Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're tuned to tap into the truth with tim tap
stay tuned right here, Tim tap into the truth right here,
right now.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Command code verified.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
He would say, it's in a crucial stage. It's not
because of ponn walls were way.
Speaker 4 (00:29):
She's wanted to tell us blue and red, she said, Boss,
you lunch govern bets tell me where the constitution went.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Bill A Writs is just heading by bread.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
So lady, people.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Trying across the politicians build a new world. Hold on, anybody,
tell the stage you love. I've got to be the way.
Speaker 5 (01:03):
Name that.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
Rule by the damn. When check your right to self defense,
to sing your signals that they don't make sense.
Speaker 6 (01:18):
Jus moons will not gonna damp guns.
Speaker 4 (01:24):
All the needs a disastereble, all the eyes made out
born shorts day with the real health. Paint the way,
name rule by the damn.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
When the way, God.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
And I will all be rolled by the dan.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
You when Hello, and welcome to today's broadcast of Tapping
to the Truth. Hope you're having a fantastic day wherever
you are and whatever you may be doing. With all
the usual caveats, of course, but you as always on
your ever so humble and mostly peaceful host Tim Tapp
coming to you live from a stork, Rome County, Tennessee,
(02:59):
and so very glad to have you along for the ride.
And we are indeed broadcasting worldwide live tonight on Friday,
as we are syndicated on great digital platforms like the
k Star Talk Radio Network, Liberty Talk FM, the Vera Networks,
and if you happen to be driving through the capital
(03:21):
of South Carolina, Columbia, you might even be able to
tune into WCET FM and be listening live there. Regardless
of how you're listening, Thank you for being here, whether
you're live or if you've decided to just listen to
the podcast after the fact, you are a welcome fellow traveler.
(03:44):
And I'm benet it a good way, not a communist way,
all right. So anyway, here's what tonight's Friday Night live
show looks like. Had a request from friend of the show,
Amy Hollum to come on and talk about a fundraising
effort in the name of justice. And you know, she's
been very generous with her time. She's been a multi
(04:06):
time guest both here and over at the Rumbles live stream,
and since she's never really asked for anything. I figure
I should make the time to let her do that,
So she'll be joining us first here in just a moment.
Then later we're gonna be joined by attorney, entrepreneur, former
(04:27):
National Guardsman, author of the fantastic book Dirt Roads to Runways,
Defending the American Dream for the next generation, a man
who has served multiple legal positions in the state of Florida.
He's run for the Senate in Florida, and he's going
(04:48):
to be coming on and talking with us. Of course,
I'm discussing mister Keith Gross. We'll be talking about what
falls in his area of expertise. Oh yeah, he hosts
a podcast called Legal Ease too, by the way, shouldn't
leave that off the list. We're gonna be talking about
Joe Biden's attempt to defend the use of the auto pit.
(05:11):
So that should be a fun and interesting, very legal
based conversation. Keith, of course, is one of those great
lawyers that I enjoy talking to, so I'm looking forward
to that. And then in the second hour, we are
scheduled to be joined to by hands down my favorite
among a pantheon of great journalists that works over at
(05:34):
Red State. I have a lot of folks I really
really like over there that my favorite is, of course,
miss Becky Noble, and it has nothing at all to
do with the fact that she is among all of
those journalists the one who comes onto the show on
the regular and also joins me over at the Rumble Channel.
That's barely even a factor. Anyway. We'll be talking about
(05:55):
some stuff that she's been writing a lot about that
maybe isn't getting the coverage that it should be. Should
be a great conversation, So hope you guys hang out
for the whole thing. If not, be sure to come
back and listen to the podcast later. You're not gonna
want to miss the conversations. Now, before we bring Amy on,
(06:15):
I am in a position to talk about the only
true sponsor that we currently have on the show, and
that's our friends over at Harvard Gold Group. They have
been fantastic. They have stood behind me and the messaging
of the show, and they've just been phenomenal. So what
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precious metals, give them a call. They are big enough
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five three. Be sure to mention tapping to the Truth
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for one of their other great promotions. Now that our relationship,
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as far as being a sponsor, it's getting really close
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Es and gentlemen, let me welcome a expert on acoustical forensics,
(09:09):
so much so that she runs her own business. She's
out here helping to protect people who've been targeted by very,
very bad people, so much so that she's even put
herself in harm's way in an effort to protect innocent folks.
And hopefully the amount of coverage that I provide here
(09:34):
in this show, and that Ron Edwards provides, and that
George sends her and some of the other folks that
she goes on, hopefully that elevates her enough so that
they're not going to move openly against her. Ladies and gentlemen,
please welcome friend of the show, Miss Amy Hollam. Amy,
thank you so much for coming on tonight. I certainly
appreciate you joining us. How are you this fine Friday.
Speaker 5 (09:58):
I'm doing very good. Thank you for having me, and
I appreciate the time you allowing me to talk about
John Flynn and what I needed to discuss here today.
So I appreciate that.
Speaker 3 (10:09):
Tim Well, like I was saying at the very top,
and I don't know if you had logged in at
that point or not. You know, you've been very generous
with your time you come on. You've been a fantastic
guest both here and over at the Rumble Channel, and
you never really asked for anything, And so when you
(10:32):
approached me with the request to come talk about this,
I was obviously, first of all, very intrigued, and second
of all kept asking myself how could I even possibly
say no? At this point, I was thinking, would I
need to rearrange or maybe change up some of the
invites that were already out. But I think it was fate.
(10:55):
I think it was meant to be because my previous
invites for this time slot all of them were unable
to get back to me. So the time slot just
sat there, open and ready. So at this point, Amy,
I guess I'm going to step back, and I'm going
to let you tell the story of what's going on
(11:16):
with John Flynn and what it is you're hoping that the
listeners will reach out and do.
Speaker 5 (11:24):
Well. What I'm hoping to do with John Flynn is
to receive donations. John Flynn was actually running for senator
back in two thousand and twenty three, and there was
complete voter fraud amongst him. While and he was originally
(11:45):
supposed to be on the ballot, he had enough signatures
to get onto the ballot and they were supposed to
put him on there, but when the time came for
the voting processes, his name wasn't even added on. He
was told that over ten thousand people who supported him
at least he has knowledge of that, did vote for
(12:08):
him and did do a write in during that voting
process out into the state of Connecticut. And he reached
out to me around that time frame afterwards to help
him out with a case on his federal side for
(12:30):
certain aspects with the voter fraud, and that coincides with
what I do with my company with it and technology,
audio forensics, digital forensics aspects, so we could prove the
voter fraud in various ways for his court case. Well,
(12:52):
when he was going into one of his court case
in the federal courthouse, he was greeted by the US Marshals.
The apparently the US Marshals beat him up and there
were eyewitnesses accounts, and they arrested him for a criminal
(13:13):
trust passing and I guess obstructing with a police officer
or something like that, and those are kind of basic
charges when you get arrested for trust passing. And so
he's currently held in Whitening for rent hospital out in
(13:35):
the state Connecticut and the mental institution. Basically, what they're
doing is they're holding him as a political prisoner, and
so we are trying to raise money for him. He's
done most of the money and most of the funds
(13:56):
for fifty thousand dollars that doesn't include for him, and
we raised most of the funds. All we need is
an extra twelve hundred dollars that is left on the
account that we're looking to get donations for. So so
far in the courthouse and the arraignments, we've done multiple
(14:20):
avenues trying to get him out of the high hospital.
He is a diabetic, so he does need proper treatment.
The hospital has not been doing what's correct with his diabetes,
and they're even trying to force medication on him, such
(14:41):
as seizure medicine, and that could actually possibly kill John Flynn.
So we wrote in some habeas corpses and we entered
those into the court system. I've submitted three of them myself,
and all three of them were returned to me. They
(15:03):
were not allowed to be submitted into the court system.
They said I had to go through the lawyer. But
the lawyer that they assigned was actually by the state,
was actually somebody that had committed three felonies against him.
