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June 6, 2025 180 mins
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Special Guests:  J.J. Bradshaw, Moshe Rothchild, Chris Adamo, Dr. Jeyanthi Kunadhasan, MO State Rep. Bill Hardwick
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A lot to be known about the people.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Gotta be jus.

Speaker 3 (00:05):
Ronald Reagan roasting Joe Biden is a thing of beauty.

Speaker 4 (00:08):
The man who all his years in the Senate voted
against every weapon system except slingshots, is now talking tough
about our adversaries and the need for national security.

Speaker 5 (00:23):
You're right, he doesn't.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
To those of you who are too far away to hear.
A lady up here said he doesn't know what he's
talking about, She's absolutely right.

Speaker 6 (00:38):
Want to get it off your chest. You're in the
right place. They accused the show of being run by boobs.
Well let me tell you about us, boobs. We're real
and we're spectacular. Want politics and fun sprinkled with a
lot of laughs. Heard in every state in the Union

(01:02):
and one thousand cities around the world. We just finished
sixteen years of broadcast excellence. Now in our seventeenth year,
Dave Weinbaum Show is streaming live all over the world.

(01:30):
You know, Biden has always been stupid, and now he's
been the fake president for four years. Trump is digging
us out of a vast danger and anti Semitism that
now breaks out into anti Christianity and anti mild Muslims,

(01:53):
but last night was a doozy. Trump and his favorite
adopted son, Elon Musk need to have a meeting, a
meeting that will involve give and take in a tariff
and give and take involving Musks, businesses, and Trump's obligations

(02:14):
to fulfill his electoral promise, the Great Big Bill. Our
real international threat, China is what he needs. Strength for
negotiation with a country who rolled over on a corrupt
Biden Obama administration to put murderous pandemics balloon spying fentanyl

(02:42):
in the hands of Americas to the tune of one
hundred thousand dead every year. Also, the Wuhan lab as
the source that was denied for years by China and
traders like Falci who made a fortune out of it.

(03:05):
China must be held accountable for this. In the twenty
seven year old or twenty seven thousand Chinese letting the
Harvard each year, obliged to killing Americans and overturning our
constitution and aligned with the Communists China Party. This is

(03:33):
capped by a purchase of farmland all over the USA,
many near USA military fields. Biogen recently smuggled into US
by Chinese students at Harvard. As smart as Trump is,
he must end the musk hissy fit immediately. Let's settle this,

(03:59):
let's fix the real dangers. A window of opportunity won't
open itself. My next guest is waiting patiently. I hope
for us to talk him and his wife, who is
not there, Heroes for all who believe our constitution? Is

(04:22):
there a bomb going off? Or what became warriors on
the day they were barefoot in their backyard? Please welcome
Mark and usefully Pat McCluskey bum say well, thank you

(04:43):
kind sir for being on the show. And why is
your poor wife out there working?

Speaker 7 (04:49):
Well?

Speaker 8 (04:49):
You know, for all of you guys that are behavioral psychologists,
one of my undergraduate degrees is in behavioral psychology, and
one of the things you know is that if you've
got a random reward a schedule, that it enhances a
controlled behavior, right, And so by not having Patty on
once in a while, we encourage people subconsciously to watch

(05:10):
the show to see when Patty's going to reappear.

Speaker 6 (05:12):
So, as a lawyer, how do you account for all this?
Bs great friend of McCluskey's, and we broke a story
last week about one to six. If somehow it failed
to find the mainstream media, it's nowhere to have you
seen it anywhere? Okay, so we're gonna still pipe this

(05:36):
thing out. Yes, crickets, you're right, it's crickets. Well, we
got a great show today. We've got JJ Bradshaw at
a ten. I don't know if he'll be in house,
but I don't he'll be here, I think, either by
a phone or in house. Rabbi Moshe who got lockdown, Yes,
yesterday was it, but he should be here. He knows,

(05:58):
he knows. Uh, I'm not as brother in law, and
he's going to have to call me. I hope. He's
scheduled for eight forty and at ten o'clock. We got
a new guest. This is a doctor jkow caller. It's
hard to pronounce her name. Let's just call it JK. Hassan.
And she's she's from actually from Western Australia. We've got

(06:22):
we're linked up to Western Australia. That's as far as
we've ever ever gone. So we're going to have we're
going to travel from the Rabbi at eight forty from
Israel to Western Australia, all by link. I mean, this
sounds really really weird, doesn't it.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Time and space can't stop the Dave Winebomb show.

Speaker 6 (06:43):
You're done right, You're done right? All right, that's super
And at ten thirty we have the great Senator maybe
coming up representative and he is right now represent he's
gonna run for the for the Senate, and that would

(07:04):
be Bill Hardwick. So we got a great show for you.
And finally, my lovely bride walks in. Yes you may
come in, honey, no no, no, no, no, no, please please,
because you make me nervous when you're just standing out
there luminering over me. Oh yeah, okay, all right, Well

(07:26):
you look like you're it. Look nice today, honey, thank you, yeah,
thank you, very nice, very nice. You're always a distraction
to me. And that's a good thing, isn't it. I think?
Oh uh so, so my wife is here, thank god.
And and uh we've got Rick Henderson out there in

(07:47):
Salem and uh uh he done a great job with
the clips and the bits we've got. We've got a
couple of new little surprises for you today, and we'll
talk about what we got going when JJ is on.
What have we gotten for him?

Speaker 9 (08:07):
Is this?

Speaker 6 (08:07):
Like, are we waiting for him or what. I can't
even see anymore.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
He hasn't shown up yet. Okay, I'm sure he'll be
arriving shortly.

Speaker 6 (08:16):
All right, So we're gonna be talking about the Trump
musk thing. You know, things look like they're all musked up.
And I was making so much fun with this, and
everybody was commenting on it on the show prep and
last night when I go out and push the show
on X and Facebook, and you know, most of these

(08:42):
people are really good about not only sending it out
but also you know, a lot of fun. They send
out little pictures of it, of the show, and they're
very loyal. I've got some real loyal fans out there
in X and in Facebook. And I see a face

(09:03):
right there, and there he is, I think, and that
would be my friend. Uh he is two hundred and
fifty six years old, and he has a right to
look down on me, you know. I mean, he's he's
very very student, and he's Uh, what.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
If I remember correctly, I think it might be somebody's
birthday today.

Speaker 6 (09:26):
Oh really, is is it now two hundred and fifty
seven years?

Speaker 10 (09:32):
It is too fifty seven day?

Speaker 6 (09:34):
Wow? Still getting that Social Security.

Speaker 10 (09:39):
Yeah, you know, you you've got to keep working for
a living, you and JP so you can pay into that.

Speaker 6 (09:44):
Yeah, you got You've been getting it for what even
though it wasn't even even there. You you were getting
Social Security back in the early days.

Speaker 10 (09:53):
Well, anyways, Elon mus has found me.

Speaker 6 (09:56):
Yeah, fifty seven. I'm gonna make a note of that.

Speaker 10 (10:00):
I'm one of those guys that's two hundred plus years old.
But yeah, happy birthday to meet fa La Lah.

Speaker 6 (10:06):
Yeah. And you've you've you've missed the investigation by the
doge by the Doge boys, and he's mad. You know
what he missed youity now he's mad at Trump about it.

Speaker 10 (10:17):
Well, you take these things as a grain of salt.
These are two of the smartest guys on the planet,
and uh, I think it was time for them to
give a little bait to the mainstream media. And I
think that's exactly what they did.

Speaker 6 (10:31):
Now, my wife says, this is intentional. You really think
this is intentional?

Speaker 11 (10:35):
No, I think I don't think it's fake.

Speaker 6 (10:38):
Yeah, well fake intentional, intentionally fake, it's fake, Okay, it is.
What's the point.

Speaker 10 (10:44):
Smartest guys on the planet dangling a little bait in
front of the mainstream media. And as Hillary Clinton would say,
and I believe it's a vast right wing conspiracy.

Speaker 6 (10:57):
Has she left the country yet, by the way she
said she was going.

Speaker 10 (10:59):
To one would certainly hope so. So say Dave, this
has been a week, as so many weeks that have
passed between you and I, where we are drowning and
stuff to talk about. There is so much fur flying
in Washington, DC. It's hard to sift through all of

(11:20):
that and pick out stuff that's noteworking.

Speaker 6 (11:22):
We'll have added my friend, Well, I'm.

Speaker 10 (11:25):
Going to get after it, Scoutas of course, our Supreme
Court of the United States of America made some interesting
decisions this last week. There are three of them that
I want to talk about. Let's talk about the first,
which was Marlene Ames versus Ohio Department of Youth Services.

(11:47):
This was a Title seven case and Marlene Aimes claimed
that she was discriminated against in the workplace because she
is a heterosexual, white woman and folks who were gay,
how dear sh I promotes passed her by. She was

(12:11):
actually demoted from a man gerial position to a secretarial position.
So she sued and she won. And here's the important
part about that little thing is this nine zero. The
Supreme Court said that there is no heightened standard if

(12:33):
you are a heterosexual, white woman. Title seven has been
interpreted wrongly. I might add that if you are black,
or homosexual, or of some minority group, and it can
be some obscure minority group, you have a lesser standard
of proof than someone who is in the majority, like

(12:56):
a heterosexual, normal white woman. They would claim. Ohio claimed,
and their district courts claimed that Marlene Ames had a
heightened standard of proof. The Supremes came back and said, no, no, no,
we are all equal in this country and there is

(13:19):
no heightened standard of proof. Nine to zero. They sided
with this one.

Speaker 6 (13:24):
That's a major victory for this country and the constitution.

Speaker 10 (13:29):
I think. So it's a major victory for those of
us who believe in right and wrong. The Supreme's next effort,
and this is one that's mighty close to my heart,
was if you recall, in two thousand and five, there
was a Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act that

(13:50):
was passing signed into law which says gun manufacturers cannot
be sued unless they're way out of line for someone
who uses their product down the way. This would be
the same as saying somebody eats at your McDonald's get
sick two weeks later and said it was your hamber. No,

(14:13):
it doesn't work that way.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
Thanks for that example, by the way.

Speaker 10 (14:15):
You know it's the same idea though. And Mexico and Mexico,
with a bunch of the gun grabbers and the sorrows
folks in the United States had sued ten billion dollars
had sued the gun manufacturers in this case, Smith and
Wesson was the main defendant, and nine to zero, our

(14:39):
Supreme Court said no, no, no, Our gun manufacturers, who
are engaged in lawful commerce, have no control over what
your cartels Mexico do with those weapons. We don't even
sell them in Mexico. They're smuggled across the border. Again,

(15:01):
the Supremes got it right. This was a Second Amendment
victory for the manufacturers of guns.

Speaker 6 (15:08):
In anybody dissenting on it was it nine zip.

Speaker 10 (15:15):
It was nine zip.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
That's amazing.

Speaker 10 (15:18):
It's about time.

Speaker 6 (15:20):
What got into these guys. Maybe the setup with Trump
was such as to maybe lessen the possibility that our
main Supreme Court justice might have been on the Epstein list. Yeah, yeah,

(15:41):
that's something we need taking off the pressure a little
or maybe adding on to it could be. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (15:46):
The third the third scootis and this one is important too,
And this is a First Amendment decision. Nine to zero.
This was Wisconsin who violated the First Amendment rights of
Catholic charities. This was Catholic Charities versus Wisconsin regarding an

(16:07):
unemployment tax. And what it amounted to was this Wisconsin
decided what was a religious nonprofit and what was not.
Catholic Charities, of course, is registered as a nonprofit organization,
and Wisconsin said no, no, no, you must pay unemployment

(16:27):
tax because we don't think you're a nonprofit. This went
through the circuit courts, the district courts, and ultimately the
Supreme Court said, Wisconsin, you're not allowed to make those
sorts of decisions. If this organization registers as a Catholic charity,
we're not going to argue about that. They have a

(16:47):
First Amendment right to do what they want to do.
Separation of church of state, freedom of speech. We all
know the litany, and nine to zero then.

Speaker 6 (16:57):
Zero nine times nine times.

Speaker 12 (17:02):
It's nine time, nine nine times.

Speaker 6 (17:07):
It's amazing. I mean, that's that's not if they do
something that they can only do something about these crazy
judges out there who are not constitutionally allowed to do
what they're doing to the Trump administration or any any
presidential administration. We'd be in good shape.

Speaker 10 (17:29):
It's coming, isn't it, Dave. Yeah, it looks like when
the supremes readjourn end of summer, they're going to be
lined up to take care of some of those problems.

Speaker 6 (17:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (17:39):
Let's talk for a moment about Ukraine. Yeah, the Ukrainians
pulled off a little something similar to what the Israelis
did with the pagers and the walkie talkies a few
months back, where they blew up a whole bunch, whole
bunch of terrorists, which was possibly the biggest intelligence coup
of the Center. The Ukrainians pulled one off two and

(18:03):
this was done so slick. This was called Operation Spiderweb.
The Ukrainians said, this has been planned and worked on
for more than a year. Now here's what they did.
They have some shipping containers, and apparently shipping containers come
in a couple of different heights. They took the tallest

(18:24):
shipping container, put a false roof on it, remote controlled
hid drones underneath it. And shipped them next to Russian
air bases.

Speaker 6 (18:35):
Ah, that's how they did it.

Speaker 10 (18:37):
They pushed a button. They simultaneously these roofs rolled back
and drones outfitted with explosives blew the hell out of
a third of Russia's strategic air.

Speaker 6 (18:52):
They didn't notice the buildings, the new buildings.

Speaker 10 (18:55):
It wasn't buildings. These things were containers, they.

Speaker 6 (18:59):
You know, So they were camouflaged and something okay.

Speaker 10 (19:03):
Inspects the container. They look all around the outside of it,
they look on the inside of it. They don't find
anything that's contact, so they pass it on through and
it turns out the container itself contained the weapons in
about a one foot space in the top of the thing.
My hat is off to the Ukrainian intelligence folks that

(19:23):
pulled this little coup off. Talk about embarrassment for the Russian.

Speaker 6 (19:28):
Well, embarrassment, but now Putin is determined to get revenge
for it, and he they killed about fifty people yesterday roughly,
so and Trump is comparing this to a fight between
between kids. You know, they all fight and they don't
even know why they're fighting at some point, and sometimes

(19:50):
you just got to let them figure it out. What
Trump is saying right in the last ninety said.

Speaker 10 (19:57):
One of the comments I saw regarding this, which interested
me a lot was that the Ukrainians did not bother
to tell the United States they were fixing to pull
this thing off. Why because Donald Trump was negotiating with Putin,
and the Ukrainians were pretty sure that Trump would drop
a dime on them and tell Putin what was fixing

(20:19):
to happen.

Speaker 6 (20:20):
Oh really, so, okay.

Speaker 10 (20:22):
You know an intelligence coup.

Speaker 6 (20:24):
Well done.

Speaker 10 (20:25):
Okay. The next question is why were all these aircraft
sitting out? Well, we had a start treaty way way
back when that said thou shalt put all your strategic
bombers out in places where they can be seen from
a satellite. We do that, the Russians do that. Everybody

(20:45):
except North Korea does that, so that we can see
firsthand if someone has launched a strategic first strike, non
missile type strike using bombers. So all of their stuff
is out on a runway, it's well within Russia, and
it's considered fairly secure until a third of it got

(21:08):
the help blown out of it. My hat's off to
the Ukrainians. Did this escalate the war? Of course it did.
But Dave this is war, and remember who invaded who?
So the Ukrainians, in my opinion, are justified in anything
they might choose to douce strategically. And they certainly embarrassed
the Russians and hurt their air force to the tune

(21:31):
of seven or eight billion dollars worth of hardware. This
stuff's not flyable anymore.

Speaker 6 (21:37):
Yeah, so them. So, so how is Trump now? Trump says,
Putin told him that he's going to help him with Iran.
He's going to help you negotiate with Iran. But you know,
how does this when? When will the that war with

(22:03):
Ukraine stop? It's it's apparently out of control now. Still
you know, do we still have a a We still
have an agreement for the for the valuable jewels or
whatever they have there, don't we?

Speaker 10 (22:24):
With Ukraine talking variable minerals? Yeah, and yeah, I think
that agreement is still there. But it kind of hard
to mind that stuff in a war torn country Southwes.

Speaker 6 (22:34):
My point is, if they start doing it sooner than later,
we will get involved in the war. How about that.

Speaker 10 (22:42):
You know, it's a sticky situation, didn't it, Dave.

Speaker 6 (22:46):
Well, it's sticky, but but we have we have examples
of that. We we occupied Japan, Germany, a lot of
the European countries, Italy, and we actually have a good
representation of stopping more via that situation. Well, yeah, Korean

(23:10):
regular Korea is in.

Speaker 10 (23:12):
Any mood for such an outreach from US, So that
might be kind of tough one to sell a brighter
good intelligence things. Uh, Krene Jean Pierre, if you recall.

Speaker 6 (23:29):
Did you did you have that in one way? Did
you have that in one sentence? Intelligence? And Karine John
Pierre Beer.

Speaker 10 (23:40):
The rellow headed woman who was the spokesman for Biden's
failed outfit. Uh, if you recall any time that you
watch this woman for about a year, stupid spewed out
of her mouth pretty regularly, and also things that we're
clearly lies, clearly.

Speaker 6 (24:02):
But she did what was she you know what? In
her defense, that's exactly what they wanted.

Speaker 10 (24:08):
Well, she did what they asked them. If the President
of the United States ask you to do something, you're
going to do it.

Speaker 6 (24:15):
I get wories or get out or you know, do something,
do something else.

Speaker 10 (24:20):
Okay, she got out. And she has written a book
which is due to be released called and I quote
independent Colan, A Look inside a broken white House, dash
outside the party wise end quote. This is the title
of this old Tom. I haven't read it. I may

(24:44):
or may not.

Speaker 6 (24:45):
Well what bothers you by that title?

Speaker 10 (24:50):
What bothers me? Well, she wouldn't have been in apposition
if she wasn't a leftist lunatic to begin with.

