Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:29):
Done, Buckle up, get the chin strap buckled in there,
General gets your helmet on.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Get the chin strap buckle securely.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Buckle up. It took a long time to get here, guys,
much longer than you may realize. What am I talking about,
the restoration of power to the American people. There's a
reason that General and I took you are loyal listeners anyway,
Thank you for that. There's a reason that General and
I took you all through several centuries of European and
(01:04):
American history during the last couple.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
Of years, which if you missed it, you can still
listen to it.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
The Purple Podcast Button, iHeartRadio iHeartRadio app. You can if
you just go back. Basically, over the last couple of years,
we have given a We've picked key moments in history,
both European and American history to highlight. And these are
(01:32):
really kind of the b sides of American history. This
is the stuff that didn't really make it in the
state approved textbooks, right, and to tell a parallel story
from the people's point of view. And I don't mean
people in the communist sense of course, or a Marxist
sense or Howard Zen sense. But there's a reason that
(01:56):
General and I took all of you through this history
we chose to start with and this is extremely relevant
and you've got to understand this elite. This what we're
going to say today on this show is going to
lead up to and defending Trump's nominees that are absolutely
going to get barbecued by mainstream media, the press, even
(02:22):
the establishment that but that is their bona fides, the
Republican establishment. They are going to barbecue Trump's people. Here's
why history is so important, and you have to know
how we got here. We chose to start with the
(02:46):
East India Company, which was a British trading corporation founded
in the sixteen hundreds by a rural, a royal rural,
a royal charter from one of the kings or queens,
whoever was Why that was important. You have the merger
of a merchant class with the political class as we
(03:12):
moved from as the world developed into more villages and
cities and non agrarian but they the merger of money
and politics in a quote free society that harver free.
You thought you were living in England in the sixteen
hundreds and seventeen hundreds, But the East India Company, again
(03:35):
a British trading corporation, became the world's most powerful business
and played a major role in the expansion of British
influence all across the world, especially Asia. It was the
black rock of the sixteen hundreds. London investors threw in
(03:56):
for a ship, a crew, and the ship would come
back a few months later with spices, silk, cotton, tea
from Asia and unchecked. It became the dominant political force
with its own private soldiers and intelligence network. It used
its financial power to colonize other parts of the world
(04:20):
India for instance, and turn those people into vassal states
under the quote protection of the flag of England. Now
that exploitation led to the birth of imperialism, cannibalizing the
land and the resources of other people. Put that aside.
(04:43):
Then we talked about the rise of lending and credit
and our guy Meyer Amshel Rothschild, where real power was discovered.
Not just having money, this is having so much more
money that you can make even more money, not in
(05:03):
a ship investing in a ship. You can make a
lot of money investing it into the political machine. The
power of controlling the money supply, the concepts of lending,
interest rates, credit, financialization of debt instruments. You could conquer
(05:24):
other territories without a bullet, well, without an arrow or
a sword or a ball, you could. It became a
much less expensive way to gain ground and wealth. And
as a Jew he could live the Meyra armsheld. Rothschild
(05:48):
could lend money with interest unlike Christians in Europe, and
Rothschild managed the finances of royal families offering currency exchange service.
Is because at that point in time there were different
denominations and the general you have had some fantastic shows
talking Thank you for that, talking about how money was
(06:10):
made and different types of coins and stored wealth. But
that was the birth of what we would call banking today.
And the Rothschild dynasty put bank branches across major European
cities London, Paris, Vienna, Naples, never New York, we'll come
back to that. And the family used this network to
(06:33):
lend money to governments to fund large scale public projects
and facilitate trade. They did it all. They were vertically integrated,
one stop shop, and they were taking fees and commissions
the whole time. And by financing wars and large government projects,
(07:00):
the investors can make a huge fortune. But what happens
if that nation state goes bankrupt? What happens if it
runs out of money, Well that's a problem. That's why
you need to make sure that your government that you're
lending money to has its teeth and claws on the
(07:22):
people and their incomes. Our founding father said, no direct taxes.
You're not having the government and the state shall not
direct put direct taxes on the people.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
We are not to tax livestock.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
We are here to replenish the treasury to make sure
those creditors are paid. We decided in the United States
in our show, rather, we decide to start with the
birth of state imperialism, colonialism, banking finance, and the aristocracy
was getting fabulously wealthy alongside members of the House of
(07:59):
Law wards in England, but then ultimately in it jumped
the pond and came over to the colonies and the
deplorables and the colonies were getting pissed. So we talked
about a scrappy young man named Thomas Paine, not from
the elite schools of England, not from aristocracy, wrote a book,
(08:24):
actually a pamphlet called Common Sense, and to this day
it remains, at least what I've seen some statistics, it
remains the number two per capita book ever published in America,
behind the Bible. In seventeen seventy six. It spread like wildfire.
