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July 4, 2025 • 60 mins
KCAA: Politics by Jake on Fri, 4 Jul, 2025
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Eighteen thirty two dot or.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Are you tired of the noise and the spin? Do
you want the real story behind the headlines? I'm Jake
and this is Politics by Jake, where I tell you
what they won't And now we're going even deeper and
I need your help to keep doing it. Join me
on Patreon and support independent political analysis that doesn't pull punches.

(00:28):
You'll get insider breakdowns, you'll get bonus clips and first
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Forward Slash Politics by Jake. That's patreon dot com. Forward
Slash Politics by Jake, No filters, no fluff, just the truth.
Let's do this together. And Hi everybody, It's July fourth.

(01:01):
It is Independence Day, seven o'clock in the morning or thereabouts,
and for those of you who are listening on the podcast,
it's just whatever time it is. This is Jake. This
is Politics by Jake, and I am here. I'm your
political host, I'm your political common terrorist. I'm a legal

(01:24):
common terrorist, and I'm a student of history because I
believe history is really important. This is an important time
and it's important days for several reasons. And so rather
than do the usual spiel which you know, I suppose
I could do. I just want to get into it.
This is like, I don't know, one hundred and seventy

(01:45):
second anniversary something like that of the Battle of Gettysburg,
the Battle of Gettysburg. You know, I don't want to
tell you more than you ever wanted to know about this,
because there's some people who will say Gettysburg was what
the phrase they use is the high water mark of

(02:06):
the Confederacy, and others will say, no, it wasn't Gettysburg,
it was Vicksburg. And so because of these both and
they both happened at about the same time, and so
because of that, and because this is so crucial, because
you hear me talk about and it is it's just
really crucial. You'll hear me talk about a couple of things.

(02:29):
You'll hear me here say Number one, I think there
are four United States. They're all built one on top
of the other, just like the ruins at Troy. Von
Schleimann went to that area and found not only one Troy.
Because everybody thought that Troy was a myth, they didn't
think that it actually existed. So an archaeologist, a German

(02:52):
archaeologist named von Schleiman went there and he found not
only one Troy, he found something like twenty of them.
And they were all built, you know, one on top
of the other. And that's the way this is. These
United States. We have the first one and people will
say there have only been two. I say there have

(03:14):
been four, and that's okay. I don't mind for the
people who say that there have only been two. We
can talk about that. Let me tell you why I
think that there are four, and let me enunciate and
tell you what I think those four are. Number one,
you have the Articles of Confederation United States. That was
the first one. Number two, you have the constant what

(03:36):
we call even today, the Constitutional United States. That's number two.
Number three, you have the new birth of freedom that
is the basically embodied in the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth
amendments to the Constitution. Thirteenth is no chattel, slavery, fourteenth,
it's just a whole bunch of things that we talk about.

(03:59):
And the fifth is with regard to voting rights, and
that to me is the third United States, and that
is the new birth of freedom. And it's just very momentous,
and on a day like Independence Day, we should really
for all the other things that we do, all the
other ways that we enjoy the blessings of freedom that

(04:23):
this country has given us, we really need to remember
these fundamental things that we need to understand these things
because these are crucial because we're in a fight right now.
We're in a fight for the life of the country
and the direction that it's going, which is entirely similar
in momentous nature to the Civil War. It's very serious.

(04:48):
And I'm going to talk about some things with regard
to Hitler and Putin in order to make some points
about the current administration. And it is just very serious.
So then you have this the what I call the
Fourth United States, and that was in nineteen thirty three,
and that's the New Deal United States under And that's

(05:08):
the United States that defeated Germany, defeated Japan, defeated the
Soviet Union in the Cold War. Put a Man on
the Moon has given the country and the world arguably
the greatest economy that has ever been in the existence

(05:29):
of the at least in recorded history anyway of the
entire world. And that has to do with the New Deal.
It has to do with the economic the Second Bill
of Rights, which is essentially an economic declaration that is
based on the premise, and it's also in the North
Atlantic Charter, and is important for that for the very

(05:50):
same reason, which is that a necessitous man, and this
is a principle, a necessitous man is not a free man.
In other words, you can say you're free, but if
you don't have, for example, decent housing, decent food, decent clothing,
decent medical care, decent education, a decent job with a pension,

(06:12):
so on, and so forth, you're not free. This is
extremely important evolution in the history of the United States,
and so rightly I think I call that the fourth
United States. So that's nineteen thirty three, and truly the
Economic Bill of Rights, which is the second Bill of Rights,

(06:32):
was introduced in nineteen forty four. Roosevelt was not able
to advance it, of course, because he died soon thereafter,
and so that's what that is. So that's without embellishing
it and elaborating on it. That's my argument on that.
So all right, let's talk about the Battle of Gettysburg.
The dates on that are July one July, sorry, July first,

(06:56):
July third, eighteen sixty three is Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The Union
commander is Major General George G. Mead, and this is
just really interesting. He took command just days before the battle.
Confederate commander Robert E. Lee probably heard of him. The

(07:17):
result was a Union victory. The casualties were about twenty
three thousand, and that's representative of three thy one hundred
and fifty killed, fourteen thousand, five hundred wounded, fifty three
hundred missing or captured. With the Confederates they lost more,
but you would think that because of Pickett's charge, which

