Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
And welcome, and it's time for Constitution radio k met
fourteen ninety am. I am here back into my bunker
hidden somewhere on the Oregon coast. Glad to have you
as part of the program. I just got back from
my forty first anniversary trip, No, not for in radio
(00:27):
with my wife. The radio anniversary was August sixth, by
the way, so that marked fourteen years on radio. And
then last Monday was forty one years of my lovely wife.
First twenty one years we killed each other, then resurrected,
I guess, and then the next let's see the next
(00:53):
which twenty seventeen years, eighteen years. It was better but
not quite where needs to be in the last two
or three years magical. So for you young men wondering
how long did it take before it could take thirty
eight years? Man, just be patient. But anyway, speaking of patients,
we have been patient over a lot of things. So
(01:17):
our good friend Dennis Jackson, right, Dennis, you're the one
that sent me the was it you sent me the
thing with the yeah it was it you or Brady
sent me the one with who's been arrested? Number of arrests?
I did, Okay, So I've been showing that off.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
It's got six or seven categories and then it has
a sandwich at the bottom.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Yeah. So Epstein clients zero Democrats who committed treason zero
January sixth Committee zero in g O money launchers zero
twenty twenty stolen election conspirators, zero COVID pandemic creators zero.
Man throwing sandwich fellon me, But it is it is
important to take note if that wasn't any ordinary sandwich,
(02:03):
it was a club sandwich.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
Never mind, it was a subway sandwich. He got hit
by a subway.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Yeah, but it was a club sandwich. You know, you
beat him with a club.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Yeah, that's not and it was it wasn't his face,
it was his body.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
If it were me, it would have been a Pepperoni sandwich.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
No.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
No, I couldn't have thrown it away. I would maybe
I'd throw a meatball sandwich, but I Pepperoni had or
I'd have to eat that one. So yeah, I don't
hate anybody en else to throw away a good Pepperoni
sandwich or excuse me, Astrami sandwich.
Speaker 4 (02:44):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
My wife said something similar. She says, man a good
sandwich on the ground. It was yeah, what a waste
of sand.
Speaker 4 (02:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
Anyway, the reason why I bring this up, and we'll
talk more about this later on the show. It's not
my opening monologue is that is that John Bolton soundles
got raided and they are talking esveionage a few other things.
One writer said it could be five to twenty years.
(03:17):
We'll see. I explained on my show Friday yesterday at
Patriot Soapbox. We have to remember those things take time.
You got to build the case. You gotta know evidence,
you gotta you know, you know, the prosecutors need to
build their case. You know. You don't just go in
there and say, well, wait, just no, he did it.
You've got to have everything in place. So that's the
(03:37):
reason why a lot of this stuff has taken time.
That's just the reality. The other reason why it's taking
time is because you got to remember all of these records,
all these files, all of these all these pieces of
of of breadcrumbs that could lead you to where you
need to go to figure this out have been in
the possession of the deep state, the swamp, the Democrats
(04:03):
all along, even when Trump was president. The first time
they had it was they you know who the they
is that was in control of it all along. And
when you break into these files and you know the
other side's been in control of it, what have they done.
They have thrown away the pepperoni and the pastrami and
(04:27):
the cheese, and they left whatever you don't want to
eat in it, maybe some anchovies. And then they inserted
stuff in there that's not supposed to be in there.
You know that it's you know that putting in a
A A H O train set in between bread is
(04:48):
not a sandwich. It doesn't belong. You're not gonna say, well,
here's the sandwich when you know all the stuff have
been pulled out of it, speaking of sandwiches and stuff
that's not supposed to be there in there, So you
don't re leased those files to the public when it's
full of what the other side has had possession of.
(05:09):
And and then and then they're like, oh, release the files.
Trump's in there. If Trump was in there, they would
have released the files the moment they had their hands
on them, because it would have sunk Trump forever. If
what they are saying is there was there, that's how
I know it wasn't and it isn't. It may be
(05:31):
faked in there. There may be a false information in there.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
Well, even even Bill Barr made that same comment. He said,
there's nothing in there, and if there were, Biden would
have nailed.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
Him with it. So yeah, it's pretty much given.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Hey, if you look at your phone, I just sent
you another picture that you might want to look at
in case you didn't see it on the internet. It
reminds me of Derek as he was sitting in his
pajamas outside his house when they rated him years ago.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
I sent you a picture. Did you see the picture.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
It hasn't shown up yet.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Ah, Well, it's a picture of mister Bolton's standing there
with no shirt on outside of his house, wearing his pajamas.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
So there's all kinds of good stuff. But that's not
what I want to open with. But that was But
I didn't want to mention that because you know, everybody's
like getting impatient. Be patient. It takes time. We have
the right people in place for the most part. I
trust President Trump. We voted for him because we trust him,
(06:43):
We expect him to do the right thing, and so far,
to my knowledge, he has now. But that's not what
I wanted to open up with. What I wanted to
open up with was a little history lesson and how
history repeats itself. There's an old saying that you know
in politics that a party or a person that's going
(07:04):
to go the way of the Whigs, the Whig Party.
