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August 19, 2025 • 31 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
For Michael Verie show is on the air. Let me
make this an absolute fact. The goal is world peace.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
That must be our prime responsibility. We are the leader
of the free world, whether we want to be or not,
and therefore we are the only ones that can preserve
the peace.

Speaker 4 (00:33):
The President has traveled all the way to Alaska all
the way back, has dedicated months and months of work him,
our entire team on this matter because we want to
see an end of the war.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
But if tomorrow the war.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
Continues, life in America will not be fundamentally altered. So
I think that we have to understand is that this
has been a priority for this president because he wants
to promote peace.

Speaker 5 (00:53):
He wants to promote the end of a war.

Speaker 4 (00:55):
And I think we should be happy that we have
a president that's trying to promote peace and bring a
war to an end. You can't have a peace agreement
unless both sides give and get. You can't have a
piece agreement unless both sides make concessions. That's a fact
that's true in virtually any negotiation.

Speaker 5 (01:09):
If not, it's just called surrender.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
And neither side is going to surrender, So both sides
are going to have to make concessions. So of course
concessions were asked these negotiations. As much as everyone would
love it to be a live, pay per view event,
these discussions only work best when they are conducted privately,
So we need to create space for concessions to be made.
But of course concessions were asked.

Speaker 6 (01:30):
John Bolton is going to be one of these individuals
to whom history is going to be most unkind. He
is a warmonger. He betrayed Trump, He betrayed the American people,
He betrayed the men who wear the uniform and get
shot at in war. He is the worst kind of neocon. Well,

(01:55):
after the Alaska Occords where Trump did so well, so
Jonathan Carl of ABC News is saying Trump knows state craft.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
This was brilliant.

Speaker 6 (02:09):
I mean he really he pulled this one off. He
had it all lined out just right, and Neo Khan
John Bolton goes on CNN where he says, oh don't no,
Trump looked tired.

Speaker 5 (02:24):
Phuton achieved most of what he wanted.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Trump achieved very little.

Speaker 7 (02:28):
And I will say one other thing, I thought Trump
looked very tired up there I mean very tired, not disappointed, tired,
and we'll have to reflect on what that means.

Speaker 6 (02:40):
You know. Uh, did I have one other bit of
audio on that subject, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
Let's see two bits.

Speaker 6 (02:52):
Our friend Jack Pisobec was on Real America's Voice where
he called the Anchorage Accord's historic, and you know what,
I think he's right.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
President Trump came back and he was cautiously optimistic. And
I'll say cautiously optimistic like this, because he mentioned perhaps
twenty five percent chance that the meeting ends early. However,
I would say that it seems that we've gone beyond
that twenty five percent chance, at least as we sit
right now, as we're racking and stacking it. But he

(03:24):
also said, we want to cease fire. I don't know
if we'll get a deal today, and so it's certainly
hedging as he went in, but he could tell that
there was a sense of optimism from him.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
It seemed as though he knew what he was doing, and.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
Of course he knew that this is a historic accords
right here, the Anchorage Accords that are taking place. This
is something that he's wanted for a long time, not
just an end to a war by the way, an
overall of framework, an agreement with Russia. And I was
talking with Steve Ruber about this as well. Look what
President Trump has done. He's working his way through with

(04:00):
the bricks nations to get to China, Brazil, India, South Africa,
now Russia. The last letter Briics would be China. So
you can see him working this way to affect a
reverse Kissinger, if you will, to engineer a Sino Soviet
split in our favor. A guest against the CCP, MSNBC.

Speaker 6 (04:25):
Now in a state of panic, they want to know
can we trust Donald Trump when he says that being
friendly with Russia is in our best interest? Can we
trust him? We're not sure. We don't know what to do.
He's getting all the wins.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Can we take Donald Trump at his word that he
just thinks being on friendlier terms with Russia is a
better idea for us?

Speaker 5 (04:49):
No, I don't care if we're talking about France or Russia.

Speaker 8 (04:54):
Better relations, cordial relations, clapping, those.

Speaker 5 (04:58):
Are means to an end.

