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May 15, 2025 70 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Joining me now is Colonel Rob Manuz. Let's talk about
President Trump's golf tour, touring the golf and what does
he make about what is said to be now the Prince,
Saudi Prince trying to get Saudi investment in the US
up to one trillion dollars. Some are concerned that this

(00:23):
is Saudi Arabia buying their way into the US. That
was a concern by Yusama Dakdoc and Sharam Haitian today
on Radio Slash Television at one o'clock Central. What does
Colonel Rob Manis think of all this. Colonel welcome back
to the broadcast. Thanks for being here.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Thank you Brandon. It's good to be back with you today.
I'll tell you what I heard his speech. If you
haven't listened to the President's speech from Riod today, go
listen to it. This is a man of peace and
who clearly laid out the pathway and the roadmap to

(00:58):
a lasting piece in not just on the Arabian Peninsula
or with Israel, but throughout the Middle East and Southwest Asia.
Focusing on the Iranians. He's very clearly communicated to the
Iranians what they need to do and that we don't
want to bomb people into oblivion. That's not a policy

(01:22):
that this administration or this president wants to follow. That's
why I voted for him again. I got to be
honest about it. So that's all really good news. Because
when a president travels abroad and uses the same words
that he uses here at home about something so serious
as peace in the Middle East, we've got a chance,

(01:45):
and we've got a historic opportunity, and the Congress needs
to get on board with it. Our media needs to
get on board with it, our opposing party needs to
get on board with it because we have this chance.
And look, this war, whatever you call it, has been
going on since before I was eighteen years old. I

(02:08):
enlisted when I was seventeen. The Iranian hostage crisis was
already happening. When that happened, it's time to end this
and take advantage of this historic opportunity. And if the
Saudis are going to invest a trillion dollars in the
United States of America and it's going to be in
something like manufacturing, bring it. We invite them, We welcome

(02:33):
them in in order to do that. If it's something
like the media and their messaging of Islamist fundamentalism. No,
we shouldn't allow that to happen, just like we shouldn't
allow Islamist fundamentalists to immigrate to this country anymore, because
it's incompatible with the freedoms that we enjoy in the

(02:55):
Constitution of the United States. There's already too much of that.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Let's go to a clip. Here's a clip from President
trip Trump. Here we go. Listen to this, folks.

Speaker 3 (03:06):
As president of the United States, my preference will always
be for peace and partnership whenever those outcomes can be achieved. Always,
it's always going to be that way. Only a fool
would think otherwise. In recent years, far too many American
presidents have been afflicted with the notion that it's our

(03:29):
job to look into the souls of foreign leaders and
use US policy to dispense justice for this sins. They
loved using our very powerful military, and now it's really
the most powerful it's ever been.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
And went, I want to say that we're going to
sell you a lot of weapons, he says. I think
it might end up being a waste of money, but
I do believe in peace through strength, So we're going
to sell you a bunch of these weapons. But let's
pray you never need to use them.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
Absolutely. That's what we do, and that's what we should do,
is sell modern weaponry to countries that want to have
peace and be able to defend themselves against evil enemies
like the people that run the country of Iran right now.
And you notice how I said that. I didn't talk
about the country of Iran or the people of Iran.

(04:23):
It's the people operating the country that are in power
that are the evil ones that call us the great
Satan and Israel the Satan of the world, and want
us destroyed and wiped off of the face from the
face of the earth. The Iranians clearly have a choice,
and the President of the United States is giving it

(04:44):
to them. And the Saudi Arabians and every other peace
loving Arab and non Arab state in the Middle East
have a choice, and the Saudis are obviously choosing the
path to peace and strength.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Here's how he entered the Economic forum this this afternoon
in Saudi Arabia.

Speaker 4 (05:05):
Here we go in this today.

Speaker 5 (05:22):
This can you believe he enters?

Speaker 1 (05:37):
He entered the conference and Economic conference in Saudi Arabia
with God bless us say and Lee Greenwood. You know
we're pulling at bit, but let it play. Let it
play in the background for the colonel Dogs. What do
you respond?

Speaker 2 (05:53):
It brings a smile to my face. But it's a
display of the power of the United States that has
returned learn to us. When even the Saudis, Saudi Arabia
and the royal family who controls this to the nth degree,
Brandon allows that type of entrance by a president of

(06:15):
the United States using a song that invokes God, not Allah,
but God in English. That is a big significant step
and shows the power that we now have once again
on the world stage, and that we really do have
a trance to have peace through strength. That's kind of

(06:36):
all signifies to Look, I'm all.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Standing for our second national anthem, or maybe our third
after God bless America. Let's let's bring up the audio
and we'll enjoy the remainder of.

Speaker 6 (06:46):
It still today have come this afternoon to talk about

(07:35):
the bright future.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
Well, there you go. And then how did he exit?

Speaker 5 (07:39):
Logan?

Speaker 1 (07:40):
I mean, that's all real. He really did that. That's
not made up. That really happened, right, Logan, that really happened.
How did he exit logan? Did he really it's in
the bookmark. Okay, is that right here? Which one is it?

Speaker 5 (08:02):
Logan?

Speaker 1 (08:05):
Did you hear? Did you hear how he accided? Are here?
Did you see how he exited the stage? Colonel No?

Speaker 2 (08:14):
I was in my show live.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Well what are his two songs he's known for? God
Bless the USA? And what's the other one he's known for? Yeah?
Here he did?

Speaker 5 (08:24):
Here we go.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
You have a tremendous future.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
Thank you very much, and please pay my respects to
your father.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 7 (08:32):
Thank you.

Speaker 8 (08:47):
The Prince's gonna do the y m c.

Speaker 9 (08:49):
A with him.

Speaker 5 (09:02):
There's no need to feel down.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
I say it.

Speaker 9 (09:04):
You're so, I'll.

Speaker 10 (09:08):
Say you're in a new town. There's I'll say it.
With your shirt on your do you can't stay?

Speaker 1 (09:25):
And I'm sure you by.

Speaker 10 (09:33):
It's fun to stay, it's not to stay.

Speaker 8 (09:38):
It okay, all right?