Whig was a party that appeared for a little while
and then vanished. And so when people say the way
of the Whigs, they mean vanishing. But the way the
Whigs vanished it wasn't because of any reason other than
there was a battle over slavery within the party, and
there's a few other things. They weren't the anti the
(07:27):
anti other side party that they ought to be, and
so there wasn't as much contrast as there should be
when it came to at least constitutionalism. So really what
we're seeing with the Democratic Party is that they're going
the way of Hamilton's Federalist Party. Hamilton's Federalist Party. After
(07:50):
Jefferson's election, which was actually a landslide, I said, well, no,
it wasn't. He didn't even get elected through the electoral
college and had to go to the House of Representatives. Yeah,
but his closest person that was battle him because he
didn't get the majority, was from his own party. Aaron Burr.
Aaron Burr was more moderate as a Jeffersonian Republican, but
he was within the republic Party. Adams got almost nothing,
(08:13):
and the Federalist Party lost both Houses of Congress, even
though they had controlled those houses prior to that election.
It was an overwhelming landslide for the Jeffersonian Republicans. And
then Jefferson wound up getting the nod for presidency after
the House of Representatives voted him in, and then Aaron
(08:34):
Burr was his vice president at first, and then what
happened was after that is then there's the famous duel
Alexander Hamilton. Hamilton died due to that duel with Aaron Burr.
So the two leaders of the Hamiltonian Federalist Party. Federalist
(08:58):
Party was not federalists. They named him that. There was
nothing federalist about them. They were nationalists. They were a
big government. They were that generations, that era's version of
what the Democrats and the left and the progressives are today.
And with Hamilton and John Adams gune At, John Adams
out of the presidency, out of power, and Hamilton dead,
(09:20):
they were leaderless. They had nobody to lead them. When
Jefferson took office. He then dismantled the deep state of
the time. He fired half of the bureaucracy, the Federalist
Party half. They no longer had any voice in the
bureaucracy whatsoever. So what did they do. They retreated to
(09:40):
the courts, where they continued to attack Jefferson over and
over through the courts. Does all of that sound familiar?
It should sound familire because the Democratic Party is in
the exact same shoes right now. Here's what wound up
happening after that when it comes to the Hamiltonian Party.
(10:01):
They never won another presidential election. They never even got
never even got closed. They began to lose seats in
Congress for two reasons, One because people weren't voting for
him as much, and two because new states were being
added to the Union and in the Frontier they were
not Federalist Party people because they're in the frontier leave
(10:24):
me alone government, they were more Jeffersonian. In fact, the
only power that the Federalist Party had at all was
in the northeast. Sounds a little familiar, still, don't it.
And so by the eighteen twenties, the only elections that
(10:46):
Federalist Party candidates were winning were small positions, small offices
in the northeast in Massa places like Massachusetts, and even
Massachusetts had a Jeffersonian Republican governor at one point, Elberge Gary.
Of course, Elberge Gary realized how hard it was for
(11:07):
him to get his office and how hard it was
for state senators in Massachusetts who were Jeffersonian Republicans to
win that they started manipulating the districts to make sure
they continue to win, hence the term Gary Mandarin. The
(11:30):
left of the time then infiltrated the Jeffersonian Republican Party.
Because the party died, they went into the courts and
into their opponent's party, and by the eighteen thirties there
was a battle over the Jeffersonian Republicans. The enemy that
(11:54):
infiltrated decided the best way to get power back, the
best way to grab it from those who believed in
the Constitution and liberty, was through democracy. So Andrew Jackson
and his gang claimed they were for pure democracy and
that democracy it was the only thing that could save
(12:15):
the country and save constitution. We had to save our
democracy and become more democratic. Sound familiar again, However, Andrew
Jackson wasn't about democracy as much as he was about
using democracy to consolidate power, consolidate power under the hands
(12:38):
of the president, under the hands of the federal government,
to centralize all that power under the federal government through
using democracy. So the Whig Party appeared not as an
alternative to the Democratic Party, which is what the Republican
Jeffstone Republican Party had become, then the Democratic Republic and
(13:00):
while they were battling and then the Democratic Party under
Andrew Jackson. But the Whig Party didn't specifically come into
being just to battle there Democrats in particular, but to
battle Andrew Jackson, because they said because of the way
he was operating, he was operating in a manner that
(13:21):
was too authoritarian. King King Andrew is what they called him.
So the Whigs appeared as the anti Andrew Jackson party.
