Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very show is on the air. Probably then the jet
play and I've him back and I hate two.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
The President of Columbia refused to accept a flight of migrants.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
He said he wouldn't take them.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Donald Trump said, We're going to enter the f around
and find out portion of this conversation. Within an hour
of making that threat, the President of Columbia said, whoa, whoa,
I'll send my own plane to pick these people up.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
L two zero niner, you are clear for takeoff? Roger,
huh departure frequency one two three point niner. Roger A right,
request factor over. But flight two zero nin er clear
for a victor at three two we have Clarence Clarence
Roderick Roger. What's our victory?
Speaker 3 (01:03):
Victor.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
But opening up to anyone who's in the country illegally
and going into schools and grabbing them, does that kids? Don't?
Message needs to be clear as consequences at a country legally.
If we don't show those consequences, you never go pick
the border.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
Pross right.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
But we are a country of laws.
Speaker 5 (01:29):
For our immigration policy to make sense, it is necessary
to make distinctions between those who obey the law and
those who violate it. Therefore, we disagree with those who
would label any effort to control illegal immigration as somehow
inherently and immigrants. Unlawful immigration is not accepted.
Speaker 6 (01:56):
They've committed a crime, deport them, no questions asked.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
They're gone.
Speaker 6 (02:00):
If they've been working and are law abiding, we should say,
here are the conditions for you staying. You have to
pay a stiff fine because you came here illegally. You
have to pay back taxes, and you have to try
to learn English, and you have to wait.
Speaker 7 (02:15):
In line to go over some masstim You know that
amazing news related to Colombia related to deporting illegal aliens.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
The number of federal agents, not just customs and border patrol,
not just the traditional agencies you've expected, But now I'm
hearing from DEA, I'm hearing from various agencies. I don't
want to go too far out there and cause somebody
a problem. That they have been directed to identify illegal aliens,
(02:54):
get them with ice, and get them out of the country.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
Meaning that we.
Speaker 4 (02:58):
Have an entire r me figuratively but also literally, which
we've now stated on the border. We're going to get
to that in just a moment. But there's a story
that's not getting a lot of attention.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
So I'm going to.
Speaker 4 (03:08):
Start with this so that it will John Ratcliffe was
a member of Congress, and under President Trump's first administration,
he served as the Director of National Intelligence. He has
now been sworn in as of January twenty third, as
the Director of the CIA, the first person to ever
hold both of those titles, not simultaneously. Obviously, John Ratcliffe's
(03:32):
job is to go in and expose all the lies. Transparency,
Sunlight is the best disinfectant.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
Quote Lewis brandeis well.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
He was on Fox News with Maria Bartiromo when he
said a Biden era CIA assessment shows that a lab
related incident in Wuhan was the most likely cause of
the COVID pandemic. And you might be saying, yeah, Michael,
we knew that, no action, they've never confirmed that.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
Part of what we have to do is we have
to restore Americans trust in our own institutions like the
intelligence community and law enforcement, and that includes the CIA.
And you know, one of the things that the President stress,
you know that the purpose of the CIA is to
protect Americans, to keep us safe from foreign threats and
foreign adversaries, but we also need to be truthful with Americans,
(04:25):
and he has stressed to me and others that you know,
these aren't mutually exclusive missions.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
We can do both.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
And so in the case of the CIA, which is
the best foreign intelligence.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Service in the world, after five years.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
To not have a public assessment to be honest with
the American people about where the likely source of a
pandemic that killed millions around the world, including a million Americans,
and really impacted all three hundred and forty five.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
Million Americans in some way.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
People lost jobs, they lost houses, they lost their health,
they lost their business, is all of that. And so
I had the opportunity on my first day to make
public an assessment that actually took place in the Biden administration,
so it can't be accused of being political, and.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
It does assess.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
The CIA has assessed that the most likely cause of
this pandemic that has wrought so much devastation around the
world was because of a laborated.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
Incident in Wuhan, and so we'll.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
Continue to investigate that and moving forward. But I think
it was important for the American people to see an
institution like the CIA get off the sidelines and be
truthful about what our intelligence shows at the same time
of protecting us from adversaries like China if they caused
or contributed to this.