So we're trying to actually hire a good lawyer that's
(15:26):
not put in there without John's permission and make sure
that he can get removed. And they're trying to call
him mentally ill, they're calling him instable. They said that
he was saying death threats. Johonthlyn is a non violent
man and even during the arresting period inside of the videotape,
(15:50):
you could see that he went willingly and that he
did not even bother putting up a fight. And so
there are certain different as specs that we're asking for
the donations about. So if you can go to give
sendgo dot com Free John J. Flynn twenty twenty five,
(16:14):
that is where the donations are. And even if you
can't donate, we even have a prayer request that you
can submit your own prayer requests so that you know
that you're praying for John. But incidences like this are
happening all over America. Anybody who is fighting against the
(16:37):
criminality or being prejudiced against and trying to fight the
system of corruption, they come in and they just try
to bake or act, somebody shut you down in order
to keep people quiet. Right now, the Whiting Hospital has
(16:58):
conservative ship John, and luckily they haven't forced any of
the medication other than that seizure medicant, because they could
literally hold you down in the state of Connecticut, they
could hold you down, shoot you with vaccines, shoot you
with medication, whatever they want, and they could also do
(17:20):
electrode stimulation and to destroy a person's brain. John Flynn
has an IQ of one, so he's very, very highly intelligent,
and so we're trying to get him out there to
save his life. That way, we could continue the work
that we were doing inside the federal court system. We
(17:40):
had a couple of court cases that were going on,
not just with the voter fraud, but we had John
and I have worked into additional court cases, one for
trafficking out of the state of New York and another
one out against the Qualcom telecommunications agencies. So you're talking
(18:02):
about IBM, AT and T, Verizon Power, T Mobile, five
G Networks. We had a court case against that as well.
So that one while he was incarcerated, has been removed
from the court system, removed from federal court and is
(18:23):
no longer it's been ruled on, and he couldn't go
in there to defend the case because he was incarcerated
at the hospital at that time, and they want to
take him to the hearing at the Federal courthouse in
Connecticut out there. So that is just one of the
(18:43):
different things that we're doing right now. We're just asking
small amount donations, even if it's five dollars. That way
we can get him the proper lawyer to get him
out of the hospital bring.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
I'm still having a hard time wrapping my mind around
the fact that they charged him with assault and trespassing
when there were witnesses in place that are prepared to
say that it was literally the opposite of that.
Speaker 5 (19:18):
Well, they had a court hearing and he showed up
for that court hearing, and the courthouse said he was
trespassing because there was no court date. But he had
the paperwork and everything. So they're just holding him against
as well in saying that court that never existed. They
(19:40):
removed it from the whole entire docket.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
And maybe so, but there still should be digital evidence
left behind it. He had the paperwork, It's not like
he created that out of his own imagination. It's just
so over the top. Was the cases that he was
working on that dangerous to the folks there that they're
(20:10):
willing to set this up so hard. Is there a
direct connection between what's going on there that we can
link as comparison to him being forcibly placed into this hospital.
Is there a direct connection or is there something behind
(20:31):
the scenes that we haven't been able to link together yet.
Speaker 5 (20:37):
Well, he does have deep roots connections into Bluemothaw the corporation,
and with the voter fraud and with the state of Connecticut.
A lot of those digital footprints and those evidence disappeared.
They denied people even access to even look into the
(20:58):
voter fraud if you remember everything that even happened during
the regular presidential election period, just even the year prior
to that, they denied access to it. And that was
through authorization through and that was through the federal court system.
Speaker 3 (21:23):
Yeah. I mean there's no.
Speaker 5 (21:25):
Evidence and they couldn't analyze it.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (21:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
You look at states like Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and Vermont in particular,
they literally did everything they could to prevent anyone other
than just a small collection of individuals to look at
anything related to voting. And of course the potential of
(21:54):
voter fraud. There's multiple lawsuits still ongoing in Pennsylvania. I
think they've pretty much given up and vaunt. And I
suppose if you've got something to hide, and this would
be a pretty big deal, you certainly don't want it
coming to light while Donald John Trump is sitting in
(22:14):
the White House, given the fact that he's going awful
hard at a lot of folks. In fact, it's kind
of looking like the folks behind the Russian collusion hopes
might be brought to justice here soon. It's just so
you know, it seems so over the top. It almost
sounds like the plot of a movie Amy. And unfortunately,
(22:36):
these are the kind of situations you find yourself in
quite a bit, isn't it.
Speaker 5 (22:41):
Well, I help the right people there, Tim, And that's
the key is when you're fighting, when you're fighting entities
that don't want to be known, you end up in
the situations like this that they want to keep people quiet.
(23:02):
And there are a lot of different types of even avenues,
especially when Baker acts and laws are in place that
can basically imprison anybody, and a doctor could simply say
this person is mentally ill. Now they have the contract
(23:24):
the Whiting Hospital has the contract for the Conservative ship.
Who do you think is benefiting from keeping people inside
of the hospital. The hospital is benefiting. Not only do
they give the diagnosis, but they get money and stipends
for people who are inside the hospital that have been
(23:47):
there for a long period of time. And they have
access to all his money and funds, and they can
spy on this legal team, and they can counter any
type of evidence that is being submitted into the courthouse
that could possibly even be released.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's just I don't know. It seems
to me like the state of Connecticut needs a major
overhaul with some of these some of these laws that
they allow such behavior to take place. Having an adult
moved into a conservative ship should be much harder than
just somebody making a simple accusation. And when conservatives conservativeships granted,
(24:37):
it should never be an entity that only stands to
profit off of it and a lot to gain to
prevent him from regaining his independence. That's just a lot
of no good all the way around. So hopefully, not
only will we help to get the word out there
and get some help for John, but maybe we can
(25:00):
kind of ignite a little bit of fire for some
of our fellow Americans in the state of Connecticut to
kind of get started on cleaning up stuff like that,
because obviously it needs to be done. Amy, we are
actually already getting really close to our time allotment. So
what I'd like to do right now is give you
(25:22):
an opportunity to share the website for the give send
go again, and then please give the website so folks
can find you over at Amy's Audio Subliminal Acoustic Fingerprinting
and share anything else you would like to at that point,
and then I want to give you the floor for
(25:43):
any final thoughts, so feel free to jump on those
in any particular order you feel like.
Speaker 5 (25:50):
All right, well, thank you so much. I appreciate it.
And you guys could donate to John Flynn at gibson
goo dot com slash free John J. Flynn twenty twenty five.
And once again, even a small amount, even five dollars
even helps. We only have a cap of twelve hundred dollars.
(26:12):
Most of the fifty thousand dollars has already been paid,
so even so, you could drop a little prayer request
in there, and we make sure that John gets those
prayers so people know that they're thinking about him, and
you could give me a contact as well if you
want the direct link at Amy's audios dot com. Just
(26:35):
type in a little message right up there on my
website and I'll answerthia email right back to you you
could give me. You could contact me on my xspace
I have at Amy's Audios, and I also do have
a Rumble page of all the video shows, podcasts and
interviews at Amy's Audios on Rumble as well, so you
(26:59):
can see me Tim Tamp He'll be up there and
any other round tables just like Firefox News, Agent X eleven,
Awake Nation, Ron Edwards Experiment and show. So you could
always find me on a liberty talk radio as well,
and make sure that I hope that everybody has a wonderful,
(27:24):
blessed evening.
Speaker 3 (27:26):
All right, Amy, thank you so much again for coming on.
Thank you for sharing the story and helping to elevate awareness.
I appreciate everything you do and once again showing that
you have no hesitation jumping into the fray when you
know you're in the right More ferocious righteousness is needed
to save America. You are a fantastic example of exactly
(27:49):
that I look forward to talking with you again sometime
real soon. Amy, thank you so much.
Speaker 5 (27:55):
Sounds good tim Thank you God bless.
Speaker 3 (27:58):
All right, gentlemen, I has miss Amy Hollum. Before we
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Speaker 3 (36:13):
All right, ladies and gentlemen. Sounds like Simmy Davis Junior.
They are giving some good advice to some people that
are involved in conspiracies against the current president of the
United States, one Donald John Trump, aka the Orange Man
Who's Bad, the kicker of puppies, the eater of babies,
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(36:36):
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(37:01):
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money you spend with them and using it to fund
actions that you don't agree with. Well, if that's the
situation you've been in, I would like to point you
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(37:42):
of course, is our friends over at Patriot Mobile. As
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soul services are. I need to be able to trust
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that the companies I do business with also aren't going
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the promo code tap, get yourself a free month of
service and find out the difference that your wireless service
provider can make. All Right, with that having been said,
it is now time to move forward with our next guest.
If you tuned in late, maybe you missed the description
that I gave you. He is the author of Dirt
(39:07):
Roads to runways, defending the American Dream for the next generation.
Host of a podcast called Legalese. He has served in
the National Guard. He has been a very successful entrepreneur.
He has served the citizens of the state of Florida
(39:29):
in multiple capacities as an attorney. He's literally an example
of what it means to pull yourself up by the
bootstraps here in America. Even though the left hate stories
like that, I love them. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome
back to the show. He's been with us once before
and it's been far too long in having him back.
(39:51):
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome Keith Gross. Keith, thank you so
much for coming on with us tonight. And before we
get into any topic at all, how are you today, sir.
