Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Oh man, what a show we have for you tonight.
We have a bunch of clips on my interview with
Tucker Carlson. Senator Tommy Tuberville is here and I've never
heard a senator as fired up as he is tonight.
So buckle up for that. Harry Sheffield about inflation. My goodness,
all that's coming.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Up on im right? All right.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
I am friends with Tucker Carlson. I should probably lead
with that. You should know before we start playing clips
of this whole thing, that we are friends. We got
to know each other a few years ago. We see
eye on many many things. I respect him and we've
always been friends. And so he invited me to come
on his new show and sit down and have a discussion.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
We discussed many many things.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
We discussed the border, we discuss liberal white women, We
discussed the failure of Republicans.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
There was Look, all you need to.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Know is I was extremely brilliant, extremely witty, and.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
You know, it was a whole lot of things like this.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
It's not an accident, as you well know, you talk
about this all the time. It's not an accident. What's
happening on the border. The people who lead the nation
from the federal level. That's Democrat politicians have the Republican politicians,
every bureaucrat they are encouraging flooding the border with illegals.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
They're encouraging it. That's just what they want.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
They want America full of illegals, no loyalty to America. Criminals, rapists, murderers,
that is what they want. Because when you cause violence
and chaos in a society, that's the fertile soil where
communism grows.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
People will always turn to.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
The government and beg them for help when that kind
of societal collapse comes.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
So they know this, so they're inviting it. Well.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
Other countries around the world are obliging, as countries always
have in this situation. Hey there's a country I don't
particularly like. They have an open border. We do have
this prison full of rapists. Hey guys, why don't you
just move on to America. We know this is happening
in countries like Venezuela. They're emptying prisons onto the border.
We don't have criminals coming here individually, we have entire
(02:06):
criminal networks coming here. The country is being undone now
and it cannot be reversed. What's happening right now I
want everyone to understand this. Let's say everyone gets their
wish and Donald Trump beats Joe Biden in November, and woo,
you cannot possibly. It's not humanly possible to deport this
(02:27):
many people. If Joe Biden's going to bring in ten
twelve million people, almost all of them will be here permanently,
and all of their children will be American citizens, and
there's not going to be some mass deportation. No matter
what people say on the campaign trail, the American people
have no stomach for that whatsoever, even if they think
they do.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Right now, it would.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Be one video of a of a little boy crying
as mommy gets thrown in the back of a paddywagon
to be deported, and all deportations would stop. Republicans would
grab their ankles for the media like they always do,
and everything, well, we need to do this more humanly.
So that's the situation we're in. We cannot stand by
and watch the United States of America be destroyed, and
(03:09):
people have to understand how dire this situation is. This
is the stated policy now of the Democrat Party. So
even if Joe Biden gets bounced in twenty twenty four,
we get some deportations. In the next time there's any
Democrat president, it'll again be open season and the entire
world will know criminals, drugs, rapists, everything flooding into the
country to destroy it. The time is now to create
(03:32):
a coalition in a totally separate immigration force.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
That's what we have to do.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Obviously, clips are making the rounds for a bunch of
different reasons. I realize that's quite a thing to say.
You've heard me say this on the show. It has
to be done. We can't hope is not a plan.
We have to save our way of life. These things
need to be done, and they need to be done now.
And so in response to that, a lot of people
(04:00):
will say, understandably, well, Jesse, let's get some guns and
we'll go down to the border. It's not going to work.
That is not how we're going to save this place.
We will need some level of state power to save
what here was.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
And let's just be honest. I mean, obviously, I'm fervently
rooting for Trump over Biden for many, many reasons. But
Trump was president for four years and he didn't He
didn't even build a defensive border wall. You didn't, and
I don't care. We can lie about that, but that's
just the fact. So the idea of these support ten
million people is just don't don't don't lie to me.
I'm sick of it, so I agree.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
Look, I mean, not not to interrupt, but along those
along those same lines, Tucker, sorry, but people have to do. Also,
remember remember child separation policy. That's a basic border policy
because people grab kids who aren't theirs and act like, hey,
I'm dad Pedro and when really he's not. He's some
kind of cartail member, and so you always separate the
kid and figure out is he there with mom or dad?
Speaker 3 (04:59):
That was That's a.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
Basic border policy. Look again, insult or don't insult. I
don't give a crap if people are offended by it.
The Trump administration ended that policy because of media and
Democrat pressures. Democrats did a bunch of photo ops down
on the border, AOC's crying at the fence. Eventually child
separation was ended. That's because of media pressure and people
in this country honestly believe there's going to be some
(05:22):
mass deportation of eight million people where you're rounding up
entire families and shipping them back to Zimbabwe. You're outside
of your mind. It'll never happen. That people have no
stomach for it. And now that it is the Republican party.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
Why is it that Republican states tend to have the
least sincere Republican like Dan Crenshaw apparently still a member
of Congress from the state of Texas, who is zero
interested in the US border, all his interests in the
Ukrainian border, the gods of border. You know, how does
a guy like that get elected in a supposedly Republican state.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Well, complacency and life being good makes us soft, right,
It's just the fact of life.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
It's one of those things humanity with.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
As soon as you get rich or well off or comfortable,
how do you keep improving?
Speaker 3 (06:03):
How do you keep your edge? You rarely do.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
This is what's happened to Red state Republicans. There's nobody
more at fault for the condition of this country than
red state GOP voters. And people get mad when I
say that. But let me just go down the list here,
Mitch McConnell, John Corn, and John Thune Tillis.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
I mean, look, you can go down the list.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Every dork from Louisiana, the reddest states, in this country
give us the most futurd Republicans.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
At the federal level.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
Why does that happen Because the GOP primary voter in
Red States lives in a relatively normal place.
