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February 23, 2026 110 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And welcome everybody. Welcome, fellow patriots, Welcome, fellow plorables, Welcome
all of you drakes of society in rock. To others,
she's sick offense you think as Jamega Nazis, yohamophobes, the
sex of phobes. You seeing the phobes. I don't care

(00:21):
what the life call you. Just know we think of
you as friends, allies and patriots. By wherever you are,
you're always welcome here. And this place is the Conservative
Commander's Radio Show, and I'm Rick Curator coming to you
from the my Pilar Studios and my Sore Studios of
the a WIN TV network and joining me today as

(00:42):
it does to lead off for week, is the President
and CEO of Frontiers of Freedom, and that is George Landrath.
And George, welcome back, Welcome back to Conservative Commandos.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
It is great to be here. After all, this is
the place to be and I always enjoyed in the
show with you because do a great job of making
sure it's always a high quality show and lots of
great topics, and we helped the viewers be as Thomas
Jefferson warned us that the price of freedom was eternal vigilance,
and so I think the goal is often about helping

(01:15):
folks be eternally vigilant.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
I agree, I agree with that. And hey, George, you
know it's it's not just me, it's my co host,
you and Sharon as Salsa, our guests, and it's it's
a co op of what we do here on Conservative Commandos.
And I'm just a stall stir. That's the straw that
stirs the drake, you know, So here, I am here,

(01:38):
I am, so, George, what's gaining your attention?

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Well, kind of what's on my radar screen right now?
Is I know last week we talked about President's Day
because it was the President's Day, But when I was
growing up in the sixties, and I think you'd remember
this as well, there was no such thing as President's Day.
But we did have two presidential birthdays. We had in
February twelfth, Abraham Lincoln's birthday, and ten days later, on
February twenty second, we observed George Washington's birthday. So yesterday

(02:05):
was George Washington's birthday. And I'm thinking to myself that
remembering him and celebrating him is far more than a
nod to the distant past. It's an opportunity to reflect
on the foundations of the American experiment for freedom and
opportunity and his extraordinary leadership that made it possible. Washington

(02:25):
was not simply the first president. He was the indispensable
figure at every stage of our nation's birth. Without his
steady hand during the American Revolution, there would have been
no victory. And without his presence, he held the Continental
Army together through very difficult years, and his personal example

(02:46):
inspired a level of loyalty and sacrifice that no figure
could have commanded. And then, on top of that, it
didn't end on the battlefield. He presided over the Constitutional Convention,
and he provided credibility and moral authority that was needed
to bring a competing factions within these thirteen colonies together

(03:07):
and to form a constitution that we now rely upon today,
a framework that guided our republic where now heading on
two and a half centuries. But anyhow, it shaped an
environment that was about integrity and restraint and set a tone.
And he understood that the new nation needed the government
strong enough to endure, but also limited enough to protect

(03:29):
the liberty of its people. And then as president, he
continued on this down the same path. He once again
defined the role through his actions. He worked tirelessly to
put American a path towards stability, opportunity, and prosperity. And
he strengthened our financial footing, promoted national unity, and he
insisted that the presidency served the people, not personal ambition.

(03:53):
And so, you know, I think most importantly he rejected
power that he could have kept it, So he rejected it.
And so when some urged him to become king, of
course he said no. But there were people who actually
wanted him to be president for the rest of his life,
and he also said no and stepped aside. And so
he established a tradition of peaceful transitions of power, of

(04:15):
limited executive authority. And it wasn't a lifetime of commitment.
It was for roughly eight years and so forth. So
it became one of America's great strength. So we celebrate
Washington not because he was perfect, but because he embodied
the virtues that made self government possible. Courage, humility, discipline,
and a deep commitment to the common good. So to me,

(04:37):
his birthday, I'm sad we don't really have it as
a national haul anymore. We just it gets kind of
watered down by every president. I don't think celebrating the
birthday of you know, someone like Bill Clinton is necessarily
the same as George Washington. Absolutely, Yeah, So his birthday
is a reminder of what principles leadership looks like and
why it matters today.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
Sure, it's just so many when stories about George Washington
and not him throwing a dollar across the Potomac River
or not him couldn't tell a lie he chopped down
the cherry tree, but some real, real stories. As you said,
he could have been a dictator, he could have been
a king. He set the president. He set the president

(05:20):
for presidents up to today, that a president only serves
two terms. It's safe for Franklin Dollon or Roosevelt who
somebody who might have thought him as king. Remember last
week when we were talking about the president's sake, you
mentioned that something that George the Third set, not George Landreth,

(05:42):
but George the third, the King of England, when he
has said that if he gives up the power twice,
there has never been a man like him in our history.
And though Napoleon, I can recall hearing something that Napoleon
said about George Washington that when Napoleon won the battles,

(06:04):
he wanted to become the emperor, and when he in
fact was beaten and then exiled, he said, they wanted
me to be another George Washington, in other words, somebody
that won the battles and then gave up the power.
Also in that speaking, when he became our first president,

(06:29):
there was some people, in particular John Adams that wanted
to call him his excellency, and he refused that. He
told him, no, it's mister President and mister President only
he refused, He refused the titles of Grandeur of King
of Excellency. Ailsa reminded about another story about George Washington,

(06:54):
and this was after most of the fighting was done.
This it was, I believe it was in seven eighty two,
before the Treaty of Paris was signed. George Washington was
still trying to hold that army together, and it wasn't
an easy task. He didn't have the money, He really
didn't have the backing. He really wasn't even getting the

(07:14):
backing from the Continental Congress that he needed. His men
weren't being paid, his officers weren't being paid, and there
was a mutiny going on. They were in Campdon Newburgh,
New York, and that his officers got together and they
wanted to march on Philadelphia at that point, which was

(07:37):
the capital, to demand of Congress that they get paid.
And that George Washington came into this meeting and he
said a bunch of things, and the men really weren't
being moved. But at the end he pulled out a
letter and he started to read this letter that he
had sent to Congress, and he was having a little

(08:01):
bit difficulty in reading this letter, and he pulled out
the spectacles and he says, excuse me, gentlemen, these are
something necessary. I have to put my spectacles on, because
not only have I become gray, but I have started
to become blind in service to my country. And it's
told that that ended, That ended the uprising. They said

(08:26):
there wasn't a dry eye in the house after that.
It wasn't what Washington said in this letter, it's what Washington.
These men finally begun to realize everything that George Washington
sacrifice to lead our country to victory, to lead our

(08:48):
country in its fight for independence. George. Hears so many
great stories about George Washington, that he was the dispensable
man he was the indispensable one in the fight for
our declaration of independence from Great Britain. And I've often thought,

(09:11):
you know, for instance, at the Battle of Brandywine, there's
a story there was a British, a British officer. His
name was Ferguson, and not only was he a British officer,
he was a gunsmith. And Patrick Ferguson developed a weapon
that was extremely accurate, the most accurate rifle in its stay.

(09:36):
And well, during that time in the Revolutionary War, there
was a spirito core kind of that you didn't shoot
a fellow officer, you didn't shoot an officer. And during
the Battle of Brandywine, Patrick Ferguson had a Continental officer
in his sights and he raised his gun and he

(09:58):
took aim, and he says it was only one hundred yard,
this gentleman, this American officer, was only one hundred yards away.
He says, this was a shot that I would make
one hundred times out of one hundred. But then he
realized it was an American officer, and that American officer

(10:19):
was George Washington. Well, Patrick Ferguson never took that shot,
he never shot Washington, and I often thought, how could
our and this was in the seventeen seventy seven, this
was only in the third year of an eight year war.
Who would have replaced him? George who at the time,

(10:42):
Who at the time could have replaced it? Who had
the strength, the integrity, who had the drive, the determination? Certainly,
you know, you go down the list of his generals,
you know, like Charles Lee was a buffoon, He was
a fool. You know. Some of his other generals were very,

(11:05):
very young men. The Marquis de Lafier, Lafayette was eight,
was eighteen at the time, eighteen or nineteen. Henry Knox
was only twenty five. Who George, who could have replaced him?

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Well, I think that's an interesting question. There may have
been some people who had enough military experience that they
could have been plausible. But to be honest, I don't
see anybody who could do what he did if you
look at the just not just on the battlefield, but
throughout our history. And that's I think why he's the
indispensable man, Because, to be honest, many historians are referred

(11:45):
to him as that. So if there were other people
who could have.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Filled I mean, I didn't coin that phrase.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Oh my no, No, that's exactly. And so my point
is if there were nobody else that could have filled
in for him, and that's what makes him indispensable, because
you know, if you've got a really deep bench and
you've got five people who could basically perform pretty much
as well as the starter, then if the starter gets hurt,

(12:12):
it's not necessarily critical to you. And so I would
argue that he was truly the indispensable man. And what's
interesting was it wasn't just that he wasn't killed on
that story you just told about, but during the French
and Indian War, he had two horses shot out from
under him, I think a bullet hole through his hat
and also bullet holes through his coat.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
Were bullet holes in his coat, but he never touched.