(07:40):
was just an incredibly misguided thing, that where they had
to cover like fifteen hundred yards of ground. It was
just stunning through an open field under fire all the way,
you would have thinked that they would have lost more,
and they did. Pickett lost half of his division. I
think he had I want to say sixty percent casualties,

(08:03):
which is over ten percent casualties would be bad leadership.
It would be you know, the leader who lost more
than ten percent of his men, That would not be good.
But I think sixty percent of his division were killed.
So for the Union is twenty three thousand, but for
the Confederates only five thousand more twenty eight thousand approximately

(08:25):
thirty nine hundred killed, eighteen thousand, seven hundred wounded, fifty
four hundred missing or captured, and the total was around
fifty one thousand combined casualties. It is the bloodiest battle
of the war. And for the Vicksburg Campaign occurred today,
back in eighteen sixty three, the day after, literally the

(08:47):
day after Gettysburg ended, and the Union commander there was
Major General Ulysseses Grant. The Confederate commander was General John C. Pemberton.
The result was a Union victory and Vicksburg surrenders. And
the significance is that it split the Confederacy in two.
It gave the Union the control of the entire Mississippi River.

(09:10):
It's severely hampered Confederate logistics in morale. It was a
major strategic victory, and as you heard me say at
the beginning, perhaps more decisive even than Gettysburg. And the
question is to which was the turning point Gettysburg at Vicksburg.

(09:31):
You know, there's an argument that can be made there.
At Gettysburg, tactically Lee's northern invasion was repelled. Vicksburg tactically
captured an entire Confederate stronghold, Strategically It's definitely a morale
boost from the North, no doubt about it. Vicksburg, strategically,

(09:53):
it severed the Confederate Confederacy. It cut them in two
and gave the Union Navy a full control of the
Mississippi River. Symbolic Gettysburg is said to be the high
water mark of the Confederacy and Vicksburg. And as you've
heard me said, this is all arguable, arguably the actual

(10:17):
irreversible pivot after which the Confederacy was never going to
be able to recover. In the aftermath is Lee retreats
to Virginia, he never invades again, and Grant rises in prominence,
sent the stage for eighteen sixty four. And so let
me just say a little bit more about this. Probably

(10:40):
the unsung hero of Gettysburg first day is a man
that you know. When I say his name, you'll probably
have said, oh, yeah, I know that guy. Now let
me explain it. John Buford, his cavalry division arrived on
June thirtieth and scouted the area, and they just happened

(11:03):
to be there at about the same time Lee's army
was coming. They knew that Lee's army was coming, and
they correctly predicted that Gettysburg would be critical ground for
the coming battle. And on the morning of July first,
eighteen sixty three, Beauford famously held off superior Confederate forces

(11:28):
with just two brigades of cavalry, and he used dismounted
skirmish tactics to delay until Reynolds could arrive with infantry.
And that delay quite literally bought the Union army. The
high Ground, Cemetery Hills, caul Hill, Cemetery Ridge, the rest
of this shaped the battle. I have argued that as

(11:48):
soon as the Union took the high ground, Lee should
have left, and he didn't, and that just means everything.
So and here's the important thing of this. On the
morning of July first, Buford positions is cavalry dismounted in
a skirmish line west of Gettysburg along ridges near a

(12:10):
place called Willoughby Run. He uses spencer repeating carbons, which
were that was really advanced weaponry at the time. Some
of the Confederate troops were just using muskets. And this
is politics by Jake. And now there's a work for
one of our sponsors, Twain consulting Hi. This is Jake
with Twain consulting let's let's be blunt, shall we. America

(12:31):
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(13:15):
by Jacobs, And this is politics by Jake, And we're
back to slow advancing Confederate forces under General Henry Heath.
His cavalry fights a delaying action from around seven thirty
am until Union reenforcements arrive at around ten thirty am.

(13:39):
And at that point in time, Major General John Reynolds
arrives with I Corps, responding to Buford's call for support,
Reynolds praises Bufford's foresight, but dies shortly after arriving and
he shot while deploying troops. The Union infantry continues to
hold the ridges west and north of town. In the afternoon,

(14:01):
the Confederate forces under Yule and Hill arrive and press
the Union very hard, and the Union forces are eventually
forced to retreat through Gettysburg, and they actually suffer heavy losses.
But despite this, the Union falls back to Buford's chosen
high ground, where Mead will later consolidate the army. And

(14:24):
this is why Buford matters. Beauford's decision, first of all,
to correctly scout the ground, and his decision to stand
and fight despite being outnumbered. He was outnumbered, he had
like two brigades of cavalry or something like that shaped
the entire three day battle. Without Beauford's delaying tactics, the
Confederates likely would have occupied the high ground, and this

(14:48):
would have drastically altered the battle's course. As I said,
once Lee saw that the Union couldn't be dislodged from
the high ground, it was over. He could have arguably
saved more of his army to fight other day, could
have saved logistics, could have saved ordinance, could have saved munitions,
could have saved other supplies and just withdrawn, but he