Speaker 6 (24:58):
And now she is.

Speaker 10 (24:59):
Going to leave the Democrat Party and become an independent
and write a so called tell all book, not unlike
what Jake Tapper did. No doubt there'll be a flory
of such activity that occurs. Whether I choose to read
it or not will be my secret. But the point
is the folks that are that have left the Biden

(25:22):
administration and have some knowledge of the inside working of
it are now writing books to make a few books
and expose some of this the exposition I'm proud to
see it needed to be exposed. Now, the next big
question is who was running the show? And that takes
me right to the host.

Speaker 6 (25:44):
Let's add did your lights go out?

Speaker 10 (25:47):
My lights went out?

Speaker 13 (25:50):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (25:50):
Okay, my routers on, Yes, so we're okay, all right?

Speaker 6 (25:55):
Well, I wanted to mention this though, is the real
problem with what's going on? She had to be writing
this book about about all the bad things about the
Biden administration while she was in the middle of defending
and lying about the health and well being of the
Biden administration. In Joe Biden.

Speaker 10 (26:17):
You got right to the core of it, Dave. This
is the the ridiculous part about this. She had to
be writing this thing for the last year. She had
a coach driver the six sick a little bit of time.
And as a segue to this, the question, of course,

(26:38):
is who was running the Biden administration, who was running
auto pen, who was running an awful lot? Yeah, has
signed a memoranda to the House Oversight Committee to probe
just that. Who was running this administration while Joe Biden

(26:58):
was wedding his pats in the basement. And there are
five people that they're going to talk to. Two of them,
one of them is a former chief of staff, Ron Klain,
and a senior advisor Anita Dunn, And I think Jill
Biden's senior advisor, her chief of staff, is going to

(27:18):
be talked to. So we've got some folks in the
Congress that are going to look into this thing, like
so many congressional inquiries, though, Dave, will this go anywhere
or will it just be a bunch of dust and
a bunch of noise.

Speaker 6 (27:33):
Well, if history, if history is like it is, it's
not going to amount too much. But you got to
have some You have to have some accountability in this.
You can't have people taking over the presidency four months
and years possibly and let this country go. You can't
do it.

Speaker 10 (27:54):
Well, I agree with that, And I think about this thing.
When will we know what the result of this might be?
Why is it important? Well, when the Congress looks it up,
it doesn't move very fast. Work past the first hundred
days of this administer straight. So in a lot of

(28:18):
people's minds, uh, the majority of what this administration is
able to do has already been done. I think, hey,
look at that back on and God said, let there
be light.

Speaker 6 (28:33):
Yeah, how about that? We got light? And when you
know what, there's no more shinan It looks like for
your birthday, God has given you a new hair, new
head of hair. It looks like from here then you're
growing a bunch of hair on top. What the hell's
that about? You're making me look bad.

Speaker 10 (28:50):
Pretty well bald. So that ain't gonna happen. If God
is going to give me something. I got some things
I much rather have.

Speaker 6 (28:57):
Bet, don't let your wife know your wife know.

Speaker 10 (29:03):
One more thing. Yes, let's see, we're coming up on
the clock.

Speaker 6 (29:07):
Yes, Doge. Yeah, we called.

Speaker 10 (29:12):
Elon Muss big old Doge. When Elon left that he
left some pretty smart people and behind who are still
looking at the things now. Jony Ernst, one of our
senators Republican, has introduced a bill called Delivering on Government
Efficiency DUG and according to her, there's about one hundred

(29:38):
and fifty billion b billion nine zeros in savings that
can be had. Steve Scales said, according to this bill
that's been introduced, there's about nine point four billion in recision.
So what does this tell me, David? This tells me
that some of the things that Doge had uncovered are

(30:01):
actually being operated on. There's action taking place in conjunction
with executive borders. Now, where's this money coming from? NPR,
PBS and the ever popular of what is the name
of it? The one that they shut down almost immediately

(30:21):
to the two of ten billion. I forgot the name
at the moment. It's old timer's disease.

Speaker 6 (30:28):
Don't worry, I'm there to.

Speaker 10 (30:32):
Jeys is bringing this thing in front of the Congress
to be voted on. Whether it makes it out a
committee or not held, who knows. But it shows me
that at least on the Republican side of the aisle,
there is activity occurring to make some of the dough
stuff stick. And that's good because if we hadn't done that,

(30:54):
all Doge was a big expose and nothing happens.

Speaker 6 (31:00):
Like well, I wonder, I wonder if Musk is a
little pissed off at the fact, of course that he's
having business problems and he was like threatened, Uh they're
blowing up, uh Tesla cars. I mean, there's a lot
of stuff that you can say that piss them off

(31:21):
that might be actually legitimate, legitimate in what he's saying back,
not really, but still uh, he did he did a
great favor to Donald J. Trump and he and the
company in the in the country by finding out all
this hidden money. And there's a lot more that they're
not acting upon. Uh social Security. They've mentioned that at

(31:44):
all or any of that stuff.

Speaker 10 (31:47):
No, I think Lisa and I are right that there
are conversations continuing between.

Speaker 7 (31:55):
Musk and Trump.

Speaker 10 (31:56):
Right, that's the public we'll never hear about and I
think part of this was a put on to distract
the mainstream media. Are they actually feuting? I don't think so.

Speaker 6 (32:07):
All right, let me read you. Let me read you
some messages, because I think some of them are for you.
Rico Camino, good morning. He's a friend of Rick Henderson's,
patriciad and Maxwell sounding good looking, good glow team. By
the way, you have scratchy noises all the time, now
you know that.

Speaker 10 (32:27):
Yeah, it's because I'm old.

Speaker 6 (32:29):
No, no, out of your not because you're old, No,
I'm serious. Static, You got static?

Speaker 10 (32:37):
Yes, I do have problems on this and fixing to
take this laptop about and put a bullet hold in it.

Speaker 6 (32:45):
Well yeah, and you have good aims, so you'll probably
get it on the first one. And Maddocks, Happy birthday, JJ.
We love you. They know it's your two hundred and
fifty seventh birthday.

Speaker 10 (32:55):
Well, thank you.

Speaker 6 (32:56):
They'll probably get your tie. Ray Man was going from Oklahoma.
Happy birthday, Bradshaw, anyone else, Katie Man ask good morning, Grandpa,
Happy birthday. I hope it's a great day. Of course,
it's a great day. He's on my show and Sharon Passing,

(33:17):
Happy birthday to you. And many many more, anyone else,
My goodness, Kathy sand for Dylan, good morning and happy Friday.
Oh my goodness, love you all have a fantastic weekend
and happy birthday. Patricia Oden Maxwell, all right, is that it?

(33:44):
And Kathy san Dylan, Happy birthday, happy, happy birth birthday.
Not just happy birthday, happy happy birthday, happy slappy birthday.
That's for me.

Speaker 10 (33:56):
Okay, next, I will attempt to take care of the
static cause it.

Speaker 6 (34:02):
Please please take use a bullet and just you know,
wipe it out. Okay Amazon, Amazon is waiting for your call. Okay,
you're on You're on the list for Amazon. All right,
thank you, my friend. I have a great birthday day
and weekend. Let's hear it for JJ Bradshaw all right.

(34:28):
I might have cut him off a little bit. I
don't know. He was still talking anyways. Uh. Let's well,
I think we should do a couple of clips. No,
we don't have time. Do uh do two clips and
a uh and we'll get right into the Rabbi. I
hope you know. Let's hit it. Why doesn't Donald Trump

(34:52):
become a judge? Yeah, you might have to.

Speaker 7 (34:55):
Be a lawyer first. I'd be a challenge for him,
but you know I got.

Speaker 6 (34:59):
Give him an honorary degree. You could even do that
for good.

Speaker 8 (35:03):
Well, you know in Texas, back when I was going
to law school in Texas, you know, you got to
put yourself in the mindset of the Texan right because
if you get elected to the legislature, you make laws, right,
and if you make laws, you ought to be a lawyer, right.

Speaker 7 (35:16):
And so the law used to be in Texas.

Speaker 8 (35:17):
And if you got elected to the legislature, you didn't
have to go to law school.

Speaker 7 (35:21):
You became a lawyer.

Speaker 6 (35:22):
Tell us more about the rehearsal of the one to
six twenty one event on September the twentieth, I think
it was twenty.

Speaker 7 (35:31):
Sometime in September.

Speaker 8 (35:33):
And this is really Peter Tickton's baliwick, but he's been
He was commissioned by President Trump to do a nine
month investigation into the origins of January sixth, the staged
insurrection stage by the Biden administration. It was supposed to
be a coup against America, not the coup that they
not the insurrection that they portray it to be. But

(35:53):
apparently the planning goes back at least video evidence of
the planning going back as far as September of You know,
the goal of all this was really three parts, right.
The first part was just to send out a message
to the American people that if you stand up against
this government, if you stand up for what you believe in, we.

Speaker 7 (36:11):
Will crush you. We will destroy you, will ruin your life.

Speaker 8 (36:14):
We'll put you in prison for the rest of your
life if we want to, and we can do so
because we have control of the judiciary in DC. You've
got a jury pool that hates you just for being
who you are, and we'll convict you of everything, no
matter what the evidence is. The other part was to
just treat the people they lured in the entrapped to
J sixers into receiving the harshest possible punishment once again,

(36:35):
to go back to part number one, to show the
American people what happens if you don't shut up and
sit down.

Speaker 6 (36:41):
You know, that'scaholocaust, like we weren't even.

Speaker 8 (36:44):
Human exactly exactly. And the third thing, of course, was
to try to create a big enough event that they
can claim that Trump and by the way, all these guys,
all they convicted J sixers were given an option to
reduce their sentences if they were make up the fact
that Donald Trump inspired them to do it, right, that
he ordered them to do it, that he was head

(37:05):
of this insurrection, right so that he would be ineligible
to run for election out of the fourteenth Amendment. But
like everything the Democrats do, they're so screwed up. They
mess up everything. And now just like all the law
fair against the president is backfired against him, and now
more than ever, we understand just how corrupt they were.

Speaker 6 (37:25):
Okay, we got a couple of minutes, so let's do
Paul Simon fifty Ways. Yes, we'll do that. And also
let's see I had something nels in mine, but it's
not looking good right now, Kamala A one speech. Okay,

(37:49):
there we go, coming up Steve Martin and Paul Simon
hit it. Yeah, it's covered.

Speaker 5 (38:07):
In the evening.

Speaker 14 (38:08):
And he said, see, I I'm so excited. I've just
finished a new song and I just have to tell somebody.
And I said, oh great, what's the title? And he
said forty seven Ways to Leave your Lover? And I said, Paul,
what if it were fifty, you know, fifty Ways to
leave your lover? And and there was a long pause

(38:38):
and he said, go on, and I said, well, you know,
fifty has a nice ring to it, and forty seven
sounds a little awkward. And he said, but you know
I've got forty seven. I can't think of any more.
And I said, make a new plan. Stand and he

(38:58):
said forty eight. He said, don't need to be coy Roy.
Drop off the key, Lee. He said, okay, fifty great, Hey, thanks,
And I'm sorry if I interrupted anything. I said, don't worry.
I was just you're cooking a chicken. And he said, really,
how are you preparing it? And I said, Parsley say
Drosemary in time and now look it up.

Speaker 7 (39:28):
I have a fancy things.

Speaker 15 (39:29):
First of all, it's two letters. It means artificial intelligence.
But ultimately what it is is it's about machine learning,
and so the machine is taught. And part of the
issue here is what information is going into the machine
that will then determine and we can predict then if

(39:53):
we think about what information is going in, what then
will be produced in terms of decisions and opinions that
may be made through that process.

Speaker 16 (40:05):
What you just said is one of the most insanely
idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in
your rambling incoherent response. Were you even close to anything
that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this
room is now dumber for having listened to it. I

(40:26):
award you no points, and may God have mercy on
your soul.

Speaker 6 (40:31):
All right, all right, all right, and I'm looking at
a familiar face right there. You never know these days
when he's gonna be hiding in a shelter somewhere. But
this is the wartime Rabbi. He provides housing for IDF
widows and their children and also gets them all together

(40:53):
so they feel like they're back with families as much
as they can. Please welcome the official Rabbi to the
Dave Weinbaum Show for sixteen years, Rabbi Moshi Child. All right, geez,
we're gonna give him overtime now, right, Okay, So we're

(41:13):
holding up the book and the book is.

Speaker 17 (41:16):
What the secrets of the Bible?

Speaker 6 (41:20):
There?

Speaker 17 (41:21):
You have your screen the web address, Yeah, and you
can get yourself copy.

Speaker 6 (41:28):
Yeah. You know you can't really see the book in
that thing. You need a brighter Can you make up
a brighter cover for the book, because it's like it
goes into darkness and now you don't want the book
on darkness, and in such a great book, you might
look at me. I'm all colorful and yellow and red.

(41:49):
They got the red writ and blue behind my back,
and you get the blue even the blue Israeli signed
there flag. So you know, let's get a little bit
let's get a little bit wild here. Anyways, fourteen nations
vote for hamas Israel cease fire, the unsc and US

(42:17):
vetos it. So where does this leave you? If this
is under Biden, they would have they might have voted
for for the regulation there.

Speaker 17 (42:30):
Yeah, well, I look, under Biden, there are a lot
of things that would have been that would have happened
or that was happening that were a disaster for Israel. Yeah,
so what's your question?

Speaker 6 (42:52):
Where does that leave us as far? Yeah? I mean
you got okay, just save your butts for a little while.
Or does it it puts into a law certain certain
things that could have been awkward had it not been passed,
had it been passed instead of uh a disdained.

Speaker 17 (43:13):
Yeah, look, we we know, uh, we know what Biden
did there. Uh And so this is this is good
for Israel, you know, this is definitely a good thing
for as well. But you know what the the what
I'm concerned about, you know, I guess I should be
grateful to what's happening in the present. I'm just concerned
about the future, Like what's gonna happen when we don't

(43:35):
have a friendly administration? You know, that's really what's you know,
these these things kind of highlight how much the water
has to be held back, you know what I'm saying.
And if we don't have a friendly administration that's doing
everything in their powadopt to help the only democracy in
the Middle East, you know, a good friend, the United States,

(43:56):
then uh, you know what will happen here? You know,
when had Biden won the election, or had those who
are who are you know, pulling the strings of the
puppet won the election, you know, or Kamala who I
liked that little clip you played, like who knows?

Speaker 7 (44:12):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 17 (44:12):
Like, And so that's what it always makes me think
of those things when Israel is under attack and the
United States does something to help us like that, Like
the question is what's happening in the world, you know,
in the future.

Speaker 6 (44:27):
Sure, so tell me about the yesterday's problem. Why did
you have to shelter yesterday?

Speaker 17 (44:35):
Yeah, well, it's been about i'd say on average maybe
once a week that the you know, in my area
that the huties.

Speaker 6 (44:44):
Have been firing.

Speaker 17 (44:46):
Firing, firing, you know, these these ballistic missiles at Israel
and uh. And so we get a message on our
phone actually saying, you know, the siren may go off
in a few minut it's because they don't know the
exact location just yet of where the sumarenes are going
to go off, of where the missile's coming. So they

(45:07):
you get a warning on your phone saying be prepared,
which is good because if you have to run to
the bathroom or something, you know, and then and then
if the missile actually comes towards your area a little
later in its flight, then the siren goes off. It's
very eerie, very loud sound. And then and you run
into your shelter and your in your bomb proof shelter

(45:29):
and you got to stay there for ten minutes.

Speaker 6 (45:31):
And you know, we we have shelters without bathrooms and no.

Speaker 17 (45:36):
Because it's just a room in your house. So it's
actually my son's Oh okay, it's my son's bedroom. Oka
And yeah, they're made as a shelter with reinforced concrete
and steel and all this stuff, right, and we covered
there's a steel roll rolling door that covers the window.
You know, so once you're in there, you know.

Speaker 6 (45:57):
I thought you had to go to a community like shelter.

Speaker 7 (46:00):
No, no, no, no.

Speaker 17 (46:02):
By law, any house built after a certain year has
your own shelter as your own bomb shelter.

Speaker 6 (46:08):
Wow, so I didn't know. So, so every every house
built in Israel in a certain period of time has
shelters built into it.

Speaker 17 (46:22):
Right, And the way kind of things are working, the
siren would go off and you'd have to run for it.
But now in the last month or so, they have
this new system that you get an early alert on
your phone saying you may be getting a siren, so
you can be ready, and then then it tells you,
you know, like in another three four minutes you might

(46:43):
hear the sirens. So it's actually a good system. So
you run in there, and you know, it's fine.

Speaker 6 (46:49):
It's the middle of.

Speaker 17 (46:50):
Day, but sometimes happens all the night, you know, and
you're kind of disoriented and it's and you know, sometimes
hard to fall back to sleep. But you know, this.

Speaker 6 (47:01):
Is a mini scoop right here. Who knew, you know,
back in just who knew this is a mini scoop? Yeah,
that you have a shelter in each building built after
what don't I don't know what after what year, but
because we were there in twenty fifteen, yeah, yeah, or

(47:21):
everyone had but you know when you were here, there
were no sirens going off.

Speaker 17 (47:25):
But like you wouldn't even know if you walked into
my son's bedroom, you wouldn't know that it's a bomb.
You know, it's a rocket proof. You know, it's a
it's a safer wow. And it has a ventilation system
and you know, we keep things in there like you would.
You know, you have like hurricane preparedness or certain it's
the kind of Bernado preparedness we got that lately.

Speaker 6 (47:45):
I'll tell you that we almost had one last night.
I'm telling you it is crazy.

Speaker 17 (47:48):
You got a flashlight, tell me have food and water.
And now after October seventh, where they use the rockets
as a decoy, I always take my gun with me
into this. We all take our weapons, you know, because
you know, I don't think that's you know, uh, necessarily
gonna happen now because we're too alert. But who knows, So.