Speaker 3 (06:36):
He lives in comfort.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
He thinks he's got a red legislature, so he either
doesn't vote in primaries, that's mostly the case. He's just
gonna sit at home, or even worse, he goes to
vote for Senator Dork, who he sees on Fox News
every time. Well, Lindsey Graham was on Fox tonight, I
guess he's on my side. You should have nothing but
disdain for virtually every single senator you see on Fox News,
(06:59):
and yet people vote for who they see on television. Well,
I met John Thune once and he was so handsome.
He's very clearly on our side. John Thune supported gun
control legislation, and John Thune on camera was ask to
back up American people owning AR fifteen's and the best
argument he could make for your liberty for the Second
(07:20):
Amendment was that, I kid you not.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
This is on camera.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
He told people, Well, I mean a lot of people
use them to shoot prairie dogs. These are the weapons
grade losers who control the GOP and they're from the
reddest states. It's under Susan Collins. Is understandable, Tucker, sorry
to get all fired up, It's understandable. She's from Maine.
It's from a blue state. Of course, we're going to
get some wishy, washy, mealy mouth dork from that kind
of state. For the Dakotas. The Dakotas are so redd
(07:45):
it's crazy. They could have somebody to the right of
me if they wanted to, but they don't.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
Why I saw him on Fox last night. I'll just
gag me with a fork.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
And so we need state power, we need help. We
need help from the red states. They are the only
thing they can form a coherent immigration policy. All right,
that's our set. Let's set that aside, because I do
want to show you.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
This the liberal white woman. I brought this up before.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Whenever you look at these dirty comedies, Joe Biden, any
of them, when they give speeches and you're sitting there
screaming at the television and pulling your hair out, and
it seems like they're speaking to a different species, it's
because they are. They're speaking to the true power of
the Democrat Party, the real destroyers of Western civilization, these
(08:33):
single liberal white women. And here was Tucker and I
discussing them specifically. I had the wildest conversation I forgot
to tell you about this with this lady.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
I won't go into details.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
We were in this big group setting and there were Republicans,
the Air Democrats there.
Speaker 3 (08:47):
It was vacation.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
We end up at this big table, like ten people
at this table having a couple of cocktails after dinners,
talking about life. And there were these two liberal white
women from Chicago and they loved their mayor Brandon Johnson
loved them. Actually referenced him as BJ. It was his name, right,
I'd BJ. I'm not kiding not that kept her calling
him BJ. I mean like he's Kamala Harris or something
like that.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
Can BJ this and BJ that?
Speaker 1 (09:09):
But I kept my mouth shut talker believe it or not.
Speaker 3 (09:11):
I know, no one's gonna believe that.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
I sat there and listened and just watched and just
listened as these people were talking. Whether it was this
oil field guy from Texas. You love this guy, his
total cowboy read America the great allestu and he wasn't
holding back. And he finally challenges this woman about the
crime in Chicago, and he says to her, you talk
about bj this in Chicago's great, dad, look at these
murder numbers and it's a disaster and you got people
(09:33):
taking over Union Square.
Speaker 3 (09:34):
It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
How can you defend it? And Tucker on my life
across my heart and hope to die. This lady looked
him right in the eye and she said, well, yeah,
if you come to Chicago, you might get robbed, but
you're not going to be targeted. That that was her explanation. Well, yeah,
you might get robbed here, but they're not going to
target you for assassination. Why are you complaining Chicago is wonderful?
In her mind? That was a good explanation. People do
(09:58):
not understand how sick the mind of the liberal white
woman is, and they don't understand that is the true
beating heart of the Democrat party today. I'm not even
actually trying to be mean about this. It's why they
talk to them. Do people know that married women vote Republican.
Marriym vote Republican, married men vote Republican. Single men vote Republican,
But it's something seventy seven percent of single women vote Democrat,
(10:23):
and the majority over fifty eight percent of those women
have been diagnosed with mental illness. Single miserable women who
are clinically insane are the beating heart of the Democrat party.
And that's why these people do the things they do,
and that's why they do what they do when it
comes to illegal immigration, because single white women view a
legal immigration like rescuing dogs who've been abused. Oh sure, everybody,
(10:47):
just come into my country, Please rape anyone you want.
Of course, that's the right thing to do. No love
of country. Just sitting there popping her anti anxiety medication
as she destroys Western civilization.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
That's the truth.
Speaker 4 (11:01):
I don't think you get the credit for being as
deep and insightful as you are.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
I am deep in insightful arena, all right. But I'm
glad you enjoyed it. I enjoyed it. Thanks once again
to Tucker for having me. Now, we have a lot
to get to. We have a United States senator who
watched that, and he's a little fired up about that
whole thing. Tommy Tuberville joins us. Next, before we get
to Tommy Tuberville, let's get to you. Maybe you're maybe
you're right now, Maybe you're thinking I'm just deflated.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Dang, I'm so deflated. Well, that's because you haven't had
your afternoon cup of coffee yet. That's because you haven't
had a cup of Blackout Coffee yet.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
Have you please tell me you've ordered your first order
of Blackout coffee?
Speaker 2 (11:46):
Listen, I love coffee.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
If I had my way, if my blood pressure could
handle it, I bet you I would drink ten cups
of Blackout coffee a day. That's how incredible this is.
