Peasants Perspective

The FBI's Secret War Against Trump: Agents, Pilots, and Hidden Agendas

Taylor Johnatakis Season 2 Episode 130

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In a riveting conversation that moves from heartwarming to heartbreaking, The Peasants Perspective reveals how America's greatest strength—our natural generosity and openness—becomes our greatest vulnerability when weaponized against us.

The hosts begin with a charming video of a British tourist experiencing quintessential American hospitality, being spontaneously invited to shoot guns and see alligators by friendly locals. This welcoming spirit, while admirable, creates blind spots that allow infiltration at the highest levels of government—demonstrated by the shocking revelation that the FBI pilot currently flying Director Kash Patel's jet was previously the lead agent on the Mar-a-Lago investigation under Jack Smith.

A whistleblower bombshell from Project Veritas exposes former Attorney General Bill Barr's alleged secret meetings with Fulton County DA Fani Willis to strategize RICO charges against Trump. "We should bring RICO because it's a very difficult type of charge to defend," Barr reportedly advised, shattering the myth of his loyalty to Trump and revealing the depth of the deep state's machinations.

The conversation takes a darker turn when examining a massive ActBlue funding scheme using real estate transactions to launder millions into Democratic campaigns. Arizona State Senator Mark Fincombe details how suspicious mortgages linked to ActBlue officers reveal an elaborate money-laundering operation that has recently begun to crumble under scrutiny.

Perhaps most disturbing is the whistleblower testimony about unaccompanied migrant children being "treated like commodities" under a $347 million government transportation contract. "What you know, you cannot unknow," the whistleblower laments, describing the children being shipped "like potato chips on a truck."

The episode balances these heavy revelations with discussions about Trump's leadership style, with former staffers describing his 21-hour workdays and first-principles thinking that makes him "the ultimate executive." His Russia-Ukraine approach exemplifies this, focusing simply on "stopping the killing" rather than geopolitical gamesmanship.

By examining the interconnection between seemingly disparate issues—from FBI corruption to immigration policies to election funding—the podcast reveals the contours of what the hosts describe as a "cabal" operating throughout multiple administrations. The message is clear: accountability isn't partisan revenge; it's the necessary medicine to restore American institutions.

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Speaker 1:

And when they went to the queen to tell her whose subjects had no bread, do you know what she said? Let them eat cake here, you take the bomb. We're getting screwed man.

Speaker 4:

Every time we turn around, we're getting screwed, man, every time we turn around, we're getting screwed. Oh, the revolution's gonna be through podcasting for sure. That's the only way we talk. It's the little guys. The little guys that take the brunt of everything. It's gotta stop. Peasants, man, we're just peasants, every one of us. You watch those old movies. Everything, it's gotta stop. Peasants, man, we're just peasants, every one of us. You watch those old movies. You see the peasants in the background with the kings and queens walking around. We're those people. We're those people. Good morning peasants. Peasants, man, we're just peasants. There we go. Goodets, pets. Peasants, man, we're just pets. There we go. Good morning peasants. Welcome to another episode of the Peasants Perspective. I hope you set your clots back for daylight savings. We're jumping on it early. We're starting to show early today because we both have appointments, places we got to be, so we figure you just watch the replay, right? I mean, it's's great. We'll probably celebrate at 6 30 when people start filling in the chats you'll probably find out.

Speaker 8:

You like it better when you can just skip ahead, that's right, oh man.

Speaker 4:

Well, it's early today. Both ron and I are like wow, I commented, there's no caffeine in here. And and he hands me a cold diet, dr Pepper.

Speaker 8:

Brought to you by Crispin Refreshing.

Speaker 4:

That's right, ron has a vending machine at his house, which?

Speaker 8:

is kind of fun, I'm getting rich yeah.

Speaker 4:

So I wanted to start out today and show you how great Americans are. We are the funnest people on the planet, for sure, and super generous. So this is. A british tourist came down to I think it's florida just for a day and just was checking out the everglades. Thought maybe he could see an alligator from the docks and we're buffering all right, let's refresh that.

Speaker 8:

I'm gonna guess there will be an alligator. There might be.

Speaker 11:

First time I've ever seen that the UK. I came here looking for an alligator. I've never seen one before. You don't mind? Alright, all right, here we go. Howdy, welcome to America. Thank you. Thanks a lot. Thanks a lot. Oh no, oh, he's coming this way.

Speaker 12:

I've never shot a gun in my life, uh-oh.

Speaker 8:

Watch out people, oh yeah. Got some new Americans here.

Speaker 11:

This board's really nice.

Speaker 1:

The.

Speaker 11:

Thing about this board is the owner of this board picked two strangers up and took us? To the theater, he filled the bottle with bullets. Thank you guys. Appreciate you all. This has been one of the most amazing days of our lives.

Speaker 4:

These are some of the greatest people in the world that's america yeah, baby, when I think of america, I think of that right there. I think of overwhelming generosity jump in, let's go. Yeah, right, that is america, and people do say that about americans we're surprisingly like outgoing and gregarious, and so that's kind of fun and that, unfortunately, that goodness that we have inherent in us and willingness to give everybody a chance, even a stranger, jump in, we'll take you for a spin. I'll show you an alligator. Never shot a gun before unload the clip.

Speaker 8:

You know it's time to time to click off those bucket list items into the water.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, the greatest day of his life. Well, that gets taken advantage of, because even at the top of our country, americans are still americans. This is kyle seraphim, former fbi agent who turned whistleblower, who now now has his own show, and apparently he did some background checking, and a lot of this is confusing as to who really figured out who who is, and when you're talking about J6 FBI agents and prosecutors, we know who they are and we've been frustrated by some of them that haven't been fired, while some have been. Well, kyle Serafim turns out. There was a big clean out at the FBI yesterday. A bunch of agents, some of them who'd recently been transferred to important positions, all got fired. They called it a bloodbath with more to come. One of these agents that got fired was actually the pilot who was flying around the jet that Kash Patel flies in.

Speaker 16:

So listen to this the pilot who flies cash patel's private jet right now a gulfstream 550 fbi aircraft was previously in his post, just before that, running the investigation into mar-a-lago on behalf of jack smith. That resulted in a search warrant at the now president's house. That sounds really scandalous. So the question how do you end up with the guy who ran the case into the current president now flying around the current FBI director and listening in on all of his conversations? And it goes something like this I gave advice to Kash Patel early on. I was giving him advice all the way through the nomination process, through the confirmation process, and the minute he was confirmed he cut me off and no longer started talking. So now he gets the information that I share the same way that any of you would. They listen to my podcast, which is a really awkward thing to find out that the fbi director was catching up on my show and yelling about it and calling me an mfr, apparently. So we put out a thread on monday of this week.

Speaker 16:

On friday I gave the trump administration a little bit of a heads up. I called an insider insider, somebody that I know and trust and said here's some information. The pilot who was flying cash Patel was the case agent on the Mar-a-Lago case. You should know that this is the person's name. Here's his FAA airman receipts. This is his type certifications on on planes. This is his address, which I didn't share, but I said ties into what goes on over at the FAA database that's on file with the tax assessor shows that he's law enforcement. In other words it's redacted. It says name withheld on behalf of the owner, which is a thing that Virginia does for law enforcement officers. So I gave him all the evidence to be able to make sure that this was the guy and then I showed them that this guy, christopher Meyer, was not just the pilot, not just the guy who worked on the Mar-a-Lago case, but he also was the person who was involved in the arrest of one, harrison Floyd. Harrison Floyd was one of the guys that went to jail.

Speaker 4:

And Harrison Floyd was the founder of Blacks for Trump in Georgia and he is the one who got hard evidence from the, I think, the election commission or whatever, but he got hard evidence of voter fraud in georgia when they arrested donald trump, sydney powell and all the different players in that georgia rico case. Harrison floyd, the only black man arrested, sat in prison for 28 days, sat in jail for 28 days before he made bond for no reason. He just goes. I think it's because I'm black and they were trying to say you know, you got to get in line, kind of thing, and but he had, he had the goods, he had the records that proved the election was stolen in Georgia and he's the guy who sat in prison time in the courthouse and alongside Donald Trump as a defendant in Fulton County.

Speaker 16:

So he was part of the Leticia James, not the Leticia James, whatever that other lady Fannie was part of the latisha j, not the latisha james, whatever that other lady fanny, uh, the ag fanny that was in there that was going after uh, trump and co in the local cases that were happening. So you got this guy. He helped arrest harrison floyd. His partner on that arrest was another guy named walter gardena, and gardena and chris meyer apparently had been ordered fired. So that's of note. That came as a result of this thread which went out viral on Monday. I was like I gave him two days to respond to it and then we published it. The story goes forward because nobody was moving forward.

Speaker 16:

What we also found out is is that for one at the FBI, the acting director at the time when Donald Trump took office, a guy named Brian Driscoll, has also been ordered removed, and the insiders that I had told me that the conversation that went on in the office went something like this you need to fire that pilot who's underneath your sort of chain of command.

Speaker 16:

He said you can't do that because he's a veteran and he said I want him fired anyway. And he said do you really want to fire the guy who spent seven months listening to your conversations and flying around in a private jet with you, which, whether it's an implied threat or not, it is one of those kind of things that we all worried about. What does leverage look like? What does it look like to have access? It's the reason why you wouldn't want a case agent from mar-a-lago actually flying the plane and having direct, you know, shoulder rubs with the current director of the fbi wow wow, huh so I assume pat patel and his benevolence is like oh hey, great, a pilot, a pilot's a pilot.

Speaker 4:

They don't usually run cases, they're pilots, turns out. This guy was running a case. Happened to be a big one, one that you're investigating kind of like bf.

Speaker 8:

Uh, the president of the united states was all of a sudden serving you at your diner. Like what the heck is going on?

Speaker 4:

It would be like if Jack Smith ends up being his butler. Yeah exactly Something like that. And it's not a position of humiliation, he's actually buying. You know, You're Jack Smith. This happened with James Baker, Jim Baker who went over to X and became the general counsel for X and he was the general counsel of the fbi during the whole coup and during the all the communication back and forth between the fbi and x and he was the one tasked with releasing the files and he was holding files back and then they caught him. They're like jim baker.

Speaker 4:

Is this the jim baker, little linkedin search reporters? Eyes are like blowing out of their eye sockets, like the very man we're looking for the smoking gun, is the one giving us these documents. No wonder they're falling just shy of what we're looking for. Yeah, and then he got walked out of x and bada, bing, bada boom. Suddenly these emails show up that are like take this account offline. We don't like what they're saying. They're bad boys. Shantini on Rumble. Good morning, welcome, welcome. And then Sapphire Patriot yeah.

