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August 22, 2025 • 40 mins
Truth Day will be here soon. Probably 2026. Pinpoint the 1992 Election and the unusual ascendancy of the Clinton Globalists who sold their positions for profit. And almost got away with it.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
General. The summer is winding up. Kids are getting back
to school. You got some college kids and high school.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Kids, don't you it is, and they are talk to
me what's going on over there with the General's h barracks.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
My eldest is starting his third year at the University
of Dayton.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
Dayton, I wait to get the tea in there? Have
you noticed the younger kids missed the tea? So you're
hearing Dayton.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
It's a glottal stop that they employ. What it's called
a glottal stop. All right, they are my sec. It's Dayton,
Yes it is.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
All right, So you got one at ud.

Speaker 4 (00:36):
There are three Dayton's in this world.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
One of them is in Ohio, one of them is
in Tennessee where the Scopes monkey trial took place, and
then the other is in Egypt. But anyway, then we
have my second oldest, who is a senior at Dublin
Jerome Public High School, and then my youngest who is
an eighth grader at Saint Bridge Elementary School. All right,

(01:02):
and he has made the football team and the golf team.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
All right, all right, I am embroiled in the s C.
I've an sec girl, I've got one of the twins
is down at Old Miss that you have Sworty Rush
going on right now.

Speaker 4 (01:17):
You have as i'd have.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
A young miss at Old Miss. Shorty Rush is such
a different thing down there in the South. It's blowing up.
It's making national news. All the girls look the same, Uh,
they all dance, they're all trying to attract potential new
members whatever you know, sorority sisters.

Speaker 4 (01:37):
This whole come dense with us.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
I don't know. I mean, it's a phenomenon of its own.
I'm just it's it's hard for dad to get his
brain wrapped around. But you know, the girls love it.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
It seems like to them is silly to us.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
It seems you know, it seems like there is a
at least in the South, there's a push back towards traditionalism.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
Very true, and.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
The news is picking up on it. It's almost like
culturally there's a there's a desire to have a little
more tradition.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
As you often said, culture is upstream from many important things.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Yeah, I don't know who said it first, but it's
so true, right.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Bright Andrew Breitbart.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
I'm heartened by that. I think if you don't have,
if you don't have traditions and customs. What do you have?
You have to have? You just have a bunch of
ideas flying around.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Your life is as shaky as a fiddler on the roof.
So there was a line from that.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
The other twins going to Miami University, the other Oxford.
And even though I don't have an Ohio state kid,
we'll get the high State Texas game coming up. It's
gonna be a banger general my son and I. Cameron's
twenty three studying for the elsat Indeed and wants to

(02:53):
go to law school.

Speaker 4 (02:54):
Perfect.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
It's really fallen for American history, especially revolutionary war analysis.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
That will help him in doing legal work.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
You don't miss that, right if you're if your if
your kid says, you know, indicates some interest in history, man,
you got to feed that. I saw, you know, his
Amazon account is tied to my account, and I saw
him looking at books on the Founding Fathers, and long

(03:23):
story short, we booked a trip to DC. We decided
to do this trip just a few days before President
Trump ordered the nationalized the police and crime fighting. So
we go out there not sure what to expect. I
wasn't sure if it was going to be Beirut in
eighty three, or if this is going to be George

(03:45):
Floyd into twenty twenty, the summer twenty twenty, I always expect,
you know this Selma, Alabama and the fifties. I mean,
what do we what are we going to be driving into?

Speaker 3 (03:55):
Right, Having been a National Guardsman, I can tell you,
even though I've not been there, it was nothing.

Speaker 4 (04:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
They're basically being used as an extra set of eyes
and ears for the local police. They can be places
where a limited number of local policemen cannot, but then
when something goes down, they call the local police. It's
like a neighborhood watch basically.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
Right, keeping an eye on the on the federal monuments
and the federal property.

