Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
All right, general, lock in, get the chin strap firmly
fixed to the helmet, the ULTI score. I told Mike
Elliott just a little while before we came on air,
I said, Mike, you know, we might need to be
on We might need to do a daily show as
fast as everything is moving and be able to Fortunately,
(00:29):
the America first, and Americans first thinking is the tip
of the spear. So what we're saying, and we'll break
this down, is a huge game. It's always been played
on the people. It's been played on the American people
clearly for the last one hundred years. And we're going
to dive into that. When you have a position of influence,
when you can move big global or national chess pieces,
(00:52):
and we delegate our consent to govern to you, and
you can use that power and influence to enrich the
lives of Americans, or you can enrich your life and
the lives of your family and friends. It seems as
though we are learning very quickly. We're getting concrete evidence
(01:14):
of what many of us have suspected for years, dozens
of years. There's a huge game that's being played on
the American people. There's a huge game being played on
all people. I mean, it's just simply a function of
what form of tyranny do you want to live under?
Speaker 2 (01:31):
Should we call it a game or a fraud?
Speaker 1 (01:34):
It's I don't know that the American people in the
world are really ready for what I suspect to be
the biggest organized criminal enterprise ever documented, Yes, ever documented.
That includes not just waste, fraud, and abuse. Those are
easy words to put on the chiron on Fox and CNN.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
Murder, conspiracy, reco.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Money laundering, drug trafficking, human trafficking, kidnapping, assassinations. I mean
what we have been doing since World War Two. I
look at it this way. We have the front of
the house, which is, you know, the front of the
house taking care of the people. The back of the
house is taking care of the people, taking care of
(02:24):
the people. So you use populism to get into power,
you use socialism to stay in power, to keep your
your the pitchfork crowd away, and you use imperialism to
get generational.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Wealth to pay for it.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
All right. I mean it's just so there has to
be a conduit and off the books conduit between the
billions of dollars that are going out the back of
the house the leakage. It has to go someplace.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
Follow those dump trucks and full of money.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
You see that these these league the omnibus omnibus bills
that no one reads. There are thousands of pages, and
all it is is a shopping list. And the Republicans
don't push back on the socialism aspect of the budget,
and the Democrats don't push back on the imperialism neo
(03:18):
conservative aspects of the budget, which is our military industrial complex,
our regime change, your Victoria Newlands, the whole criminal enterprise
that USAID, which was cleverly acronym to look like the
little brother to the Red Cross.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
Why don't we start calling it, you said.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
And that's just one NGO. And these NGOs they work,
I mean the World Health Organizations in NGO. The United
Nations is an NGO. We are paying money to these NGOs.
We are granting, giving spending money, possibly palettes of ca
to various organizations like Russian nesting dolls. The money comes
(04:07):
from Treasury to an executive agency, from the executive agency
to a department. From the department, it goes into an
NGO like USAID, and then let's say usaids. You know
what do they say forty four to sixty billion dollars
per year. Well, USAID, it's hooked up below it to
a bunch of other nesting dolls. Everything we now are
(04:30):
hearing Politico.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
They were getting eight million dollars a year or eight
hundred thousand dollars a year in memberships.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
So USAID uses humans shields, uses human shields for cover,
no different than Hamas using hospitals and schools for cover
for their crimes. And let me explain this. So USAID
is a humanitarian relief agency.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
They can't see the quote fingers.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
This is this is what the most keep an eye
on the most vocal people who are speaking out.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
That is your that is your list of America's most wanted.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
These are going to be your senators and congressmen and women,
the people that are in fight or flight or freeze
mode because they know that Trump must colonoscopy is just
getting started. It's just getting started. And so you're going
to see the the people that are going to engage
(05:32):
and fight. You're going to see these people who have
benefited the most are going to be out there saying
this is going to wreck humanitarian aid to starving children
in Africa. That's no different than Hama saying the Israelis
can't come into Gaza and chase down bad guys because
(05:54):
they're all in hospitals. That's what they're doing. They use
humanitarian aid as a shield, human shield so that you
can't go in and audit and look.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
And it's not like a cool Captain America shield that
defies the laws of physics and comes right back to
you and it can't be peers or broken.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
The back of the house, the imperialist back of the
house that has been engaged in what said all the time,
it's like a broken record. Our Texas General, Supreme Allied Commander,
two time president in the fifties, the only Republican from
(06:34):
nineteen thirty two to nineteen sixty eight, at the beginning
of the original conservative movement in America, Dwight Eisenhower said
this military industrial network is very dangerous. And then when
his successor stepped in to the White.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
House, John F.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Kennedy and for some reason tapped LBJ as his VP.