Speaker 2 (12:41):
Yeah, And he later, when he was President of the
United States, met with one of the you know, the
Indian chiefs, and he wanted to meet him because he
referred to him as the man that God would not
allow them to kill. And so he determined that this
he wanted to meet George Washington not because he was
angry that he had, you know, been successful in battle

(13:01):
against them, but because he realized we had a ton
of chances to kill that man, and God wouldn't let us,
and so he wanted to meet him, and they had
a good meeting, and it was a friendly meeting, one
of respect. But I just think that's kind of an
interesting point because I would argue that he was indispensable,
and perhaps God understood that as well, because God understands everything,

(13:25):
so maybe he made sure he made it. I'll tell
you an interesting story about why he was born in America.
And I just learned this a couple of years ago
when I was taking one of my sons down to
see George Washington's birthplace, and we were there and the
park ranger was showing us kind of one of the
It looked like it was a swampy area. It didn't

(13:46):
look like much of a river. And his father was
a merchant and he brought a ship over from Great
Britain and there was a storm and the ship sunk
in this swampy area of whoever heard of a ship,
you know? Getting it looked to me like a place
I could have walked across. But the point is, so

(14:08):
when he told me that, I thought to myself, interesting,
maybe God caused that to happen because then his father
had to stay and so he stayed in America, rebuilt
his business in America, and George Washing was born here
instead of being born in Great Britain because he wanted
to be here. So I think to myself, there's lots

(14:29):
of great evidence that important factors came because and George
Washington was the one who pointed that out as well.
He often talked about God's blessings or the Creator's blessings
and helping them. Instead of telling everyone what a great
general he was, he generally talked about how they had
the blessings of God to help them, and that's why

(14:50):
they sometimes escaped from the British when it didn't seem
like they could. And there were other times the British
couldn't escape from them, like at Yorktown.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
Well, George love to go into this sometime with you,
we really don't have time. During the segment ar Abia,
even this show the Divine Intervention that, in my opinion,
how many times during the Revolutionary War, divine Intervention intervened
to save Washington, to save our army, to save our

(15:21):
Republican It's just so many remarks. See that's the problem.
Let me tell you what a problem is a problem
is these things are not being taught to our school children.
What's being taught to our school children is how Washington

(15:43):
was a slave owner. That's what's being taught to our
school children. That's what's wrong, not about Washington as the man,
as the general, as the indispensable man who who led
our army through eight an eight year war basically with
very little backing. When I mean backing money, clothes, food, ammunition, weapons,

(16:08):
I mean he had a script for everything. That army,
George Washington, and that army had a script for every
little thing that they had, and that I think these
are lessons our kids need to learn, but are not
being taught today. And it is I think it's a
problem why we have so so many disrespectful kids today

(16:33):
that are leaving classroom to go out to protest against ice.
They don't understand the history of our country. They don't
understand civics, they don't understand the rule of law, they
don't understand why we have laws. I think it's a problem.

Speaker 3 (16:55):
George.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Anyway, Hey, George, let's get a break in. This is
the Conserva to commandos with George Landers. I'mrick Trader, and
today's show, Like each and every one of our shows
being brought to you by the first Amendment, and it
is protected by the second. Don't go wait George and
I will be right back.

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Speaker 1 (20:17):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
George Landrath and I'mrick Trader, coming to you from the
My Pillar Studios and My Store studios of the au
n TV network. You know, George, in the last segment
we kind of ended up. I mentioned the fact that
laws and liberty and I wanted to kind of like

(20:38):
talk with you about our laws and by bringing in
this recent vote by the Supreme Court to strike down
Donald Trump's ability to place tariffs on foreign governments on
foreign countries. What's your take on this, George.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
I thought it was an interesting to say because it
seemed a little bit kind of odd to me because
the statue that they were essentially hearing about does give
the president the power to monitor and the way Kavanaugh
talked about this, and maybe I should just look at
his assent, because his descent seemed very accurate. He argued
that statute clearly gives the president wide latitude to regulate

(21:21):
imports and to manage economic relations with other nations, and
in that reading, he says, tariffs is certainly a part
of that, and you know, regulating imports, and Congress had
intentionally given the executive ranch flexibility to respond to challenging
global conditions. And he emphasized also the presidence of both

(21:42):
parties have used this similar authority for decades now. So
it's not just Kavanaugh that said that the majority was wrong.
It's history that says the majority was wrong and that
it was precedent. And so they basically rewrote the statue
to remove the powers that Congress had in fact granted,

(22:04):
and so Kavanaugh stressed that point. And it has made
it clear that foreign trade and national security are often intertwined.
And the Constitution makes it very clear that the president
is in charge of national security and foreign policy and
things like that, and the statute gave him the power
to deal with these issues as well for that very reason.

(22:27):
So it's just interesting to me because the statute did
not limit the president to purely kind of economic considerations.
It allowed action when foreign conduct threatens US interests, and
from that perspective, using tariffs to encourage better trade behavior
or discourage destabilizing action. And he's used that to end
certain wars that would have started. And so it demonstrates

(22:51):
that both history and Justice Kavanaugh were right.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
Well, George's decision has been made. What do you think
Donald Trump should do now? I think Donald Trump should
sit a to the Supreme Court, go pounds send, let's
see you enforce your ruling the way Andrew Jackson did.
Or do you think that he is going to have
other ways to get around this Supreme Court decision to

(23:18):
continue to use tariffs I see as a weapon be
it the velvet glove and the iron fist of his diplomacy.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
I think the reality is he does have other require
statutory possibilities to pursue because in some case, one of
the people I saw defending the court's decision was they
were saying, uh, yeah, the president has the power to
do this, but he identified the wrong statute. It's like, oh, okay, interesting, well,
how ridiculous. Yeah, that's just not ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
That's that's like saying that George Landers has has the
right to go to a particular store, but he resed
wrong street and sit. Therefore we're I mean, well, then
what was this soul about? George? Was this all about
stopping Donald Trump at every turn at the road? Is

(24:17):
that what this was all about?

Speaker 2 (24:19):
I think it clearly is about that. For example, you know,
if you look back when there were more deportations and
a lot more shootings like times ten or one hundred,
and yet we didn't hear a single thing about it
because the president at that time was Barack Obama and
he could do nothing wrong. There was no problem. So

(24:40):
the reality is, if Donald Trump were to find the
cure for cancer, there would be people arguing how awful
that was that he had done that, and it's just like, yeah, okay,
so you just hate Donald Trump, so you don't care
if he does something good or bad. You just hate
him so much that you're gonna label everything he does
is bad.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Well, George, it's gonna be interesting to see how Donald
Trump changes his course in direction but continue to do
what he's been very successful at. And what that has
been is bringing more fair trade practices from other countries

(25:21):
towards the United States. And also he's part a lot
of money and a lot of jobs back to America
because of these tariffs. You know, I've also been thinking
about Coursa and Amy Coney. Barrett has two of his
choices that he's put on Supreme Court. I would think

(25:44):
he has got to be regretting them. Now.

Speaker 8 (25:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
I mean they've been, you know, good on some other decisions,
but they've also been a little bit what you call unreliable.
Because someone like a Clarence Thomas has been very reliable, Well,
you can always predict that he's going to follow along. Yeah,
he's not going to play politics with stuff. And yet

(26:09):
these other people have played politics sometimes and so you
know they may be right, say seventy five percent of time,
but twenty five percent time they let you down. And
that's not very good because this isn't baseball. In baseball,
that'd be okay right in your Supreme Court justice. You're
not going to be as a Hall of Famer if

(26:29):
one third of the time you get it right.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Hey, church Less, which gears because I think it's gonna
it's real important that we discuss Ran.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
What's the latest, Buddy Well, I think one thing that's
important to some people talk about Iran like it's like
it's a normal, reasonable government, like I wouldn't talk about,
say the government of Germany or France in the same
way talk about Iran, because Iran is not a normal government,

(27:00):
their regime that for within forty five years, has been
of the most destabilizing forces in the world. That doesn't
mean I as slay approve of everything France has done
or everything the Great Britain's done. I think listeners in
the show know that I don't actually, But the point
is the Iranian regime is a government that has attacked Americans,
killed Americans, targeted our diplomats, even targeted our president before

(27:23):
the election. They've also directed proxies to kill members of
our service, you know, armed forces and so forth. They've
exported terrorism throughout the Middle East, and they've repeatedly targeted
our friends and partners in the Middle East through the
network of their armed groups and so forth. So whether

(27:44):
it's the UAE or Saudi Arabia or Qatar, they and
of course also Israel, they've been attacking them all and
so no other regime on the planet has invested so
consistently on violence as their primary tool for foreign powers.
So I see it is that, you know Iran, The
picture inside Iran is just as grim, maybe even more so,

(28:06):
because the regime has carried out mass executions, crushed peaceful protests,
and silenced generations of Iranians who want nothing more than
just basic freedoms and a better chance for good life.
And the Iranian people are not our enemy. In fact,
they're actually our friends and allies, and they are the
first victims of this regime's brutality. So I think when

(28:30):
we look at this, we have to kind of understand
that an attack on Iran is very different than say,
just attacking another country because we disagree with them. This
is a country that has you know, like I said,
killed Americans for forty five years. This is a country
that has you know, killed friends and allies for forty
five years. This is a nation who exports terrorism around

(28:53):
the globe. So it's time for us to recognize that
we have a real problem there of stability, and how
you get stability by negotiating with a nation that has
a history of lying and using negotiation as just a
way to get more time. So, as I see it,
we don't need to impose regime change. We may end

(29:14):
up preventing the regime from using its military and proxy
forces to kill its own people. But the reality is
the Iranian people can be in charge of the regime
change and they will want a regime that is very
much aligned with the United States.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Well, George, what's funny? So I can remember in the
late nineteen seventies, when Jimmy Carter was president, that the
Shawl of Iran was losing popularity in Iran and that

(29:52):
it was because Jimmy Carter refused to back the shaw
the shaw was post and after that, since that time,
we've just gotten these mullus who hate America that have
been a thorn in our side for all these many years.

