Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Michael Very show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
It's not a place you could get to buy a
boat or chains.
Speaker 4 (00:21):
Thank you.
Speaker 5 (00:25):
This was a huge, I mean a monumental victory for
President Trump, the biggest legal win of this administration so far.
A total embarrassment for crazy Judge Bosburg who's been trying
to force this president to bring foreign alien terraces back
onto American soil, trying to turn our planes around, trying
to empty prisons.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
In foreign countries and bring them back to our soil.
Speaker 5 (00:48):
This is a monumental, colossal victory for the rule of law,
for the Constitution, for our founding generation John Adams who
signed this law into effect in seventeen ninety eight, and
for President Trump.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
And fulfilling has made look agree.
Speaker 6 (01:01):
The President's plan on this in the same plan you
had during the first administration. You concentrate on the public
safety threats and the national security threats first because they're
the worst to the worst.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
So it's trying to be.
Speaker 6 (01:11):
The worst first.
Speaker 4 (01:12):
That's how it has to be done.
Speaker 6 (01:14):
And we know o recog number of people on the
terrorist watch, that's the process border. We know recog number
of terrorists have been released in this country. We've already
wrestled some planning attacks. So look, the President is dead
on when he says criminal threats national security threads are
to be prioritized, and that's the whay theys want to be.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
This is pretty remarkable.
Speaker 7 (01:32):
The Trump administration has taken that controversial CBP one cell
phone app for migrants that the Biden administration was using,
and they've repurposed it into a self deportation app. The
app is now called CBP Home.
Speaker 8 (01:45):
It allows illegal aliens in the US to register to
self deport They fill out biographical information, including their countries
of citizenship, which country they plan to return to, their
alien registration numbers, their contact information, and it allows them
to upload photos of themselves to confirm their identity. All
of it is then submitted to CBP and they leave
(02:06):
the country.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
So, in a nutshell, Dana Trump.
Speaker 7 (02:08):
Just took Biden's program which was bringing migrants in and
has now totally repurposed it to get them out.
Speaker 9 (02:14):
The media and our friends in the Democrat Party kept
saying we needed new legislation, we must have legislation to
secure the border. But it turned out that all we
really needed was a new president.
Speaker 10 (02:28):
Well, a historic moment occurred. If you are a stock
market watcher, you probably know this.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
Found there are three types of people.
Speaker 10 (02:38):
Those people who are employed in public company operations who
follow the market, those who have a four to h.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
One k or some level of.
Speaker 10 (02:52):
Investment who keep something of an eye on the process,
and people who know and care nothing about all of it.
But an interesting thing happened today. For the first time
ever a company hit a four trillion dollar market capitalization
(03:16):
or trillion dollar market capitalization. It's pretty amazing how fast
things are moving today. You know, I have a friend
named Dan Pastorini, who was the third draft pick in
the early seventies in he played ten years in the NFL.
(03:38):
Amazing career. He was my childhood hero and now he's
my friend. That's a cool thing, a very cool thing, indeed.
But you know his contracts when he started, I think
it was thirty five thousand for his first one. His
biggest contract was with Al Davis when they traded him,
or when the Oilers traded him for Ken Stabler, and
I think it was one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars
(03:59):
a year. And it took him fifteen years to get
paid because Al Davis is a snake. He did that
to a lot of people. He just let him out. Anyway,
in those days, you could be the top of your
field or close to the top of your field, really
good at what you do. And Elvin Bethay great example.
(04:20):
Elvin Bethay. When I met him, I was on Houston
City Council and there was a Budweiser plant east of Houston,
and Elvin worked for the Budweiser plant, not the distributor,
the actual manufacturer brewery, and he was the liaison to
(04:41):
city council, and so I got to know him as
a person, even though he was this great NFL player
when I was growing up watching for the Oilers.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
Since then he's gone into the Hall of Fame.
Speaker 10 (04:51):
Elvin always had, as pro players did back in those days,
a job during the off season. You couldn't live off
what you made playing football. Today you can retire three
years into playing and never work again. And if you
if you just don't put it up your nose are
(05:12):
the stripper pol You can have a decent life for
the rest of your life and never have to work again,
if financially at least, it's amazing how things have changed today,
and that is because of TV contracts and the audience
is bigger and more monetizable. So my point is, as
sports change. You know, the Lakers being sold for ten
(05:34):
billion dollars, and you know in the seventies, there's a
great documentary about the Spirit of Saint Louis, the seventy
four seventy five or seventy five seventy six teams, the
two years that the Spirits played there, and they had
Marvin Barnes and they had Moses Bologne, and they had
(05:57):
this amazing team and these two brothers, the Silnas. Anyway,
when the ABA was absorbed into the NBA, it brought
some showmanship and they ended up getting contracts later. And
a lot more money is made in professional sports now
and it's just getting bigger by the day.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
It's growing exponentially.