(08:47):
It inspired Washington's worn out, hungry and underdressed, underfed troops
to keep fighting when it looked like the revolution was
lost the Valley four years. Yes, because as the people
were being exploited by the state, and it took someone
not part of the state or the establishment to reduce
(09:09):
it to writing and communicate it to people. Its corruption,
its censorship, its overreach into the private lives of the
free men and women of America who just wanted to
be left alone with their farm and plows. And as
soon as political control was wrestled away from the out
(09:30):
of touch elite, these new fresh faces became immortalized with
the writing of the United States Constitution and the Bill
of Plays. They moved from lived experience a few things
about man's human nature. Centralized power corrupts. Easy access to
money corrupts. You got to keep those two things separated. Hey,
(09:56):
the general, I we want to give you all the
the playbook. And we've been talking about the playbook. We've
spent most behind talking about the establishment playbook, the permanent
political class, the donor class, the global class, their plans
for the future. It's not noble. It's not humanitarian. It's
(10:20):
not at all. If it was humanitarian, they wouldn't let
what's happening in the Southern border happen the way it did.
They just wouldn't. It's not him humanitarian. The migration of
slave labor.
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Speaker 2 (11:04):
Into the United States, You're going to be told in
the weeks to come that mass deportations are going to
cause a rise in costs.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
You're going to see I think a reduction in rent
as a lot of people's apartments are now open.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
But the mass migration is here for one thing. Guys,
essentially slave labor. When you are, when you're undocumented and
you're in the interior, the heartland, you're not free. You're
not free.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
You're a tool.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
You're you're you are working as a slave.
Speaker 3 (11:38):
You're in instruments.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
And there are men and women and children in America
from uh all around the world, the global poor that
were induced, transported, fed, housed, given phones, brought into the
United States. It's modern human trafficking. It's modern human trafficking.
(12:06):
Those people are not free. They're here because they want
the same thing as you do, a better life. But
they're not free. They can't go anywhere. They have their there.
Whoever brought them here knows where they are. They know
they're illegal. They have to do whatever their sponsors tell
them to do and how to vote, what to think,
(12:32):
what to do. These are not free human beings. What
do we do with them? That's a conversation for a
different day. Easily are our new favorite man in d C.
Tom Homan. He'll he'll get the illegal, the violent, the
criminal element out first. But these are the b sides
(12:56):
of the history. This is why, for the defense of
the American people, we really have to make sure that
our listeners understand history, and our kids and grandkids understand
history and understand that clicks form and secrecy and wealth
and power. We're a self governing nation and we need
(13:20):
to make sure that the people that we elect are
not in it for the ring of power. When you
graduate from Yale Law School shared Brown with your degree
in Russian studies in nineteen seventy four, and you just
got voted out of public life for the first time,
I mean, you've been retired after fifty years shared brown,
(13:46):
and you and your party have the gall to slap
down a lawful immigrant who is here for the right reasons,
Bernie Marino, who's now a US Senator, who is pledged
term limit, who has pledged fealty to the MAGA movement.
And that's what this show is about. MAGA is not fascism,
(14:08):
it's anti fascism. So our founders knew that centralized power corrupts.
Easy access to money corrupts because the person who gets
the free money, that gets the loan is a debtor,
and you can be You can be a slave many different.
Speaker 3 (14:30):
Ways, especially if you come to depend upon that money.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
You can become a debt slave, and now your loyalties
are to your creditor. You can be a wage slave
and your loyalty is to the person who's paying you.
You know, we can go down that road, but our
founding father said, as it relates to the governing body,
(14:55):
we need to make sure. They never even thought of
political parties. They never even thought that our constitution would
last as long as it had.
Speaker 3 (15:04):
Well, they called them factions in fact, and said that
they were things to be avoided.