(30:14):
And once what I'm getting at George is once again
go to show how important a strong American president is
in leadership that because of one week president, one week
President Jimmy Carter, we've had this storn in our side

(30:35):
that continues to stick us and stick us and stick
us and stick us for years for not.

Speaker 2 (30:43):
To stick us, but many of other nations because they
export terrorism all across the globe. So Jimmy Carter is
one of our worst presidents, not even based on his
economic policy, just on Iran alone.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
And where I'm going with this is is Joe o'biden. Here,
we had another week president, probably a man who did
not have the mental capacity anymore to be president, that
that White House was run by a bunch of staffers.
I think that Joe Biden was a puppet. I think

(31:22):
those puppet strings were being pulled by Barack Obama, another
as I think of as bad president. And because of
the bad policies of the o'biden administration, we get thirty
million people that have flooded into our country here illegally,
and now we have a president that's trying to send

(31:43):
these people back home, get rid of them, and he's
being stopped at every turn once again, every turn of
the road is being stopped. He is being harassed. This
should never be a ran should be into the discussion
right now. It's only because of Jimmy Carter it is.

(32:06):
And I only say this because to point out, to
use that example and the Joe Biden example, how important
it is, how important the presidency is. You know, George.
In the first segment we talked about George Washington, how

(32:27):
his strength is his wit and his wisdom actually helped
created this country and put us on the road that
we've been on for the last two hundred and fifty years.
So when people go to vote George, they got to
stop voting for personality. They need to vote for policies

(32:52):
and not personalities. Don't vote for somebody that has a
nice spy smile and a nice hand shake. The devil
isn't going to come to you looking like a serpent.
The I think the devil is going to come to
you looking like Mundaney. I don't know. I'll got off

(33:13):
the topic a little bit there of a run, but
might be a good history lesson. Hey, George just got
a break in. We do have a couple of great
guys that we'll be joining us here on the Conservative
Commandos with George Landers, I'm Rick Trader and dunk Away.
Those interviews are coming right up right after this break.

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Speaker 1 (36:33):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
George Landith and Nomrick Trader, coming to you from the
My Pillar Studios, the My Store studios of the a
U n TV network. And Hey, Georgia, our guest is
with this, and please make that introduction.

Speaker 9 (36:50):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (36:50):
I'm always happy to do that because we have the
very best guests on TV and radio, and we have
Gregory Wrightstone here to prove it. He is the executive
director of the CO two Coalition. He's also a geologist
with more than forty years of experience studying the Earth's
processes and climate history, and he's the author of a

(37:11):
best selling book Inconvenient Facts, and he is known for
bringing data driven science basis analysis to today's climate debates.
So thank you Gregory for joining us today. We're very
glad to have you.

Speaker 10 (37:28):
It's good to be back on with you again. It
seems like a completely different world of the world a
climate change here in the United States today as it
was just a little over a year ago. If you
remember that boy the world was going to have There
was one crisis after another, and then Trump took over. Man,
it's been a sea change and he's not afraid to

(37:51):
call it a hoax, and neither am I. And it's
not a hoax, and the climate change isn't happening. The
hoax is that we're seeing unusual and on press servented
warming being driven by our human emissions, mainly of carbon dioxide,
which is a I mean, if you're trying to demonize
and they are carbon dioxide, they're trying to kill all

(38:12):
fossil fuel use, coal, oil, natural gas, and these are
the things that allowed humanity to go from one billion
to eight billion in people. And the good news is
there too, because of more carbon dioxide and a little
bit of warming, we're producing more food, food, production, crop
productions outpacing population growth. So that's a that's a really

(38:35):
really big story that goes unreported.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
Yeah, well, it's interesting because they act like CO two
is some sort of poison, like it's carbon monoxide. Obviously,
if you're in a room with carbon monoxide, that could
kill you. But we're all in rooms right now that
have CO two in them. Our atmosphere has CO two
in it a fair amount of it. And while it's
true that if all we had to bring with CO

(39:00):
two and had no oxygen, that would be bad for us,
but CO two, like right now, all three of us
and every listener and every viewer of the show is
exhaling CO two, So it's not poisonous. It's just not
necessarily like plants need CO two. We don't need it
as much personally, you know, we exhale it. But the

(39:22):
reality is if there is no carbon dioxide in the earth,
there'd be no life on the Earth. And so it's
just weird that they act like CO two is a
bad thing.

Speaker 10 (39:32):
It is. We're at four one hundred and thirty parts
per million for a little over four hundred parts per million,
that's zero point zero four percent, four hundreds of a
percent of the atmosphere of CO two. It's a very
very minute. It's it's a rare, scarce molecule, but it's

(39:53):
still vitally important for us and plants because without that
to photosynthesis could not occur, and of course that would
be very, very bad. So we've got we've increased from
about two hundred and eighty to four hundred and thirty
parts per million since the Industrial Revolution. That's about a

(40:14):
fifty percent increase in the air in the CO two
in the atmosphere. And when you're breathing out, and as
you're breathing out, you're exhaling about forty thousand parts per million,
so it's more than more than one hundred times what
the ambient CO two is the atmosphere. And you know
the old wives tale that I talk to my plants

(40:37):
and they do much better when I talk to them.
What's because you're breathing out, You're breathing CO two on them.
Of course, plants are going to do better if you
breathe forty thousand parts per million. And so it now
I will say OSHA in particular was the Office of
Safety and whatever it's from workplace to accidents. They set

(40:59):
upper limits on carbon dioxide, and it's around eight thousand
parts per million, I think, because in fact, in the
food industry they use a lot of what's called dry ice,
which is basically frozen CO two, So they have to
monitor the CO two because, like any gas except for oxygen,

(41:20):
if you have too much of you can't get enough oxygen,
and it is a danger and enclosed area with dry
ice or CO two is it's just as it's warming up,
it goes directly from the frozen CO two into a gas.
So a lot of the particularly the food industry and
their use of dry ice, they have to monitor it.

(41:40):
But again we're in no danger of any levels of
CO two until we get up to maybe forty to
fifty one hundred times what we are today, and we'll
never get there. Well.

Speaker 2 (41:53):
Yeah, one of the things that's interesting is I think
I've seen some articles that suggest that the Earth is
now greener than it was thirty years ago, and that's
because there's more CO two, and that means the CO
two is being absorbed by plants. So it's not just slowly,
you know, filling our atmosphere with CO two. It's it's

(42:14):
just it's plant food and the plants use it, and
that's why we have now more food. And it's just
it's kind of like, you know, an example would be
I think that there are places that if you have
like a greenhouse, where they will pump CO two into
the greenhouse so that it helps the plants grow in

(42:34):
the greenhouse better.

Speaker 10 (42:36):
Absolutely, and it's this greening of the earth. What's really
interesting if you, I think you're probably aware of it.
You've got my newest book. But half of we're putting
a lot of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, only half
of it's showing up in the atmosphere. What happens to
the rest of that carbon dioxide. It's mainly being absorbed

(42:57):
and used in photosynthesis by plants. And we see that
from the near polar regions to the equator, almost every
ecological niche has seen a huge increase in vegetation. Not
the deep Sahara, not the Antarctic, there aren't plants there
any use it. But it's been a huge, huge, huge benefit.
We're seeing the forests are expanding, We're seeing the deserts

(43:19):
are actually shrinking. The southern Sahara, the Sahel one hundred
thousand square kilometers of former desert are now turning into
lush grasslands and crop. They're able to grow crops in
the southern Sahara where it was sand sixty years ago,
and that's a that's a huge benefit. And increasing CO
two allows plants to resist drought much more effectively because

(43:45):
they're not because of more CO two. They're not, if
you will, breathing in and out. It's called transpiration. And
because they're not doing that, they're doing it less. With
more CO two, they're not used losing water through that
process of transfer, and so they need less water to survive.
That's why they're able to do better in very dry conditions.