Speaker 6 (48:10):
Listen, listen, it's getting that way in the United States,
where you're gonna have to carry I've carried a few
times and I'm I'm still still have a gun with me.
You know, most of the time.

Speaker 17 (48:21):
I was still living in the States, especially because I
wear my yamaca wherever I go, right your target, I
would definitely be carrying your target. Got a target because
when I got a target on the target, wait a.

Speaker 6 (48:37):
Minute, Wait a minute, a minute. Yeah, there you go.
How's that for an addition to the show like that?

Speaker 17 (48:53):
Yeah, I just my arm is tired.

Speaker 6 (48:56):
Yeah, this is what you need when you go on stage.
You need a little of that when you go on stage.
You know, you have one that doesn't work very well,
like that one, and you just you don't play it.
But all right, FBI discovers weapons, explosives, UH and Nazi
paraphernalia in Washington, d C. Obama is finally exposed. Might

(49:25):
as well be for God's sakes. Yeah, at all the
harm he's done Israel. He hates Israel, he hates bebing
that then put him in the back room of the
White House and ignored him.

Speaker 17 (49:39):
Nazi parents, But they're finding all over Gaza. That's where
the soldiers find that there's this sort of direct line
between what the Nazi ideology was and what the Hamas
ideology is. Yeah, and this idea of trying to kill Jews,
and it's not just about Zionists, it's just a smoke screen.
They want to kill Jews everywhere, you know.

Speaker 6 (49:59):
And they all there's a story out that the Palestinians
are arming themselves to kill Hamas.

Speaker 17 (50:07):
Yeah, well not just the Palestinians. The story this week
that broke was that Nitayahu is arming militias in Gaza
and that are fighting against Hamas.

Speaker 6 (50:19):
No kidding.

Speaker 17 (50:20):
He was a huge story that broke here this week,
and it's now canowledge it is true.

Speaker 6 (50:26):
Yeah, and so so uh, since since I thought they
were all united, I thought they all elected Hamas unanimously
since two thousand and five, they might have.

Speaker 17 (50:39):
But you know, I guess when you regret your vote,
you know, in Gaza, you know in America, you regret
your vote, you wait for the next election. Gaza, you
just start killing people. Yeah, that's that's kind of how
it works there.

Speaker 6 (50:53):
So, but it's this is never gonna There's no remedy
for this, is there. I mean, there's no real remedy
other than you were at war constantly.

Speaker 7 (51:02):
Right.

Speaker 17 (51:02):
The only remedy isn't you know, is what Trump said.
But I just don't think it's realistic, but that the
only real remedy is a population transfer, you know. But
it's it's not going to happen to the extent we'd
wanted to. But you know, there is the possibility of
moving out terrorists and moving out you know, some part

(51:23):
of the population that is hostile. You know, you want
to live in peace, so fine, stay you know. It's like,
you know, in the United States, like if something like
this would happen, if you had to add a population
of two million people decided they hate the United States
and they're going to be constantly killing people. Like what
would any normal country do? You know, you either have

(51:45):
to go in there, clean it up, and get rid
of these people. You know, what are the choices there?
There's never been a good choice.

Speaker 6 (51:54):
Well, you have you have four children, right, Yeah, you
had to think about that for a while. What were
you hesitating for? Wait a minute, you know, where's your wife?
I want around right now? I wanted an explanation for that. God,
all right, So maybe there's one or two out there
that you don't know about. That's all right. I'm sure

(52:16):
you were single then. But uh, here's here's the thing,
the population war, which is you have you know, five
maybe five children in these Palestinian homes, and you're you're
only getting two or three in your homes. Eventually you

(52:36):
become a lower population and harder to defend yourself. Isn't
that true?

Speaker 17 (52:44):
That would be true, except your statistics are off because
we are reproducing at a higher rate.

Speaker 6 (52:50):
Alrighty, I knew you know what. I knew we were
good for something. Yeah, oh my god, I'm celebrating right now.
We make good lovers, Yes, we make good lovers and
good collar bread in your case, you know, make the
pretzel of the colabreds. Yeah, you ought to. You ought

(53:12):
to put a wrap around that and sell it.

Speaker 17 (53:16):
You know, it's funny because they don't sell those in Israel.
I made it because they only sell them in America,
and I love them.

Speaker 6 (53:21):
Why don't they sell it?

Speaker 17 (53:23):
Yeah? I'm thinking about it, but I need an industrial
oven because you can only make five at a time.
And yeah, you make make five.

Speaker 6 (53:30):
Then you know you're not going to make You're not
not going to make millions of dollars and not have
to have to actually buy something to do it.

Speaker 17 (53:39):
Right, So you know it's only worth it if I
can make a lot of dough.

Speaker 6 (53:45):
Come on, come on, you're come on. We got to
get to sea about a boom, all right. So airlines
who abandoned Israel may be shut out. So these airlines
that bypassed Israel may be now on the wrong end
of the political uh cycle.

Speaker 17 (54:05):
Here, Yeah, maybe I should start an airlock. There's a business.

Speaker 6 (54:10):
Yeah you haven't. You haven't shown Israel yet, have you? No? No?

Speaker 17 (54:14):
Uh?

Speaker 6 (54:15):
So laser iron beam to defend Israel. Uh worked? Uh?
It worked? So so Trump's are gonna now build one
in the United States. Yep, not only did it work,
but the iron laser iron beam is that what.

Speaker 17 (54:36):
Story in the opera here saying we did not have
may not have to have too many sirens anymore because
it works so fast that the moment the rocket is launched,
they could literally shoot it different uh. And then if
they miss it, they have multiple chances in order to
hit it. But if they knock it down like in
the first five seconds there there won't be a siren

(54:59):
in Israel, which which that's a game change.

Speaker 6 (55:02):
So is it do you have it now or is
it just in what's operational?

Speaker 17 (55:05):
It's totally operational. Wow, so its successful.

Speaker 6 (55:10):
So what about the the uh the call that you
got the other day.

Speaker 17 (55:15):
Why wasn't that they haven't built enough units? And like
it's operational, it's not the only thing they're using.

Speaker 6 (55:22):
Okay, it is.

Speaker 17 (55:24):
Working, but in the future this will probably replace the
iron dume. The iron dome costs fifty thousand dollars every
time you fire it. The laser costs like two three dollars.

Speaker 6 (55:35):
It's nothing, So you know, so there's there's been a
split I don't know if that's a WordNet of reports
of Israel killing innocence by the BBC uh, but usually
they're cleared. I mean, but it's it's propaganda that's egging

(55:55):
the world one to be antisemitic.

Speaker 17 (55:57):
Yeah, well they they actually were tracked, did it? The
washing posed to be? They retracted the story because it
wasn't true.

Speaker 6 (56:05):
But where get the story from? What's that? Where'd they
get the story from? Was that the BBC from Commas?

Speaker 17 (56:15):
And well, often how it works in the media is
that if the story has met anything but Israel, they
spend time fact checking and seeing if it's true. When
it's about Israel, they immediately accept it it's true. Like
at the beginning of the war, they said we bombed
the hospital and killed the eight hundred people, right whatever
it was, and it wasn't true, and it turns out
it wasn't true and they had to retract it. But

(56:35):
with Israel, somehow they run every story. You know, I
think about what happened with with with Biden's son his computer, right, No,
we have to verify. But if it was Israel, they
would immediately run the story. You know, if it was Trump,
they'd run the story right away.

Speaker 6 (56:52):
Well, they all, they all, they all lied about that.
I mean they outrighte lied And they had the fifty
one uh three letter uh three letter offices of like
c I A and FBI and all these people testified
that this is a false, right and they all lied

(57:15):
about it. Replicansions for those right.

Speaker 17 (57:19):
It's the same thing. You know, you get you get
to a point where you realize that you know, your
bias is showing and this in the media is biased,
and people forget that the media is a business. You know, CBS, ABC,
they're all it's all money driven and uh they have
to have stories that are going to get uh viewership,

(57:41):
and the viewership gets advertisers, and.

Speaker 6 (57:45):
You know, well, their problem is they have ignored the
majority of the people in this country who are now
leaning to the right, and so we don't watch that
stuff anymore. So they've got it. They've got to go
back to their old customers, who they're losing all the
time now because they're not they're not believable. They're just not.

Speaker 17 (58:07):
Being newsmax, you know, alternative media like you and all
over the internet, because they're just not believable, and so
people are like, Okay, I'll get my news elsewhere.

Speaker 6 (58:17):
You know.

Speaker 17 (58:18):
You know, I grew up in the era, and I'm
sure you of course you remember Walter Cronkai. You know,
there's very trustory that people trusted him, you know, and.

Speaker 6 (58:27):
I never trusted him.

Speaker 17 (58:28):
You know, I don't know if it was true, but
like the evening news, people turned on the evening and
there was a level of trust. You know, looking back,
who knows, but you.

Speaker 6 (58:38):
Know, yeah, did he ever tell us how Kennedy was killed?

Speaker 17 (58:43):
Seriously started to realize, you know, there's alternative The downside
is that a lot of the alternative media you know,
a lot of it's fake news.

Speaker 6 (58:54):
You know.

Speaker 17 (58:54):
You see I see even in sports, I see all
these things posted, you know, the things that to the
Knicks who was fire, things he said after and they
have these these AI driven fake things, and you know,
and I'm like, watch it. I'm like, there's no way he's.

Speaker 6 (59:09):
That's that's an interesting subject. I'm about ready to, uh
to interview somebody. And a couple of my my questions
now are coming from AI and and but but they're
also so biased it's amazing.

Speaker 17 (59:24):
I mean, I can't video huh the video of the
Knicks coach. Yeah, I made him say it said, uh,
it's it would be worth quitting basketball forever, just not
to coach Jalen Brunson again. Now he never said what,
but they took AI and they took an image and

(59:45):
it really looks like a press conference. It looks like
he's saying it. And and I watch it. I doubled.
It took me a second to realize. But if you
look at the comments, like seven thousand comments, he.

Speaker 6 (59:56):
Was there old the only person that really believed in
the guy. I mean, I really believed in him.

Speaker 17 (01:00:02):
One percent of the comments said this is fake it's
ais me.

Speaker 6 (01:00:08):
Okay, So Trump and Musk, you know they're having a
big argument. Do you think that's fake? Seriously staging it?
I mean everybody seems to think that. I don't think
that myself, But I think they're going to get together
and they're going to solve it.

Speaker 17 (01:00:25):
Though I can't see what would be in it for either.
I mean, I mean they either stop dropped fifteen per yesterday.

Speaker 6 (01:00:33):
I know, well it's up, it's up today, but still
oh yeah.

Speaker 17 (01:00:37):
It was a buying opportunity yesterday.

Speaker 6 (01:00:40):
Did you buy any.

Speaker 17 (01:00:42):
No, I don't have any money.

Speaker 6 (01:00:45):
Yeah, yeah, tell us about that. Uh So the idea
this is this is not a this is not a
happy thing here. IDF retrieves the bodies of hostages Judith
Weinstein and hag I uh her husband, Oh Judith Weinstein
had guy and her husband Gotti Hay guy from con Eunis.

(01:01:10):
Now these people we have been dead since probably the
ten seven twenty three. Now why are they being held
as hostage? Yeah?

Speaker 17 (01:01:20):
Well, they released a phone call that Judith had made
on October seventh asking for help, calling to like our
nine to one one, saying that her husband is dead
and she's being attacked by terrorists and that was the
last call we had, So we don't know even she
was killed, but he was definitely dead and taken his hostage.
They took lots of dead bodies as hostages because they

(01:01:43):
know that for Israel, for Jewish people, burying someone is
so it's such an important part of our tradition and
such a holy part that we would, you know, we
would do anything to get those bodies back, maybe one
step less than a living stage of bot Still, so
they took dead bodies, They took whatever they could, and

(01:02:05):
they were both American citizens also.

Speaker 6 (01:02:09):
So when is the end of the war going to be?
This war is spreading out and just you know, you
got guys dying here. Still.

Speaker 17 (01:02:17):
My son is home from so I asked him, and
the first off, he was in the Communists. He was fighting,
that's the guy where it was fighting. He said, they're
literally it's taking a long time now because they're literally
going house to house to house and they're in neighborhoods
that they were not in before. And when you go
house to house you have to be extremely careful sure things.

(01:02:37):
So much of it is is almost every house is
booby trap. Yeah, so the Army, Army Corps of Engineers
has to go in in it. And uh, it's very
very slow, but difficult work. And it's just he said,
we're making a lot of progress.

Speaker 6 (01:02:51):
Ye are they finding anything?

Speaker 17 (01:02:55):
I mean nothing, so much to report. But obviously they
found these two bodies, which that was in a communist Yeah,
that wasn't given back to you, that was taken by Israel, right,
those bodies right, yeah, exactly. So you know, in part
of these operations in Gaza, part of it is the
hunt for hostages. And so if we have to go
to every single house in Gaza and every tunnel, we will,

(01:03:17):
but it's gonna take you know, it's very slow.

Speaker 6 (01:03:19):
You're not gonna get much help, are you.

Speaker 17 (01:03:22):
We're not getting much help from anyone.

Speaker 6 (01:03:23):
So you know, so how about you got any more
rabbi rants or scoops.

Speaker 17 (01:03:30):
No, but I am coming to the States with twelve
widows on June twenty ninth. We're bringing them on a
respite trip. We'll be in New York, we'll be in
Michigan for almost two weeks and flying in a in
three weeks something like that. So it should be exciting.

Speaker 6 (01:03:47):
Well, that's great, hey, Other than Dave Weinba. I'm sure
where can people find and contribute and buy your book?

Speaker 17 (01:03:54):
Yeah, well they can get my book there. It is
Secrets to the here Bible dot org. You can get
copy and you can go to our site is the
Alliance dot org or our Facebook page see it up
on the screen. Is an Alliance after the Facebook dot com.

Speaker 6 (01:04:11):
Hey do you hear about the self service Dennis? He
tells his patience, brace your shelves boom all right, right
by moshe raw child. I don't know do you like
that or the or the or the you know, I'm
cutting I'm cutting some of my help out there. I
got to save some money too, and so uh so

(01:04:34):
I'm using the bottom boom thing here. And what do
you think? Is that better than than hearing applause? Or what?
I like it? I like the bottom move. All right.
We're gonna get all sorts a bout of booms. You're
gonna get different ones.

Speaker 17 (01:04:48):
All right, sounds good to me.

Speaker 6 (01:04:50):
Yeah, well it'll help you in your comedy act. Yeah,
all right, chabatcha oh my friend to all the family.
Thanks all right, now, yeah, one for the road and
commercial time, commercial time, all right, you hold.

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Speaker 8 (01:11:06):
I don't know if you saw Ed Martin on the
Maria Barker Romo show a week or so ago. Did, Yeah,
he's he's now the weaponizations are in the Justice Department,
investigating the weaponization of the Justice Department under Biden, And
he said that he's going to find he's going to
investigate to an open and transparent investigation of all the

(01:11:28):
people that set this up, all the people that made
a decision early on that they were going to make
January sixth the event to take over the government, not
from our side, but from their side. And then he's
going to prosecute the ones that he can prosecute, and
he's going to out and shame the ones that he
can't prosecute. And then he's going to going to see
about compensating the Jay six ers.

Speaker 6 (01:11:50):
Is he in cooperation with the j bondy? How about
the FBI cash and how about all these the hiding
the little hiding place apparently in the FBI that they found.

Speaker 8 (01:12:04):
Yeah, you know, and and well, the answer to the
question is that that Ed Martin is in the Justice
Department now he's he's he's been given the power of
the jurisdiction to investigate all the weaponization of government under
the Biden administration wherever it is. I mean, he's he's
got kind of cart boss in my understanding, to reach
into all the different places, you know, where there was corruption,

(01:12:26):
where there was weaponization. I'm hoping that he's going to
go into the issues where it's a big big thing
for me back when I was running for Senate and
that was a treason committed by Nancy Pelosi and Mark Milly.

Speaker 7 (01:12:37):
I talk about this all the time.

Speaker 8 (01:12:39):
But on January fifth, Pelosi calls up Mark Milly and says,
you know he's crazy, don't you meaning Trump? And Millily
says yes, And then Emili says that if Trump is
going to go.

Speaker 7 (01:12:50):
To war with China, he'll warn the Chinese first.

Speaker 6 (01:12:54):
You know, why isn't there a big, big story about
Millie's going to the Chinese and then making people swear
that they'll go to him for any problems and not
the president. That is clear treason. Am I wrong? Hey

(01:13:20):
call the show five seven three five seven eight two
seven zero zero and get it off your chest. Let's talk.
It's a talk show. Do we have any clips? New clips?
Per se? Yeah? Comments, okay. Patricia Odin Maxwell, the official

(01:13:41):
pastor to the Dave Wayne Mema Show. Rabbi Patsy and
I was really praying for you and your family when
we heard about you having to go to your safe
place again. Bless your hearts. Well, bless your heart for
doing that, Patricia, Rabbi brings some of your bread to
your next visit to see us at the cc CL.

(01:14:05):
That's what does that stand for?

Speaker 2 (01:14:08):
That is city of Light and yep.

Speaker 6 (01:14:11):
Okay. And speaking of which, my wife is now, come on,
do this on camera. Show everybody how colorful that is.
She's eating a cupcake and it's green. Anybody eat green cupcakes?
You gotta watch them, all right, and as that's it
on that okay. So you know, there's some studies that

(01:14:32):
are going on now that say that men have lost
like fifty they've lost a lot of testosterone. I don't
know if it's fifty percent, but from the last fifty years,
men have lost testosterone. You know, I wonder about that.

(01:14:53):
Is that is that true? And why is that? Yeah?

Speaker 17 (01:14:59):
Yeah, I talked to somebody this week.

Speaker 11 (01:15:01):
Yeah, I mean it's true of the all the population worldwide.

Speaker 6 (01:15:04):
But well, don't have a lot of testosterone except for
you maybe.