Speaker 4 (04:19):
Right.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
And nobody's going to act up in front of these
guys in they're m vy.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
No they try. I saw someone through a sandwich at
a National guardsman that did not go well. You see
some small full time activists around DuPont Circle around the
White House, you know, doing their their Donald Trump must
go go danger danger there's a fascist in the White House.
But most of the people that I saw were waving

(04:46):
at the troops and getting selfies. So but you know,
DC is ninety percent it votes ninety percent Democrat. It's
a ninety ten.

Speaker 4 (04:58):
City. Very true.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Where was the Democrat? Where are those people? If ninety
percent of that community is in the opposing political party
and the leader of the party in power deploys federal
troops there, where was everyone else? We know what they're
giving interviews to see it in an MSNBC going, well,

(05:23):
you know, it is a little area around here, it's
a little crazy.

Speaker 4 (05:26):
Yeah, they're saying it's not so bad.

Speaker 1 (05:29):
I did see that on truth Social that it was
just announced that DC is now crime free. We went
over the National Archives, saw the Declaration of Independence, the
US Constitution, the Bill Rights. I would say they need
to be They're fading, really hard to read. They would
be hard to read if you saw it in real

(05:52):
time in seventeen seventy six or in the seventeen eighties.
They write really really small, and the penmanship looks like
someone it's in between calligraphy and art. It's really really
hard to read. Are we sure that the words written
down were exactly have been translated and transcribed into our

(06:17):
school books? They're correct? Way? I mean, because I'm reading these,
I'm trying to read them, and I'm looking at I'm like,
how can you? How do you know what that says?
They didn't have the Internet. They couldn't. They weren't scanning
these things up in seven in the seventeen seventies. But
who just the reading the cursive, it's so hard to
read well. And they're a little little. I mean, if

(06:39):
this was a font, it would be like two point font.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
Yes, And some of the SA's look like f's sight.

Speaker 1 (06:47):
I did ask where the Warren report on JFK's assassination was.
There's national archives and the nine to eleven recently declassified
CIA and FBI intelligence files. They acted like they don't exist.
And then the Epstein list, I did ask for the

(07:07):
Epstein list. Nothing. No sense of humor of at the
Smithsonian either. Whenever the Smithsonian Museum on American History, you
have the original Star Spangled banner, the flag that inspired
the national anthem is the museum centerpiece. Really really cool exhibit.
It's in a dark room. You go back behind a wall,

(07:28):
all dark, and it's laid out. It's huge, it's massive,
it's absolutely beautiful. Have you been to the Smithsonian.

Speaker 4 (07:36):
I have, especially the Aaron Space part.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
There's Thomas Jefferson our Man TJ's writing desk, his lap
desk that he used when he was drafting the Declaration
of Independence Number sixteen stovepipe hat is there and one
of my favorite, my favorite car I've seen two now,
the Tucker forty eighth.

Speaker 4 (08:00):
Yeah, it's a Tucker.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
Whenever I go to DC, I always try to stay
at the Holiday Inn on sixth.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
I hear that, I've heard other people mention that.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
And it's great because down in the basement there's a
bar called the twenty first Amendments, which is of course
when they reinstated the legality of drinking.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
But not they didn't reinstate drinking. That never stopped. No,
that did not stop. We stayed at the Mayflower Hotel,
built in nineteen twenty five Art Deco, and it really
their bar is called the Edgar as in Jay Edgar, right,
and the menu is like an old file, like an
intelligence file, and it's typed up in that time typewriter type.