And you can have whatever you want. I get the
whole bean. I get the whole bean. They send me
the whole being, they ship it fast, I get it.
I'd like to do the grind up thing at the house.
And my wife now makes fun of me because I
love my Blackout coffee so much.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
Do you want to try some of my favorite coffee?
Speaker 1 (12:11):
Oh? Get some how about twenty percent off your first order.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
They're begging you to come get.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
Some Blackout coffee, baby, And I found out yesterday they
have mugs and they're sending me one, so I'll show
you that soon. Blackoutcoffee dot com slash Jesse is how
you get twenty percent off.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
Don't pay full price like some sucker.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Blackoutcoffee dot com slash Jesse, We'll be back with the coach.
Republicans do nothing. Republicans have been in charge for I
don't know how long of managing the decline. I mean,
(12:53):
looks good. Look, it's exactly a new insult to call
the Republican Party controlled opposition.
Speaker 3 (12:59):
But let's be frank, that's exactly what they are.
Speaker 1 (13:01):
Even Joseph Stalin allowed an opposition party. A lot of
people don't realize this. He allowed, encouraged, and in fact
funded an opposition party to give the people of the
Soviet Union an illusion of choice.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
Oh no, no, these guys are against me. Wow, it's
pretty scary.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
But somehow they never end up accomplishing any of their
anti Stalin goals. We're constantly told the Republican Party is
going to fight for us a protective border, and we'll
cut your taxes, and we'll be pro life and we'll
protect the family. Yet none of these things ever seem
to materialize. They all talk about it during election season,
all build the wall, and then you get there and
(13:36):
you get twenty five feet a wall and a bunch
of excuses. Greg Abbott, if look that's his excuse, he's
a Republican. That's what they all are. It's why I'm
an anti communist. Apparently that clip fired up the senator
one of the good ones. We don't have very many
good ones, sadly, but we do have one. Out of
Alabama football coach. Everyone knows of his coach, not Senator.
I think that's the coolest thing in the world, Senator
(13:58):
Tommy Tubberville, coach.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
I don't know why that clip got you all fired up?
What did I do?
Speaker 3 (14:02):
Are you mad at me?
Speaker 2 (14:04):
Well, unfortunately, told a lot of truth. Jesse.
Speaker 5 (14:07):
Here's a lot of truth the entire I watched the
entire clip, and you know, we're in bad trouble. I
tell people that when I go out and speak in Alabama,
and you know, people ask me, coach, what.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Are we gonna do, how we're gonna do it? Where
are we at? That pretty much tell them, you know,
our country is.
Speaker 5 (14:23):
In bad trouble. We've probably already lost our country as
we grew up in it. Now the only chance we
can get it back is that is to get people
up here that's going.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
To listen to their constituents.
Speaker 5 (14:34):
And as you just said, a lot of people come
up here, Jesse and the Democrats, for instance, They they're
in a group mode.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
They vote as a group.
Speaker 5 (14:43):
They you know, they figure something out and that's where
they go and they're gonna stick with it. Hell or
high water. Republicans were kind of individual contractors. Uh you know,
I represent Alabama. I don't represent me. I come up
here and I vote for the state of Alabama because
we're pro life, for pro military. Uh you know, we
were against big government, we were for God. All those
(15:05):
things go along and anything with that. I'm gonna vote
that way. I'm not gonna him haul around and let
some other Republican come come to me and say, coach,
and we need you to vote this way or that way,
or any lobbyists. And uh, you know, my dad was
a military he died on active duty.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
I believe in this country.
Speaker 5 (15:21):
But I'll tell you, uh you know, we're not a
team in the Republican side.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Now.
Speaker 5 (15:26):
We try to be, but there's too many individual contractors.
And again I vote different than a lot of them
sometimes and they probably think the same thing about me.
But again, the thing about it is they don't do
that on the Democratic side. They stick together and they
gonna vote, you know, for for their persuasion, not their state.
(15:48):
They're gonna vote how Chuck Humer wants to vote, and
that's how we've ended up in.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
This mess, Coach, Why is it that way on the
right to such an extent?
Speaker 2 (15:58):
And this is what I mean.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
I don't expect or even want you to be identical
to Mike Lee or Ted Cruz or something like that.
I like that we have individuals up there who are
different and have and have different perspective on things. But
some of these guys who are up there, and I'm
happy to name names, as you know, but I don't
need to. Some of these guys actually seem to hate
me as a GOP primary voter as part of the
(16:20):
GOP base, the things I care about. They talk down
to us now quite openly all the time, that we're
stupid and we're idiots and we don't understand.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
It feels like they hate us.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
Well, I think a lot of times. And again I'm
not gonna put words in other senator's mouth. But the
thing about it is is you're around so much up
here that sometimes you get into a situation where you
think you know better than everybody else. Other than say,
it doesn't make any difference I think here, as coach
Tommy Turberville, I vote for the people of Alabama. I'm
(16:54):
not going to vote to spend money up here that
we don't have. I'm just not gonna do it, and
they don't want me to do that. And again, I'll
fight back against you know, the abortion policies that bid
administration has thrown at us, the military, and the VA.
I'll fight back against anything that I think the American.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
People in Alabama want me to fight back against it.
Speaker 5 (17:17):
I don't care I'm not running to get reelected, Okay,
I could care less about staying up here. You know,
fifteen twenty thirty years, that's I've had in my career.