Speaker 10 (06:15):
And that's what we're seeing with stock values, and that's
what we're seeing with a stock market. But not everyone
is going to participate in. Nvidia is a GPU manufacturer
maker these I think they're called graphics processing units. They
make some hardware, they make some software. But if you're
(06:37):
a person like me, it's not huge into AI. But
you recognize that technology is going to change our lives.
It's incredible how much a few tech stocks can raise
or lower the stock market overall in a given day,
such that all but a handful of stocks individually, none
(07:01):
of those stocks matter. They don't affect the overall stock market. Now,
if you're invested in heavily, they can affect your your portfolio.
All of that to say with President Trump. In President
Trump's administration, a thing that no one is talking about
is where we go over the next three years is
(07:25):
going to determine if we are the largest economy in
the world, the greatest health at, the greatest wealth creator,
the greatest opportunity for investment. Now, this is these You
notice I didn't mention jobs in all of that, and
all of that is going to be determined by the
Trump presidency. And I will tell you this, I'm very
glad for that reason, especially that Donald Trump is president
(07:46):
right now. Michael Ry, because you're a public Paul Revere,
how to ring in the warning before we get into
the Komy and Brennan investigation, which I hope lands them in.
But I've learned that there will be a lot of
talk about what's going to be done to Epstein or
(08:07):
anyone else, and very rarely.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Any follow through.
Speaker 10 (08:10):
But there will be headlines and articles written and promises made.
Don't tell me they're not going to end up in prison.
Let me at least live in a world of hope,
even if it is delusional. Greg Guttfelt talking about why
the Democrats are struggling right now, and I think you
(08:33):
hit on something very interesting and as a result, I
think you're going to see that solved very soon.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Listen carefully.
Speaker 11 (08:40):
The problem with the Democrats right now is a hoax
apparatus is broken. And the days you could rely on
a big hoax, you know, a collusion or the fine
people oaks or drinking bleach, and the media would do
their work for you, right, But now you know the
ratings for CNN and MSNBC. They're lower than Jasmine Crockett's
SAT scores.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Their credibility is on par with Smolett.
Speaker 4 (09:02):
So the Dams.
Speaker 2 (09:03):
Almost have to do their own work now.
Speaker 11 (09:05):
They actually have to use what's called their brains because
their friends aren't fighting their battles anymore. The Democrats are
like they're a weak loudmouth at the bar who realized
all of his buddies have left after he picked a
fight with a bunch of bikers.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
They don't know what to do.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
They don't, they.
Speaker 4 (09:21):
Can't, they can't think of anything.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
The Harold's Party is in a hole.
Speaker 11 (09:26):
So deep they could shake hands with President chi As.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
You can go down there.
Speaker 11 (09:30):
And it's a failed political failed political institution. So it's
no wonder that you know there. They think violence is
an option. And Gavin this trans thing is hilarious. One
minute he's pro woman, the next he's selling them down
the river.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
He's actually trans.
Speaker 11 (09:46):
And what is this trans community that he keeps talking about.
Show me your trans community.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Oh, you're gonna show me some kids.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
That's a lie and it's illegal.
Speaker 11 (09:56):
Now you're gonna show me activists, your loudest voices. Those
are caused blame male fetishists.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
So but just a.
Speaker 11 (10:04):
Tiny fraction what he says is a trans community is
not real. He's just a coward who can't say that
in public.
Speaker 10 (10:14):
Further to that point, came across an interview with a
woman who describes how she was groomed as a miner
to undergo irreversible gender affirming care that means to rip
out your plumbing and all the hormones and everything that
(10:34):
goes with it. This is admittedly disturbing, so if there
is a child in the car or you are squeamish,
take two minutes mark three to one, two minutes from now.
Speaker 12 (10:48):
I hadn't even learned algebra in high school yet, but
I was old enough to choose to have healthy parts
of my body electively ammutated. I was sold a product
medical transition, by professionals and institutions who told me that
it would fix my distress and.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Save my life.
