Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Coming up next, our final news roundup and Information Overload.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Our all right news roundup and Information Overload hour. Here's
our toll free telephone number. It is eight hundred and
nine to four one sean if you want to be
a part of the program. In a minute, we'll get
to Greg Jarrett and Brett Tolman. Greg Jarrett has a
peace out today who could be indicted by a grand
jury in the Russia collusion hoax, and he names names,
(00:28):
But first let me play Tulsei Gabbard on Elbama's involvement
in all of this.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Go to ODNI dot gov, goov. It's all right there
for anyone to see. And those who go in and
read this will see how President Obama directed that a
National Security Council meeting be called to talk about Russia.
That the report that came out of that meeting was
filled with tasks that were delivered by James Clapper's assistant
(00:57):
to John Brennan and to other elements of the intelligence community.
John Brennan was the head of the CIA at the time,
all saying, per the president's direction, per the president's order,
and very specifically, they were tasked to create an intelligence
assessment that detailed how Moscow tried to influence the election,
(01:17):
not if, but how, And this was the beginning of
this manufactured intelligence assessment where they knowingly wrote things in
this assessment that were false, and they knew they were false.
They knew that they were basing it on discredited intelligence
or documents like the Steele dossier that was politically motivated
(01:38):
and that they knew was false. And this was how
they came up with the rush hooks that was then
weaponized and used to try to delegitimize the president President
Trump and to try to ultimately enact this year's long
coup throughout his entire four years of his first administration.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Let me give a little context to what Tulsea is
saying as part of the decline passified information that she released.
The first part of this is there was an original
intelligence assessment. She's talking here about the intelligence assessment that
was ordered after they read the original one that was
(02:17):
put together by senior career intelligence officials, released in early
December twenty sixteen, a post mortem, if you will, on
the twenty sixteen election, asking the question if there was
any Trump Russia collusion. Their conclusion it was finished, there
(02:40):
was no Trump Russia conclusion. That is what our top
career intelligence officials determined. And then, as she rightly points out,
it was Obama ordering people, you know, not if Russia interfered,
how Russia interfered. And then they went about creating a
new intelligence assessment report. And it's the new intelligence assessment
(03:04):
report that purposely used what that had already been completely
debunked by that time, and that was the dirty Russian
disinformation Hillary Clinton bought and paid for dossier and other
information that they knew to be false to come up
with an assessment oh that yeah, Russia favored Donald Trump
(03:25):
and that there was collusion when there never was. They
knew there never was. They knew it was false intelligence.
So initially this plan was hatched in July of twenty
sixteen for the purposes of smearing and slandering Donald Trump
to deflect away from Hillary's own email server problem. They
knew it was manufactured. But also the declassified information gave
(03:49):
us very pertinent information that yeah, this will give us
a bump out of the convention, but then there'll be
accelerant when the FBI runs with this lie as well.
And remember in August of twenty sixteen, Bruce Or warned
against using the steal dossier because it was political in nature,
but yet it became the basis for not one but
(04:11):
four FISA applications, which Rune Carter Page is live and
then was a backdoor wait to aspire on the Trump
campaign and then later his transition team and then later his presidency.
But the fact that all these top officials and were
going all the way up to Obama saying not if,
but how Russia interfered after the initial assessment said otherwise
(04:34):
is breathtaking to me. Greg Jared is with US Fox
News legal analyst, New York Times bestselling author, he wrote
two best selling books on this very topic, and Brett
Tolminus with his former federal prosecutor, sir for US Attorney
of Utah. Greg, I loved your article today. Who could
be indicted by a grand jury in the Russia collusion hoax?
(04:55):
This is something you wrote about what seven years ago?