I'm up here to help Alabama and help the citizens
of this country, and I'm gonna vote that way.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Is that why you're more impervious to it? And maybe
why some of the others are not? And I really,
I really genuinely mean that everyone knew who Tommy Tuberville
was long before you became a United States senator. You've
had this incredible life and this great career and everything.
You don't need to be a freaking senator. You walk
away tomorrow and be just fine. You're still going to
be coach Tommy Tuberville. So the others who don't necessarily
(17:55):
have that life experience, and not many do, is that
what hurts them? All they have is I'm senator this,
I'm Congressman that. And if they lose that there nothing
is that what happens to our guys up there?
Speaker 5 (18:07):
Well, I think it happens to groups on both sides,
not just our side. I think people come up here
and they see this as something that they can use
as as what you said, as a symbol of a power.
I've made it to this point. There's only one hundred
US senators. You know, I don't look at it that way.
(18:28):
I think you've got to come in with that mindset.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
Again.
Speaker 5 (18:31):
You know, I didn't invent a wheel here. I just
come up here and I've seen what's going on. And
again I have not voted for one dime to go
to Ukraine.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
I do not believe.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
And again there's nobody has got any more information than me.
Because I'm on Armed Services. I've been on all the
classified hearings. I've asked questions to all the generals people
who have been there. I've had people hear hostages from
you know from Ukraine and people that's been fighting there.
I've talked to all of them, and I see where
Mike Johnson's changed his mind.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
I've seen things now that change my mind.
Speaker 5 (19:03):
We need to give money Ukraine. They can't win I
don't know how to put it any any more.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Plane. They cannot win over Russia.
Speaker 5 (19:13):
We need to go over there and get this madness
over with and save the lives of people from Ukraine
and Russia and draw a line a new boundary.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
They keep saying that Vladimir pood is gonna run through Europe.
He doesn't want Europe. What the hell would he want
that for.
Speaker 5 (19:30):
I mean, they have no minerals, they have no gas
or they don't have anything. And sure he could probably
go through there because they have boutiques armies now they
don't spend any money on defence.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
But at the end of the day, this guy does not.
Speaker 5 (19:44):
Want people on his borders, you know, with weapons like
US in Ukraine.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
They want NATO wants Ukraine to be.
Speaker 5 (19:54):
On their team. I don't believe they need to be
on their team. We wouldn't want China in Mexico at
the end of the day, That's what it's all about
they can't win.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
Well.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
Speaking of borders, this may Orcas situation, it's not surprising
to anyone who understands how these dirty communists operate. I
knew Chuck Schumer wasn't going to have a trial. That's
something Republicans would do to themselves. Democrats would never do
such a thing. So we're just stuck with an open border, now,
aren't we. Senator. I know you don't want that. I
know that's not what I want, but that's really what
(20:25):
we're stuck with now.
Speaker 5 (20:26):
Right most devastating thing has happened, Jesse, And you're in
my lifetime, and it's over what you said. What you
said that they're they're here, they're not going home. We
might be able to send a few of them home,
but they've let their prisons out down in Venezuela. They've
done everything they possibly do can do to ruin our country.
I just don't understand. I've asked some of my Democratic colleagues,
(20:50):
what is it that you don't understand about our country
is getting overrun by people that don't know anything about
our country. They can't help our country whatsoever, and it's
going to cost us a fortune, and it's going to
cause crime to go out too. What is it you
don't understand. We need to help other people. Wait a minute,
We're all for immigration. We can bring a million people
in a year. We can bring in people that speak
(21:12):
our language, are educated. They can help us become a
better country. But that's not what they want. They want
voters at the end of the day.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
That's what this is all about. You know that.
Speaker 5 (21:22):
But I'll tell you it is gonna be devastating to
this next few generations coming up, and Heaven help us
if we don't get some something done at the board.
That's reason I'm really disgusted with the Republican Party. We
have had an opportunity to say, listen, we're gonna take
our our football and go home and we're not going
(21:44):
to pass anything for the rest of this term. I
don't care who it's for, whether it's a new budget,
We're gonna go home until you close that damn board
because it is killing the American people.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
And but we won't do it. And we've had every
opportunity to.
Speaker 5 (22:01):
Say, listen, you know games that match, y'all can play,
play politics all you want, you don't close the border.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
We're done. But nobody would do that up here.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
So frustrating, Senator, I wanted to make sure I ask
you before I let you go about the DoD the
vaccine mandate. Today, it's just madness to me that our
troops are still going through all this crap.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
What did you learn about all this? Well?
Speaker 5 (22:31):
Being on Armed Services Committee, I've had all the stats
and we're starting to get them more and more in today.
We had the Secretary of the Army here and the
Chief Staff of the Army, and I had already had
the status and I kind of read them out to him.
They ran out eighteen hundred people in the Army, just soldiers,
and then we lost two hundred great mechanics on airplanes
(22:51):
and all the big equipment that we have. We run
them off two hundred and we can't replace them. There's
nobody to replace them with. And uh, that's just the Army,
that's not the Air Force and Marines. Because we were
talking about recruiting, and that's what I've done all my
life is recruit We have nothing to sell these young
men and women coming out of high school and college
(23:13):
about a great and strong military. All we have to
sell them is a you join our military. And you
can be part of a great diversity, equity and inclusion
program and you know we'll go happily down the road.
I mean, we need a killing machine. We are on
the verge of three wars. Somebody needs to wake up
(23:34):
and smell the roses. I've talked to active duty military
all over the world since I've been in this job.
I've talked to all over the country at our military basis.