Speaker 2 (15:09):
Correct along with not getting intermingled in the affairs of Europe,
we were told, and our founding fathers had their tug
of war between the centralized power banking guys, the federalists
led by Alexander Hamilton versus the decentralized power no national
(15:33):
central bank guys, the anti federalists like Jefferson Monroe Madison,
the city guys and the country guys.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
And that was different in England because you know, in
England for so many thousands of years, it was the
country rich people that formed the oligarchy. If you didn't
have a land and a manor and an the state
you were knowing, you were even looked down upon, even
though you had more money than those people, if you
were a London trader, a London merchant. But in America
(16:04):
there was no distinction between how you got your money.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
We all started in America. We all start in the
same spot. Obviously the stain of slavery. Can't say that
for those folks. In the show, we talked about how
banks were formed, how banks were funded, the concept of
fractional reserve banking extremely important, guys. You really need to
understand what fractional reserve banking is. To fund the American expansion,
(16:32):
while the big city bankers in the East wanted them
on a monopoly over banking, just like they were monopolies
and steel, rail and coal. But the men out west,
the farmers, the small business owners who needed loans to
support themselves, especially the farmers, started to use silver that
(16:53):
they were finding mining storing to back the loans in
the banks. So what do the bankers in the East do.
They go to their Ivy League educated buddies who are
in DC in Congress and pass and act a law
(17:17):
that bans.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
Silver can use silver to back your dollars.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
And now all of a sudden, everyone out west is
getting screwed. Look at the development of the map of
the United States east of the Mississippi versus West and
the Mississippi. In short order, the big city guys out
east were successful again in creating monopoly on the country's
money supply with the creation of the Federal Reserve, which
(17:45):
is a central bank and something called fiat currency. And
we've explained the General has gone to great lengths to
our listeners to explain what the Federal Reserve is and
isn't and what fiat currency is. This central bank now
had control of the nation's money. Federal reserve notes. But
(18:09):
the government, the United States government needed more money in
its treasury to actually borrow from this bank, this private bank.
It's a bank of bankers. And so this bank of bankers,
like cow, we've got this, we have this, we have
this customer, the United States Treasury. We didn't have enough
money to buy our notes to borrow from us. Thus,
(18:34):
the passage of the income tax directly opposite what the
founders put into the Constitution one hundred and fifty years
earlier to confiscate the money from the people. Remember what
the first income tax was, I want to say, it
was like, well, either one percent or ten percent.
Speaker 3 (18:51):
It was one percent, and it was one or two percent,
and it was only on like the top one or
two percent.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
And it was sold to the American people that it's
just temporary, like the income taxes civil War. It was temporary.
And then it passed the Constitution Amendment. It was sold
to the American people that it's just going to be
on the We're just going to tax the uber wealthy.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
Then we'll get rid of it.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
Then, by the way, this all came the exact same presidency,
the exact same progressive Democrat presidency of Woodrow Wilson, who
also promised us no war in Europe. Okay, we relied to.
World War One resulted in busting up and reorganizing Europe
(19:35):
and the creation of what would be the state of Israel.
We've talked about that. We talked about the birth of
state propaganda with the radio. We talked about the birth
of the field of economics and something called Keynesian economics.
Government debt is good, don't worry about it. How this
leads to inflation. How inflation is yet another tax on
(19:57):
all of us. All that new free money that was
made in the Federal Reserve, on the what we call
the dollar, went straight to the banks and Wall Street,
making those wealthy even wealthier.
Speaker 3 (20:14):
And then they.
Speaker 2 (20:15):
Pumped up the tires of their companies, decided to take
their companies onto Wall Street and start selling, selling their
shares there. And it was boomtown, Roaring twenties, sold to
the working class, the middle class, the burgeoning middle class.
The origins of the Great Depression still need explain to
(20:37):
the American people. Who was behind it, who knew it
was coming, and how it made even more money on
the boom and the bust which led to the rise
of the administrative state to fix it. An attorney Brad Koffel,
that is the General snarkmaster General taking a trip down
(20:57):
memory lane, both the memory gotten institutional memory of an
American citizen and a trip down memory lane of our
show the last few years. There's a reason why the
General and I continue to do the show and talk
about the topics we talked, talk about the topics we
talked about.
Speaker 3 (21:15):
You have to.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
Understand how we got here. It didn't happen in one
decade or one century, nor by chance. Segment one, we
talked about, well, I'm not going to recap. The birth
of the administrative state was a response to the Wall
Street crash, which is ironic because the whole premise of
(21:38):
the Federal Reserve from fifteen years earlier was to prevent
that exact same thing from happening. General, am I right
or wrong?
