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August 27, 2025 • 13 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Three hours and seventeen minutes. It was Trump's longest public
event as president ever. Not even Bill Clinton could last
that long. But Trump's more impressed by the guys holding
the boom.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
I can't believe you're not tired holding that How strong
are you? How strong are you?

Speaker 3 (00:18):
Look at him, He's been holding that thing for three hours.
Good fisherman.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
The guy guzzles diet cokes and then does over three
hours without using the John Gottfeld can't even make it
through the five He takes a bathroom break at the
bottom of every hour. Trump's a camel. Even his bladders
better than Biden's.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
You have not had this happen for four years, you said.
And you'd ask one question to Biden, and it was
always the ice cream question, right, what flavor I skream?

Speaker 4 (00:49):
Do you like?

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Us?

Speaker 2 (00:51):
I like vanilla? And that was the end of the conference.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
Biden couldn't even stay awake for three hours. The meeting
went on for so long Duffy got caught taking off
his shoes for.

Speaker 6 (01:03):
The first time in his life. Kennedy skipped a workout,
the Pete.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
And Bobby Challenge.

Speaker 5 (01:11):
It's one hundred push up, fifty pull ups, and you
try to do it within ten minutes. I got five
minutes and forty eight seconds.

Speaker 7 (01:19):
Beat eat me.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
I'm still bitter at that. Five minutes twenty five. The
cabinet leader is stock Turner. Five minutes and fifteen seconds.
I'm waiting for reports for the rest of the cabinet.
The only exemptions currently existing is if you can hit
a fifty at ad minister, which President Trump did.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
With the cabinet meeting was longer than the Titanic. At
one point, Rubio was like, I got to get back
to work.

Speaker 8 (01:47):
You were elected as the president of working Americans, and
that's why this labor Day is so meaningful for me personally.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
This is the most meaningful labor day of my life
with someone with four jobs.

Speaker 7 (01:56):
And so.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
At one point, after they'd covered everything, they didn't have
anything to say. So they just started teasing Schumer.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Poor stupid Chuck Schuber, the guy.

Speaker 3 (02:10):
He looks like he's aged one hundred years and they
don't like getting into looks. You know, looks don't mean
anything right when you're in politics books, No matter I
look at Pam, I would never say she's beautiful, because
it's that'd be the end of my political story.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
When he was shooting the Apprentice Board meetings, they went
for hours, so this was a breeze. Axios calls him
the Chairman of all boards, forty five, forty seven, Commander
in Chief, Mayor of Washington, President of Europe, Daddy, and
now Chairman of America. A man of many hats and
a man of many wins.

Speaker 3 (02:48):
Domestic steel production is up by one hundred thousand tons
of steals a week forward. That just announced it's going
to create four thousand new jobs American jobs, Hyundi fourteenth
thousand jobs. General Motors is moving production of the Chevy
Blazer and Equinox from Mexico back to the United States

(03:08):
where it belongs. They're building big, modern, beautiful auto plants.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
But think of that.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
We're up eighteen thousand cars a month. I hope this
table gets a lot of the credit for what's happening.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
And while Trump's building Alligator Alcatraz, the Speedway Slammer, and
the Cornhusker Clink, Zuckerberg's using a zucker Bucks to build
US AI plants the size of Manhattan.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
This is something given to me by Mark Zuckerberg. And
you'll see this is AI now. So this is when
he's building in Louisiana. Look at that. That's the size
of Manhattan. So that's superimposed over the island of Manhattan.
It takes up a big part of Manhattan. I think
they say eighty one percent of Manhattan. So these are

(03:53):
big things.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Companies are breaking ground on the Trump boom, and the
tariffs are balancing the budget.

Speaker 7 (04:00):
The Treasury Department is taking in record tariff revenues that
I had been saying was running at a rate of
three hundred billion a year. You chastise me for saying
that it's not that that number is too low, and
as usual, you're right. They think we could be on
our way well over half a trillion, maybe towards the

(04:25):
trillion dollar number.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
Tariff Stimmy checks on the way courtesy of DJT. You
take that Stimmy and you sign up for Fox one.
You can stream Waters and Tom Brady. And today there
was big marriage news.