Once Andrew Jackson was gone, they then were able to
get four presidencies had Andrew Jackson and then what was
(13:43):
it after that? Was it not vampiuria and can't remember
fillmore right right afterwards? And then you had two Whigs,
one Democrat Pierce and then two Wigs Harrison Tyler with
Whigs that he had Pearce was a Democrat, and I
can't remember the names of the other Wigs off the
(14:04):
top of my head. But the Whigs got four out
of five, and then they vanished because see, they had
no direction. They didn't choose anything other than similarities with
their opposing party, going against the Constitution for internal improvements,
things like that. In fact, there was only one Wig
(14:26):
that really stuck to the Constitution. That was John Tyler,
the second Wig Golden the presidency, and they threw him
out of the party because of it. Then the Whigs vanished,
but not because of the same reasons of the Democrats
now and the Federalist Party, but because slavery was ripping
(14:50):
them apart from within. They couldn't agree on that topic,
on that on that issue. And then in eighteen fifty
four the Republican Party was formed specifically in opposition of slavery,
or at least to contain it keep it from getting worse.
(15:11):
And the Republican Party also carried some stances that were
against what the Democrats stood for. For example, the Democratic
Party stood for a stronger president, and the Republicans liked
the Whigs originally before they started to fall apart, and
(15:32):
follow the wrong path, believed in a stronger legislature. Problem
with the Republicans so at the time is they believed
that the conqueror shouldn't should not just be stronger, that
it should be so strong that the other branches could
be micromanaged by the legislature. They felt that way because
(15:52):
the Democrats had been micromanaging the other two branches through
the courts, which had been packed with their people. Began
with John Marshall, John Marshall's sent to the Chief Justice
position in eighteen oh one. Eighteen thirty six, john Marshall
(16:14):
passed away. Of course we had people right behind him,
like Joseph's story, that carried on the leftist tradition, and
to this day the courts have been under the left's control.
It's only been recently that Supreme Court has been wrenched
out of their grip. And perhaps it might get better.
We'll see in their future. Of course, the left they
(16:34):
can't win on issues, so they demand power. As they
did with the Federalist Party, they demand it today. They
believe that the way to get back into having a
chance to win is not on issues. Not to convince
you the people, or the states, or anybody else that
they're on the right track, but to get rid of
the electoral college and to stack the courts with a
(16:59):
greater number of justices so they can have the majority.
Because they can't win on the issues, they believe they
can win by betraying the constitution. The Democratic Party, however,
we've seen this before in history. Hamilton's Federalist Party is
on a track to extinction. They may go the way
(17:23):
of the Dodo if they continue down this path, if
they continue down the path of the wokeism, the anti constitutional,
because the American people have been foolish in the past
on how they vote. When the Churchill said the best
argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the
(17:45):
average voter. Democratic Party, though, is doubling down on what
beat them, because the American people, for the most part,
are still not completely looming like they are, and the
younger generation, especially the male voters, I'm tired of this junk,
the young men especially, I'm tired of being marginalized. I'm
trying to being told that my manhood, my masculinity is toxic.
(18:15):
And so the Democrats numbers are going down and down. Meanwhile,
Donald Trump and his team are slowly dismantling the deep state,
the bureaucracy. They're slowly taking care of business, and they're
working on election integrity. They're working on getting the district
(18:36):
in a little bit more reasonably sane. They're looking for
getting illegal aliens off of the appropriation count for number
of representatives. The Republicans, once that change with illegal aliens
has put in place, stand to gain twelve to fourteen
members of the House of Representatives, no matter helmet. Gavin
(19:01):
Newsom tries to Gary Mander the already grant Gary Mander
to the hilt state of California, State of California, if
they get rid of county and legal aliens for the
portionment would lose two more seats just for that. So
(19:22):
we're looking at a Federalist Party moment. Two hundred years
after the Federalist Party vanished during the eighteen twenties. Two
hundred years later, during the twenty twenties, the Democrats are
looking like they are going to repeat history. History does
(19:45):
get repeated by the way. Mark Twain said that history
actually does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes. Well,
this is one hell of a rhyme. We're looking at
right now, exactly two hundred years ag. The Democratic Party
is looking to exit like Hamilton's Federalist Party, and in
(20:07):
my opinion, it couldn't be soon enough. That said, we
have to be careful not to become the enemy, because
now we've always been against one party rule, but we're
looking at the chance for one party rule, and that's
when tyrants try to grab the reins. We have to
(20:30):
make sure that doesn't happen. Also, all of these displaced
progressives looking for somewhere to go. I don't know, the
Socialists Communist Party USA might take them, but some of
them might work their way into the Republican Party, like
(20:52):
the Federalist refugees did with the Jeffersonian Republicans, eventually pushing
them towards save our democracy. And Drew Jackson is we
have to be careful that doesn't happen either. I know
Donald Trump is on a second term. There's been jokes
(21:12):
about him serving a third term. He can't. Constitution doesn't
offer it. And I doubt that an amendment would survive
the ratification process because what could happen for one party
can happen for some other party, and we don't want
to open that door. I think JD. Vance would be
a fine replacement. We have to make sure he gets
(21:34):
in there, that he wins it, and that he's not
negatively influenced. So yes, I do believe the Democratic Party.