Speaker 14 (40:01):
I'm doing great and it's always good to be with you.
Thanks for having me on.
Speaker 3 (40:05):
All right, Well, the pleasure and honor is mine. Of course.
You're one of the few attorneys out there that I
really really like to talk to because you're not one
of these judicial supremacists. You understand, the law is designed
to be a tool to protect the people from the government,
not for the government to run over people. And that
(40:28):
seems to be a rarer and rarer mindset with any
within the judiciary and certainly within those that are meant
to defend the American people. So I appreciate that mindset greatly, sir,
So thank you, and let's get into it. Just this
(40:48):
past week, one of the bigger controversies of the last
administration the use of the auto pen excessively in the
waning weeks, the final days of the Biden regime. A
lot of people had a lot of questions. A lot
of people are thinking that some of these executive orders
(41:10):
and maybe some of the pardons, there were some legal
questions about some of the pardons even other than auto
pen wise. But Joe Biden actually came out this past
week in an effort to defend it himself, and he
kind of opened up a whole new can of worms.
He basically admitted that he didn't necessarily know the names
of the people on the list that had been kind
(41:32):
of passively approved, meaning that he was not actually the
person executing the pardons and commuting sentences. At least that's
the way I take it. But you're the attorney, and
that's why you're the guest. Based on what you heard
in this admission and based on some of the other
things that had been testified to and have been admitted to.
(41:56):
What's been your take of this controversy from the jump?
Speaker 14 (42:00):
You know, I saw that interview that Joe Biden gave
to Fox News, and as typical with Joe Biden, every
time he opens his mouth, he says a lot of nonsense. Well,
this time he let the little nugget in there and
he said straight out that he did not personally approve
each name. Well, the president is the only person with
the constitutional authority to issue pardons. And while we may
(42:23):
be okay with the idea of a president saying, hey,
I want you to charge, you know, pardon John Doe,
and then the chief of staff goes and issues a
pardon and affixes the president's signature because the president ordered it,
That's not what this was. This was the staff running wild,
operating an auto pen and Joe Biden didn't even know
what they were signing with his name.
Speaker 3 (42:46):
Yeah, I don't think this was unusual for this administration.
Speaker 9 (42:51):
Though.
Speaker 3 (42:52):
How many times, even early on, did we see Joe
Biden talking to somebody or hear about him talking to
as one of the congressional leaders and things that were
via executive order, things that he had done that he
would literally sit there and argue that he didn't do.
(43:13):
And at the time a lot of us kind of
just poo pooed that as him just not remembering stuff.
But it's entirely possible that he never saw half of
what his name got affixed to because of this auto
pen and looking back at it, this might have been
a far greater aspect than what we thought. But this,
(43:33):
as much as people want to focus on all these
other things going on, and there's plenty of stuff going on,
I've spent more than my fair share of talking about
a lot of it, a lot of victories, a lot
of questions here and there, But this may be the
biggest deal because this is a legitimate, honest to goodness
constitutional crisis, isn't it.
Speaker 14 (43:55):
It can be, certainly, you know. I think we'll see
as the next step and this investigation unfold, I'm hoping
that the DOJ is going to investigate and call witnesses
and get to the bottom of who was really running
our government while Joe Biden was clearly incapacitated. I hope
they investigate why Joe Biden was not removed under the
(44:15):
twenty fifth Amendment. You know, these cabinet members had a
duty to the Constitution and to the people who removed
Joe Biden a long time ago, and they didn't. And
just in his final weeks he supposedly pardoned fifteen hundred people.
And that's really the issue at hand today is are
those pardons valid. Well, until the DOJ investigates and determines
(44:35):
whether or not there was proper authorization granted for each
of those names, we won't know the answer. You know,
a lot of folks they're up in arms about the
idea of the autopen being used at all, But I
think that's really not the best issue to focus on,
because the use of an auto pen, whether we like
it or not, is something the president can reasonably decide
to do. The key is did he make the knowing
(44:58):
authorization for his signature to be affixed to that document.
The issue isn't how the signature got there rather, but
whether he intentionally assigned that signature to that document.
Speaker 3 (45:11):
Yeah, yeah, I agree with you. I mean, we are
in the modern age where electronic signatures are now commonplace.
They're legally binding. Again, as you pointed out, regardless of
the context if I'm filling out my income taxes, if
I'm sending some type of legal document to a business partner,
(45:35):
it's perfectly okay for me to use an electronic signature,
and it will stand up as long as I knew
that my signature was being put there, so it's not
any different. So I agree completely with that. I think though,
that my question still keeps circling back around to how
(45:55):
would it even be possible given that essentially he gets
up basically a criteria and then kind of gave permission
for the people working for him to compile the list themselves.
That kind of still flies in the face of what
this commutational power is meant to encompass, because, in truth,
(46:20):
and I keep pointing this out, the dirty little secret
some of these particular categories that he mentioned. If you
talk about nonviolent drug offenses, for example, the majority of
people setting in federal prison on a non violent drug
offense took a plea deal. They're probably and I have
(46:43):
to use the word probably, because obviously there may very
well be some exemptions, but there's most likely some other
larger crime that they committed. The reason why the federal
government felt necessary to imprison them rather than leave this
to a state level offense. And in the process, they
just had some question about whether or not they could
(47:05):
get the conviction through a jury of peers. So the
plea deal, they plead to a much lesser charge. They
take that because they don't want to roll the dice either.
But a lot of these so called nonviolent drug offenders,
and in certain other crimes as well, that's not exactly
what it looks like on paper.
Speaker 14 (47:25):
Right yeah, there's certainly a lot of unprecedented angles to
the way Joe Biden handled the pardon authority. And you know,
if we want to make sure that future presidents are
not so eager to use the autopen, think the best
way to do that is to start challenging some of
these pardons. Let's call them invalid and let the fight happen.
(47:45):
And even if ultimately the pardons are upheld as valid
in the courts, at least future presidents are gonna think
twice about using an autopen because if it's something important
enough to affix their signature to, they might just decide
to sign it themselves to avoid the potential of it
being challenged.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
Right yeah, I guess ultimately I keep circling back around
to the nature of a large percentage of these pardons
that were issued, especially the people that were preemptively pardoned,
people that he believed would be targeted by the incoming
(48:26):
Trump administration, So many things that previously had never been done,
even the notion of the potential of pardoning yourself. There's
not really anything prohibiting a chief executive from doing that
at the federal level in the constitution. But that's primarily
because the founding fathers, the framers of the constitution never
(48:51):
thought that the American people or the cabinet level positions, who,
as you've already pointed out, have a constitutional responsibility to
remove people when they are not capable of performing the role.
They never believed that a person would have the opportunity
or the audacity to attempt these things. What would be
(49:14):
the best remedy to solve the issues of self pardons,
which I don't believe was ever intended, or vague open
ended preemptive pardons, which I also don't believe was ever
the intention of this ability. This was intended to be
one of the checks on the excuse me, the judiciary
(49:35):
if there was a case where they obviously got it wrong.
It wasn't intended to be an open ended power to
be wilded. Willy nilly, Do we need now to maybe
do a constitutional amendment? Do we need to have a
convention of States to get there? What would be in
(49:56):
your mind the best solution here, because I don't think
if there's any other lesser legal step than a constitutional
amendment that would legitimately fix this beyond question.
Speaker 14 (50:09):
No, if it's a situation where you think the Constitution
is wrong, then the only way to change it is
an amendment. But when you look at the exercise of
executive authority, there are other ways to handle this situation.
You know, the executive branch, all of the power of
that branch is vested in one person, the President, And
(50:30):
if you don't like the way the executive handles that power,
you know he could be removed from office through impeachment
and removal if the Congress finds the offenses serious enough.
When you talk about the use of pardons for oneself,
you know, if the president pardons himself, while that may
or may not have been considered by the founding fathers,
you know that wouldn't apply to an impeachment proceeding. So
(50:52):
there are still checks and balances there. I tell you
what I'm more concerned about than anything is the limiting
of executive power. Because for decades we've seen executive power
chipped away by both the judicial branch and the legislative branch.
And now we've got a President Donald Trump who's actually
trying to exercise the powers granted to the executive by
(51:12):
the Constitution, and he's being hamstrung every step of the
way by an out of control administrative state and a
rogue judiciary. So limiting executive power right now, I think
is probably not the best focus for us, because, if anything,
we need to restore the full executive power so that
we can have a president that can actually fire all
of these useless bureaucrats that we don't need on taxpayer payroll.
Speaker 3 (51:35):
Yeah. Well, you're obviously right when it comes to that issue.