Speaker 4 (04:58):
Yeah, seven years ago, and then the sequel six years
ago which Hunt and I laid out how Brennan, Comming
and Clapper were untruthful in their congressional testimony and you've
identified it. You know, they insisted that the dossier was
never a part of the intelligence assessment, and they were
(05:22):
incredibly devious about it. Sean. They actually erased or expunged
the section of the intelligence assessment in which they relied
on the dossier they provided to Congress and the public
a sanitized version of it. They literally took it out
(05:43):
and then testified, oh, you know, we didn't rely on it,
it's not in there. Well, it turns out the newly
declassified documents show a clean, original version in which it's
in the body of the ICA. Now that strikes me,
as lawyer, as a deliberate falsehood. It's a lie. And
(06:05):
so if you're testifying under oath, that's perjury, and if
it's not under oath, it's nevertheless a false fraudulent statement.
Both carry the same punishment, up to five years in prison.
And if you conspire together to do that, it's a conspiracy,
which only doubles down on the penalties.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Bright Tolman, let's get your view on this matter.
Speaker 5 (06:31):
Well, nobody's really talking about Barack Obama being being charged,
right we are assuming presidential you know, executive immunity applies.
But I say, so what, let's put him in the
grand jury. If the conspiracy you know started while he
was president. It's certainly cute when he was no longer president.
(06:53):
I want to see him answer about communications that he
had after What did he communicate with Komy, What were
the what were the emails or the text messages? Because
this is Obama, who was the only president in our
lifetime who stayed in Washington, DC when he was done
serving as president. Why did he do that? Because he
knew he had an opportunity to try to control the government.
(07:15):
A shadow government was what he was pushing for.
Speaker 4 (07:18):
So I would love to.
Speaker 5 (07:19):
See the use of the grand jury to robustly investigate
all of the conspiracy, including President Obama and who he
communicated with after he was president.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
Greg you let's go back to your column. Who could
be indicted by this grand jury in the Russia collusion hoax?
Speaker 6 (07:35):
Who?
Speaker 4 (07:36):
Well, in addition to Brennan, Comey, and Clapper, which we
just discussed, there are other people who were involved at
the CIA, the FBI, the Office of National Intelligence, and
you know, some of these people were coerced into doing it.
(07:57):
They would probably as witnesses, asked for immuney and their
testimony would be valuable. They might get conditional immunity, but
there are others, and for example, we've already seen some
of their emails, who warned Brennan in particular, you're using
bogus information the dossier, don't do it. There's no other
(08:18):
credible evidence to justify this revised intelligence assessment. Those people,
and I think there are probably at least a handful,
if not a dozen, will happily step forward before a
grand jury and implicate not just Comy but Brendan rather,
but Comy and Clapper as well. But you know, the
(08:40):
list is a long one. I identify in my column today,
you know, the Hillary Clinton campaign, not just Hillary yourself,
but those who were in on it. I think a
critical witness is Julianne Smith. It was Smith, according to
the Durham Annex, that proposed the entire fictitious collusion scheme
(09:02):
that Hillary approved on July twenty six, twenty and sixteen.
And you know, Smith was questioned by Durham's investigators and said, well,
I don't specifically remember, but it's possible I did that. Well,
being placed in legal jeopardy in front of a grand jury,
(09:23):
she may have a sudden memory recollection, and you know
that would be a critical witness. But I've also identified
Jake Sullivan, the attorney, Mark Elias, Robbie Mook, John Podesta.
These are all critical people who to me appear to
have been involved in conjuring up the hoax and spreading
(09:48):
the lie, and their testimony I think would be important
because they're also in legal jeopardy. I wouldn't be surprised
if they too would take the fifth.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
I quick break right back more with Greg Jarrett Brett
Tolman on the other side, and your calls coming up.
Final half hour, eight hundred and ninety four one Sean,
if you want to be a part of the program
as we continue, all right, we continue now who might
be indicted by a grand jury over the Russia Russia
Russia hoax. We continue with Greg Jarrett and Brett Tolman.