May I never understate my enemy. You never know what
will happen. They're capable of all kinds of interesting evil things.
But it looks like they may go the way of
(21:54):
the part of the Hamiltons of Hamilton's Federalist Party. They
may go the way of the Dodo. And if that happens, well,
we just have to still keep her head on a swivel.
It won't be time to relax, It won't be time
to trust. It definitely won't be time to stop being
involved in politics. Just take a break. When I come back.
(22:18):
My two co hosts Alan I almost said Alan Jackson,
Alan Myers and Dennis Jackson. No, I don't have the
famous country singer on board. I have two guys though.
If you combine their names, it might see that name
and they will give their opinion their commentary. After this break,
(22:38):
don't go anywhere.
Speaker 5 (22:41):
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Speaker 1 (24:20):
Repeal Democracy by Douglas V. Gibbs is finally available. Doug
Dat's book examines the importance of being a republic, How
we can restore republic, Why democracy is so dangerous. Of
all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of
its victims may be the most oppressive. C. S. Lewis
And that is the very first page that you would see,
(24:42):
right before chapter one and Repeal Democracy. Repeal Democracy by
Douglas V. Gibbs on sale now. Help me fight the
good fight. This radio program is funded by advertising dollars.
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(25:05):
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Speaker 4 (25:33):
We are the socialists.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
Sided Your individual liberties, personal freedoms, and mental individuality will
be added to our own.
Speaker 4 (25:43):
Resistance is futile.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
Right then, welcome back to Coastution Radio k ET fourteen
ninety AM. I have Douglas V. Gibbs visit me at
Douglas P. Gibbs dot com. Douglas V. Gibbs dot com.
(26:09):
Read the blog, write every day of things we're working
on to get on there on that site, grow that site.
We're also I'm also going to be on a trip
and I don't have all the details yet. I'll get
them maybe during break or something next time, or in
a phone call later. I'll be at San Diego State
University on September seventeenth. Don't know the capacity I'm gonna
be there yet. I might just be a visitor hanging
(26:30):
out with something with a professor I don't know yet. No,
not the professor Gilligan's Island, different professor. And then I
am also planning during that trip to set up meetings
with old class members and anybody else that wants to
show up in Beaumont, Chino, Fallbrook, and Carlsbad. And I
(26:50):
will let you know by email how that goes. Want
to be on the email list, email me Constitution Speaker
at yahoo dot com. Constitute speaker at yahoo dot com.
I'll add you to the email list. There's a button
for adding on the website right now, but it's not
working right so still working on stuff under construction. So
(27:10):
just email me Constitution speaker, yeahoo dot com. I'll get
you on the list now. I just spent the first
half of the show talking about how the Democratic Party
is in trouble and the similarities between them and the
early Democratic Party and the Federalist Party. Leaderless lost its
(27:35):
power in the Congress, lost its power in the deep state,
trying to flex his power in the courts. What say you, Dennis,
Dennis sir.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
You know, especially over the years back when we used
to have the Corona class, you know, and had a
lot of these historical discussions. But the big question to
me is, you know, what will it morph into? You know,
will it be more formally an actual socialist party. I
mean they're embracing that term very much right now. You
(28:21):
know with New York. You know, when Sanders ran, he
didn't really run, and as a Democrat he ran, and
his mainly main money was the Democratic Socialists, of which
AOC also was a Democratic Socialist. And I don't know
if that will just wind up filling the void or
(28:45):
if they're going to get more of the sloomic.
Speaker 1 (28:52):
Overreach you might's going in and now, sir.
Speaker 2 (29:02):
Okay, I don't know if there's going to be some
infiltration or they're not you know how it is. You know,
they use the words to label themselves, but the labels
really aren't accurate, you know, They're they're kind of a
warm and fuzzy.
Speaker 4 (29:19):
They're kind of.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
Sit in your mind right to accept it because they
aren't quite so foreign. They aren't going to call themselves
the anti American you know, pro atheist party, even though
that's what they are. So yeah, they're really struggling right
now to see what they're going to come up with.
As far as you know, the midterms, who's going to
really break out. I don't think the team Jefferies is
(29:48):
gonna really amount to much of anything. I mean, he's there,
their speaker if they were in charge, you know, but
the Shenanigan heat when he talked for you know, twenty
four hours or so, I think he's kind of warn
himself out. You know, I just I don't think he's
going to have the staying power.