(08:43):
Very cool.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
The other thing is neat about the Holiday In at
sixth and see it's right next to the Smithsonian Air
and Space Museum, but it also on the top floor
as a pool.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
Yeah again, I've heard open air. I've heard, yeah, I've
heard great things about that particular holiday. In great little
road trip, especially as your your dollar goes uh doesn't
go very far anymore. It's a great, great family trip
if you've got a little few extra days this fall,
like if your kids have a fall break or a
little fall break. It's a great one. And you're just

(09:15):
a short drive half an hour down to Mount Vernon,
George Washington's abode, very cool, a lot of history there.
He married wealthy, married wealthy, always important, kind of reminder
of my son he married wealthy. And then off to
Colonial Williamsburg, very neat, down to Yorktown, Willymond, Mary Home Avoy,
very Woman Mary Beautiful Campus, Yorktown. The American Revolutionary War

(09:40):
Museum is there, another great trip. And then over to Norfolk.
I wanted to Harry S. Truman. The carrier was in
was in Norfolk, so we were trying to figure out
how to get there.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
They have a tour that you can take on a
launch that will take you like twenty dollars a person.
It will take you all throughout the just speak U
or the Naval shipyard.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
We did not do that.

Speaker 4 (10:02):
Did you go to Wisconsin.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
We know, we didn't do anything. We didn't have a
lot of times. We had to book up to Charlottesville
as our last night. We ran up to Charlottesville, spent
the night, had a great burger at a place called
Citizen Burger, which is of course Thomas Jeffson with Forever
the Citizens. All in all fantastic. But after the break,
I want to talk about John Bolton's raid. I want
to talk about the Clintons, and I want to talk

(10:25):
about what I think Donald Trump needs to have, which
is a new deal for the next generation. That's when
break this and let's have a new deal for the
next generation. All right, welcome back for the defense of
the American people. We are your eyes and ears and
interpreters of what's happening in the United States and around

(10:46):
the world. If you are of a moderate conservative bent,
or you are more of a populist and you think
that the system is rigged to the few, If you
don't want your sons and daughters drug off to foreign wars,

(11:07):
if you don't like profligate spending of everything of everybody, everyone,
especially our government. If you think that we have a
total mismatch in society from your traditions and your morey's
and your values. This is a show for you, and
we started the show in twenty seventeen. We are on

(11:29):
six to ten WTV in three times on the weekend,
Friday's six pm, Sunday's eleven am, and Sunday seven pm.
You can always catch the show on iHeartMedia app, iTunes,
Purple podcast Button, and Spotify. General FBI rates John Bolton's home.
They search the residents of Trump's former national security advisor Thoughts.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
They claim that they are looking for unauthorized possession of
classified intelligence.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Yeah, and explain that one thing you mentioned to me
on our way into the studio today.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
There's a technique in the intelligence community to determine who
is leaking what to whom, if any.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
And what'd you study in college?

Speaker 3 (12:17):
I studied national security as a minor. And what it
basically said or does, is that it's called a barium meal,
named after what the surgeons do with X rays.

Speaker 4 (12:32):
But what they're doing basically is, when they come up with.

Speaker 3 (12:35):
A classified document, they print let's say it's going to
be distributed to ten people, they print it up in
ten subtly different ways.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
Maybe only one word is changed.

Speaker 3 (12:46):
Or maybe there's a typo somewhere in the document that
is there on purpose, and each person gets an individual
copy of that and then when that document is then
found in the possession of the New York Time, they
just go and find each of the little errors that
is there and they can tell whom from whom that

(13:08):
document came.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
Fascinating. Fascinating. Uh, what's your theory why they Why did
Cash Patel start with John Bolton again our last show.
It's a sense that there's a D Day coming. You
just know, there's a grand swell, you can feel it.
There's a and there's there's there's a silence, a deafening silence. Uh.