We talk more about that on a different show, Needed
and LB and then Jack Kennedy starts to speak out
vocally against the military industrial complex. And we we've mentioned
(07:13):
his commencement address in American University June sixty three, June
sixty three, and we're going to learn more and more
about how dangerous this third rail is, of the billions
and trillions of dollars that are associated with endless war
and the imperialism, because the capitalist and I don't want
(07:34):
to sound like a Marxist, but there's a lot of
money to be made if you can do business in
second and third world countries where there are no regulations
and there is no competition. There is no competition. All
you need to do is pay off the local lords.
And whether it's Central American and South America and you're
(07:55):
down there getting fruit and rubber for your cars tire,
we're in the Middle East, and the American oil industry
is linking up with unlimited amount of oil reserves in
the Middle East. It's all going to come out. This
has been going on easily since forty six. I suggest
(08:17):
that it started back with the Wilson Progressive era of
nineteen twelve to nineteen twenty.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
I mean, there's been versions of this going back a
thousand years.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
But its populism gets you into power. Socialism they figured
out in the nineteen early nineteen hundreds, as the revolutions
were spreading across Europe and the Americas, they figured out,
we have got to keep the pitchfork crowd at bay.
We need to get more money to the people. We
need new safety regulations in the workplace, we need certain
(08:48):
labor laws. But we know now we need more money
to keep the American people placated. And taxes. We can't
do direct taxes on the people constitutional.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Let's get an amendment, and we.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Can't raise the tax and we just don't. We can't
afford it. So how are we going to do this.
Let's create a central bank, called it the Federal Reserve.
We'll get a monopoly on money and we'll control the
nation's money supply, and we will lend money to the
United States government. We'll determine the interest rate, will determine
the terms, and then we'll pass an income tax constitutional
(09:26):
amendment through Congress to pay.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
For all this talk about unelected powerful people with Democrats.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
This is what is about to get dismantled. But before
it does, there's going to be a hell of a comeback.
There's going to be a big pushback from the establishment.
Welcome back. Attorney Brad Koffel and the General Attorney, air
quilts and always everyone. I get this last night I
was at the Blue checks. Who's the General? Who's the General?
(09:53):
Can't tell you secret?
Speaker 2 (09:55):
He's a nome de radio.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
We we the American people, just tell you. Guys, the
people that have been listening to our show since the
beginning in twenty seventeen, it's always been about the concentration
of power. The founders knew you've got to divide, divide,
and divide, and if in doubt, divide the power again.
And then once you merged. Once that revolutionary spirit went
(10:18):
to Europe and it upended the monarchies, and it brought
in new populous leaders, and those populous leaders quickly turned
into tyrants themselves. Then you had the various civil wars,
and then from there, these destabilized nations and economies became
(10:40):
right for exploitation. And it was very easy for Americans,
British French, for instance, to move into the Middle East,
move into parts of Africa. And we weren't there for
their cheap labor like we were in Asia and Southeast Asia.
We're there for natural resources and we're there to protect
(11:00):
trade corridors. Very important legitimate purpose in the trade corridors. However,
what's America's role. We now need to decide as a
nation who's right because the way it's been done since
Wilson FDR has always been government intervention. We'll look to
(11:22):
the government to solve our problems first. And that's the
Keynesian model that you're John Maynard, Keanes, K E y
N E.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
S also spelled discredited.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
And meanwhile, the losing voices Keines and Keynesyan economics government
intervention won out big time. The losing voices your Milton Friedman's,
your fa he X, your Mises Institute, m I. S. E. Z. Yes,
these voices were speaking the truth about the economic models
(11:56):
associated with endless government intervention.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
But there's no money and corruption in the truth.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
You just can't tax the American You just can't tax
your citizenry enough to support the welfare state. You cannot
tax us enough to support the dream, the fever dream
rather of constant military spending.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
Especially under a system where the government in effectlessly picks
the winners.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
So if we can't afford it through taxing and tariffs
were became a bad word somewhere. You know, the income
tax was brought on to help to assist the release
of tariffs, you know, and then when the income tax
came on and the Federal Reserve was able to have
(12:47):
the monopoly on money. These group of private bankers, literally
a group of men and now group of men and
women control buying lending money to the United States by
buying bonds and setting the rates. And they're supposed to
be apolitical. There's not supposed to be any connection between
(13:07):
retail politics and our military policy. Guys, there's something called
M two, and M two is the actual quantity of
money in the American system. We have so much paper money.