Speaker 4 (30:09):
So I don't know.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
I mean, they're they're a party. I don't even know
if they're really in search of a leader. It's kind
of like they're all roaming around, you know, bumping into
each other and uh if they can turn the party
over to the New York uh mayor and think that
he's going to be, you know, the future like they
(30:31):
thought Bill Debragio was.
Speaker 4 (30:34):
You know, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (30:36):
I mean, the guy's only been in the country a
handful of years, early thirties, and he's he's the wisdom leader.
Speaker 4 (30:45):
You know. I don't know. I just really think they're heard.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Well, it seems like they want to turn it over
to Gavin Newsom, even though he has said he hasn't
want it, but he seems to be positioning himself for it.
Oh he wants it, but what Yeah, and he wants it.
But what he's done to California, which he claims is
a wonderful thing, is you know the rest of the
You know, it's funny because when I travel the country,
what I notice is even the Democrats in other states
(31:10):
called California, Camifornia even the Democrats think what Newsom has done,
it's ridiculous. Uh and and uh. Since Newsom has been governor,
roughly a million people have fled California. Hundreds of companies
moved out of California, moved their headquarters out of California,
and a lot of them, you know, uh, they're a
lot of their their business out of California. Uh you
(31:32):
bed back and beyond. I wrote about this the other day,
and they're now coming back. In twenty twenty three, they
had closed all their stores, most of them were in
California at the time, like eighty seven of them. And
when asked about, you know where they were gonna uh
come back to, you know, we know, growing and uh,
the the uh uh guy in CEO, Yeah, he says, hey,
(31:57):
we're we're not We're not gonne. We're not gonna open
any any thing in California because you know, you can't
do business there because the high taxes, the steep wages,
the regulations, and the overall cost of doing business. So
we're not opening any stores of California. They planned a
half like seventy five opened by the end of twenty
twenty five. Before twenty twenty six, starts. They put like
(32:18):
six in the greater Nashville area. They moved their head
their headquarters in Nashville. The store was originally from New Jersey,
but as it grew, it eventually started growing in California
and then they put most of their stores there and
that's when they started to fall apart because the cost
was too high. That was a part of it. I mean,
there's other reasons why they also got into trouble. They
didn't warm up to the online stuff too well. And
(32:41):
they did it. They got rid of some of their
regular brands to bring in some new fangled brands, you know,
to try to you know, bring in the younger generation,
but the older generation who was in the bulk of
their of their shoppers said bye bye. Kind of what
kind of like what Cracker Barrel's doing trying to do now.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
Also attacked Michael and got rid of them, right, you know,
along with a lot of the other liberals stores, I
mean Mike and Mike Pillow. You know, they were in
all the major stores and they all got crucified, you
know with all the anti trumpetsm from four years ago.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
So yeah, so so and you've got new and newsom'se
like say, hey, I'm gonna punch Republicans in the mouth.
So he's not only he's not only not the right
candidate for the Democrats, he's just he's just as radical
and injurious as Mom, Donnie. He just doesn't say it
as clearly. Uh. But you know he's you know, you
(33:39):
know with his response to bed bath beyond well, there's
no relevance there. So he's so he's anti business. Other
businesses know that he's telling were probably to punch punch
in the mouth. So so he's losing if he were
able to gain any voters, he's lost him. He's alienating
anybody that might help him. Rather than you know, uh,
(34:02):
rather than try to attract business and attract a better
voter base around the country if he were run for president,
he'd rather snipe at his opposition, which has sends the
message to companies and voters and he's hostile to them.
He's hostile in the business. They're hostile to those voters.
So and so you know, Trump has done so well
(34:23):
because he he didn't say I'm you know, I'm for
the Republicans. He says, hey, I'm for Americans. I'm going
to work for you. All of you who, regardless of
who you are, and those ones are screaming and yelling
they are the minority. Don't listen to them, you don't
pay attention with your eyes, and then go with what
you see. I'm for all Americans. And then people are
(34:45):
flip flipping over to Trump young men, Blacks, Hispanics and
so on and so forth, and and so the Democratic
Party they just keep doubling down on what beat them on,
the arrogance, the the smugness, the oh there's another word,
but I can't think of it. I mean, these it's
(35:07):
it's like these power hungry tyrants who then project everything
and a sanctimonious that was the other word, These sanctimonious
bleepholes that are you know, on that side. And they're
just digging the pit deeper, believing that somehow, some way,
their hatred of Trump and their love of socialism will
(35:30):
somehow just turn everything around and it's just not gonna happen.
And uh and and trump, Uh, Trump's success and their
hatred of Trump combined means I think, hopefully maybe uh
that the uh Democratic Party go the way of the Dodo,
go the way of Hamilton's Federalist Party, I really do.
Speaker 2 (35:51):
Well, I think Trump's gonna do something more unique about California.