(13:35):
You know, you know, Donald Trump and his crew want
to get to the bottom of everything, everything, and I
think they will. I mean, look how fast they've moved
on their their agenda in the first six seven months.
They're there, way ahead of pace. You've not seen anything yet,
and I I yeah, I believe you're going to see

(13:56):
a lot of very prominent people get in purp walk
doing morning raids. And just as the as our intelligence
community and FBI and elements within these agencies became hyper partisan,
they became and maybe they always have been. But you know,
now it's our turn. You know, Joe Kennedy's not around

(14:19):
to call stuff out. Robert A. Taft isn't around any
to call stuff out. Now it's our turn. Those are
probably one or two bad examples. But you see what
I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (14:28):
I see exactly what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (14:29):
It's our job, it's the people. We're the bosses. And
at the end of the day, if you're gonna fa
you're gonna fofo. And I believe that you can go
all the way back to the Clintons, not Bill Clinton,
the Clintons into the early nineties, with his unusual ascendancy

(14:50):
to national politics in the world stage. A little governor,
little state governor Arkansas becomes President of the United States
over the dynasty of the Bushes and the of the
East Coast establishment, the Texas Big Oil.

Speaker 4 (15:09):
How did Bill.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
Clinton get there? And then once he got there, if
you if you believe in my theory that Bill Clinton
was recruited by global global globalists, globalists, global forces, this
new world order, it's up for grabs. The United States
is the unipolar power for the first time in the
history or the world. One nation rules them all, Wow,

(15:31):
you want to if you're if you're not in the room,
you need to get in the room. Well, they, whoever
they are, were not in the room. The Bushes had
been in the room for a long time. The Tafts,
I mean, there are families that go back hundreds of years.
They were in the room. The East Coast ivy elite
had been running this country since its founding, and then

(15:56):
the Clintons arrive.

Speaker 3 (15:58):
I think what Trump is trying to do with all
this is to send a message that if you're going
to do this to your political opponents, then it's going
to be done back to you.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Well, it has to be, because someone has to do it.
If the if America was sold out, if the interests,
if the American people's interests, Main Street's interests were demoted,
and the agendas and interest of foreign countries were promoted,

(16:28):
foreign corporations were promoted, or even domestic corporations were promoted
to the detriment of the American people. My view, and
this is the view of the people that I look
up to historically, like Ronald Reagan, like Robert A. Taft,
like Jack Kennedy, would say, every federal exercise of power

(16:53):
either increases your freedom and liberty or decreases it. And
when the if you're the present and you're going to
sign things, you need to be able to explain to
the American people in every single EO, how this increases
your freedom and liberty and security. Now, security has been
overweighted a lot, but we are not looking, we're not

(17:18):
asking that question anymore with these eos or congressional acts
or the big beautiful bill. Tell me line by line
each one of the things, how it increases my children's
freedom and liberties and their security to prosper go.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
When I was going through law school, Dean Freeman, who
was an authority, he pea, yes, who was authority on
this subject, wasn't he?

Speaker 4 (17:47):
His belly was so big, yes, it was.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
And his shirts I don't think he bought a dress shirt,
since he was wearing a forty two regular sport coat.
Perhaps by the time I arrived in law school, Professor
Freeman was wearing probably a fifty two.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
That's right, isn't it. And he he would say.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
He taught my very first law pardon me to cut
you off, but my very first law school class. Day one,
first class, first year law school. Brian Freeman. Professor Freeman
con law constitutional law, and I was late. I was
prone to being not exactly on time in college. If
I made it to class, I was the remaining seat

(18:28):
was right in front row, center, right in front of him,
and Professor Freeman's belly was so big the buttons that
were keeping that shirt together were screaming in pain. And
if every time he would like cough or stretch. Like
those of us in the front row, we were leaning

(18:49):
to the left of the right because we didn't want
to take a button to the eye. Sorry, go ahead, buddy.