Speaker 4:

Sapphire Patriot jumped on with us. Good morning peasants. She said visiting the John Takis family is on my bucket list. I said we need to make that happen. Yes, just like Tina Peters. Yes, harrison Floyd was thrown in jail. Harrison Floyd and blacks for Trump visited Freedom Corner, which stood vigil outside of the DC Gulag, for I don't know a long time a thousand days, a long time. And then Sapphire Pasture. That sounds crazy. It is crazy.

Speaker 4:

So one of the other FBI agents that was fired yesterday was Steve Jensen. Steve Jensen was a lead case agent in a bunch of FBI stuff. He was promoted and it kind of sent a firestorm right off the beginning. We're like, how is this guy getting promoted? And the word we got from Dan Bongino all the cryptic messages was basically, you know, some people have the goods and we keep them around to do whatever. Well, now you fired him. So I have a feeling you never debriefed him, got the goods, he probably was up for promotion, looked like the right guy and nobody did a little background check to realize what he'd been involved with. I mean, the subterfuge is unbelievable here and the fact that you have a case agent on over mar-a-lago that ends up flying the jet for cash.

Speaker 4:

Patel, that looks intentional. Have you ever seen? Uh, there's a, there's a. When I was in prison, I figured out that I could go down to the rec center and I could watch a movie on Saturday and Sunday mornings. Right, so you could go all week, but I was doing other things. So on Saturday and Sunday morning I'd wake up and you can go down and not have to have an appointment because they're full.

Speaker 4:

So, Saturday and Sunday I wake up early 5 AM, watch a little bit of news and then I go get in line for the 6 AMm breakfast call and at 6 am breakfast I can haul down and I can bank a left into the rec center because it opens up and I could get onto a TV. But you had to haul, I mean haul from your housing unit down there.

Speaker 8:

So how many TVs were there and how many people wanted.

Speaker 4:

There was 20, and there was probably 300 people that wanted them. Oh so, first come, first serve. 6 am by 603, all the tvs are filled out, and my housing unit just happened to be the closest to wreck, so as long as the door got unlocked when they did the breakfast call, then I could make it if there was any delay. If the co was moseying I wouldn't make it. How?

Speaker 8:

many stamps, is a tv worth?

Speaker 4:

oh my gosh, you can't buy them. You couldn't buy them. You couldn't buy them. You couldn't buy them. You could bribe the record, maybe you could, I, but either way, um, I would get down there and I typically get a TV, so I got, I watched well, I was just thinking he had such a good access.

Speaker 4:

Maybe you can sell one every day. I watched the entire James Bond series. I watched the entire Mission Impossible series, Basically any kind of trilogy, multiple, like I'd watch them because I could get into the story of it. And I just watched all of the Fast and Furiouses, All of them.

Speaker 4:

They get progressively worse. Yeah, and I watched a bunch of stuff, man. I watched a whole bunch of indie movies. They had 2 000 movies you could watch. They had dvds, that that you could check out and go. Anyways, it was pretty cool it wasn't that cool.

Speaker 4:

You were sitting in a cubicle, like it was when I used to work in a call center in college. Right, you get your little desk with the cubicle, and it's not even a cubicle, it's just a desk with sidewalls. Yeah, you're all kind of so. That's what it was. It was a tv screen not much bigger than the one we have here, and you could just sit there in a plastic lawn chair and watch a movie, and it was.

Speaker 8:

It started to become the highlight of the week this sounds like me in college, you know, I took a film study class and I had to go to the library to watch all these movies and it was. It was in a cubicle thing, that well, not a cubicle, but like what you were describing.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that's exactly my experience in school, so I don't remember which bond it was, but it was one of the new ones with the English guy I guess they're all English guys, but it was. It was one of the newer ones and I think it's called Cypher and at one point he's sitting there with Moneypenny when she becomes an old lady, or no, mom, mom, it wasn't Moneypenny, it was Mom. Anyways, point is he's talking to her and she's got her driver bodyguard and they've got this Cypher guy and they're kind of getting ready to torture him. Get the information. We're Cypher. And he's like like we think you guys are all over the place, we think that the cia and mi6 are listening in on every phone call, we're super paranoid, but you don't even know we exist. And he's like that's what I'm learning. And he's like we're everywhere. And then her driver has his gun on him.

Speaker 4:

And then the driver turns and puts the gun on her oh and it's like whoa they have a mole as the exact assistant of the head you know what I mean it's like, ah, it sends the whole mi6, and so anybody's who's seen the movie you know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 4:

I don't remember which one it is, but, uh, best bond woman of all, eva green for sure, no doubt about it. So, anyways, uh, so that's what it reminds me of. It reminds me of you've got this cabal and they have their apparatchiks and they've spread them all over the place. You know, I know in my J6 FBI agent who I have many things to say about him, but he fled. So he was told, before Trump came in, you need to get out of this office, and so he transferred, told before trump came in, you need to get out of this office, and so he transferred to another place. And it was when they returned our property. I wasn't there, but the fbi agent and the new fbi agent replacing him were talking to my wife and she, you know, they said he said something and the the new fbi agent that replaced well, I mean, it wasn't that. I mean your son, your husband, kind of deserved it, because he participated in an insurrection. He was like attempting to overthrow the government. He said this to her.

Speaker 4:

He said this to her. I'm like, oh so that's the FBI agent now in this area. Okay, just FYI, there will be no crimes solved while this man is here. His worldview is messed up. Yeah, it's that simple. You see bad men where there's good men. That's, that's what that is. Your worldview is messed up like you can't send that fbi agent to go look after crime now, because yeah, you're parroting a lie that's been spun by the media not only a lie.

Speaker 4:

but now your boss is the guy who was over trying to overthrow the government, right? So what are you? You're clearly you know the oath of the constitution that binds you to him through us. Right For us, you think he's an insurrectionist.

Speaker 8:

You're confused at best.

Speaker 4:

Confused. You can't be in this position. We require the FBI to see through all the nonsense. Just get to the facts, the things that happened, right and they can't. It can't be that way, because when you don't see things clearly, you end up with stuff like this. So this right here is a. This is coming from cnn us.

Speaker 4:

Charges dropped against man accused of trying to abduct a child at a georgia walmart after surveillance footage sows doubt. So here's the man and I guess this woman's on this little car. There's a guy right, there's a woman's on a cart. Charges have been dismissed against a man who was facing attempted kidnapping and other charges after a mother accused him of trying to grab her two-year-old son from her. At a Georgia Walmart record show, mahinda Patel encountered 26-year-old Caroline Miller with her two children riding a motorized cart she was driving in the March 18th incident at walmart in the city of ackworth, about 30 miles northwest of downtown atlanta. He asked her for help to find tylenol. His lawyer said miller's alleged patel then grabbed her two-year-old son from her, but that she pulled the child back. Patel's lawyer says surveillance video proves he was just trying to make sure the boy didn't fall from the scooter which they said had just clipped a store to play display.

Speaker 4:

Patel was held in Cobb County Jail, which, by the way, it's a horrible place to be. I've met many people who went through Cobb County Jail for 45 days after he was indicted on April 3rd by a grand jury. He got indicted. They took this to a grand jury. What evidence did they show to the grand jury? Because as soon as they showed this video footage to the judge, charges dropped on charges of criminal attempt to commit kidnapping, simple salt and simple battery. He was released on a 10,000 bond in early May.

Speaker 4:

After his lawyer, ashley's, merchant presented her case as to why he should be released by showing the judge a compilation of security footage she subpoenaed from Walmart and shared with media outlets, including CNN. It was security footage that drew public attention to the case and prompted over 90 000 people to sign a petition declaring his innocence and calling for his release. The footage is somewhat grainy and patel's backup screws part of what is happening in his encounter with miller. About six minutes later, video shows patel paying for his purchase and walking out the door after pausing to speak with an employee for more than 20 seconds. Well, merchant said patel was trying to make sure the boy didn't fall from his scooter. His mother was riding on him with in her lap. Prosecutors argued the video shows he grabbed the child and fled the incident. The state agreed. So the prosecutors said no, no, no, he's trying to grab the child. The judge is looking at it like I don't know about that.

Speaker 8:

So is the woman just lying.

Speaker 4:

It's amazing how prevalent those lies can be right, yes, there are people who do those kind of lies just for the attention and just because of who knows what reason. But even if it's, even if she was correct and thought he was trying to take the kid, you just clipped a cart and your kids off balance, and you know what I mean.

Speaker 8:

I don't know, I mean, if you were really trying to steal a kid.

Speaker 4:

You really hanging out in the store forever home depot, yeah, walmart. So the state. So after the video was shown in court, the state agreed to dismiss the case and drop the charges on wednesday, according to court records. So here's the thing you remember my friend earl 43, oh yeah, in federal prison, charges dropped and he's homeless. By way, he spent the last night in a homeless shelter after going to the ER because he has a foot infection. He did finally get a paper ID and he's this next week he should get his regular ID so we can get him out of town get him out of that bad area that he's in and get him somewhere better.

Speaker 4:

So, fyi, I might be making a call for people to some kind of gifts and go or something at the beginning of the week because he could use a couple bucks. Patel spoke with CNN so after the court hearing, saying I feel relieved. To be honest with you, this thing was hanging over my head for a long time and our family went through a lot of hell. You know we went through this, but today is a day of celebration. I'm thankful for that. The only reason this case was resolved in our favor and this is from the attorney was because we were able to obtain the video proving our client was innocent from Walmart. Merchant said in a statement Now keep this in mind. They went to a grand jury. What did they present? I don't know the mother's statement alone.

Speaker 8:

It sounds like it.

Speaker 4:

Grand jury is supposed to basically see the trial in advance. It's not adversarial, but they're supposed to stack up all the evidence.

Speaker 8:

If they didn't have the surveillance footage, or if the doj was hide or the the state prosecutors were hiding it or hadn't disclosed it. That's putting your finger on the grand jury indictment. Yeah, that's putting your finger on the scale.

Speaker 4:

She said our system needs to be aware that innocent people are falsely accused on a daily basis. This I know for a fact. I went through prison. I cannot see a world where we don't have that institution. There are people behind bars that need to be there. They will eat your face. There are sociopaths, there are murderers, there are rapists, there are killers. There are people who do not feel remorse for the things they've done. And then there's good people who get caught up in stuff like this. Some of them have even participated on the periphery of bad activity. I'm not even saying that they shouldn't be punished, but the problem is the system has no way to decipher and it just assumes your guilt.