(15:09):
didn't do that. And even at General Meade later acknowledged
view for zeroll and saving the field. So okay, this
is something we should all remember. And at this point
let's take a break and we will be back, of
course after a commercial from the good folks at Twin Consulting.
And this is politics by Jake. And now there's a
work one of our sponsors in Twain Consulting. Hi, this

(15:34):
is Jake with Twin Consulting. If you think owning things
in your own name keeps you in control, think again.
In today's world, lawsuits, taxes and predators are everywhere. That's
why the smart money hides in plain sight. We help
you to build legal fireworlds, LLCs, land trusts, private contracts
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(15:56):
Consulting today at three one zero nine ninety seven two
two zero four. Find us on Facebook at Twain Consulting.
That's Facebook dot com, forward slash Twain Consulting. Protect what
you've built before someone else takes it. Now let's get
back to Jack and politics. By Jack Hi. This is

(16:17):
Jake with politics by Jake. Do you like what you
hear right now? Support the real talk, then go to
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Every dollar helps fight the noise. Okay, and this is
politics by Jake, and we are back. Thank you Twain Consulting.
Thank you Patreon for those good commercial messages. Good stuff

(16:40):
from Twin Consulting. You should check them out, if I
do say so myself. So unfortunately, the big beautiful Bill passed.
And I say that not even tongue in cheek, but
as a pejorative, because we all know what this does.
This cuts eight hundred and eighty billion over ten years

(17:00):
from the social safety net. It acts against the poorest
and most defenseless in our country to deprive them of
food and of healthcare and of other things too. One
of the things that it deprives them of now it's

(17:23):
called light heap, and light heap it's an acronym. It's
for well, it's for anywhere, but especially for the parts
of the country where it gets cold and it gets
colder than ordinary normal and people need to have heat.
And as a consequence of this, now they're not necessarily

(17:46):
going to be able to pay for their heat. And
this is the kind of a thing. This is why
the social safety net is so important. People. Literally some
people live and they have to decide whether they're going
to eat or whether they're going to pay for their medicine.
Because medicine can be life, it can be literally the

(18:10):
difference between life and death. And some people are living
in such a state and in such a condition that
this matters. And it's the same way with heat. Imagine
sitting in a house all bundled up and it's still
not working because it's freezing in the winter, and you
have to make a decision now because like heap has

(18:31):
either been completely removed or has been severely compromised. Now
you have a situation where you have to decide whether
you're going to eat or whether you're going to have heat.
This is awful. The least among us are being brutally
savaged by this bill. So okay, So, in other words,

(18:55):
on Thursday morning, this is yesterday, the House narrowly passed
a sweeping bill to extend tax cuts and social safety
net programs. I know you've heard about this. I'm just
gonna tell you anyway, capping a Republican's chaotic monthlog slog
to overcome deep rips within their party and deliver President

(19:16):
Trump's domestic agenda. The final vote was two hundred eighteen
to two hundred and fourteen. That was along party lines.
Speaker Johnson spent a frenzy day and night toiling to
quell resistance in his ranks that threatened until the very
end to derail the President's Marquy legislation. And it's this.
You can get this stuff from other things. This is

(19:37):
what I want to talk about here is that Trump.
And we're going to be talking about this because this
is totally corrupt. This is just the worst. Trump is
running a confidence game. He's a grifter, he's a con man,
he's a felon. He has promulgated and prosecuted insurrection against

(19:57):
the United States of America, and now now he has
crafted legislation that is designed to, as I said, take
from the poorest among us. Gabin Newsom of California called
it an ultimate betrayal. It is. Governor Tim Watts of Minnesota,
singled out the state's GOP representatives, said the United States

(20:20):
will never fully reverse the damage caused by their votes,
and I agree, I totally agree. Senator Elizabeth Warren in
Massachusetts blamed President Trump and Republicans for selling out working
class people. There's no other way to describe this. It's
a gut punch, she said. She said, we will not
stop fighting back. We got to have a show where

(20:40):
we talk or a segment. Maybe I'll get that today.
I don't think so, where we talk about the kind
of democrat that basically is in office and what has
to be done in order to rectify this, because this
is really the worst. It's just this is monumentally bad,
and like I said, it is taking from the poorest

(21:01):
and most defenseless constituents of the United States of America,
and it's just an obscenity. It's an abomination. There's no
other way to describe it. And this leads into the
rest of this, which is that Trump is running a
protection racket. His governance style is a protection racket. I mean,

(21:22):
the idea is that Trump's presidency operates like a protection racket,
where loyalty is bought and paid for and dissent is punishment.
Trump leverages his office to benefit himself, his allies, and
to intimidate opponents. And we've talked about this, and I've
talked about ideology a lot, but this is more about

(21:46):
cash than ideology. And you know where this is going.
It's a business run through government power. The original Giovanni Gentilly.
You hear me mention this periodically on the show Vanni Gentille.
Definition nineteen twenty two of fascism is control of the
means of production by business or private interest. And I

(22:09):
think it was nineteen twenty four or nineteen twenty six
Mussolini said made this famous declaration. He said, if fascism
is not corporatist, it is nothing. And so you see,
and there are other definitions of fascism, but this is

(22:31):
the prototypical definition of fascism, and you're seeing it. It's
the privatization of everything. And when you analyze the Trump presidency,
you see this. It's a business run through government power,
where personal enrichment Trump's you'll excuse the expression public service.