Speaker 12 (11:08):
I was told that if I didn't do this, I
would probably end up dead. But here's what they didn't
tell me. They didn't tell me that taking cross sex
hormones and undergoing major surgery at fourteen years old could
leave me with pelvic floridysfunction and urinary incontinence problems I
have to manage now as a young adult.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
I'm only twenty years old.
Speaker 12 (11:31):
They didn't tell me that these complications are common enough
to be known risks, and yet they were hidden from
me at an age where I didn't even understand what
these terms meant, let alone the impact they would have
on my daily life.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
And it doesn't stop there.
Speaker 12 (11:48):
When I tried to warn others by leaving honest reviews
on my surgeon's websites describing my regret, the complications, the
lack of real informed consent.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
My reviews were deleted.
Speaker 12 (12:00):
Think about that a surgeon permanently altered my healthy body
when I was.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
A middle school student, and then it erased.
Speaker 12 (12:07):
My negative feedback to protect his reputation. If that doesn't
sound like fraud, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
What does you know?
Speaker 10 (12:16):
If you've raised children. My boys are eighteen and nineteen.
At some point in the life of every child, and
certainly when I was a child, your kid has some
hair brain scheme and you politely put it down. You
politely shut it down. So imagine if your kid had
(12:39):
a hair brain scheme of absolutely destroying what is between
their legs.
Speaker 1 (12:48):
Imagine that.
Speaker 10 (12:49):
Now, imagine that your kid got that great idea from
a teacher, from a counselor from an institution our tax
dollars pay to develop young people into thriving adults. Imagine
(13:10):
the sense of betrayal that person has at twenty years old,
to realize that so many people around that person let
that person down. Can you imagine how painful, how betrayed
(13:33):
you would feel? First, do no harm?
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Doc? What are you doing?
Speaker 10 (13:40):
How do you sleep at night? President Trump was asked
about Komy and Brennan being investigated by the organization that
Komy used to be the head of, and he did
not pull any punches. He was very clear his opinion
on this.
Speaker 7 (14:00):
James Comy and John Brennan now under criminal investigation related
to the Trump Rush of probe?
Speaker 4 (14:06):
Do you want to see these two guys behind bars?
Speaker 13 (14:10):
Well?
Speaker 3 (14:10):
I know nothing about it other than what I read today,
but I will tell you I think they're very dishonest people.
I think they're crooked as hell, and maybe they have
to pay a price for that. I believe they are
truly bad people and dishonest people. So whatever happens happens.
Speaker 10 (14:30):
Mark Elias, the awful lawyer sick dog for the Democrats,
was on MSNBC and begged the media do not cover this.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Which is how you know we have to.
Speaker 14 (14:44):
We predicted you and I and others that we were
going to get to this moment, and the question is
what do we do? And the question of what we
do is multifaceted. The first question is what do we do?
Do we retreat and hide in the corner? So I'm
on TV today, not hiding in the corner.
Speaker 4 (14:57):
I'm not retreating. I'm saying I'm going to stand up
and fight.
Speaker 14 (15:00):
And Donald Trump won't intimidate me by by going back
to this twenty sixteen stuff.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
And that's one thing.
Speaker 14 (15:05):
But the other thing we've talked about is what do
large institutions do? You know, what do civil society groups do?
What does the media do? And I am imploring, like, honestly,
I'm just imploring the media, do not report this as
a legitimate investigation.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
Do not report this.
Speaker 14 (15:19):
As they're opening a a investigation into John Brennan and
we will see where it goes. Report this as the misuse,
the abuse, the authoritarian takeover of the Department of Justice
that should be the headline. Headline should be in a
misuse and abuse of the power of the.
Speaker 10 (15:37):
Trumps powered the gown off course trustper and it ends
up as a hockey player NHL player, and the guy
ends up just pumbling him. That's Elias And then they
do you do protest too much? Their brother show.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
He's the big honor to be living in the United States.
Speaker 10 (15:53):
John Brennan is a very very bad man. I wish
we could drag Clapper into this as well, imer CIA director.
He's a very partisan left winger. He hates Trump, and
the allegation is that he and Comy pushed the Russia
collusion hoax to try to build public sympathy for their
(16:19):
movement and private law enforcement action to prevent Trump from
being president, to prevent the voters from being able to
choose who would be the president. And now on MSNBC
he feigns innocence with I really have no idea what
(16:40):
they could be investigating me for.