Speaker 3 (18:53):
Dean Freeman expressed to us that how executive orders worked
were that it was a directive to the federal government
to do things in a certain way. So he gave
us the for instance, which was before the Congress enacted
Title seven, which guaranteed equal treatment and employment, the President

(19:14):
had issued an executive order that anyone contracting with the
government must do what was in Title seven, even though
it was not yet law. And if you didn't do that,
then you didn't get contracts. So these large aerospace companies
like Boeing and all suddenly they had to get rid

(19:36):
of all discrimination in anything that they were doing. But
It was not that the president could just evade Congress
and issue an executive order and then that would bind
you and me. It would bind only those with whom
the federal government was doing business if they wanted to
continue to do business. Boeing had the right to say, no,

(19:59):
we are still going to discriminate, and we'll just take
our planes and sell them elsewhere.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
If you if you look back at where where did
where's history going to say? The fulcrum was in terms
of you can look back at when things change. Obviously,
coming out of World War Two in the fifties, he
had Ike arguably the most popular president of the twentieth century,

(20:24):
and then you got Jack Kennedy and JFK would have
was a great president, would have been fabulous president. But
then Vietnam took a toll, Nixon took a toll, the
economy took us down, Reagan brought us back up. Bush
was there to kind of keep us moving in the
right direction. But once you had unchecked power, you needed

(20:45):
to be in the room of the hegemon, the unipol
or power of the world. And that's where Bill Clinton
came out of nowhere. And then things started getting weird.
And let's pick up that after the break getting weird.
So somewhere along the way, the FBI cozied up nice

(21:07):
and tight wick to Clintons, and we spent a fair
amount of time talking about the nineties and early nineties
and Bill Clinton and whoever he drug into the White
House with them. Of course, you had the real estate
ventures with the mcdougalls. You had banking disasters down in Arkansas.

(21:33):
You had Clinton associates getting indicted. The governor was a
Jim Guide Tucker was indicted down there. Hillary Clinton is
a lawyer at the Rose Law firm. All her billing
records suddenly disappeared.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
All of the cattle futures that she invested in went crazy,
and everybody else has lost money.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
FBI field agents had promising leads that were getting ignored.
And then Ken Starr. Remember Kenneth Starr was not for
Monica Lewinsky. Kenneth Starr was for white crime, right, that
was Kenneth Starr's job.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Monica Lewinsky rewarded by becoming later the dean of Pepperdine
Law School.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
Monica LeWitt didn't know that Monica Lewinsky shifted focus away
from the financial crimes that were getting very close to
the Clintons. So there was paid to play going on.
There was a lot of stuff going on there and
a pattern developed that has allowed the FBI to be sidelined.
Then at the same time, do you remember General nine

(22:39):
over nine hundred FBI background files on prominent Republicans showed
up accessed by the Clinton White.

Speaker 4 (22:46):
House, showed up in the White House.

Speaker 1 (22:48):
It was just a bureaucratic mistake. Well, James Baker, no
one knew who signed for them. Tony Snow, you know, JOHNSONUNU,
you haveical espionage, political espionage, and a muted FBI response. Ah,
they said, as a clerical error, no problem.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Only nine hundred files, nine hundred Democrat operatives and officials
and elected.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
Members of Congress, their invest their their FBI files, investigative
files showed up in Trump's White House. That's no clerical error.
Ken Starr says, inappropriate, but not criminal. So then the
Clinton Foundation is started as soon as Bill's out of

(23:45):
office two thousand and one, and there is a certain
level of genius to that. Sure, the Clinton Foundation. Why
in my opinion, in my opinion, the Clinton Foundation of
what I've read and my own lawyer brain and my
own cynicism is a pay to play vessel.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
It's a way it's renting corruption rather than owning corruption.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
If you're not familiar with the Uranium one deal yet
you will. This is part of D Day. This is
part of Trump's D Day or T Day, T for
Truth Day. You're gonna find, You're going to hear. I
believe my opinion that the Clinton Foundation and Uranium one

(24:32):
Deal and one hundred million plus US dollars find themselves
in the Clinton Foundation. The Crown Prince of Bahrain made
a substantial donation after being denied access to.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Bill Clinton, then to the Clinton Foundation, and then suddenly
you have.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Access Saudi Arabia, cutter, Algeria, donations, donations, weapons, all right,
I mean, and we're going to start to see more
about this.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
And it's important to note what does the Clinton Foundation
provide to the Clintons. It provides them condos all over
the world. It provides them an aircraft to fly anywhere
they wanted, tax free. Yeah, and all of this comes
without them having to own it. It's just provided to them.
But what do you care if the condo you're staying
in is owned by a foundation? Or whether it's owned

(25:34):
by you as long as you control its use.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
I'm predicting that we're going to learn more in twenty
twenty five and twenty twenty six that requests for search
warrants were denied, requests for grand juries were denied, requests
for and subpoenas were refused, not honored, not enforced. I
think the name Loretta Lynch is going to re emerge.