Speaker 1 (09:50):
I was hoping we would get a little bit of
Trump dance there with the y m c A. But
I guess not. But I mean, can you see, uh,
you know, a stiff like George H. Bush doing that.
I mean, these guys don't have the personality, they don't
throw the shadow Donald Trump does to be able to
get away with that in the first place, nor would they,
nor would they step out a character and actually do

(10:11):
something like President Trump did, opening with God Bless Usa
and closing with YMCA. I mean, this is the classic
Donald Trump. The other guys they're so stiff they could
never get away with it.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
What they don't have it is not a lack of
love for this country, but a lack of love for
the priorities of America's first. It's our priorities first that
Donald Trump has a love for. And you know, he
was born into a wealthy family. He's a wealthy man,
but you know he spent a lot of time growing

(10:45):
up on construction sites, hanging out with men that wear
hard hats and bust knuckles for a living. And that's
why he gets it. The American people want a government
that puts our priorities first. And we've had enough of
these people leading these this government and serving in our

(11:05):
Congress and serving in our on our Supreme Court that
put the interest of everybody else before our interest. And
that's the end of it. That's why we have to
grow people that will replace Donald Trump and his administration.
And we are behind a power curve on that thankfully,
We've got a JD Vance and a couple of others

(11:27):
in the wings, but we've got a lot more work
to do.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
Brannan. Now, there was concern today, as I said in
the beginning here about from Sharon Haiti and Yusama Deak
talk in Saudi Arabia using this, whether I guess the
Prince wants to get up to a trillion dollars? Are
they buying access to America? What is there concern there?
Or is this another example of Donald Trump saying when

(11:51):
they give you a free putt, pick it up, take it,
walk to the next hole. Is this if you want
to give you a trillion dollars, I'll take you a
trillion dollars. Do you really think that Donald Trump is
going to be swayed by a trillion dollars?

Speaker 2 (12:01):
What did they say that the first administration when his
first official trip overseas was where the Saudi Arabia? Again, Look,
the President of the United States is the President of
the United States, and he's rebuilding our power, and he's
re establishing peace through strength. He's re establishing our prosperity,

(12:24):
and he's re establishing the monolithic leviathan that was the
manufacturing base of the United States of America allow the
nineteen thirties that if we had not had it, we
would never have been able to become victorious in World
War Two. Neither would the Russians because they used our
equipment that we built and those kinds of things. So

(12:47):
that's what he's doing, and that has nothing to do
with the Saudi Arabians buying access. They've already had access
and been protected for goodness sakes, that's a that's a
red herring that we don't need to be chasing.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
Let's go to this. Trump's biggest arms deal in history
with one hundred and forty two billion Saudi war chest
and sends major warning to destructive Iran. Is that what
this is about. Is this about arming Saudi Arabia. So
if Saudi Arabia has to get involved in Israel America
strike against Iran, did Saudi Arabia, by the way, did

(13:24):
in Saudi Arabia come to Israel's defense last year when
they were being bombarded.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
Yes, they did, and so did the Golf Arab states.
All of the air defenses were combined into a coalition.
When the Iranians fired the four hundred drones and missiles
or so at the State of Israel. That was a
combined coalition defense effort and the Saudi Arabians were part
of that, and that's what the Abraham Accords. One of

(13:57):
the things that they're about is to establish peaceful economic
relationships and political relationships with the state between Israel and
states like Saudi Arabia in order to put up a
shield against the Iranians and face them down so that
they no longer have the power to wield like a

(14:21):
hedgemond throughout the region. And that's what they've been doing
through their proxies. Now, the Israelis have done a lot
to eliminate that threat, and this step in a peaceful way,
this offer to the Iranians is a major step forward
if they take it for their people. Because Americans, we

(14:43):
love the Persian people and the Iranian people. My uncle
adopted an orphan boy from the oil fields in Iran
when he was working there in the nineteen fifties, so
we have a very long historical close relationship with the
people of Iran. We want nothing more than peace and
having a strong Saudi Arabia, a strong Israel, and quite frankly,

(15:07):
an Iraq that's independent and strong, which we remember at
one time was the only nation that would that would
militarily take the Iranians on and the Saudis did not
stand up to do that. It was the Iraqis that
did that in spite of you know, you could say
what you want about who was leading it and those

(15:28):
kind of things, but that's the facts on the ground,
and the Saudis have to be stronger in order to
help deter Iran and ultimately eliminate their nuclear weapons program.
That's a key part of it.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
So if and I hope we don't, but if America
has to get involved with a strike on Iran with Israel,
what do you think Saudi Arabia does? Do they let
US land airplanes there? Do they let Israel land airplanes there?
What do you think happens here? When you got one
hundred and forty two billion dollar weapons package being sold

(16:03):
by America to Saudi Arabia? What is this going to
allow for? I mean, other than us getting money? What
do you think is happening here?

Speaker 2 (16:13):
I haven't looked at any of the written agreements that
have been signed that we've heard about in the reporting,
but there should be some agreements to allow us to
use ports and airfields and those kinds of things if necessary,
and for the Saudis to shoulder arms with us. They're
going to buy our assets. I'm guessing that F thirty

(16:36):
five's are on the table, and those kinds of top
line military capability they should be flying with us if
we in the event that we have to do that.
Let's hope we don't have to do that, though in
the Iranians will make the right call.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
So we're talking about, according to Reuter's, six hundred billion
dollar investment, and I guess the Prince the Saudi wants
to get this up to a trillion dollars. We're also
hearing that we're talking about what was it? I read
twenty don't have to go see how much it was,
but a large sum of money I can find it

(17:13):
real quick, A large sum of money coming from Saudi
Arabia twenty billion, supposedly twenty billion in AI data centers
and energy infrastructure in the United States. That's according to
the White House.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
Well that doesn't surprise me.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
You know.

Speaker 2 (17:29):
The artificial intelligence build up is a goal of this administration.
The President's been very open about it. I don't know
if you noticed or not, but Elon Musk was in
the audience, so he's traveled over there with him along
with the Defense Secretary, I saw Secretary of Hegseeth, Secretary
Letnich of Commerce. All the right players were in the

(17:50):
room to do that. And we're looking for investors in
large data centers because it requires that, it requires a
lot of power. I'd like to see him invest in
some nuclear power plants with the using the latest nuclear
power technology, because really nuclear power is the only real
clean energy that has the reliability UH and a uh

(18:15):
capability to foot bill for America's future power requirements.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
We've got Elon there, We've got Sam Altman there. This
is UH again. I guess are they are they already
investing in their companies or there's black Rock? Are they
already investing in their companies or are they looking for
more investment? Which one is it?

Speaker 5 (18:39):
UH?

Speaker 2 (18:40):
I think there's probably a little bit of both. You know.
Altman and Elon are the two biggest start official intelligence
corporations in the world right now from what I understand,
so they're the major players in AI there, and they're
probably looking for investment in the companies. UH in black Rock, UH,
I hate to see Larry Fink there because black Rock
is not well liked and not thought of as a

(19:02):
friend of America first policy, quite frankly, and we'd like
to see other companies.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
They're more of a They're more of a pro red
China company, aren't they?