Speaker 8 (05:01):
The end has to be concrete objectives that are good
for the American people, that are good for our allies.

Speaker 5 (05:07):
And I would say good for our partner in Ukraine.
Just a good meeting.

Speaker 8 (05:10):
I think President Trump gets this mixed up all the time.
He thinks that a good meeting is the outcome, it's
the means to something concrete. If all they do is
all this happy talk, it reminds me you guys were
talking about. It reminds me of King Jong Un. Did
we get anything out of that? Did anything happen about No,
he had these meetings when he was president first time.

Speaker 5 (05:32):
Does anybody remember anything that we got out of Trump?
Excuse it, I got out of Putin because they had
a nice meeting here, there and everywhere.

Speaker 9 (05:42):
We're going to be changing the name of the Gulf
of Mexico to the Gulf.

Speaker 10 (05:46):
Of michael Berry, which is a beautiful way.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
President Trump won the election.

Speaker 8 (06:11):
January sixth was not an insurrection by these Alzheimer's is
real lascandy.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
These are the themes that I truly.

Speaker 9 (06:23):
Believe a lab in movement manufactured rona Donald J.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Trump one an Arizona, the slaws, pull.

Speaker 5 (06:37):
Up your rough rats, belie the streams.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
These are the themes that I truly believe.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
Masks are as useless sasy clown knowses.

Speaker 10 (06:52):
Steve was murdered before he disclosed that half hour he
lead to unscreen goblets.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
These are the things that I truly believe.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
Every word from je Basaki is.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
A two face.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Those that this believe that the things that I think
I mean, I should be book.

Speaker 6 (07:35):
Now let's check in with the deep state operatives to
see what propaganda they're pushing about the peace summit in Alaska.
These occurred after the peace Summit in Alaska. But I
don't think any audio in this particular file that I'm
about to play for you occurred after Zelenski. These are

(07:56):
all in between the Alaska Accords in in Alaska on
Friday and the Zelensky Monday meeting. So that give you
a little bit more context, but just so you see
what they're doing to try to undercut Trump, to try

(08:17):
to spin. First up, we have former Vice President Mike Pence.
I never liked Mike Pence. When some of y'all liked
him as the choice for VP, I never liked Mike Pence.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
I never trusted him.

Speaker 6 (08:30):
He told Jake Tapper that he served alongside the president.
He said he knows his style and dealing with these dictators,
it's a velvet. I'm sorry, it's a velvet glove when
it should be a hammer. So so Mike Pence. He
knows better how to deal with with Putin than Trump.

(08:50):
That's what we're supposed to believe here.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
There are observers out there, people who like Trump, people
who are rooting for Trump, who think that Trump got
played well.

Speaker 11 (09:02):
Look, you know, I served alongside the President for four years.
I know his style in dealing with these dictators.

Speaker 5 (09:10):
It's the velvet glove.

Speaker 11 (09:12):
But I think the hammer needs to come, and it
needs to come immediately. I think the President as he
welcomes President Zelenski to the Oval Office tomorrow and a
whole cast of our allies in.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
Europe that are going to be joining him.

Speaker 11 (09:27):
I think at the same time he had to pick
up the phone and ask Majority Leader John Thune to
immediately pass the secondary sanctions bill that is supported by
virtually everyone in the United States Senate. I think the
combination of engagement but also making it clear to Putin

(09:50):
that we are prepared to take actions that would literally
break his economy even while we redouble our commitment to
the security of Ukraine and to working closely with our
European allies is important.

Speaker 5 (10:06):
Look, I said it before, I'll say it again.

Speaker 11 (10:09):
In the long history of the last twenty five years,
Putin has made it clear. He launched an attack into
Georgia when President Bush was in office. He attacked Crimea
and Ukraine when Obama was in office. After that disastrous
withdrawal in Afghanistan, he crossed the border and started this

(10:29):
war three years ago. Putin's made it no secret of
the fact that he wants to reassert the old Soviet
sphere of influence, what we used to call the Evil
Empire in Eastern Europe. And I think Putin only understands strength.
So while the President and his diplomatic team engage in

(10:50):
this reapproach with Putin, and there seems to be interest,
in my judgment, Putin's not going to stop until he
stopped until he understands that there's going to be enormous
cost to Russia. And there's an unflagging commitment to defending
Ukraine's sovereignty by the United States and our allies.