(22:51):
Take Stephen Miller, for example. And there are many examples
of this that I'm going to be able to talk about.
I'm just going to give you a few of them. Now,
a senior advisor, his hardline immigration policies made headlines, but
Miller interestingly also holds between one hundred thousand and two

(23:12):
hundred and fifty thousand in Pallunteer Technologies, and Palunteer Technologies
is a key contractor for ICE. The iis Gestapo. Pallunteer
secured a thirty million dollar contract to develop immigration OS,
a surveillance tool to enforce deportations, directly benefiting from the

(23:35):
policies that Miller champion. This is a textbook example of
financial interests driving political decisions. It's classic corruption. We see.
This is nothing new. Well, Stephen Muller is nothing new either.
But across the administration we see, for example, government power

(23:57):
wield as a profit machine. Jared Kushner leveraged everybody, well,
I don't know if you know this, son in law
of the president, married to Ivanka, leveraged his White House
role to bolster in the first Trump administration, to bolster
his personal real estate interests to Trump's own businesses, bettings

(24:18):
and benefiting from policy decisions, increased visibility and the lines
between public office and private game have been blurred. And
you know, at this point in time, let me talk
about Senator Murkowski from Alaska. Now, Alaska doesn't have a
big population it's one of those states like North and
South Dakota and Montana and places like that don't have

(24:39):
big population, not many people live there. They still get
two senators, just like the state of California, which has
tens and tens and tens of millions of people in it,
they still get the same power. And what Murkowski was
doing back in January, she was speaking on honestly how

(25:01):
afraid she was and how it was she didn't know,
she understood why her constituents were afraid. She tried to
make a private deal with Trump to have Alaska's residents
removed from the snap deductions and configurations that would limit

(25:23):
the amount of money that she could get so that
she could bring home the bacon. And you know, pork
barrel politics is not an unheard of thing. I'm not
telling you about something that's not that's new. Is this
has been happening. But the things that she didn't get it,

(25:43):
she got slapped down by him. And so you can't
run a government this way. You can't. You can't have
this kind of thing going on. So the ideological battles,
the culture worlds, the national nationalist rhetoric serves as elaborates
mok screens, so you think you're talking about one thing,
but the people who are actually in power are talking

(26:06):
about another. Confuses the public. It focuses attention away from
the financial machinations that are going on, and many supporters,
who you would have to call the illiterati in this context,
the people who are not illuminated and who do not
know what's going on inside the Beltway are mobilized behind

(26:30):
a political narrative that conceals the real game, and the
real game is money in power. So, getting back to Murkowski,
those statements by Murkowski could have been self serving in
order to mobilize her base and the people of Alaska
behind her, when she in fact was operating in a

(26:51):
sub rosa fashion in order to enrich herself and admittedly
also the people in the state of Alaska at the
expense of everyone else in the country. She wants to
get re elected. All these people want to get re elected.
We know that, but they're mobilizing the people behind a

(27:11):
political narrative that conceals this real game. I said money
and power, the patterns of nepotism that have come to
the fore, insider deals and favoritism, all these things dominate
administration officials who invest in companies that receive government and
what this does, this transactional style, which is inappropriate. It's

(27:35):
entirely inappropriate to government that it has been happening back
in the days of the Bush administration, when Halliburton was
able to be made the sole contractor with regard to
everything in the Iraq War. This is just more of
the same, and it shows that this has become business
as usual and these legal, these illegal and immoral actions

(28:01):
have become number one, business as usual and number two,
a certain kind of individual who wants to engage in
these kinds of activities. It has now been made okay
because Trump is the government into a cash machine. And
we've talked about the fact that Trump is just trying
to do a couple of things. Number One, he wants

(28:23):
to use the presidency as a way to make as
much money as he can, and number two, he wants power,
and number three, he wants to stay out of prison
because if he ever loses the reins of power, he
is going to prison. He is a felon thirty four

(28:43):
times over. As I said, he prosecuted insurrection against the
United States of America. If you don't believe me. Read
Griswold v. Anderson. It lays it out perfectly. Georgia is
aching to get their hands on him, to indict him
for interference in the election of twenty twenty after the fact.

(29:06):
And I mentioned, I don't know about a week ago,
that this is really a situation where you have people
who are seeing that government can be run this way
and that they can enrich themselves in this way, and
they are flocking to government. And you heard me say
that the ones coming after Trump are going to even

(29:28):
be worse than Trump is. And I mean this kind
of a transactional style. It just undermines effective policy making,
with decisions hinge on who pays or who profits, rather
than the public good, the public weal. Democratic institutions inevitably
erode accountability. It becomes secondary to maintaining cash flow and loyalty.

(29:55):
This is bad, This is really bad. The base is exploited.
They're us this political capital. As I said, they're energized,
they are rallied, but often they are unaware that they
are pawns in a scheme designed to enrich the elite.
The ideology they champion. It's often a facade, and it's

(30:18):
masking the cash grab reality that goes on inside the Beltway. So,
in other words, to understand the Trump presidency, we must
look beyond the rhetoric. Financial motives now permeate every level,
from top advisors like Stephen Miller to the President himself.