When he made the statement this way that I am
gonna save California.
Speaker 1 (35:59):
Yeah I heard. Uh yeah, you know, if.
Speaker 4 (36:02):
He gets involved and tries to use.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
The YEP, you might win again, just keeps.
Speaker 4 (36:14):
Going back and forth.
Speaker 7 (36:15):
But the uh uh, you and I both know that
there's a lot more people voting that should be elected
every year and has been for decades in.
Speaker 2 (36:26):
California that are that are having their election stolen. So
if he can crack through on some of that with
what he's trying to do now election.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
Integrity and get rid of maille balloting and all that, well,
I expect Oregon to go Republican if they get rid
of mel in balloting because because Oregon has been mail
in balloting only since ninety eight, and that's what it
got deeper blue.
Speaker 3 (36:48):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
Oregon has Portland and Salem and Eugene, but the rest
of the state is not a lipt hard like that. Uh,
we'll see what happens, well, we'll see, but uh, but
but ultimately they continue to shoot themselves in the foot.
Ultimately I see the Democratic Party going the way of
the Hamilton Federalist Party. We'll see what happens. Alan, So
(37:12):
I had my opening monologue, heard me and Dennis kind
of go back and forth on this. What's your thought
about the Democratic Party similarities capital to his fellow's party?
Is history getting ready to repeat itself or at least
rhyme as Mark Twain would say, or do they have
one more thing inside their magic cat?
Speaker 3 (37:32):
Well, thank you for the history lesson. There's an old saying,
and I made it up, so I'm old, So it's old,
and I took it from somebody else is saying basically,
it is the reason to steady history, which is what
we're talking about, is to learn what to repeat, not repeat.
And people are not studying history, complete history to learn
(37:54):
what not to repeat. Right now, it's interesting to get
to know that you had this division in politics so
very early on in the country, I mean day one.
It's there the misuse of a term Federalist Party, that
(38:21):
would give you an indication they were about federalism, not nationalism.
Nice misuse of the word. Jefferson came in with a
Republican party because he understood the country was set up
to be a republic. I'm glad Aaron Burr was a
(38:41):
good shot. I'm okay with that. That was good. The
Jefferson came in, he understood what was going on. He
was very committed to the country. I really like it.
According to the US Treasury, because I had time to
look it up at the time, around the early eighteen hundreds,
(39:06):
the national debt was eighty three million, still a huge
amount of money back then.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
But now let's get to well, when Jonson took office.
Speaker 3 (39:16):
Yeah, it's around eighty eighty three million.
Speaker 1 (39:19):
He did reduce it well all the years except for
one during his presidency.
Speaker 3 (39:24):
I'll tell you, hold on.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
It was only one year he didn't reduce it. And
that was the year of the Barbary Pirate War, which
he was putting money spend.
Speaker 3 (39:33):
He started what year eighteen hundred, eighteen oh one, eighteen
zero one, eighteen zero one, the national debt had gone
up from eighteen hundred eighteen zero two, it went down
eighteen zero three, it went down eighteen zero four, it
went up eighteen eighteen five through eighteen twelve, it went down.
Speaker 1 (39:59):
Yeah, and when you talk about that very first year
eighteen oh one, he didn't take office till March, so, yeah,
it went down during his part of the presidency, but
it went up so much during Adams it didn't balance
out anyway.
Speaker 3 (40:13):
But anyway, to me, it's interesting to review all of
this because you all have gone to other areas. What
I see is that you have this new party, the
Democrat Party, which seems to be very related to democracy,
which has nothing to do with this country. Why would
(40:37):
you use that term, Why would you want that term?
You're telling everybody that you're not about the founding.
Speaker 1 (40:44):
But they had convinced everybody the democracy and a republic
was the same thing by then, and that it took
democracy to save the constitution. That was Andrew Jackson's argument,
and the push to confuse republican democracy was already in
play the moment the Constitution was out there, because in
five of A. Madison's Federalist papers he felt the necessity
(41:07):
to explain the difference between a democracy and a republic.
Speaker 3 (41:11):
Right, and still that wasn't getting through. What was interesting
is that when Jackson took to show you what a
democrat will do. Jackson took office and in eighteen thirty
he signed a law called the Indian Removal Act of
eighteen thirty, and they wanted the lands that in part
(41:39):
five of what we're called the civilized tribes were living
on in southeast US, and they sent these people on
the Trail of Tears west of the Mississippi. This is
a completely different environment for these people. And you know,
I'm a big fan of understanding article on section eight
(42:01):
clause seventeen. Well, guess who took the land that the
Indians used to live on. Oh, that'd be the federal government.
How constitutional is that? It's not?
Speaker 1 (42:13):
Well, what's funny about that too, is that move was
made in response to Georgia saying, hey, we need that
land for our own growth. So federalgram removed the Indians,
but then they took the land for themselves rather than
giving it to Georgia for their own growth.