We have so much money in our system. It is
going to the people who have access to it, who
(13:29):
can then borrow on the cheap zero interest rates directly
from the Fed. Low interest rates strictly from the Fed.
Who gets the cheap money, the banks, the lords of
easy money. What do the banks do? The banks mark
it up and they lend it out, they lend it
to countries.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
Money is a liability for a bank.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
Yeah, they have to get it off their books because
as soon as the money comes into a bank, they
have to start paying prevailing interest rates on it.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Yeah, a small amount true, but it's still because they
get it for cheap, but they still have to pay.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
For got to move it, yes, and it has to
get deployed, and all that money gets pumped into the economy.
In two thousand and eight, nine ten, because of the
Great financial crisis to save the big banks. It was
the socialization of or the welfare and safety net for
the banking class.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Who were our secretaries of the Treasury. They were all
big banker representatives, Reuben, all those guys.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
So where did this all come from? This comes from
Keenes and economics. And I'm being even more cynical about it.
I think I believe it's that, as we said in
the first segment, the front of the house, in the
back of the house, you want to stand power, then
you got to take care of the Pitchfork crowd that's
(14:48):
coming up Madison Park Avenue, fifth Avenue. They're protesting outside
the White House. They saw these folks in the early
nineteen hundred, saw what was happened in Russia, they saw
what was happening in France. They ever saw what was
happening in the midlands of England. They saw the workers revolt,
the workers' revolution, you know.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
And there's also a more invidious side of this, which
is they also see nothing people like Elon Musk when
he all he had was a backpack and a laptop,
that these people are coming too, and that these people
are going to be competing for their wealth and competing
for this and they see wealth as a zero sum
game and that you take from one and it goes
(15:30):
to the other directly, and one loses in the other games.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
So it's the big it's the redistribution model.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
And they had to keep those competitors out, and they
use their laws to keep them out, just like they
used the laws to pacify the people with the pitchforks.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Like you're talking about, you have two. You have two
macro cohorts of American working class. You have the W
two to ten ninety nine crowd supply to man curve.
You charge too much, you're not going to have too
many customers. You charge too little, you're leaving profit on
(16:06):
the table. So you have the W two ten ninety
nine crowd where the natural laws of money apply. Then
you have the high finance crowd, where you all you're
doing is you're taking credit. You're taking money on credit,
you're loaning it out, you're marking it up, you're getting
(16:28):
repayment terms, you're getting banking fees, and that money gets
put into the investment world. And in the investment world,
you have a passive income, and that passive income works
while you're asleep. That twenty four to seven. You want
to be in a class of people. We want all
Americans to be in a place where they're wages for
(16:51):
their labor, whether they're making goods or offering services. There's
enough left over that they can participate in the investment
class because that money compounds and it grows for you,
ostensibly for you while you're not working, and that's where
wealth is made. And once you have wealth, you can
(17:14):
buy property. Once you have property that your own. It's
a maxim that if you truly want to be free,
you want to own your home, you want to own
your cars, you want to have money in the bank
and no one can really mess with you. Right, we
(17:35):
have a nation of government dependence. In nineteen seventeen, this's
my point. In nineteen seventeen, there's a gentleman came up
with the American creed. And I find the timing of
this to be interesting because this is at the same
time of the explosion of the welfare state, as these
(17:56):
revolutions were moving all across Europe and the Americas. To
keep the pitchfork crowd at bay, we expanded the money
supply into the American economy and that money went into
the stock market. You're the Roaring twenties and then the
run of the banks. The FED that was created just
(18:17):
a decade or so before to prevent all that was
supposed to prevent all this, And if you do a
digg or dive on this, you'll find out that a
lot of this was allowed to happen. And the most
of the money of the generational wealth on the East
Coast was made not before the Great Depression, but buying
(18:39):
things up pennies on the dollar during the Great Depression
because the people who had cash on the sidelines, everything
was on sale and they were able to make a
ton of money. It's a crash and burn model. But
in nineteen seventeen, the American creed was written out to
(18:59):
be uncommon to develop what God has given me. Do
not want the state looking after me. I don't want
to be a kept citizen. I prefer the challenges of
life to guarantees. This is what it means to be
an American. That was memorialized. And there's a plaque in Georgetown, Ohio,
Brown County down on the river. This America's creed is
(19:22):
on three historical markers. One is in Ohio, and that
is the backbone of America. We want very little government.