(30:38):
This cash grab presidency has reshaped, perhaps irretrievably and irrevocably.
I said this before in the first administration, that Trump
has deformed the office of the presidency and we may
never be able to get it back. And this cash
grab presidency, as I said, is re shaped American governments

(31:01):
governance in ways that challenge democratic accountability and public trust.
And I wonder if, in fact we'll ever be able
to get it back. I really do. Going on with this,
I talked about Steven A. Miller. You have Pam Bondi,
who I like to call Pam Blondie, who's the Attorney
General of the United States, was the attorney general for

(31:22):
the state of Florida. She's involved with Trump Media and Technology,
the cabinet officials. She earned at least three million from
the merger that formed Trump Media and Technology Group, the
parent company of Truth Social. Bondi was listed as a
consultant for the merger and owned additional shares in the company.

(31:42):
This financial windfall raises questions about the separation between her
public duties and her private investments. Ivanka Trump and fashion brand.
Ivanka Trump, also serving as advisor, owned and operated the
Ivanka Trump Fashion brand during her time I'm in the
White House. Her brand benefited from increased visibility access to

(32:05):
foreign markets, raising concerns about the use of public office
for personal business advantage. Tom Barrick an investment firm. Tom Barrick,
chairman of the inaugural Committee, founded Colony Capital. It's an
investment firm. Barrick was charged with acting as an unregistered
foreign agent using his access to Trump to benefit his

(32:27):
business interests. This case highlights the potential from misuse of
public office for private game on Melisa Murkowski, as I said,
she tried to bargain with Trump for political favors in
exchange for her vote on the Big Budget bill. She
sought a carve out to exempt Alaska from stricter snap
work requirements plus health provisions tax benefits for Alaska's fishermen.

(32:52):
The Senate parliamentarian ruled as carve out illegal under the
Bird rule, meaning her bribe failed and she got nothing
in the end, and she sold out the broader American
public three hundred and thirty million people to benefit seven
hundred and forty thousand Alaskas. And then she's screwed up

(33:12):
and gotten nothing for us. And she's ineffective. And this
is the kind of Democrat that we have that we
need to get rid of and primary out of existence
in twenty twenty six and twenty twenty eight. She's ineffective.
She's obviously ethically compromised. Not that the other ones are.
Time would fail me on this show and probably several
other shows hereafter in order to talk about all the

(33:36):
ineffective and ethically compromised people in Congress. She's caught between
Trump's power and her own interests, and she's ultimately failing
to secure her deal. We have Kirsten Gillibrand, she's a senator.
She's criticized for being ineffective, out of touch. She's the
most inner Democratic senator in history. She parents maga talking points.

(34:00):
She did this recently on a radio show that she
was on. It was like she was on drugs or something.
It was like she was high. She was particularly attacking.
I know, you're just listening to me say this, but
believe me, I heard it. This happened. She particularly was
attacking democratic mayoral candidate in New York with false claims.

(34:20):
In my opinion, she long ago lost credibility for what
she did in the Al Franken affair. And I think
she's disconnected from the real issues of the people she represents.
But she thinks she can do it. She thinks it's okay.
And that's the thing with all of them. They think
they can do it, and they think that it's okay.

(34:40):
So anyway, this has got to be kind of a
screen here. So basically, let's take a moment. Let's stop
this segment. This is actually a double segment I've done,
and let's just say this is politics by Jake on
this July fourth, two hundred and forty nine years of
independence of the United States. And we'll be back shortly

(35:00):
after this message. And now there's a work for one
of our sponsors, Twain Consulting.

Speaker 3 (35:08):
Hi.

Speaker 2 (35:09):
This is Jake with Twin Consulting. If you think owning
things in your own name keeps you in control, think again.
In today's world, lawsuits, taxes, and predators are everywhere. That's
why the smart money hides in plain sight. We help
you to build legal fireworlds, LLCs, land trusts, private contracts
that protect your assets while keeping you invisible. Call Twin

(35:31):
Consulting today at three one zero nine nine seven two
two zero four. Find us on Facebook at Twain Consulting.
That's Facebook dot com, Forward slash Twain Consulting. Protect what
you've built before someone else takes it. Now, let's get
back to Jack and Politics by Jack Hi. This is

(35:52):
Jake with Politics by Jake to tell you you're not crazy.
The system is rigged. Help us say it louder, won't
you join us at Patreon dot com, Forward slash Politics
by Jake. All right, this is politics by Jake, and
we're back and I want to talk and talk to
you about what we're dealing with. And it just really

(36:13):
important part of this show. Trump wants an apotheosis of
himself and that means raising himself to the level of
a god. You know, some people would say this is fine,
let him have it. It costs us nothing as long
as you're getting continued adherence to the alliance that is NATO.
And this goes on all the time really and is

(36:34):
absolutely essential. So we want sanctions on Russia now, and
what I'm saying is going I'm going to be getting
into the historical aspects of this, which is why there
are some people that you just can't deal with, and
why people some of my colleagues say that these people
are not going to let go of power in the

(36:55):
ordinary way. They're not going to go quietly into that
good night. You're going to have to literally kick them
in the balls in order to let them get away
from power. Putin has said that he wants economic forum.
This past week, he simply puts out this statement, says
it in front of a packed house, but it's all broadcast.
He says this, wherever Russian soldiers go, that's our land.