Speaker 4 (05:42):
These are the sorts of things you would expect to
be the case, but now they're saying them out loud.
As the CIA director Maria Bartiromo followed up, asking if
the CIA had identified if the leak was accidental or intentional.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Now, this is where it gets really important.
Speaker 4 (06:03):
Have you identified or concluded that that lab leak was
intentional or accidental?
Speaker 3 (06:09):
Well, we're going to continue to look at you know,
I've been on the job a couple of days now,
and I'm going to look closely at the intelligence that
that that we've gathered. You know, Marie, I think we'll
get to the point where every intelligence agency in the
United States will agree with the CIA's assessment that the
most likely outcome was from from a lab in Wuhan,
(06:31):
and we'll get more intelligence as time goes by, and
we'll be transparent with the American people about what that
intelligence says.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
Remember when they told you that it was from an
open air food market in Wuhan that just happened to
be half a mile from the Wuhan Virology Lab.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
And you were supposed to believe that.
Speaker 4 (06:51):
Remember when they told you, oh, here's some footage of
what Americans are going to consider to be very gross
because cultural it's very different.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
See they're eating bat soup and every American soup.
Speaker 4 (07:05):
Oh well, yeah, if you're eating bat soup, what are you,
Ozzy Osbourne, you can't be eating bats. Well, no wonder
they got the COVID. No wonder they're spreading it, those
darned Chinese. They're spreading diseases that aren't supposed to happen.
This is like the monkey pox. You're not supposed to
(07:25):
have butt sex, and when you do, diseases a car right,
you get people convinced of this. That way, we can
blame the open air market. But it wasn't the open
air market. The CIA knew all along. It was half
a mile away. What are the odds anywhere in the world.
That's what happened. It was at the virology lab where
Fauci was funding what the United States government had made
(07:48):
illegal on American soil. So he was using US dollars,
US tax dollars, government dollars to fund gain of function research,
which means taking a virus and making it far more
dangerous in a Chinese lap and denying it when doctor
Rand Paul called him on the carpet in front of
Congress and he lied about it. That's why he has
(08:09):
to have the coverage. That's one of many reasons. Oh
this gets good.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
At least chairs rolling around.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
Damn it all right, This is Mark Chestnut and Jar
Bizaar of Talk Radio Well the Immigration News, the Trump News.
I frequently say, we're not a breaking news show. We
would rather add analysis and commentary in perspective to the
(08:41):
news you can get anywhere else.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
All the time, the.
Speaker 4 (08:45):
Exciting thing about the Trump presidency and frankly exciting thing
about the Trump campaign, and then Trump's win the three
months in between. More was done in the three months
in between in anticipation, in fear to play Kate Trump.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Than had been done four years before.
Speaker 4 (09:06):
Positive things anyway, So this is going to be an
interesting time because Donald Trump knows, really he's only got
eighteen months. He's only got eighteen months before there's another election,
and he could lose the Senate and he could lose
the House. He could lose them both, and historically in
(09:27):
the midterm elections. The party that's out of power in
the White House kills it in the House and the Senate,
so he knows he has to get done what he
needs to get done fast. And it is exciting for media,
but it's even more exciting for real Americans because it's
(09:49):
not just stories, it's changes.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
It's positive, all right.
Speaker 4 (09:53):
So we're gonna get to the immigration stuff at first.
I'm gonna finish up with John Ratcliffe, the CIA director,
and he's explaining why it was important to revoke former
CIA director John Brennan's security Clinton clearance.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
Brennan is as deep state swamp as it gets.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
And if everything is revealed, and I believe it's Trump's goal,
this is why they want to kill him, not just
beat him, kill him. If everything is revealed, the things
that John Brennan has done under cover of darkness in
an official capacity and outside skull and crossbones sort of stuff,
(10:38):
I think it's going to shock people to the point
that it's going to be hard to believe that he
actually did those things. And in fact, one of the
greatest defenses to the biggest crimes is, oh, come on, he.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
Wouldn't have really done that.
Speaker 4 (10:56):
Now, y'all, are fishing, you know, the vast right wing
conspiracy kind of. It's the argument is going to be, oh,
now they're claiming he'd oh my goodness. Next you're going
to tell me that he yeah, we are, because he did.