Speaker 6 (04:41):
And I'm not talking about Swift and Kelsey.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Trade deals are getting married to peace deals and Trump's
lead negotiator use the N word.

Speaker 9 (04:50):
We are negotiating multiple entries into the Abraham piece courts
because of your vision.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
There's only one thing I wish for.

Speaker 9 (04:59):
That that Noble Committee finally gets its act together and
realizes that you are a single finance candidate since the
noble piece of this noble award was ever talked about.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
To receive that word, the Speaker of the House has
forget the novel for world peace. Trump deserves it for
what he's doing in DC twelve straight days without a murder.
Five years ago, reporters were calling the President an insurrectionist,
but now they're just grateful they're not getting pistol whipped.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
In broad daylight.

Speaker 8 (05:31):
I was on my way to work and a young
man with a black ski mask pointed a gun in
my face and threatened me to hand over my phone,
my wallet, my laptop, and everything else. And when I refused,
he used the butt of his handgun to strike me
across the face in the cheek, or what some people

(05:53):
call pistol whip me before running away, and that has
deeply traumatized myself and my family ever since.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
I've never dared to walk in.

Speaker 8 (06:01):
The street of DC at night ever, and my family
was extremely worried.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
So missed a President, Thank you so much for what
you're doing.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
Right now, Because being honest, DC's so safe. The guard
doesn't have any criminals left to chase. They're picking up litter,
cleaning up the park. So Stephen Miller can take his
wife on a romantic stroll under the moonlight.

Speaker 6 (06:23):
And if you take a life, you're getting the chair.

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Anybody murders something in the capitol, capital punishment, capital capital punishment.
If somebody kills somebody in the capitol Washington, d C.
We're going to be seeking the death penalty. And that's
a very strong preventative.

Speaker 6 (06:48):
Capital punishment in the capitol.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Over half the United States have the death penalty, and
presidents have used the National Guard to fight crime, illegals,
stop riots, desegregate. Heck, we mobilize the Guard for a virus.
Trump has every right to use the Guard to stop
black gangs from killing, but Democrats call it fascism.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
I think Donald Trump and Stephen Miller and Trump's handlers
thought that he would conduct some kind of Mussolini's style
military march across the country, subduing all the local populations.
But it's completely backfiring on them.

Speaker 6 (07:26):
Backfiring. How there were no murders in twelve days. It's
a record. How's that backfiring?

Speaker 1 (07:32):
Trump says, if that makes me Mussolini, I'm here for it.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
The line is that I'm a dictator when I stop crime.
So a lot of people say, you know, if that's
the case, I'd rather have a dictator.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
But I'm not a dictator. I just know how to
stop crime.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
The left says crime is not that bad and there's
nothing they can do about it, and anyone who tries
to do anything about it, Trump must be a dictator
because anyone who can stop crime is too powerful. Democrats
know they have the power to stop crime, but they
don't have the will. They're calling Trump a dictator. In Chicago, no,

(08:07):
they're not. The Wendy City's begging for the guard.

Speaker 10 (08:11):
I've lost an uncle to Chicago crime. I've lost two
first cousins two Chicago crime. I've lost distant family members, friends, neighbors.
And what they want us to do is find comfort
in this chaos and normalize this trauma. And we're not
doing it anymore. We need our president to come here
right now and do a forensic audit to find out

(08:32):
who's getting paid and who's benefiting from this crime, because
right now we're grieving.

Speaker 6 (08:38):
P raise onto something.

Speaker 1 (08:39):
Chicago is the main distribution hub on the Heroin Highway
and the homicides on the South Side are directly connected
to the street gangs that traffic the drug. Where are
those profits going?