The executive power needs to be completely restored. As every
member of the judiciary, every member of the Congress, whether
they're in the House of the Senate, they need to
not only recognize and respect the authority of the other
two branches, but also better understand what their own limitations are.
(51:59):
You've got a lot of folks describing for power now
that they know is never theirs, and this has come
in conflicts after a lot of members of the Congress
for a while have been trying to pass the buck
and ignore their own responsibilities so that they have issues
to run on. In this particular instance, I think it
is important, though, to make the distinction. This is not
(52:23):
necessarily an executive power that was intended to be wilded,
because remember the Framers, they were looking at a way
to keep the government from getting out of control, to
keep too much power from becoming centralized. And in an
instance like this, yes, absolutely the executive needs to be
able to go do what that is. That means being
(52:44):
the top guy running all of the bureaucracies and being
the commander in chief, having an insurrection judiciary who thinks
that they are supreme having Supreme Court justices like Kaitanji
Brown Jackson who have to be called out by members
of her own legal minded side. It does tell you
(53:06):
that there's a lot of work that needs to be done.
And yes, you are absolutely right, but that still doesn't
mean they should be granted additional extra constitutional powers either,
And I think that's something we can kind of work
on both at the same time, or I hope we can.
Speaker 14 (53:24):
Yeah, I mean, I totally agree. The powers are what
they are. They shouldn't be expanded, they shouldn't be contracted,
they should be exactly what it is. As Justice Scalia
would have said, the Constitution says what it says, and
it doesn't say what it doesn't say.
Speaker 3 (53:41):
You know, that kind of wisdom seems obvious on its face,
but it does seem to be very rare, especially in
the swamp these days. Keith, again, I want to thank
you so much for coming on. I hate that we
can't continue the conversation because these are topics that probably
really need to get delved into very deeply to get
(54:03):
to the crust of the matter, because I think a
lot of people they only get it glossed over, and
there's just one or two simple linchpins that would let
it click in the minds of even the folks that
tend to vote Democrat, who have bought into legacy media disinformation,
and who still believe that Donald Trump is the Orange
(54:25):
man who's bad, that he's a kicker of puppies, he's
an eater of babies, he's a climate arsonist. They still
buy into that Trump derangement syndrome is a real thing
and it needs to We need a vaccine for that,
not for COVID, that is for sure. I want to
give you a chance though Here at the end, please
(54:46):
feel free to share your website, let people know where
they can still go pick up the book, let them
know where they can find all your other work, whether
it's the podcast or anything any other projects you're working on.
And then if you are inviting people to follow you
on social media, feel free to share handle some platforms,
and then any final thoughts you'd like to share for
(55:07):
the evening, and you can approach any and all of
those or none of them if you want to, but
in the order you see fit.
Speaker 14 (55:15):
Sir, Well, thanks again so much for having me on.
It's been a pleasure to be with you. And it's
important that we have these sorts of conversations as Americans
because a lot of us, like you said, a lot
of Americans get caught up in the media hype and
they don't dig into the issues. They take the headline
without understanding what's really going on. And so you know,
(55:36):
part of my effort is to educate people and help
break down some of those issues. I do that on
a podcast called Legal Ease. You can find it on YouTube, Spotify,
or on X. I'm also on X. My personal profile
is at Keith Gross fl. You can visit my website
at Keithgross dot com. And if you're interested in the book,
it's an audiobook on audible dot com. It's also available
(55:58):
anywhere books are sold in a hard print or a paperback,
at Barnes Andnoble dot com or Amazon dot com. And
I think we set the price as low as Amazon
would let us set because it's not about making money.
It's about spreading the word, educating people, and moving the
country in the right direction.
Speaker 3 (56:16):
All right, well, Keith, again, I appreciate so much you
sharing some of your very valuable time with us tonight.
God speak to you, Sarah. Keep up all the great work,
because you really are doing great work. And I hope
we can get back together again and continue the conversation
down the road, this time without so much of a
gap between visits.
Speaker 14 (56:35):
I hope, I hope. So it'll be great to see
you again.
Speaker 3 (56:40):
All right, thank you much, have a great weekend, sir.
All right, ladies and gentlemen, Keith Gross, And like I said,
dirt roads to runways defending the American Dream for the
next generation. It is a great book, and he's not
kidding when he says it's priced really, really low. Let
me do something that's typically dangerous for live radio, so
(57:00):
let me pull up a website. Yeah, Kindle version ninety
nine cents, hardcover four dollars thirty five cents, paperback seven
dollars eight cents. This he's practically giving it away. Guys,
if you've ever looked at pricing or ever tried to
sell a book on Amazon, that's as well as he gets.
(57:23):
All right, With that being said, we are quickly heading
towards the end of this hour, and you know what
that means. Time to get to the news and to reset.
So we'll be right back on the other side with
miss Becky Noble in the meanwhile, don't go anywhere because
the conversation still is just getting started. We'll be right back.
Speaker 8 (57:45):
You're listening to Tap into the Truth.
Speaker 15 (57:57):
And again, this is Tim tap host of Tapping to
(58:24):
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This is Tim Tapp, host of Tap into the Truth.
Speaker 2 (59:30):
Sad, but I guess.
Speaker 9 (59:33):
That doesn't cut in.
Speaker 11 (59:39):
I almost wissy what.
Speaker 9 (59:40):
In the native.
Speaker 3 (59:46):
Ohrighty, ladies and gentlemen, welcome back as we now dive
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they have additional extensions like Talk Live and Write Talk
and Irish Radio I think is still attached to one,
and you know, lots of other tune in. We were
showing up on tune in on two, maybe even three
different places, and you know, I kind of take that
(01:00:28):
as a thumb in the eye to get old tune in,
because I once had the podcast version of the show
directly on tune in and they just up and canceled
me for no apparent reason, said nope, no more, wouldn't
even give me a reason. It's like, well, fine, yeah,
and then here I am, thanks to some of these
digital platforms, back on not solo, of course, but I'm
(01:00:53):
here for an hour, two hours fantastic. I'm digging it. Okay, anyway,
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Tap into the Truth. And while you're at it, since
you're here and all, don't forget to thank Becky Noble
for taking some of her very very precious time where
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she's working on her substack, where she's putting together her
podcast in your Face over at Gumshoe Politics, where she
is working for Red State writing some of the best
articles you are going to find. Thank her for taking
some of her very valuable, very precious time and spending
(01:04:36):
it with us, because that's what I'm about to do. Becky,
thank you so much for joining us tonight. And before
we get into anything, how are you today?
Speaker 5 (01:04:46):
I'm good.
Speaker 16 (01:04:47):
Jim, how are you doing. Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 3 (01:04:50):
I'm doing fine, And you know, I always enjoy having
you on such a great conversation, always and always a
lot of great positive feedback, whether it's here on the
radio show or over at the Rumble Channel. Always some
of the best segments that we have. Don't tell George
(01:05:12):
that might hurt his feelings, but I think you would
probably still agree though.
Speaker 14 (01:05:18):
Thank you.
Speaker 16 (01:05:18):
I appreciate it, and I appreciate appreciate everybody giving you
lots of positive feedback.
Speaker 3 (01:05:25):
Well, yeah, there's no doubt about it, between you and
Randy when he does come on, I don't think I
have more accumulated positive feedback from anyone. So taking and
try not to let it to get too deep into
that ego because we don't want you to lose focus
(01:05:47):
and slipping down the road. But you know, there's things
going on, and so I'm going to make you a
promise right here, actually, because I've spent so much time
with the last three shows talking about a certain person
that they say self deleted, and I have a hard
(01:06:12):
time buying into it given all the evidence or the
lack thereof in this case, I promise you right now
we're not going to talk about that tonight. Besides, there's
a lot of other things going on. Almost everything's been overshadowed.
Donald Trump's got so many wins going on this week,
(01:06:32):
in particular, he has very nearly completely reshaped the destiny
of our republic. We're so much closer today thanks to
recisions and thanks to dose cuts that have been cut
and put in place, and thanks to the Republicans in
(01:06:53):
both the House and the Senate getting off their backsides
and moving forward with America first. We're so much closer
to something that our founding fathers might actually recognize as
being something they founded. And we've just moved so far
along in a way that I didn't think would be possible.
And with all that, that means that there are other
(01:07:14):
stories that are well worth talking about, this just aren't
being so I want to spend all of our time
together talking about things that you've either talked about or
written about in the past few days, in particular, and
I wanted to start with something I got a big
kick out of hearing you talk about over on the
(01:07:35):
In Your Face podcast over in Comascy Politics, that of course,
being the recent visit from Democratic Congressional Oversight to Alligator Alcatraz.