President Trump has revoked the security clearance of We'll start
(11:17):
with John Brennan.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
Go ahead.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
What President Trump wants is he says, you know, lead
with integrity and get the politics out of the intelligence community.
So you talk about, you know, revoking security clearances. You know,
when we talk about the fifty one former intelligence officials,
remember that there's sworn testimony under oath from the from
the author of that letter that the intent behind that
(11:42):
was to influence the election in favor of then candidate Biden,
to improperly influence election with something that everyone knows wasn't true,
that Hunter Biden's laptop was real, that it wasn't Russian disinformation.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
So this was all.
Speaker 3 (11:57):
About accountability and deterrence and consequences. When former officials use
the imprimature of ic authority to misrepresent to the American people,
there should be consequences. And so this was not retributive
in any way. It was about making sure that people
think about this myself included going forward, that we don't
(12:19):
mix politics and intelligence and so consequences and establishing deterrence,
you know, the COVID origins assessment, making that public. You know,
President Trump needs to have the very best intelligence so
that when he's negotiating with President g and other adversaries,
he's able to confront them with the things that we
know that our intelligence tells us about what our adversaries
(12:42):
have done to us. So now that it's out there,
he'll be able to use that to leverage that to
have honest discussions to put America's our national security posture
in a better position than it's been for the last
four years.
Speaker 4 (12:55):
He was perhaps too polite. Let me say in clear
what he was saying. Trump learned in four years in
the White House that there are a lot of people
with lifetime security clearances. Why do they need lifetime security clearances?
They don't the swamp rewards itself who are working contrary
(13:18):
to the interests of anyone who questions them. This is
why we've been unable to root out the cartel in
Mexico is because the cartel has too many people on
the payroll who are in the local state and federal agencies.
In fact, the army doesn't tell the national police what
(13:41):
they're doing, and vice versa, because they all have too
many rats, they all have too many people on the payroll. Well,
John Brennan is, in one form or another, part of
the enemy, the entrenched enemy of Donald Trump and you
and we can't go into negotiations with China or Iran
(14:07):
worrying whether he has revealed details about what's going on
inside our government.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
And by the way, why did he need clearance?
Speaker 4 (14:16):
Anyway, you got Mike Pompeo, Pompus Pompeo, who I never liked.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
I always thought he.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
Was a rap, and he proved to be a rap,
and he didn't need access. And I think Pompeo worked
against Trump's interests. You'll remember he tried to run against him.
But I remember the day he announced that he was
stepping out of the presidential election. And the comedy of
that news story was, oh, huh, I didn't.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
Realize you were running.
Speaker 4 (14:53):
More people didn't know he was running than cared that
he had stepped out. So Trump says, I am revoking
the security clearance of Mike Pompeo and Tony Fauci and
the only people jumping up and down saying, oh my god,
(15:13):
well let's start with Pompeo. But the Irani's are going
to get Pompeo. The Iranis could kill Pompeo. This is
we can't have this. Wait a minute. Did you jump
up and down when they refused to give Secret Service
protection to Robert F. Kennedy Junior while he was running
(15:34):
for president when there were legitimate.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Threats on his life And by the way, you might
know that.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
His father was assassinated and his uncle was assassinated.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
You would think that R.
Speaker 4 (15:52):
FK Junior would have received Secret Service protection as a
presidential candidate, even if that wasn't the case. And the way,
he's a Democrat and Biden didn't give it to him.
I didn't hear them kicking and screaming over that. Pompeo,
like Trump said, he can pay for his own story.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Trung Michael Bay good show on golf Lump.
Speaker 4 (16:20):
President Trumps got more accomplished on the golf course this
weekend between the third hole and the sixth than Joe
Biden could have in four years.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
A quick overview. I'll assume you know, but you know
I often tell how.
Speaker 4 (16:36):
We do our show because it's a little different than
a lot of other shows.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
And so that you.