Speaker 4:

This idea of innocent till proven guilty is a farce at best. Otherwise, everybody would make bond. Nobody would be caught in a situation like my friend Earl. You know no way our system needs to be where the innocent people are falsely accused on daily basis and without police willing to investigate before rushing to judgment. And this is what I'm saying with the FBI agent. If he just assumes Trump was a Russian agent, just assumes Trump was trying to overthrow the government, then he's right to assume that every conservative group, like the Birch Society or the Kitsap Patriots, are right wing American Taliban institutions trying to overthrow the government. He's going to put his attention there. Do you see what I'm saying? When you assume that an entire group is something they're not?

Speaker 8:

Well, you were part of an insurrection, you were part of an insurrection.

Speaker 4:

Trying to overthrow the government. I mean you're lucky, your guy won. It was never the case. Trying to overthrow the government? I mean you're lucky, your guy won. It was never the case. Judge is willing to release people on bond while awaiting investigation. The prosecutor is willing to provide transparency with evidence. This will continue to happen. The attorney continued. So again, it matters what gets said. The other thing, too, is there's a constant attempt to try to shape the media narrative. So let's guess good morning. Did you start early today? Pray the rosary daily on rumble? Yes, we did. It's daylight savings, don't you?

Speaker 8:

know man, you got a gas line a little better than that.

Speaker 4:

Be like no dude, no we're running late yeah, we're about to wrap up. We did. We both have appointments today, so we did that. Uh, harrison blacks for trump visited freedom corner from sapphire patriot. That sounds crazy. 906 days. 906 days is how long freedom corner stood vigil. It's pretty awesome. Whoa, we know the agents are embedded deep.

Speaker 4:

And tiffany and carlito good morning patriots. Yes, good morning, totally. Should start a gsg for that man. Yes, we, I need to. Um, he, it's this.

Speaker 4:

Oh, man, earl got out and it's like I'm out, okay, great, how do I get you some money? I don't know, man, I don't have an id card. I'm like you're literally just, they just dumped you out the back door of the jail. Yep, I'm like. I've had that happen to me twice now.

Speaker 4:

I remember after I was indicted, I spent only a day and it was snowing in Seattle, tacoma, and they just literally opened the door and I walked out and I was like you're free, I don't have a cell phone. I didn't bring my wallet. They told me not to bring anything. I'm like, wow, I just. I went up to a Starbucks and can I use your phone? We don't let customers use phone. Can I use your cell phone?

Speaker 4:

She looked at me like I just got out of jail across the street. I need to call, okay. She handed me my phone and I called my wife where are you at, come pick me up? I didn't even have a sweater, it was snowing, right, and uh, I had it happen to me in idaho same thing just getting dumped out. Like here you go, you're like all right, so he just gets dumped out. Well then, you know what do you do? So he spends a night or two just on the streets, literally, and now he's starting to acquire things. Right, someone gave him a bedroll, someone gave him a sleeping bag. Who are the people giving him these things?

Speaker 8:

clearly, the homeless people yeah, well, hopefully he doesn't have a shopping cart now oh, dude, he's carrying around a rucksack oh he's hiking everywhere.

Speaker 4:

But it took us. I mean, he's been out a month or more now. He just barely got his paper license. We had to resolve issues in other states. It was like, oh my goodness, what a nightmare. So couldn't get a bank account Right. So we're finally at the point next week he'll get his ID card, we're going to get him a bank account. And the other thing too is his charges came from the va and that's where he needs to go for medical care and of course they all you know have in their file like do not help this man. It's even worse. And he had to get some something approved and it went to the base commander, and a base commander happens to be the person who whistle blew on this whole party started in the first place.

Speaker 4:

It's like when it came back tonight, he's like these people hate me. I'm like, yeah, you need to get out of town, bro. Like lower your expectations for them somehow honoring their oath and just get out of town, all right. So this is the CEO of Old Glory Bank, who is someone who, at 1776 live, we recommend and work with. I actually have a conference call with this guy later this week, and actually it won't be this week, it'll be next week now, but anyways, he called out brian moynihan from bank of america who, after trump, basically said they wouldn't open a bank account for me. I had billion billion dollars to deposit, he said, said no. Well, this guy here was like not the case, because Brian Moynihan made it sound in his response, which we played a couple of days ago, that while it's true they denied banking, that we need to do the reform because there's national security things and basically the government was telling us not to bank with you. And what are we supposed to do? Well, the CEO of Old Glory Bank calls him out on that.

Speaker 12:

Colin L Bryan Moynihan, the CEO of Bank of America, right now with a $100,000 bet to a charity of your choice, that you are not telling the truth. It was your choice to not bank Donald Trump. There is nothing in the Bank Secrecy Act, nothing in the regulations promulgated that they're under. I've been a lawyer for 30 years. I've read them. Have you, it was your choice and you need a man.

Speaker 4:

I got to point something out before we listen to the rest of this. He has the creature from Jekyll Island on his bookshelf. Do you know how significant that is? Where's my copy? Is it? Do you know how significant it is that he has the creature of Jekyll Island sitting on his bookshelf? And he's the CEO of a bank. Everybody needs to bank there. If you're not banking at Old Glory Bank, go start a savings account there for your kids or something. Send some business this man's way and tell the truth.

Speaker 13:

Watching on CNBC. Joining me right here in Aspen is Bank of America's CEO, brian Moynihan, who talked to President Trump on Squawk Box about this executive order that he's planning around banks, who he thinks discriminated against conservatives and your name came up, and so I just wanted to show you what he said and wanted to get your reaction.

Speaker 10:

This was after I got out. By the way, I call up Bank of America routinely and I speak to him and I speak to a couple of people and they have zero interest. Brian was kissing my ass when I was president and when I called him after I was president to deposit a billion dollars, more importantly, to open accounts, and he said we can't do it.

Speaker 6:

No, we can't do it, but look the president's after the right thing, which is the laws, rules and regulations around our industry became used to cause things to happen. This was BSAML, whether it's KYC, whether it's reputational risk.

Speaker 12:

Folks, did you hear how he played with words? Never did he say that Trump was wrong. He tried to throw out a bunch of BSAML, kyc. It's all mumble jumble. He's deflecting. He made a choice and it's okay, moynihan, if you don't want Trump, but tell the truth. We bank everybody. We're a pro-America bank. Come on my podcast and prove me wrong. $100,000 will go to a charity of your choice. Mike Ring at OldGloryBankcom. Mike Ring at OldGloryBankcom, it's time you stand behind your words and your decisions, and folks do not trust these people now. They cannot change. They can't even tell the truth about their action Bank with Old Glory Bank. We don't debank people who disagree with us. We don't improperly share your data. We proudly bank J6ers. There's nothing that prevents that we would love to bank Donald Trump and his family. Quit misleading America.

Speaker 4:

Own your decisions, I love that that's a CEO of a bank.

Speaker 8:

I wonder what their leverage ratio is, huh.

Speaker 4:

What their leverage ratio is. Hopefully one to ten. Right.

Speaker 8:

I'm just wondering if they're trying to beat out that Silicon Valley bank. But he's right, these people cannot change?

Speaker 4:

Oh no, he's not wrong?

Speaker 4:

he's definitely you know they made a choice. They for for personal expediency when the times get hard. They ran. I'm sorry I can't bank with you, but your president, come around all around 10 cup asking for regulation, relief and whatever. They're crooks, man, I mean, say what you want about banking. It is what it is, but again you got to stand behind your decisions. I love the fact that he's calling him out. I've always assumed wells fargo had no choice. I've always assumed they got a letter from treasury or a letter from the fbi, something that then triggered them saying you're a security threat or whatever. But now I don't think that's the case.

Speaker 8:

Now I think wells fargo just did it, which again is horrible well, I got a beef with wells fargo, so I'm never banking with them again I found it fun.

Speaker 4:

There was something, uh something that came out. Someone was talking about wells fargo and I was just like been there, done that yeah okay, so this is, uh, what is his name?

Speaker 4:

Stitchfield, talking with Fincom. Okay, he used to be an Arizona representative. He lost his election. I think he ran for I think Attorney General and lost that election in arizona. He was involved with all the voter stuff going on down there in 2020. He got involved with the cyber symposium and getting that kicked off and going after that kind of ended his political career. But where every door closes, another door opens. He's been doing this research project into act blue and he found out some interesting things. So we're going to take a listen to this because, again, we as americans are virtuous. We as Americans have a very gregarious personality and we just want to go have a good time and look at alligators and shoot guns. Right, that's who we are. We don't oftentimes see the things that are happening just below the surface, below our eyeline, and he went out and found some stuff. This is about act blue and he went out and found some stuff.

Speaker 23:

This is about ActBlue. So we have this architecture that when you buy a house, generally it goes into escrow. You have a title company that handles the escrow and there are a number of documents that go into it. So, just in a broad scale, let's imagine you buy a house Grant Stitchfield buys a house for $200,000, and it's funded by one of the North American banks. We'll just say Wells Fargo, please don't sue me. All the records, including the mortgage, the deed of trust, the Alta insurance policy, all of those records are recorded in the county record. Okay.

Speaker 23:

Then just a few minutes later, your $200,000 house suddenly has a $200 million magic mortgage that comes through. It's nothing but a wire that goes through the title company. There's no lender involved because it's a hard money loan what they call a cash hard money loan but because it goes through a title company, there's no notation of who the lender is and it goes on through the system. Now what's interesting is and this is what caught our attention these are act blue officers, corporate officers. Once we found one, it led to another, and another, and another, and another, so we have them all over the nation and this is just one small fragment of the human map. You leave this digital dust, if you will. This is one small fragment.

Speaker 3:

You have all of these gigantic financial transactions. Now the question becomes how do they funnel that back into the campaigns? Is that the small dollar donations that we see that show up at some lady's house? And she's donated to ActBlue 52 times and she knows nothing about it.

Speaker 23:

Well, that's just one small aspect of it. So James O'Keefe got to give that guy credit with the whole smurfing piece that he's done, and we got to be careful about what we're calling this. This is a research project, because we're not licensed investigators. We want to make sure that people understand that this money is going into organizations that were this architecture was set up by Barack.

Speaker 4:

I got to correct something. Sounds like he still is a current Arizona state senator. I thought he'd been voted out, but it's Mark Fincombe.