(44:07):
It's it's really it's a great story. If we were
back in around Christmas, i'd be telling you glad tidings
of great joy that I bring to you about carbon dioxide.
It's probably what I call the greatest untold story of
the twenty first century. Out of a thriving planet, a
thriving ecosystem.

Speaker 2 (44:27):
Yeah, I mean it is interesting to act like somehow
CO two is awful, but the reality is if you
got rid of it all, you know, you'd have no
plants at all, and then you'd have no animals because
they would then starve and then eventually, you know, humans
would too. It wouldn't take long before basically there'd be
no life on Earth. And they, you know, I think

(44:49):
they aren't we called carbon based life systems and things
like that. Yeah, and we're not. We're not carbon based
in the sense that we had. We're made out of
charcoal or coal. It's the carbon that is used and
as you said, and by plants through the process. You know,
plants are able to take CO two and sunlight and

(45:12):
then turn that into you know, edible things. You get
trees with apples and oranges, You get plants that grow
and you know, whether it's beans or cabbage, and you
know all kinds of things that you know, hay and
wheat and all of that. And it's like if all
that goes away, life goes away.

Speaker 6 (45:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (45:33):
Indeed, and the other thing people that they're being told
told complete disinformation about warming and heat. We've been The
truth of the matter is we have been warming for
more than three hundred years. And it's important to note
when did it start. It was more than three hundred
years ago that this current warming trend were in started

(45:56):
and so that was long long long before the first
bottle t rolled off the assembly line, before there any
SUVs driving around, or we were burning lots of coal
to generate electricity, and this warmth combined with the CO two,
the warming has a great beneficial effect on agricultural productivity.

(46:18):
Why is that because we have longer growing seasons in
the contiguous United States here the lower forty eight we've
seen a lengthening of growing season of just about two weeks,
and so that's great for agricultural productivity. You don't get
these late spring killing frosts if you're an apple if

(46:40):
you own an apple orchard in Michigan, that can really
ruin your year if you have a late spring killing frost,
and we fewer those because it's warming up. So it's
the combination of that warming, longer growing season, and then
that's just turbo charged by increase in carbon dioxide, and
we should celebrate that what they're trying to do now.

(47:02):
In fact, when I was working this afternoon on an
abstract for paper, I hope to present it an industry
energy industry convention telling the truth about carbon capture. These
oil companies, they're all in for it because they're going
to get huge subsidies. They're going to make billions of
dollars because they're going to take money from your back

(47:23):
pocket and from your bank accounts, and they're going to
it's to be a direct transfer into the oil companies
and energy companies. And they love it, and they and
so I'm going to go tell the truth and go
to these energy conventions and speak about that. It's carbon sequestrations,
carbon storage, carbon capture. It's unnecessary, it's harmful to the ecosystems,

(47:48):
and it's really really expensive. It's about a billion dollars
to retro fit a coal fired power point, and there's
a commensurate nearly forty percent loss of energy. It's energy
intensive and expensive. So they're using a good part of
the electricity that the coal is creating to actually strip
out the CO two. So it's a lot more it

(48:09):
would be much more expensive electricity, and so you've also
got less of the electricity you're generating getting into the grid.
It's it's stupid what these people are doing, and they
Trump and his team need to pull the subsidies for
all of this.

Speaker 9 (48:26):
Yeah, that makes sense.

Speaker 2 (48:28):
I was going to ask this question, which is if
somebody started saying, let's have oxygen sequestration, let's you know,
it'd be like, wait a minute, so you just want
to kill all the living you know, being meaning you know,
whether it's animals or humans, you know. But the point
is not plants. I don't think plants are dependent on
oxygen as we are, and likewise we're not as dependent

(48:52):
on CO two as they are, you know, plants. But
it just seems to me that there's a balance here.
They both matter, and yet people act like they're the
problem and it's just weird. And the other thing that's
weird is they started off calling it global warming. It
was global warming, global warming, and every time there was
it was cold and snowy, they'd say it.

Speaker 11 (49:11):
Was global warming's vault.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
And I think people realized, wait a minute, warming is
making it cold, So they decided to change the name
to climate change because then every time there was a variation,
they could pretend that it was the fault of industry
or you know, CO two and things like that. So
I just wanted to ask you, do you think that's
a fair assessment of why they decided to stop calling

(49:35):
it global warming and decided to give a climate change
because that gave them more freedom to pretend that.

Speaker 10 (49:43):
Yeah, we'd gone through we'd gone through about an eighteen
year period where it wasn't the warming stopped. I mean
it was going like this up and down, but it
basically went through eighteen years with no warming, all the
while carbon dioxide was increasing. So they waited in it.
Something's not right here. And now this we're experiencing this

(50:04):
giant cold weather event across the United States, and it's
also in Europe they're having extreme cold. In fact, it
just snowed in Australia, Canberra yesterday and it's summertime there
for them. It's we'll see it.

Speaker 1 (50:20):
There, you know.

Speaker 10 (50:20):
It's southern hemispheres. This is the this is the middle
of their summer and they got snow there that's high
beyond highly unusual. So we're seeing this and what well
you have to learn and what we're finding the science
tells us it's just opposite of what we're being told.
We're being told fear the heat, heat is deadly, heat

(50:42):
waves will kill you. But that's just that's yes, that
is true, but cold weather deaths greatly outpace heat related
deaths by some fifteen to twenty times. As many people
die from cold related deaths as heat related deaths. What
does that tell us global warming saves lives, because it

(51:05):
would say millions of people from an early death due
to the cold.

Speaker 1 (51:09):
You're in a Conservative Commando's radio show. Our guest is
Greg Writes down. He's the executive director of the Co
two Coalition. Greg's been a while since we've talked to
here on Conservative Commandos. It seems like we talked to
you whenever there's a huge weather event like a hurricane
or tornado that nearly hits your home. It did hit

(51:34):
it this time. It's we're digging out from a blizzard here.
I mean, it was supposed to be the storm of
the century. Places buried in snow and ice and it.
What I'm getting at is the hype whenever we have
any of these storms, and the hype seems to start

(51:57):
with the Weather Channel. And I just wanted to get
your reaction to sudden weather events like this lizard that
we had just a couple of days ago.

Speaker 10 (52:10):
Yeah, that's it's unusual, it hasn't. I remember when I
was in college back in the mid seventies that we
had terrible, terrible winters. So you know, we're talking about weather.
It's hard to point exactly why it's happening like this.
They says, well, the vortex is broken down and the

(52:30):
cold escapes. That might well be true, but it's did
they predict it.

Speaker 1 (52:36):
Well, Gregory, it doesn't. It just seems to happen occasionally.
For instance, the last time we had a major snowstorm
like here in on the East coast, Oh, you have
to go way back to twenty sixteen, which was only
ten years ago, and then you can go back to
the nineteen seventies, there is a major snowstorm here on

(52:58):
the East coast. And if you go back to the
I saw a picture of an easter Sunday, this was
April third in the year nineteen eleven to have a
major snowstorm. But it just seems like about every eight
to ten years we have major snowstorms. And it's always

(53:20):
been that way, but since the invention of something called
the weather channel, and you know, they always hide these
weather situations to keep you coming back to their stations
so they can some were advertising where's the truth? Well,

(53:43):
where's the truth?

Speaker 10 (53:45):
That's a good question. But we see that what you're
right about that and they don't hype the cold like
they do the heat. This was August and it was
two weeks of one and five.

Speaker 1 (53:56):
Degree It's almost like, never let a crisis go to
waste exactly, no matter if it's hot or cold, or rainy,
or icy or snowy, or you get a month of
bright sunny days, everything is a crisis to them.

Speaker 3 (54:13):
Yeah, it is.

Speaker 10 (54:14):
I'll give you an example. My newest book is A
very Convenient Warming and the Dutch language version is over
my shoulder here, and it was published in Dutch, and
we traveled the publisher said, I want to bring you
and your wife over. We're going to tour the Netherlands
and it'll be a book promotion tour. And we got
there and it was frigid now at the same time

(54:36):
it was it was June, middle June, and we had
to wear winter coats because it was so cold and
it was highly unusual. But the United States they were
talking about the extreme heat in Europe. Well, I was
in Europe. The extreme heat was occurring in southern Europe,
which is what they really promoted. Did they talk about
this unusual cold in northern Europe? Heck no, they don't

(55:00):
do that. They avoid it. It's that's just a great example.
One part of Europe is in heat and they blow
it up. The other part is an extreme cold in
its crickets.

Speaker 1 (55:14):
I think you've seen that in our recent weather, Matt.
The east coast, the eastern half of the country was
cold and snowy and icy. The western half of the
country was above above a temperature. Yeah, you know, we
see it, but yet they always make a hype of it.
Gregory writes, ton see it too. Coalition. We always appreciate

(55:35):
you spending time with this, Gregory, but before you go,
please tell us a little bit about the CO two
Coalition and how people could find out more.