We don't want politicians getting super wealthy on their role
as being public servants. Well well meaning Marxists and socialists
(19:45):
think government is the answer. And when we stop taking
care of each other and look to government to do it,
the human spirit will suffer because we need each other.
We don't need government as much as they think you did.
(20:07):
In general, we've mentioned Senator Fetterman kind of be at
a dark court seats. He's shown some promise, but now
there's education since he's voting against Chelsea Gabbett and Bobby
Kennedy were still other votes as of this show. In
this recording, it seems as though it looks like everyone's
probably in good shape. What do you think about cash?
Speaker 2 (20:29):
I think I can think Pattel will get through.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
And talk to just let's dive into this us AID
right now. In general, it is sounding a lot like
and we've mentioned this in go on our show a
few times, and there are others that Americans will be
it'll be on the dashboard very soon, one being the
(20:55):
National Endowment for Democracy. We're going to learn a lot
more of money law and how it works and who
is benefiting and how they code their expenditures. Like a
seventy five thousand dollars subscription to Politico, Well, seventy five
thousand dollars is going to Politico. Well, it's going to
someone on the inside of Politico. And then from there
(21:17):
they're obviously they're paying reporters and journalists. And I'm hearing
some big names that have been on the payroll who've
received large sums of money from USAID. USAID gets the
money from a agency, and the agency gets the money
(21:40):
from Congress. Congress has the money, and they're from the
lobbying and it's all one big omnibus bill. This is
all going to get potentially undone. The question is can
the system handle it?
Speaker 2 (21:52):
And those reporters all then contribute some of that money
back to the Democrats.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Oh favorable recording.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Yeah, I mean, reporters don't make that much money. I've
always wondered, how where are they getting all this money
to donate to congressmen in Ohio and Illinois and Florida
where they don't even live. Was because they're getting this
money from the government to donate back to the government leaders.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
The people that you we last week we thought should
be worried. Your congressman like Menendez, the guys that are
just bald, just straight up brazen corruption and greed.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
Let me tell you old fashion greed.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
As a criminal defense lawyer, I know that when I
see someone who gets caught at that level, that level
of brazenness, they have been doing it so long that
it becomes normalized.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
There's almost a Nostopel argument that could be made.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
To the extent that Menendez actually thought what he was
doing was okay, it was part of politicking. It's because
corruption has been institutionalized in the Imperial City to the
extent that the seven seven of the wealthiest zip codes
surround the Imperial City.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
Irony coincidence at all, not at all.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
So, the hyperventilating swamp creatures both parties. They are they're
vacillating between the urges of fighting or fleeing. They are convulsing,
they are fibrillating, and they are shocked at how precise
(23:30):
these strikes were by Trump and Musk and Maga, the
people that he has surrounded himself the last year or two.
They know exactly where to go to find that where
DC's secrets are.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Right, and they I read an article about this that
came out just two days ago on Citizen Free Press
and they talked about how Musk brought in these coders.
These guys are all in their early twenties, but they
know how.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Are every other staffer right, they're all this age bracket.
Speaker 2 (24:01):
Right, But they know how to do coding, and they
know how to do algorithms, and they could they could
set these algorithms in place, and they would. Now that
they have direct access into the computer network of these places,
they can find and trace all this money where it goes.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
It'll it'll it will be earth shattering. Yes, as of
this recording, what are we in the first week of
February twenty twenty five. If this now, they're going to
the the opposition, the establishment opposition is going to push
back so hard. They're gonna they're going to slow roll everything.
They're going to do every trick in the book. They've
(24:37):
already tried, assassinations, Trump's made it clear. You know, when
he mentioned to Iran they're going to be obliterated. That
was expressly stated in Iran. That was also implicit to
anyone else stateside who may be thinking, we need to
take out the Trump and Musk and but you can't.
(24:58):
Now there's an idea we do. Just have men and
women citizens, actual citizens in the halls of power who
are crossing the Potomac and going over to the various
agencies and ultimately hopefully get to the Defense Department and
(25:19):
the CIA see what the hell's really going on over there.
But we're going to be told that you can't go there,
national security, can't go there. Earlier this week was you
can't do this. Children are going to starve and not
get clean water. Next week it's going to be national security.