Speaker 2 (19:13):
Or they are a pro red China company. It's disappointing
to see that they're invited along.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
You had an interesting tweet today, I wonder how many
dollars Boeing is putting behind this media smear campaign against
America and potus. Their status is a prime defense contractor
should be on the table for removal at Secretary deaf?
Are they the ones that you think are pushing all
this bad press about the airplane? The Qatar cutter? However

(19:42):
you want to say at airplane.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
I have no idea but somebody with a lot of funding,
because funding is power, and power is information and messaging
getting out, and that message is consistently getting out every day,
every hour of every day. The message is still getting
out on all forms. Immediate that the President's been offered
it's a stake, the spake stuff. The President's been given

(20:06):
a gift by a cutter of a seven forty seven
for him to use for his personal use, and even
after he leaves the presidency as an acting Air Force one.
It's just a bunch of baloney. Look, we've bought two
of the four current air Force twos were purchased from
foreign countries. We have bought seven forty sevens from foreign

(20:28):
countries before and used in the four doomsday airplanes the
National Airborne Operations Center seven forty sevens, the E four
B is what it's called in military parlance. We bought
some of those from foreign countries. The problem is Boeing.
Everybody should be mad at Boeing. And that's what the
essence of the beginning of me tweeting that out is.

(20:50):
I'm asking the question, and it's a serious possibility with
the nefarious characters that are running our companies today. We
just talked about Larry CCP. Communists China think they're from
Black Rocket. That's a fact. I'm not even speculating about it.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
We know he is.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
He's on tape saying I'd like to see our government
be more like the communist China government. Are you kidding me?
It's ridiculous and that's what's going on. So would it
surprise you if one of the five prime military contractors
like Boeing, wasn't, in fact putting the money behind the
effort to smear the United States of America and the
President of the United States over a couple of their

(21:28):
own seven forty sevens. It wouldn't surprise me one bit
that they're behind it, because money is power, information is power,
and the continued presence of companies like Boeing being the
top five military prime contractors is power to them and
they want to maintain their power. All those that are
powerful want to maintain their power, and they don't want

(21:50):
the little guys to be able to get into the competition.
That's one of the things the President needs to change
his view on these big companies. We need to little
guy companies to get those opportunities. He signed a big
executive order yesterday about removing regulations that empower big corporations

(22:11):
and putting less regulation in place that will return the
power to the little guys so that they can compete
and get these opportunities. That's what American capitalism is all
about and should be, and anybody that goes against us
should be held accountable. And it wouldn't surprise me one
bit if Boeing was doing that.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
What happened to Boeing? I watched a documentary not too
long ago on Boeing and their creation of the seven
forty seven. I know if you've seen that documentary, I.

Speaker 2 (22:46):
Don't think I've ever seen it.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
That's an amazing documentary. And now that was back in
the Was that back in the sixties or seventies, seventies?

Speaker 2 (22:54):
I think so. I think so, And you know, I
would just want to add that we wouldn't have to
be chasing four engine jet aircraft around the world from
other countries that Boeing was still producing them, or any
company in America was still producing them.

Speaker 5 (23:07):
They're not.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
That's part of the problem. You want to trust the
safety and security of the President of the United States
to a two engine airplane going aground the world and
across the world's oceans. I think not. Ladies and gentlemen
be mad at Boeing because they can't get their act
together and produce an airplane in less than twenty years,
even when they start with their own airframes. That's what's

(23:31):
really going on here, and that's why they're probably behind
the smear campaign.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
Let me just play a minute of this. I think
this is the documentary that I watched, and it was
a fascinating documentary.

Speaker 6 (23:42):
Look at it.

Speaker 11 (23:43):
The Boeing seven four seven, the world's first white booted
jet so wide the Wright Brother's historic flight was sure
that it's wingspan.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
The quantum leap in technology of that aeroplane was just extraordinary, and.

Speaker 11 (23:58):
It was much more than just big aircraft.

Speaker 12 (24:01):
This airplane allowed every person on Earth the opportunity to
get an airplane and fly anywhere else.

Speaker 11 (24:10):
But there's a hidden story to the gym ro.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
It was a fight all away. It was a billion.

Speaker 11 (24:16):
Dollar gamble that stretched technology to the limits.

Speaker 12 (24:20):
The whole engine would move and the structure was obviously shaken,
and you'd hear a very loud bang.

Speaker 11 (24:26):
Pushing the Boeing company close to financial meltdown.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
Boeing gambled the company millions of dollars on this project.

Speaker 11 (24:34):
But when it did fly, it sawed off into the
history books.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
The vision of that airplane as big as it was
lifting off for the first time.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Was just magic.

Speaker 11 (24:49):
It became an icon, the most recognized aircraft in the world.

Speaker 9 (24:53):
When it was some imposal to the gate, people take
pictures of it, Little kids pointed it.

Speaker 11 (24:58):
The Jumbo has transported the equivalent of eighty percent of
the human race.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
The seven forty seven rated on a one to ten scale,
it has to be a ten. It's solid state. If
you will, you know it's majestic.

Speaker 11 (25:13):
The plane that created a revolution and changed the world.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
If you guys haven't seen that documentary, you should see it.
I watched it a month or so ago. Fascinating. Now
that was a different day and a different generation. Let's see.
I want to find out Boeing seven forty seven. I
want to see when did it start flying? It looks
like the slate sixties, doesn't it. Let's see. Let's see here, Yeah,

(25:44):
sixty eight manufactured by Boeing in the United States between
sixty eight and twenty twenty three, nineteen sixty eight out
of a different day, different generation. You can see the
older gentleman that was sitting in there being interviewed about it.
What has happened to Boeing? I mean they can't. Their
planes seem to be I guess falling out of the sky.

(26:05):
They got a multi billion dollar contract to make I think,
build two brand new Air Force ones. I think Biden
was supposed to take custody of it. Donald Trump should
already be flying on it. You create the seven forty seven,
you change flying history. But that was a different generation.