Let's talk a little bit now about this issue of immunity, Brett,
(10:22):
that you brought up, because conventional wisdom is that that
presidential immunity in the decision, the Supreme Court decision as
it related to President Trump, would apply to President Obama.
And there's one one, maybe slight bit of difference. I know,
I know everyone thinks that that would apply, but is
(10:44):
it really part of the duties of the president of
the United States to subvert or sabotage intelligence, or manufacture
false intelligence for the purpose of hurting a successor.
Speaker 5 (11:01):
Well, John, I think you hit on the point that
this country needs to be talking about. And yes, you know,
the Supreme Court did clarify that the government could not
use in a prosecution the evidence of his communications while
he was president, But he's outside the bounds of what
(11:21):
you know, his executive power is. You never have executive
power to commit a conspiracy to interfere in an election.
So because of that, I think the focus needs to
be on was he part of the conspiracy still when
he left as president. That's the cleanest case. You don't
have to worry about litigating what he said and what
(11:42):
he did when he was president. But when he's no
longer president, are there overt acts by him or communications
in furtherance of the conspiracy. It is highly unlikely that
he just left as president of the United States and
didn't continue to try to orchestrate what we know was
an attack on President and Trump while he was president
to try to pull him down and delegitimize his presidency.
(12:06):
So if that's the case, conspiracy continues on where pasted,
when it first committed, and it involves individuals that may
not necessarily know, like Greg points out, properly, they may
not know they're really part of this conspiracy, but there
are those that did and what were those overt acts?
And President Obama was at the helm of this, So
(12:26):
he needs to be put in front of a grand jury.
Let him take the fifth while he's in the grand jury,
and let the American people see that he has a
lot to hide after he was president of the United States.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
What's your take on that, Greg jerreed his post presidency actions.
Speaker 4 (12:42):
Well, if he's claiming that he has a broad immunity
for official acts, not unofficial, but official acts, he's no
longer in jeopardy before grand jury, right, because he's got community,
he claims community. You know, he has to tell the
truth because he's no longer in jeopardy. He was knee
(13:06):
deep in all of this. The new records show that
he pressured Comy to clear Hillary Clinton of her obvious
email crimes. I think that's well excited.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
He didn't want this to, you know, put a stand
on his presidency.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
That's right, and then he actively joined the plot to
push the phony collusion narrative that Hillary had instigated, and
he was a principal player engineering that counterfeit case against
Trump by altering or massaging the intelligence. So, you know,
(13:45):
I agree with the Brett's analysis. I think he should
be called. Hillary Clinton absolutely must be called. And you know,
if she's not telling the truth in front of the
grand jury, and the documents and testimony of others undermine
her and demonstrate that she's lying, there could be a
(14:07):
new charge against her lying to a grand jury. So
you know, all of these people, it strikes me, are
in a world of hurting by the way.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
You know, I would bet they're all going to play
the fifth but I have to run real quick.
Speaker 4 (14:21):
I know they think that this is going to happen
in Washington, DC. I disagree. I think it's gonna Happenlarida
based on an overarching criminal conspiracy that extends to the
Morrologo rate. So I think the grand jury will be
or're already is in the state of Florida.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
Uh be fascinating. Wouldn't it be great if I got called?
I'd be very fair and balanced. I believe in our constitution.
I believe in the rule of law. That's the problem.
They don't want people like me on a grand jury
or on a jury altogether. Anyway, Brett, thank you, Greg
Jarrett always as always, thank you.
Speaker 5 (14:57):
Thanks.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
I know we see a ceasefire in Israel, but if
you ask the people of Israel if they're feeling peace,
you're going to get a very different story. You know,
bombed out homes, complete neighborhoods, families torn apart, kids, they
can't play outside. The violence may have slowed, the fear
has not. You have tens and tens of thousands of
(15:19):
Israelis that have been displaced, they have no homes to
go back to. And the IFCJ they are on the ground,
they're providing all the humanitarian assistance possible, food, water, medicines, clothing, shelter,
you name it. They're also building bomb shelters in anticipation
of the likely next attack. And whatever you can do
(15:40):
to help in this mission, to help Israel in their
time and need is they've been fighting for their very
survival is beyond depreciative, especially at a time where we
see rising virulent hatred anti Semitism. You know, the people
that would blame Israel for this is remarkable to me.