Speaker 6 (11:14):
Former National Security advisor for Obama, Susan Rice, another very
evil person, has lots of blood on her hands, was
on MSNBC with Jim Pasaki, who was also in that administration.
She called the summit a victory for Putin, and she
hopes Putin didn't bug the presidential limo while he was

(11:36):
riding with President Trump.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
Ah, yes, Putin has bugged Trump.

Speaker 6 (11:42):
Is such a such a dufus that and the Secret Service,
there are all such dufuses that that Putin doctor evil.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
He bugged the limo and we'll.

Speaker 6 (11:53):
Never he'll be able to listen in on Trump and
Trump allowed it because Trump's not very smart.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
It is an out of body experience.

Speaker 9 (12:01):
I will say, to watch things happen in a way
that is so different from how things.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
Would have been done in an administration you worked in.
And that is even more.

Speaker 5 (12:10):
So I would bet for you. Giving you were the
National Security Advisor, What were you? What is your takeaway
from the meeting today?

Speaker 2 (12:18):
What did you make of it?

Speaker 12 (12:19):
It was, in short, Jen, a big victory for Vladimir Putin.
He walked off his plane onto a red carpet to
a clapping Donald Trump and a flyover of American military aircraft,
an extremely warm reception. And then they get into the
President of the United States limousine one on one with

(12:44):
no staff and no interpreters, and Putin apparently good enough
English to carry on a conversation. I hope Jen that
he did not drop a bug in the backseat of
the President's limousine as a former kg BEAD chief, because
having Putin in that limousine is really quite an extraordinary gesture.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
And then he lets.

Speaker 12 (13:09):
Putin speak first at the press conference.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
But the big picture is that this is.

Speaker 12 (13:14):
The end from Putin's perspective of his international isolation. He's
welcome onto American soil for the first time in almost
two decades outside of the UN, and he gets a
warm welcome from Trump and gave nothing in return, stuck
to his hardline positions about Ukraine, and he walks away

(13:38):
with no sanctions against him, evading sanctions for the fourth time.
He walks away with no cease fire, vague discussion about
an agreement that nobody understands, and he's in a stronger
position than when he arrived.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
And Trump, frankly, it's not clear what he got.

Speaker 12 (13:58):
Except some back candid bs about how war wouldn't have
happened if Trump had been president, which is something Trump
loves to say, and.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
That literally might be.

Speaker 12 (14:09):
The only thing Trump got out of this hole.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
Sure, this is LaToya Kadsrill. If I'm Love meets a
Michael Berry.

Speaker 6 (14:16):
That boy, fine fine, Praise Jesus. He also hosted former
Obama CIA chief John Brennan. Wow, this is just old homewek,
isn't it. It's almost like they're trotting them all out
here to try to undercut Trump. Almost like they're scared.
Brennan called the summit in Alaska shameful. He's living on

(14:41):
a different planet and he's scared, He's worried. He oddly
echoes Susan Rice's concern about Putin dropping a bug in
the presidential limo.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
You know, they scheme this stuff up, They plan what
they're going to say.

Speaker 9 (14:55):
Just looking at the optics, it's clear that Putin felt
very confident from the arrival in terms of how he
was greeted again an international pariah, a war criminal who
was basically embraced by the president United States on a
red carpet in the United States. So I think you
could see on Putin's face he felt very, very comfortable,

(15:17):
and the fact that he was given a ride then
in the presidential limousine the Beast. I certainly hope the
Secret Service has swept that vehicle very well. In terms
of any type of small microchip that might have been.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Put in the vehicle.

Speaker 9 (15:29):
But then in the press conference, Putin looked chipper, He
looked upbeat. He looked like somebody who was satisfied with
the meeting, not as though he was somebody who was
given an ultimatum about what's going on in Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
He did look very upbeat, and.