Speaker 4 (16:40):
Understand, we assume you get most news headlines. They're easy
to get, but they often lack context. And things are
happening so fast right now that some things like what
John Radcliffe is doing at the CIA are of mentally
important as it relates to exposing what happened in Wuhan,
(17:04):
and that Fauci was involved, and that American dollars were used,
and that you were lied to.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Because look, but for.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
That virus, either accidentally or intentionally, and now we're talking
about the difference between manslaughter and murder, But for that
virus being leaked and making its way to American shores,
how many hundreds of thousands of businesses closed, How many
people lost their jobs?
Speaker 1 (17:31):
How many people lost their lives?
Speaker 4 (17:34):
The damage from the clock shot which didn't work to
keep you from getting it, but people took either out
of fear or coercion. How many lives, How many autoimmune conditions,
how many conditions that did not exist in people have
been exacerbated to epic proportions. I saw a study and
(18:00):
here are the numbers. This is the increase since nineteen
ninety so in fairness, this isn't the increase since twenty twenty,
so I can't blame all of this on the COVID shot,
but that was the point of this piece. Increase in
ADHD since nineteen ninety eight hundred nineteen percent Alzheimer's two
(18:21):
hundred ninety nine percent, three times as many autism spectrum
disorders two thousand, ninety four percent, so twenty one times
as many bipolar disorder in youth ten thousand, eight one
hundred thirty three percent, one hundred and eight times as
many cases celiac disease one thousand, one hundred eleven percent,
(18:43):
eleven times as many cases chronic fatigue syndrome eleven thy
twenty seven percent, depression two hundred eighty percent, diabetes three
hundred five percent, fibromyalgia seventy two hundred and seventy two percent,
hypothyroidism seven hundredwo per lupus seven hundred eighty seven percent,
osteo arthritis four hundred and forty nine percent, sleep at
(19:05):
in the A four hundred and thirty percent, asthma four
hundred and twelve percent, four times as many cases of
asthma autoimmune disorders general sixteen hundred percent. I could spend
from now to the end of the show telling you
about people in my personal orbit. It's their medical story,
(19:26):
not mine. So it's not for me to tell whose
health has deteriorated due to something that would fit into
the category of autoimmune disorder since taking the clock shot.
And I want to be very clear, I don't want
anybody to leave this to doubt. That is not a
(19:47):
Nana Nana boo boo on my part. I am not
gloating that I begged people not to take the clock
shot and they did and some died. That is not
me gloating. I want them back. I want them to
be alive. I want to make more memories. I want
(20:08):
to go have a drink. I want to take a trip.
I want to rekindle. Hey, you remember this. I don't
enjoy being proven right. I didn't even know I was right.
I just knew I felt it. I knew that there
were too many things that we've learned in science.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
That's what the scientific method is. Ask questions.
Speaker 4 (20:36):
The moment people are afraid to be questioned is the
moment they're lying, or at a minimum, have something to hide.
It is your responsibility, not just as an American, although
this is something is a hallmark of American citizenship is
the citizen can question, the citizen can criticize the beauty.
(21:01):
You don't have to worry if you criticize our president now,
you can't threaten to murder them. And by the way,
I don't want you to be able to threaten to
murder There are too many credible threats on this president already.
I don't want you threatening to murder Biden or Obama either.
I think that goes too far. But criticizing, criticizing doctor Fauci,
(21:23):
trust the experts, Are you kidding me?
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Screw you those experts, I could.
Speaker 4 (21:29):
Right now lay my hands on Within two minutes, audio
of Fauci saying, don't wear the mask, you get the
schmumps on you. And then flip boom, you gotta wear
the mask all the time. And then we've got him
admitting that the reason to make people wear the mask
(21:52):
is not because it in any way obstructs the movement
of the virus and the transmission of it.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
There's nothing to do with that.
Speaker 4 (22:01):
We need to make people wear the mask so they
remember we're in a pandemic. Any pandemic that you have
to keep beating people over the head with that we're
in the middle of it. Maybe isn't as bad as
y'all are trying to make it seem.
Speaker 8 (22:16):
Right now, in the United States, people should not be
walking around with masks. You're sure of it, because people
are listening really no closely to this right now. People
should not be walking There's no reason to be walking
around with a mask when you're in the middle of
an outbreak. Wearing a mask might make people feel a
little bit better, and it might even block a droplet,
(22:39):
but it's not providing the perfect protection that people think
that it is, and often there are unintended consequences. People
keep fiddling with the mask and they keep touching their face.