(25:58):
I think Andrew McCabe is going to re emerge. I
think that there's going to be a playbook that they
were just trying to run out the clock before the
twenty the twenty sixteen election, because if you can get
HRC in the office that has that big magic wand called.

Speaker 4 (26:21):
Pardon, everybody gets along, right, So.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
You have to do everything you can to get HRC
into the office. They did everything but shoot Donald Trump
in twenty sixteen. Well they they whoever they are, had
one or two really good opportunities to take him out
in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
Game within Nathan introviusis so I think.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
That if Donald Trump wasn't running in twenty twenty four,
there would have been a shot shot on him. No
at all, there wouldn't have been if he's just out golfing.
Do you think that there's just going to be a guy.
They are ready to take a shot out him.

Speaker 3 (27:04):
Now, and none of these cases that he was prosecuted
under which have been reversed now.

Speaker 4 (27:10):
Have would have ever taken place.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
Did I mention the email server scandal? Of course, she's
running a private email server at her home.

Speaker 4 (27:21):
And then when it's subpoenad she wipes it.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
Yeah. I think that the additional names like Peter Struck,
Lisa Page, a lot of names are going to come out,
and there's going to be a lot of burn bags.
There's going to be evidence of burn bags. Device is destroyed.

(27:47):
You have more and more people, they're going to take
the Fifth Amendment. You know, there's something called bleach bit,
which is what you use to delete digital or forensically
forensic evidence.

Speaker 3 (28:02):
What people don't realize about a computer hard drive is
that everything you put on there stays on there. It's
just that the tag that starts where that information can
be found, that is what is erased. But if you
are a forensic experts, you.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
Found they found bleach bit, you can stay. I read
the bleach bit was found on Hillary's server.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
Right, that's why you have to erase every single thing,
even in the unallocated spaces of the hard drive where
the old stuff is.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
They just throw it in the river.

Speaker 4 (28:32):
Well you just throw it at that.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
How many computers are in the Potomac or in Lake Mead.
The mysterious Bill Clinton tarmac meeting June of Tooth twenty sixteen,
Well they.

Speaker 4 (28:45):
Just talked about grandchildren for three three hours.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
Loretta Lynch, Jim Comey should be looking at countries that don't.

Speaker 4 (28:53):
Have extradition extradition Treetnam.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
And uh, I think you're gonna I think there are.
My guess is there are FBI whistleblowers, probably retired FBI whistleblowers,
maybe even retired Secret Service. I don't there's so much.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
This is the beginning, not the this is Yeah.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
There's so much. It's and it's all, you're all, it's all.
And then there's the Epstein connection. Don't forget about that.
Epstein went to the White House at least seventeen times.
His name's in their thirty seven total.

Speaker 4 (29:24):
Times, but not during the Trump administration.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
Bill Clinton was on Epstein's plan at least twenty six times,
five without any Secret Service five It all we're going
to go back, right, You're going to go back to
nineteen ninety two, nineteen ninety one, and who was behind
getting this guy into office? And once he was there

(29:46):
and entrenched, it got picked up by Obama and it
was a continuation of selling out your office and your
position for enrichment. And if that's the way the Clintons
and Obamas thought it the way politics was, then they

(30:07):
are wrong. They need to read about more about George H. W.
Bush and his upbringing. They need to read more about
Ronald Reagan and his upbringing, and even Jimmy Carter. All Right,
I won't speak to Nixon because Nixon probably Nixon might
have set the template here.