Speaker 23:

Obama to spread cash around the country and to put money into political action committees, into non-government organizations, to fund candidates, to set up the whole architecture for a public relations machine read basically, propaganda machine to promote that, the whole concept that we're a team, we've got great funding. It's all behind us. So here in Arizona, for example, the Arizona Democrat Party, not more than about five weeks ago, replaced their chairman because their fundraising is 25% of what it was last year. Well, where did all the donors go? So what we're talking about, that's catastrophic.

Speaker 4:

Whoa, that's catastrophic. I mean, what he's saying here is millions of dollars were funneling through these real estate transactions. So not only are you sucking up a property and who knows what you're doing, for who you're renting it to, but that's how you're laundering in millions of dollars to these people, who then somehow take another step and distribute it to the campaigns and the candidates. It's a fraud, the entire, don't?

Speaker 8:

I mean, I wonder if those of you watch this, if you bundle this cash through here, then you get your house paid for, kind of thing.

Speaker 4:

he's200,000 house with a $20 million loan Right. Our funding is 25% down. Well, maybe because someone's looking under the covers. I know ActBlue is being looked at in Minnesota. It's being looked at in Texas. I know the DOJ is looking at it. These guys are looking at it.

Speaker 8:

They're probably like look at that and all of a sudden the funds dried. All of a sudden the funds dried up.

Speaker 4:

Yeah the funds dried up. Where's our campaign funds? Where are our donors? You ever considered you never had any? I mean, you're talking about democrats and free stuff. Do you really think they're going to give you money?

Speaker 23:

your grant is wholesale fraud, where the money is at blue officers. And now, because we're not federal law enforcement, we don't know exactly where it went, but that's why we've turned it over to US attorneys.

Speaker 3:

And that brings me to the real news, I guess, is that you have handed this over to the Department of Justice. What has been their response of taking the evidence? We'll call it evidence because you know nothing's been proven yet. I'd like to get ActBlue's response on all of this. But you turn over this evidence to DOJ. What do they say to you?

Speaker 23:

We are now engaged in conversations with a number of US attorneys, former US attorneys, lawyers who are not yet confirmed US attorneys, so there is great interest. I've got to believe that Attorney General Pam Bondi has forwarded this out to the folks that are the financial crimes folks and, by the way, the AG. We also sent it to the IRS criminal division and to the FBI. So Director Patel also has this.

Speaker 4:

I got to say I've, you know, encountering a handful of people that are dealing with the IRS for various issues.

Speaker 4:

Dude the fact that the IRS goes after some of the little fish is the most insulting thing Like talking to someone that's on basically retirement benefits and you know the IRS needs $9,000 from me. I don't have it and I'm like I can't even believe they're wasting their time. It's costing them more to send you letters and deal with your file They'll ever collect. It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable what the IRS will do and what they'll chase after but yet turn this over to the criminal division and you know they'll stew on it for years and years and years and years and years and years. By the way, I got my transcripts back with a. I went through the transcripts and found all the violations of law in my case. It's pretty good. Should we go through it? Yeah, we'll go through it here in a minute.

Speaker 4:

So this act blue thing again, this is a slow burn. We've been talking about this for a long time. Act blue was the funding arm for blm. Act blue has been the funding arm like uh, for antifa. Act blue is just involved in every nefarious little thing you can think of. They're an incredible. Oh, we have so many donors, so many donors. Look at our little donors project. Veritas goes door to door did you make 4700 donations. What are you talking about?

Speaker 5:

I'm a republican, you know well your address and your name have been used.

Speaker 4:

What?

Speaker 1:

yeah, so then we updated our security.

Speaker 4:

Now you have to put the code on the back of the card and funding went down. Okay, so got rid of the smurfing, or at least part of it. And it's like every you know, usa goes down. Oh, act blue apparently was getting money funneled through usa id or whatever. Oh, that that hurts. You know, discover this mortgage fraud. All sudden, these directors are like I got some pretty big loans that I have to pay back. You know, oh, they're totally legitimate. I'm paying them back, judge, I'm paying them back.

Speaker 8:

Yeah, I remember when we first heard about this act blue is like we were like not shocked. It was like how are they funding all this? It's like, oh, this must be one of the ways yeah, yes, uh.

Speaker 4:

Then you've got oh, let me find, did I? Oh no, I must have closed it. Oh no, it happens, it happens. Okay, let me give me just a moment. So then I wanted to show you guys this.

Speaker 4:

This is from back when andrew mccabe uh, started the investigation on donald trump. So general flynn, when he was fired donald trump fired him told him watch out for andrew mccabe. He was the deputy director of the fbi. Here's why andrew mccabe this is the federal bureau of investigation, electronic communication. So this is where he orders the opening of the investigation into donald trump at the direction of the assistant deputy for the fbi's counterintelligence division, that was andrew mccabe, following consultation with the office of the general counsel. The fbi is opening and this would have been their case thing based on an articulable factual basis that reasonably indicates that president donald trump may or has been wittingly or unwittingly involved in, in activities for and on behalf of the government of the Russian Federation, which may continue to violate, may constitute violations of federal laws and statutes. Blah, blah, blah. They wrote that down on paper and they knew. We now know, they knew that that was fake. Yeah, and here's the thing.

Speaker 8:

And uh, lie it's not just fake, it's a lie they knew it was fake and it was a lie.

Speaker 4:

Right, john solomon broke this. They did a little digging through obama's speeches and stuff like that turns out obama might have been the first one to bring this up. Obama may have given us a smoking gun, sir.

Speaker 18:

He did. Yeah, he's either the first president in American history because he seemed to know on December 19th, before the CIA redone the Intelligence Committee assessment, what its outcome was, or, more likely, he knew the fix was in. This is his NPR, and I guess he forgot that they hadn't done the work yet. So he tells NPR he expects the CIA to conclude, reverse, reverse itself and conclude that Vladimir Putin tried to help Donald Trump. The problem is the CIA hasn't really even started the work. It just got going and he's so embarrassed he comes back later and tries to walk it back a little bit. Oh, things are still going on. Want to see where it goes. It is the sort of proof that John Durham should have found in his investigation but didn't. But for this point going forward, when you try to prove it was just a long, 10 year conspiracy, this is a really, really significant piece of evidence, and I'll walk people back to Watergate, because you mentioned it for a second.

Speaker 18:

The moment Republicans bolted on Richard Nixon. The epic event that caused them to do is when they got the tapes and they realized that Nixon had asked the CIA to try to stop the FBI from investigating the burglary. By the way, the CIA didn't do it, but the mere fact that a president would consider asking the CIA to do something political was enough for an entire party to bolt on their president here. Obama asked the CIA to come up with a concocted thing, and he seems to know the outcome before the work's even done. You've got the FBI pressuring the CIA to put a bogus Christopher Steele document in the intelligence assessment and of course, you got the FBI helping Hillary Clinton carry out the whole dirty trick. It is just on the standards of Watergate. It is epically worse than anything we saw in Watergate. And the Democratic Party just yawns at it in our face every day. That's why consequences matter. If we don't punish this behavior, we're going to go from the greatest constitutional republic the world has known to a perennial banana republic.

Speaker 4:

That is the concern. And for the people that are like, well, we don't want to be a man, we got to let these guys off the hook, just a little slap on the wrist, we'll just name and shame them.

Speaker 4:

no, that would be being the banana republic you think those people aren't going to come back? They put harrison floyd in jail. They put me in jail. They put they were trying to put donald trump in jail for 700 years. They probably shot at him. Oh, but we, you know, we don't want to be back and forth. Don't let them weaponize your virtue. These are not nice English tourists that just want to go see an alligator and shoot a gun. This is the scorpion in the frog story. You got to learn. And here's the thing we know by your fruits you shall know them. It's my opinion. Once burned, once stay away. Once you touch the hot stove, stop touching it. Looking into the history of Bill Barr, he covered up the Iran Contra affair. He wrote an executive summary that was inaccurate to the actual investigator general's report. That came out years later under Clinton Right. He did that. His dad hired Jeffrey Epstein. That happened. His dad wrote a book about sex trafficking kids in space. It's the weirdest thing. It actually happened. That's all real OK. Light in space it's the weirdest thing, it actually happened. That's all real okay.

Speaker 4:

Project veritas has a two-part series and this is part two. Whistleblower bill barr held secret meetings and plot to plot prosecutions of trump and block his political comeback. Project veritas thursday released part of its. This is credit to christina lila leila uh. Bill barr released part of his whistleblower investigation of the former US Attorney General, bill Barr. On Tuesday. Project Veritas released a bombshell story from a whistleblower alleging US Attorney General Barr, along with media figure Armstrong Williams, is running an illegal immigration visa fraud scheme for elites and billionaires.

Speaker 4:

Patricia Lillis, whistleblower from Brazilian. I knew she was Brazilian, I knew it and I could tell it from her handwriting. I had to go back and look at her handwriting and make sure it wasn't in Portuguese. That's hilarious. Former Brazilian journalist at Howard Strickholdings, who is in hiding abroad, told Project Veritas she was prosecuted after Bill Barr and Armstrongstrong william.

Speaker 4:

After reporting bill barr and armstrong william to the fbi on thursday, project veritas released video of layless explaining how bill barr plotted prosecutions to block trump as a political opponent from coming back. Bill barr was like we should bring rico, because it's very difficult type of charge to defend. Layla said. Texts and emails reveal Fulton County DA Fannie Willis and Bill Barr worked together on the Rico case, targeting Trump for more than a dozen defendants. So here, look, here she goes. At that point I didn't have an idea who she worked with.

Speaker 4:

Hello, patricia, please save my number. This is Fabby Willis. If you need to reach me on behalf of bill barr, barr, feel free to call me or mess with me on this number. Patricia, despite your disagreements with armstrong, which I hope will soon be resolved resolved soon armstrong needs you to be able to deliver us all the notes of our meetings between barr and mrs willis. Could you leave all your notes in the office today, please, please. We need you to return the company notebook. Remember that legally, you cannot keep any record of your work. And guess what? This is part of the cover up. Bill.

Speaker 4:

Barr was meeting with Fannie Willis. Think about that for a second. The same Bill Barr that wouldn't look into election fraud. I wouldn't look into any of that stuff. Part two here's where she talks about it. We're just going to play the beginning of this.

Speaker 24:

so this is the whistleblower being interviewed is it to know why I am being prosecuted. No one else it's being charged or prosecuted. It's very easy. I called the fbi to report bill barr and armstrong williams. I have notes of every single meeting. One meeting can be about visa for someone, or another meeting can be about January 6th or RICO case. I have a quote here that was like Barr believes the FBI will go to Trump house soon, and one thing that I heard a lot is like how they go will go to Trump house soon, and one thing that I heard a lot is like how they go to prevent America to have Trump again. One thing that I learned very fast in the beginning is like Bill Barr is someone extremely important and I remember the biggest conversation they had at that point. It is like what kind of charge that we can bring against Trump, and that's when Bill Barr and I will never forget that Bill Barr was like we should bring recall because it's a very difficult type of charge to defend to defend.