You know, the people that would look at this guy
(16:01):
digging his own grave inside one of these terror tunnels
is unbelievable to me. Any suffering that is happening in
Gaza is a direct result of the terrorist organization Hamas
that wasted money on a network of terror tunnels and
rockets that they've been firing in Israel, killing Israelis and
(16:25):
momenting terror throughout the entire region. Anyway, please help the IFCJ.
The need is great. Just go to IFCJ dot org.
That's IFCJ dot org today. All right, twenty five now
to the top of the hour, we're gonna go to
the Oval Office. While we were doing our debate with
Greg Jarrett moments ago and Brett Tolman the President. As
(16:47):
we had anticipated, we thought this was going to take
place at four point thirty meeting with Apple, and I mean,
it's actually pretty amazing what they're offering, Tim Cook and
talking about six hundred billion dollars in investment in manufacturing
here in America. Let's go to the Oval Office. Howard
Lutnik and the Treasury Secretary Besson are also in the room.
Speaker 6 (17:11):
Let's listen in behind. But we're not going to forget
what happened.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
I'm going to take very good care of this, this
person that did this horrible person. This afternoon, we're pleased
to welcome to the White House one of the great
and most esteem business leaders and geniuses and innovators anywhere
in the world.
Speaker 6 (17:31):
Apple CEO Tim Cook, amazing job.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Thanks as well to Secretary of the Treasury Scott Besant
and Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnik for being here wherever
you may be.
Speaker 6 (17:44):
Oh here, you're hello, fellas, I missed you.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Today Apple is announcing that it will invest six hundred
billion dollars that's with a B in the United States
over the next four years. That's one hundred billion dollars
more than they were originally going to invest. And this
is the largest investment Apple has ever made in America
and anywhere else.
Speaker 6 (18:08):
And it's just an honor to have you.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
As you know, Apple has been an investor in other
countries a little bit. I won't say which ones, but
a couple, and they're coming. They're coming home. Six hundred
billion dollars. It's the biggest there is. The company is
also unveiling its ambitious New American Manufacturing program, which will
bring factories and assembly lines across our country, all roaring
(18:32):
to life areas that we're not doing so well or
doing very well. We have about seventeen trillion dollars coming
into the United States, which is more than ever before.
That's never even come close. There's never been anything like it.
Even you, that's even a lot of money for you.
But we have commitments of more than seventeen trillion dollars.
Speaker 6 (18:53):
That was as a couple of weeks ago.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
These investments will directly create more than twenty thousand brand
new American jobs and many thousands more at the Apple.
Suppliers like Corning, Broadcom, Texas Instruments, and Samsung all deal
in that world. As part of this historic commitment, Apple
will massively increase spending on its domestic supply chain for
(19:17):
the iPhone, and we'll build the largest and most sophisticated
smart glass production line in the world in Harrisburg, Kentucky,
which is a great Actually, I did very well there.
I like it because I see I did very well there.
I did very well in Kentucky. But it's a great place.
You're going to be very happy. I thought, maybe while
(19:38):
we're up, I'll interrupt my own speech by you might
show them a little bit about the product that you're
going to be doing in Kentucky.
Speaker 6 (19:45):
Temp. Yes, please this.
Speaker 7 (19:49):
Bond who's made in the US California, And god wow,
how long the morning?
Speaker 4 (19:56):
Waw?
Speaker 7 (19:58):
It's engraved for present a Trump. It's a unique unit
of one. It was designed by US Marine Corps corporal,
a horror one that works at Apple down. He's doing well,
designed it and the base comes from Utah and is
(20:19):
twenty four care at gold and exists. I'll take the
liberty of setting it all. Wow, well, there we go.