I've talked to military personnel that have recently got out,
and a lot of people just here getting out because
they can't put up with all this madness that they're
(23:56):
being taught in the military. They can't handle it. One
marine told me, he said, Coach, I fought in two wars.
I love this country. I've got two boys that are
getting close to military age. Not one of them will
ever fight in this military. I will move to another
country if we start a war because we can't win
with the leadership that we have in the military that
(24:17):
we have. Now we have gone the other direction, and
I think it's all but design. And so it's look
at Joe Biden right now. Show a weakness in the
Middle East, to show a weakness.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Everywhere all over the world.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
And what better than just say, hey, listen, we're just
going to destroy our military. We won't be able to
fight no matter whether people want us to fight or not.
I mean, it's it's madness all over this administration and
the things that we're doing in terms of protecting the
American people and the best country has ever been on
the face of this earth.
Speaker 1 (24:49):
It is heartbreaking, Coach. I think that's my son's. Look,
my son's at thirteen and fifteen. They've put on dad's
marine uniform before sitting in my clause and I've told
them no dances, no, no under this kind of and
that figure breaks my heart. Coach, Hopefully I break red
with you one of these days. We gotta go get
a stake one of these nights. I appreciate you very much.
All Right, there's a lot going on overseas speaking of
(25:12):
what Coach was just talking about, and we're going to
dig into some of those things in a moment. Before
we get to those things, let's dig into this. He
said something. He said a lot of things that are
very profound there. But one of those things is it's intentional.
You and I know this by now. It's intentional what
they're doing is intentional your money. You know, we look
around and we can't afford what we used to be
(25:34):
able to afford. Everyone's watching their standard a living go down.
You can't afford the groceries of vacations, they're eating out,
the new clothes that, whatever may be, you can't afford it.
It's intentional. They are attacking our money. They have been
doing this for a long time. Why else would you
print trillions in unbacked currency. Get a hold of Oxford
Goal Group because precious metals, hard assets, things you can
(25:57):
touch and feel. Those are the things you'll be able
to rely on once your government declares war on your money.
All right, that's what Oxford Gold Group is. It's our
parachute for all this stuff. You don't have to go crazy,
you don't go nuts. They'll put gold, silver coins in
your physical possession.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
They'll get it in your retirement called eight three three.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Gold.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
All right, eight three three nine nine five gold. We'll
be back.
Speaker 6 (26:33):
And I made it clear to Israelis. Don't move on, Hypha.
It's just not I mean anyway, I just look what
we did recently when Israel was attacked.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
Don't move on, Haifa. I actually, you know, I agree
with Joe Biden there. I think strategically for the Israelis,
I think it would be a mistake to invade a
city that's already in Israel.
Speaker 2 (27:04):
But maybe I'm wrong. Mike Baker was in the CIA.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
I certainly wasn't joining me now, Mike Baker, former CIA
operations officer and host of the Amazing President's Daily Brief. Mike, Look,
I was just the corporal in the Marines. I don't
pretend to be some all knowing guy. You were CIA.
Is it smart to invade Haifa? Or is that a mistake?
Speaker 2 (27:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (27:24):
You know, I was talking to some folks.
Speaker 8 (27:26):
I was just in DC and we were talking about
potential target packages that the IDF might pull together for
this response to Saturday night's attack, and none of them
included Haifa.
Speaker 7 (27:39):
So it might be a whole new thought process. I
don't know. Again, you know you.
Speaker 8 (27:44):
Can't Trying to make sense of what President Biden is
saying currently is very very difficult, right. I mean, he's
because in part because all he's doing is pandering to
his base out of fear of losing that vote over
the support of Israel. So he says, one thing, we
support a two state solution, and then you find out
from Leech's cable the traffic coming out of State Department,
(28:07):
that the White House does not want the two state solution,
and now they're going to veto it in the UN
when it comes through tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (28:15):
Great, all right, let's move on. Yeah, yeah, who whatever, know,
let's deal with this.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
One thing I find frustrating is it's hard to get
details on the ground, details from the ground, strategic details
of how any of the conflicts going on in the
world are. You think with the overabundance of information, we
would know. But I've genuinely just been.
Speaker 2 (28:37):
Curious, not rooting, but Ukraine, Russia.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
What's happening there? What are the tactics is reel hamas Iran?
In fact, let's begin there. What's going on there? Israel's
in their invading Palestine?
Speaker 2 (28:49):
Is that going? Okay?
Speaker 1 (28:51):
Iran's launching all these drones, has belaws attacking from the north.
What's the tactical situation on the ground, setting all the
emotions aside.
Speaker 7 (29:00):
Yeah, no, it's a great question. Okay.
Speaker 8 (29:02):
First of all, they have secured Tel Aviv, so that's good.
You know, what I think what's happening right now is
kidding aside, is that they've they've made a decision that
they're going to hold off on this retaliatory strike against
Iran until after Passover, which you know will wrap up
(29:22):
on the thirtieth of April. So that's the first thing,
because that's had everybody on edge. What's going to happen there?
What's their target package going to look like?
Speaker 2 (29:32):
Now?
Speaker 8 (29:32):
I suspect, look, Iran gave them an off ramp because
Iran clearly doesn't want strikes inside their territory against nuclear facilities,
against their energy to infrastructure refineries. They know that the
potential for chaos internally and the potential for the Mullus
(29:52):
to lose power is real if this thing kicks into
a real direct conflict between Iran and Israel, and they
know the US at that point will have to come in.