Speaker 4:

so she goes on to basically just describe all the other. She was, you know, just in there taking notes, taking minutes and just watching this huge thing unfold in front of her bill barr, the attorney general for donald trump, colluding with fannie willis, who's hired her paramour and paid him more money than he's ever made and never, never, prosecuted even a felony case. And here he is prosecuting the president of the United States, bill Barr. Bill Barr, is there any wonder why I was indicted under Bill Barr? Is there any wonder why Bill Barr wouldn't look into the election charges? Wonder why bill barr, uh, wouldn't look into the election charges? And now jeffrey clark is like getting his law license taken away because he had the evidence and was like, hey, we're just going to open a little investigation here on bill barr's like no, I already looked into the fraud.

Speaker 8:

I don't know when he did, sitting on the toilet or something, reading politico you know, what I'm saying like unbelievable I remember when we were first started this podcast and his name would come up and I remember having like high hopes.

Speaker 4:

Oh my gosh, me too, everybody did. What really did it for me was when I found out about Iran Contra and, by the way, iran Contra, remember, jeffrey Epstein, ties into that story. This is the cabal that, slowly but surely, the smoke is clearing and we're seeing this cabal. It's the Clintons, it's the Obamas, it's the Bidens, it's all of their chiefs, their deputies, their little. Those are machines. Right, you've got Bill Barr. He's part of this Bush machine. Bush is involved in this. These guys are that. We have been run by a cabal. I don't know exactly where Reagan fit in all this. Run by a cabal. I don't know exactly where reagan fit in all this. I really don't. If you go read the book transformation of america, reagan's not a good guy, but he's like this weird intermediary good guy where he does bad things but he doesn't. He's our bad guy. You know what I mean.

Speaker 8:

Like it's kind of a weird deal. But for a lot of republicans there's a weird, you know, really nice place in their heart for him and probably rightly so, because you can't believe everything right.

Speaker 4:

But either way, reagan also was kind of that outsider. He was coming to buck the system right.

Speaker 8:

He kind of had that well, he was an outsider, but he was also like an insider because he was part of hollywood. He was inside, outsider, exactly.

Speaker 4:

So it, but so was trump. He's part of hollywood had a tv show right, you know but then he's different too. So I don't know. I'm not making a judgment, but I just know that George HW Bush, under under Reagan, did a lot of stuff. He was involved in a lot of things and he'd previously been a CIA director, a lot of stuff, right.

Speaker 4:

So it's just. It's just endlessly curious. But when I learned about Bill Barr's background and covering up Iran Contra, I was like no see, we can always forgive people, especially when they openly admit their, their errors. I made a mistake, I wrote a report, I made a mistake, I was blackmailed, whatever.

Speaker 8:

Just state your reasons, and when you're running an operation like that, it's not a mistake exactly so it's like state your reasons and we can move on.

Speaker 4:

You know, confess your sins and we'll move on, but when you don't, and you cover it up and you, you know, maintain this aura. The other thing that was a big trigger for me too, uh, and I have this with with kavanaugh. So when kavanaugh was being confirmed, lindsey graham right came into this new lindsey graham 2.0 where he's like we gotta confirm this guy, blah, blah. But he said something and he was yelling at his colleagues in the senate and he was like this is not trump's guy, this is our guy, we selected him, this is our guy and you guys are fighting this like it's the end of the planet. You know, he's like and he's our guy.

Speaker 4:

And I kept thinking how that was so weird. He's like he's not trump's guy, he's our guy, like. And I was thinking like the heritage foundation, the republicans, like, because he you know kavanaugh's one of the ones who drafted the patriot act. Like maybe, maybe it's just, you know he's, he's a neocon or whatever it is. That's another one where I have this huge question in my mind. I'm just waiting for kavanaugh to disappoint me because he's our guy and I'm wondering who r is. It's kind of the kebab today?

Speaker 4:

yeah, exactly laura logan had trenis evans on. We played a clip from this yesterday and uh, he's talking about actually, you know what? I'm gonna wait on this particular one. Okay, this one needs a minute, but I wanted to show you this here. So this has to do with illegal immigration. So Scott Adams has been making a point because the Trump administration was talking about how we're going to arrest the bad people, the violent people, the criminals. But how do you sort those people out? Scott Adams is like they're raiding Home Depot. That's not where the violent criminals are at. My experience was different. I hired a guy from a Home Depot parking lot for a year, only to find out after a year he was a gang member and actively doing gang things in the evening.

Speaker 4:

You know, I was the day job and so I could have just been like, oh, he's a hard worker. Apparently that's not the case. So there are real gang members that do really bad things at Home Depot that will come and clean, cut your lawn for 10 bucks, like I almost wonder if that's their cover, to be completely honest with you. So this man, he fled haiti to be, and became integral to a conservative community. Now they're fighting his deportation. So this man, uh, is from haiti and after his, his good friend, was kidnapped, he decided it's time to get out of haiti and he headed up to ohio, where a bunch of haitian immigrants were being deposited, and he ended up getting a job up there. Here's why, why, once he hears, once he was in ohio, he was granted temporary protection status for tps, along with a work permit which allowed him to fill critical teaching and translating roles in the area of akron.

Speaker 4:

With teacher shortages, well, that sounds legitimate. You know it's got teacher shortage. Someone coming in teach, particularly for haitian creole speakers? What in ohio? So we have a teaching shortage. So isn't it great that these immigrants can fill the need?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, but I didn't realize there was a large Haitian Creole population in Ohio, and I understand the difficulty of getting people who speak Creole in Ohio. Why do we have this problem again? Oh, because we've just been depositing these migrants here, okay. Well, is there anyone amongst them that's qualified to teach? That's basically what happened here, oh, boy uh was?

Speaker 4:

uh, he was a teacher, andy shea, who was also a teacher in springfield. I was thrown into the spotlight during his presidential election last year. As haitian immigrants have come into northwest ohio, why does the screen keep black? I don't know. Know what's going on in northwest Ohio, with the promise of housing and opportunities, the quick population boom created some housing shortages and strains on health care for cities, according to local officials, but don't worry about that. They're not eating the cats or dogs, though. Don't worry about that.

Speaker 4:

On June 27th, the administration announced that it would terminate the TPS for Haitians, so this guy's you know, his community is kind of rallying around him, trying to get support to get him not deported. I don't know what to think of this. I'm at the point where I'm like uh, again, we talk about haiti. Specifically, you have to talk about the clinton foundation, so now I'm still back to this cabal thing. Why do I have to put pay for all of your sins? Why do I have to be subject to all of these problems? You've dumped this on me.

Speaker 4:

This is not. Hey, you're a british tourist, let's go shoot guns. You can't drop 20 000 people in a community in northwest ohio. Create strain on housing, strain on the er systems and strain on the school system and then hire one of the illegal immigrants to teach school and then be like, oh well, he can't be deported. But it's a package, go teach school in haiti, take those kids, take them all, transport the entire classroom to haiti and just let them continue down there, but pay them five dollars a day instead of five hundred dollars a day. How about that? How about that? You know, why don't we get the same bang for our buck and do? It is such an impossible conversation. We want to be those good americans that take the foreigner out on a trip to see the alligators.

Speaker 8:

We want to be accommodating, but it's starting to strain our very capacity to be accommodating well, think of it this way when the one guy shows up at the dock, goes hey man, can I get a ride on the boat? Yeah, cool, jump in. What if 20 000 people showed up at the dock hey, can I get a ride, hey, can I get a ride? It was like bro, it's unreal. How could you accommodate them all? You can't it's unreal.

Speaker 4:

So this is laura logan um, talking with what is his name, jason jones, and he's talking about the deportation and what needs to be done there popular question for some do you really think that you can remove 15 to 18 million people who've come here illegally just in four years? No can you even move half of that?

Speaker 23:

well, let's stick to what's important, though. Right yeah, protecting the american people eventually.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, you can do it, but you have to get the violence and those violent offenders who can hurt families out.

Speaker 7:

You have to that's, I mean, as difficult as that is, as fraught as that is with risk, it's still something that most americans can wrap their head around, right, I mean, it doesn't make sense to even if you're, you know, democrat and you don't want to believe it and whatever you see these people being killed by illegal immigrants and and there are a growing number all the time now, because they've let so many people in and when you've gone to, you know, like the president of v of Venezuela did, go into the prisons, recruit the most violent criminals and then create Tranda Aragua, create a cartel out of them. You've now put an army of killers, murderers and rapists on the streets of the United States.

Speaker 4:

How do you separate them? I don't know. How do you sort them out? 18 million, can we even do it in four years?

Speaker 8:

and he's pretty frank, no, yeah, but that's just being real yeah, but you got to start.

Speaker 4:

You got to start wherever they're at. Wherever they're at, you got to go get them. Sapphire patriot says deport them all. Yeah, uh, yeah, yeah, start, start, start deporting them all. And, uh, if they go quietly and nicely, maybe they can reapply and come back in after their background check has been passed. And this thing is, it's so broad, right, so this is another one, uh, another, uh, james o'keefe media group. Let me make sure it's yep, james o'fe Media Group. They had a whistleblower from Her name's Clarissa Rippey. Whistleblower blows the lid off the number one child sex trafficking organization on the planet, the Biden-Harris administration. Unaccompanied children are being treated like commodities, like potato chips on a truck. Whistleblower exposes a $347 million contract for transporting unaccompanied minors. You know what you know, you cannot unknow. My line in the sand was in the moment when I found out that GSA had awarded a contract to a company to transport unaccompanied minors. So let's listen to just a couple minutes of her whistleblower testimony.

Speaker 25:

Sand moment was when I found out that GSA had awarded a contract to a company to transport unaccompanied minors.

Speaker 5:

What was that like for you?

Speaker 25:

It was like someone kicked me in my gut Once I found out about the contract. That night I got on my computer and I started doing a Google search.

Speaker 5:

Action obligation $40 million. Total contract value $347 million. That's over a quarter of a billion dollars. That's a lot of money to transport unaccompanied children. This is a big money business.

Speaker 25:

And that's why we're sitting here today, because, as I shared before, what you know, you cannot unknow.