Congratulations the great people of Kentucky.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
Either if I had a great less of business to
it's fantastic, and then nice. We're doing these things now
in the United States instead of other countries, far away countries.
Speaker 6 (20:56):
This is a.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Significant step toward the ultimate goal of ensuring that iPhone
sold in the United States of America also are made
in America. With the mass infusion of capital it's announcing today,
Apple will also build a two hundred and fifty thousand
square foot server manufacturing facility in Houston and a vest
billions of dollars to construct data centers across the country
(21:18):
from North Carolina to Iowa to Oregon.
Speaker 6 (21:23):
That's big stuff.
Speaker 1 (21:24):
Apple will also open state of the art manufacturer economy.
Speaker 6 (21:28):
It's going to be a manufacturing.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
Academy in Detroit, and that's a great place to do well.
You know, big things are happening in.
Speaker 6 (21:37):
Michigan and Detroit.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
They're coming in because of what we've done with the
I go with the great, big, beautiful bill.
Speaker 6 (21:43):
I added one word great, but we have.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Probably the biggest, most comprehensive piece of legislation ever passed.
Speaker 6 (21:53):
It's going to mean.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
Unbelievable numbers of jobs and no jobs on Think of this,
whether it's tips or overtime or social security. No tax,
no tax on tips, no tax on social Security, no
tax on overtime. And it's just a small bit of it.
For Apple and others businesses. We're talking about the deductions
(22:17):
and all of the things. And actually for people they
go out and buy a car, first time it's ever
been done. We talk about deductions for companies, but they're
going to be able to deduct interest when they borrow
money to buy a car. If it's made in America,
has to be made in America. So it is amazing
and one of the reasons I think I can say
that Apple's coming. Here is the legislation we just passed.
(22:40):
With this kind of investment, Apple will also open other
facilities rare earth magnets from Texas and build Oh, I
love that you're doing this.
Speaker 6 (22:52):
I love that.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
I love that, and build a brand new rare earth
recycling line in Mountain Pass, California. I know that area. Yeah,
that's where they have a lot of truly rare earth.
That's fantastic.
Speaker 6 (23:04):
I love that.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
And Apple will help develop and manufacture semiconductors and semiconductor
equipment in Texas, Utah, Arizona, and New York. For years,
Americans have watched as many of our leading tech giants
built their factories overseas and exported American jobs abroad. But
under the Trump administration, we're doing everything possible to make
(23:26):
this the best place on Earth to build a factory
or grow businesses. I'm allowing them to build electric producing
plants with their factory because it was they have to
hook into the grid.
Speaker 6 (23:37):
And I think it's one of the biggest things.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
We've done where you can build tim your own electricity.
You become your own electric manufacturer, and that goes along
with the plants, so you become a utility. So congratulations,
now you're in the utility. I hope they don't value
your company based on utility, but that's okay. You're going
(23:59):
to make You're going to be making your own electricity.
And as you probably know, for much of this and
much of many of the things that we're doing, especially
the AI, they would need actually double the electricity that
the country now produces for everything. So it's massive electric
and they're going to be able to make their own
and they're getting very fast approvals. Lee Zelden is doing
(24:20):
a fantastic job, including with a one hundred percent expensing
on the one big beautiful bill. In return, we're asking
our businesses to invest in America and they're coming in
at level so we've never seen before. So I don't
know when it shows up, but there are a lot
of factories and a lot of plants that are either
(24:41):
under construction or soon will be starting construction. So I
can't tell you exactly when, but I want to be
around in about a year from now and two years
from now, because we're going to see an explosion I
think like this country.
Speaker 6 (24:55):
Has never seen before, never.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
Today's announcement is one of the largest amitments and what
has become among the greatest investment booms in our nation's history.
And we've got the hottest country anywhere in the world.