(37:20):
Wherever Russian soldiers go, that's our territory. We have this
old rule, an old rule that says we're a Russian
soldier sets foot, that is ours, that is our territory.
And this I think, I mean, if Trump could read
or think, he would say this means that he wants

(37:42):
not only all of Ukraine, but he wants all of
the Baltic states, and he does. He wants all of
Central Asia. He wants the stands back, you know, the
five Central Asian republics he wants, you know, Kazakhstan, and
he wants everything else. Anything that's ever been part of Russia,

(38:03):
he wants it. Right, the five Central Asian republics he wants,
and anything that's ever been a part of Russia he
wants back. And when I heard this, I was reminded
of the World War Two documentaries that I used to
watch the kid back in the nineteen fifties, and there's
one of them. The way I remember, it was at

(38:25):
a phase when things were not going so well for Germany,
and this was, oh, nineteen forty three, may mean after Stalingrad, Right,
Stalingrad is kind of September January of nineteen forty two
forty three. And this is a quote from Hitler that
I have have in my mind. And Hitler says, now

(38:46):
get this. Hitler says, where a German soldier now stands,
no other shall put his foot, And that would have
been maybe victory at sea, which was popular in those days,
or maybe crusading Europe by Eisenhower and this other first
generation of World War two documentary. So here's what we have.

(39:07):
I am right, although maybe I don't have the exact wording,
but there are several versions, so it's a little bit
more interesting. The quote from Hitler I have here in
Germany is the following. So the idea is that where
a German soldier stands, no one will go a note
that I just said that. Putin said exactly the same thing.
No one's going to take his place where he stands.

(39:30):
This is just on the eve of an attack. It's
on the eve of the German attack in the West
against France. It's between the fourth and the tenth of
May nineteen forty one. That's you. It was put in
the theaters and so forth. So that's one. How about
this one in the eve of the or in the
midst of the Norwegian campaign, because he took over Norway.

(39:52):
He says, it's December tenth of December nineteen forty I
need not tell you that no no one will take
the soil on which a German soldier now stands. Okay,
similar thought from Hitler, mainly focused on Norway and January thirtieth,
nineteen forty one, he says, we are now standing on

(40:15):
this continent. We are standing in a place from which
we and from where we stand, nobody will ever be
able to remove us again and if we dominate Europe.
This is after the fall of France nineteen forty. And
this is the same line for Putin, and that's clear.

(40:40):
He holds his talks in contempt of the needs that
do this, and it's absolutely in the same direct tradition
of Hitler, and Putin is loved and admired, and arguably
you could say that Putin's got something on Trump the
way he acts and the way he fawns over him.
I mean, some of these things are almost really worth
and hence, by the way, before I go on, hence

(41:02):
the reason why we should be very concerned. Now the
other question, because some of these are just word for word,
almost word for word citations. Now, the other question with
respect to Iran and the book is the general response
to easy, automatic, detailed response to politician. So if anybody's

(41:23):
acting aggressive in military, they say, we need to cease fire,
we should stop the fighting, we should go to the
peace table. And this is the problem. This is the
point of what I'm talking about, really, and we're in
the midst of it. In the nineteen forties, Europe and
the world was saved from fascism by the United States.

(41:45):
But now fascism has come to the United States, and
the question is who saves the United States? So if
somebody's acting aggressive and military, we should go to negotiation.
The problem is is that with certain regimes are incorrigible. Trump,
for example, is incorrigible. Certain regimes you cannot negotiate with.

(42:10):
And the problem is is that certain regimes, whatever they sign,
whatever they approve, whatever they agree to, it's going to
be a dead letter the next morning, if not sooner.
And Adolf Hitler was such a person. Remember Hitler says,
first of all, I'll support you know, he's going to
agree to maintain the very size system for a while.

(42:31):
And their ins and outs to this, and you know,
we could discuss this, and we could have an intelligent
discussion about this, but this is what he says. Makes
a friendship treaty with Poland and so forth. That's the
starting point. By nineteen thirty three, nineteen thirty four, then, however,
he says, I want the Rye Land. I want the
demilitarized Rhyine Land to be remilitarized by me. Yeah, I'm

(42:57):
going to send my troops. He had very few, but
he sent whatever he had. He flew across the Rhine
River around the bridges. The French and the British they
do nothing. And there's a reason of that. I talk
about some of my videos that you can have on
YouTube dot com forward slash Politics by Jake that talk
about this. And then Hitler says, Okay, that was not enough.

(43:18):
See the Rhine Land is not enough. Now I want Austria.
I want the Antlis. I want Austria to be a
part of uncomb Austria. As he says, I want Austria
to become part of the German Reich. And that's done.
Then he's finished with that, and he says, now I

(43:40):
want the sedate In Land, which sedate In is southernland
of Czechoslovakia. This is the best part. And this is
politics by Jake. And now there's a work one of
our sponsors in Twain Consulting. Hi, this is Jake with
Twain Consulting. Let's let's be blunt, shall we. America is
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(44:03):
name is on everything you own, you're a sitting duck.
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(44:23):
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by Jack Hi. This is Jake with politics by Jake.