Speaker 9 (15:45):
Donald Trump he spoke for a very short period of time.
I know people think that it was Putin who didn't
want to take questions. That might have been the case,
but also I think the American side didn't want to
take questions either because there's no good answers to what
has happened. They were making reference to an agreement, but
it was nothing at all. Is don't mention about a
ceasefire anything. And also I think Donald Trump realized throughout

(16:07):
the day that he was getting played by Putin. But
also I think Donald Trump just put himself in this position.
He was the one who offered this meeting, He was
the one who invited Putin to the US territory. He
was the one that to put together this summit that
clearly there was very little preparation for.

Speaker 2 (16:24):
And they came out empty handed.

Speaker 9 (16:25):
So I think when I look at what happened today,
it was embarrassing. I think it was shameful, But also
I think it's very very worrisome from the standpoint of
the United States. The leader of the United States engaged
with the President Putin and came away with apparently nothing
at this point, but also again normalized. I think, as
Investment Fall said, normalize lamt Putin for all the tremendous

(16:46):
suffering and the devastation that he has wrought in Ukraine.

Speaker 6 (16:51):
Brennan told Posaki that as a former KGB agent, Putin
knows how to flatter his target, and Trump has an
ego that needs constant flattering. Uh, he got the better
of Trump because he's a KGB agent. They're so clever,
and Trump he's just a dumb dumb He's naive, he
just has a big ego.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
He won't know what they're doing.

Speaker 9 (17:12):
Well, it was strange one respect, but it also wasn't
unsurprising another because again, Leander Putin, as a as a
trained intelligence officer, knows that the way to ingratiate himself
with others is to flatter them, and obviously Donald Trump's
ego is something that he needs constant flattering floor. And
so again, inviting Donald Trump to Moscow is something that

(17:35):
you know, let me, Putin I'm sure wanted to do
and wanted to do it very publicly, and put Donald
Trump in the position of having a response to that,
and Trump said, yeah, well maybe, And so again it
looked like Putin was in control of this summit. And
I presume that during the closed meeting that they had,
the small meeting that Putin did most of the talking.

(17:56):
In Putin's first meeting with President Obama, he spoke nonsose
off for almost an hour, and so I could I
could just imagine that Putin spoke throughout the course of
that meeting, and there was very little back and forth
between the two delegations. But again, maybe there's something that's
going to be coming out soon and it's going to
redeem what looks like a failed meeting. But again, all

(18:17):
of this, as Andrews said, the choreography, uh, the just
the the impression that was left as a result of
that joint statement that came out not a press conference,
just in you know, two statements really left I think
everybody wanting and I'm sure that Presidence Lensky right now
in Ukraine is really really worried that the recent increase
that we've seen in Russian military operations is not going

(18:40):
to stop.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
In fact, it might increase.

Speaker 6 (18:44):
Some other things I would like to get to. That
happened over the weekend. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessened was on
Fox Business where he wondered if it was a good
idea for the Fed to start renovations, because remember, they're
spending billions of dollars on their building.

Speaker 2 (19:01):
Was it billion?

Speaker 6 (19:02):
How much did they do? You remember how much they
were spending? Maybe it's millions. I wrote billions, but sometimes
if I'm writing while i'm listening, it's not a trillion. Anyways,
he made the point they're losing one hundred million dollars
a year. Why are they doing renovations when they're losing? Well, see,

(19:25):
I wrote a one hundred million, and I wrote a
hundred billion. Damn it, I can't remember. He'll say it
in the clip.

Speaker 13 (19:30):
I don't really understand what's going on with the size
of scope, the cost of the building renovations. One can ask,
was it a good idea to start the renovations for
an enterprise that's losing one hundred billion dollars a year,
the hundred billion because of a mismatch in the bond
portfolio from the short term rates. And I think that

(19:52):
the FED should undertake an internal review because I think
all the other operations are endangering its independence of monetary policy.
As I said, monetary policy should be kept independent. It's
a jewel box should be walled off. But by undertaking

(20:13):
all these other activities, then you come in for criticism
just like you're seeing here that might impinge on monetary independence.