Speaker 3 (55:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (55:46):
We were formed ten years ago, twenty fifteen, a little
over ten years ago. Doctor William Happer is our chair.
We have now more than two hundred of the top
scientists and experts in the world. And this these great scientists,
it's it's really like a team of volunteer scientists that
work to create the scientific reports that we write. We've

(56:11):
we've gone through just a spectacular growth over the last
five years. We've gone from I think thirty five members
that we're scientists over two hundred today and our budgets
now over ten times what it was when I took over,
so we've in the donor base has increased just just tremendously,

(56:34):
So we're getting the word out. I'm planning to launch
a national television ad campaign. We've created two sixty second ads.
Maybe we can get it on your it would be
one of the Yeah, we'll have to talk about that.
We're going to launch it. I believe Doctor Happer and
I participated in a Newsmax documentary that will air in March,

(56:57):
and I hope to launch this ad campaign during that
and then I'd like to take it all over, but
I got to raise money to do that. It's not cheap.
But I'm excited about that. And one of the things
I've been saying for several years is we are winning,
and boy, we sure are by that. I mean, we're
getting the truth out and it's thanks to people like

(57:18):
you and George for helping us get that word out.

Speaker 1 (57:22):
So think what about Donald Trump? How much of a
help has he been?

Speaker 3 (57:26):
It's been.

Speaker 10 (57:27):
It's just huge, huge, I mean, there are things we
can complain about from from our standpoint when we talk
about science and climate change. They've stubbed their toe a
couple of times. They're going to be doing issuing probably
announcing a repeal of the endangerment finding. It may come
as early as this week or next. We expect it soon.

(57:49):
It's in the Office of Management and Budget rush Boat's
department there and then it's being under review for them
and comments. We expect that to come out in the
next two weeks. An announcement that takes that says we're
going to repeal the finding that we did back in
two thousand and nine that carbon dioxide is a pollutant

(58:09):
and they're going to get rid of that. And that's
that pulls the whole house of cards come tumbling down.
It's all been it's all been built on this endangerment finding.
And so the you know, learn more at CO two
Coalition dot org. CO two Coalition dot org and to
get my excellent new book that's over my shoulder is
it's a very Convenient Warming. Just search for Convenient Warming.

(58:31):
I guarantee you will love it. It's understandable. It's not
high tech science. I take the science. I don't dumb
it down, but I make it understandable.

Speaker 1 (58:41):
Well, you know, it's great about your books, like Very
Convenient Truth and your latest book. It's almost like giving
our side ammunition to fight the lies. George has got
a book. Same thing with George's books. It gives our
side ammunition. So when we go to a Thanksgiving dinner

(59:03):
and you're confronted by a member who believes that we're
destroying the earth, that CO two is a bad thing,
well here are the facts. Here are the facts, but
Greg writes them. We want to thank you for joining
us here in the Conservative Commandos. Great Sea again. I

(59:23):
know it's been a while, but take care and God.

Speaker 10 (59:27):
Bless Thank you both.

Speaker 1 (59:29):
And this is the Conservative Commandos with George landerth Imrick Trader.
Go no where. We'll be back right after this break.

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Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
We've got Tom Donaldson, the host of the Donaldson Files program.
He's also the president of America's Pack and the author
of an excellent book, America at the Abyss Will America Survive?
And We've got Doctor Joe Manjacatti. He's the host of
The Joe Manjacatti Show on Boston's fifty thousand watt powerhouse
station WCRN eight thirty AM and your radio dial and

(01:03:34):
of course his show, even if you're not anywhere remotely
close to New England, you can still watch his show
listen to his show nationwide are all across the globe
thanks to things like iHeartRadio on the Internet and other
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hell us here at the frontiers of free minutes.

Speaker 9 (01:04:01):
Toot, gentlemen.

Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
We've got lots to talk about, but I thought maybe
we could start off with what's going on in Minnesota,
because Minnesota has become a major flash point in the
national debate over immigration and the enforcement of immigration and
public safety. And after several high profile incidents involving federal
immigration agents, including fatal shootings that sparked widespread protests and

(01:04:23):
in fact not just protest violence, President Trump has deployed
borders are Tom Holman to take direct control of ICE
operations in the state, and so Homan will be the
coordinator of those things with state officials. He'll oversee enforcement,
and he'll report directly to the President. I think this
move reflects several realities. One is the administration is concerned

(01:04:46):
about the escalating unrest and it wants a seasoned, tough
minded leader on the ground. And I think Tom Homan
certainly qualifies, as that he has decades of experience in
handling immigration crisises, even bef before Donald Trump became president,
he actually served under the presidency of Barack Obama, back
when apparently it wasn't considered a bad idea to deport people,

(01:05:10):
but now it is because that's just the reality of
the left, very inconsistent, and they just play politics. So
I want to ask you guys what you think about
what's going on here. I think so the good news, too,
of courses, is Minnesota's law enforcement people have said that
they're going to support ICE's presence. Of course their governor
and mayor and others or not. But apparently the police

(01:05:31):
are saying, sorry, we're going to follow the law, not
going to play politics with the law.

Speaker 9 (01:05:35):
So what do you guys think, Well, I think this was.

Speaker 17 (01:05:38):
A case of taking a step back to take two
steps forward. Namely, Holman is First of all, I think
it's funny in the sense that I don't remember Homan
being considered a good guy a year ago.

Speaker 18 (01:05:50):
I don't think Warman fuzzy when I think Tom Holman
Warrick fuzzy.

Speaker 17 (01:05:53):
But all of a suddenly he's like the good cop
that comes in, and I think there's a no nonsense.
First of all, he's got Trump's support, that's number one.
He reports directly to Trump, and I think this is
one of those steps back to take too so forward.
I think this is Trump when I said, Okay, we'll
de escalate, but we're not going to give up our goals.

Speaker 19 (01:06:16):
And I think the real question is he's giving both.

Speaker 17 (01:06:18):
The governor and the mayor of ramp off while at
the same time getting the job done, namely, you let
us finish the job.

Speaker 19 (01:06:26):
We're out of here.

Speaker 17 (01:06:27):
But the longer, you know, and I think the point
of times Home it's going to make is once we
do our thing, we're out of here. The longer you delay,
the longer we stay. But the one thing that I
don't think you're going to see is Trump is not
going to retreat because if he retreats, a this gets
repeated elsewhere. It goes beyond this, and more importantly, the

(01:06:48):
base is going to say, why do we vote for
you guys in the first place if you're not going
to finish the job.

Speaker 18 (01:06:54):
Yeah, you know, I did this whole idea. First of all, Tom,
I agree hundred percent. The last thing that Home and
Christino Donald Trump can do is actually pull Ice out
because they demanded it. It would be ludicrous and it
would be suicide because a UH to Tom's point, it
would be repeated in every blue city that decides, oh,

(01:07:16):
that's if we just make enough pain and we cause
enough trouble, we can get the federal government to back off.
And then it says the president, does that mean we
can decide and pick and choose.

Speaker 3 (01:07:29):
All federal law enforcement agencies?

Speaker 18 (01:07:32):
If the FBI wants to investigate and go arrest somebody,
you can get in their face and stop them. What
if we just want to ignore IRS agents if we
cause enough trouble? I mean, I I don't understand why
that's tolerated. And the fact that walts Frey and others
are going out there labeling ICE with the terms they're

(01:07:52):
using and saying to do this, there's got to be
some kind of ramification for that. They've got to it's
got they've got to be process to charge that. Something
has to happen because they're actually have caused this. These
ICE officers are actually doing exactly what their job is,
So no, they can't pull out till it's done. And
if they had cooperated instead of pretending that there's something

(01:08:15):
called sanctuary cities and they can pick and choose federal laws,
now they can't stop them because the police, and the
sheriff's office. Well, actually, the sheriff's office is interesting because
that's usually elected position, that's not appointed. It's elected and
they answer to the people. It's a constitutional office. It's
not well, you're going to be fired if you don't
go the politic or political way. But let's put a

(01:08:38):
pin in that for a second. The fact that they
are telling the officers or the police, and it's got
to be serious Lacker morale. I mean, I mean, all
the police officers can't be these Willywashee, you know, leftists,
sympathizers or whatever. We've heard some of these chiefs that

(01:08:58):
have come out and you know, didn't achieve somewhere cry
or something the other day and then say something about
he thought about not even releasing this information about this
horrific illegal that did these horrible crimes. Again, it's like
bizarro world, guys. I don't know. So just one more
thing on this. It's got to bother the supporters of

(01:09:20):
Tim Walls and Jacob Frye that Donald Trump is talking
about what a great conversation they had and what a
great phone call, and he doesn't even seem like the
guy I'm seeing on TV.

Speaker 3 (01:09:30):
I was.