Speaker 14 (01:07:48):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 16 (01:07:49):
You know, I played a clip of a guy. His
name is Kevin Guthrie and he is I'm trying to
remember now his proper title. He is executive director, I believe,
of the Florida Emergency Management Agency. And what I said
(01:08:09):
in your face was that if there was if they
if all of the agency had honchos there, the big
cheese there at at at the Florida Emergency Management Agency,
if they had a contest to see who was going
to have to be the one to drag all these
goofy democrats around Alligator Alcatraz and you know, answer all
(01:08:31):
their goofy questions and listen to all their goofy hoaxes.
If there was a contest for that. He apparently drew
the short stick, poor guy, because he was on with
Jesse Waters the other night and he was talking about how,
how and and it obviously, I think to him was
very apparent from the minute these people all walked in
(01:08:51):
the door that they had an agenda. Well, you know,
there there's a shock democrats coming into some place like
that that has been up and run. Uh in a
in a red state, uh, with a red with with
a Republican governor, under a Republican president. Gee, there's a
shock that Democrats would find something wrong with it. So
(01:09:12):
he was uh talking about how he had to, you know,
lead all these Democrats through Alligator Alcatraz, and how by
by all accounts that this place is above and beyond
in better shape than a lot of prisons. It's uh
in better shape than then. Uh even Jesse Waters was saying,
it's in better shape than a lot of the whole
(01:09:33):
homeless shelters in New York City, which probably there's a
lot of places that are probably in a lot better shape.
But you know, and and all these guys are not uh,
you know, none of them are Shirley Temple. These these
are some bad guys. And you know, they're murderers, they're rapists,
they're drug traffickers, human traffickers, I mean, you name it.
(01:09:53):
And so so these these aren't aren't nice guys, and
but they're getting they're getting some very nice treatment. And
so you know, they all came in and of course
you know they're they're all after their visit, they're all
running to the first camera that they can find, and
and of course the media is lapping it up because
that's what they want to hear too. And you know, oh,
(01:10:15):
they're they're all in cages. There's I don't know whether
twenty or thirty people in a cage, and you know, oh,
well they're they're using the restroom and they're they're brushing
their teeth, all in the same place. And that was
that was Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and I thought it was
funny that that everyone pretty much everyone's response to her
was yeah, everybody does that, Debbie, It's called the bathroom.
(01:10:37):
And you know, uh, you know, then then you know,
they wanted to know, you know, they they saw they
they caught a glimpse of some of the food that
that some of the detainees there were being fed, and
they were talking about how they were eating turkey sandwiches
that were gray and and oh, you know, all the
food just just looked and and you know, just totally
(01:10:58):
looked horrible, and you know, how could you these people
this food? But then one of them asked, well, if
the detainees that are eating this awful, nasty, terrible food,
if they want seconds, can they go back? Okay? Well,
which is it is a food too? Nasty to eat
or can they go back for more? I mean, it's
it's just so cold. If it wasn't if it wasn't
(01:11:20):
about something so serious, it would be just completely laughable
and comical, you know. But the best one, I think
was Debbie Wasserman. Schultz brought a thermometer with her because
she wanted to apparently see how hot it was in
this facility. Gee, I don't know, what do you think
Florida in July. It's it's probably a little warm. Every
(01:11:42):
place in Florida in July, I would imagine it's probably
a little warm. So she goes in with her thermometer.
But what she did was she held the thermometer up
to the light bulb, and so the thermometer shot up
to like one hundred and ten degrees or something like that.
And I think he kind of caught her in the act,
and he was like, how about if you maybe just
kind of stand in the middle of the room where
(01:12:03):
other people might be and and you can test how
cool or how hot it is right in the middle
of the room where other people are standing. So, you know,
I mean, it's just they're just just a collection of buffoons,
and they keep they keep doubling and trippling and quadrupling
down on their buffoonery, and they expect to win elections.
(01:12:24):
So it's just But it was funny too that that,
you know what, Jesse Waters said it himself, and I'm
sure a lot of other people thought about it. You know,
when she was holding the thermometer up to the light bulb,
how many people, when they were kids and they wanted
to get out of going to school would get the
thermometer and hold it up to a light bulb and
then show their mom and say, oh, look I have
a temperature, you know. I mean, it was just this childish,
(01:12:47):
petty buffoonery. I mean, that's the only way you can
describe it. So poor guy, I kind of hope you
got combat pay for that.
Speaker 3 (01:12:57):
It's a very ze time and a half certainly earned it.
But then again, I kind of feel that way about
anybody who has to deal with certain members of the
Democratic Party, and Debbie Washerman Schultz definitely falls into that category. Yeah,
(01:13:19):
the level of absurdity, like you said, it would be
hilarious if it wasn't for the fact that these are
supposed to be leaders. There are people that are supposed
to be helping to make policy, they're supposed to be,
supposed to be a lot of things. I don't even
think that they're grown people, not emotionally anyway, no, desperately
(01:13:42):
trying to find something to complain about. And I guarantee
you these folks are in much better conditions than a
lot of US citizens are, because even now trying to
undo the damage that was done by the last administration,
the American people have been put at the back of
(01:14:04):
the line for way too long. And I, for one,
I'm glad to see that turning. But for any of
these people to go down there and pretend as if
they're not incarcerated, well, they're just yes, out in the
middle of this walk.
Speaker 16 (01:14:24):
Right right. And you know, if you think back too,
I believe it was twenty twenty one when all of
this mass illegal immigration started and we had the summer
of all the Haitian immigrants. Weren't a lot of Haitian
immigrants living under a bridge in Del Rio, Texas, where
(01:14:44):
daily the temperature was upwards of one hundred degrees. I
didn't hear anybody talking about how inhumane that was. Republicans
might have been talking about, but I certainly didn't hear
any Democrats talking about how inhumane that was, you know,
and aren't know. Wouldn't wouldn't Haitian immigrants be being black people.
Wouldn't they be the prime group of people that Democrats
(01:15:07):
claim they want to help so much? So I you know,
there there's their silence was deafening at at that point.
Speaker 3 (01:15:15):
Uh, Becky, you know as well as I do, though,
trying to find hypocrisy in the Democratic Party is literally
easier than shooting fish in a barrel. It is, it
is all right. Uh, it's a story that while this
one's a lot of fun and it does point out
(01:15:36):
the ridiculousness of some of the very deep bench of
the Democratic Party, uh, one that actually is kind of
an important story, and I think will be all the
more important as we see the presidential primaries start to
heat up, and that of course, is the ongoing struggle
(01:16:00):
or victims of the LA wildfires to find any kind
of relief. You've talked about and written about some of
what's going on. So obviously before we head into the
mid hour break, we may have to carry this one
over because there's a lot of moving parts here, starting
with the fact that folks were supposed to get some
(01:16:23):
made money that doesn't seem to be making its way there.
And there seems to be a whole lot of removal
of certain regulations and possibly some rezoning going on, pretending
to be to help the victims, but it really looks
like it's more about the redistribution and the re imagining
(01:16:47):
of what Los Angeles County should look like in the
minds of democrats. I will let you start on whichever
part of this story that you would like to and
we'll kind of go from there.
Speaker 16 (01:16:58):
Well, I think it is it's something I think that
has been in the works for Democrats. It's it's been
on their agenda, they're wish lists for quite a while
and that and it I think it started probably about
the time that Joe Biden was elected installed. Whichever words
you want to your choice of words, but you know,
(01:17:19):
one of the things that the Barack Obama types have
always wanted to do was get rid of suburbs and
put low income housing, you know, scatter it among those
suburbs so that it wasn't all just single family homes.
And I think these unfortunately, these wildfires have kind of
at least in California, have given Democrats, bar left democrats.
(01:17:43):
I don't know if there's any other kind anymore. It's
given them an excuse to say, hey, why don't we
do this? And what it's This story is kind of
near and dear to some of my coworkers who do
live in California and who were affected by these fires.
And fortunately, thank god, no one, no one lost homes
(01:18:04):
or anything, but those fires were pretty close and it
was a pretty scary time for them. And so what's
going on, I think is that one of the clips
that I played on in your face was from Joel Pollock.