Speaker 11 (01:15:10):
Anyway, what I was saying was I talked to somebody
this week, and after he had COVID, he felt like
absolute hell oh the next three years and you really
have to press hard to get them to test your hormones.
But he finally got it tested and he was really

(01:15:30):
really low on testosterone and he was under forty so
he should still be pretty high up there. Yeah, So
he started to take hormone supplements and he's feeling much
better now. So I didn't ask.

Speaker 6 (01:15:45):
That's very interesting because they are you know, which which
ones do you take? Well, they got these commercials.

Speaker 2 (01:15:50):
The shots of I've been taking injections for about the
last year because I had my test and I was
below two hundred and the doctor.

Speaker 11 (01:15:59):
Yeah, the twenty five to nine hundred I believe is.

Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
That's considered normal. My doctor says she wanted me to
be around seven to eight hundred minimum.

Speaker 6 (01:16:07):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
Now she claims that men in like ancient Roman times
like in Athens and those times like that when they
they worked all day and they learned how to fight,
and they were fighting battles and all that. Those guys
were pumping anywhere from fifteen hundred and two thousand.

Speaker 6 (01:16:20):
So there, and.

Speaker 2 (01:16:21):
She's she's sold on that. What has really killed that
is our food the way they manufacture it and what
they add to it.

Speaker 11 (01:16:27):
And the chemicals coming down from all of the stuff
in the sky their spring, that all effects.

Speaker 6 (01:16:34):
What about the vaccines? Have they been so? Have they
been doing it too? They have messed with it because
we've found an expert on vaccines coming up, So I'm
fortunately she'll be really interesting. Guys, you're gonna do for
a treat.

Speaker 11 (01:16:45):
I think it's fertility on both sexes.

Speaker 6 (01:16:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:16:49):
Fortunately I wouldn't know about the vaccines affected me because
I didn't take them. So yeah, you didn't take what
the vaccines?

Speaker 11 (01:16:56):
Oh you take it well, So apparently it could be
a long term after effect as well.

Speaker 6 (01:17:04):
Okay, so not only not only can it kill you,
it can get men to where they don't want to.

Speaker 2 (01:17:10):
Fight back for for and it could I'm just gonna
put this out there.

Speaker 6 (01:17:16):
Women don't have as many babies and has a lot
to do with it.

Speaker 2 (01:17:20):
Could it also explain why there are more men now
who seem to swing more to the feminine side.

Speaker 6 (01:17:27):
Put it that way, and ergo the problem of Democrats
have with men, because because men now are just not
as aggressive as they used to be, and now they're
they're hard, they're they're they're very hard to bring back,
especially the manly men.

Speaker 2 (01:17:49):
So now these days, if you have somebody who is
a manly man, as everybody, all the men used to be,
you're considering extremists.

Speaker 6 (01:17:57):
Now, not all men, but you know, a bigger but majority.

Speaker 2 (01:18:01):
Toxic masculinity, masculine because men can't be what men are.

Speaker 6 (01:18:06):
So what do they have to say to the men?
They've got nothing, nothing, there's no there's no way.

Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
So then why are they spending twenty million dollars do
with study?

Speaker 6 (01:18:14):
Because they're stupid? I mean, it's it is telling them
that because these men are wondering a lot of men
are wondering what happened to the Democratic Party? You know,
we're not there yet, I mean, and the Democratic Party
is now wanting to be tough. They want to look tough.

(01:18:35):
You've got the Buddha jug going on with a beard
sounds like a trucker, you know, instead of you know,
being pregnant and having milk, milking, giving milk to his child,
to a fake breast.

Speaker 2 (01:18:49):
There's nothing about that says masculine to me.

Speaker 6 (01:18:53):
I'll just about that he tried it. You know. It
was a little gruff, you know, beard.

Speaker 2 (01:18:58):
Just because suddenly you have a beard and you're talking
with your voice a little lower.

Speaker 6 (01:19:03):
Same thing with Suaweh, he's doing the same stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:19:07):
And it's funny how all of a sudden they're trying
to adjust and show themselves to be the very thing
that they used to speak out against.

Speaker 6 (01:19:12):
Uh. Yeah, it's just it's just it's mind boggling because
that's all they have. They got to find a way
to lie back into the UH population because it's not
working right now. And this is where and I don't
know how, I don't I don't know what would I
do if I was in their shape. I tell you
what I do. I switched away from the Democrats as

(01:19:34):
as soon as possible and get with the people that
understand there's only two genders.

Speaker 2 (01:19:39):
The funny thing is, and I've had to point this out,
especially to some people that I work with in particular men.
This is mainly to them who will say, well, I
don't like Trump because of how he talks to people.
And I'm like, I've heard you say some of those
foul things I've ever heard of my life, and now
you're going to criticize him for how he speaks. Really,
we're going to go there, because that's called hypocritical.

Speaker 6 (01:19:57):
Did you get into a fight? It sounds like you're
they know better, not just did just throw a punch?

Speaker 2 (01:20:02):
Come on, I don't have to. They know I'm not
the kind of guy that you want to mess with.

Speaker 6 (01:20:08):
Ice getting a lot of fights when I was a kid.
I still think I have some testosterone. Do you think
I have testosterone? Honey? Of course, not where it's necessary. Maybe,
don't answer that question.

Speaker 11 (01:20:20):
I don't know how to answer that. Yeah, I'm pretty
sure you could get tested yourself.

Speaker 6 (01:20:26):
Yes, okay, I could probably do that. Yes, yes, But
I don't trust doctors enough to test me. You know,
I don't trust them. I really don't. After the pandemic
for sure, I know I don't trust him. And we're
going to come up with doctor J. K. Hassan, and
she's gonna tell us all they did all Phizier did

(01:20:48):
and all the bs about the veyors report, My god,
did they snicker us? And China has a lot to
do with us too, obviously came out of the the
Hussan Wassan or Hussan Wuhan lab right, and who made

(01:21:08):
a fortune off of that, Fauci and his buddies and
who's fighting.

Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
A lot of people made money on that one.

Speaker 6 (01:21:16):
JK. JK Hussan and her friend Peter McCullough, who she
did an interview with anyways, uh, and we're going to
talk about another gal who who got me that interview,
and that was Leah Santo, Leah Santos uh, and she's

(01:21:37):
she's she's along with that group and she took she
took him on and doctor JK there it is and
uh Leah Sandgug Stagnos Stagnos Okay, so uh we're back

(01:21:59):
on on the show. And in the last decade there
was an eight hundred and ninety three percent eight hundred
and ninety three percent increase in anti Semitism and it's
it's implicated by this the murders in DC of people

(01:22:21):
from the Israeli Israeli office there and this Egyptian nut
in Denver couldn't get a gun and is an illegal alien,
but he couldn't get a gun because of that screaming
against the Jews and trying to throw Mala to off cocktails,

(01:22:46):
which he did successfully against the Jews who were who
were like trying to get the hostages back and demonstrating
for that. And notable about that was on the bill
building that they were demonstrating under, it had a Palestinian flag.

(01:23:07):
The state of Denver, the state of Colorado had had
a flag on one of their buildings. Isn't that? Isn't
that incredible? And you wonder why this is happening.

Speaker 2 (01:23:18):
You know, it's like they're trying to egg it on exactly.

Speaker 6 (01:23:22):
So Alaska's now open up for drilling, and so your
pro I saw the price of I've been watching the
price of gas. Who doesn't watch that? It went down
a penny this time it's two eighty seven instead of
two eighty eight point nine. Wow, I feel rich, don't you.

Speaker 2 (01:23:45):
It's amazing how quick it is to go up and
how slow it is to go back down.

Speaker 6 (01:23:50):
Yeah, what the hell's going on here? Is there a
cobble here? They are in the same they're all calling
each other every day or what that's wrong? Come on now,
it's uh, let's get those prices down, all right, you're
you're telling me and uh yeah me. Uh, I've got
to watch it too because I can't get too expensive

(01:24:11):
in the in the food business. Uh, eggs are down,
that's for sure. So uh Tamppa Tim Waltz. He's telling
the Democrats you gotta get meaner to Trump. I don't
think he spoke it in that kind of waye, but

(01:24:31):
he what a what a wiss.

Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
This guy is Instead of tampon tent, he looks just
like Don Rickles. Yeah, I mean he really does. When
he was in that debate with Vance, Yeah, every time
he had to start thinking, I thought he's gonna have
an androism. His whole face, including the top of his head,
we'd go bright red. You could tell he was struggling
just to formulate a sentence.

Speaker 6 (01:24:51):
It was.

Speaker 2 (01:24:52):
It was almost like watching Biden. But I mean he
was a little better than that, but not a whole lot.

Speaker 6 (01:24:56):
Didn't get trash by these I mean the Trump he did,
didn't He did he ever debate Kabbola? I thought he did,
I think once.

Speaker 2 (01:25:12):
Because they removed Biden so late in the campaign.

Speaker 6 (01:25:14):
Yeah, and then he had interviews where they would steal
stuff from him and drop alter Yeah, they actually alter it.
Who he's suing?

Speaker 2 (01:25:22):
I think CBS, Well, they did the same thing with
what he said on January sixth.

Speaker 6 (01:25:26):
That day.

Speaker 2 (01:25:27):
It made it sound like he told him, well, this
is going to be the Capitol. I watched it live.

Speaker 6 (01:25:30):
That's not what he said, right up, rite up our
quest to have the one sixth thing exposed. Hello, play
another two clips please.

Speaker 8 (01:25:46):
Then he calls in all his chiefs and makes them
swear allegiance to him. Mark Belly not the president of
the United States, so they only take commands from him,
make them swear their oath to only obey him, which
is with that's the cue.

Speaker 7 (01:25:58):
That's treason.

Speaker 8 (01:25:59):
And uh, that's something that people you know, but hang
on the end of a rope for.

Speaker 6 (01:26:04):
Yeah, So why is Pete he seth and I don't
know if this is true or not after what you said,
but why did they just take away like one of
his stars or something like that as a general.

Speaker 7 (01:26:17):
Well, once again, no offense to mister who.

Speaker 8 (01:26:20):
I bet I like you mean he actually did this.
He's a talk show host. What he what he's planning
on watch it. He's I mean true, Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 7 (01:26:37):
But he says he's going to take the star and
document his retirement. Bake.

Speaker 8 (01:26:40):
Well, holy crap, I docum on his retirement by terminating
it is.

Speaker 6 (01:26:48):
What is? Come on, get out of her.

Speaker 8 (01:26:51):
She's here and she's hearing voice only because she she
doesn't think she's beautiful enough today to be on television.

Speaker 6 (01:26:58):
Oh come on, man, your two year too huge for
him even tell me about it. So what are your
core legal arguments you plan to use under the fourth
and sixth amendments? I got that straight from groc by

(01:27:19):
the way.

Speaker 8 (01:27:19):
Yeah you know I've got more than the fourth and
the sixth. I was being interviewed by a cbsfilo yesterday.
They said, so, what damages did your January sixth defendant
suffer other than you know, having the doors kicked in
and their houses flashbang and having their four year old children,
you know, covered with laser dots from machine gun sites.
Other than having their fifteen year old daughters having to

(01:27:41):
dress and undressed instead of in front of fifteen FBI agents.

Speaker 7 (01:27:45):
Other than those little things, their.

Speaker 8 (01:27:47):
First amended violations because everybody had all their communication equipment
taken from them. They were prohibited from accessing the Internet.
They're prohibited from talking to other j six defendants, they're
prohibited from using My favorite one is a twenty year
police officer who is just charged with trespass.

Speaker 7 (01:28:05):
They told him that.

Speaker 8 (01:28:06):
If he used any cell phones other than his own
personal cell phone to communicate, he would go to prison
for seventeen years, and then they confiscated his cell phone.

Speaker 6 (01:28:16):
So how does AI avoid this, I mean they avoid this?
They said, Well, most of the people believe that, like
sixty five percent believe that this is was in his
insurrection by the Trump people, and it's provable that it

(01:28:37):
isn't even if you don't know that this guy is
a lawyer, Okay, it's provable. You see cops letting people
into the building, okay, and for that that's a crime.
They're charging people with a crime for being in there
for six seconds. They're charging people with crimes that weren't

(01:29:00):
even in the building and didn't do anything wrong.

Speaker 2 (01:29:03):
AKA Jeff and Ryan Zinc.

Speaker 6 (01:29:05):
That's right, you got it, and you got a lawyer,
Mark McCluskey, along with Peter Tickton, who is Trump's best friend.
For goodness sakes, they're on it, and yet it doesn't
seem to register in a AI. So it's incredible. Anyways,

(01:29:27):
we have our next person on the show, and this
he's he looks like he's he looks like he's he's
got a mean look on his face. I'll tell you
what he does. And we're going to talk about that
a little bit, because this guy's this guy's a pieson.
He's a pison pizza lover Liz Cheney enemy, see their enemy.

(01:29:52):
See you know you gotta wait, you gotta wait. You
just can't interrupt me before before I before I say,
this is your introduction. Put it, put him down, don't
don't let him talk during this. Uh. And he's he's
an excellent writer, and he is a wyoming hero. He's
saving the state. Okay, please welcome Chris Adamo. Okay, you can,

(01:30:19):
you can, you can put his uh all right? Good?

Speaker 5 (01:30:22):
You used to play music for me?

Speaker 6 (01:30:24):
Well you know what, you get tagged with music. I
used to play music for everybody. But you get tagged
with these notices that somehow you you've uh, you're they owed,
they own the song, and then you go. Then they
got lawyers calling you. I'll tell you what. It's a
it's a tough world in here, and I mean I

(01:30:45):
had lawyers running to assume me and just you know,
they wanted to settle with me, and I kept low
balling him and finally they gave up, but it cost
me some legal fees. So what the hell? Anyways, when
should the rights of just fertilized babies be anointed with

(01:31:06):
human rights and dignity.

Speaker 5 (01:31:10):
The minute we know it's a human being? Do we
know at conception?

Speaker 6 (01:31:14):
Conception? All right? Now?

Speaker 5 (01:31:18):
The truth is that it may be these days, may
be difficult to figure out exactly when that happens. But
the point is that you go into the doctor's office,
and the doctor can't save every patient that ever comes
in there. That's just a fact of being a doctor. However,
the doctor should not, under any circumstances, have an agenda

(01:31:38):
of killing off one or more of the patients that
come into his room. And so, you know, it's like
they say, well, can you abort the baby to save
the life of the mother. You try to save them both,
but and number one, number two, that's also a very
false scenario, because you want to save the mother if
she's especially in a late term pregnancy, well, we got

(01:31:58):
to save the mother, so we got to kill baby.

Speaker 20 (01:32:00):
No, you don't.

Speaker 5 (01:32:01):
If you want to save the mother, you do a cesarean.
Because late term abortions are like two and three day processes.
They don't tell you this, but they're really dragged out
and they're a risk to the mother. So the only
reason you do a late term abortion is because you
want a dead baby, because you don't want to deal
with the baby. So there's no excuse for late term abortions,

(01:32:22):
no excuse. You can do a cesarean. Save the mother,
maybe save the baby.

Speaker 6 (01:32:27):
And you know, and I can't emphasize this any more
than I usually do, but abortions are half female. Yeah,
I mean female. You're killing females.

Speaker 5 (01:32:40):
You're killing the female. You're killing one female, you're exploiting
the other. Because the number one reason for women to
have abortions, the number one reason is because the man
the god are pregnant doesn't want to be bothered with
the responsibility of raising a child. So what you're doing
is you're killing the child, which may be a male
or a female, as you say, and you're turning the

(01:33:00):
mother into a sexual playtoy and nothing more. Because if
she happens to be an actual mother who produces a baby,
which is one of the glories of motherhood. If she
actually does that, then the guy said, no, what we're
going to do is we're going to leave her with
this emotional and possibly even physical scar that we're going
to get rid of the baby, and then then I

(01:33:21):
can just keep using her the way I want for
for whatever. And that doesn't elevate women. It totally demeans them.
And if you think I'm lying about that, look at
what's happened to women in society since abortion became so popularized.

Speaker 6 (01:33:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:33:34):
Yeah, they may think they have more jobs and careers,
but you look at the trafficking happened, what.

Speaker 6 (01:33:39):
Haat, right, and what happens when they get their job
and they're making a lot of money and then there's
suddenly forty yep and above, and you know, the market
for marrying is not as good.

Speaker 5 (01:33:53):
The suicide rate among women who've had abortions is significantly
higher than the general populace. Significant people. Well there's a
reason for that.

Speaker 6 (01:34:00):
Where can you find that? Where people will say, you
don't have any facts about that, I think.

Speaker 5 (01:34:06):
Well, they're absolutely enough for starters, and I'd love to
talk all day about the what you just said. You
don't have any facts because those people are saying I
don't want to hear it. Okay, they don't want facts,
they just want to dispute the facts.

Speaker 6 (01:34:19):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:34:20):
But there's there are sites out there. I can give
you two of them right off the top of my head,
Center for Bioethical Reform. They they are excellent pro life site.
They're they're they're very powerful. Then there's the White Rose
Resistance and let me tell you about White Rose Resistance
in a minute. And the third one is LifeNews dot com. Okay,
you can get all kinds of information from these sites.

(01:34:42):
Now let's talk about White Rose Resistance because it's it's
a it's an excellent site. Seth Ruber Uh just a
warrior for pro life. Uh is the head of this site.
And and White Rose Resistance is based on an incident
out of Nazi Germany. And it had to do with
young lady and excuse me, I've forgotten her name, but

(01:35:04):
she was a Christian lady like a teenager, and she
and her brother had formed this organization called the White
Rose Resistance to resist the Nazis because they could see
that what the Nazis were doing was wrong. Rest of
society's you know, clouding it in euphemism. It's like, oh,
it's a choice, it's this, it's that, it's a final solution.
Remember that one, and she and her brother said no,

(01:35:26):
and they fought it, and they actually were ended up
being caught and were executed for taking that stand. So
Seth Gruber has taken their role and the model did that.
They showed and he's used that to uh as a
banner for his group, which is all about pro life.
It's the White Rose Resistance. Check it out.