Speaker 18 (01:09:31):
I'm wondering if the call was the way Trump described
it or not, because if Trump is a great troll, right,
if he really wants to get at these guys, he
does exactly that. He goes out there on national TV
and say, great conversation. These guys were so cooperative and understanding.
That's going to drive their base crazy because it appears

(01:09:54):
that they cooperated with Trump or conceded to Trump in
some way. So maybe they did. Maybe it was a
very tomusualist type of phone call. But Trump says, hey,
it was a great call. They were wonderful. I don't know,
but we did see to Tom's point, right, all of
a sudden, the police are like with the hotel, you know,
they they really and again, who's getting arrested in paying

(01:10:16):
for the vandalism done to the hotel where they thought
Ice was staying Avon.

Speaker 19 (01:10:20):
That was not necessarily the local police. That was the
state police.

Speaker 18 (01:10:23):
All right, good, well, the state police came in. Maybe
that's because of the conversation with Tim Waltz. I don't know, right,
we don't know for sure. I assume that that signals
to the left that there's some understanding and cooperation to
support Ice.

Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
That isn't going to be good.

Speaker 18 (01:10:39):
I mean, I mean, Tim Waaltz comes out looking like
he caved, and I don't know, See, I don't even
know if I'm going to go so far as they
say he caved, other than I think he it got
through to him that the right thing to do is
let the police all do their appropriate jobs and follow
through on their their sworn duties.

Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (01:10:58):
Okay, that's good point.

Speaker 2 (01:11:00):
Well.

Speaker 9 (01:11:00):
One of the things that I think is interesting.

Speaker 2 (01:11:02):
About all of this is that their people acting is
if christin Nome is going to be out the door,
and there's certainly some support for that, but I just
don't really get it because the question whether the Homeland
Security Secretary, Christy Noman is going to be kicked out
the door, I think has become a serious political conversation
because there's at least a few people on the Republican

(01:11:22):
side who acted as if she's got to go, And
I'm thinking to myself, really, I don't know, it doesn't
make much sense to me, because.

Speaker 17 (01:11:28):
The way I'm gonna look at is this, She's not
gonna go for some one reason. If you start, you
let her go, nobody's gonna get it peaced and then
you're gonna have to replace her with somebody, and I
guarantee you're gonna have some weak minded Tom.

Speaker 19 (01:11:41):
I'll give you the name.

Speaker 17 (01:11:42):
Tom Tillis, tell us Lisa was in the fight for life,
Lisa Morask, who's always you know, she's the queen Princess
of Alaska. So I'm just going to say it very clearly.
Then you're not gonna you're not gonna be able to
get somebody to replace my dear. She'll stay, She'll just
take a less high profile. And when it comes to
the immigration issue, uh, this is going to be on

(01:12:04):
Tom Holmand because he's.

Speaker 3 (01:12:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 17 (01:12:07):
I mean, the bottom line is, she did what she
was supposed to do, and when it's all a sudden done, you.

Speaker 18 (01:12:13):
Know, she actually took the dog outs behind the barn
and did what she had to do.

Speaker 3 (01:12:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 17 (01:12:19):
And now, I mean the rumor was that she and
Tom Holman didn't get along, but I'm thinking, you know,
somebody recently said she basically was repeating the talking points
she was given. Yeah, And as far as i'm sir,
Tom Tillis can go pound, go pound saying light mrsk
and all these other people.

Speaker 19 (01:12:37):
These Republicans. You know, this is not a time to
be weak.

Speaker 17 (01:12:40):
This is the time to basically say we're going to
finish the job because if they don't, don't even bother
having you know, bother about twenty twenty six, yeacause.

Speaker 18 (01:12:50):
Look, he doesn't have the bodies to continue this up.
I mean, they they've got to and let's not forget
we have three hundred you know, give or take other cities, right,
but none of this is happening. It's happening in this city,
and it's trickling in some other blue cities. So that
means the cities that are don't have this delusion of

(01:13:12):
being a sanctuary city because it doesn't exist, and who
are cooperating. That means that Ice is going into the
jails and peacefully taking custody because there's a hold order,
or going to the courthouses and doing the same thing.
And that means ICE isn't going in to the street.
And you know, where are they got to go. They've
they've got to go into neighborhoods, and they've got to

(01:13:32):
go to home depot, and they've got to go to
construction sites because they have dossiers on these people, right,
they know who they are. They can track movements through
cell phones and bank accounts and wires and all this
other stuff, so they know where to go find them.
And it's them who has made ICE have to go
out into the neighborhoods. And then it's them meaning Waltz

(01:13:52):
and Fry and so forth that has riled this up
with the rhetoric that they do. So if you just
Ice get the worst of the worst, and for that matter,
to the argument about well, but they're getting these illegals keyword,
who did no other crime other than enter the country illegally,
they're keeping their nose clean. You know, they're working under

(01:14:14):
the table obviously, and you know, but they're not rapists,
and they're not assaulting, and they're not gang members. I
get all that, But if they're in the area when
ICE is there and they got to be taken, they
can't ignore that. That's the situation that they've caused ICE
to be in. That's why seventy percent of the people
who have been picked up have crimes either convicted or

(01:14:37):
serious charges. The thirty or the thirty percent that haven't
committed these horrific crimes, they're just there and they get
sweeped up in the situation and that's that. So yeah,
and we're still at what fifty seven sixty percent of
all the polls say people still think every illegal should
be deported, regardless of whether they committed a crime after

(01:15:00):
they enter the country or not. So the country as
a whole still supports this concept and idea. But if
they just cooperated and ICE was able to get look
at the number of people in the crimes that they've committed,
and they've been either convicted or they're standing charges against
right now, these are your neighbors. But I see the
interviews guys when they say, well, do you think that

(01:15:22):
these violent criminal people should be removed? Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
Yeah, they should be. We'll make up your mind.

Speaker 2 (01:15:27):
Well, the next topic is the signal conversations, which reveal
cooperation between state officials and the rioters. And I think
that's very revealing because you kind of all knew that
that's what Tim Walls was up to. And I guess
the question is is how crazy do you have to
be and how anti public safety? I guess also do

(01:15:48):
you have to be to be supportive of protecting violent
criminals who have raped children and killed people from being
arrested and deported, or for that matter, of just arresting
and deporting people who came here illegally, and then you're actually.

Speaker 9 (01:16:01):
Like, oh, they need due process.

Speaker 2 (01:16:03):
It's kind of like if you entered here without due process,
why do you have to leave with due process?

Speaker 9 (01:16:08):
So what do you think about the signal thing? What's
that proving I'm not?

Speaker 19 (01:16:11):
Here's the thing to me that comes into play. It's
very simple.

Speaker 17 (01:16:14):
It details the fact that this is a well organized effort.
I'm not going to use the word insane. I'm going
to use the word their goal is to eliminate immigration
laws by any means possible. They're totally organized, they're totally
got inside information where ICE agents are doing things and
where they're going. And you got the cooperation. I mean, look,

(01:16:37):
you got a lieutenant governor, an advisor to the governor,
at least one legislator involved. You have to be asking
yourself the question is can these people be held accountable
for violating or encouraging people to violate federal law? This
is not about freedom of speech here. When you're basically
actively planning to violate federal law to put people at risk,

(01:17:01):
I'm used to it people at risk.

Speaker 18 (01:17:04):
Yeah, can I back up to a second to the
due process here the George made reference too, because again
this is you've got people who they're usually low information voters,
and they're basically low information people, and they hear this
catchy term due process and they think of constitutional rights
and courts and appeals. Due process. For an illegal alien,

(01:17:27):
if they're stopped at the border, they're turned around to
the border and they're not permitted to come in. So
if you come in illegally, due process is the immigration
court has given a removal order. That's all the due process.
That is the due process. So due process for an
illegal alien isn't oh, you're going to be indicted and
then arrested and charged and you go to court and
you put that's for existence who commits a crime.

Speaker 3 (01:17:50):
Say again, and.

Speaker 9 (01:17:51):
You can appeal to the Supreme Court.

Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 18 (01:17:54):
So there has been due process for most of these
people because there is a removal order or they're in
a situation where the due process is we just got
to find you.

Speaker 3 (01:18:04):
And so that's that.

Speaker 18 (01:18:07):
And then the other thing to your point, Tom cash
Brittello has been saying, hey, we've been we've had really
good success in figuring out who is behind all this.
We've followed the money. We've said it on this show.
I know I've said it on this show. I've said
it on my show. Use the racketeering laws, right, use
the conspiracy laws.

Speaker 3 (01:18:24):
Do this.

Speaker 18 (01:18:25):
They're committing crimes. This is these peaceful protests. This is
criminal activity on a cross state line. So you've got
wire or fried. You got all kinds of chargers, George,
you 're the lawyer in the group, all kinds of chargers,
and use the same tactics we've used for organized crime figures,
domestic terrorists and things of that nature. So if you
follow the money and you know who's funding all this,

(01:18:46):
go get them do this.

Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
Because that makes them people who are helping to commit
the crimes. Others, they become essentially partners in the criminal activity.

Speaker 3 (01:18:57):
You know, who's more guilty the assassin.

Speaker 2 (01:19:00):
Someone doesn't go in the bank but stands up across
the street and is watching for say the police, is
a watch out guy.

Speaker 9 (01:19:06):
Yeah, guilty of bank robbery too.

Speaker 18 (01:19:08):
Yeah, but the same with you, right, Who's more guilty
the assassin who pulled the trigger? Are they the tool
or the assass or the person or the person who
hired the assassin. They're both guilty of the same crime.
So whoever is directing these people and paying for it
is just as guilty as if they're in the street
getting in the way of the officer, or throwing a bottle,
or spiting off their finger or spitting in their eye

(01:19:30):
or all the other things they've done.

Speaker 9 (01:19:32):
Yeah, we're trying to head them with a car.

Speaker 3 (01:19:33):
Yeah, rot him down with a car.

Speaker 9 (01:19:35):
You gotta take care of a little business.

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Speaker 1 (01:22:36):
And Welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commanders with
George Landreth and I'm Rick Trader, coming to you from
the my Pilus Studios and my Store studios of the
a U N TV Network. Well, Georgia, President Trump is
going to fulfill one of his duties UH this week,
and that's to give our State of the Union Address.

(01:22:58):
Of course, there's already a lot of of cycocrats, members
of the Picacrat Party who's in Congress, who's saying they're
going to boycott it, and I say good riddance to
bed rubbish. What's your take on the State of the Union, George,
What do you expect to hear from the President?

Speaker 2 (01:23:17):
Well, I think it's obviously historically been a very important
moment in American politics because it gives the president a
national platform to outline priorities, to set the tone for
the year ahead, and to speak directly to both Congress
and the American people. And so this year's address comes
at an important time because there's lots of domestic disagreements

(01:23:38):
and there's international tension, and he's been working on all
these different issues, and so I would expect his speech
to try to balance a reassurance and a sense of
urgency at the same time, and on the domestic front,
I think the President's likely to highlight economic growth, the
importance of how our economy is getting in a stronger position,
job growth, the forts to address inflation and how it's

(01:24:02):
been dropping dramatically. And also I think we'll hear about infrastructure,
probably and energy policy, which is also helping to reduce prices,
border security, and the dramatic drop in crime rates, I
mean historic in many areas, the crime rates have dropped
to essentially sixty year lows, and the ongoing debate over healthcare,

(01:24:27):
and of course education, because I think he clearly believes
that parents ought to have certain rights in determining their
quality of their children's education, whereas the left seems to believe, no,
that's our job and we need to force.

Speaker 9 (01:24:41):
This on you and so forth.

Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
But anyhow, presidents typically use this speech to frame their
legislative agenda, so we should expect to push to you know,
I push for policies the administration believes could gain traction
in Congress, and of course, internationally, the President will almost
certainly address national security challenges, including tensions with Iran, the

(01:25:05):
competition with China, and the importance of America's alliances and
given recent global instability, the White House may use the
speech to project steadiness and resolve because for the last
four years before this term, we've had essentially kind of

(01:25:25):
no real American leadership, and so he's trying to make
it clear that to the world that we're going to
be providing leadership. And so I think emphasizing America's leadership
role and the need for bipartisan cooperation on foreign policy
could be an important part of this because historically foreign
policy wasn't terribly partisan, and everything now is partisan. If

(01:25:49):
Biden did it, they like it. If Obama did it,
they like it. If Donald Trump did the same thing,
they still hate it because they're just being partisan. But anyhow, politically,
the state of the Union can have a real impact.
It's one of the few moments when the president has
the full attention of the country, and a strong performance

(01:26:11):
can energize supporters, shape national narratives, and influence public opinion.
And it can also put pressure on Congress by framing
certain issues as national priorities. Example of Iron M. Reagan
did that he pressured Congress into supporting building missile defense
and to cutting taxes and things like that. And because

(01:26:32):
he built public support for it, Congress felt like they
had to go along with it. Even some of the
members of Congress who had opposed it early on changed
their mind because they realized it was probably not a
good move for them to continue to oppose it. But
at the same time, the opposition party will be listening closely,
ready to challenge the administration's claims and offer a contrasting vision.

(01:26:53):
And I would argue that it might be that their
vision is also not terribly candid or honest because they've
picked Abigail's the governor of Virginia. Oh boy, they chose
her to deliver the Democratic response, and I would say
it's for a very strategic position or reason. She has
built a public image as a centrist, even though she's not.

(01:27:15):
She's anything but a centrist. She's a left wing whack
job kook. And she's also a lying sack of riding
fecal matter because many of her early actions has proven that.
Because during her campaign for governor, she told us that
she emphasized themes like by partisanship, low ring taxes, she
was firmly opposed to jeremandering, and she framed herself as

(01:27:37):
someone who would bring moderation and balance to Richmond, and
yet once getting in office, her policies have been the
exact opposite. Taxes have gone up significantly, energy costs a
rising because of her regulations, and the redistant approach of
her administration is far more aggressive than any other Jeremy

(01:28:00):
plan in America. Even California's is not this aggressive. She
wants to go from basically six' five to ten to,
one even though it's about it close to fifty to fifty.
State that's why sixty, five because it's pretty. Close so
they picked her to give the. Response it was not.
Accidental it's because she's someone who can is very practiced

(01:28:22):
at sounding like a. Centrist she speaks, calmly uses moderate,
language and presents herself as, pragmatic even though her governing,
record whether it was In congress or just in the
first month of her, governorship proves she's anything.

Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
But So George, landras are you sitting here today on
The Conservative commando's radio show telling me that they are
now looking at her as a presidential candidate in twenty twenty.
EIGHT i, mean look at the options they got, now
and they're not very. GOOD i, mean you've got To Gavin,

(01:29:00):
newsom who's a disaster In, california who's by the, way
you want to talk about disaster In. California of all
those homes that were burnt down In malibu in The Pacific,
PALISADES i think six have been, restarted so you can't
consider him as presidential. Material and then you've GOT aoc

(01:29:23):
and NEED i say anything? More and then you Got Josh,
shapiro WHO'S i don't think acceptable to the left because
He's gus, what he's A jew and it doesn't seem
like the left of The picocrat party Like jews very. Much,
So George, landers are you telling me That Abigail spamberger

(01:29:46):
is being looked at as the New? Cicocrat hope maybe she.

Speaker 2 (01:29:51):
Is i'm not sure BECAUSE i don't think that there's
any presidential polling that suggests he's a top.

Speaker 19 (01:29:56):
Candidate, well neither Was Barack.

Speaker 1 (01:29:59):
Obama neither Was Barack obama going into two thousand and.

Speaker 2 (01:30:03):
Eight, yeah and there were obviously three years, away so
maybe she could become with. That BUT i think If
Gavin newsom isn't real popular because he's done horrible things To,
california she's doing To virginia What Gavin newsom did To,
california and she seems to be even better than he.
Is and SO i don't think she'll be a presidential

(01:30:25):
candidate because she is a demonstrable liar and, faker and
the longer she serves in, office the harder it will
be for her to hide.

Speaker 1 (01:30:35):
That georgia wanted to talk with talk with you about
your analysts analysis of what you see coming up in
the Presidential's state of The union, message and you said
that he's going to have the full attention of the.
Country keep in, mind the midterm elections are less about

(01:31:00):
eight months away, now and it's in my, opinion it's
all going to come down to the. ECONOMY i expect
The state of The union message to be all about
the economy and the accomplishments of this administration compared to
all the disastrous policies of the last. Administration as we hear,

(01:31:27):
it we've heard, many, many many, times it's the economy.
Stupid SO i would suspect that the president is really
going to emphasize on the. Economy may And you've made
a lot of great points crime, healthcare BUT i see
it coming down to he's really and again as you

(01:31:52):
said he's going to have the attention of the. Country
he's really got to sell his economic program, really really.

Speaker 2 (01:32:00):
Hard, YEAH i. AGREE i, mean the job creation has
been very, high and wage growth has been, high investment
in key industries has been, high and SO i think
those are some really important things to talk. About so
he can use the state of The union to argue
for these policies and continuation of them and perhaps in some,

(01:32:20):
cases if you, will magnification of them and maybe Have
congress stop trying to block them on, everything because you,
know more tax, cuts regulatory reforms and reduction and wasteful
spending and fraud would all help the economy grow. Faster
because when the government spends hundreds of billions of dollars

(01:32:41):
on stupid, stuff that's theft that funds, inflation and it
also damages the availability of capital to the free. Market
meaning if you're trying to start a company and most
dis government's been wasting, money then that means there's less
money in the economy for you to use to grow a.