He is the editor at large for Breitbart, and he
(01:18:24):
is also a California resident, and there was a I
forgive me. I don't remember the exact number of the bill,
but anyway, it was earlier this week the California Assembly
signed a bill basically to where they can I think,
if I understand it right, they can kind of get
the ball rolling on this. Gavin Newsom has has has
(01:18:51):
allocated about one hundred million dollars I think for low
income housing in Pacific Palisades, which is one of the
hardest hit areas in Los Angeles. And you can go
on the best place to go is on X or Twitter,
whatever we're calling it, and you can see that that
construction is going at a snail's pace. People's building permits
(01:19:16):
are not you know, it's it's just it's just not
it's just not going as quickly as it could. Even
even though Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass I'm sure are
all talking, you know, patting themselves on the back about
how they've they've gotten rid of this regulation and that regulation.
But you know, I think you have to kind of
take that with a grain of salt. But so anyway,
(01:19:38):
Gavin Newsom signed this bill earlier this week where he
there was a set aside of one hundred million dollars
for low income housing in Pacific Palisades. And I think
this is what a lot of people, I mean, the
fires were still smoldering, I think, and a lot of
people were saying, this is this is what they're going
to try to do, is not rebuild all of these
(01:20:00):
single family homes in the Palisades. They're going to try
to get more low income housing there. Well, there was
already there was I think two trailer parks there in
the Palisades that were made up of predominantly low income people.
And what I wrote about today is there was a
concert almost immediately following the worst of these fires called
(01:20:25):
fire Aid in California, and all the usual suspects were
there performing. Katy Perry and Lady Gaga and all kinds
of other people were there performing, and they raised like
one hundred million dollars. Well, this woman, Sue Pasco, she
runs a local news website there called Circling the News,
(01:20:45):
and she said the story kind of dropped in her lap.
She had one of her readers say to her, Hey,
how do I access some of the funds from the
Fire Aid concert? And so she was kind of like, huh,
that's a good question. I don't know. Let me see
if I can find out. Well, so she started at
the Annenberg Foundation, which is supposedly in charge of doling
(01:21:06):
out funds from the concert that was raised. She tried
to contact them, She called them, emailed, she called, she emailed,
and this went on for about two weeks and finally
someone got back to her and they said, you need
to contact this other person who was some sort of
media spokesperson I think for the Annenberg Foundations. So she
(01:21:29):
contacted this person and said, hey, you know identified herself
and said, I have a reader who asked this question,
and he said, well, the individual people, individual fire victims
aren't getting the money. What they're doing is they're doling
out money in phases to nonprofit organizations, and then those
(01:21:52):
organizations are doling out money to people. And you know
there's all kinds of different you know, there's different organizations
to let's say, help senior citizens, emergency animal shelters, food banks.
You know, think of any sort of natural disaster and
any kind of of other you know, any kind of
(01:22:15):
organization that would kind of come in to help people. Well,
the thing is is that they're not quite sure if
the money is getting to the people who it needs
to get to. Because Sue Pasco pointed out that a
lot of these nonprofits, it doesn't look like just I
(01:22:36):
don't it seems to me that she didn't go into
all of the information that she had, but because she's
said that, she doesn't think that these nonprofit organizations are
doing what they're supposed to do and that has helped
the people who were affected by the fire, who lost
their homes and lost everything. A lot of these organizations
have executive heads that are making six figure salaries and
(01:22:59):
so the money in a nutshell, the money that you know,
and we've seen this over and over and over with
with natural disasters, that the money that gets raised for
people doesn't go where it's supposed to go, and so
they have the she was She was being interviewed by
(01:23:19):
a local Fox affiliate there in Los Angeles, and the
TV station there has said that they have contacted California
Attorney General Rob Bonta about this to see if he
A if he knows anything about it, and b if
he does, you know, is it on his radar and
what can be done about it? So I think it's
a story. It's not not one I think that's gotten
(01:23:40):
a lot of airtime anywhere, and I think it's hopefully
we'll hear a lot more about it, that this isn't
the last that we'll hear about it, because like I said,
you know, there's people who've lost everything they own and
seven months later, nothing is being rebuilt because of well,
well because of Democrats, and Democrats run California, and uh,
(01:24:02):
you know they can they can get rid of all
the building regulations and ordinances.
Speaker 5 (01:24:06):
And all that.
Speaker 16 (01:24:07):
They can get rid of of anything they want. But
if there is if if there are other entities that
are are that are getting in the way of people
rebuilding their homes, and and they have they have other agenda,
other agendas beyond people build rebuilding their homes. That's a problem.
And so, like I said, I think we'll certainly stay
(01:24:29):
on it at Red State because it is it is
near and dear to to several of my coworkers' hearts.
And you know, hopefully that these people will get some justice.
And I don't know if we'll get Gavin Newsom to
stop messing around with with whatever he's messing around with,
but you know, that's that could be a tall order.
(01:24:50):
But uh, you know, hopefully these people will get some justice.
Speaker 3 (01:24:54):
I mean that that would be great.
Speaker 9 (01:24:56):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:24:57):
You know, one of the things people don't understand outside
of those population centers, California is actually a pretty conservative state.
It's just unfortunately within the population centers, democrats have built
little thiefdoms. And I still hate to see the people
have to suffer, you know, Unfortunately, Becky, oftentimes we see
(01:25:21):
it time and time again. The only way some people
learn is the hard way. But this is still over
the top. It is an extremely harsh way to find
out that these people have been lying to you all along,
and they have this plan that is designed solely to
completely redesign their super city. In fact, I've had a
(01:25:44):
couple of different guests on while the fires were still ongoing,
and they specifically stated that they believed that the mismanagement
of the forest to that allow those fires to go
the way they did was in intentionally done. That it
was intentionally done this way so that they would have
(01:26:05):
the excuse to do the building the way they wanted
to these super metro areas. I certainly I can't imagine
people having to suffer as badly as they're going to
have to hear. Yes, we definitely all need to keep
this story focused and on the forefront, because this is
(01:26:27):
something that will hang around Newsom's neck when he goes
to the national political level too. He can't explain it away,
just like he can't explain away the fact that he
doesn't know if eight years old is too young to
start talking about transitioning.
Speaker 16 (01:26:44):
Right now, all of a sudden that he has a
nine year old. Eight years old is a little too
young for gender reassignment.
Speaker 3 (01:26:51):
Yeah, it's strange. The other thing too, though, I would
not be surprised to find out that some of this
money ended up in the hands of an n g
O that's helping to fund the ongoing anti Ice stuff.
We've got to put a pin in it right there, Becky,
We've got to reset the hour and when we come back,
(01:27:14):
we will continue the conversation. So you guys don't go anywhere,
and Becky'll we'll hang around to and we will keep talking.
We'll get to a couple more interesting topics. We'll be
right back.
Speaker 5 (01:27:31):
Hi.
Speaker 14 (01:27:32):
I'm Becky Noble.
Speaker 16 (01:27:33):
You can find me at Gumshoe Politics dot substack dot
com and at RedState dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:27:38):
You're listening to Tim Tapp and Tap in the Truth.
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All right, ladies and gentlemen, welcome back, and thank you
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(01:33:56):
control room of what that might have looked like. And
it probably he would have been a lot like that,
only I would have looked like I had epilepsy yet
the way I would have been around.
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But yeah, the point is that Chuck Norris is a
former world karate champion.
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He was the action star of the eighties and then
the early nineties. I mean, you can say what you
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the man because he could do his stuff for real.
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You know.
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He wasn't just for and he wasn't just the godna.
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you're enjoying a drink. Best case scenario, you are enjoying
life again. Fantastic stuff. Okay, I've dwelt on that longer
than I should have. Ladies and Gentlemen, our guest today
is a phenomenal journalist. She works at RedState dot com.
(01:37:55):
She also operates her own substack no this Gumshoe Politics,
where she also does a I guess the proper term
is micro. Micro is the right term, right, A micro
podcast known as in Your Face, Ladies and Gentlemen, it's
miss Becky Noble. Becky. Before we jump back into conversation,
(01:38:20):
please let everybody know where they can find you and
your work, and let them know where they can find
you on social media if you're so inclined to share that.
At a certain point, I almost kind of feel like
everybody eventually just gets tired of the social media thing.
So if you're still inviting people to follow you, let
(01:38:41):
them know handles and platforms, you know, all that good stuff.
Speaker 5 (01:38:45):
Sure.
Speaker 16 (01:38:45):
Yeah, well, I'm on Facebook at Becky Noble, I'm on
X at Becky Noble sixty five, and of course you
can find me at RedState dot com, and you can
also find me at Gumshoe Politics dot substack dot com,
and of course the in Your Face podcast is right
there on my subtack page. And that is where to
(01:39:08):
find me.
Speaker 3 (01:39:11):
All right. I'm going to start encouraging you from this
point too. I think that your body of work, the
great articles you've written that you've put the place. I
think you are nearly at a point where you have
such a body of work that we should be getting
a book from you. Becky obviously.