We're going to make us so unsafe. Look, guys, Donald
(25:44):
Trump is the single biggest existential threat to this crowd
since Jack Kennedy. We now know that Russia Gate was
a hit job. We're going to learn more about USAID funding,
COVID and gain of function research. We're going to see
(26:05):
how Joe Biden miraculously turned his twenty twenty presidential campaign
around after placing fourth at Iowa, fifth in New Hampshire,
and then somehow grabs most of South Carolina, works out
a deal with Clobashar and Buddhajegg and then they take
(26:25):
out Bernie Sanders. They put in Biden because he's the
hot best Hobson's choice.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
He's the most malleable right.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
Who has been running America since twenty twenty. It hasn't
been Joe Biden, but the Swing States rewrite their election laws.
During COVID, the Democrat candidate was barely seen. Trump was
on an old fashioned whistle stop tour. The Hunter Biden
laptop gets suppressed. USAID is going to be all over
that story. The Hunter Biden laptop is a looking glass
(27:02):
into the financial corruption just of that family. That's just
one right. Republicans and Democrats online are going to have
their fingerprints in DNA all over this crime scene. The
unusual and documented irregularities of a twenty twenty election night,
the endless funding of the Ukraine War. We know there's
(27:25):
money laundering going on there. The federal government and the
nngo's mass facilitation of migration into the country, that's labor exploitation.
We're bringing them in for their cheap labor because they
can't unionize.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
They're exploiting them.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
They're exploiting them. They can't go to the police. They're
not even allowed to be here. We have almost three
fully loaded regional jets a day crashing with no survivors.
Every day, three regional jets just tied to fentanyl and
opioid overdoses. And we know where all that comes from, China.
(28:03):
So what Trump and Doge and Elon are doing is
what every politician has promised they would do on both
parties but never did, but never do. Now, all of
a sudden, they're actually doing it.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
And this shouldn't be a surprise. You remember, politicians have
been swearing for decades to move the capital of Israel
from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. And they've been promising and
promising and promising. Trump promised it, and Trump did it.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
Let me tell you, Let me give you one more.
This is really good concrete stuff. The White House Press
Secretary Carolyn Levitt, she's only twenty seven years old. She's
a total outsider to DC. She's from New Hampshire. Think
about this. New Hampshire, the very first colony to establish
its own constitution. Before seventeen seventy six, live free or
(28:57):
dies at state motto heavy libertarianly, no income tax, no
sales tax, a low regulatory state, small government conservatism. Their
governor is elected every two years, not four years. This
state of New Hampshire has a strong tradition of personal freedoms,
(29:17):
healthy skepticism of centralized power town halls. That's who Donald
Trump picked to be his spokesperson. The guy gets it,
He absolutely gets it. And he surrounded himself with men
and women like this and my favorite russ vote Vought,
(29:40):
who just got confirmed. But this is a significant turning point. Guys.
There was a regime change in America one hundred years ago,
and it took a long time for American people to
realize whoa We have absolutely had a game run. Our
(30:01):
federal government is under the direct control of unelected, unaccountable, unknown,
invisible force. That is institutionalized power since World War One.
And Trump and Elon and the others other shine at a
big old light on it all. Fourth and final segment
for the defense of the American people General. I am
(30:24):
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Speaker 2 (30:43):
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Speaker 2 (31:15):
President Trump was talking about this in the form of tariffs,
and they talked about how if you are living in
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long time. But that is what we're fighting over there
in Europe. They are shutting down their access to their markets.
Speaker 1 (31:53):
Well, the banks are the banks, I mean the banks
up in Canada. There's no US the American banks can't
lend up there's no.
Speaker 2 (32:00):
You can't even have a deposit bank up there. There's
no Wells Fargo up there.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
The politicians and the power brokers that have come before
this current administration have used their position of power and
influence to move big chess pieces for their betterment, not
the betterment of the American people. And that's where this
glorious revolution is kicking in. But back to Chess run,
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want to finish in our remaining minutes with the analogy
of the of the house. We have the front of
the house, and we have the back of the house.
The front of the house is where the domestic spending
(33:14):
and the and.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
It's all pretty and clean and shining.
Speaker 1 (33:17):
And the fraud waste and abuse that's going to get
cleaned up. You're we are going to need to decide
as a nation, what is the purpose of our government?
Is it? Is it to is it to redistribute income
and wealth? Or is it more or less? Hey, let's
(33:38):
let's spend some more money on defense, and let's have
a hemispheric defense zone from Greenland all the way down
to the South America. Let's get back to saying this
is we'll take care of everybody here. The Monroe doctrine
and the Roosevelt corollary. You can see now that the
(34:00):
Trump doctrine developing. But then we get over to the
Middle East and in Europe, it's a little more problematic.