Speaker 3 (42:27):
Right, And then in the process, the federal government sold
that land. During Jackson's presidency, And what was what was
Jackson's claim to fame? He got the national debt for
a brief moment down to zero.
Speaker 1 (42:47):
Yeah, because he was selling property that they that that
was most originally going to Georgi anyway says no, we're
gonna take it for sim will sell it to you.
Speaker 3 (42:54):
Yeah. Between eighteen thirty five and eighteen thirty six actually
briefly went to zero. But to me, it's the absolute
basics that keep getting missed and not talked about, which is,
if you're taking if you're going to become a member
(43:16):
of the House of the Senate, you know this better
than I. You're gonna swear enough to protect and defend.
If you take the oath to be president, you take
an oath to protect, defend, and preserve. I guess the
out on this oath is that it's to the best
of your ability, and if you have no ability, then
you don't have to do any of this.
Speaker 1 (43:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (43:42):
And again, when you have people in office saying they
want to save the democracy, my first response is which one?
Because I'm aware of seven different types of them and
none of them are supposed to be here. Which one
do you want to save them? Why do you want
to save it? Again, these questions are not being answered asked,
(44:03):
which means they're not being answered. The talking about how
things are going here in California. And I'm not promoting
this business. I'm just using it as an example you've
heard of in and out right. Okay, uh, pretty big love.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
I love the burgers. I wish there was one near me.
I gotta go two and a half hours at least.
There's two of them up there by Grants Pass in Medford.
Speaker 3 (44:29):
Anyway, pretty big burger chain. This is taking their corporate
headquarters out of California. Mm hmm, in and out. I mean,
I'm thinking now.
Speaker 1 (44:44):
And they are uniquely California, and they began at California.
They were only California for the longest time.
Speaker 3 (44:49):
That's what I was thinking that. I mean, this is
a California in a way, kind of a southern California business,
fast fast food, drive through, get it on the way
to the beach kind of thing. And they're leaving. They're leaving.
Speaker 5 (45:09):
The end.
Speaker 3 (45:09):
If you look up the current CEO, she gives it
a description of why. And according to her, this is
not a place to where's the family?
Speaker 1 (45:22):
And that's part of it for me. Even even the
libtards of Hollywood are leaving a lot. Most of your
movies now are being filmed at places like Georgia.
Speaker 3 (45:34):
Ultimately, this to me, this is about it still comes
back to the beginning. Let me make sure I got
this right. You would know it. Oh yeah, how does
the constitution begin.
Speaker 1 (45:48):
With the people?
Speaker 3 (45:50):
Okay, this is a message, and this is an opportunity
for us to do what hasn't been done in a
really long time, and that is to it whether you're local, statewide,
around the country, start getting involved, really understand, speak out,
(46:10):
listen to others, share information, because to switch into a
democracy or a democratic socialist thing, what you have is
a country an environment where the federal would be federal
(46:34):
would be national, where the national government decides what your
rights are. There's no more God given, Creator given. There's
whatever they say you have, and if they don't say
you have it, you don't have it.
Speaker 1 (46:51):
Right.
Speaker 3 (46:52):
Those are my thoughts. Thanks for the time.
Speaker 1 (46:55):
All right, very good, And we talked a little bit
about California's collapse. I'm not going to go more into it,
but Gavin Newsom has destroyed that state. But now I
want to get into the topic I was talking about earlier,
which I think deserves a lot to talk about, and
that is John Bolton's house and office in a raid.
And it's funny because the left are freaking out on
Wait a second, what this is mar a lago in
(47:17):
the other direction, and this is not due to retribution,
it's due to reckoning. The boomerang of justice as the
WLT report puts, it is flying again with a raid
at John Bolton's home in office. Now it's a mirror
image of what happened in mar Laco. And when the
(47:42):
President was asked about it originally, he didn't have an
I didn't even know what I found out about it
on the news. I don't know the details. So Dan
Bongino on exput, well, political corruption will not be tolerated,
So really, what was it about? What's the younger? Is
my wife when we first heard about this while we
(48:03):
were driving back from out is here, the driving backer
right before we left our vacation this week over our
wedding anniversary. And John Bolton has is an interesting guy. Uh.