Speaker 1 (01:32:59):
Business folk worst the, NATURS i think he's got to
make to the point to The american people where this
money come. From it comes from the hard the hard
working men and women who go out to work every
day and pay their. Taxes do they really want to
see their tax money wasted on this? Garbage like what

(01:33:22):
is going on In, minnesota what is going on In,
maine what is going on In? CALIFORNIA i Think israeli,
again because he has the attention of the, country he
has to say to The american, PEOPLE i know you
don't want. THIS i don't want this because this is
your heart earned. Dollars it's not government. Money it's your.

(01:33:45):
Money it's your money that's being, stolen that's being.

Speaker 2 (01:33:49):
Wasted and they pay for it twice because once they're
paying for the money being stolen out of their, pocket
and then they pay again when those policies fuel inflation and.
Weakdomy and so it's kind of it's awful that they
get hit twice by the same.

Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
Thing all, Right. George while The city of The union
being tomorrow, night it's going to be very interesting watching.
AGAIN a lot of the, cicocrats Like Maxine waters said
that she's she's not going to. ATTEND i don't think
she's going to be. ALONE i think that that the
cycocrats do that do, attend obviously are going to sit on.

(01:34:29):
HANDS i, mean you could have a cancer survivor in
the audience and they're going to ignore. That you can
have national. Heroes they're going to ignore. That they're going
to use it as a stage to show their. Displeasure
went to president.

Speaker 9 (01:34:46):
Survivor.

Speaker 2 (01:34:47):
Yep they couldn't even clop for.

Speaker 1 (01:34:49):
Them. Yep, again this IS i, Think george just might
be the most Important state of The union message That
Donald trump has made in either of his, presidencies because
it is so important that he holds The, house that
he holds The, senate because if we lose The, house

(01:35:11):
it's going to be endless, impeachment, impeachment, impeachment investigation after.
Investigation i'm just it's just so. Important, also it's important
to continue his his The Trump, agenda The trump policies
that are, working that are. Working and Again president probably

(01:35:35):
has to make that argument, also all, Right, George, george
let's going to break in the Sissy conservative commandos With
george Landerth Mrick. Trader don't go, Away we'll be back
my news and commentary right after this.

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Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
Tv and welcome, Back welcome back to The Conservative commandos
With George landreth And Imric, trader coming to you from
The My Pilar studios And My Store studios of the
A u N Tv. Network, George, uh yesterday was quite
a day and truth and being truthful and. Honest this

(01:39:44):
show is being recorded On monday. Afternoon after The United
states this, big huge victory Over canada IN uh hockey
at The olympics And. GEORGIA i love, ironies AND i
find that there are a couple little ironies in this

(01:40:05):
win by The United. States Number, One Jack, hughes the
fellow that won the winning goal in. Overtime his brother
actually was instrumental in getting them to the final. Game
his brother scored the winning goal in overtime in the previous.
Game not only, that their, Mother, george happened to be

(01:40:30):
a member of A us women's hockey team that won
a gold. Medal she was also very instrumental in putting
together the women's hockey team who also won a golden
gold medal at these Past. Olympics so there you have.
Family there's another great family. Connection there was a player

(01:40:53):
on THE us. Team you, know this was only the
third gold medal THE us has ever won in all
In olympic, hockey their first one being in nineteen, sixty
the second one nineteen, eighty The miracle On, ice and
now this. One Well nelson on THE us hockey. Team
his grandfather played on that nineteen sixty, team and his

(01:41:18):
uncle played on the nineteen eighty. Team now he's on
this team that won won the gold. Medals SO i
thought there was a couple of very interesting family stories
therein also being from The philadelphia, area The Johnny grideaux
story is a very very tragic. One and for those who,

(01:41:41):
Know Johnny grideau was a terrific hockey player from the
south urs the, area and about a year and a half,
ago he and his brother were out on a bike
ride and both of them were killed by a drunk,
driver a drunk and reckless. Driver and what impressed, Me,

(01:42:02):
george during this Entire olympic, season How johnny's jersey was
hung in THE usa locker. Room and when they won
that gold medal, yesterday not only was the players in
The american flag paraded around the, arena so Is johnny's.

(01:42:24):
Jersey and then when it comes time to take the team,
pictures a couple of the players went up into the
stand and brought Down johnny's two little children so they
could be included in the photograph of the winning. Team,

(01:42:46):
ALSO i Know i'm going a little long, Here, george
And i'm sorry for, that But Jack hughes interview being
interviewed later talking about how proud he is to live
in the greatest country there. Is AND i want to
Thank Jack hughes for the win and for that statement

(01:43:10):
of his loyalty and love of our country versus another,
Player Eileen, chu who was born and raised In San,
francisco chose to state or skate For Team. China and

(01:43:30):
WHAT i think What america, Needs george, meets it needs
More Jack hughes's and Less eileen.

Speaker 2 (01:43:39):
Shoes, well, WELL i think that's an interesting. POINT i
also think it's interesting that apparently some liberal publications were
complaining about the fact that there's so Many american flags
being displayed by THE us hockey, teams the women's team
and the men's team that won gold, medals and also

(01:44:00):
that there were you, know, fans you, know chanting THE, USA, USA.
Usa they act like that was somehow inappropriate or you,
know they called it excessive and. Politicized AND i thought to,
Myself so The Huffington post in The San Francisco chronicle
apparently find The american flag excessive and, Inappropriate AND i

(01:44:24):
think of, myself, so why don't you just tell me
you Hate? America without actually telling me.

Speaker 1 (01:44:30):
That but the Gay pride, flag did? It The Gay
pride flag in the in The hamas, flag that's quite, acceptable, Right, George.

Speaker 2 (01:44:41):
Yeah, yeah but not That american.

Speaker 1 (01:44:43):
Flag not That american. Flag you, know talk about the.
Media what really bothered me in the very very beginning
of the, game and it was very very Early sunday,
Morning East coast, time like eight in the, morning the
game is. Started before the, GAME nbc had a commentator

(01:45:05):
and he made the statement that The canadian team entered
with rousing, cheers but The american, team THE usa team
was met By. Booze that was THE nbc commentator that said. That, George,

(01:45:27):
NOW i look at that crowd as being fifty to.
FIFTY i think half that crowd was For, canada half
that crowd was for The United. States but for AN
nbc commentator to point out that The canadian team was
met with cheers and THE us team met With booze

(01:45:49):
just goes to it's another example of the of the
corrupt media that's In. America, George that's the.

Speaker 2 (01:45:58):
Truth it's very, frustrating AND i just it's kind of,
like like whether you you Hate america so much that
The american flag offends. You you Hate america so much
that the, uh you, know crowds CHANTING USA usa offends.
You it's, like you, know, like IF i went, to for,
example A university Of virginia, Game i'd expect people to

(01:46:18):
cheer at the you, know for The university Of. Virginia
that wouldn't be. Offensive IF i went to, a you,
know A ucla, Game i'd expect the fans in the
home you, know cord or the home field to be
cheering FOR. Ucla it's, like what is weird about? That
and yet somehow that's what they're acting. Like so it
just tells me they must Hate.

Speaker 1 (01:46:39):
America, indeed, indeed, Hey, GEORGE i want to thank you
for sitting in. Today As micaha says, always but before you,
go tell us about your.

Speaker 2 (01:46:49):
Book sure, well here it is Let Freedom. Ring and
of course the subtitle can self evident truths save them
from further? Decline and this book offers a timely AND
i believe compelling exploration of our founding, principles the wisdom
of The, constitution and the self evident truths that fueled

(01:47:10):
our nation's rise to. Greatness because we went from being
thirteen insignificant colonies compared to the rest of the, world
to being the world's, economic, military and cultural and innovative.
Superpower and why did that? Happen because of our founding
and the things that are. There so that's what this
book talks. About and one of the things That Stephen

(01:47:32):
moore said about the, book as he, said for many,
Years George landeth has been one Of america's premier freedom
fighters In. Washington liberty is sacred but incredibly. Fragile without
watchdogs Like George, landerth politicians would be snatching away our
rights one right after. Another this book Let freenery again
is a reminder that our free enterprise system is always under.

(01:47:54):
Assault so that's what he had to say about, it
AND i appreciate his kind, words.

Speaker 1 (01:48:00):
All, Right and where can people get?

Speaker 2 (01:48:02):
It, well they can certainly go to F f dot
org and they'll see the book up in the one
of the top you, know parts of the website and
click on that and then it'll give you a listing
of all the different places there and you can just
click on the. Link but you can also go to
all the you, know whether It's barnes And noble Or
amazon or you, know every you, know because it's also

(01:48:23):
you can get it as a verbal you, know like
you don't have to read the. Book you can listen
to it if you want. So and you can also
get an electronic version and read it on your. Device
so there's all kinds of different ways to get, it
and they're all available. There but anywhere you buy, books
that's where you can find.

Speaker 1 (01:48:38):
It all, right very, Good but for right, now we
are out of. Time that means if we get to
run and we got to, go take, Care god bless
and we'll see it. Tomorrow that's going to be ON
tv and on.

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