Speaker 5:

The crisis of conscience would only grow and reach inside the holy grail of the unaccompanied child transportation business. There's the white buses right there. That's the fedex transportation hub for the unaccompanied minor children. They stopped the transportation of children, they stopped the money my name is clarissa I want to be clear about this show.

Speaker 4:

pretty much every unaccompanied minor that comes across the border has been raped, and then they're transporting them to places unknown and untracked. They're not meeting with law enforcement to get statements and things like that. No, they're just being shuttled.

Speaker 25:

I work for General Services Administration, aka GSA.

Speaker 5:

And for those who are not familiar with what GSA is or what it does, can you talk a little about that?

Speaker 25:

GSA. It basically manages all the services for the federal government. Then you have the transportation side of GSA that manages like travel, transportation and logistics, which is that's the area that I'm working in right now.

Speaker 5:

And what sort of thing do you do in that department?

Speaker 25:

I'm what's called an 1102. I'm a contract specialist and my responsibility is to work with contractors that provide products and services to the federal government, and I work on a team of contracting officers and we award those contracts.

Speaker 5:

MGO stands for non-governmental organization.

Speaker 25:

So that they knew being shipped at every out, anyone that they knew being shipped at every hour of the day, especially like late at night when we're all sleeping in our beds and our children are safe at home.

Speaker 5:

These children were being shipped all over the place shipped over, and that must have made you feel guilty yeah for having this promotion and that was your line in the sand moment, and um, and we also have some, some, some documents here, um that we've we've been provided by you. Just Just tell me what this one here indicates.

Speaker 25:

This was a GSA contract that was awarded to MV.

Speaker 4:

It goes into talk about, you know they'd get reports back on the suffering and the things that were happening and they're just like keep shipping, keep sending, because you're just a bag of potato chips. I mean it's super sad, these people.

Speaker 8:

Super dark.

Speaker 4:

If they're not held accountable, this will continue. It just gets worse and worse. It never gets better. It cannot self-correct itself unless we correct it, which is really what General Flynn is saying here. Yeah, if we don't self-correct it, it won't correct itself, but we have the power to do it.

Speaker 11:

We have an accountability issue that must be dealt with. And I keep telling those foreign leaders that I talk to and the ambassadors that I see in Washington DC periodically. I keep telling them do not mistake what we're going through internally here in the United States of America as a weakness this is a strength of our constitutional order and as ugly, as we are operating inside of our family. We're going to fix these problems. We're going to hold people accountable. Trump has to do that. He has got to, he's got to assure to the American people that that is going to happen. He is the chief law enforcement officer for the country, not the attorney general. We have an accountability issue that must be dealt with.

Speaker 4:

Absolutely. And I keep telling, and we have the mechanisms of power now. Now people have to grow a spine and use it. No more, bill bars, no more. Oh, he's our hero. I remember all the memes with him, like arresting hillary clinton walking out of the. You know, I just remember q. You know, trust bar, oh my god. It was trust sessions first and then it was like bill bar, don't trust any of it, just fruits, accountability, accountability, accountability, accountability. This is oh so now we'll go back and listen to Laura Logue again. This was her and Trey Sannis talking about General Flynn, after the Department of Justice and the attorney. You know this goes with the guy that was in prison because he helped a kid from falling Right, that the system just isn't set up right and General Flynn took some of the worst potentials that our system would have Like. Even when the government dropped the case, the judge wouldn't.

Speaker 7:

Admitted that they had no case against Mike Flynn, that they'd manufactured the case. He refused to drop it.

Speaker 14:

No, another man of courage, right, he's been symbolic in leadership and the idea of how to respond to this kind of lawfare and what to do, and I think it drove him. Look where he is now. He can't stop, he just keeps coming for them and these things that were once called conspiracy theories in the caves and all the nonsense. The evidence is all the Russiagate and all the nonsense, Russian collusion, all this nonsense. And now where are we? How's that working out for him?

Speaker 4:

yeah gotta hold him accountable. So now, touching on covid, you know just, I feel sometimes when I do the show prep I'm like are there only five things happening in the world?

Speaker 4:

it's just the five things you're looking at apparently my echo chamber is like real condensed, I think I have broad stuff but then it's like man, well, here's another COVID. But again, these things have impacted every single, but you. You have not not been impacted by this, right, you have not not been impacted by this. Even sports fans had to listen to political drivel from Steve Kerr. You know from Steve Kerr's interviews and talk about how bad Trump is and Russia, this and you know, thing after you can't, you couldn't escape this, you couldn't escape the mask Nazis, you couldn't escape the close downs and shutdowns of public places and things like that. Like, couldn't escape it Six foot safe. And think about how many people got vaccinated under duress, under coercion, because of being being talked into it under executive orders by executive orders in some cases yeah it's a big deal.

Speaker 4:

They asked to put something in your body without properly explaining what it was, where it came from, how it'd been tested and what it would do just shut up and take the shot and then you can go back to work.

Speaker 4:

You'll still get sick, but at least you've taken the shot. Well, dr Hatfield is part of the working group at the CDC, nih, whatever it is that's been going over all the vaccine stuff and they just banned the mRNA vaccines or basically cut funding to the 22 projects, and then took the mRNA vaccine off of the schedule of approved vaccines for respiratory viruses, coronavirus and whatnot. Well, dr Hatfield gets into some of that data because Bannon and others have been critical. Like you can't just do a press release.

Speaker 12:

Like you've got to give us the data through what led to the decision of finally getting you know, stopping the underwriting of American taxpayer for this experimental gene therapy. Sir, hi, sir.

Speaker 22:

Hi, stephen, good to see you once again. What happened is that the data had accumulated to the point where meta-analysis studies could be done. These are very comprehensive analysis, and it virtually came back consistently that there was no benefit to risk ratio for taking a messenger RNA vaccine. In fact, it was more dangerous to take a vaccine than it was to contract COVID-19 and be hospitalized with it. We're now in 2022 that the status started to come out. The side effects for this essentially gene therapy was so enormous and progressive it was difficult to fathom.

Speaker 4:

And then finally, a few months ago, Difficult to fathom For those of us kooks that have been looking into this for years. It's like, honestly, you know, somebody sneezed. We're like, oh, I might be dying, every single person that dies. We're like did they get vaxxed? Why? Because the list of side effects are miles long everything from infections of flesh eating diseases, strokes, uh, myocarditis, uh, blood brainbrain barrier issues, behavioral problems, pretty much anything dealing with your gut, susceptibility, basically AIDS, right, aids. People were getting autoimmune deficiency problems left and right. It's like everything, it seemed like everything had a touch on this, which almost makes it go. Well, maybe nothing is it? Maybe this is all correlation.

Speaker 8:

Ah, you just died with COVID, not from COVID. Yeah, instead he's like it's hard to fathom.

Speaker 22:

Until biochemistry studies started to appear in the literature and the sudden flood of messenger RNA. It appears, irrespective of what the messenger RNA insert is coding for, of what the messenger RNA insert is coding for, just the sheer amount of number of millions of molecules of messenger RNA entering the cell is creating biochemical havoc, it's disrupting protein metabolism, it's interfering with tumor suppressor genes, it's damaging the mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell.

Speaker 4:

It had to be stopped it's so bad that they couldn't tell you how bad it was. They just said we're cutting funding. That's how bad it is. That's really what's going on. They can't come out and say how bad it was, because even trump the other day in the white house again was like, well, the warp speed was great, and a lot of people go yeah, well, warp seed was great, it's too bad. We've warped into MRNA. You know what I mean. Like yeah, you got all of government moving and you showed us just how corrupt they are.

Speaker 8:

I know it's like. It's moments like that where it's like dang it.

Speaker 4:

I wonder if is really the bad guy. Yeah, it's like weed and boys is. How could they say no long-term side effects when it was only out for months at that point? That is true, yeah, that is true, and anybody who studied birth control for women that's, you know. Birth control became very popular before the long-term side effects really became well known. And uh, yeah, interesting another little deal here. This is the Ghislaine Maxwell. They wanted to release all the grand jury information. They're not doing it.

Speaker 4:

The court wouldn't give the grand jury information to Ghislaine Maxwell to review. So she's like, well, to preserve my rights and stuff, I have to like say no, if you won't even let me see it, I would let it be released. That's what she says in her little report. I believe that 100 that makes sense if you came to me and said we want to release your grand jury information to the public and I'm like but, you won't show it to me hey do you mind if I take a look at it, just to make sure no, no, no no, no, no, we're not doing that, it's just straight to the public.

Speaker 4:

So you need my consent to go straight to the public without letting me see what's in there, like, yeah, what if you lied about me? Because people are going to take it like gospel truth.

Speaker 8:

Well, 100% there's going to be a lie in there.

Speaker 4:

Yeah. So, again, not the Trump's problem, not Ghislaine Maxwell's problem. It's the court's problem and, in fairness, they shouldn't release it. Yeah, in fairness, they shouldn't release it. Another thing that happened yesterday was man I always say remember the names. I can't remember his name. It'll come to me as he's talking here. But they're talking about the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the misreporting on the jobs. Yeah. Thank you.

Speaker 9:

Mr President. So I called the president because I had some very good news from some new data that we've been able to put together that no one has ever seen before, and I'll just very quickly go through these. So I was telling the president that he did the right thing in calling for a new head of the bureau of labor statistics, because this shows that over the last uh, two years of the biden administration, the bls overestimated job creation by 1.5 million jobs. That's a, mr president, that's a gigantic error and uh, I I don't know if she's, I'm not might not have been an error.

Speaker 2:

That's the bad part. If it's an error, it would be one thing. I don't think it, she's, I'm not. Might not have been an error. That's the bad part. It was an error, it would be one thing. I don't think it's an error. I think they did it purposely.

Speaker 9:

Whether that you may well be right, but even if it wasn't purposefully, it's incompetent, right.

Speaker 8:

Yes, you know, no matter who's reporting these kind of numbers, I don't believe these numbers ever Like it's. Just like when they report cpi. It's like, yeah, it's doctored.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, trump is getting it, though he's starting to get it. He's like now they're they're fake. Like again, the goodness is well, they're just incompetence. It can't all just be incompetent. Like at a certain point, you're like your incompetence borders on negligence. Yeah, your incompetence borders on intentional.

Speaker 8:

Yes, and it's on the intentional side of an accident.

Speaker 4:

Why are all the errors in one direction?

Speaker 8:

Why is all the bias in one direction? How come they never self-correct this goes?