(26:27):
In this new generation, they can't seem to keep their
planes in the air much less fulfilled government contract. You
would think that if you take this government contract, you're
going to find a way to make sure you meet
the government contract. But their over budget, they're way behind.
What happened to Boeing? Is this not also, Colonel? Kind

(26:48):
of a symbol of what America and American corporations have
become so obsessed with woke cultural Marxism and transgenderism and
affirmative action. What happened to putting the best people in
the job and getting the job done, working twenty four
to seven? Your word is your bond again. I'm not
shocked that the sixties generation of engineers and architects and

(27:12):
aeronautical engineers could produce this, But you know, I'm not
shocked that today's generation can. There's a difference in the
work ethic, there's a difference in the integrity, there's a
difference in the common sense. I don't know if that's
what it comes down to, but it looks like Boeing
has shot themselves in the foot.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Oh it's worse than that. Before I say this, keep
in mind, folks, I have flown Boeing aircraft in the
United States Air Force, and every combat operation that I've
ever flown in I was in a Boeing aircraft. And
I've flown in operational missions around the world all in
Boeing aircraft. So I'm a believer. Okay. If a believer

(27:55):
is saying the things that I'm saying, then you should
really be paying attention. This is a company that is
fielding aircraft into operational airliners that the emergency exit hatches
blow off in flight due to manufacturing defects. That's the
kind of company that Boeing Aircraft is today. And it's

(28:18):
sad that we've come to this, but that company and
companies like Blackrock, the Chinese communist lovers of the world,
chose to go down this marxistem doctrination path of diversity,
equity and inclusion and critical race theory and use racism
and sexism to do their hiring processes instead of using

(28:40):
merit to do their hiring processes. And this isn't a
prime example of what happens to a manufacturer that goes
down that line. The same thing is happening to the
United States Armed Forces. We've got to pause in it
right now because of Donald Trump and because of his
executive The universities are stopping it. Although they're hiding this stuff,

(29:04):
and so are the corporations. They're hiding it and trying
to cloak it until mister Trump is out of office.
Because we have a Congress that will not codify his
executive orders in law. So you can expect a continuation
of this unless we get people in Congress with some
spine to codify his executive orders in law and make
this permanent. This is the type of manufacturer that you

(29:28):
have inside the United States, a prime defense contractor, and
it's got to be put to an end and fixed.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
What do you make of the seven forty seven that
you know, or whatever the plane is on a seven
forty seven, whatever this jumbo plane is that Gatar wants
to give to President Trump, What do you make of this?

Speaker 2 (29:53):
It's a seven forty seven that their government happens to own.
Like I said, we are going around the world to
try to find four engines seven forty sevens that we
can use because Boeing no longer makes them, and no
other aircraft manufacturer in the United States makes them. We
did the same thing with the Air Force two jets.
That's why two of them were owned by foreign countries

(30:16):
before we purchased them, is because we couldn't find them
here inside the United States where we want to find them.
It's because Boeing can't get the two that's been ordered
manufactured on time and under budget. And Donald Trump had
to step in the first time because they were charging
way too much money. And it wouldn't surprise me if

(30:38):
they weren't using this as a nefarious way to get
the purchase price back to what it was before Donald
Trump made them reduce it the first time in his
first administration. And of course delays and those kinds of
things drive the price up.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
And he basically said, why would I not take a
free plane?

Speaker 2 (30:56):
Right, why would I not do exactlane exactly? Go through
that aircraft. A lot of people are going, well, you
can't trust those people. Well, you know, we trusted them
with Air Force two. We've trusted them with a whole
bunch of other things, and we'll go through our people.
We'll go through that aircraft with a fine tooth comb
it'll be structurally sound, mechanically sound, it'll be it'll be

(31:18):
sound from an intelligence perspective, and those kind of things,
because the teams will go over it before it's released
to fly with the president.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
Well, they were saying some some are reporting that it'll
cost billions of dollars to take that plane and turn
it into Air Force one. I'm thinking, well, getting a
four hundred million dollar plane, I don't know what it'll
cost to turn into Air Force one with all the
you know, stuff that's on there that can evade an
attack or throw off flares and all the communications and

(31:48):
all that. But hey, it's still four hundred dollars plane,
four hundred million dollar plane you're building on the base
of that's got to be some kind of savings there
right right off the bat.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
Absolutely absolutely, it'll be saving Well.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
You know, the media is invalid argument, Yeah, exactly, so,
he said. The media trying to tell us, oh, it'll
cost billions of dollars to retrofit that into Air Force one,
all right after they try to tell you that Donald
Trump's being gifted it for personal use and he's going
to use it after he leaves office, which.

Speaker 2 (32:16):
Is all a lie.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
Uh, don't.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Don't listen to the mainstream media. Folks go to places
like worldview Tube, the Rob Manus Show, Brandon House, World News.
Come to our outlets. We're going to tell you the truth,
and we'll tell you when we have an opinion and
what our opinion is, and we're not going to play
around with it.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
Here here's a little bit of Elon and Saardi Raby today.
Listen to this. Elon, my dear friend.

Speaker 7 (32:40):
We're honored to have President Trump. We're honored under the
sponsorship and guideance of His Royal Highness to celebrate a
US Saudi and a Saudi US relationship that is ninety
two years old about how we move from an oil
based economy to it vation based economy powered by wonderful technologies.

(33:04):
That definitely you're one of the pioneers in this industry.
We just showed to His Royal Highness some of your
Optimist robots and to President Trump.

Speaker 2 (33:14):
Let's talk about that.

Speaker 5 (33:15):
Tell me about them.

Speaker 12 (33:16):
Yes, So we just showed the several of our Tesla
Optimus robots to His Highness and President Trump, and I
think they were very impressed. In fact, one of our
robots did the Trump Dance. Which I think was pretty
cool and y m c A yeah to YMCA. So yeah,
robots can dance, they can walk around, they can interact.

(33:41):
I think we're headed to a radically different world. I think,
I think a good world, an interesting world. My prediction
actually for humanoid robots is that ultimately there will be.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
Tens of billions.

Speaker 12 (33:59):
I think everyone will want to have their personal robot.
You can think of it like as though you had
your own personal C three PO or r t D two.
But even better then, who wouldn't want to have their
own personal C three PO r t D two. That
would be pretty great. And I also think it unlocks

(34:23):
an immense amount of economic potential because when you think
of like what is the output of an economy, it
is productivity per capita. At times population will capita the
Once you have humanoid robots, the actual economic output potential
is tremendous.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
It's really unlimited.

Speaker 12 (34:46):
Potentially, we could have an economy ten times the size
of the current global economy where no one wants for anything.
You know, sometimes an AI they talk about universal basic income.
I think it's actually going to be universal high income,

(35:07):
where anyone can have any goods and services that they
want a science fiction book, recommend.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
We stop righting that that's interesting. What was it a
month or two ago? Colonel? He said, I think we're
gonna have a lot of people sitting around nothing to do.
Prices are going to fall. You can pretty much buy
wherever you want, but you might have a hard time
finding a purpose, and we may have to go. We

(35:37):
may go, he says, not that I'm saying I want
to do this, but we may go to universal basic income.
He got a lot of criticism for that. Hey, that's socialism. Now.
You hear him saying in Saudi Arabia, we may end
up with universal basic high incomes, right, because so much
products are going to be produced and things low price