Speaker 6 (01:35:43):
Okay, Yeah, you were also supposed to get me the
contact for governor race in Illinois.

Speaker 5 (01:35:52):
Oh, he hasn't called you yet. No, his name is
Joe Severino and he's he's on Twitter. I will get
I'll get on the floor.

Speaker 6 (01:35:59):
Well maybe maybe I thought it was It could have
been my fault because you get so many calls every
day that are just fake calls from all sorts of
different numbers.

Speaker 5 (01:36:09):
Well a time, his number, I'll get you his number,
and uh oh and that's what we could talk all
day about that the the uh you.

Speaker 6 (01:36:19):
Had idiot out of there, tyat idiot Pritzker.

Speaker 5 (01:36:24):
Yeah, well yeah, and and and Joe Savarino. You couldn't
you couldn't get further from being the opposite of Pritzker.
This the swamp in Illinois hates this guy. They've literally,
uh they they've sent uh the under false pretenses. They
sent the cops to his door a couple of times
to try and intimidate them. And this is the quote
unquote Republican swamp. Okay, because the Republican swamp and Illinois

(01:36:46):
is in the hip pocket of the Democrats swamp. So
you know, this is how they operate. Well, this is
how corruption operates everywhere.

Speaker 6 (01:36:54):
Well, yeah, so Chicago, it has a huge history of
I mean, it used to be somewhat familiar kind of corruption.
It was the daily years, you know, and he was
friends with with people, you know what I mean.

Speaker 5 (01:37:12):
Tammany Hall was was Chicago? Absolutely?

Speaker 6 (01:37:15):
I thought, wasn't it Tammany Hall.

Speaker 5 (01:37:19):
I'll have to check that out. I was pretty sure
it was Chicago. However, Chicago, let's say, let's just say
that they.

Speaker 6 (01:37:25):
The Tammany Hall and New York.

Speaker 5 (01:37:30):
Don't don't forget, don't forget what what state elected Obama
as they So, yeah, Illinois, this this is the Chicago
area is the sewer of the sewer. But here's the
thing that you have in Illinois. You have this this
deep blue sewer cesspool, this nightmare, and and and they've

(01:37:53):
got all the squalor and all the crime and everything
to prove it. And yet what you have around that area,
the whole rest of the state is his heartland America.
I've gone through southern Illinois and there's Trump signs everywhere,
and it's it's this is this is America, and they're
dominated by that state capital. But the rest of the
state is actually is actually Midwest America, down to earth people,

(01:38:17):
and this is the people that Joe Savarino is reaching
out to.

Speaker 6 (01:38:19):
All right, well, yeah, I'll be happy to talk to
the guy.

Speaker 5 (01:38:22):
So okay, I'll send you his contact info and you
give them a call.

Speaker 6 (01:38:26):
So so, if you think often of true justice and nobility,
what's right, pure, lovely, admirable, excellent, is that praiseworthy of
a wasted life? I don't know what the hell you're

(01:38:49):
right in there. Next question, Okay, Disney is Disney is down. Okay,
the Saint Louis Cardinals are having a good here, Yet
they can't draw a decent crowd. Nobody buys bud Light anymore?
Why is this? Well?

Speaker 5 (01:39:09):
And this this is a great uh segue into lots
of other things we got going on. If you get
out there and you have made your name on one image, okay,
let's just say I mean, Dave Weinebaum is popular because
Dave Weinebaum speaks the conservative message and people love how
he does it, and they'll even put up with his
bad jokes. But they love Dave Weinebam.

Speaker 6 (01:39:31):
Okay, throw that in there, didn't You just couldn't raise that?
Give me all right, just a minute. That deserves a response,
Give me eddie. Yeah, why do you know? From funning
your bash and then hit the other one? There you go,

(01:39:52):
you've got to buy a boot there. Okay, you deserve that.

Speaker 5 (01:39:57):
So but but if you if you suddenly decide that
it's really all about you, because well, people don't care
what you say. They just think you're such a great guy.
They just want to sit there and make eyes at
you for three hours. And you start approaching it that way,
your show is going to disappear. What they want from you,
and what they get from you is quality conservative commentary. Okay.

Speaker 6 (01:40:17):
Wow? And with with with major characters like yourself.

Speaker 5 (01:40:22):
I'll take it.

Speaker 6 (01:40:23):
So.

Speaker 5 (01:40:23):
But the point is that if I'll give you a
name here now, I'm not going to do a trivia
question on you. Yes, but I will tell you most
people right now, most people will not remember this name,
even though I can tell you that back when the
entire nation hung on this name because it was so important,
the name is Scott Brown.

Speaker 6 (01:40:41):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:40:41):
Now, back in ten you remember him, good, Okay, You're
one of the few.

Speaker 6 (01:40:45):
And that's because this guy in the pickup truck that
he had garbage down.

Speaker 5 (01:40:48):
For Scott Brown. Okay. Typically, typically people don't remember him.
He was though in twenty ten because he was running
as the Republican outsider. He was running for the Ted
Kennedy seat in the Senate. And the whole purpose that
the whole campaign platform he had is we're going to
return the Senate to the people. We're going to to

(01:41:11):
and but the big issue, his number one issues, we're
going to stop this nightmare, this socialist nightmare called Obamacare,
and that that one vote could have turned the whole thing.
Of course he got in on that on that premise.
But the Obama crowd, of course, they played dirty tricks.
They flipped it around and they got past that. But
he did get in on that premise, and he was

(01:41:32):
going to stop Obama.

Speaker 6 (01:41:33):
That was Massachusetts, wasn't it.

Speaker 5 (01:41:35):
That was Massachusetts. A Republican got in in Massachusetts stopping socialists. Okay,
here's the problem.

Speaker 6 (01:41:41):
Though.

Speaker 5 (01:41:41):
He got in and because the whole nation had been
so focused on him, and I remember, I remember the
day he got elected, was like, wow, this is a
huge deal. He started thinking it was all about him.
That's the biggest pitfall that any of us can fall into.
It's all about me. He So he goes to Washington
and he thinks, well, I must be just the greatest
thing since sliced bread. And he goes down there and

(01:42:04):
the first thing he does, instead of saying I was
elected for this purpose, I better carry this torch, he said,
I'm just going to be the most popular guy in
the world. I can get elected as a Republican in Massachusetts.
I might be in the next president. I'm going to
broaden the base. I'm going to reach out to the
opposition because it's all about me. He lost the very
next election, which is only about two three years later.

(01:42:24):
He lost that, he moved to Connecticut. He tried to
run again. He lost that. He just he disappeared from
the political scene all because he had fallen into that
attitude of it's all about me. Okay, anytime, anytime a
political player anybody else does this, they lose. It's just
that simple, because no, it's not all about.

Speaker 6 (01:42:44):
You, right right. That's a very good segment there. And
we got upcoming is Bill Hardwick. I know you know
about him, right, Oh yeah, I helpe you watch him.
We got a fundraiser going on and June the thirtieth
here at the Oak Meadow Country Club at five pm.
And I'm working on getting McDonald's food there too bad.

(01:43:08):
I couldn't get any pizza from you because it's too cheap.
But that's all right, you know, it's okay.

Speaker 5 (01:43:14):
I almost thought of saying that. I thought, no, I'm
not going to say that to Dave. I'll give him
a past today, but you went ahead and said it,
so go ahead.

Speaker 6 (01:43:21):
All right. So so yeah, so I want to hear
what he has to say about that too, because he
gave a speech at the this the oh, the the
Congress of Missouri, and he gave a speech that was
so good they actually reversed or put on the on

(01:43:42):
the ballot to reverse Amendment three.

Speaker 5 (01:43:46):
Here, that's excellent.

Speaker 6 (01:43:48):
I mean, and he and he did it.

Speaker 5 (01:43:49):
He's a hero.

Speaker 6 (01:43:50):
He did it. He had nothing written. I mean he
was he just made the speech up. It was about
two and a half minutes. So if you, if you'll listen,
if you, I'm going to play it when he's on.
All right, Okay, you got a song I can play
for you?

Speaker 5 (01:44:03):
You have a song you can be used?

Speaker 6 (01:44:08):
Yeah for me? Yeah, a song or a speech I
can play for you or something.

Speaker 5 (01:44:14):
No, probably probably not. I haven't given that many speeches,
and none of them are recorded, so I hide the evidence.

Speaker 6 (01:44:20):
That just can't do that. You got to go and
spill what's right.

Speaker 5 (01:44:26):
Absolutely now that's why I get on here and I
talk with you and put off all the bad jokes
and everything. Now, Bill, if you're listening, congratulations on that speech.
Yes you're a hero. Yes we appreciate it. It's about
the issue and you did a great job. It's not
about we all just want to put up pictures of
Bill Hardwick in our house. And of course he knows

(01:44:47):
that I know Bill, he knows that it's such an
easy snare for them to fall into and and the
minute they do, it's it turns into I don't.

Speaker 6 (01:44:55):
See him doing that. I don't see him doing that
because he takes when he when he it goes against
Amendment three, and he's got seventy one percent of the
population that voted for him, and they vote in Amendment three,
he's he's he's already taken a risk saying really, I

(01:45:15):
mean if I do this, I might they might boot
me out.

Speaker 5 (01:45:19):
Well, there's two things driving bill in this case. Number
one is he's going to do what's right.

Speaker 6 (01:45:25):
Yeah, okay.

Speaker 5 (01:45:26):
And when you get into office and you start trying
to do what's pragmatic, you can be manipulated and corraled
in anything they want. When you say, you know what,
here's the principle of this situation. I'm going to do
what's right. You don't look at the polls and things
like that. Number two, if you look at if you do,
want to look at the pole on Amendment three, the
massive amount of out of state money that came in

(01:45:49):
to not promote the realities of Amendment three, but to
mask it in all sorts of fraudulent terms and to
promote something that Missouri really didn't want, and yeah, they
got away with it barely. Okay, if they had, if
the Amendment three crowd had said here's what it really is,
it wouldn't have passed. So they don't do that. They
have this total misinformation campaign, big money. All I saw

(01:46:11):
kinds of things, these heart wrenching civil rights stories and
every other kind of nonsense, had nothing to do with
killing unborn babies. But it was all that was how
they're going to promote Amendment three. And so I'm not
suggesting you be pragmatic. I'm just saying that it's standing
for life in red state Missouri is not only the
right thing to do, but it's also something that will

(01:46:31):
promote a person a principle.

Speaker 6 (01:46:35):
So seventeen years and four billion dollars in California has
failed to build its train complex. What should happen.

Speaker 5 (01:46:45):
Well, we need to find out where that seventeen billion went,
and every single individual who siphoned off of it, every
bureaucrat who expanded their department to actually accomplish nothing, needs
to be held personally accountable. And let me underline the
personally every time. And I've seen some lawsuits and stuff

(01:47:06):
in this past week that were settled against wayward school
districts and things like that. Every time you have a
public office that cheats the public and they're fined for it,
guess who pays the fine the public. It's the biggest
scam in the world. And Congress actually, and they may
even still have it in place. But during the whole

(01:47:26):
time Pelosi was a speaker, Congress had a slush fund
to pay off these people that have been abused, sexually
abused and otherwise by by wayward congressman. They had a
slush fund to pay those bills. Okay, so guess what
the slush fund is. Slush fund is you and me,
we're paying them to get them off the hook, exactly.

(01:47:50):
And so so that you know, if you have a
school board that abuses as a child by bringing trainees
into the classroom, and they get sued and and and
the lawsuit is in the favor of the parents. First
of all, those people ought to be in jail because
bringing trannies into the classroom is equivalent of aiding and
abetting a child predator. But they get sued a civil

(01:48:11):
liability and the public has to pay the parents. Now,
the parents deserve a settlement on that because of the
abuse that their kids suffered. But it's not the rest
of us it should do that. It's those people who
abuse that position, that official position.

Speaker 6 (01:48:24):
Sure, So what's your take on the Elin and Trump
screaming match. It's a screaming match. They're yelling at each other.

Speaker 5 (01:48:34):
Well, I'll tell you what. And that was actually the
whole reason I researched that Scott Brown thing this morning, Okay,
to bring that to you. So what you have here
is very unfortunate. What you've got is the richest man
in the world in competition with the most powerful man
in the world, and unfortunately both of them. Both of

(01:48:54):
them got to where they are in life by being
very strong personalities, and now there's this rift between them.
And I'm not sure.

Speaker 6 (01:49:02):
I don't think you don't think it's.

Speaker 5 (01:49:05):
You know, there's a possibility of that. I I I've
heard that, and it would it would be a great
encouragement to me if it was. I do think that
there's there's a legitimate problem there. I take the problem personally,
I take it all the way back to the Congress,
and they're both reacting to that but taking it out
on each other. If that's what's there, they're actually doing,

(01:49:27):
because I'd love to find out that this was a
w w F type staged event, because this is very
unfortunate for all of us, both of them, both of
them need to understand that the big picture is about
the future of America. It's not about either one. And
and if they can, if they can rise to the
occasion and do that, and uh, you know, they're both

(01:49:49):
they both have been absolute heroes in their own way.
They've both just done some amazing things for the country.
And for them now to clash on this and to
do it so publicly, I think it's only going to
harm not only each of them personally, but America on
the whole. And if they could, if they could come
to that realization, it would be better for them and
it would be better for America.

Speaker 6 (01:50:09):
What's going on in uh in Russia with the with
the attacks now that Russia is doing upon Ukraine, because
Ukraine nailed their butts with some placed explosive materials by
some of their nuclear planes.

Speaker 5 (01:50:30):
Yeah, the the.

Speaker 20 (01:50:33):
U.

Speaker 5 (01:50:33):
If you if you look, if you get onto x
or on Facebook and you look at the posts of
General Michael Flynn, and he's an expert on all these things.
He is working as hard as he can to get
the word out and his goal literally is to stop
World War three from happening. That's that's the stakes that
we're in right now. Now, Why why is this happening?

(01:50:56):
I would have to say, you had a bunch of leftists,
globalists set up a bunch of dominoes that are starting
to tumble. This reminds me very much of World War One,
where you had all these pieces set in place to
where all of a sudden, one day they assassinate arch
Duke Ferdinand and all of Europe is at war over
this one event. And we've got to be very careful

(01:51:17):
now because as many people has died in World War One,
that would be a drop in the bucket compared to
what would happen if this breaks loose. Now there is
no well, they have it on record. Now they're saying
China is sending drones to Russia. Escalation.

Speaker 6 (01:51:33):
Yeah, it's escalation.

Speaker 5 (01:51:35):
And we have US rogue politicians thinking Lindsey Graham, Mike
Pompeo and others that going over to Ukraine and all
they can possibly do. You get a big wig, you know,
if the governor of Missouri was to show up on
the day of winebomb show you. Hey, I got the
governor on my show, and all of a sudden it

(01:51:56):
pumps you up.

Speaker 6 (01:51:57):
Right.

Speaker 5 (01:51:58):
We send these boys over there to to Ukraine, and Zelenski,
who's obviously between being unstable's he's an egomaniac, all of
a sudden he feels more important. Okay, So now we
have rogue politicians going over there and doing this, and.

Speaker 6 (01:52:14):
But then again his country was attacked. I mean it
was attacked by a and it was attacked with permission
from one Joe Biden saying well, if you're gonna make this,
make it a short one, make it a short attack.

Speaker 5 (01:52:30):
You know what, Again, there's so much to that situation
because we can go back. Why was it attacked? Who's
trying to claim what land from? When we can go
back as far as we want, and it's it's it's complicated.
Both sides have lost many lives. The leaders don't seem
to care. It's the guy on the street that they grab.
And I don't know if you've seen how how they

(01:52:51):
recruit people in in Ukraine. They send out a truck
full of full of thugs and they go out and
they see somebody walking down the street and they say
you're the right size, and they grab them and throw
them truck. Now he's a recruit.

Speaker 6 (01:53:01):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:53:01):
Yeah, Now he goes out and gets sent out to
be shot.

Speaker 6 (01:53:04):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:53:04):
And and uh there were protests in Russia against the war,
which she that that never happened in Russia. Uh, you
know in the past. The point is nobody wants this.
You got the you got this. Uh the these egotistical
leaders guess what they're saying. It's all about me, okay.
And and you got this this border conflict that needs
to be settled. It's not gonna be settled perfectly according

(01:53:26):
to anybody. But instead of that, it's like, well let's
just kill a few more people. Maybe I'll get my way.

Speaker 6 (01:53:31):
Other than Dave Wayne Baum show, where can people find
and buy your book?

Speaker 5 (01:53:36):
It's still available at Amazon. It's still the guidebook for
for dealing with with duplicitus leftists. And uh yeah, I
as much as it's been out for Quadejuana America needs it.

Speaker 6 (01:53:48):
I have a beautiful doctor from you will never guess
where she's from, Western Australia waiting to talk to me
about the pandemic. All right, got to watch this next one. Yeah,
she's she's she's on the end of it. Believe me.
I can't. I'll explain later in my interview to her

(01:54:10):
how I got this interview. It's amazing though, but uh,
how did the deli owner get rich? You're gonna answer, no,
I figured you would. He thought outside the locks thought
that boom? All right, he didn't. He didn't have it enough.
That's it. He didn't ham it up. That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:54:30):
That's good.

Speaker 6 (01:54:31):
Almost a bottom boom for you. There you go, that
one for you. You're finally getting with it. I heard that,
all right. My next guest. Let's go to the next guest.
She's early back. She's calling all the way from Australia. Hi, there,
can you listen? Can you hear me? Can you hear me? Oh?