Speaker 4:

along with the FBI agent saying well, your husband participated in an attempted overthrow of the government, so everything is going to bias to that one one direction. You're only going to see conservatives in the light of terrorists and you're not going to see the their opposition to it, right people who oppose it, as terrorist equivalent right, they're not patriotic they're terrorists.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, they're not patriotic, they're terrorists. It's like you can't have that premise. Yeah, you can't have that premise. They're just people. Either you take them at face value or just put your logos on, strap on your team play and Democrats can't investigate Republicans and Republicans can, potentially kicking off. You've got Act Blue being undermined. You've got the redistricting going on, a call for a new census which, if it happens, is going to shift to the Republicans like 40 seats. It's a big deal, big deal.

Speaker 8:

Got a lot of FBI dudes getting let go.

Speaker 4:

FBI dudes getting let go. Pam Bondi came out yesterday and offered a $50 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Maduro which, by the way, at a certain point, his own lieutenants are going to turn on him and be like we'll take the cash. You're worth more dead than alive. That's what they're doing. They're upping the ante. It was $20 million or $25 million, now it's $50 million.

Speaker 4:

I really think they should put on their dead or alive and then put on their guaranteed payment to anybody. You'll have some gangster with like four teardrops come down and bring his head and be like I want my 50 million Done. There you go. By the way, you're also now on the top 10 most wanted, but we'll let you cross the border and have a fair start. You know what I mean. So with all of that, it kind of harkens back to this critical flux. I remember in 2020, when Trump had just overcome impeachment, it was obvious he was going to not get impeached or convicted at the impeachment and the economy was roaring and he was coming into that last year and it was like this man is a force of nature. He has really whipped Washington around, disrupted a bunch, exposed a bunch of people, just survived an impeachment, and then, at the same time, in China, they had this virus breakout. Well, guess what?

Speaker 19:

Breaking tonight. A viral outbreak in China prompts the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the CDC, to issue a travel warning. More than 7,000 cases of this disease have been reported so far. State Department correspondent Jillian Turner has details tonight. Live from the State Department. Good evening, jillian.

Speaker 20:

Good evening Brett. The CDC, as you mentioned, is warning Americans traveling to China about chikungunya. It is a virus that spreads to humans through infected mosquito bites. It can cause severe illness with symptoms that mimic pretty closely dengue fever and Zika virus, mostly found in Africa. Here's what the CDC says about it. They say most people infected get better within a week. However, some can have severe joint pain for months to years. Other symptoms include severe fever and fatigue. The outbreak now is in the Chinese province guangdong.

Speaker 4:

It's near hong kong, with more than 7 000 cases reported so far, prompting some dramatic measures to contain the spread, like mandatory insect repellent blasts, mandatory property checks for stagnant water which attracts mosquitoes and, when found, is now punishable by fines or even arrest we're doing property checks, any standing water, we're spraying it with insecticide where you've got to be dusted with insecticide 7 000 cases in a land that's got, you know, a couple billion people.

Speaker 8:

Get out now. Get out now get out now.

Speaker 4:

So the funny thing is is, you know, bill gates has this ongoing obsession with, like, making the mosquitoes the carrier for things you know carrier for the vaccine which is also the disease. Well, it's where all those patents?

Speaker 8:

are.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, oh, people are like oh, bill gates to the rescue, you know, or? To the punishment, whatever it is. I don't know, it's crazy. Uh, how did we uh? How could they say no? Oh, how did excuse me, weed them? Boys, here we go.

Speaker 8:

Deja vu, yeah yeah, that's what I was trying to say. You know, when you have 7 000 cases in a land with 2 billion people, that's not an outbreak, I know. I mean that's when they're over here like, oh, we got some cases of mumps again, or whatever it's like. Oh yeah whatever.

Speaker 4:

Here's the thing. All I gotta say is lock this down, yeah, good luck this time. Like, yeah, like, lock this down. I dare you like, good luck. I do think trump is gonna this. Probably, this is probably gonna go nowhere.

Speaker 8:

It's just gonna be a little kind of problem but if this, if this was a harris biden, we'd be locked down right now. Oh yeah, we'd be locked down 100.

Speaker 4:

Prevent the spread. Prevent the spread. Oh my goodness, it'd be horrible. Soften the curve oh it'd be horrible. All right, we need to jump over to private rumble now. We've got to put some time in over there and we've got at the end of the show. We have a four month product review for a baby. It is awesome. You got to watch it. How much is the baby? People are human. No, he's gonna watch the product review it's pretty good.

Speaker 4:

It's really fun. We're gonna have some giggles and laughs, so. So we're going to jump over there and then in the private, what we're going to be going over there is we're going to be going over some people who know Trump and work with Trump on the daily and their interactions. We're also going to get to hear from Susie Wiles, the ice maiden, or whatever they call her Ice queen, ice queen, ice maiden. We're going to hear from them. So we've got a couple more videos to do over there. We'll be streaming over there for a little bit and, uh, I am gonna. I'm I'm watching the youtube chat just having everybody on there and I'm like I'm so sorry, guys, we have to go to private. See, here's what happened yesterday. You know we'd completed the one month in the creator program, which that was cool. Basically had some goals and metrics to meet it was just normal.

Speaker 4:

We said to make sure you guys went and chatted and rumble, blah, blah, blah. Well, we got paid. We got paid. We actually made money, yeah. So the hosting of all of this thing, like, I got one of the bills yesterday. It was a couple hundred bucks but we got paid like $260 last month, which is I blew my mind. I wasn't expecting a penny. I think we've made like 12 in this thing all together up till now. So I was like, oh dude, we are on our way. We got 260 bucks. I'm gonna be able to pay the hosting fees. Rich, rich, yeah. But anyways, I do have to do some private browsing or private broadcasting, so we gotta go private. So that's over on rumble. If you're over there, really appreciate having you join us. I know people like to watch it on youtube, but we get more credit when you watch on rumble so we're gonna need a little bit more work before we jump into some joe rogan money here yeah, we're a little way away.

Speaker 4:

I had a guy in the bathroom yesterday you guys podcasting, you guys getting quite the audience like yeah, we have a good little dedicated audience and he's and I go, I mean, we're no joe rogan's. He laughed at that. Okay, all right guys, we're no Joe Rogans. He laughed at that. Okay, all right guys, we're jumping over to private and we'll see you in just a minute. Are you going to play the outro before we?

Speaker 8:

go If you want?

Speaker 4:

No, we'll just jump straight over to private. We're just jumping straight over to private. All right there we go. Pow. And we're private and we're private. Okay, so now that we're and we're private. Okay, so now that we're private.

Speaker 21:

We're gonna hear a little bill. Now we can tell the truth. I want to go back to the 70s.

Speaker 4:

I guess her name is bataya ungar sargon.

Speaker 21:

I see her around, don't really know her background or anything, but she's talking about tariffs and talking about kind of how that works and she's on the bill maher show and she gives a great defense of tariffs I want to answer the question about manufacturing in the 70s maybe, maybe we'll do well, the reason people want to go back to the 70s is in the 70s, the largest share of our GDP was in the middle class, and that was not separate from the fact that 25 percent of our economy was in the largest share of our GDP was in the middle class, the biggest chunk, the middle class, most of what was produced came from the middle, and now it comes from what the rich now the top 20% controls over 50% of the GDP.

Speaker 21:

Our economy was an upward funnel of wealth and the largest share, which used to be in manufacturing, which gave a lot of working class people a middle class standard of living, now the largest share is in real estate and finance, meaning that asset rich Americans are controlling over 50% of the GDP and they have left the working class out of all of that prosperity that was generated. That manufacturing is still being done. It's just being done. In other countries it is still making— For wages we will not work for. That's exactly right. You're right, bill. That's what the tariffs are for. They are to make american workers more competitive in the global market.

Speaker 21:

Why are we accepting that there should be a race to the bottom? You know china. What is its competitive advantage over us? It's that it pays slave wages. Why should we accept that they're still manufacturing our ppe, our pharmaceuticals, our cars? They're making all that stuff. Trump says there are five industries that we cannot have any kind of national security without having a stake in them Pharmaceuticals, lumber, steel, aluminum, and I forget what the fifth one was. But these are really important, that we have a stake in the manufacturing of the things that we need as a nation, so that, when China decides that it wants to go to war against us, we're not relying on them for steel and aluminum in order to fight them. Well, at least that's an answer.

Speaker 8:

What do you mean? At least it's an answer. It sounded pretty solid. It also points out that trickledown economics is not working out so good if you make people rich, they only buy one hamburger a day.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you know it means. Yes, rich people do spread a lot of money around, but it's not the same as when the whole middle class class has a big chunk of that right. Okay, so this is suzy wiles, who I teased out earlier. Suzy wiles is being interviewed by Miranda Devine and she's talking about just success in the White House and how it works, and I just really appreciated hearing from this.

Speaker 26:

Why do you think people get Donald Trump so wrong? I mean, you work with him. I'm sure you wouldn't do that if you didn't respect him and like him, so why is he so misunderstood?

Speaker 17:

Change is hard for people. A disruptor is hard for people. We expect things to go a certain way, certain decorum, certain sort of way to be. We have a view of our president that was rooted maybe in the 50s and 60s, and Donald Trump's gift, in my view, is the thing that that makes people uncomfortable sometime, which is that he says what so many people think, but never had the nerve to say it, and that that is how he. That is how he reaches Americans Well, the world, but certainly Americans and yet it's different than the prescribed protocol of how a president should talk. He just says what's on his mind and people say, yeah, I think that too. So it's different, but it's working. He's in his second term and, as we started this interview, he has done more in six months than many administrations certainly the last one did in four years.

Speaker 4:

I have to comment on that. Just saying what you think, my wife, I have that hat that says I have no filter and my wife always says you say things.

Speaker 4:

You just say the thing and I'm like, yeah, but I'm saying the thing. People are thinking. I've had that, you know, mirrored back to me and told me many, many times. I'm like I just thought it was a great icebreaker, I thought it was a great way to get the conversation going. Like I, you know, I just really wanted to talk about something that's taboo or not politically correct to talk about. Like to me, I just don't even see it. So I imagine donald trump's the same way. I imagine he just like oh, you were offended by that. Like politically correct, it just doesn't quite. You know, the wires don't quite cross. When I was in prison, one of the most relieving things was realizing you could say anything you want in here, like you could say the most glaringly racist.

Speaker 4:

Obviously not that I went around saying racist remarks, but I'm saying like there was no pretense like political correctness, what's that? There was no effort to try to conform to the system, like they were outlaws and they say whatever they wanted, and that was actually very liberating. It was very it's very interesting you could be, you could hear people's real thoughts about really deep topics and you could get right down like I can look at people out in the real world. I don't know if they're bigots. There were people in prison. I knew they were bigots you know what I mean.