(35:58):
and high incomes. So he kind of tweaked his message out.
If you notice that I did.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
He he's a smart guy. He's probably maybe the smartest
guy on the planet. It's alive today. That's at his age,
you know, able to articulate it. Uh, you know, so
that shouldn't surprise anyone.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (36:19):
What you know, Elon's a great salesman, like Donald Trump's
a great salesman. Look. P. T. Barnum was a great salesman. Uh,
And I admire all of them. I've read all of
their biographies as a matter of fact, in each and
many others in my lifetime, and I admire them. Uh,
but you got to remember they are sales pitching at

(36:39):
a time. I can't think of a better salesman for
the United States of America than Donald Trump and his
assistant Elon Musk for goodness sake, you know. But the
bottom line is, artificial intelligence is still a computer system.
It is still garbage in and garbage out. It is
still only as good as the human beings that write

(36:59):
the programming for it. The robots are going to be
only as good as the human beings that are able
to write the programming for it. So they're a tool.
We have to always think of these as a tool.
They may be highly effective tools, you know, like neurallink
that mister Musk is fielded now is I think he's
got it implanted in two or three human beings that

(37:20):
you know want you know, the latest guy is able
to do tweets and stuff on X just using his
mind because he's not able to use his hands and
arms and legs and those kinds of things. Those are
all great leaps in technology. They're good for humankind, and
so is artificial intelligence that's going to go along with that.

(37:43):
Robotics of what we're seeing with optimists and those kinds
of things. They're going to do amazing things, but they
will never do the amazing things that human beings are.

Speaker 1 (37:52):
Capable of doing.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
Never. They will never be sentient, they will never be
creative to the level that a human brain can be creative.
It's just not going to be that way. And I
know I'm raining on some people's parades that are out
there saying that, but that's the truth, and I'm going
to give you the truth. And look, I started out
in my college life as a computer programmer. I understand

(38:16):
programming language, I understand the machine language, I understand machine learning.
I understand artificial intelligence at its most basic level. And
it's still a computer program using very fast, very powerful
computing capability that makes it look and sound almost human.

(38:37):
But it's never going to reach the level of a
human sentient mind and human being with that level of
innovative creativity. So he didn't use the term high basic
universal income. He used the term high universal income, which
to me means the potential to have every person on

(38:58):
the planet that's an adult have a high universal income
that's being earned in some way or another is really high.
Because if that's the path that I just describe, we
go down, that's the path to success. But if we
go down on the path that these things can take
over and do everything, and there's not going to be

(39:19):
anything left for Rob Mayniz to do in his daily
life except for just sit by the pool and sip
iced tea, then that is a path to total destruction
of Mankin.

Speaker 1 (39:33):
And I'm not sure we're going to get there. Really.
I know people think that that's sci fi. I don't
see that happening. I don't see guys like you and
me being replaced because hey, I can't bring in the
biblical worldview and the history. I mean, it can recourgitate,
but how do you know it's accurate? Right? Our audience
trust you and me, and we have thirty five years

(39:54):
of doing this. In all the years you've done this,
they know that we're telling them the truth. They know
that not going to mislead them, certainly not on purpose,
that we're committed to truth and that we're going to
bring Christian worldview to bear and the scriptures and history.
They know that. I'm not going to sit and listen
to some AI. I'm like, well, how I know that's true.

(40:15):
I don't. That's not an individual that I trust. Right,
They have individuals I trust, and I'm like, I want
to listen to that individual because I trust them, right,
So I think that's very important. But there's nothing wrong
with these computers. I think we call them artificial intelligence.
But like you said, someone's got to program them. We're
using them here, we're advancing them here right now, Logan

(40:38):
has these computer systems, call them AI, call them supercomputers.
Wherever you want doing the work of about what you say, Logan,
four people or five? He says, honestly, probably five people.
So we have AI or supercomputers doing the work, he says,
of five people, and we're just scratching the serf. When

(41:01):
our IT guy is done with some of the other
things coming, it's going to be more than that, which
you know, I'm already working hard to bring in forty
thousand dollars a month just for the hard cost of
running this network. That doesn't include my salary. That's just
my hard cost of running the network. But what if

(41:21):
forty thousand is the cap. It doesn't go any higher
than that really, because everything that I'm adding, I'm not
having to pay them because it's AI doing it for us, right,
And that's what's going on in the control room. The
guys have got computers doing things for them, and then
they go about their other work and they monitor what's
going on. And the IT guy is going to be

(41:43):
doing stuff where AI will be doing stuff for us
twenty four to seven, behind the scenes and updating the
website with title description. It'll be doing things for us.
Every day we get up, we'll see what the computer
system did overnight. That's nothing different than what we do now.
And I don't want people to be careful because they're like,

(42:03):
I don't think you should go down that road, Brandon AI. Well,
that's like saying you should have a VCR ur TV
our radio. Right. Don't use the word AI artificial intelligence
and put that word across everything, right. That's there's different
types of AI. There's different types of supercomputers, and there's
different methods for what you use them. But I personally

(42:26):
think he's right. These supercomputers give a network like Hours
the opportunity to compete with Fox News like we could
never afford to do right.

Speaker 2 (42:38):
That's right. That's why he used the term I universal income.

Speaker 1 (42:44):
I mean, if we had five people now being the
work of five people. We haven't fired anybody, we haven't
let anyone go. We've just said we need everybody we
have now, but we need five more people in the
form of AI to do this, this, and this and
this that we could have never done with someone because
we have the budgets to hire any more additional people.

(43:05):
But now, instead of lagging or doing without, we can
offer more services and more features to our audience and
pretty soon, logan, I would not be shocked if pretty
soon AI is doing the work of twenty people for us,
would you no, He said me, neither.

Speaker 2 (43:23):
I'm not. I won't be. I won't be.

Speaker 1 (43:26):
And then you add that to the twelve we've got
working for us as a team of thirty two people.
That's a pretty good sized little network, right. But our
cost is not going to necessarily go up. If anything,
we might go to bring it down, right, Absolutely, right.
So I'm pretty excited about it, are you?

Speaker 2 (43:44):
You should be? Yeah, I'm very excited about it. Like
I said, I started out when I went to college
in the Air Force by a degree. You was one
of the first in management information systems, so computer systems
analysis design, and I had to learn COBOL and fortrain
and machine language and basic programming and machine learning and

(44:06):
those kinds of things. And I've kept doing, you know,
kept up to speed on those things throughout my military
career because I flew in airplanes and did bomb disposal
work and all of that has artificial intelligence associated with
it at a level now that could do the work
of five of me in an aircraft or doing bomb

(44:27):
disposal type operations and everything, and so I kept up
with it and have really high expectations. But it's got
to be done ethically. It's got to be done using
logic and always at the front of mind that whatever
regulations and ethics standards that are developed for it has

(44:48):
the human being first, just like we demand Donald Trump
and voted for Donald Trump's America First policies. As we
move forward with artificial intelligence and this type of technology,
it's got to be humankind first in ethics and logic,
process and capability.