Speaker 6 (25:08):
And I told you the story that and Tim, I'll
tell you.
Speaker 1 (25:11):
But I went to the Middle East and I was
with Qatar, I was with YOUE and the King of
Saudi Arabia, old great leaders. And then I went to
NATO and saw many great leaders. And we just finished
that about four weeks ago. Everyone virtually everyone said in
effect that we were a dead country one year ago America.
Speaker 6 (25:34):
This was dead country. We were dying, we were dead.
And now you've got the hottest country anywhere in the world.
This would have never happened except for certain people. Thank
you very much.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
I appreciate Navidia is investing five hundred billion to go
along with Apple six hundred billion, six hundred billion. Micron
Great Company is investing two hundred billion, is investing more
than one hundred and fifty billion. SoftBank is investing substantially
(26:06):
more than one hundred billion. TSMC is investing two hundred billion,
Johnson and Johnson fifty five billion, Merk Silantis and General
Motors are putting many, many billions in they.
Speaker 6 (26:18):
Haven't determined the final number.
Speaker 1 (26:20):
And many other countries are investing tens of billions of
dollars that I'm not going to give you the whole
list because the list is too long to read, but
it's hundreds of billions and even trillions, I mean, it's
trillions of dollars is being invested right now. Last week
it was announced that our economy grew at three percent
in the second quarter, and consumer confidence is surging, blue
(26:42):
collar wages arising rapidly.
Speaker 6 (26:45):
Costs the way down.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
You know. I listen to these horrendous frauds on CNN
and various other fake news networks, and they say costs
are up.
Speaker 6 (26:56):
No, no, costs are down. Is down.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
It's going to soon, I believe, be less than two
dollars a gallon. It's around two forty right now. Many
places other than a California where a tax shat of
business and a couple of others. But gasoline is way down.
The price of groceries are down.
Speaker 6 (27:18):
How about eggs.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
When I first came here, my first week, the press
hit me very hard on eggs, eggs and quadrupled or something.
Speaker 6 (27:26):
I said.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
I didn't know about it. Give me a chance. I've
just been here for four days. Well, eggs a down.
Everything's down, prices down. The only thing that's up is
stock prices that's really up, and that's through the roof.
The stock market has been hitting all time.
Speaker 6 (27:42):
Records, all time highs.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Last week it was announced that our economy grew at
levels that we haven't seen in a long time.
Speaker 6 (27:51):
But the real levels of growth are going to be
judged in a year from.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
Now when you start seeing some of these incredible plants,
because we have cart plants opening.
Speaker 6 (27:58):
They're coming in from cat from Mexico and from all
over the world, and they're coming in because they like
the way the election worked out. But they also like
the fact that they don't want to pay tariffs.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
And the tariffs I think will be taking well, we're
taken in hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs. I
won't be so specific other than just said because we
don't even know what the final number is. We just
made a deal, as you know, with the EU where
they're paying hundreds of billions of dollars, Japan paying hundreds
of billions of dollars, and numerous other countries paying hundreds
(28:31):
of billions of dollars and we're not even completed there.
And as you know, they found twenty five billion three
weeks ago. They said, we have a surplus of twenty
five billion dollars and they said, where did this come from.
I said, check the tariffs and they checked. They said,
you're right, that's where it came from. And we've really
just started. This is just in its infancy. So we
(28:52):
have a great country. We have a country that is
going to be very rich. It's a country that we're
proud of, but it's going to be very rich. And
it's companies like Apple. They're coming home. They're all coming home,
and we want them to come home. They have to
come home. We're going to treat them really well. We're
going to be putting a very large tariff on chips
(29:17):
and semiconductors.
Speaker 6 (29:19):
But the good news for companies like Apple is if.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
You're building in the United States or have committed to
build without question, committed to build in the United States,
there will be no charge. In other words, we're not
going to be charging. So a lot of countries, a
lot of companies are leaving various other places and they're
coming to the United States. So in other words, we'll
be putting a terraffon of approximately one on chips and semiconductors.