Speaker 4 (30:25):
I think he tried to fight fire with fire and
got caught.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
I don't think it was this bad with It might
have been this bad with LBJ, but it was absolutely
This is going to turn out, in my opinion, to
be a thirty plus year criminal conspiracy against the American people. Hey,
two things before we jump back into the show. First,

(30:51):
we have to thank Chezra Chevy gmc our singular sponsor.
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(31:13):
It's absolutely beautiful.

Speaker 3 (31:15):
Why not buy American? Why not employ your neighbors and
your friends?

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Exactly? They have right now, they have two hundred and
thirty seven vehicles for sale right there in Delaware. Just
in between Delaware and in Columbus is twenty three North.
Check them out and thank them for supporting our show.
Just let them know you're listener of the for the defense. Also,
if a government agent, should they.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
Give you eighty percent off a new car price if
you mentioned those stop they don't.

Speaker 1 (31:44):
Also, if pesky government agents, police detective show up at
your house, your place for employment, maybe want to grab
your kid's phone and go through it and see what
here is she's been going up to. Or the lights
come on behind you and you get arrested, give us
a call. We are through Friday Criminal Defense Firm, thirty
one years in counting God Willing six one four eight

(32:05):
eight four eleven hundred.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
That call would come after you have firmly pushed your
upper lip into your lower lip when asked questions.

Speaker 1 (32:12):
Yeah, keep your mouth shut. That's how fish get caught,
all right, General U. The FBI has a love affair
with had a love affair with the Clintons, a lot
of things, and I just it's going to all come out.
I just know that it is what I want President
Trump to do. I would love to see the man

(32:33):
Trump two point zero as he softened. He does seem
to be genuinely interested in ending all war. And I
found Hillary Clinton's statement that if he brings peace, she
would nominate him for the no Belt. I'm thinking she
knows her her neck is out there and maybe start
extending the olive branch. Also, a lot of these people

(32:56):
are very silent. They're not saying much. You want a
better deal for your children. This needs to be the
message coming out of the White House heading into twenty
six to save the House and Senate. You get up
every morning, you go to work, you pay your bills,
you watch your shows, you scroll your screens, you scroll
your screens, and the paycheck that you get every other week,

(33:22):
it's just it can't keep up. At the end of
the day. It just isn't keeping up your house. If
you're lucky enough to own a home, you probably have
a mortgage, you don't really own it. And if you
do own your home without a mortgage, you still don't
own it. The government has its own.

Speaker 4 (33:41):
And pretty taxes every year.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
So property tax on your real estate needs to be repealed.
Get rid of property tax. Stop taxing our lifeline to
freedom and liberty, which is your You can own your
home and oil and no one can move you, period hard. Stop.

(34:04):
We've been brainwashed into taxation that it's a right of
the government. It is not.

Speaker 4 (34:10):
Government does not have rights powers, people have rights.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
And number two, stop taxing our labor. If you get
a paycheck, that means you're selling your service or goods,
and you shouldn't. The government shouldn't be taxing your labor.
There are other revenue sources. There are many other revenue sources.
We're seeing what tariffs are doing. You're seeing the introduction

(34:34):
of monumental billions, hundreds of billions of dollars of new
money entering the United States economy from around the world.
Why because of who's in the White House and the
strong military, robust economy, inflation is under control. We're probably

(34:54):
going to see a reduction by and interest rates, maybe
even half a point. America is on the upswing.

Speaker 3 (35:04):
And if you want more paycheck power, then maybe we
can get rid of all of these people who are
working for substandard wages because they're illegal.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
Stop taxing the real estate we live in, stop taxing
our labor, get rid of those and if it will
create a shortage, then start looking at what we can
continue to dose.