Speaker 6 (20:27):
Kimball Combone is an author and the owner of Magnificent Books.
He says, the only solution to America's problems is to
exterminate you white people off the face of the planet.

Speaker 14 (20:40):
And the one idea is how we are going to
exterminate white people, because that, in my estimation, is the
only conclusion I have come to.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
We have to exterminate white people off.

Speaker 14 (20:53):
Of the face of the planet to solve this problem. Now,
I don't care whether you clap or not, but I'm
saying to you that we need to solve this problem
because they are going to kill us.

Speaker 6 (21:07):
Great value Obama, as they call him, the discount Obama.
Hakeem Jeffries was on CNBC with Joe Kernan when he
called the Trump administration a calamity. Kernin provided a list
of Trump's accomplishments and asked Jeffries which of them was
the calamity. So not only does he not have an
answer to this, he has to sit there and listen

(21:29):
to Trump's accomplishments being read off to him and all
the folks at home.

Speaker 15 (21:35):
All I can tell is that the inflation rate itself
was two point seven percent in the most recent read year,
versus it got to a hive nine percent under Biden,
stocks for at record highs.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Unemployment is four point two percent, that's full employment.

Speaker 16 (21:54):
The GDP is three percent, The border is actually secure,
We've got trade deals with EU, Japan, many more in
the works, and trillions of dollars of foreign investment coming here.
Iran's nuclear ambitions have been set back indefinitely.

Speaker 5 (22:10):
And I just wrote down a few things.

Speaker 15 (22:12):
So I just have to ask you, where is the
calamity that you're talking about? And it almost seems like
for Democrats, socialism.

Speaker 5 (22:21):
Is the answer to.

Speaker 15 (22:24):
These problems, or I don't know about what an end
of democracy or or something that we just don't get it.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
It's out the world as we know it.

Speaker 6 (22:35):
To Michael ends of the world, Clandy Peterson's how your
search director sent me an email, the subject line of
which was mopeds the new face tattoo.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
I will admit it piqued my interest.

Speaker 6 (22:54):
I do not like open ended statements without context, so
my immediate thought was, all right, now I have to
read what she's written here before I read anything else,
because it sounds very odd. She'd better explain it. Well,

(23:15):
she did, and it goes like this. I'll read it
as she wrote it. Over the last four years, Miami
has acquired even more international flare. The city has been
swarmed by people driving mopeds. Mopeds are a fixture in
cities like Rome and Athens, where they are called papake

(23:38):
ducklings because of the way packs of moped riders seem
to form and return and sorry to form and reform
as traffic flows. Mopeds are also very popular in places
like Bogata and Caracas, where they are a cheap and
popular form of transportation.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
It's also true in India.

Speaker 6 (24:02):
Where you have crowded streets it's hard to move around,
no place to park. Mopeds are you can't go very
fast anyway, and they cost a lot less than an automobile.
Automobiles are very expensive in the rest of the world,
and now in Miami. Moped and scooter sales boomed in
twenty twenty two and twenty twenty three as illegal aliens

(24:24):
settled in Miami. Riders were able to weave in and
out of traffic, turning the city's streets into a death
race and probably frightening the retirees who don't have the
reaction time needed to handle the additional distractions. Who hasn't
had the experience where some guys whitelining beside you in

(24:46):
between the two lanes and they go blowing by, and
you think to yourself, you know, I could have ended
up merging over or just just drifting a little, and
then I would have hit you and I would be
in trouble. It doesn't make me angry, because I give
one damn whether you die or not, you loser. It

(25:08):
makes me angry because then I would be in court.
I would have this on my record, I would have
to hire an attorney. I would have to fight this
all because you make stupid decisions. Your death or injury
would be your punishment for your stupidity. But I'd rather
you be putting. I'd rather you run into a poll

(25:30):
or run in this to a wall. I don't want
to have to be involved in any aspect of your
tom foolery. So you've got Moped's sales, and you got
the old retirees that the.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
New Yorkers who moved down to Miami.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
And because a lot of New Yorkers fled to Miami
during and after COVID, our friend Carol Markowitz, who right
for New York Post. She's also Fox News contributor. She
has a podcast now. She's a delightful, Delightful age. She's