Then can you get some schmutz sort of thing inside there?
Of course, of course, but when you think masks, you
should think of healthcare providers needing them and people ill.
Speaker 4 (23:02):
That was Anthony Fauci explaining you don't need to wear
masks for COVID. Masks are for a doctor doing open
heart surgery to keep him from sneezing before we suiture
you up because you're completely exposed. But we don't need
you to wear a mask to prevent this. By the way,
(23:26):
science showed very early the particulates of the covid virus
were so microscopic, so tiny, that this is like a
picket fence slowing down a mosquito swarm. It doesn't work.
It hassled people. And how many children were panicked at
(23:48):
school and they were forced to wear this thing was torture. No,
I will never stop talking about what happened because it's
going to happen again. Because Bill Gates makes his money
off of pandemics, and Bill Gates is sitting around masturbating.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
He's a gooner for.
Speaker 4 (24:07):
Pandemics. He's heavily invested in pandemics. He wants a pandemic,
just like the military industrial complex is hoping for war,
pushing for war. He wants a pandemic. Well over my
dead body, and it may come to that.
Speaker 8 (24:26):
People need to make informed decisions.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
And you're giving him the.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
Answer, Michael Berry, because you're a public Paul Revere had
to ring in the warning though.
Speaker 4 (24:36):
Ramone and I love trivia, political geography, music, and I
hate to be asked a question by someone that when
I can't answer it, they don't know the answer.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
So Ramon just asked, So, don't.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
Email me a trivia question unless you're going to include
space down a little bit and put the answer.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
And I'll be honest. If I didn't know what, I'll
tell you.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
So Ramone said, what are the names of the members
of Emerson, Lake and Palmer? And I said, well, number one,
you got Emerson, number two, you got Lake, number three,
you got Palmer. Okay, I would admit I don't know
their first names?
Speaker 1 (25:15):
What are they? And he goes, I don't either, Well,
look I didn't.
Speaker 4 (25:22):
Ramone has an encyclopedic knowledge of music, So for me
not to know their first names, I I am. I
am a mile deep in an inch wide. I know
skinnerd the band, and especially Elvis. Ramone knows a mile
wide and eight inches deep? Oh ten inches? Ten oh, sorry, okay,
(25:47):
ten inches. If he's excited and he he knows things
that most people don't know, he will go back and
read you know about bands that you wouldn't think of.
So that's my question to you, and you can email
me whether you knew it or not. Can you honestly
say you know the first names of Emerson, Lake, and Palmer?
Because I I did not. I will confess that all right,
(26:09):
let's get to it. So the president, so the socialist
dictator in Colombia who has some real problems in his country,
and Colombia in Venezuela used to be. When I was
a kid, my mom's best friend, her name was Billy Tucker,
and her husband, Francis Tucker, worked for one of these
(26:32):
companies like ABB Loomas or one of these international global
companies that build platforms and do logistics and those sorts
of things, and they were sent to Venezuela and my mom,
you know, international phone calls were very expensive back then,
so my mom would write her letters. Billy would write
(26:54):
my mom letters about what Venezuela was like. My mom
would pull them out. My mom didn't have advanced education,
but she was a woman of letters. She read like crazy,
which made me a voracious reader and I'm so grateful
for that. And she would pull out the letter from
Billy and she would read the letter about what life
was like in Venezuela. And we didn't have computers back then,
(27:15):
so you young people can't understands. We got my whole
mindset of what Venezuela's like was from those letters and
how she would write the stories about it, and some
of you will appreciate this if you worked abroad or
your husband worked abroad. My mother would then send her
(27:35):
She would buy Kraft mac and cheese. This was a
great indulgence for us, but we didn't have money, and
she would buy three or four at a time, and
she would just take out the cheese portion, the powdered cheese,
and she would mail her that. And the reason was
it would cost too much to send the whole box
of noodles. Billy could get noodles down there, she could
(27:56):
find noodles, she couldn't get the cheese that made Kraft
mac and cheese.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
And that's what's special, right.