Speaker 3 (21:45):
You're exactly right, and in many ways it caused it.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
So we needed government to fix what these smarty pants,
greedy banking class, broke capitalists figured out. They can buy
influence in DC. You can put a buck into your business,
you can put your buck into marketing, you can put
(22:12):
your buck into a senator.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
You could regulate your competitors right out of the.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
Field, your buck into lobbyists, special interests. So when the
capitalists figured out they can buy influence in DC, they
get access to well everything. World War two showed the
rich and powerful there's money to be made in war,
like multi generational money, like this is money that'll set
(22:44):
you and your kids and grandkids up for a long time.
Ike saw it. Ike fought war. I had not had
to see moms and dads of boys killed and under morganisms.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
He warned us, and.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
Ike warned us on his way out in sixty one
people citizens the military industrial network. It's very secretive, it's
very influential, it's very wealthy. And by the way, they
just built that colossus called the Pentagon, and it's poster
(23:26):
boy Robert McNamara, who has degrees in economics. Oh there's
that field again, philosophy, uh idea makers and professor with
professors from Berkeley, And I don't think Berkeley of the
(23:50):
thirties was the Berkeley of the sixties maybe and Harvard
Business School class of thirty nine. Robert McNamara was one
of four Motor Company's infamous whiz kids. He was the
first non Ford to run forward. Kennedy appoints McNamara to
be Secretary of Defense in sixty one. Off we go
(24:15):
with our adventures abroad and then the sudden and tragic
assassination of JFK in sixty three. We will get the results.
We will get to the bottom of what happened there.
With these fresh faces coming in the Vietnam boondoggle, the
(24:36):
combination of all this allowed the people to get restless,
the youth to get the youth that we're about to
get hoovered up into a jungle and stuck fighting someone
they don't even know, and they don't even know why
they're fighting them. And a lot of the parents were
on board with that. And if you question it, your
(25:00):
loyalty to your patriotism, to your nation. Well, this is
the bifurcation of where the state took off away from
its people, and it was filled. That void was filled
with what we call cultural Marxism, first in the universities,
then the media made its way into the churches. Didn't
(25:22):
it economically general, these smarty pants told Nixon to take
us off the gold standard in seventy three because we
needed our economy was tanking. Why, well, you can look
at some policies that came out in the sixties. The
Great Welfare State, which was bribery of Black Americans, took
(25:49):
Black Americans pride crushed the Harlem Renaissance, caused white people
to not all because stereotypically white people to look at
stereotypically black people as though, well, you can't do it yourself,
(26:12):
the government needs to help you.
Speaker 3 (26:13):
Horrible but to it did that by tearing the father
out of the black home.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
With the welfare policies of LBJ.
Speaker 3 (26:20):
Right, and you tear the father out of any home,
doesn't matter the race you're going. You're you're heading.
Speaker 2 (26:27):
Down Vietnam and lbj's Great Society. Our treasury O, our
checkbook couldn't keep up. We need, we need, we need
to get even more what we call quantitative easy.
Speaker 3 (26:45):
That's called printing money.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
Well, we can't print any more money. We don't have
enough gold to back it, mister President.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Oh well I'll fix that all right.
Speaker 2 (26:53):
We're off the gold standard. Whoa hold on? Uh Middle East?
The the OPEC nations just got whiplashed. Like what we're
selling you oil for this paper that's backed by gold.
It's actually not paper, it's Senate linen and silk we've
talked about, and OPEC said, get back on the gold
(27:14):
standard or we're not selling you oil. OPEC embargo that
was great, long lines at the gas station, sky high
interest rates, economic stagnation.
Speaker 3 (27:26):
And there was a misconception there that the long lines
at the gas station were caused by the OPEC cutbacks.
It was really caused by the price controls that Nixon imposed.
And what happened was.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
The smarty pants metal in the market market. This is
what happens.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
And so what they said was the the the service stations,
the filling stations could not stand to be open that
long because they had to pay o their employees. So
they compressed their hours down to about three or four
hours a day. And that's why you had lines.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
The cost of producing goods and offering services in America
became too expensive. Corporate America moved operations to Southeast Asia
and China. Wait a minute, didn't we just send our
troops to Southeast Asia. Didn't Nixon just go to China
and open up? We were told we went to China
(28:25):
so that we could sell our goods to the billion
Chinese people. And know you're going to take our jobs
and give them to the Chinese people. Well, the greatest
president of them all other than Thomas Jefferson, The greatest
president of them all, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the People's President,
the great community communicator who made America great again, whose
(28:48):
words are more relevant today than even than Thomas Jefferson's.