Speaker 1 (45:10):
Well said, let's move in our final moments here. Possible
killing of Mohammed Sinwar may boost hostage deal efforts. Sources
tell the Post we're getting reports that Israel may may
have carried out a successful assassination of the former leader
of Hamas, his brother Mohammed. What do you make of this?

(45:31):
I guess they hit a hospital or you know, they're
using hospitals and schools over there all the time, so
just so the audience knows, it wouldn't have been a
hospital that's actively being used. It would have been an
empty hospital that they're using for terroist attacks or to
hide out in. But they used suppose a nine bunker
buster bombs.

Speaker 2 (45:48):
On that target. You're giving them too much ethical credit. No,
they commit war crimes daily by using hospitals that are
actively being used as military targets because they put their
command and control in there, they house their personnel in there,
they put their armaments underneath the hospitals. That's all a
war crime, and the Hamas and those types of Iranian

(46:09):
proxies have a standard process to do that. They even
go fight with their guns in sabine clothes, so they
can be counted as sabine casiories. But when you see
the propaganda videos where they're operating bodies or returning hostages,
they're wearing their hamas uniforms. Those are all war crimes
that the media doesn't call these people out on, so

(46:30):
don't give them that much credit. I was glad they
got it.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
What I was a bring to is I don't think
Israel was bombing a hospital full of innocent patients.

Speaker 2 (46:39):
Every target that Israel is bombing, lesson error was made,
is a legitimate military target, whether it's a hospital, a school,
an ambulance, a church, a mosque, all of it. We've
had the bomb moss in our own war against international
terrorism because they use them as armories, they use them

(47:00):
as command centers, they use them as conference centers, and
it's all war crimes against civilized laws of armed conflict
and laws of war. If you can call anything like
that civilized. It's the most uncivilized thing a human beings
can do to each other is go to military war
and commit violence on each other. And it's despicable to

(47:23):
use that kind of stuff to try to use it
against the Israelis when these people are committing war crimes
every minute of every day. The Israelis are fighting the
most ethical war in an urban environment that's ever been
fought in the history of the world. And I say
that as a warrior that's been involved in it and
studied it from World War two.

Speaker 1 (47:42):
And again I agree with all that. All I'm going
to say is, I would be really shocked if that
hospital is full of innocent civilians when they bombed it.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
I wouldn't You wouldn't be.

Speaker 1 (47:54):
You wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (47:54):
No, you shouldn't be. And they'll add those casualties if
there were any to the inflated casualty accounts that the
Mosque government Ministry of Health puts out that our media
routinely believes even though there are a bunch.

Speaker 1 (48:07):
Of pack of lion wolves. And I cannot disfirm everything
they're getting and I can't confirm it was a hospital
or school, but that's the initial. That's the initial reports.
Want to see what comes out, but I do think
we have footage of it here we go. So we

(48:56):
are getting reports tonight. It seems as though he again
I can't confirment. We're trying to get ahold of our
reporter over there, but there are there are unconfirmed reports
that he has been eliminated, the former head of I
guess what they thought was going to be the next
head of a Moss.

Speaker 2 (49:14):
Well done to the Israeli defense forces, it looks like,
you know, just visually, it looked like they were attacking
hardened and deeply buried targets. By the way, those plumes
were coming up out of the ground from the bombs
being dropped, and that means that we had you know,
they had very good intelligence, which we know they have
good intelligence when you look at Operation grim Beeper that

(49:36):
they pulled off, and they.

Speaker 1 (49:38):
Have systematically called it grim Beeper.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
That's what we call it in the military circles that
I run in Operation grim Beeper, and it's a it's
a term of art and a term of a compliment.
Quite frankly, the Israelis have mastered the ability to attack
command and control nodes and leadership nodes against these Iranian
proxy forces that they have had to live under and

(50:04):
had their kids and friends and families die under needlessly
as Sabine intentionally, and targeting of civilians is Whatsbala and
Hamas and all of those Islamist proxies of Iran do routinely.
They don't go after military targets. They think civilians are

(50:24):
military targets no matter what the cost is, and that's
another war crime. And none of these people, if they're
alive at the end of this, none of them should
go without being charged with war crimes by some court somewhere.

Speaker 1 (50:40):
I agree. Here's what supposedly the IDEF is released. Take
a look at this. So they're mapping out where they
had their tunnels and terist hideouts under this hospital.

Speaker 2 (50:53):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
So this is supposedly being reported tonight, being released by
the IDEA. So there you go. Closing comments, anything else
I didn't ask you about you want to tell our
audience about before I let you go.

Speaker 2 (51:08):
When it comes to this type of presentation, the IDEPP
is not putting out propaganda. They're showing the enemy the truth.
The enemy needs to surrender unconditionally. Put your arms down,
put your hands up, walk out, and end this now
so that the people that live there can return to peaceful,

(51:29):
prosperous lives, which is perfectly capable of happening in this
part of the world that has many times before.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
Robminus dot com robminus dot com each and every day
there and at Worldviewtube produced here by our team in
the control room, now by AI by the team in
the control room at two pm Central three pm Eastern Standard.
As always, Colonel thanks for being with us. Thank you.
Bro Let me ask you about something real quick. We

(52:00):
spent three hours in the Arlington House in Art International Cemetery,
the home of Roberty Lee and his wife. There was
given to them by Roberty Lee Lee's mother and father
in law, who his father in law was the grandson

(52:20):
of Martha Washington. They're buried. I'm not telling him this,
as he already knows this. I'm just make sure the
audience knows it. They're buried. Roberty Lee's wife's parents are
buried on the property. I had to go looking for it.
By the way, It's almost like they don't want you
to know. And it wasn't on any of the maps,
meaning the big map they give you. They say where

(52:43):
Audie Murphy is buried in different people, which is great,
but they never told me, oh, right, here is where
the people who the property belonged to are buried. I
had to ask a tour guide who then had to
direct me to the area. And they died before the
Civil War, so they were allowed to stay. When I
went through there and was reading what they've put at

(53:09):
Arlington National Cemetery about General Lee, I was disappointed. I
think they're trying to make him out to be a racist.
And as I understood, he inherited his slaves from his
father in law's estate. Then he had to try to
figure out what to do. This is a very complicated situation,

(53:30):
and I know people want to make it very simple.
But if all of a sudden you find that your
father in laws died and said, here are twenty five
or whatever number was of his indentured slaves, what do
you do with them? Hit the streets, Hit the bricks, guys,
take your wife, your kids, hit the streets. I'm done
with you. Well, he couldn't do that. Where are they