Speaker 4 (28:02):
And I don't know that there's a better product off
the shelf, shelf stable twenty five years or more. I
don't know that there's a better product off the shelf
in a box in American history. I'm open to your
ideas if you want to email me, but I can't
think of a better one. I've been to fine dining restaurants,
I'm not exaggerating, who make it as kind of a
(28:23):
tongue in cheek thing. They'll have an item on there
that's Kraft Mac and cheese places that serve a seventy
dollars steak and you know, eighteen dollars spinach, and they'd
have a you know, a ten dollars Kraft mac and cheese,
and it's really Kraft mac and cheese, because it's one
of those kind of comfort creature comforts from home. And
(28:47):
any chef confident enough to do that, that's pretty clever.
Venezuela was in those days we're trying the late seventies,
a country that, for South America had a very high
standard of living. Colombia was a country that because because
(29:07):
of Escobar's antics, it's it's hard to undo the damage
he did by making the place unsafe. That was the
greatest damage, the greatest damage. You had a civil war
going on and you had these these gorilla units that
were fighting out in the mountains. That thing could have
(29:30):
turned into what Cuba became. I mean, they there was
a real risk that they could oust the Colombian government
at that time, and US involvement against those gorilla units,
those insurgents, mountain insurrectionists, whatever you want to call them,
was driven the mindset by preventing the next Cuba. Because
(29:54):
nobody saw coming that Castro with fifty men could come
rolling in and Baptista would would would hit the road
and he would take over the government and not be
our puppet. That's the danger. He hadn't been vetted enough.
We didn't mind an insurrection or an overthrow. We didn't
mind the revolution. In fact, we certainly did our part
(30:18):
to allow it to happen. What we minded was him
not falling in love with us the minute he came
into power. So that drove Colombia, That drove that, that
informed Colombian policy. Those two countries were stable, wealthy countries.
Venezuela fell into the the the throes of Ugo Chavez
(30:44):
and and of course you've seen what's happened. I mean
the destruction of the quality of life, the number of
people who fled from there. And I'm talking about gang members,
I'm talking about good people. I'm talking about the elites,
the intellectuals, the the business leaders. So the Colombian gangs,
you got some really bad guys. You got some guys
(31:07):
that have been in a civil war for thirty years,
forty years. You got some people that on the streets
of America can wreak a lot of havoc. These aren't
your average every day you know, illegal alien turned bads.
Some of these guys they've got a real record. Of course,
nobody knows that when they come in. So Trump's policy
worst first. You know, we're not digging nannies and bus
(31:31):
boys out from the kitchen to start with. You're getting
the bad guys. So Trump sends them back. Petro, the
socialist dictator in Columbia, says nope, and Trump out on
the golf course instead of going through the State Department
where Marco Rubio will never have the level of influence.
I mean you've seen from O'Keeffe and some of these people.
(31:53):
There are a lot of people entrenched in these bureaucracy
it's going to take a while to get rid of.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
Normally, what would have happened.
Speaker 4 (32:00):
Was you would have had a war of words played
out by the press, and then you'd have blue ribbon
committees and advisory national security vity. Trump hit social media
and said they're not letting our planes in. I'm slapping
a twenty five percent tariff. In a week it goes
up to fifty. I'm closing our embassy. They got fifteen
hundred people waiting on tourists and business feess to come here.
(32:21):
I'm sending back their diplomats boom by the end of
the day. By three holes later, Trump gets the Columbia
dictator to go, oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
And that told the rest of the world all the while.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
Let's compare that to India Mody, who he gets along
great with. They said, hey, we got eighteen thousand illegals
from India living in the US. Mode he said, send them,
we'll take them back. They're not supposed to be there.
The rest of the world saw this is precedent setting.
Trump understands that when you start at a new school,
the first kid that picks on you, you got to punch
(32:56):
him in the mouth for everybody.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
Else to see.
Speaker 4 (32:58):
Oh, his first day of prison kind of mindset, first
day of school kind of mindset.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Well, there's a new sheriff in town.
Speaker 4 (33:04):
If you don't take your illegal aliens back to your
country because they don't belong here, guess what we're gonna do.