(29:48):
But if you're building in the United States of America,
there's no charge even though you're building and you're not
producing yet in terms of the big numbers of jobs
and all of the things that you're building, if you're building,
there will be no chart. So I just want everyone
to know that. And I didn't even tell you that. Inside.
We discussed the concept, but I didn't. So it's a
(30:11):
big factor. So one hundred percent tariff on all chips
and semiconductors coming into the United States.
Speaker 6 (30:18):
But if you've made a commitment to build, or if.
Speaker 1 (30:20):
You're in the process of building, as many are, there
is no tariff.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Okay, if if the station's along the Sean Hannity Show
Radio network, we're going to stay with our coverage of
President Trump with CEO of Apple Tim Cook, and his
big announcement six hundred billion dollars in investment and manufacturing
in the US. As the President expands out the discussion,
he claims seventeen trillion in total commitments. As we continue
(30:47):
our coverage along the network, say you're building and.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
You don't build, then we go back and get we
edit up, it.
Speaker 6 (30:55):
Accumulates, and we charge you at a later date.
Speaker 1 (30:59):
You have to pay and that's a guarantee. So that's
a big statement. And I think the chip companies are
all coming back home. They're all coming back.
Speaker 6 (31:09):
You know.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
We started with Intel, and gradually Intel was just taken
over the over the calls. They were taken to the cleaners, frankly,
and moved to other places, in particular Taiwan.
Speaker 6 (31:22):
But I think a.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Lot of those companies are coming back, and they're coming
back very rapidly. So that's a big statement on tariff.
I want to thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Tim.
Speaker 6 (31:32):
Would you like to say a few words about your
company please. Good afternoon everyone.
Speaker 7 (31:40):
Mister President, thank you very much for having me here today.
You've been a great advocate for American innovation and manufacturing.
I'm grateful for your leadership and your commitment. That's a
commitment we share at Apple because American innovation is central
to everything we do. Our products are designed here, we're
(32:00):
hiring and growing here, and we support four hundred and
fifty thousand jobs with thousands of suppliers and partners in
all fifty states. Earlier this year, we made our largest
ever spending commitment five hundred billion dollars to the US
over the next four years.
Speaker 6 (32:19):
That's already yielding results.
Speaker 7 (32:21):
Earlier this year, we broke ground on a new factory
in Houston to make advanced AI servers, and just last month,
the very first test unit rolled off that factory's line,
proudly made in America. President Trump shared some kind words
about that work, but he also asked us to think
about what more we could commit to doing, and mister President,
(32:44):
we took that challenge very seriously. I'm glad to be
here with you today, and I'm very proud to say
that today we're committing an additional one hundred billion to
the United States, bringing our total US investment to six
hundred billion over the next four years. As a part
of this, we're launching Apple's American Manufacturing Program. It will
(33:07):
spur even more production right here in America for critical
components used in Apple products.
Speaker 6 (33:14):
All around the world.
Speaker 7 (33:16):
And we're thrilled to announce that we've already signed new
agreements with ten companies across America to do just that.
First with today's announcements, I'm proud to say that Apple
is leading the creation of an end to end silicon
supply chain right here in America, from design to equipment,
(33:37):
to wafer production, to fabrication to packaging. In Texas, we're
working with manufacturers like Texas Instruments, Global Wafers America, and
Applied Materials. We're working with Amcor in Arizona and broadcomon
global founderies in New York. Thanks to President Trump's vision
and with his help in his first term, we also
(34:00):
led the way to bring TSMC to Arizona by committing
to be their first and largest customer. Today, they're producing
tens of millions of chips for Apple using one of
the most advanced process technologies in America.
Speaker 6 (34:16):
Today.