(53:52):
going to go? Where are they going to eat? Where
are they going to sleep? Right, So he's thinking, how
do I how do I free them? Now? Supposedly they
were supposed to be freed when his father in law died.
I don't know what was going on that prohibited that,
but something let Lee think. And I know he had

(54:14):
some debts, so maybe his pragmatism kicked Jenny. He's like,
we've got debts from this estate. We've got to try
to save the estate. And this I don't know, but
I do know this. One of the ladies there a slave.
The tour guide told me so respected the Lees. When

(54:35):
the union came in and started tearing stuff up, tearing
up plates and everything, she found a way to take
the furniture. It was either in the attic and lock
it away or off site. But she found a way
to protect the property the furniture, which is why it's
in the room when we walked through. And later she
wrote a letter to Roberte Lee's wife and said that

(54:56):
her and her family were then I think living in
Alexandria now, I said to the tour guide, because he
wasn't leading tours, he was just standing there and we
were the last ones in the building, and we got
a lot of time to film because we were the
last ones in the building. I said, are you telling
me this guy was such a mean racist and mistreated

(55:17):
these slaves. He inherited that they wanted to protect his
property for him, and then they wrote to his wife
to say, here's where my spouse and children are living
now after the Civil War. I said, that seems a
little like there was a relationship here. Maybe he actually
treated them well. And this is a seriously complicated issue
that we in twenty twenty five cannot fully comprehend. But

(55:38):
we know that Roberty Lee wrote against slavery. But what
I went there and what I saw was, you know,
as a guy born in Jackson, Mississippi, you're in Mississippi,
as a guy who lives in the South, I have
to tell you, I got a little tipped because I'm thinking,
are you trying to make all of us Southerners and
our history look like we're all and tell you, I

(56:00):
don't buy that the Civil War was all about slavery
because there were a lot of states doing away with it,
a lot of people doing with a lot of people
in the South down and then do it at all.
I think people go to war for different reasons, some
state rights, some slavery, whatever. But to make the whole
thing out about slavery, which I was reading on the
you know, the boards there, I didn't like it. I

(56:22):
didn't think it was accurate and I thought they were
mistreating generally. And we're going to do a documentary and
try to set the record straight because we filmed a lot.

Speaker 2 (56:29):
What say you, yeah, it needs to be done. You know,
I'm still holding out. I hope that President Trump nominates
America First Crew Patriots to these commissions, like the Renaming Commission,
the Monuments Commission, and those kind of things, to actually
be the chair people, the chairman of those commissions so

(56:50):
that they can take the appropriate actions and remove these
smears and put the facts out.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
Look.

Speaker 2 (56:56):
You know, as you mentioned, Brandon, it's a complex situation.
I'm working on my first book right now. Part of
that book is a chapter on historical figures that I
studied when I was a child and the qualities that
I admire about them. And one of those figures is
going to be President Jefferson Davis. I live up just
a few miles from his last home at Bouvois in Biloxi, Mississippi,

(57:20):
and been through it, and been through the Presidential Library,
and through the cemetery, which I call the Arlington of
the South, the Confederate Armies, unknown soldiers buried there, Davis's dad,
who is an American Revolutionary War soldier is buried there,
and those kind of things. It's a complicated set of history,
and we have to study that history in an objective

(57:43):
and honest manner. And what's happened to this country the
last five years especially, is has been a dishonest approach
and use of government power and your tax dollars in
mind to tell the story about this time in our
nation's history in a way that smears individuals personally and

(58:06):
really smears the values of the country, which are the
most noble. And again, I'll remind everybody the United States
of America is the country that's lifted the most people
out of poverty and put them in a prosperous place
so that they can achieve liberty and freedom that we
have here in this country. And we've got to find
a way to turn that around. And I hope Donald

(58:27):
Trump appoints people to do that. I don't think he's
appointed down that low yet, but he still has those
opportunities to fix it.

Speaker 1 (58:35):
So you agree with me that it seems as though
some wokeness has hit all into national cemetery.

Speaker 2 (58:42):
Oh yeah. We tried to get the statue of Jefferson
Davis that was in New Orleans. That Mayor Landrew I
think took down the least statue, the equestrian statue from
General Beauregard and the Jefferson Davis statue. We tried to
get the statue you from over there, and the Lieutenant
Governor of Louisiana told me that the people that have

(59:03):
control over it will only release it to come over
here if it's displayed in a manner that is not
respectful to Davis himself.

Speaker 1 (59:14):
So they have statues that they've taken down from Arlington
and they won't even allow you guys to take them
down to Southern Mississippi.

Speaker 2 (59:23):
Yeah, the Reconciliation Monument or the peace Monument that Ezekiel Moses,
the first Jewish graduate of the Citadel, put together to
as a reconciliation moment that a Republican president, White President
even said it was a fine reconciliation moment was torn

(59:45):
down through the renaming commission because they smeared not only
the sculptor, but the meeting of the statue. And it
was right there in Arlington Cemetery. In the law that
was passed on the renaming commission said nothing in the
cemeteries was to be touched, and they broke a lot
to do it anyway, and it's in pieces there. It
needs to be put back into Arlington Cemetery and as

(01:00:07):
soon as possible.

Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
And we tried finding it on our second day. We
were having a hard time and we were running out
of time. So when we go back. We're gonna go there,
we go to Audie Murphy's grave. We're going to go
to that monument you're talking about, because I was reading
articles about it, and we're going to do a piece
on that too.

Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
Because Google, if you google Defend Arlington, you can find
the group that's been in court trying to save it
first and now trying to reinstate that monument. Defend Arlington.
They could certainly use your help.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Yeah, I'm going to give them some press, but we
want to do a little documentary news story on that.
Because as I talked to Jivon Fleet, who was raised
in China, I don't know if you've been her, not
I have. She was talking about and we learned at
the Anti Commage Museum last week, whether it was in
North Korea, China, Vietnam, wherever it was, I kept seeing

(01:01:07):
this common theme destruction of the family, destruction of traditional institutions,
destruction of nationalism or patriotism for that specific country, and
destruction of their history right right. And as I went
through those museums and are through that museum, there were

(01:01:28):
showing every one of those communists did that, North Korea, Vietnam,
you name it. They were doing that. That's what they're
doing here. They're tearing down our history, whether it's good
or bad, all right, And there's nobody perfect. Brandon House
is a perfect right, So do we have a lot
of people in our history that did things we don't

(01:01:50):
agree with. But you don't measure a person's whole life
by a few things. Not when you look at the founders,
did Thomas Jefferson owns? Yeah? Apparently he liked one of
them so much in a child with.

Speaker 2 (01:02:03):
Them, right, So, so not convinced that's actually true based
on DNA findings, but really I'll stipulate that it might be.