(44:51):
Do you like what you hear right now? Support the
real talk, then go to patreon dot com forward slash
politics by Jake right now. Every dollar helps fight the noise.
And this is politics by Jake, and we're back. This
is by Now. We're in September of nineteen, summer of
nineteen thirty eight, so he takes long story short here

(45:15):
he takes the sedate in Land. During the course of
this is where he says, this is my last territorial
demand in Europe, except it wasn't. He then says, I
need all of Bohemia, I need Prague, I need the
whole Czech Republic side of it. I want that. And

(45:36):
so he creates a puppet state out of Slovakia. And
that's the story out of Slovakia. And that's the story
of President Hatya. Get this of Slovakia. The guy comes
to negotiate with Hitler. Hitler talks to him about how
he's going to bomb the hell out of Slovakia and
so forth, and the guy has a heart attack. Hata

(45:59):
has a heart attack. So the Nazis they bring in
their doctors and they're able to keep him alive as
he's signing away the sovereignty of the whole country Czechoslovakia.
Gone okay, And then what and then I mean this serious,
this has happened. And this is the reason I'm telling

(46:20):
you this is because Putin is the same way. Trump
is the same way. So, getting back to Hitler, what
comes after this the Munich Accord, in which basically the
idea is that this is the less territorial demand in Europe.
I swear to God, this is what happened, except that
it's not. And then comes, of course Poland. I want

(46:44):
the Polish corridor, he says, I want the space left
open to give that had been left open to give
the Poles access to the Baltic and the world Ocean,
and that's no good either. So at a certain point,
just looking at all of this stuff, you have to say,
it's the British to give that had been left open,

(47:07):
to give the Polls access to Baltic in the world
Otrian that that's no good either. So at a certain
point you have to say, as the Brench of the
French and the British, finally, did you know you can't
negotiate with this guy. He won't respect his commitments, He lies,
he cheats, he deceives. It's useless to talk to him.

(47:32):
You've got to use military means and maybe you make
him back down, but if not, you've got to assert
a military defense. Now you look at Putin. What Putin
is telling us here with this stuff about nobody sets
foot where the Russian soldier, and it's just a lift
from what Hitler said about the German soldier. This is

(47:52):
Putin's version of it. Wherever the rest is, it's just blowney,
it's nonsense, and there will lying on your ignorance. And
that's why we have politics by Jake cheap Plug to
tell you about these things. Relying on the ignorance of
the people who really just want peace and they want
to live their lives. They're not like these people who

(48:14):
lust after power. And this is putent version of it.
Wherever the Russian soldier goes, that's our land, that's our
old rule. Well, that essentially means that you're going to
be demanding excess. As we've said repeatedly, this is the
prophecy of Moscow. Is the third Rome, coming from the
apocalyptic month philothis not so far from Moscow. It was

(48:36):
back in the sixteenth or fifteenth century, and it's the
idea that there's going to be a third Roman empire.
One room has fallen on the Tiber, the second Rome
on the Bosporus has fallen. The third Rome is Moscow again.
Go to politics by Jake. I'm sorry YouTube dot Com
forward slash at politics by Jake. I have a video

(48:59):
about and I could talk about it more on the show,
but we're not gonna make it. We're not gonna make
it now except just to mention it. But they know this,
the Russians know this. You don't know this. That's why
you listen to politics by Jake, because I will tell
you these things that nobody else will tell you. Cheap
plug Politics by Jake seven am Mondi's Fridays Kcaradio dot

(49:24):
com or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, the third
Rome is Moscow and the fourth Filo. Theis says there
will not be and that's essentially worldwide. So here's the
upshot of this. If somebody says, you know, I'm the
agent of a worldwide third Roman empire, you can't negotiate
with a person like that. And I'm afraid the Iranians

(49:46):
are the same. They're in the tradition of Byzantium, the cynical,
the holistic idea that there is no legality, there is
no international law. They talk about it, but they don't
really mean it. And therefore it is certainly plausible that
the cynical holistic idea that there is no legality, no

(50:09):
international law. To stave off something worse in the future,
you might have to bomb their nuclear program. And I
don't believe for a minute that we destroyed it. But
some people say, are you giving a big issue against Trump?
And I don't think those are big issues against Trump.
I think it's probably the average Joe out there in
the boondocks feels some mixture in relief and even pride

(50:31):
that the United States has these abilities, and therefore it's
better to attack on some other area, which would be
for example, you're trying to destroy Medicare, you're trying to
destroy Medicaid, you're destroying food stamps. And this current bill
just to end up is so monstrous. Obviously we want

(50:53):
to block this. We tried to block it. It's a monstrosity.
It's got killer cuts all over the place. Sixteen million
people will be thrown off their health insurance. Sixteen million
people will lose their health care. To that extent, it's
the biggest loss rolled back of health care and health