Speaker 14 (01:39:33):
Prepared.
Speaker 16 (01:39:34):
I'm going to leave the book writing to my husband.
Speaker 3 (01:39:40):
He's prepared to help you get over there. I think
it's time, says the guy who's supposed to be writing
a book himself and is getting absolutely nowhere because he
doesn't make the time to do it.
Speaker 16 (01:39:51):
I will have to say I may be around on
with next week. I may be around on Red State
a little bit more than Substack. We've got some folks
on vacer and doing some other things, so I'm gonna
gonna fill in a little bit and help out and
kind of kind of, you know, maybe maybe do a
few do a few little extra odds and ends and
things over at Red State next week. So you can
(01:40:12):
probably find me hanging out a little more over there
next week. But but I'll be back on Substack so
after after everybody's done vacationing and you know, doing doing
their thing. I'll be back, so as as as a
certain governor might have said, I'll be back.
Speaker 3 (01:40:27):
I'll be all right. Well, I guess the question at
this point, Becky, is was there anything else you wanted
to touch on or to highlight from the last story
we were talking about, because there are a lot of
moving pieces there. It's a very complex situation, but it
(01:40:48):
can be boiled down simply to democratic leadership. Bad people suffer,
But there's a lot more to it than that, are there.
Speaker 16 (01:40:59):
You know, And and I mean obviously, and you know,
whether he says it or not, you know, Gavin Newsom
is already busy running for president in twenty twenty eight,
so so you know, I think it's he he can't
be bothered. And you know, I think it probably comes
down to the fact that that the sad part of
it is is And in fact, Sue Pasco, the woman
(01:41:22):
who kind of broke this story, said it. She said,
you know, she she said, I'm originally from the Midwest,
and there were so just so many people all over
the country when this when these fires broke out and
and all these people lost so much, that there were
people all over the country that just wanted to help.
Even if they sent, you know, five dollars, ten dollars,
(01:41:43):
twenty dollars, they just didn't wanted to feel like that
they were helping out because because we're Americans and that's
what we do. We help each other out when when
stuff like that happens. And you know, she said she
wanted one of the reasons she wanted to get this
story out was not only to get people in kelis
Forny the help that they needed, but but so that
that you know, other people around the country could see
(01:42:06):
what was going on, and you know, maybe they will
if they want to really help people, they they might
find some organizations, some local organizations. I'm sure you could
do it, you know, you do, you know we can.
We can all get on the internet now and do
a little research, you know, and and find someplace where
they could donate their money directly to to an organization
(01:42:29):
right there on the ground in California and not have
to go through the middleman of the of the Annenberg
Foundation or or you know, however many you know, hands
in the pot you know of money are are there
and they're and they're taking their own cut, you know.
But you know, I think it's just said that those people,
(01:42:50):
I think have been taken advantage of too, because they
just wanted to help. They just wanted to help Californians
get back on their feet, and you know, they sent
in their twenty dollars, but now they have no idea
where their twenty dollars went. Did they go, did they
go to pay the salary of the not for profit CEO,
or did it actually go where they wanted it to go.
And I think that's that's going to kind of be
(01:43:12):
the heart of the investigation, so, you know, and it
makes it's sad too, I think, because it kind of
makes people hesitant to want to want to send money
someplace to help people. You know. I mean, we're just
looking at the horrible floods in Texas, and you know
there's tons of great, you know groups on the ground
right there doing phenomenal work, like you know, Samaritan's Purse
(01:43:34):
and all sorts of other organizations, and you want to
make sure that if you donate money to those those
people who are there on the ground helping out, you
want to make sure that you're even if it is
ten dollars or twenty dollars, you want to make sure,
it's going where you wanted to go. So it's it's
not just people who in California who've lost everything and
are being victimized all over again, but it's the people
(01:43:56):
who just wanted to help and wanted to send money
and now they really don't know if their money has
gone where they wanted it to go. So it's just
it's kind of a kind of a bad deal for
everybody all around. So hopefully, hopefully we'll get to the
bottom of it, and you know, with or without Gavin
Newsome being busy running for president and you know, find
(01:44:17):
out what's really going on right now.
Speaker 3 (01:44:20):
You make an excellent point. In fact, last week here
on the radio show, Richard Battle joined me, and of
course Richard lives less than an hour away from Hill Country.
He was driving home through the rain on the fourth
when this debacle started. And one of the things that
(01:44:44):
we talked about were some of the organizations that are
good to contribute to. And for those of you who
maybe missed last week, feel free to go into the
show archives and look up the show description because we
put the links there. But you mentioned Samaritans perse they
are a phenomenal group. They're still on the ground in
(01:45:05):
North Carolina. They're still doing things and those Mercury Won
another great organization that does a lot of good stuff.
They're present on the ground trying to help in Texas,
but they're still on the ground in North Carolina. They're
still trying to do help in these other places. And
Richard had a couple of other organizations. If you were
(01:45:29):
specifically looking to help in Texas, it doesn't take that long.
We had a guest on a while back who their
organization actually is focused on veterans. I'm getting tongue tied now.
(01:45:49):
Their focus is on veterans charities and what they do
is kind of rate them. And one of those criterias
is how much bang do you get for your buck?
How many of those dollars are actually going towards the
programs that you're being promised. And I think we need
more organizations like that when it comes to all these charities,
(01:46:11):
because best of intentions don't mean jack if you're skimming
off the top.
Speaker 16 (01:46:17):
And more watchdogs.
Speaker 3 (01:46:21):
Absolutely, it sounds nasty, but I know there's overhead. But
you know you also mentioned something else. Now, Karen basses
at play in this as well. You know, she was
trying to sneak back into the country when the fires
were going on. She doesn't want to talk about that.
She does want to continue to demand that I should
report to her when they're in LA's right. No, ma'am,
(01:46:45):
we do not work for you, but for all the accountability.
I think the other thing something else that you've written
about this week is this might also help to draw
attention to how these programs simply do not work, how
bad the management is, so that maybe someplace like I
(01:47:05):
don't know, let's say New York City, doesn't make a terrible, horrible,
very no good decision on who their next mayor should be.
You're getting some mileage out of AOC going on a
let's be friends.
Speaker 16 (01:47:19):
Yeah, with her new with her new besties, aren't aren't
they two peas in a pod? Her and her and
commie mom Donnie. Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:47:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:47:30):
He took Zora and mom Donnie uh up to Washington,
d C. To uh, you know, to take him around
to meet meet meet the crowd up there, and uh,
you know, it's funny because all of the Democrats, who
you know, I don't I don't know how many of
them actually sat out. There was some sort of breakfast
(01:47:51):
or something, and so a whole bunch of them showed
up at this this breakfast which was supposed to also
be attended by uh some businessmen, and then not a
lot of them showed up. But you know, you had
Primilajaia Paul and Bernie and and a whole Elizabeth Warren
I think, and a whole host of the usual suspects,
(01:48:12):
you know, the usual Democrats, you know, who were all
talking about how inspiring he was and and oh he's
just such a talent, and you know, they were slobbering
all over him. They were going on and on and on.
But yet no one, no no Democrat quote unquote leaders
have really endorsed him yet. Chuck Schumer has not endorsed
(01:48:34):
him yet. I believe Hakeem Jeffries met with him either
yesterday or today and talked about what a great meeting
they had, but still has not endorsed him. And I
just heard someone tonight I can't remember who it was, uh,
and they were saying that that they have there's there's
got to be people telling Hakeem Jeffries do not endorse
(01:48:57):
this guy because he's I think what their words were was,
he's going to be an albatross around the Democrat Party's
neck come twenty to definitely twenty twenty six and most
definitely twenty twenty eight. But uh so they're scared to
death of him. So but uh, they're they're also scared
to death of AOC and the squad too. There's they're
they're petrified of that far left wing of the party,
(01:49:20):
which I don't really think anymore it's a wing. I
think it is the party, whether they whether they want
to admit it or not, that's the party that is
the Democrat Party. The the uber left, the far left
is no longer just a wing. So she AOC took
him to Washington, d C. To meet the rest of
the crowd, and uh, you know, they went on and
(01:49:42):
on and and and slabbered all over him. But but
I don't think he's gotten a lot of endorsements yet,
So that that part's kind of interesting that they uh
may maybe they maybe they know what he is, and uh,
you know, it'll be interesting to see if eventually if
they endorse him. In so, who exactly does it If
Schumer and Jefferies do it or other people actually do it.
(01:50:05):
I mean, it's one thing to you know, to talk
about how great you think somebody is, but you know,
in politics, endorsements are what accounts, and so we'll see,
we'll see what happens.