So I think, you know, the Iranians did their attack
on Saturday night mostly to play to the home crowd,
you know, mostly to say, look at us. You know,
they may have taken out General Sahiti and others, but
(30:12):
we had a strong, strong response. Well, they telegraph that
response by advising the Saudis and others that their missiles
and drones would be passing through their airspace, knowing that
the Saudis would then inform the US. So in a sense,
it was an indirect telegraphing of what was about to happen,
because again, they don't want this to spiral out of control.
(30:33):
So israel I think at this situation now, because of
their ongoing conflict and their concern over operations in Rafa,
they're concerned over hasbolav North, They're going to probably look
to do a target package that is not inside Irradian territory.
I could be completely wrong about this, but I suspect
that may be the case, possibly an attack on weapons
(30:54):
facilities and other inanimate objects in Syria, going after some
proxy activity. I don't know that they're going to go
after this in a big way because, you know, despite
the fact that the only thing that will get us
to long lasting peace in the Middle East is the
collapse of the Iranian regime, I think all sides are
concerned over what that.
Speaker 7 (31:15):
Could look like if it really does kick off.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
Yeah, regime change always sounds good until you find out
how that actually shakes out and the end.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
Okay, well, Mike, let me ask you this.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Then, if Iran telegraphed it. Israel and a bunch of
people US included swatted all these things down.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
Is it a mistake? Technically? I understand you have to
respond as a state. Is it a mistake to respond
at all? Anytime? Soon passover or no passover?
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Maybe you wait a year and you drill them with
something when you're still busy with the South and the North.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
Why are you opening up a new fronts? Why not
just wait?
Speaker 8 (31:52):
Yeah, I think there's a general sense of Look, there
is some division there in the war cabinet, but I
think there's a general over all sense at a thirty
thousand foot level that you can't allow that to happen
without a response. You can't normalize that significant of an
air strike, even though they telegraphed it, it was still
you know, one hundred and eighty five drones and you
(32:14):
know upwards of one hundred plus ballistic and cruise missiles.
Speaker 7 (32:18):
You can't normalize that.
Speaker 8 (32:19):
And so but again, I think they're going to be
trying to thread the needle in terms of a response,
but not one that you know, then spirals out of
control and the next thing you know, we've got a
major conflagration.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
No, that's sucky, all right, Mike, real quick, Russia Ukraine again,
you can't ever find out what the heck is actually
happening out there. You get a propaganda headline from them,
and a propaganda.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
Headline from them. The situation on the ground, what is it.
Speaker 8 (32:47):
We've been looking at this in the President's daily brief
and and you're absolutely right, it's it's a very murky
situation when you try to just understand something as straightforward
as casualties. Right, So, latest assessments are that the Russian
military has had up to fifty thousand plus and probably
more because again these are conservative estimates. Fifty thousand deaths
(33:10):
Russian soldiers dying in this Putin's invasion on the Ukrainian
side equally murky, hard to understand.
Speaker 7 (33:17):
It's understandable both sides.
Speaker 8 (33:19):
You know, they're not keen to be transparent about their casualties,
but the Ukrainians possibly thirty thousand or so.
Speaker 7 (33:25):
This is a real problem right now.
Speaker 8 (33:27):
Look, it has definitely shifted in Putin's favor, right, and
the Ukrainian military is definitely facing significant shortages of just
about everything, not just munitions, but all the hardware you
need to keep a war effort moving, you know, and
not even advancing, just trying to hold off the Russian advance.
(33:48):
The Russian military is now conscripting another three hundred thousand
or so personnel for a very expected summer offensive. They
have controlled a significant amount of territory don Bass region.
Speaker 7 (34:01):
They are making some gains.
Speaker 8 (34:04):
This is again, I don't want to sound overly cynical,
because you have to praise the Ukrainian military and the
courage of the people there, but you have to also
look at this in a realistic manner. If they don't
get resupplied, if the US Congress is so dysfunctional that
they can't figure out the gravity of the situation and
approve some further aid to Ukraine, you know, Putin's going
(34:26):
to win.
Speaker 7 (34:27):
Ukrainians can't hold out.
Speaker 8 (34:29):
And even Zelenski, who's always been looking at this through
rose colored glasses in terms of how his military is doing,
he's now turned the corner and said, yeah, we you know,
we'll probably lose if we don't get further aid.
Speaker 2 (34:40):
That's it.
Speaker 8 (34:41):
And so if people are okay with that in Congress,
then they should stand up and say we're okay with
Putin winning. They should at least express the understanding that
they know what's going to happen by them, you know,
unasking the sofa and voting against Ukrainian Aid.
Speaker 1 (34:57):
Yeah, Mike, thank you, my brother. As always, I share
it very much, all right. On top of everything else,
we have inflation news, interest rates news. We'll talk to
Carry Sheffield about that next. Before we talk to Carrie Sheffield,
let's talk to you about the time share.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
You're stuck in, but you don't have to be. You
do not have to be stuck in that time share.
Speaker 1 (35:15):
This is the lie that timeshare companies tell everybody these days.
Everybody they get you signed up, fluffy brochure, you know
our look at the palm trees and hopefully you have
enjoyed your time share. I really hope you do. But
eventually people get tired of it, kids move away. Whatever
timeshare company tells you, oh so are you went out,
(35:37):
we don't do that. Here, pay your annual fees, pay
your special assessments. This is a lie because loan star
transfer exists. You would be stuck if it wasn't for
loan Star transfer. But this family business, ninety nine percent
of the time they get people legally and permanently out
of their time shares ninety nine percent of the time
(35:59):
they put in writing. You're not stuck your one phone
call away from freedom. Do you want to be free
of that time share?