The Conservative Treehouse calls him a well documented neocon, I
(48:23):
would say lefty in Republican clothing. And he has also
served the other side as well. He's a former national
security advisor, and he operates inside the business model of
selling US foreign policy influence for personal gain, influenced pedling,
you know, like Biden and his attitude, his activity, and
(48:46):
his political stances mirror quite a bit John McCain and
maybe even have a little bit of Biden thrown in there,
although he does know which room he's in now. He's
also known probably for the most famous mustache in politics
at this point. But the way a Washington DC operates
(49:07):
where Grima's supposed to operate intelligence, Remember what was mar
A Lago rated for, they're looking for classified documents. I
think that's a part of it here. But the FBI
rate on his residence office has led to a considerable
amount of speculation. Nobody knows the details yet. They haven't
been put out, but there has been some evidence that
(49:32):
the potential violations are of the Espionage Act, where Bolton
may have leveraged current or prior classified intelligence information a
part of his influenced business. That's espionage and if it
is true, his imprisonment could be anywhere from five to
twenty years. Bolton is on the radar because of his
(49:59):
act activities, playing both sides countries like Qatar, and while
Trump is in office, the big market for the services
of people like John Bolton. This influence peddling business that
goes on, especially when they operate with a specific militaristic
mindset against the Trumpet administration. They're going to be found
(50:22):
out and they are going to be investigated and and
maybe one of those numbers on that meme that we
were talking about the beginning show will finally click up
to one and then maybe two, maybe three. Did John
Bolton have access to classified information about national security? Yes?
(50:43):
What could he leveraget knowledge for personal material gain? Yes?
Would he do it? Yes? Did he operate in the
same industry as most of the DC influence agents. Oh? Absolutely,
So we don't. Once again, we don't know the details
of this investigation. Yet, we're building a case. Right so
(51:04):
he hasn't been charged. Remember, we have due process. You
get charged, then you're given notice, and then you're you
have the opportunity, and then you're an act probably guilty.
He's innocent right now as far as we know, until
it can be proven guilty. So you got to build
the case. That's what this rate is all about. But
it means that there was a warrant issued, and if
there was a warrant issued, it was issued because there
(51:27):
is probable cause. But here's where it gets. Here's where
it's important. If this is figured out, if he is
if he is charged, if he is convicted, it could
be the first step this investigation could be the first
(51:47):
step into learning about and exposing a larger network of
corrupt influence pedaling in DC, the Bidens, the Clintons, others.
It what exposed the entire deep state, those tentacles that
are growing and writhing beneath Washington. This could be the
(52:12):
step in the right direction. All right, we got like
four minutes left, gentlemen, or actually three minutes, so I apologize,
I didn't give you much time to respond. But Alan,
in your sixty second best idea, what's your thoughts about
John Bolton possibly been under investigation for violations of the
Espionage Act.
Speaker 3 (52:33):
Well, obviously something happened to have a warrant issued. I'd
like to know who issued it. I would like to
know the probable cause. And this is not something that
I believe would be done just because they had nothing
else to do that day. It's going to be very
(52:53):
interesting to track because you're going after they have they're
not going after they have gone after an incredibly high
profile person in a very public manner. And we don't,
as you said, we don't know the details. We don't
know the why. But I'm imagining something had to be
(53:16):
put in front of a judge to sign the warrant,
to show probable.
Speaker 1 (53:20):
Cause, Yes, what are your thoughts about what I talked
about sixty seconds?
Speaker 2 (53:27):
Yeah, the cash Patel has made the comment that there's
been no predicate for the Marlago raid, So he's not
about to go after Bolton unless he has a predicate.
He's got to have a reason for it. They know
they're going to be in their scrutiny. They know because
of his book and the fact that it didn't work
(53:48):
out between him and Trump. You know, they're going to
try and play this off like it's you know, political, uh,
And so they're gonna they're going to have this thing
buttoned up. They have a reason, and they're going to
go through the stages. And you know, I hate trying
to be patient for this stuff, but I think they
(54:10):
know what they're doing.
Speaker 4 (54:12):
I hope so.
Speaker 1 (54:12):
I think so too.
Speaker 2 (54:13):
And I think it's the first of many. They're gonna
tie a half a dozen of these people together.
Speaker 1 (54:19):
And I think this is the first step into that
and the and the larger conspiracy. Okay, one on one
thing left represent Vanny Biggs wants to mess with the
twenty fifth Amendment because of the cover up regarding Biden's health.
Don't mess with it at all. Because mutiny is supposed
to be difficult. It has to be so bad that
even your allies want you out of office. That's why
the twenty fifth Minute was written the way it was
all right, Alan plug yourself.
Speaker 3 (54:42):
Fat a fd ed dot us and on Sundays five
to seven pm West Coast time on for the Republic
or for the Republic on Patrient.
Speaker 1 (54:53):
Shipbox and learn more about what I've got to say
at Douglas V. Gibbs dot com. Matter fact that thinking
about twenty fifth Amendment an article about it. United, we stand, Combined,
we kick. But God bless America, my friends, God bless you.
Thank you for taking time out of your business day
to spend it with us. Don't forget that. You can
also catch these shows on at SoundCloud and other places.
Go to KMT fourteen ninety am dot com find my
(55:16):
show page to learn more. We'll see you next time