(01:54:52):
You can? All right? Yes I can, Yes, I can. Uh.
And let me just introduce you. I'm going to call
you doctor JK Hassan. Can I use that? I'm sorry,
doctor Hassan. Doctor JK will be fine because Leah Stagno

(01:55:14):
said to call you that. I don't know if you
know Lea or not, but yes you do. Okay, this uh,
this doctor is author of a book analyzing COVID nineteen
vaccine death reports, the Veyer's Reports and the author of

(01:55:35):
Too Many Dead. Please welcome all the way from Western Australia,
doctor JK. And how thank you for being on the show. Wow,
this is the I had a rabbi from Israel before you,
and now I've got somebody from Western Australia. Okay, So

(01:56:00):
I want to talk to you about the Veryar's report
first because that's something that caught my eye back in
twenty twenty one. And personally, I'm not I'm not a scientist,
I'm not a doctor at all. But the Var's report
shows a remarkable spike back in February I believe of

(01:56:20):
twenty twenty and it's it's also very very vague on it,
on stuff, and it's only one percent of the report
is viable. How does that happen?

Speaker 21 (01:56:37):
So I'm not sure if you're mistaken. So I didn't
actually write anything in the VS report.

Speaker 6 (01:56:44):
So basically, no, I didn't. I didn't. I didn't I
didn't suggest that I suggest that you know about it.
I know you didn't write anything. I thought you had
a book that that was too Many Dead?

Speaker 20 (01:56:56):
Yes, so that was actually.

Speaker 21 (01:57:01):
See so I'm in an institute in Australia and I'm
part of the Australian Medical Professional Society that's an alternative
medical organization to the Australian Medical Association. And because we
had excess debts, we put out a book too Many
Dead uh, And so I actually didn't have a report

(01:57:22):
in that book, but it was put out by the
society that I'm part of.

Speaker 6 (01:57:29):
I use a lot of I use a lot of
AI okry. Yeah, And you know what they don't. AI
doesn't like you, do you know that? Seriously, They're saying,
this is how you handle her, this is how you
do this, and it's all negative stuff, and they're saying, well,
you know, don't let her get away with the I

(01:57:49):
hate Peisier kind of thing. And I says, yes, I'm
just a guy looking for a way to figure out
what you want to talk about. And they're already they're
cautioning me about you. Why should I be cautioned about you?

Speaker 21 (01:58:06):
Well, basically, I'm part of the group of volunteers who
looked into the PISA documents that Piser wanted to have
hidden for seventy five years, and we found basically how
Piser could a sort of delay the vaccine results around

(01:58:28):
the time of the November twenty twenty elections. We can
talk about that if you want to, or the fact
that when FISER approved the drug there were more people
that died in the trial at that point in time
than they publicly admitted in journals and in the FDA briefing.
So we can talk about how PISER basically underrepresented vaccine

(01:58:50):
efficacy results around the time of the US election, because
I think.

Speaker 6 (01:58:56):
Twenty twenty US election correctly, yep, yep.

Speaker 21 (01:59:00):
Yeah, because remember when President Trump was having a debate
with Joe Biden, he basically said we'll get a vaccine
before the election. And that was because he you know,
they actually had a contract with the US government basically
that the vaccine was supposed to be approved and delivered
before the thirty first of November October twenty twenty, and

(01:59:24):
PISA had enough cases to analyze for an effective vaccine.
I used those words effective vaccine.

Speaker 20 (01:59:32):
And they didn't.

Speaker 21 (01:59:34):
They sat on it. And what we show is that
even when PISA publicly said, oh, you know, the day
after Joe Biden was declared president November eighth, they said that, oh,
we've got ninety four cases. They actually had one hundred
and thirty four cases, so they could have actually declared
an effective vaccine way before the election, and they didn't.

Speaker 20 (01:59:58):
So I am the I wrote the report about.

Speaker 21 (02:00:01):
Two years ago, and I think recently Alex Berenson was
talking to Charlie Kirk about it that they've basically found
the same analysis that we found two years ago.

Speaker 20 (02:00:14):
Uh, so maybe that's why AI doesn't like me.

Speaker 21 (02:00:17):
I'm not sure.

Speaker 6 (02:00:19):
Theyors theyres The veyors report is in the New England
Journal of Medicine and it's also approved by the CDC.
Isn't that right?

Speaker 21 (02:00:32):
So this is a reporting system for vaccine safety that
the CDC uses.

Speaker 6 (02:00:37):
Yeah, yeah, and and uh isn't it true that this
is now the AI saying well, there it's voluntary, but
I heard it was required for doctors to report this
and less than apparently an AI calls the uh that

(02:01:01):
it lacks nuance. What the hell is that?

Speaker 21 (02:01:06):
I think in the sense you can't discriminate against you know, nuance,
you know, I mean, it's.

Speaker 6 (02:01:12):
Just it is that a scientific term. Is that a
scientific term? Nuance?

Speaker 21 (02:01:22):
It's an English term?

Speaker 6 (02:01:23):
So so you actually, uh, you actually did a study
and with Harvard about this one percent, And no I.

Speaker 21 (02:01:35):
Didn't, So I really I don't sure if you actually
put the right person into AI too. So I've got
I didn't write any report with this day, did you?

Speaker 6 (02:01:46):
Did you do anything with a Harvard study of the
one acclamation? All right, well I'm gonna skip that. Then
maybe maybe I got your I don't know how I
got you mixed up. Your name is so easy, so.

Speaker 21 (02:01:58):
I know I actually maybe have to go look at
myself invest maybe because I think.

Speaker 6 (02:02:04):
They're they're saying very very negative things. I thought I
had the right too.

Speaker 21 (02:02:10):
Well, I suppose if you hit that's when you were
seeking vaccine approval or you're trying to hide, uh.

Speaker 6 (02:02:16):
You know, not I was putting.

Speaker 21 (02:02:18):
I was putting vaccine when the contract required you too.
You might say it's negative. But yeah, as I said,
I haven't googled myself in AI, so.

Speaker 6 (02:02:27):
I would I would do it. I would do it
because I think I was using your name that I
had on the on your email, so that should have
got them in there. Anyways. Uh so, uh, what what
was your position in uh your judgment against Pfizer's reporting

(02:02:50):
on its Phase three trial? Now that were you on that?

Speaker 21 (02:02:56):
So I'm part of the volunteer group that looked in
into phizis the data that Pfizer you used to get
approval from the FDA, so they didn't want that data
public for seventy five years and then to court order
it was made public. So basically, as a group of volunteers,

(02:03:17):
we've been looking at this data since it was publicly available,
and we've written reports about it. So prior prior to that,
it was on the Daily Cloud. But now some of
us that that project with the Daily Cloud has ended,
so we're still as a group of volunteers still looking
at the data, and we're under Pandemic Investigation Project dot com.

Speaker 6 (02:03:38):
Okay, so yeah, so what what feed? How does uh?
How does Pizer treat you? What do they think of you?

Speaker 20 (02:03:48):
I don't think they've heard of me, so it doesn't.

Speaker 6 (02:03:49):
Matter they've never If they've heard of.

Speaker 21 (02:03:53):
Me, then you know they're not letting me know.

Speaker 20 (02:03:55):
So you know, we just so you.

Speaker 6 (02:03:58):
Don't know anything about the James o'keef project Veritas report
where he sat down with a with a with a
person who is important in Pfizer who was telling him
actually yeah, telling a person that was like fake that

(02:04:20):
you know, you know, they don't care about how many
bodies there are. They just care about cash flow. Are
you familiar with that?

Speaker 20 (02:04:28):
Well, you know, so I did.

Speaker 21 (02:04:31):
I did ask for that. I couldn't find that.

Speaker 20 (02:04:33):
Particular clip, but I watched it.

Speaker 21 (02:04:36):
As I said, what we found is that when Pfizer
actually seek approval of the drug in December twenty twenty,
at that point they said six people had died in
the truck. What we found is that there were actually
eleven people that died. And what I found was PaperWorks

(02:05:00):
from uh Well for one patient in Kansas and one
patient in Georgia that these patients had died. The clinical
site had known, had been informed they had died, and
this was before the data cut off day, and these debts,
by the trial protocols should have been declared, and these

(02:05:22):
debts were not publicly disclosed. And one of them had
an autopsy and that patient, that subject died of sudden
cardiact death.

Speaker 6 (02:05:31):
So let me ask you that the FDA, CDC, TGA
have they validated your claims of hidden deaths.

Speaker 21 (02:05:41):
Basically, what we did was we as a team we
wrote to the New England Journal of Medicine talking talking
about all the inconsistencies and discrepancies that we found with
what was publicly reported, and they've come back and said,
you know, nothing to see here.

Speaker 20 (02:05:59):
I've written to the New.

Speaker 6 (02:06:00):
England Journal of Medicine, the biggest, most most worshiped by
all doctors and you and they they they said it's
not worth talking about.

Speaker 21 (02:06:13):
Yeah, so they did, you know, there's factual inconsistencies when
they when they approved the drug, they said that, you know,
six people died more in the placebo group than the vaccine.
But in actual fact, at that point it was more
people died in the vaccinated arm compared to the to
the placebo arm. So it was it was opposite of

(02:06:36):
what they were trying to portray publicly what actually happened.
In the New England General Medicine said We've reviewed this,
there's nothing here, and I've also returned to the Australian
regulatory authorities and they've basically said nothing nothing to see here.
That so nobody really wants to know the factual truth.

Speaker 6 (02:06:55):
So is this some kind of a conspiracy? Was this
an organized conspiracy to hide the deaths from the death
and the the the wrongness caused by the vaccines, The sickness.

Speaker 20 (02:07:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 21 (02:07:12):
I mean, I don't like using words like conspiracy, but
there is a lot of corruption out there. That's what
I can see. As a doctor.

Speaker 20 (02:07:21):
I think that.

Speaker 21 (02:07:24):
A lot of things got politicized in COVID and doctors
should have been allowed to be doctors, but it got
politicized and everybody got involved, and then we couldn't deliver
proper care for people, right, And there's a lot of
corruption because there was so much censorship. There's been a
lot of corruption, and for me, I think it's really

(02:07:45):
sad in the medical community. Uh, doctors have come to
a point where we can't question anything is a label
on someone. So I've just heard one previous colleague just
labeled me and anti vaccine. They don't want to know me.
But I'm actually just talking about common sense, critical thinking that.

Speaker 20 (02:08:02):
Everybody should be able to do.

Speaker 21 (02:08:04):
And you know, the stakes have been made so high
for people that if you disagree, you lose your job.
And that's what happened to me. I got fired because
I didn't take the COVID vaccine.

Speaker 6 (02:08:16):
You got fired, right, Yeah? I got fired, Wow, because
you wouldn't take.

Speaker 21 (02:08:24):
Because because I asked my previous employer please justify the
risk of this new novel medication to me, and let's
do a risk assessment, the risk of the disease and
the risk of the cure. I mean, you know, this
is just basic risk assessment, entirely logical thinking.

Speaker 20 (02:08:44):
And I got fired for that.

Speaker 10 (02:08:45):
So wow.

Speaker 21 (02:08:48):
Whether it's a I don't know whether it's a conspiracy,
but there's a lot of corruption and censorship and and
a lot of cowardice in the medical community as well.

Speaker 6 (02:08:57):
Yeah, I tell you, let me tell you my story.
I'm here with my wife Lisa, and back in twenty one,
we we got it, we got the disease. We're coming
back from Jamaica, I believe, And maybe he got on
a plane or whatever. But her family is in the

(02:09:17):
uh they were in the cattle business, so they had
huh business, veterinary business. So they had Iver met them.
So he started feeding me. Iver met them, you know,
and we were drinking it. It's terrible taste. But but
but I call my doctor, says I've got this thing.

(02:09:38):
You know, he's probably city still sitting in his office
with a mask on. By the way, and this guy
was my doctor for twenty five years, and I had
just seen the recently the Veyors the Veyors report where
it had a huge jump in. Uh, I guess it
was February January of that year. And I says, I says,

(02:10:05):
you know, I think I've got it. And he says, well,
you got to come in for shots right now. I said, well, yeah,
but don't I have antibodies because we're we're almost over it,
it seems like. And he said, well, I don't know
about that, but you got it. You have to you
have to get that vaccine in you. And I says,
I says, so what about the Veyors report? He says, uh, well,
I only read the New England Journal of Medicine. That's

(02:10:28):
all I read. So I hung up. I hooked it
up to a I linked it the Veryar's report, New
England Journal Medicine. Well, guess what's in the New England
Journal of Medicine. The Veyors report. So I called them
back and he says, oh, yeah, I found out that
that's a veyor's report is in. I says, you know what,
let's stop this conversation right now. After twenty five is

(02:10:51):
you're fired? Yeah, that's what I did, yep, because somewhere
this is crooked.

Speaker 20 (02:10:58):
Yeah, exactly that.

Speaker 21 (02:11:01):
I think the incentives was the perverse, you know, to
have any discussion, because thinking led you to places where
you could lose your job as a medical professional. And uh,
you know, I think a lot of thinking stopped and
people just accepted it and just did it. So yeah,
it's very sad. It's very very sad. It's part of

(02:11:23):
the reason why I did what I did because I
thought when they actually approved it for pregnant women, I
thought the wheels have followed off. We never give pregnant
women drugs with this, this shot a safety history, you know.

Speaker 20 (02:11:38):
I just couldn't believe that a.

Speaker 21 (02:11:41):
Profession that you know, would have a memory of Teleido
MinC could actually go down and say, you know, let's
take a drug with the name m RNA and give
it to women who are forming babies who are actually pregnant.

Speaker 20 (02:11:54):
I just couldn't believe it.

Speaker 6 (02:11:56):
Well, in my in my my limited uh knowledge of this,
it sounds like a conspiracy to murder a lot of
people and a lot of babies. I don't know, you know,
I can't scientifically prove it, but I saw people now who,

(02:12:16):
like my friends, my best friend had had the moderna
shot and suddenly he's he's sick. So I got to
talk to him and I said, what the ELL's going
on with you?

Speaker 9 (02:12:29):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (02:12:29):
I got the flu. I said, how do you know
it wasn't a pandemic because the doctor told me it's
the flu. It's the flu, And I didn't know he
had taken them at maderna shot before that, and so
so a couple of days later, I found out he's
in the hospital. He's in the hospital with a heart condition, right,

(02:12:50):
So so I called him in the hospital. I says,
how are you feeling now? You got operate now? He says, yeah,
I feel a little better. Two days later, he has
h he has what happens in your head.

Speaker 3 (02:13:03):
He had a stroke.

Speaker 6 (02:13:04):
He had a stroke. He's dead. And I found out
about that. He took the shot from his from his employer.
He was my banker, for goodness sake. And uh. And
then I'm finding that the butcher at the at the
local Kroger's store, the grocery store. Uh, he had it
and died. And he took the shot. And people that

(02:13:26):
I know, people that are related to me and their
relatives are dead. I mean, it's all over the place.
It seems like and I'm just in a small town
in Missouri, you know, and so very sad.

Speaker 21 (02:13:40):
It's very very sad. I mean, the shots should be
should be pulled off the market, and the fact that
they're still up there, like you know, legally, it's very sad.
Now it shows how powerless we are. And if you
think about it, if you think about the fact that
a company can withhold, can sign a contract with the
US government for delivery of a vaccine and then behold

(02:14:03):
that results possibly to influence an election. I mean, think
about how how you know they had enough cases? That's
what we showed in our report, which can find a
report seventy six on the Daily Cloud as well as
the pandemic investigation. They had enough cases, they changed the protocol,
they changed the ruleso as not to have a vaccine

(02:14:25):
announcement before November twenty twenty election, and they sat on it.
So think about how powerful that corporation is to actually
even do that to a country like the United States.

Speaker 6 (02:14:39):
Corporation and industry and it's all over the world. How
many people died because of this? How can you estimate
how many people died? There has to be about ten
million or so.

Speaker 21 (02:14:54):
I think some numbers like that are being banded around. Yeah,
it is very tragic. I mean this, as I said,
these shots should be pulled off the market. They shouldn't
be given to anyone. And it's it's terrible. I just
wish more people in the medical profession had spoken up
or even start to speak up. But they're not really

(02:15:16):
seeing that as well.

Speaker 6 (02:15:17):
Well, like you, the ones that speak up get banned
and they get getting fired. You've got you've got kids
staying at home from school for a couple of years,
a year or two. You have masks. How how do
the masks work? Are they do? They work? They don't work?

(02:15:38):
And you got kids walking around in masks. You got
old people walking around in masks or sent to these
hospitals where they put them on a ventilator and that
kills a lot of them, or they put them in
old people's homes. It's incredible. What's happening. This This is
this is mass murder in my mind, in my mind,

(02:16:00):
and I know you can't say that, but it sure
sure looks like it to me. Something's happening and somebody
is responsible for it. Uh, and maybe a lot of
people are responsible for it, But it takes a little
coordination to do this, I think you know. So anyways,
this is a great interview and I really appreciate you

(02:16:21):
being there. I told you fifteen minutes where at about
sixteen minutes now seventeen minutes. Anything you'd like to say, so, I.

Speaker 21 (02:16:30):
Mean, and come and look at the reports. I mean,
if you think about it, the what when they for
the pass of vaccine when they actually did the study
it was only one study and then declared, yeah, this
is an afficacious vaccine. The sheer amount of volume of

(02:16:52):
pages that will form the basis of the vaccine of
bros for half a million, so the you know, not
one person can read this. So come to Pandemic Investigation Projects,
support our work and have a read of the reports,
because this is what was done to people.

Speaker 20 (02:17:10):
Nobody really got.

Speaker 21 (02:17:12):
Any informed consent for anything that they have taken, like
and if you really want to know what's in it
that obviously there's the phizer, the paper, that's the book
that's out as well as finding our work on the
Daily Cloud and the Pandemic Investigation Project.

Speaker 20 (02:17:29):
If you think about it, they can if you were.

Speaker 21 (02:17:31):
A person, So the person that was in Kansas, this
person signed up to be part of the clinical trial.
This person died, she got This person got the vaccine.
Shows a sixty three year old woman. She got the vaccine.
She's in Kansas.

Speaker 6 (02:17:45):
She died.

Speaker 20 (02:17:46):
She actually had an autopsy.