Speaker 15 (16:42):
If there is an investigation that people will be questioned,
I would be questioned about it. But again I've had
no contact from them. But again I testified in front
of many many congressional committees in the House and the
Senate over the years, and I continue to explain exactly
what we did during this process, why we try to
make sure we stay true to our intelligence responsibilities and
(17:04):
that we were not going to do anything at all
to try to interfere in that election. And again, it
was a challenging time, but also one I think that
the people who actually worked this, both in terms of
trying to collect intelligence prior to the election and then
the ones who put together intell me assessment.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
They really, I think showed the best of.
Speaker 15 (17:22):
What the intelligence community and what CIA is made of.
So again I am clueless about what it is exactly
that they may be investigating me for.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Calls to mind the mean.
Speaker 10 (17:39):
Of Will Ferrell as Rob Burgundy, where he says, I
don't believe you.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
I don't believe you.
Speaker 10 (17:50):
Let's go back to Peter Strasik, who was having an affair.
If you remember with Lisa Paige, and remember all the
text messages they were sending, they were getting on like bunnies.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
It was crazy. You get a hold of yourself.
Speaker 10 (18:04):
And she was constantly in the middle of their affair
and their constant text messages hot and heavy, saying I'm
worry Trump's gonna win Orange Man bad, Trump's gonna win,
and Strasack would say, don't worry. We have an insurance policy.
We're not going to let the people pick the president.
We're going to keep him from being the president. Well,
(18:28):
here is what he went on to say, that this
was not just him, that all of his efforts to
swing the election, to lie, to break the law, that
throughout it all, once he had.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
To admit that he had done it, the people above.
Speaker 13 (18:46):
Me knew what I was doing at every step, at
every investigative decision. There are multiple layers of people above me,
the assistant director, executive assistant director, deputy director, and director
of the FBI, and multiple layers of people below me,
Section chiefs, supervisors, unit chiefs, case agents, and analyss, all
of whom were involved in all of these decisions.
Speaker 10 (19:07):
Let's hear that again, Jim. I think this is important.
He's saying, basically, whether I committed illegal acts or not,
I wasn't going rogue. The people above me knew exactly
what I was doing.
Speaker 13 (19:26):
At every step, at every investigative decision. There are multiple
layers of people above me, the assistant director, executive assistant director,
deputy director, and director of the FBI, and multiple layers
of people below me, Section chiefs, supervisors, unit chiefs, case agents,
and analyss, all of whom were involved in all of
these decisions.
Speaker 10 (19:44):
That would be Jim Comy. Now, let's go back to
December of twenty nineteen. Jim Comy is on Fox News
with Chris Wallace and he's defending the Steele dossier. You
remember the Steele dossier, the fake document that was paid
for by the Clinton campaign to be handed to the
(20:06):
media to say, oh, Trump's in.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Bed with the Russians.
Speaker 10 (20:10):
They paid Christopher Steele, a former British spy, and Christopher
Steele now says it was all made up. He just
got paid for it. It was all one big hoax
that was carried out. At the time, here was Jim
Comey claiming he had no idea what was going on,
(20:33):
but that the Steele dossier was trustworthy. This was almost
twenty twenty by this point.
Speaker 16 (20:39):
Of how reliable the Steele dossier in fact was. On
January sixth, twenty seventeen, and the Trump Tower, you brief
Donald Trump, president elect, about the Steele dossier. That same month,
the FBI talks to Steele's main Russian contact, the main
person on whom he based the dossier, who says, according
(21:01):
to the IG report quote Steele misstated or exaggerated the
primary subsources statements in multiple sections of the reporting.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
Director Comy. Not only do you fail to go back.
Speaker 16 (21:14):
To the president of the lab or a president after
January twentieth and tell them.
Speaker 4 (21:17):
Oh, you know that report I briefed you on turns.
Speaker 16 (21:19):
Out its bunk, but the FBI can goes back and
renews its FIVESA application three more times, and by this
point the FBI knows that the Steel reporting is not credible.
Speaker 17 (21:34):
Yeah, I think you're mischaracterizing both what the FBI knew
and what mister Horwitz says in his report. They didn't
conclude the reporting from Steele was bunked. They concluded there
were significant questions about the reliability of some of the
sub source reporting that should have been included in the renewals.
But when I briefed the President, I briefed him on
a small part of it that I told him I
didn't know whether it was true or not, didn't care.
Speaker 4 (21:55):
I just needed him to know about it.