(26:11):
one of our favorite thinkers, writers, talkers, wonderful husband named Shy.
They're just they're great, great folks. And anyway, so I
never thought she would leave New York. You know, if
you read her work, and I read her work long
before I ever got to know her. If you read
her work, you knew that she was a very proud

(26:32):
New Yorker, and she, you know, self proclaimed snobby New Yorker.
She loved everything about New York, the culture, every the good,
the bad, all of it. And then during COVID, and
they have kids and all of a sudden you start
thinking differently, so they go down there. Of course, Sean Hannity,

(26:53):
he loves New York. Of course Rush, you know, for
Rush leaving New York or I think was the right
thing at the right time. But new York wasn't in
his blood the way for Hannity, it is the way
for Carol mark Witz.

Speaker 2 (27:09):
It is so imagine you've got.

Speaker 6 (27:11):
These people who've moved down to Miami for a better
way of life, a calmer existence. Now you've got these mopeds.
What we're really talking about is not the mopeds. What
we're talking about is you left New York to get
away from the dirty, bad criminal element who are reckless

(27:34):
and dangerous and filthy, and now they've shown up in Miami.
That's that's That's what nobody wants to say, but that's
that's what's happening. But now it's very rare, Sandy Wrights
to see mopeds on the streets of Miami. Sales of
new and used mopeds and scooters have plummeted beginning in
January with the Trump administration canceling the humanitarian immigration program

(27:58):
that allowed immigrants from Cuba, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, the
moped riders have disappeared. Mopeds are a cheap form of
transportation and don't need as much ID to buy or lease.
One form of documentation like a foreign passport is required

(28:19):
to issue sorry to lease a moped, and they don't
require insurance in many states, so you don't have to
have insurance.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
It's easy to get You've got.

Speaker 6 (28:31):
Your passport from the country you came here illegally from,
so it's an easy way to get around, and it's
an easy way to identify. Jonathan Rodriguez, a forty year
old Venezuelan who has sold moped parts for twenty years,
says driving a moped in Miami now is quote like

(28:53):
having a tattoo.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
On your face.

Speaker 6 (28:57):
The authorities, Rodriguez says, believe that if you're driving a moped,
you probably don't have papers. You can see the fear
of deportation. I'm good with the fear of deportation. I mean,
I wish pedophiles had fear. I wish rapists had fear.

(29:19):
At least the illegal aliens have fear of deportation.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
I don't feel bad about that you broke the law
coming here.

Speaker 6 (29:28):
If people think the law is so awful when it's enforced,
then repeal the law.

Speaker 2 (29:34):
You can't because the law is popular.

Speaker 6 (29:37):
Boris Pedraza, who owns l Ray de Lost Motos, the
King of the Motorcycles, says that sales have plummeted as
moped buyers have been deported or self deport The issue
is that if the moped driver gets stopped is found
to be illegal, they are taken to jail and deported.

(30:00):
Dresa estimates it between twenty twenty two and twenty twenty
four he sold over five million dollars worth of mopeds
every year. At the height of sales, he moved ten
mopeds a day out of his shop. Now, he says
he's lucky to sell two a week. The bulk of
his sales now are directly to Cuba. Okay, I'm adapt

(30:27):
one door closed, another one open. You're not going to
hear me boohoo over illegal aliens in this country being
scared of being deported. You're going to hear a hooray.
That's what I voted for. That's what our president is doing.
The more of that he does, the more popular the

(30:48):
Republican brand will be, and the people who don't like
it are people being deported. Those people need to be
removed from our country, and they need to be we
return to where they are from. In many cases, the
country they're from doesn't want to take them back. But
take them back. You will take them back. You will

(31:09):
get them out of this country. We don't need the problems.
I want America to be great again. I want America
to be safe again. I want America to be clean again.
I want America to be great again. And this is
part of doing.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
He will as has unity. Thank you, and good night,
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