Speaker 21 (02:17:49):
And this happened before the data cut off date, and
they hid it, they sat on it. Imagine if you
were someone in can you know this happened to.

Speaker 20 (02:17:58):
People in the United States?

Speaker 21 (02:17:59):
People signed up in good faith for a clinical trial
and something adverse happened to them, and they've got no recalls.
So there's a lot of work to do to regain
our health and our power in society.

Speaker 6 (02:18:13):
Okay, just a couple more questions. I'm begging you. Thomas Havilin.
Do you have you ever heard of him? No?

Speaker 20 (02:18:22):
Who is he?

Speaker 6 (02:18:23):
He is a guy that went out and did he
did these. He went to bombers who did autopsies on
people that you know that had died recently. But and
they found all these white fibrous blood clots in the

(02:18:43):
veins which were causing all sorts of damage to these
people who were who eventually died, and they were they
were never ever that didn't happen to them. The only
blood clots that would have would be grape like you know,
and very yeah, diminishing. These were tight, These were fibrous,
you know that. And and I'd like to know what

(02:19:06):
you're you're I know, I know you did a interview
with Peter mc McCullough, Doctor Peter mccloth. Just just give
me two opinions about that both and then we're done,
I promise.

Speaker 20 (02:19:23):
Okay. So, yes, the clocks are terrible.

Speaker 21 (02:19:25):
I mean, you know, this has made people. Probably a
lot of the sudden deaths are probably because obviously of
microdietists and also these clocks. And it's it's it's really sad.
I mean, these drugs should not be on the market anymore.
And I was really grateful that doctor Vitamculor actually wanted
to hear about the work, and so I was very

(02:19:48):
happy to be able to tell him about the hidden debts.
So that's what the debts that happened before the data
cutoff date and should have been publicly disclosed, but we're not.
And all, so how FIZA basically UH underrepresented vaccine efficacy
data for the November twenty twenty elections, So that that

(02:20:10):
interview is also out there on the focal.

Speaker 6 (02:20:12):
Points okay, well, thank you so much, doctor j K. Okay,
and boy, that's uh that that Yeah, my wife is applauding.
We're we're both we didn't take it, we didn't take
the shot. We're so proud of each other now and
and and uh, it's amazing that they got away with

(02:20:34):
us for so long and they're still doing it. All right,
keep up the good work. Doctor. Thank you so much
for being a star on the Dave Weinebaumer Show.

Speaker 21 (02:20:43):
Thank you very much, Dave, thank you.

Speaker 6 (02:20:47):
Okay, I was gonna I was gonna tell her a joke,
but I I just don't want this. I don't want
to ruin it. You know, she might not like the joker.
I don't understand it, stand it.

Speaker 11 (02:20:57):
Thank you so showing great result there.

Speaker 6 (02:21:01):
Yes, so I'll tell it to JP so JP JP.
I swallowed a wrench. My doctor said, don't worry, this
tool shall pass. There you go. Okay, that was for

(02:21:22):
I don't think she's listening anymore. She's in Western Australia.
It's like twelve o'clock. It's eleven o'clock or twelve o'clock
at night there. This is just incredible stuff, all right.
Commercial time and then we got Bill Hardwick. Okay, hit it.

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Housing lender.

Speaker 6 (02:27:36):
Okay, I'm here actually with my next guest, who's on time,
looking sharp shave and wearing wearing a shirt, actual shirt. Ye,
and the actual shirt combed his hair.

Speaker 24 (02:27:47):
I brushed it.

Speaker 6 (02:27:48):
Yeah, I brush my hair earlier today. But it seems
to have gone off somewhere. I don't know why. I
have no idea why. This gentleman here is Iraqi, was
an Iraqi platoon leader. He's still in the National Guard.
He's a Missouri State rep now running for the Senate

(02:28:09):
in Missouri. He's a philosopher, professor, lawyer, and he's a friend.
Please welcome all the way from well Waynesville, Missouri. Bill Hardwick, Good.

Speaker 24 (02:28:24):
Morning with antry everybody. Wow, all right, a lot of
people came out today.

Speaker 6 (02:28:29):
Enough. All right, let's I want to play his clip
first because I want people I said I would do
it earlier, and then we're going to talk a little
bit about what's going to happen on June thirtieth, Right,
all right, hit it please.

Speaker 2 (02:28:43):
The distinguished gentleman from Pulaski.

Speaker 24 (02:28:47):
Thank you, mister, Speaker to speak on the bill preceded. Gentlemen,
mister Speaker.

Speaker 25 (02:28:51):
Last year, we had the Amendment three debate in our districts,
and many, many of you did and made our positions
where we were in my district, I are you to
vociferously against them my three try to put up signs.
I did town halls, I did debates, and everywhere I went,
I said that my conscience and my beliefs about what
was right and wrong believes that this should not be
in our constitution. And everywhere I went, I said, even

(02:29:14):
if it does pass, because it's such a core belief
that I believe in, I'll fight to repeal it. I'll
fight to take out what I think should not be
in the constitution and replace it which I think you
should have pulled, which is a principle and a value
of life.

Speaker 24 (02:29:28):
So I did that to.

Speaker 25 (02:29:29):
The utmost of my ability, but my district still voted
to approve Amendment three at the end of the day. However,
at the same time, my district voted to reelect me
by seventy one percent. Knowing that that was a central position,
and knowing that even said at many town halls, I'm
willing to lose my seat, even if it cost me
votes in order to fight against them. Three So I

(02:29:49):
got elected, and I'm back here now. And if I
asked the question, what do I do? What do I
do with this choice that I'm presented? Where I have
this contradiction between what the voters voted on and what
I I said that I would uphold no matter what
if I were elected. And so I'm left to do
is do what I truly believe in. And I want
to describe what I believe in, first of all, as

(02:30:09):
something I believe in math and logic. And here's a
principle in mathematics and logic that if A equals B
and B equal C, then A equal C. It's called
the transitive property of equality. It means if one thing's
equal to something else, and that's equal to something else,
they're all equal.

Speaker 24 (02:30:25):
And why is that relevant to what we're talking about?

Speaker 25 (02:30:28):
Because if any human life at all is worth protecting,
is valuable, means something is not just nothing in a
nihilistic universe. If any of our lives matter, then all
of our lives matter, or the other possibility is none
of our lives matter.

Speaker 2 (02:30:45):
Logically speaking, there are just two things.

Speaker 25 (02:30:47):
That could exist either none of our lives are important,
none of our lives worth protecting, or every single life
is worth protecting. And I believe, deep down inside to
the Chakarin and the the disagreement to many of my
colleagues and people are on the state, I believe every
single life is worth protecting. Whether you have a disability,
whether someone has down syndrome, no matter what their race is,

(02:31:10):
no matter whether they're a Republican or Democrat. Every human life,
and yes, I believe is a gift from God. That
And I don't know why tragic things happen and horrible
things happen, but I know that I believe that life
comes from God and God wants us to live. And
I think that my duty here in this place is
to do every single thing I can to protect life

(02:31:30):
and uphold life. And I think that the mother is
a human life and the baby is a human life,
and our duty as legislators is to protect both of
them as people who have equal worth and value, just
like everybody in your state. And so this bill comes
the forest. It's the optuty to do what I said
I would do and do what I believe in. And
so it's easy for me to vote yes. It's easy

(02:31:51):
for vote yes for that preset and that principle. And
it's been said, I think it's been a said in
the four you guys are just keep fighting, you keep
going for it. Yeah, if something you truly believe in
is that important and matters that much as how will
we say about all human life? There's nothing more basic
and important and central as to whether or not any
one of our lives matters. I think a lot of

(02:32:13):
us are not here, not here holding our nose voting
for it. I think a lot of us are here
for this very reason. It's why we ran for office.
It's why we came to legislature to uphold this basic
principle that every human life is important, and that every
human life has equal worth and value onto logically, and
that there's nothing there's no higher good than us protecting

(02:32:36):
that and defending that. And so I hope everyone will
vote for this resolution. I know I certainly will. Thank you,
mister speaker.

Speaker 6 (02:32:43):
That speech was one of the best speeches I've ever heard,
and especially from a politician. I's tired for me to
call you that, quite frankly, because you're not the typical
politician what's your response.

Speaker 25 (02:32:56):
I don't want to be a politician. I want to
be somebody who's stand up for what's right, and I
want to try to embody that I wasn't planning on
given that speech that you talked about, but I was
thinking about it recently because I've posted something on Facebook,
and now and I post something, somebody will say, well,
why are you over some variation of why are you
overturning the will of the people, Because Missouri voted to

(02:33:17):
pit Amendment three, which is abortion on demand in the
Missouri Constitution last fall, and I'm opposed to it, and
I'm trying to undo it, doing everything I can to
undo it. And so I saw that, and you know how,
I'm undoing the will of people. And a couple points
in response. One is that I can't undo the will
of people. The people have to vote on a new
constitutional amendment, so I'm sending it back to the people.
But to that point, what if the entire world wanted

(02:33:40):
me to do something unjust, something that I thought was
evil and I believe that it was wrong, wouldn't it
be the right thing for me to do to oppose them, even.

Speaker 24 (02:33:47):
If everybody wanted me to do that.

Speaker 6 (02:33:49):
Yeah, So art.

Speaker 25 (02:33:51):
If what I said is true, that everybody's life matters,
and nobody's life is more valuating bi else's, and that's
something my parents taught me. Nobody better than anybody else.
Everybody's valuable, right, every human life's worth protecting, especially vulnerable
and innocent life. If I really believe that, then isn't
the right thing for me to do to try to
fight and uphold it. And I don't think I'm doing

(02:34:13):
it in a way that's I'm not trying to condemn people.
I'm not trying to go out to people. I want
to protect mothers too, But we have to. We have
to say that those innocent lives mean something and they're
worth protecting, because if we don't, all of our rights,
obligations and worlds to each other unravel. In my opinion,
so I think it's something that's really basic and fundamental

(02:34:34):
to our society that we're protecting the innocent. And I'm
not willing to There's some things I think you should
compromise on, like if you okay, should be eighteen percent
or ten percent, stuff like that. Those are good things
that we could talk about, compromise figure different points of
view but there are some things you really can't compromise on.
And one of those things is, Okay, we're going to
protect we're gonna tect life, We're gonna take the Constitution,

(02:34:54):
our rights, our freedoms. Those are just things that you
have to believe. You know that I believe in right,
and so yeah, if the whole district was like, don't
do it, then I'd say we got to pick somebody
else to represent you, because I'm not going to change
this is who I am.

Speaker 6 (02:35:06):
Right, So you're willing, you're willing to get voted out
versus doing something that would accommodate everyone and have that
stick with you your entire life, which I think is a
wise move, but politically probably inept.

Speaker 25 (02:35:28):
So yeah, I've taken hard positions since I started to
come to public office, and there are some people who
definitely do not like it. And the issue of abortion
is one of those issues that some people are definitely
opposed to my position and are very vocal about letting
me know about that. There are several of them like that.
But what would be the point of me running for
office and taking that position if I had a compromise

(02:35:52):
my belief so much to get there, and then once
I got there, I would just be living a lie.

Speaker 6 (02:35:56):
I mean, what's important?

Speaker 24 (02:35:58):
What's important?

Speaker 25 (02:35:59):
So exactly, and then you get there and you're what's
the point of being there if you can't fight for
the things you believe in. Yeah, we're way better off
if Cana's just say here's exactly what I would do,
and here's the kind of here's the kind of person
I would be in that office. Here's what I'm going
to champion, here's what you can count on me to
fight for. And then if people like it, they can
vote for it, and then that's what they're gonna get.
They know they're going to get what the person said

(02:36:20):
they would do. We're way better off in a system.

Speaker 6 (02:36:22):
Like that, and follow up with honesty. Yeah, and I
don't think you're not not changing as some some politicians
would do. I understand that you have to negotiate certain things. Sure,
they're negotiating the big bill right now in in d C.
They're negotiating. Sure, okay, but it has to you have

(02:36:44):
to do do it on principle, that's right.

Speaker 25 (02:36:47):
I think that you could come and say, well, hey,
you know my district, you know we're we're doing appropriations
we're trying to appropriate. Yeah, there's a lot of room
to negotiate for your district. But let's say that in
in a bill there was and I think we need
to come to this is you come to focus for
me too. Let's say in a bill that it took
away our religious liberty, it was a First Amendment problem
on it. Let's say it took away our secondment rights.
Let's say that it had a pro abortion measure in it. Well,

(02:37:10):
it doesn't matter if there's something else good in it,
I can't vote for that. Let's say that it was
a bill that gave me district everything it won in
terms of appropriation, but it had a of COVID mandate
in there. Right, Yeah, I'd have to vote no on
it exactly. And I think that what I want to do,
and hopefully part of the campaign that express is if
more people oppose bills like that and voted no, then
the system would just start to have to take one

(02:37:31):
issue at a time. But you have to have things
that you just don't compromise on, sure, but the system forces,
the system insist upon you compromising and ostracizes you if
you don't. But I think if more people didn't compromise,
we'd have a better system for the people. And I
think that an important part of this next campaign cycle
is coming into focus these kinds of things that we

(02:37:52):
don't want to representatives compromising on.

Speaker 6 (02:37:55):
Yeah, and then I just had a woman I had
from Western Oh you, who was a doctor that was
fired because she's she's done studies on Pfizer and how
the pandemic has hurt people and she've refused to take
to take the shot if I got fired.

Speaker 25 (02:38:17):
I mean, that definitely is one of the issues that
animates me.

Speaker 24 (02:38:19):
You know that we've talked about that.

Speaker 25 (02:38:20):
It's one of the things that we're connected on that
something like that could happen again and is.

Speaker 24 (02:38:24):
Happening, and I am just still going on.

Speaker 25 (02:38:28):
It's still going on, and I'm disappointed. A lot of
conservatives are disappointed that now the re acting like it
never happened and reacting like that'd be okay if the
government and Pfizer did something like that again. And like
you said, there's still there's stuff going into their shots
that they're not telling people about right now, and so
that's a big issue and somebody to say, okay, like

(02:38:49):
the right of a person to say no to have
informed consent. That's going to be something critical. That's the
kind of thing like and I had a meeting a
week or so ago and somebody was like, well, what
would you filibuster if you were a senator? And I
was like, yeah, there's some things I'd filibuster for life,
stuff like vaccine mandates and form consent. I'd filibuster over
that when your freedom is being taken away. Because a

(02:39:10):
lot of times they go, well, we compromise, we worked
out a deal, we got something in proporation. There are
just some things that somebody needs to stand up on
and fight and say, you know you can. There's not
It's not that nothing I like ever passes. It's just
some things we can't let pass. There are some things
we have to straw a line in the sand over.
And to me, that's and to me, actually, to be

(02:39:32):
honest with you, that's one of the main reasons why
even decided to run is because I was disappointed that
there weren't people drawing a line in the sand over
things like that, things like the vaccine mandate, things like
these issues. Right just say we're.

Speaker 24 (02:39:43):
Gonna we're gonna fight, and we're not gonna backpedal.

Speaker 6 (02:39:45):
And you're either gonna get kicked out are you gonna
make it bigger? Because uh, you know, you got fifty
They got fifty two percent of the vote. You got
seventy one percent. It was a complete opposite right deal
except for that. Why did they why? Why why was
it such a difference. Wasn't it the the out wasn't

(02:40:08):
a lot of it the outside people coming in and
uh spending money for the advertising, leaving out some of
the other material. Yeah.

Speaker 25 (02:40:18):
No, And I think it's part of it. I think
it's part of it's the wording. Part of it's people
who didn't think that the measure was extreme as it
was the way it was worded. They saw things like
birth control and say I'm voting to support that. Yeah, sure,
not for abortion on demand. I think that, you know,
because it's is little dike on them. If you look
at my Facebook from that period of time, it's a
no on Amendment three debate, it's it's me opening up

(02:40:38):
no a mini Amendment three signs. It's me everywhere I
could go saying hey, oppose this, this is not good.
We had this is what This is what people who
support life, This is what people who conservatives need to
come out for it's a key issue for us. And
then the district still supported it. And then that means
there are a whole lot of people who voted for

(02:40:59):
Amendment three and voted for me. Right, yeah, there are
a lot of So okay, what does that tell you?
That could tell you that maybe some people admire a
conviction at least they know where you stand. Maybe some
people think all things be equal. I do a good
job on other issues, you know, I'd be good. I
do a good job taking care of constituents being responsed
by theirs. So the people who say, hey, then maybe

(02:41:19):
that issue is not as important to me.

Speaker 6 (02:41:20):
But he's good, and you're a smart guy, and you're
a funny talker.

Speaker 25 (02:41:23):
Well I think that I think excuse me, sorry, I
am kind of funny.

Speaker 24 (02:41:28):
I'm pretty humorous. I think that I am pretty funny.

Speaker 25 (02:41:34):
But I also I have this theory too about voters
that they can smell what you're like, and if your
a yours.

Speaker 6 (02:41:41):
Now you know you're funny. That's what you've got the
stamp of the Wine Bomb Show saying you're fun.

Speaker 25 (02:41:47):
I was curious about it until I got that critical feedback.

Speaker 24 (02:41:50):
But now I know you now now the doubt.

Speaker 6 (02:41:54):
To make little things out there. I know I'm funny
because Wine Bomb Show anointed.

Speaker 24 (02:41:59):
Me right.

Speaker 25 (02:42:01):
Identified as funny by the Dave Why Bomb Shore, you go, yeah, no,
that's important.

Speaker 6 (02:42:06):
No.

Speaker 25 (02:42:06):
I have a theory about the voters too, like that
they can tell what you're like, you really like, and
there are people if they like distain the voters, they
just don't like people, or they're kind of like stuck up.
When people meet them, they can tell it. And then
if you really do have a humble attitude, or you
kind of have a servant's heart, or do you do
love people, you can tell it. When you interact with people,
they can tell it. And so you can. You can

(02:42:27):
have all the consultants in the world tell you what
to say, you can have all the whatever, but when
you when you meet a person, they can sense, like
what you really like sure, and I think you can't
fake that, and nobody can give you consultant advice to
fake whether or not you really actually love people. So
I think there are some concisions who don't agree with
me on everything, but they but they know that I

(02:42:48):
really do have a heart for them, and I'm trying
to do the best I can for the people, and you.