Speaker 16 (21:57):
I think you're mischaracterizing Steele is inn or rather, Horowitz
isn't saying that the sub source, the Russian contact, was
unreliable or was inaccurate. The Russian contact said to the FBI,
Steel is unreliable because he misrepresented Steel misstated or exaggerated
(22:18):
the sources statements in multiple sections of the report. He's saying,
I told him one thing and he ruled something else.
Speaker 4 (22:24):
The FBI knew that.
Speaker 17 (22:26):
Yeah, but that doesn't drive a conclusion that Steele's reporting
is bunk I mean There's a number of tricky things
to that.
Speaker 4 (22:31):
First, you're interviewing the sub source.
Speaker 17 (22:33):
After all, the reporting has become public, and so as
a kind of intelligence investigator, you have to think is
he walking away from.
Speaker 16 (22:38):
It because it's now public? Well, and that has to
go into your assessment it happened. I mean, if it
had become public just barely. This is in January twenty seventeen.
This isn't two years later, right, This is when it
blew up, when it was published by whatever the outfit is.
BuzzFeed was all over the news and have become a
big deal. And so did you know all of this,
all of what everything that we're talking about here?
Speaker 4 (23:01):
Did you know that, in.
Speaker 16 (23:02):
Fact, the Steel report was the key for probable cause?
Speaker 4 (23:06):
Did you know that the FBI.
Speaker 16 (23:08):
Had talked to the Russian contact and he said what
Steele said he had told him was not true?
Speaker 4 (23:15):
Did you know this? You're the FBI director.
Speaker 17 (23:17):
First again, the report we'll speak for itself. I don't
believe the FBI concluded that Steele's reporting was bunk after
talking to a subsource. But no, I didn't. As the director,
you're not kept informed on the details of an investigation.
So No, in general, I didn't know what they'd learned
from the sub source. I didn't know the particulars of
the investigation.
Speaker 4 (23:35):
This isn't some investigation, sir.
Speaker 16 (23:37):
This is an investigation of the campaign of the man
who is the president of the United States. You've just
been through a firestorm investigating Hillary Clinton. I would think
if I were in your position, I would have been
on that, you know, like a junk yard dog. I
would have wanted to know everything they were doing in
investigating the Trump campaign.
Speaker 4 (23:57):
Yeah, that's not the way it works, though.
Speaker 17 (23:59):
As a director, you're sitting on top of an organization
of thirty eight thousand people. You can't run an investigation
that's seven layers below.
Speaker 10 (24:06):
No one said run career. You're saying you were not
aware of it, and you're lying. You are absolutely positively lying. Oh,
you have thirty eight thousand people, You have a lot
going on. I can't keep up.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
With it all. You expect us to believe.
Speaker 10 (24:25):
That you weren't even aware of the hatchet job that
was done on Donald Trump. That's your defense. That's not
gonna fly. He's got to go to prison. He's got
to go to prison.
Speaker 9 (24:39):
Keeps dy Kuris Mazamasu, Betty.
Speaker 10 (24:46):
Show, super Neat. Although I grew up, I grew to
an adult in the eighties. I'm born in seventy. I
am not an eighties music guy. I don't love eighties music. However,
I must admit that it is the soundtrack of my
(25:11):
teenage years. And you know, that's when you're first really
noticing girls and those sorts of things, and you're having
good times with your buddies and going to the video
arcades and starting to drive and listening to the radio
in your own car and all those sorts of things.
So I still have an affinity for that music. I
(25:36):
am much more of a seventies music guy than I
am eighties But that song right there, Everie Rose has
a storm that's solid right there, that's good as cheesy
as it is. That's good quality. Brett Michaels was, and
you know, Poison's got some songs that I think are
(25:59):
highly highly underrated, highly underrated. There has been an assault
that's a pivot right there. There has been an assault
on law enforcement in this country. That is part of
an overall theme that the left has fomented. And you know,
the sad part about the kinds of people who shoot
(26:19):
police officers or ice or do is that they're pawns
and they don't even know it. It's like the Palestinians
who who wear the suicide vest and walk into a
village and they feel like, you know, they're going to
get their virgins and their palace in heaven, and all
they're really doing is giving up their life to be
(26:41):
a pawn for someone else, to use for someone else.
That's why the imams recruit and radicalize and prepare the
bad guys.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
And they never do it themselves. You go do it,
you go be the bad guy.
Speaker 10 (26:56):
I have to stay here and train others because they
would never give up their own lives. They would never sacrifice.
So you see these people who fall under the influence
of politicians and radical activists, and it's only going to
get worse. And I'm tired of it, and I want
(27:18):
the hammer brought down. I want these people responded to
with violence, with force. I want them defeated and destroyed.