Speaker 3 (01:50:16):
I think, especially in Chuck Schumer's case, there is an
inherent risk to endorsing him if he ends up losing
the race. Right he's already under threat by AOC, and
I do I feel like right now she is very
(01:50:37):
likely to try the primary him. I think she is
very likely to take that seat from Chuck Schumer. Unfortunately
for him, because that is where the young voters are
at now, and they don't see him as being that
old guy. So he has to play nice with Mundami,
and then at the same time he still has to
(01:50:59):
keep in mind that, you know, there are a lot
of democratic political machinery in place that is working actively
against him. The problem is most of them are damaged goods,
people like Cuomo, for example, running as an independent. Now
you've got the current mayor running as an independent. You've
(01:51:20):
got the leader of the Guardian Angels trying to run
as a Republican. And what you have a clear cut
situation here is that if they can flip a coin
and decide who was actually going to be the one
candidate to run against Mandami. I think they win easily,
and it doesn't even matter which one. I've heard a
(01:51:42):
lot of people claim that it does matter, and everybody
seems to think that only Cuomo could actually be It's
like no Clomo was too much damaged goods, But the
majority of New Yorkers are still not on board with
a guy who doesn't even really consider himself to be
an American, It doesn't consider himself to be a First worlder,
(01:52:03):
and who does in fact believe in globalizing.
Speaker 16 (01:52:06):
The anfinatum right right right, Well, you know it's that.
Then the other the other side of that coin, I
think is that if none of them get out of
the race, does it does it maybe split the Democrat
vote up enough to where Curtis Sliwa could kind of
slide in there and and and win. I mean, I
(01:52:28):
don't know it's gonna be. It's gonna be interesting to see,
but uh yeah, I mean Curtis Sleiwa could would be
the best thing that had ever happened in New York
City since Rudy Giuliani. But you know whether whether or
not that can actually happen. I heard somebody the other night,
trying to trying to say, you know, oh, well, you
know them, you can't just you don't have to just
(01:52:51):
be a far left liberal Democrat to get elected mayor
in New York because Giuliani got elected and Michael Bloomberg
got elected, and first of all, Michael Bloomberg was heartily
he was like barely a Republican. And you know, when
Rudy Giuliani got elected, it was it was a different
time in a different place. And so I don't know,
(01:53:11):
I think, yeah, whether or not they they all get
together and say, Okay, who do we think had best
beat this guy. I know that there is a large
group of wealthy real estate people in the real estate
industry there in New York City who are also raising
a lot of money to beat this guy because they
(01:53:33):
know what's going to happen if he wins, with with
rent freezing and things like that, and so they they've
got a dog in the hunt, and so they are
they're they're trying to raise a lot of money to
to get someone else elected other than him as well.
But you know, I think that would be I think
it would be a big surprise if if the Democrats
(01:53:54):
did between Cuomo and Eric Adams and Mandami that if
they would all, I'll split up the Democrat vote and
Curtis Lee what could just slide on in there? That
would be I think there would be be like a
big fat shock to New York City. But maybe that's
what they need.
Speaker 3 (01:54:13):
Ye see. My fear though, is that the way the
current electorate seems to be divided up. And maybe this
is just an outsider looking in who doesn't really have
his finger on the pulse of what's going on in
New York City, but it looks from where I'm setting
at that the only way that happens is if if
(01:54:38):
they unify against him. You know, there has to be
a unification. I think that that comes down to the
It's almost very trump Esque as far as the election electorate.
It's concerned. It's either your forum or you're against him,
(01:54:58):
and it doesn't matter who's the one person opposing. And
if you've got two independents and a Republican, although both
independents are clearly Democrats, just the Democratic Party's mad at
both of them for whatever reasons. We know the reasons,
but we'll not go into them right now. We don't
have the time to. But I think ultimately the anti
(01:55:22):
Mandami group has to all coalesce together. And you mentioned
some of the big money folks that are operating that
are concerned about their business, but there's a lot of
small business owners that are also concerned. A lot of
bodega owners have been very vocal. There's also a lot
of people who live in New York City who immigrated
(01:55:43):
here from countries that embrace the kind of ideologies that
he's trying to promote, and they know that that's dangerous.
And what I'm afraid is going to have to happen
for the city of New York is these folks, if
they can't unify against the idea of full blown communism
(01:56:04):
running their city, they're gonna have to get out. They're
just gonna have to leave.
Speaker 16 (01:56:11):
Oh yeah, I think that if he gets elected, the
exodus of people that you are gonna see is gonna
be phenomenal.
Speaker 14 (01:56:18):
You know.
Speaker 16 (01:56:18):
And he keeps saying that he's going to tax the billionaires. Well,
if there aren't any billionaires left, who's he going to tax. Well,
the answer to that is he's gonna attack the people.
He's going to tax the people who are left who
can ill afford to be taxed because you're gonna be
left with low income people because middle class, anybody, uh
you know, middle class and beyond that has the means
to get out, is going to get out.
Speaker 3 (01:56:39):
So yeah, you're literally going to see an exodus that's
gonna make all the businesses and people that have been
getting out of California for the last four years look
like a slow trickle. Oh and for anybody, it's been
anything but Becky. We are almost completely out of time
(01:57:00):
for tonight, so I want to give you an opportunity
to share any final thoughts for the evening that you
would like to share with the audience.
Speaker 16 (01:57:08):
Man, well, I just you know, I really appreciate you
having me on, Tim. It's always a blast to come
on and talk to you and and talk to your listeners,
and I, you know, just just really appreciate the opportunity
to come on and say it's always good time, always fun.
Speaker 3 (01:57:26):
All right. Well, I'm for one, I'm just glad that
you haven't changed your mind about that yet because I
love having you on as well. Send my best to Randy,
of course, and I look forward to getting together with
you again. Obviously, keep up the great work and we'll
do it again.
Speaker 16 (01:57:44):
Sin Okay, thanks so much, Tim.
Speaker 3 (01:57:47):
All right, all right, ladies and gentlemen, that was miss
Becky Noble. Be sure to check out our work at
RedState dot com and over at sub stack at Gumshoe Politics.
In the meanwhile, don't take my word for anything you've
heard me say tonight, But for the love of God,
don't believe the other side either. Be prepared to put
in some effort, do your own homework, and most importantly,
(01:58:11):
use your brain if you really want to tap into
the truth. Have a great weekend, everybody, and we'll see
you next week.
Speaker 9 (01:58:20):
That's all fulk.
Speaker 11 (01:58:46):
Your beauty.
Speaker 4 (01:58:47):
God was a world of fun when you were just
a little squirt.
Speaker 3 (01:58:52):
Your defense also.
Speaker 9 (01:58:55):
That no one work gets hurt.
Speaker 4 (01:59:02):
You learn to breathe and you learn to squeeze till
you're able is always true.
Speaker 2 (01:59:08):
You may the rite of passage man with your first
reel twenty two Now the new World Order through Well,
they're begging their demands.
Speaker 3 (01:59:24):
They don't feel.
Speaker 5 (01:59:24):
Safe, and you are wrong.
Speaker 16 (01:59:26):
You say country show.
Speaker 3 (01:59:29):
Is using both hands.
Speaker 2 (01:59:36):
Father's name.
Speaker 4 (01:59:37):
The second Amendment was the final one to keep shot.
Speaker 7 (01:59:42):
So hold other like Sam chats, so never.
Speaker 4 (01:59:46):
Because sheep staring.
Speaker 16 (01:59:52):
Hit them hollar me in.
Speaker 11 (01:59:53):
Paul Pott told those things that you never forgot.
Speaker 4 (01:59:58):
You see you less see your don a sauce to here,
the government, the fears of drugs.
Speaker 2 (02:00:07):
Now the New World or true? Well, they're median love mans.
Speaker 11 (02:00:13):
And don't feel safe.
Speaker 12 (02:00:15):
And you are wrong, you say on control, he's using
both hats.
Speaker 2 (02:00:26):
Like a fer freedom winter time.
Speaker 3 (02:00:29):
In two to three.
Speaker 2 (02:00:32):
He's mo than thout, naught to take my family.
Speaker 3 (02:00:54):
Now the New World are not true?
Speaker 2 (02:00:56):
Well, there are magian love mans.
Speaker 4 (02:01:00):
They can pass a hundred bars, but we still won't
give it down.
Speaker 9 (02:01:07):
Already stings about deal.
Speaker 4 (02:01:09):
If they try to take this man, they have the chance.
Speaker 5 (02:01:14):
To reap said don't control
Speaker 11 (02:01:25):
Is using both hands