Speaker 3 (35:27):
Have you noticed when you go to the grocery stores
you're starting to see fourteen year olds again pushing the
carts around in the parking lots to move them back
and doing simple tasks. You didn't see that well when.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
Money is just being printed and dold out to key
preferred banks and those banks get the Federal Reserve notes,
and those banks now have a monopoly on where the
money goes next.

Speaker 3 (35:55):
And the extra creation of money that is the sole
cause of sustained inflation.

Speaker 1 (36:00):
So that's all. Domestically, we need a new deal for
our kids and grandkids, and maybe compromise on income tax.
Maybe the first one hundred thousand dollars is income tax free, right,
I mean, don't tax a living wage. Don't tax a
living wage. NATO Article five shackles dressed as security. NATO

(36:24):
has done nothing but perpetuate conflict period. Give our kids
and grandkids a government that stops stealing our wages for
wars we never choose.

Speaker 4 (36:36):
How about make Russia a member of NATO?

Speaker 1 (36:38):
Why not? Why not? Why not blow up NATO and
let's figure out another way to have peace. I can
tell you the citizens of Ukraine don't want this war.
The citizens of the United States don't want to be
in this war.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Citizens of Russia don't want this war.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
No one wants it. The people that want are the oligarchs.
The people that want are the ones that want to
control the natural resources and.

Speaker 4 (37:03):
The weapons testers that.

Speaker 1 (37:04):
Flows through there. If this is trickly about self determination
and letting the Russian speaking people get together and letting
the Ukrainian speaking people live together, let them do get out.
It's a boundary dispute. It has been going on since
Jesus lost his sandals. We're not going to stop it.

(37:26):
War doesn't bring peace. World War One showed us that.
World War II showed us that World War One made
Germany put Germany into a position that historically you should
have known. The German speaking people don't like to be
told what to do. You can ask, you can ask Rome,

(37:49):
you can ask just about anybody. You were not going
to get them to pay a butcher's bill they can
never make. You're not going to get them to agree
to no real meaning for national security defense. It was full,
It was just fulhardy. And then coming out of World
War Two, we start carving up the Middle East and
we don't even know the history there, Like you're just

(38:11):
going to draw arbitrary lands, arbitrary lines and holy lands.

Speaker 4 (38:15):
The Psychspeako agreement.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
It was all. It just seemed to be very avoidable.
And there were a lot of voices that didn't make
the history books that were crying from the rooftop, don't
do this, don't do this. You don't know their names
because they didn't win, but they're out there.

Speaker 4 (38:35):
The winners write the history books.

Speaker 1 (38:37):
And today, you know, I don't expect Europeans and Utopians
or the people that wear fake reading, big fat black
reading glasses to look smart on CNN and MSNBC to
understand this.

Speaker 4 (38:51):
Smart girl glasses, smart girl.

Speaker 1 (38:52):
Glasses are great. Our greatest problems are not in Kiev
or Gaza. They're here at home in our schools. Our
rising debt, are despairingly unemployed college graduates are increasingly unemployable
young in the cities who are fourteen fifteen years old

(39:14):
and broken urban school districts that don't stand a chance
to do anything. Let's figure out a way catch them
at fourteen and introduce bring the RTC down to middle schools.
Start warming this up to them. Bring in African American
and Hispanic and white Marines and Navy, an army, an

(39:39):
air force for you. Let them start talking to these
kids in middle school, give them an option besides being
a class disruptor.

Speaker 4 (39:49):
The military is full of high tech stuff.

Speaker 1 (39:52):
But back to the Bolton raid and what I think
is coming. T T day is coming. What do we
do when those sworn to protect the constitution are caught
undermining it, undermining it, spying on political rivals, silencing speech,
manipulating politics. This is treason in slow motion, and I

(40:16):
believe that that is what has happened in the last
thirty years. Every political system has its faults, but thus far,
the one that got us up to at least two thousand,
up to nine to eleven seemed to be pretty good.
That man, the wheels came off. After nine to eleven.

(40:36):
Something happened, and both parties are responsible.
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