They are enemies of peace, they are enemies of America,
and they make that clear by waving foreign flags. Go
(27:41):
back to the country whose flag you fly. But I
believe these acts of violence on law enforcement and innocent
citizens should be met swiftly with equal violence. I think
these people should be dealt with as harshly as possible.
January sixth was not a day of violence other than
(28:04):
Ashley Babbitt being murdered by Michael Bird, a DC police officer.
What these people are doing and the reason they're doing it,
They're being radicalized and motivated, spurred on by Democrat elected officials.
(28:24):
Stephen Miller, who has really emerged not just as a
brain behind the scenes, but as a spokesman for reasonable policy.
It might sound harsh, but he is unafraid to say
these things, and that is so important. Stephen Miller's star
is on the rise.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
In my opinion. Here he was on Fox News.
Speaker 5 (28:48):
Rhetoric from Hakim Jeffries, the rhetoric from Democrat leadership of
the record, from that awful guest that.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
You just played on CNN. This is eliminationist rhetoric.
Speaker 5 (28:58):
This is rhetoric is used to justify violence, that is
used to justify terrorism that has directly led to has
directly inspired enormous assaults, a seven hundred percent increase in
assaults on ice officers, and of course recent attempts at
(29:19):
murder against ICE officers, including in Texas where you had
a shootout at this case a border patrol facility that
again is inspired by this hateful, odious, villainous rhetoric. Must
be very clear, ICE officers are saving with their actions
tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of American lives. Border
(29:40):
patrols and ICE are getting fentanyl and drugs out of
our communities. They just had an operation recently in Minneapolis
that swept up a dozen child sex offenders, child predators,
and pedophiles. They are removing foreign terrorist organizations from our
country like Trained de Aragua MS thirte six Mexican drug cartels.
(30:02):
They are fighting, They are battling every single day on
the street the most violent, evil, ruthless criminal organizations on
the face of planet Earth, organizations who stock and trade
is rape and murder. Ice officers are not only heroes,
but they are among the bravest Americans among us.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
Every day they go out onto.
Speaker 5 (30:24):
The street knowing they face the threat of murder, knowing
they face the threat of dosing, knowing the hateful smears
against them and their family, the risk to their lives
and their liberty, and yet they continue to press forward
to do what to save this country. Every American should
be endlessly grateful to the men and women of ICE
for what they are doing, of what President Trump is
(30:44):
doing to liberate America.
Speaker 10 (30:46):
That is how I want every elected official to speak directly.
Stop apologizing, Stop being worried whose feelings are hurt. If
you say every rapist out there is going to be
arrested and sent to prison, If you say every person
defrauding welfare is going to be arrested and sent to prison,
(31:12):
you will have people start screaming that this is picking
on minorities. Okay, if you say so, I really don't care.
Welfare fraud is welfare fraud. If you're telling me the
blacks are committing it, so be it. Then we'll know
what the people will look like who are arrested. You
said it, We're not going to apologize, as simple as that.
(31:36):
Once you understand that our people are afraid of being
called racist, and that that is the overriding theme of
most every breakdown in our government in this country, the
fear of being called a racist.
Speaker 15 (31:52):
They know this.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
It is a cudgel. They wield the scepter.
Speaker 10 (31:59):
And this is how we elections, and this is how
we win elections, but don't get our policies passed, because
when you start sending in ice, you know, Trump caught
them unawares. They were on their heels to begin but
now they've gone from from violent protests to actually firing
(32:19):
on ice. They're bringing the fight to law and order.
They're not going to sit idly by and let this happen.
They'll burn this place to the ground if they have to,
and we have to decide we're willing to watch them
do it. We're willing to arrest them and put them away,
and the amount of force necessary to prevent them from
(32:44):
doing that to innocent people, including law enforcement officers. Once
you understand what they're willing to do, they're willing to
pull the pin. So you either let them or beg
them not to, or you stop them. As you're seeing,
Trump is forcing the hand. There are a lot of
(33:04):
Republicans who didn't want it to get to this because
they don't really want anybody to port it. They didn't
mind showing up at your event on July fourth and
telling you we've got to have illegals deported, but they
didn't really mean it because they don't want to be
called racist.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
They're scared of being called racist. You've got to get
over that.
Speaker 10 (33:21):
You've got to save your country for Americans, whatever they
may look like. And you've got to rid this country
of illegal aliens, whatever they may look like.