He knew in his bones what needed to get done.
And you know who else knows in his bones what
needs to get done?
Speaker 3 (29:01):
That'll be Donald J. Trump.
Speaker 2 (29:06):
How are we doing on time?
Speaker 3 (29:08):
We got about a minute and a half left. All right,
I'll keep going for this segment.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
So now I'm oh, well, this is perfect time. In general, guys,
we have spent too much time meddling in the Middle
Eastern affairs like Iran. We created a coup and installed
the Shaw in early fifties, we meddled in Lebanon. This
(29:33):
stuff all needs to come out. The American people can
handle it. We need to know the truth. What the
hell have we been doing? Now? Trump's opened up the
transfer portal. Tulsey Gabbert from the Democrat Party to MAGA
now probably DANI director Marco Rubio from the State from
(29:54):
the neocons. He hit the transfer portal he's over to
MAGA as Secretary of State, Radcliffe keep going right, Pete,
heck yeah, Pete.
Speaker 3 (30:05):
After the break, bring.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
To talk about this armor up, Armor up. Do not
let them hockey out of these candidates because they're quote unqualified.
You know why they're qualified, because they're unqualified per the establishment.
Final segment on our kind of our pivot show, here
(30:30):
we we finally have gotten to the point where we
we we are now going to see uh citizen Trump
return to d C to bust up the administrative state.
He's bringing in created Doge, my new favorite, my only
favorite government agency. Doge, Elon and Vive are going to
(30:55):
get the tape measure out and and we're going on
a diet.
Speaker 3 (30:59):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
Federal government is getting hit with ozembic musk and Ramaswami.
You talk about other you talk about vaccinations. I like
that vaccination. You know what else? Uh? Chessround Automotive Group
continues to write a check every month to Heart iHeartRadio
to the Mothership to keep this show going. And guys,
(31:24):
it's it is so important that we keep talking as
people and stop listening to the self serving talking heads
on cable.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
News trying to tell you what to think.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
Yeah. I mean just we really really need you to
to stick with us if you believe in what we're saying.
If you if you believe in what we're saying, we
really really need you to stick with us and share
the show, especially to kids in their twenties and thirties.
Get into young moms and dads, if you've got grandkids,
(32:06):
I mean, get I think our showed probably a little
too much for your high school set and maybe a
college set, but here are some things they just need
to know how the machine works.
Speaker 3 (32:19):
Well, think about it. I mean, Bernie Moreno has been
on this show several times, and you know, without him,
and without people in the Senate, which we now have
by at least fifty three votes now, which may even
be up to fifty four, there would be no chance
of any of Trump's people getting qualified through the Senate.
(32:41):
If the telegraphy we were still.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
You're going to be told that recess appointments are a
form of fascism. We don't have time to explain recess
appointments to you, but when you hear recess appointments, perk up,
pay attention.
Speaker 3 (32:54):
Listen.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
This is critical Trump's nominees in order to in order
to deploy Maggot policies. You've got to have your one
thousand federal top people.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
There, people are policy.
Speaker 2 (33:13):
You've got to have your You've got to have your ambassadors.
You've got to have your directors. You've got to have
your deputy directors. You have your secretaries, You've got to
have your undersecretaries. There's a thousand people that Trump needs
to sign nominations for that need to get through the Senate.
We really really need recess appointments. They're constitutional, absolutely, We've
(33:38):
got to do so. Pay attention to recess appointments. And
then we really need to make sure that this new
leader and the Senate John Dunne sticks to his guns
and doesn't capitulate on these nominees.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
He said that he would deliver Trump's nominees in a quick.
Speaker 2 (34:01):
And the most important person to MAGA right now is
John Thune. Got to pay attention. You have to pay attention.
You hear his name, Pay attention, you hear recess appointments.
Pay attention now. I want I am dying, probably wrong.
Speaker 3 (34:22):
Phrase.
Speaker 2 (34:23):
I can't wait. We need to get to the bottom.
As long as the people are now get our representatives back,
are founding father's two point zero back in there. We
need to get to the bottom of the nineteen sixty election.
I'd like to know a little bit more about that.
But certainly we need to know who killed our president JFK.