Speaker 2 (36:07):
Call eight four four three one zero two six four six.
We'll be back.
Speaker 9 (36:21):
So we've said at the FMC that will need greater
confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward two percent before
it be appropriate to ease policy. You know, we took
that cautious approach and sought that greater confidence so as
not to overreact to the string of low inflation readings
that we had in the second half of last year.
(36:42):
The recent data have clearly not given us greater confidence,
and instead indicate that it's likely to take longer than
expected to achieve that confidence. That said, we think policy
is well positioned to handle the risks that we face
if higher inflation does persist. We can maintain the current
level of restriction for as long as needed.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
Well, I don't know what all that means. I went
to community college. That doesn't sound very good at all.
I hope Carrie can explain it to us. I'm sure
she can. Joining me now. Carrie Sheffield, Senior Policy analysts
with the Independent Women's Forum, also an author of an
outstand due book, outstanding book, I'm sorry motor home prophecies.
Speaker 3 (37:23):
I love the name.
Speaker 1 (37:23):
All right, carry that all sounded bad, but I'm uneducated.
Speaker 2 (37:28):
Is it good? What was he just saying there?
Speaker 10 (37:31):
Well, look, I don't think he knows what he's saying,
and so you're you're totally fine because he has been
asleep at.
Speaker 11 (37:41):
The wheel his entire term.
Speaker 10 (37:44):
Unfortunately, I think he's one of the worst Federal Reserve
chairs that we've ever had. I would describe him as reactionary, stumbling.
And we used the word confidence a couple times, and
I just wanted to cringe each time I heard him
say that word, because I'm like, I have no confidence
in what you're doing.
Speaker 11 (38:04):
Because they.
Speaker 10 (38:07):
And the other thing is that he so the way
they've been, you know, spiking the interest rates. They are
the reason why the American dream is falling out of
reach for a lot of people of home ownership. And
he says over and over, I need to stick to
my knitting. I need to stick to my knitting. I
only do monetary policy. I don't do fiscal policy. Well,
(38:27):
the problem is there's an echo chamber loop between fiscal
and monetary policy. Fiscal policy is what the Congress and
the White House does. That's all the budget stuff, and
we know that the inflationary impact of all of the
stimulus that was passed by the Biden White House and
unfortunately the Republicans. This is part of why you see
Republicans in revolt because they want to stop the spending.
(38:48):
The spending is driving the interest rates not slowing down
the way that they've been hoping, and now they're starting
to creep back up again. So he's keep saying, oh,
we're you know, we're going to be crost it's not dropping,
the inflation's not dropping as much as we wanted to.
So therefore we have to delay cutting the interest rates
(39:09):
because we need we need to slow the economy.
Speaker 11 (39:11):
We need to keep slowing the economy.
Speaker 10 (39:13):
Well, that's going to cause more job loss and it's
going to cause less housing being able to be purchased.
Speaker 1 (39:20):
Kerrie, can you explain what do you think we're I
know we're guessing on a lot of things here. What
are we thinking for the rest of the year. Obviously
they were telling us we were going to get a
rate cut. At least they were kind of hinting at it,
flirting with that rate cut a little bit, and now
we're hearing maybe four point eight percent year over years,
So you ain't getting a rate cut at four point
eight percent. Are we going to have rates go up soon?
Speaker 12 (39:46):
I mean, the fact that inflation has been creeping up,
it's not out of the realm of possibility. The other
thing that I want to point out is median CPI,
which is I've just looked it up. It's four point
five to five percent, which is much higher than the CPI,
the core CPI of three point four eight percent, So
median CPI is the more realistic and that's almost heading
(40:08):
towards five percent.
Speaker 10 (40:11):
That's that's terrible. The median CPI is actually what people
put into their the average. It's the median which you're
actually shopping for, versus throwing out the extremes, which is
like the CPI. So the fact that that's still much
higher than the CPI, to me, is a leading indicator
that the inflation is not going anywhere. So it's very
much in the real of possibility that we could still
(40:33):
see another rise in interest rates, potentially at the very
least of plateauing of you know, the cuts that they've
been doing, which I think makes a lot of people
who are homeowners upset because they see their home values
plummeting they make it makes it harder for them to
be able to sell their homes too. So I hope,
and you know, I don't like inviting within the conservative movement,
(40:55):
but I understand why people are so angry on the
right to try to tell Speaker Johnson, we have to
cut into spending.
Speaker 11 (41:03):
We have to.
Speaker 2 (41:06):
Yeah, no, we don't have any options here.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Okay, you wrote a piece about Joe Biden attacking banks.
Speaker 2 (41:13):
What's he doing? What are you talking about?
Speaker 10 (41:16):
Yeah, so it's part of an ongoing pattern that I've
written about, not only for this current one, but also
it's the Consumer Financial Protection Ber at the CFPB, which
is so orwellianly named, and I believe also an unconstitutional
agency that is just completely lacking in accountability in its
funding structure. But in any case, this was a study
(41:39):
that was looking at you so called overdraft fees and
what happens if the biderministration wants.
Speaker 11 (41:47):
To severely tamp down on overdraft fees.
Speaker 10 (41:49):
Which might sound great, However, when you actually look at
the study itself, it showed that the consumers, if you
don't have the overdraft fees, there's no signal for them
to change their beha behavior and they actually end up
nose diving into other products that are way worse for them.