(51:14):
insurance in the history of the United States. And this
is from Trump, who promised that he would not do
this to working people. He was aware of the needs
of the working people and the working man, and he
wouldn't do it. But of course this is exactly what
he did. So you can forget about what he says

(51:34):
and his promises. Four point five million people will lose
their food stamps snap overwhelmingly. I don't know what it is.
Eighty percent, eighty five percent of the top one percent,
the waste, the fraud, the abuse. This is the oldest

(51:55):
Republican champ, the oldest Republican hope them in the book
goes back to the nineteen fifties. That I can tell
you if you know, we said, well, it looks like
we didn't balance the budget, but we'll get rid of waste,
fraud and abuse. That would be killer cuts. In the
real world, you have Mitch Moscow, Mitch McConnell of a

(52:17):
taker state, Kentucky. A Mitch is talking about what about
the fact that you people were cutting medicaid, and Mitch says, well,
it comes to medicaid, the people will get over What
does that mean? What kind of thing is that? What
kind of cynicism is that these cuts are going to
be to the bottom one third of the United States population,

(52:38):
wage journers, particularly one third. So one third means everybody
under fifty five thousand dollars a year. Puts you in
one third. You're going to get hit hard. They will
lose the biggest You call that populism, you call that
friend of the working man? Certainly not and all right,
I basically think we're out of time. We celebrate the

(52:59):
birth of the United States and the birth of freedom
two hundred and forty nine years. We will be back
on Monday with another show, and we hope you have
a pleasant holiday, celebrate and remember the new birth of
freedom because it's under attack and your very lives depend
upon it. And this is politics by Jake. And now

(53:20):
there's a word for one of our sponsors, Twain Consulting. Hi,
this is Jake with Twain Consulting. Let's be blunt, shall we.
America is like tigious, it's unstable, and it's financially weaponized.
If your name is on everything you own, you're a
sitting duck. At Twain Consulting, we help you vanished legally,

(53:41):
ethically and permanently, from land trusts to layered LLCs. We
teach you how to restructure your assets so the predators
can't see them and can't touch them. This isn't a loophole.
It's a strategy that the wealthy have used for decades.
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Consulting at eight oh five three aight zero five six

(54:03):
ninety nine or visit us online. Protect what's yours before
someone else claims it. Now, let's get back to Jack.
In Politics by Jack are you tired of the noise
and the spin. Do you want the real story behind

(54:24):
the headlines. I'm Jake and this is politics by Jake,
where I tell you what they won't And now we're
going even deeper and I need your help to keep
doing it. Join me on Patreon and support independent political
analysis that doesn't pull punches. You'll get insider breakdowns, you'll
get bonus clips and first access to new content. So

(54:48):
go to patreon dot com. Forward Slash Politics by Jake.
That's patreon dot com. Forward Slash Politics by Jake, No filters,
no fluff, just the truth. Let's do this together.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
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Speaker 2 (56:18):
Project twenty twenty five is already underway and the Second
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Local nineteen thirty two, protecting the Future of Working Families,
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Speaker 5 (57:42):
Org, NBC News Radio. I'm Brian Schuk. President Trump says
it's great to honor America's birthday with the passing of
the government spending bill.

Speaker 1 (57:57):
There could be no better birthday.

Speaker 4 (57:59):
President from then the phenomenal victory we achieved just hours
ago when Congress passed the One Big, Beautiful.

Speaker 3 (58:06):
Bill to make America great Again.

Speaker 5 (58:10):
It cleared a final House vote after a few GOP
holdouts switched their votes to Yes. Trump is at the
Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines to kick off America
two fifty. It's a year long celebration ahead of the
semi Quin Sentinel anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Two
cases involving transgender participation in women's sports are being taken

(58:32):
up by the Supreme Court. It's a victory four conservative
activists who've been calling on the High Court to step in,
pointing to the protections provided under Title nine. The TSA
is expecting to screen more than eighteen million passengers by
the time the fourth of July holiday wraps up. Natalie
Migliore reports, TSA spokesperson Jessica Maylee says, fireworks or one

(58:55):
item travelers absolutely cannot.

Speaker 3 (58:57):
Pack, and you know we see that more often than
you would think.

Speaker 6 (59:00):
But just to remind people, if fireworks aren't explosive, they
are one of those rare items that are not allowed
in either check bags or carry on. She says it's
important passengers know what items are prohibited, especially since the
holiday can come with extra weight times. Anyone traveling without
a real ID or compliant form of secondary ID should
also budget extra time into their travel days and say

(59:20):
we'll have to go through additional security checks. I'm Natalie Migliori.

Speaker 5 (59:24):
Mexican boxer Julio Seesar Chavez Junior is being taken into
custody by US immigration officials. The Department of Homeland Security
announced he was arrested on Wednesday, just days after he
faced Jake Paul in a boxing match in Anaheim. You're
listening to the latest from NBC News Radio ten fifty AM.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
Don't forget that number. And for you young people who
got here by accidentally fat fingering your FM band select there.
We're an AM radio station and AM refers to more
than just the time of day.

Speaker 2 (01:00:00):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
How are you doing, mister Matson?

Speaker 4 (01:00:04):
Good good?

Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
How'd you get invited here tonight? I wasn't.

Speaker 3 (01:00:09):
I just
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