57:23):
because we have Democraticplants within our party that are
also known as rhinos.
We've gotten most of them out,but again we still have to keep
draining the blood and look.
It's uncomfortable.
No one ever wants to basicallybring something to the bottom to
build it back up again, but itis the only option that we have
if we're going to do thingsdifferently.
(57:44):
And the fact that they justexpected us to come in and do
things the same and not touchany of their craziness is beyond
me.
But the good news is is over80% of Americans believe in
cutting this waste across theboard.
All right, guys, happy Monday.
I hope you had a wonderfulSuper Bowl last night.
I'm going to sign off here andI will be back on tomorrow with
(58:07):
everything you need to know.
Fight off the woke liberalcrazies that invade our lives
every day.
I'm Chad Law, reminding you ofsomething Reagan once said.
Government's view of theeconomy could be summed up in a
few short phrases If it moves,tax it.
If it keeps moving, regulate it, and if it stops moving,
(58:29):
subsidize it.
God bless you, president Reagan, and may God save America.
Speaker 13 (58:53):
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(59:16):
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