Speaker 7 (34:18):
We're going to keep working with our suppliers to move
even more of this incredibly advanced work to America, and
this year alone, American manufacturers are on track to make
nineteen billion ships for Apple in twenty four factories across
twelve different states. Second, we're committed to buying American made
(34:40):
advanced rare earth magnets developed by MP Materials, which will
become part of Apple's devices shipped.
Speaker 6 (34:48):
Around the world.
Speaker 7 (34:50):
MP is the only fully integrated rare earth producer in
the United States and with this partnership, they'll be significantly
expanding their flagship facility, Fort Worth, Texas. We're also thrilled
to work together on a cutting edge rare earth recycling
line in Mountain Pass, California, and third in Kentucky. We've
(35:13):
worked with our partners at Corning to build the world's
largest and most advanced smartphone glass production line, and I'm
pleased to announce that very soon. This is for the
first time ever, every single new iPhone and every single
new Apple Watch sold anywhere in the world will contain
cover glass made in Kentucky.
Speaker 6 (35:36):
In addition to the.
Speaker 7 (35:37):
American Manufacturing program, we're also significantly growing our investments in AI,
including expanding data center capacity in North Carolina, in Nevada,
in Iowa, in Arizona, and Oregon.
Speaker 6 (35:50):
So we're going to.
Speaker 7 (35:51):
Keep making investments right here in America. We're going to
keep hiring in America, and we're going to keep building
technologies at the heart of our products right here in
America because we're a proud American company and we believe
deeply in the promise of this great nation. Thank you all,
and thank you President Trump for pulling or for putting
(36:13):
American innovation and American jobs front and center. Thank you, sir, good,
thank you, thank you.
Speaker 6 (36:21):
What did you have the what did you incredible?
Speaker 1 (36:25):
I want to thank you very much and thank you
JD for helping alone. Good job, really good job.
Speaker 6 (36:32):
Any questions please.
Speaker 8 (36:35):
I's on the MP trail to bring forward being any
new factor in renaissance.
Speaker 6 (36:39):
I just mentioned.
Speaker 5 (36:40):
Seventeen trillion dollars in your first seven months or so?
Speaker 7 (36:43):
Can you talk about how investment linked this all the
other ones that you laid out will positively impact the
millions of Americans that trusted.
Speaker 6 (36:50):
You with the book.
Speaker 1 (36:51):
Thank you very much. It changes our country. I mean,
our country is a very different country than it was
six months ago, and people like.
Speaker 6 (37:02):
Tim are coming. We had microun in yesterday.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
We had all of the big great companies that you
read about.
Speaker 6 (37:08):
You don't know about, but you read about.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
Many of them were making products outside of our country.
Speaker 6 (37:14):
Foolishly, we lost them.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
If we had the right person sitting in that seat,
that would have never happened twenty and thirty years ago.
When you look at the chip business, that would have
never left our shores. We had one hundred percent of
chips originally, and then we slowly got taken down to nothing.
We have the biggest chip companies to both of them,
but we have the biggest in the world coming in.
(37:35):
They're going to Arizona and beyond, and we're going to
have a short period of time we'll be up to
almost fifty percent of the chips from starting in nothing,
and that's something. But we have the greatest companies in
the world coming into our country, and that means jobs,
and it means wealth, and wealth means security for our people.
End end.
Speaker 8 (37:56):
Yes, sir, congrive relations on this and invest in. Presidentrum
In Bank a good great example of putting America first.
What does the labor force look like to fill these
jobs that you have? Do we have enough skilled American
workers to fill this.
Speaker 1 (38:11):
Well, we do have a lot of workers, and we
have a lot of workers that hadn't been looking for
work because they were disincentivized. Frankly, and people like Tim
have tremendous schools and training centers that they build along
with a lot of their big plants where they train
people on whether it's lass like in Kentucky, or computers
(38:31):
or whatever they might be doing. It's a complex world
and they train people and they do a great job
so it's a whole new workforce now we have a
lot of them.