They go into the black market as opposed to going
to work with a bank or financial institution. There's also
(42:11):
not as much of just a signal for them to
change their behavior.
Speaker 11 (42:13):
It's almost like a wake up call.
Speaker 10 (42:15):
That's what is signaled when you have these overdraft fees.
Speaker 11 (42:20):
I don't like overdraft fees, but I've had to pay
them sometimes.
Speaker 10 (42:22):
But at the end of the day, it's actually valuable
to have a red light flashing to you to change
your behavior. So that's what was interesting about the study
is that people saw the value in overdraft fees, and
they said that the ability to get the money they
needed by paying that extra almost in some ways like
attax or just an extra fee. It was valuable enough
(42:44):
for them to be able to do very basic things
like pay for their grocery bills, or put gas in
their car, or pay for their utilities. And so what
the study found is that the most basic stables could
be threatened if the Biden administration is able to do this, Carrie.
Speaker 1 (43:01):
I want to talk about your book for a second
because of the name, the title. Honestly it got me.
I love it. Motor Home Prophecies. What are you talking about?
What is this thing about?
Speaker 11 (43:09):
Yeah, thanks for letting me chat about it.
Speaker 10 (43:11):
It just came out last months, a few weeks ago,
and the title. I've got a copy here as well,
and you can get it wherever you.
Speaker 11 (43:19):
Get your books.
Speaker 10 (43:20):
I called it motor Home Prophecies because they grew up
largely in a motor home, or large parts of my
childhood were in many ways the third world existence, so
we would care in between first world the third World.
Sometimes we had houses. We also had sheds and tents.
My brother was born when their family was living in
a tent. I took my act exam for college when
our family was living in the Ozarks with it in
(43:41):
a shed with no running.
Speaker 11 (43:42):
Water, and I have seven biological siblings.
Speaker 10 (43:45):
With my parents, it was ten people, not a very
sanitary or comfortable living situation. And we did this because
my father claimed that he was a Mormon prophet. I'm
careful to distinguish his behavior which was not sanctioned by
the official church. Of Jesus Christ at Glaturday, saying the
official Eldist Church, he.
Speaker 11 (44:02):
Was actually excommunicated from that.
Speaker 10 (44:05):
He basically created his own offshoot cult and it was
very physically, emotionally and for me sexually abusive.
Speaker 11 (44:11):
And I just fell into this depression.
Speaker 10 (44:16):
And I wrote the book right now at this time,
because we have the highest suicide rate since nineteen forty one,
since the Great Depression, and I call it the new
Great Depression because even though on a GDP per capita basis,
were much wealthier than we were back then, we didn't
have the stock market crash at that level as we
did back then. I believe what we have is a
moral and a spiritual crisis. And I spent about twelve
(44:36):
years of my life really angry and bitter at God
because I'd been abused in the name of God. My
dad actually put a curse on me in the name
of Jesus. He said I would be raped and murdered
if I left his cult. And then when I eventually
did leave, he said I was no longer his daughter
and that my blood changed, and I was not allowed
home to visit during Christmas or summer breaks.
Speaker 11 (44:57):
And I had to make that choice. You know, I'm
glad I did.
Speaker 10 (45:00):
I'm glad I chose freedom, but I did suffer a
lot of mental health problems. And I've had three siblings
who have attempted suicide.
Speaker 11 (45:06):
I have skins.
Speaker 10 (45:07):
Two skins are brothers, and there's just been a lot
of mental instability. And I'm writing about it now because
I think that what's happening again, Like I said, in
our country where people are killed, we had almost fifty
thousand people kill themselves, which is seventeen almost seventeen times
the number of people who died in nine to eleven.
God gave me, for whatever reason, a twenty year lead
(45:31):
on how to deal with a lot of these issues
and how to deal with getting spirituality and a healthy
balanced faith in God to heal mental illness.
Speaker 11 (45:39):
There's all kinds of evidence that I put.
Speaker 10 (45:41):
In the book that proves that when you go to church,
when you're in healthy, rooted spiritual community, your mental health improves.
There's so much data for this, that your depression levels
go down, that you're but finding that healthy balance. So
I went from one extreme of being in a cult
mind control religion to hating God and having no religion.
(46:02):
I know God, and now that I've found that sweet spot.
That's what I'm here to teach, in particular to gen Z,
because they've swung into that camp of hating God and
not having any faith in their lives, and that's why
they've also had I believe, record suicides and record depression.
Speaker 1 (46:19):
The book is the motor home Prophecies. People will go
pick it up, learn a little something about life, especially
if they're struggling.
Speaker 2 (46:25):
Right now.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
It sounds like the perfect kind of a book. Carrie,
Thank you so much. I appreciate you very very much.
All Right, now, you know what time it is. You
know what time it is. It's time to lighten the mood. Next,
(46:46):
all right, it is time to lighten the mood, as
we always do. But sadly tonight, as you can see
right there on the screen.
Speaker 2 (46:53):
We have to darken the mood. Why well, look, it's
hard run how to get choked up?
Speaker 1 (47:01):
Red Lobster, you know, the premier seafood restaurant in the
United States of America. But from my earliest childhood memories,
that was all I wanted to do was eat at
Red Lobster. They're filing for bankruptcy Chapter eleven bankruptcy, so
it hurts to see this happen to an American institution
like this. I don't know how I personally will go on,
(47:25):
but I will try. All right, all right, I'll see
you