Speaker 10 (08:51):
We want to get this cartel out of here. We
know that the Heroin Highway runs directly through the West
side of Chicago and they are trafficking two billion dollars
worth of hair when a year out of our community.
Imagine what that looks like America. That looks like overdosing.
That looks like violence, That looks like people leaning, That
looks like people rocking. That looks like people dying. We

(09:13):
don't want to live like this.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
The narcotics run from Mexico up through Texas and north
up the interstate into Chicago, where the customers are, where
the trucks can take it east or west, and the
boats can take it across the Great Lakes. You think
drug money's paying off politicians.

Speaker 6 (09:32):
You think the politicians are.

Speaker 1 (09:33):
Being paid to keep a light footprint on the South
Side so the drug cartels can keep their money up.
Six hundred murders a year is the cost of doing business.
Jamie Back can stop it. All he has to do
is pick up the phone.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
I would have much more respect for pritskurvy call me
up and say I have a problem.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
Can you help me fix it? I would be so
happy to do it. I don't love not that I
don't have the right to do anything I want to do.
I'm the president of the United States.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
Have I think our country's in danger, and it is
in danger in these cities.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
I can do it.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Jbi Back wants an award because murders went from nine
hundred a year thirty year high to six hundred a year.
Chicago still got double the murder rate of LA. There's
neighborhoods in Chicago that are more dangerous than I raq.
But Jamie Back thinks he's got it all under control.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
We're very pleased about the progress that will making. I
know that I live rent free in the president's head,
and I wish.

Speaker 3 (10:29):
He would spend some time inspira so that he could
see what a lovely city be in.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
Six people were killed in Chicago this past weekend and
twenty seven shot.

Speaker 6 (10:41):
And Ribs is pleased with his progress.

Speaker 1 (10:44):
We could use some more progress, and we could use
some more backup.

Speaker 6 (10:49):
But the mayor says, no, Moss, do you believe.

Speaker 3 (10:53):
That the streets of Chicago would be safer if there
were more uniformed police officers on the streets of Chicago.

Speaker 9 (11:01):
I believe the city of Chicago and cities across America
would be safer if we actually had affordable housing.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
Look, we got the question I asked Mayor Johnson's going
to fight crime by building more housing projects? When Bill
Deblasio says get it together, get it together, I think
the Democrat Party has to look at this issue much
more honestly and say, hey, there are some places where
we should be doing better, our leaders should be doing better.

(11:31):
The problem is Democrats can't see past the politics. They
think Trump's laying a trap for them by fighting crime.
But the President's not laying a trap. He's just doing
the right thing. Democrats should try that sometime, and the
media is not helping.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
Here they are.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
If it wasn't clear, then it is now. The White
House's public safety play is a deliberate ploy, one that's
already backing Democrats into a corner. See, the media has
got all their minds messed up. This is what Trump
was elected to do. It's not a ploy, it's a mandate.
The whole framing's ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (12:08):
The new box that they've fallen into his crime. There
was a consultant on one of the shows this morning.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
I was watching. I thought he was very good.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
He's a Democrat consultant, and he was screaming, no, no,
don't let him do this to you. Don't let It's
another trap. It's another trap. This guy's screaming, it's another trap.
And this is the worst of all, he said, because
this is crime. Trump is saying he's against crime, and

(12:37):
therefore crime.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Over ninety percent of the shooting victims in DC are black.
Trump believes black lives matter.

Speaker 6 (12:46):
Do Democrats?

Speaker 1 (12:47):
And Black Americans want safe neighborhoods, and the safer they
get under Trump, the more blacks vote Republican. Just like
when he secured the border, Trump won more Hispanic votes.
So if Democrats want to avoid the trap and take
the issue off the table, join up with Trump. Bring
in the guard, make the streets safe. It's not a trap,
it's an invitation. Do what Trump did in sixteen. Don't

(13:11):
listen to the party, listen to the people. Where did
that get him?

Speaker 6 (13:14):
Well? He won the White House twice, maybe three times.
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Speaker 3 (13:21):
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