Who didn't give a speech in Dallas, of course, but
(34:48):
in his pocket the day that he was assassinated. The
final words of his speech or paraphrase, is we all
stand on the watch towers of freedom, Jack Kennedy. We
need to know what we were doing in Levanon in
the eighties. We got to get to the bottom of
this stuff. I would like we need to know more
(35:09):
about regime change, color revolutions. These are all in our name.
These are people that we put in office. We've watched
in the news. Never question uh regime change. When there's
on our national news, there's there's a country you've never
heard of, and there are bullets flying ninety nine out
(35:31):
of one hundred times, our DNA and fingerprints are all
over it.
Speaker 3 (35:35):
And our money, yeah, our.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Money Clinton Foundation. We need to get to the bottom
of those folks dead Clinton associates. We need to find
We need to get to the bottom of suspicious deaths.
Speaker 3 (35:50):
Shot himself in the head, three times.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
Oh sorry, don't mean to left nine to eleven. I'll
say it again. We need to know more about Building seven,
the great financial Crisis of eight that was sold to us,
but it just built out the bankers Russia, Russia, Russia
(36:13):
twenty sixteen. People need prosecuted and convicted of treason COVID Lawfair,
COVID twenty twenty, law fair. We need. You cannot be told,
(36:35):
you cannot be turned to think that Waltz, Radcliffe, Tulsey Gabbert,
Pete Marco Elon Vivek, Christie Gates, Matt Gates, who's also
been on the show. I don't think Matt Gates survives
(36:56):
this process by.
Speaker 3 (36:57):
The way I think he does.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
You cannot be turned and convinced that these are unqualified people.
This is the people. Remember the Great Reset. We talk
about the Great Reset. This is the people's great reset.
And Pete Hegseth is exactly who our founding fathers had
in mind.
Speaker 3 (37:20):
I don't understand when they say he has no experience.
Speaker 2 (37:23):
Pete Pegseth is exactly twenty.
Speaker 3 (37:26):
Years of experience in the military, Bronze Stars, active duty
war assignments. He has an undergrad at Princeton and he
has a master's in public administration from HAVD You some
fox guys.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
We might need to run him through the scanners one
more time for the Princeton Harvard stuff, But thus far
he appears to be untainted. He is someone from the
outside the incestuous government defense contractor network who actually cares
about the women in uniform. His actions over the last
(38:04):
decade speak much and plus speak much louder than the
lefts and the establishment's words. General, the Pentagon has created
an unchecked apparatus that has bankrupt the American treasury. We've
created an unchecked welfare state, an administrative state. We have
(38:24):
never ending military adventurism and decisions that don't profit the
American working class but lines the pocket books of the lobbyists,
men and women who wear the uniform. And I would
never be prouder than to see my son or daughters
(38:44):
in uniform. But not if they're going to be pawns
in a geopolitical chess match in a failed foreign policy.
Jake Sullivan, and by the way, Jake Sullivan, don't forget.
We can now let that guy off the hook. He
wrote a cover story in Foreign Affairs that dropped the
(39:06):
days before October seven, saying the Middle East has never
been safer. Now, how are we doing on time? You're
not doing a very good job today showing me the time.
Speaker 3 (39:16):
We got two minutes.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
Jake, Jake, Jake, Oh, Jake. We're recording this show on
Thursday morning. I'm not supposed to tell you guys this Thursday,
October fourteen. I'm sorry, November fourteen, ten forty two in
the morning. I am speaking of Jake's I'm predicting Jake
Paul beats Mike Tyson in one round.
Speaker 3 (39:41):
I would say that is the least likely thing to happen.
If Paul's going to beat him, He's going to run
from him for the first three or four rounds, tire
him out, and then there'll be some sort of thing
where Tyson can't get up and off the stool. But
you cannot stand in front of Mike Tyson and throw
blows and expect not to get killed.
Speaker 2 (40:00):
Bitcoin hits one hundred thousand that here are names I
want to see in the administration. Steve Bannon, Jamie Diamond,
Professor David Sachs, Ron Paul all need Home in Trump's cabinet.
Does Joe Joe's got to pardon his son. If I'm
Joe Biden, hell yeah, I'm pardoning my son Hunter. Screw everybody,
(40:25):
Screw them all, That's what I say. And Trump needs
to pardon all the Jay sixers. Edward Snowden join us, Songe,
maybe met Jas.
Speaker 3 (40:37):
Thanks for listening.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
Oh, Tulci Gabbett would be maybe president someday, and the
Ravens will win the Super Bowl. Thanks for listening.