Speaker 1 (01:02:14):
Okay, Well, yeah, Thomas Jefferson is the father of the
Decoration of Independence, pretty much, is he not? So let's
trash Thomas Jefferson because he had slaves. Okay, it's a
complicated issue. It's not something we agree with. And it
was on its way out the door. It was on
its way out the door. And if we never had

(01:02:35):
a civil war in America, I think it would have
gone away on its own as it already was. So
we tear down the Jefferson Memorial? Who were just in?
Do we tear down Mount Vernon? I mean where do
we stop? Where do we stop? And that's what these
communis are trying to do to Arlington.

Speaker 2 (01:02:54):
Yes, the Founders rode into the Constitution the first date
that was it was allowed to outlaw the international slave
trade coming into the United States, And on the day
that that date occurred, the Congress passed that law to
do that. So, I mean, it's just it's a complex
situation that inflicted not just our society, but societies around

(01:03:16):
the world. It still inflicts societies around the world outside
of the United States of America. I would like to
see more work done to totally eliminate slavery in all
of its forms as it exists today, instead of all
this craziness to try to rewrite American history and smear
people's individual personalities when they don't really deserve it. Look,

(01:03:39):
if it's deserved, I'm all for it if the historical
facts support that argument, But by and large it doesn't.
And we've got to protect our written history so all
Americans are able to study it and learn the lessons
of the past and make sure that the country is
freer and more prosperous and their children's liberty is protected

(01:04:00):
the way the Founders intended, which they really did intend
that in a way that hasn't been possible throughout our
historical pass and it's not even possible today based on
what we've seen from the pandemic response and laws that
are being used and abused from that.

Speaker 1 (01:04:15):
Well, I'll tell you this little story and they'll let
you go. So we're trying to find this reconciliation monument
where they've taken a lot of it down. They couldn't
take the base of it down because they did they
would disturb the graves. From what I was told by
one of the park service guys, that's true. Now, as
I was trying to find it, he basically pointed us
to the area. We headed that direction, could not find you,

(01:04:40):
and we were running out of time, starting to rain,
But there's this park. I don't know if he's an
employee volunteer. I'm going to assume he was a volunteer.
But he was wearing a Arlington Cemetery shirt. I said, sir,
do you know where you know the controversial monument where
they took down a bunch of it Confederate you know

(01:05:00):
where that is? Over that direction? Some way? I don't know.
I don't know anything about the Confederates, and he turned
his back on me, and it was like, okay, wow,
you're here to serve the public, this is our history.
Can you not just be polite? I mean, even the
wokeness in that guy was such he couldn't say, oh yeah,

(01:05:22):
I mean, he had no idea.

Speaker 5 (01:05:23):
I told him.

Speaker 1 (01:05:24):
I told him I'm with the press, I'm wanting to
do a store and he couldn't even so he didn't
even know where I was coming from on it. But
he couldn't even know I don't know anything about the Confederates,
and he turned his back. I'm like, wow, this is
really a shame. This is really a shame. So we're
gonna do more on this, because we shouldn't be tearing
down these monuments, as you're stating, And this is a

(01:05:48):
communist tactic going on for decades, for hundreds of year,
or at least one hundred plus years in other countries
as I've named Vietnam, North Korea, Laos, other places.

Speaker 5 (01:05:59):
So we're going to we're.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
Gonna get back to it. But and I think we're
also going to get finally, we ran out of time too.
We started that direction section sixty and one of your
friends who was killed when some when I guess an
Islamic guy threw a grenade in his tent, right.

Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
That's right, the first night of our Iraqi freedom.

Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
So we want to do a story on him as well.
So we have a lot of history to creak out.
Can let me ask you this, what do you think
about us going around and grabbing up all this footage
and doing history and turning world YouTube into a little
bit of a history channel, particularly on the weekends.

Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
I think it's badly needed. You look at what the
History channel turns out today. It's not history anymore like
what I saw when I was growing up as a
kid in my teens when it first came about, And
it's a it's a space that must be filled, and
it's seeming critically more important that it be filled now

(01:06:55):
than it was then because there's an active Marxist movement
to destroy it so that we don't know our own
history and we're not proud of this country. You look
no further than the Hated sixteen nineteen project as a
formal way of attempting to do that through academia and
the media and other non governmental organization institutions. And that's

(01:07:19):
why some of the things you've read, when you've seen
these placards and those kinds of things are written the
way they are is because of that movement.

Speaker 1 (01:07:28):
Indeed it is Robmanus dot com, Robmayanus dot com. Thank
you so much, colonel.

Speaker 2 (01:07:34):
Thank you Brandon. I appreciate what you do, colonel.

Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
And you my friend, Colonel Rob Manus checking in and
Melissa brought me my dataton. If you want to support
our network and your health at the same time, so
it's a win win, consider going to Melissa House GPA
dot com. Melissa House GPA dot com. One little scoop
is the equivalent of ninety billion plant cells. Ninety billion

(01:07:59):
and as you know he's got I have five or
six clinical trials behind it. The man that developed it
was raising it for his shellfish, got a terminal cancer
diagnosis and started eating it. I'm not making claims, I'm
just telling you the story. Ended up living another ten years.
His biopsies all eleven of them came back but nine

(01:08:19):
and Global Plankton Alliance was launched. So I drink it
every day and put a half a scoop on Vali's food.
And we highly recommend you take this. I take this
I take my Bella Grace, and I swish with my
new MEI the power of three. I do these three

(01:08:42):
every day. We took these three with us in the
motor coach, and we took them every day. So do
what we do, Melssa and I do this every day.
I think I've actually had two of these already today.
Usually I do one, but sometimes I do two. I
switch with this sometimes if I feel like somebody's coming down,

(01:09:03):
I'll switch with my new met every hour on the
hour to fight it off. So you can find all
this at worldviewtube dot com. Slash sponsors, the Gatatanas at
Mossa HOUSEGPA dot com. But you'll find all of it
right here, all of it right here, Worldvietube dot com,
Slash sponsors, Worldviewtube dot com Forward Slash sponsors. Let me

(01:09:29):
finish this real quick. That's all there is to it.
I was running through the bloodstream now quillent of ninety

(01:09:50):
billion plant cells. All right, check that out. Great way
to support us and your health. Lots and lots of
your own subscriptions for all three of these. You're on
a subscription you get automatically, just like we do. So
we don't run out because we take it every day.
And by the way, the Gatton really curbs your appetite,

(01:10:10):
totally takes away your desire for junk food. That's for me,
that's for Melissa, does for a lot of other people
we've talked to. Really takes away you're craving for junk food,
so one of many benefits. Check it out worldviewtube dot
com Slash sponsors worldviewtube dot com Forward slash sponsors. You'll

(01:10:30):
find it there along with Bella, Grace and Numi
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