Speaker 11 (02:42:53):
Won't have to do a survey on how to talk
to men?

Speaker 24 (02:42:56):
How to talk to men?

Speaker 6 (02:42:57):
Yeah, like the.

Speaker 11 (02:42:58):
Democrats are doing to find out how.

Speaker 25 (02:43:00):
Oh yeah I get that.

Speaker 6 (02:43:02):
I get that you're to do that.

Speaker 24 (02:43:05):
Yeah, I'm a man.

Speaker 6 (02:43:07):
Yeah, record what are the records for the record? What
are the Democrats? Why can't they get men to vote
for them?

Speaker 24 (02:43:14):
What's my opinion?

Speaker 6 (02:43:16):
No, I want you to lie, yes, of course I
want your opinion.

Speaker 25 (02:43:19):
Okay, risking being controversial, andaliaening people. Here's why the Democrats
have a problem with men, because they have a problem
with the groups that they talk down to, which are
more and more groups. So if you're saying men of
the problem, masculinity is the problem. If you're saying hey,
you know, if you're saying hey, you're not you're bad.
You need to do better, you need to you know,

(02:43:41):
to deny who you are that sort of thing. You're
fundamentally bad. So that's not a very appealing message. So
the message of the Democrat party is that masculinity is bad, which.

Speaker 24 (02:43:50):
Masculinity is not. What what's masculinity?

Speaker 25 (02:43:53):
Masculinity is taking action, it's providing, it's stepping up. Masculinity
is is taking care of it. Can is Oh, it's
your car broke down, I get out and I change
your tire for you. It's raining, I hold the umbrella
for you. Ohe that there's a there's a wolf attack,
I'm gonna get in between you and it. That's what masculinity. Yes,
it's a good thing. It's not bad. We can't villainize that. So,

(02:44:14):
so masculinity is not toxic. But to say, hell, all men,
these things that men do, where they go and work
and provide for their family, we've also really put that
down to say, hey, I'm I'm working, I'm getting up early.
I'm exhausted. Some days I'm exhausted, right, I'm sure, but
some days I'm exhausted. And then it's like, well, the
kids broke this or there's whatever, and they need help
and I help them. Right, And to me, that's like
what being a man is. You're providing, you're sacrificing yourself,

(02:44:37):
you're doing you're taking care of somebody else. And so
we shouldn't have villainized that. Socially and societally we should say, hey,
you know, being a mom's an important thing. Being a
woman's a good thing. Being a dad's a good thing.
We need both of you, and nobody's better than anybody else.
But it's but it's okay to be a man.

Speaker 5 (02:44:52):
It's a good thing.

Speaker 6 (02:44:53):
Did you know a judge by the name of Dwayne Benson, No, perchance.
It was a while back. He was actually the head
of the Supreme Court in Missouri for a while, and
before that he was my lawyer, and that was under
Harvey Tuttlebaum. You know him, right, yeah, Harvey. So this guy,

(02:45:20):
he just was excellent on everything. He was in the army,
he was in the top of his class at at
Yale where Justice Thomas was going and leaving and left
him his books and stuff like that. And so he
went to work for Harvey Tuttlebaum and he was handling

(02:45:48):
one of my court appearances for a divorce. And so
he did that all right. And I noticed one thing
was that when he got up on the on the
witness stand, it was all I'm not sure, I don't know,

(02:46:08):
I wasn't there, blah blah, all right, just like any
other guy. And then he came down and he hugged
me in front of the court and everything else, and
I noticed the judges. They all got a little dressed
up a little bit and stuff like that. But this
guy also introduced him in a McDonald's meeting and it

(02:46:31):
was the center of the guy who was the Republican
governor Carnahan. Did I say that right? Yeah, he gets
up and makes makes a speech and he's he's terrible,
really sucked.

Speaker 2 (02:46:47):
He was the governor.

Speaker 25 (02:46:48):
He's from a Democrat I.

Speaker 6 (02:46:49):
Know, I know, I know. And then I had to
introduce Dwayne Benton, and I did a little bit about him,
you know, doing everything like bo jack and did all
these different sports and different things that he accomplished. And
he got up on stage, he takes a microphone and
my last line was and by the way, he was

(02:47:12):
my lawyer for six years.

Speaker 5 (02:47:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:47:14):
So he yells out, well, if you paid my bills,
I would have I would have stayed. I says, yeah,
but that would mean you would have had had to
have won a case.

Speaker 25 (02:47:26):
Yeah, oh my, oh my goodness.

Speaker 6 (02:47:28):
And you know, he is entertaining. He was entertaining. It
was fun. And yet you know, he was a very
smart guy and knew what he was doing. And he
was a Republican by the way too. Anyways, I just
saw throw that in there.

Speaker 24 (02:47:42):
I like Missouri history.

Speaker 25 (02:47:43):
There's a lot of cool characters and figures and stuff.

Speaker 6 (02:47:46):
Yeah. The law and you tell bomb is like eighty
nine years old, he's still practicing.

Speaker 2 (02:47:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 25 (02:47:52):
I met him at the Republican National Commission in two thousand
and four.

Speaker 6 (02:47:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 25 (02:47:57):
Yeah, so that was twenty one years ago. I first
met him there. It was in New York City. Yeah,
it's pretty cool.

Speaker 6 (02:48:03):
How about that. Anyhow, Let's let's go back to some stuff.
Have we have we stopped outside money coming in that's
supporting things like Amendment three.

Speaker 25 (02:48:17):
We just we did pass the bill that foreign foreign
funding for elections is forbidden in Missouri. We just passed that.
The governor hasn't signed yet. I don't think, but we
just passed it like the last week of saession.

Speaker 6 (02:48:29):
Is there a lot of blowback with that?

Speaker 25 (02:48:30):
A lot of people think so, I mean, it passed
on partisan lines. I really don't know that. I don't
think that. We I've always had an issue with China
and other countries trying to pick who the people get
elected in the United States. What is there a problem
with that? I think that if you're talking about outside money,
we also want to think about what the first Amendment.
That the first Amendment is because you can give money

(02:48:51):
to a candidate, and that's a first It's part of
your first amendment. Right, you go, hey, this person, they
support their pro life you know, I want to give
them fifty bucks, you know, because I'm pro life to
that's part of you speaking with your check.

Speaker 6 (02:49:03):
Right.

Speaker 25 (02:49:04):
So that's okay, and that's our first amendment, that's the
first American So we want to make sure that we
were so.

Speaker 6 (02:49:08):
Your vote is actually guaranteed by the First Amendment, that
it is actually able to be counted, your vote, your
vote isn't that interpreted by the by the Supreme Court.

Speaker 25 (02:49:22):
Yeah, so your your support for a candidate is supported
by is protected by the First Amendment. Your vocal support,
you're you're supporting them, you're giving them stuff, you volunteering,
you're giving your resources. That's you speaking politically, and religious
and political speech are the most protected types of speech
in the United States. Your your right to vote is
protected by the fifteenth Amendment, which is one of the

(02:49:42):
post Civil War amendments. Right that and your in the
ability inability for a state to protect to protect, inability
for a state to intrude upon your First Amendment or
fifteen Amendment rights is found in the fourteenth Amendment No
state shall deprivate and be of due process, so that
they're all are constitutional protections. So I think that as
we as we want. Here's my thought process on things

(02:50:03):
like keeping China out of our owning farm land, which
I know think you should on it, and keep goin
of our elections. China is trying to take over, for sure,
get themselves in Missouri and then influence our elections, control
our food supply, all kinds of stuff. So we need
to stop them, and we need to keep them from
picking the candidates they want, from controlling.

Speaker 24 (02:50:21):
Our food supply.

Speaker 25 (02:50:23):
We also need to be careful that we don't become
China in our way to stop it, because we don't
want to adopt authoritarian measures that that detect freedom or
that that's kind of like intrude upon our freedom. So
we want to stop China, but we also want to
make sure that we retain what's special and unique and
exception about America, which is the freedom and rights we

(02:50:43):
protect for everybody. So that's kind of the balance I
try to strike. We're not approaching things like agricultural land
and campaign finance issues, right because I can't say, because
I don't like your position, you can't support a candidate
or buy property. But I do want to say that
money can't come from the Chinese con Party and the
Chinese Commuist Party shouldn't be buying farmland in Missouri exactly.

Speaker 6 (02:51:04):
Yeah, farmland in Missouri. And they have twenty seven thousand
Chinese in Harvard who are basically serving the Chinese Communist
Party and they just had they just caught a couple
of them with agro terrorism weapon in the US. One

(02:51:25):
of them escaped back to China and the other ones
in jail right now.

Speaker 25 (02:51:29):
Yeah, we're kind of like a frog in a boiling pot,
like you know. They so everybody sells their land. Everybody
sells because they want what everybody wants money. Yeah, so
they go, man, I got a fantastic deal in this land.
I got a fantastic deal. Equity is taken my agriculture business.
So they make a lot of money off of it.
But China can basically just print money, and they do.
They just create money out of fiat or fiat creation

(02:51:49):
of money. So people are trying to make all you know,
they're selling their farms, they're selling stakes in their business.
China's buying it. We don't have any mechanisms to stop it. Really,
Missouri already even know how much land China owns, and
then at some point.

Speaker 6 (02:52:01):
We not have any mechanism to stop it. They're an
outside country. We can we can't go into China and
buy land from China.

Speaker 25 (02:52:11):
That's a good question, I'll give you. I'll give you
a direct answer. The people probably deserve a direct answer.
If so, you don't know that it's China buying.

Speaker 24 (02:52:18):
So let's say you go sell your phone, you sell your.

Speaker 25 (02:52:20):
House, right, Yeah, so random guy comes up and he goes,
I want to buy it. Yeah, you don't know that
that guy's backed by an LLC and that LLC is
seventy percent owned by a different company that's owned by
a different company. It's a Chinese company, and the companies
in China are are subsidiaries of the CCP essentially, So
you don't know that because when you go to sell
your property, it might say Tom Smith, it might say

(02:52:41):
it might say Missouri Farm Investments LLC. And you don't
know who the stakeholders that LLC are because we don't
disclose shareholders to LLC's in Missouri, and there's good and
bad to that. Right, you can start a business. I
don't know if JP's your business partner or not. It's
silent to Missouri. Now, some in some states is heavily protected,
like Utah, won't you and disclosed a members like upon
subpoena or whatever. It's picked by statute. Delaware is very

(02:53:04):
protective of shareholders. So we have these protections, so you
can have the government's not getting in your business. But
those same protections protect a company that's founded or is
funded by China to buy farmland without people knowing it.
So I don't think there are farmers who are like generally,
who are consciously selling out their country. They're just like, hey,
the cost of fuels up, the cow prices are down,

(02:53:25):
the grain prices are down. My kids don't want to
run the farm. We're in a squeeze. This person's offering
me fifteen million dollars for my farm. Let's go home, retire.
But they don't know that fifteen million dollars basically came
from China. Right, So it's a huge it's going to
be a huge problem, especially as we get we get
into these trade wars and we get these tensions with
China that China will control the supply and demand of
the production of commodities, and that will control the prices

(02:53:48):
of food supply, right, and we won't have a good
And so people go, let's just seize the land. Okay,
that's not like then, why would you do that now? Right,
it's not a practical solution. You define a way to
stop them from doing what they're doing now. So there's
got to be a way to unwind the Chinese ownership
in Missouri and the Chinese steak and these agriculture companies.
I think it's important.

Speaker 6 (02:54:08):
Are these what Trump is negotiating in with the President
Shei right now, amongst other things, because China is the
big problem here.

Speaker 25 (02:54:16):
So what Trump did was China was running rough shot
around the world. Yeah, so what Trump did as he
came in and he said, you're you're ripping off our
intellectual property. You're ignoring everything in the World Trade Organization.
If there's international regulations, you just defy it. You are
you're basically buying up You're buying up land all over
the world, and you're having these contracts for infrastructure and
internet and you're building a separate canal. They're just kind

(02:54:39):
of taking over everything. So Trump was the first president
ever really, I mean Nixon kind of tried to have
polarity with them, but like to come in and say,
we're going to push back. So we pushed back in
all kinds of ways. We sent the fleet to the
artificial islands of South China Sea. We pushed back hard
on North Korea on their nuclear weapons program. We started
doubling our presence, our diplomatic presence in Taiwan. Unofficially but

(02:55:02):
practically speaking, we started to say, if it's manufactured in China,
it's not going to be cheaper than stuff that's manufacturing
in the United States. So China responded by trying to
say that we're basically in a fight.

Speaker 5 (02:55:12):
We're in a two.

Speaker 25 (02:55:13):
Superpower tug of war for influence around the whole world
with us in China. And so China is the one
that won the twenty twenty election by running Trump.

Speaker 24 (02:55:22):
Out of town.

Speaker 6 (02:55:23):
Oh and they helped them.

Speaker 25 (02:55:24):
They definitely wanted by helped you because Trump was was
tough on their heart of your plan. So now Trump's
back and we're into it with China, and China has
some weaknesses and strengths, but they're trying to run around
Trump's policies. So we're really in a fight for control,
like global control with China. And I just think that,
just like Trump said, we've been stupid about it the

(02:55:45):
whole time. We take money, but money's never free. They're
always buying something from us. So it's kind of time
to start manufacturing stuff in America. Quit manufacturing our defense
products in China. Right, manufactured in Rawa with the super
sim reconductor. Make it here, make it so we're not
dependent on them.

Speaker 24 (02:56:03):
Make it so.

Speaker 25 (02:56:04):
Part of this reduction of spending is that we don't
have so much debt that's held by China, so we're
less dependent on them. Because whoever you depend on controls you.
And we depended on China for a ton of stuff.

Speaker 24 (02:56:14):
So I think it's all important. That's what's going on.

Speaker 6 (02:56:15):
All right, let's talk about finally, we only got four
minutes left or less the town hall that we're going
to do on Uh, how do you do? What do
you see with this? How do people figure out how
to go there and what's going to happen there?

Speaker 25 (02:56:32):
So June thirtieth at the Oak Meadow Country club. We're
going to have a get together and I'm going to
talk about, you know, why i want to be a
state senator and meet some people, and I hope people
will come and visit with me and ask about whatever
they want to and tell me what they're looking for
and people that represent them in the legislature. And you'll
be there, and we've got McDonald's.

Speaker 6 (02:56:52):
Yeah, I think we're going to get McDonald's food.

Speaker 25 (02:56:54):
I'm pretty sure. Yeah, I'm pretty psyched about it. And
there's a good connection to our president's.

Speaker 6 (02:57:00):
Not right, Yeah, man, I can't wait. I'm hungry.

Speaker 25 (02:57:02):
So yeah, now I tell them the other day, I
was like, I've given a lot of I've given a
lot of money to McDonald's over the years.

Speaker 24 (02:57:09):
Right, So since I was about.

Speaker 6 (02:57:10):
This is paybacks? Is like musk?

Speaker 25 (02:57:13):
Yeah, No, I vividly recall the Batman Summer in nineteen
eighty nine at the Saint Robert McDonald's and hanging out there.

Speaker 24 (02:57:19):
Yeah for sure, but I really do so.

Speaker 25 (02:57:22):
That's gonna be that event, right, people are gonna be there.
I hopefully people will support and just meet more people
and everybody's welcome to come, and I think it's gonna
be a good deal.

Speaker 6 (02:57:30):
So all right, So now you got the lowdown on that.
So pay attention where people could Where can people find
you and like ask you questions and stuff like that.

Speaker 25 (02:57:40):
So we're launching up a new website and Bill Hardwick
the public. There's a there's a there's a public official page.
There's a candidate page Bill Hardwick on Facebook. Really great
way you can message me there. We'll message you back.
Interact with us on Facebook. We'll post links to all
of our events there so people can find out about
them and have invites and what you Just follow us
on the camp a pin trail at Bill Herdwick on facebooks.

Speaker 6 (02:58:02):
All right, I was going to do a joke, but
you know, I don't think I can use this one,
so I'm gonna be nice. No, it's all right. So
if I tell you a joke that's questionable, is that? Okay?

Speaker 25 (02:58:15):
You have first right to say whatever you want?

Speaker 6 (02:58:17):
All right, Well, I can respond to I'm telling you
this a JP. I don't want, I don't want. Don't
listen you know, you know, JP, I hate nuts in
my muffins, but I can't stand muffins in my nuts.
Oh that's terrible, is that? Members?

Speaker 25 (02:58:34):
Of the audience are like getting up and walking out.

Speaker 6 (02:58:37):
Well that's the good thing I did at the end
of the show.

Speaker 24 (02:58:39):
Anyways, guys, we're sorry.

Speaker 6 (02:58:41):
No, it's it's it's I got I got crickets. I
finally got crickets today.

Speaker 25 (02:58:46):
They're not all home runs, no, all right, now you are, Yeah,
the show is a home run.

Speaker 6 (02:58:50):
Though the show was a home run until now. All right,
I screwed everything up. All right, I'm sorry. I apologize,
but you know, I want to thank everybody, especially Bill here,
for putting up with me and my wife obviously putting
up JP and everyone does listened to the show, all
the people that I interviewed up until like now, maybe

(02:59:11):
that that I said that terrible joke, because it's horrible.
I got to cut it from my my inventory, so
to speak. But this guy, this guy is for real
and we need we need people like him. We need
him as well to help manage this country the way

(02:59:35):
it ought to be managed. And he's a guy with
a big heart and that's what we need. And we
got one as a president too, and that's Donald Trump.
Uh So I want to thank everybody for listening, putting
up with me, and I think it was a good
show up until recently. I'll be back with another show

(02:59:55):
next week.

Speaker 24 (02:59:56):
Thank you guys.
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