We're going to have to decide what role of any
should we play in the various civil wars in other
parts of the country, other parts of the world.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
And thankfully, with Trump giving us energy supremacy, we don't
really need to worry about them so much as a
vital area in the world.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
What's your take on the Gaza other than putting in
a big BUCkies on Gaza strip, what's your take on them?
His Gaza idea? It makes sense, right, it makes sense.
It's what he's saying.
Speaker 2 (34:42):
It's a tremendous idea. I've been thinking some of thewhere
along those lines. But you know this was of course
before it was bombed. But no construction crews can come
in there and start working until all those EOD, those
unexploded ordinances have been taken out. You could probably hire
Hamas to come in there and get them, because they'd
(35:02):
want them to make roadside bombs. But the point is, though,
you've got to get specialists in there first to get
all that stuff out there. Then you're going to have
to take all that concrete and rubble out of there.
But then what you should do you have to understand
the climate down there. I'm talking about the geographical climate
that is Malibu Beach. When people say that Los Angeles
(35:25):
has a Mediterranean climate, that's what they're talking about. Us
is some of the best, most valuable exactly. So why
wouldn't you, Why wouldn't you, as a Palestinian temporarily move
out of there to some other Arab country. Let them
build hotels, houses, fifty stories high, everything with the view
(35:47):
of the ocean. You know, whether it be casinos, race tracks,
whether it be anything. And then you make it into
an absolute tourist heaven. You could have so much money
flowing in there that you could do a universal basic
in come for every single Palestinian and now they could
be sending their kids to European schools general.
Speaker 1 (36:06):
It's like putting Disney on Mecca. It just it's holy Land.
Speaker 2 (36:13):
Gaza Strip is not holy Land.
Speaker 1 (36:14):
This whole area it's it's a it's a mess. It's
always going to be a mess. But why does it
need to be our mess?
Speaker 2 (36:24):
It doesn't need to be our mess. What we're saying
is that we can get in there and solve this
problem once and for all.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
But no, I don't think so. I mean why we what?
What developer is going to go in there? Who's going
to pay for all that? Who's going to pay for
the cleanup? Who's going to ensure it?
Speaker 2 (36:40):
Well, I guarantee you want to, I guarantee you Trump.
Speaker 1 (36:43):
Won't the Trump Casino Gaza. I couldn't imagine a worse combination.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
No, these Arab countries have as much money as we
ever had with all their oil wealth. They're looking for
something to invest in. There's all sorts of money that
would love to develop that area.
Speaker 1 (36:58):
Then let Saudi Arabia, come out in there and do something.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
Certainly with our guidance, and and and and and help.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
Oh, by the way, just gonna alert all Senate confirmation
votes delayed again until Mitch McConnell unfreezes.
Speaker 2 (37:13):
Moments of silence.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
You know, I generally, I go back to our analogy
here the we're gonna have to clean up the front
of the house and the back of the house. The
front of the house is you're gonna you're you're they're
gonna be the other side, the established is gonna be
saying scaring the people into things, thinking that they're not
gonna have Social Security, You're not gonna have medicare. Uh,
(37:39):
they're using humans as shields. There doesn't matter. We've got
to plow in an audit and see what the hell's
going on and have some really hard and decisions have
to be made. And they're gonna be politically unpopular. Trump
is not running for reelection.
Speaker 2 (37:55):
Well, they're gonna be politically unpopular at the top of
the political food chain, and they're not going to be
politically unpopular in the in places like Columbus, Ohio.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
The back of the house, the spending through the military
and the covert ops, the regime change, the amount of
money that gets unlocked when you go into Ukraine and
you get rid of an elected Russian pro Russian president
(38:27):
and you install a puppet Victoria Nowlan, If I'm Victoria Newlan,
I'm looking at the list of countries that don't have extradition.
Speaker 2 (38:36):
Yeah, I'm looking over my shoulder, all right.
Speaker 1 (38:38):
And lawyer, the guy whoever the CIA agent is who
made up the story that Donald Trump was holding back
money to Ukraine until they told him Trump what was
going on with Biden? And right that CIA operative used
(39:05):
as a basis a hearsay story that came from a
news outlet that is run by usaid. What we're going
to learn in America is going to be shocking. The
question is can our system handle the shock that's coming
(39:28):
to it. Have a great weekend. Talk to you next week. General.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Take care,