Speaker 4:

Like they told me and they were okay being bigots.

Speaker 26:

And he calls you the ice maiden. He's also said you're rough and tough. You know that's not what you think. I don't think so. It's not the image that you project, but I don't think you could do this job and get to where you are without having a bit of true grit.

Speaker 17:

I do, but that's not my preferred way to be. If you cannot get what you want with respect and logics, and sometimes you have to be a little tougher, I don't have to do that very much here. Everyone here is so devoted to what we're trying to do I don't have to be tough very much, which is sort of a gift to me, it's kind of fun.

Speaker 4:

So she's really running the show and you talked to. You know there are some Republican influencers out there that do not like her. They think that she's sabotaging Trump. I don't know. I don't know. She's been around the block quite a bit. She's worked with a lot of different people out of Florida and Trump likes her. I mean, at a certain point you have to trust Trump, but then at the same time, you can clearly see he's surrounded himself with a handful of people that have already been fired because their vetting was a bit of a problem.

Speaker 8:

Yeah, sharks in the water everywhere.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, so this is Scott Besant, who's, you know, really a star in the administration over at Treasury, and he's been asked about what it's really like working for Trump, and I think this is pretty significant, especially coming off the Biden regime, where we got an inactive, slow-witted, ailing president, compared to what we have now Comment with key folks in the White.

Speaker 18:

House staff in the cabinet. What's it like working for him?

Speaker 15:

Well, I can tell you, it's 21-7. 21-7. The president is a cyborg half man, half machine. And he not only does he have incredible energy, he has incredible ideas, he's very engaged in first principles. Why do we do this this way? Why was this built? And I was in Stockholm last. It all runs together. I was in Stockholm last week, monday and Tuesday, negotiating with the Chinese, and he said well, call me on Monday and tell me how it went. I said well, we're pretty good, but there's this one problem. He said well, why don't you just do this? And oh, that was too obvious, right? But I mean, the wheels are always going. He can multitask like crazy.

Speaker 4:

I mean, he's really the ultimate executive, I mean he's really the ultimate executive and he's always thinking it's the ultimate executive, Sweet 21-3 or whatever.

Speaker 8:

Yeah, so does that mean he sleeps three hours a night? Three hours a night, yeah, wow.

Speaker 4:

And I've heard that you know Trump is a workhorse. It's great. What does he say? You're not really working when you're doing what you love.

Speaker 4:

Pony boy over in the chat says he quote you know, when I was in prison the laugh yeah just just like out in the field when we're all digging uh, we're all digging at each other with racist jokes. Yeah, that's true, you do get that military settings, you get the dark humor and you know the stereotypes become funny and I think that it's. It's nice to be relieved of all the pressure all the time. Uh, the other thing too and this is again just pointing to trump and his nature and the way he responds to stuff when asked about this russia ukraine deal, remember, on a high level. You know the people who transport children like sacks of potatoes and get paid to do it and don't care who, where they're coming from or where they're going. These people look at the russian war as a financial decision about resources and territory. Trump doesn't see it that way when he's asked about meeting with putin potentially to solve the war.

Speaker 25:

Listen to his answer does putin have to meet with zelensky in order and before you and putin have meet?

Speaker 21:

No, are you hoping?

Speaker 20:

That's actually important because the president, President Putin said this morning he was pretty dismissive of his idea of meeting with President Zelensky, who was President.

Speaker 17:

Putin was. I don't know, I didn't hear him. If you, need to meet with him. He doesn't have to meet with Zelensky. Is that what you're saying?

Speaker 2:

No, he doesn't. No, they would like to meet with me and I'll do whatever I can to stop the killing. So last month they lost 14,000 people killed. This month, every week is four or 5,000 people. So I don't like long waits. I think it's a shame, and they're mostly soldiers the Ukrainian and Russian soldiers and some people from the cities where you know missiles are lobbed in and you'll lose 35, 40 people a night, which is terrible, but no, mostly it's soldiers. And you're talking about, on average, 20,000 a month. 20,000 people are dying a month, young, generally young people, soldiers.

Speaker 4:

He just took that one minute 30 second question. He could have gone into geopolitically. This he goes. We gotta stop the killing, the dying, the dying. I honestly believe one of the reasons they haven't been able to weaponize this ukrainian russian war against trump that that well, they haven't been able to turn it into trump's war or anything like that is every time he's asked about it, he brings it back to life. He brings it back to the people that are dying. He doesn't care about the territory or anything else. People are dying and I think that is. It puts a lot of pressure on russia, puts a lot of pressure on ukraine.

Speaker 8:

It's kind of interesting how the media, when they ask their questions, they keep trying to like put something in front of him that's going to trip him up somehow well he, that's first principles yep, it's like what scott bessen said.

Speaker 4:

He's always thinking first principles. Why do we do this? How? Why was it built this way? How can it be improved? Should it be scrapped? You know he's willing to say let's. In business, when something's not working, you have to be able to walk away from it. You have to be able to close it down and walk away. People get in trouble and anybody who's run a business that's of any significance understands this. Sometimes you get too far into a project. You feel like you can't let it go, but it won't kill you to finish it. Yes, you got to walk away. Trump's clearly willing to walk away. Usaid yeah, it's gone. It's 80 bad.

Speaker 8:

It's all gone then yeah, and everybody else is like oh, what are you doing?

Speaker 4:

oh man, this is too much because he's like the utility of it. It has to function, it has to work. Just because you have a department and it's not doing anything doesn't mean you have to keep the department but there's jobs.

Speaker 8:

People are losing their jobs, yeah they'll find new ones in the code?

Speaker 4:

oh, maybe not. Yeah, learn to weld. Yeah, okay, four month product review for baby. This is going out on a high end, because life is what matters and I thought this was really cute.

Speaker 27:

What's up everyone? Here is my four month product review of baby Um. Okay, so delivery takes a while nine plus months but the the product so far has absolutely exceeded expectations Super lightweight, surprisingly durable and that new baby smell is just chef's kiss. Now the learning curve steep, not going to lie to you guys, but once you figure out the whole kind of crying equals need something. Algorithm it's pretty intuitive. Now the smile feature is absolutely game changing. You know, instant dopamine hit every single time. Battery life is only about 90 minutes and sleep mode still has some bugs, but support says that will be patched in the next update. Now performance, ok, this thing is a machine. Processes milk at just incredible speeds, converts directly to energy and growth. The learning AI is honestly impressive. You know, babies, they're a lot like having your own personal LLM, if, if, llm is also peed on you.

Speaker 4:

Large language model.

Speaker 27:

Now the features, the cute factor is off the charts, definitely enterprise grade adorability, advanced grip, functionality, surprisingly good audio you know, frankly, the volume could be a little bit lower and pro tip, the cuddle feature is absolutely worth the premium pricing. Overall, I would definitely recommend this product for families looking to scale. Yeah, they're resource intensive and they require significant investment. It's kind of like a expensive SAS subscription with no cancellation policy, but the ROI is already showing massive gains in happiness metrics. So that's my review. Stay tuned for future product updates. Time to go change a diaper. All right, I'm out.

Speaker 4:

I just thought that was really cute. It is so worth having kids. You know, I oftentimes think about my kids and when I was in prison that's all I wanted to do is just be with them. I just wanted to be around, just be with them I just wanted to be around them, be able to provide for them, do my stuff and uh, being back, it's been a whole new, fresh view isn't it funny how, when you think about your kids, sometimes you just completely forget about all the nonsense it's.

Speaker 4:

It's interesting, my wife and I. She heard a phrase one time and we incorporated it and we call it the best part.

Speaker 4:

You know, know, when you hear the kids feet pitter patter in the morning, it's the best part you know, or even when the kids are frustrated, just laughing, we just this is the best part, like it's these little moments that are the best part. It's so nice to be back home and have to be able to see the best part. You know, it's so fleeting. My youngest now is six and he's bigger than my seven-year-old or my eight-year-old. He's a huge case of tank and you know he's talks in full sentences, he logic things out, he asked permission. He's like he's starting to be a small human being. You know he's been that for a while, but it's just.

Speaker 4:

The baby phase is gone. It's so fleeting. If you've got kids, go hug them. Remember that that's what this is all for. No amount of success in the world will compensate for failure in the home. Exactly those kids are absolutely critical. Just always just pour into them, do the hard things that make them good people discipline all that kind of stuff. But gosh, it's worth it. So my baby review is I've had five. All worth it. All right, guys. That's it for the show today. We will talk to you again Today's Friday, right? Probably Monday. Bye, old woman.

Speaker 1:

Man, man, sorry, what knight lives in that castle over there. I'm 37. What? I'm 37. I'm not old. Well, I can't just call you man. You could say Dennis. I didn't know you were called Dennis. You didn't bother to find out, did you? I did say sorry about the old woman, but from behind you looked.

Speaker 1:

What I object to is that you automatically treat me like an inferior. Well, I am king, oh, king, eh, very nice. And how do you get that? Eh, by exploiting the workers, by hanging on to outdated imperialist dogma which perpetuates the economic and social differences in our society. If there's ever going to be any progress there is. There's some lovely filth down here. Oh, how do you do? How do you do?

Speaker 1:

Good, lady, I am Arthur, king of the Britons. Whose castle is that? King of the? Who the Britons? Who are the Britons? Well, we all are. We are all Britons. And who are the Britons? Well, we all are, we are all Britons. And I am your king. No, we had a king. I thought we were an autonomous collective. You're fooling yourself. We're living in a dictatorship, a self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working class is oh, there you go, bringing class into the gang. That's what it's all about. If only people would, please, please, good people. I am in haste. Who lives in that castle? No one lives there. Then who is your lord? We don't have a lord. What I told you? We're an anarcho-syndicalist commune. We take it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the week. Yes, but all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting. Yes, I see, by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs Be quiet but by a two-thirds majority in the case of more major, be quiet.

Speaker 1:

I order you to be quiet. Order. Who does he think he is? I'm your king. Well, I didn't vote for you. You don't vote for kings. Well, I can become king. Then. The lady of the lake, her arm clad in the purest, shimmering semite, held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine providence that I, arthur, was to carry Excalibur. That is why I'm your king.

Speaker 1:

Listen, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony. Be quiet. You can't expect to wield supreme executive power just because some watery tart threw a sword at you. Shut up. If I went round saying I was an emperor just because some moistened bint had lobbed a scimitar at me, they'd put me away. Shut up, will you Shut up Now? We see the violence inherent in the system. Shut up, come and see the violence inherent in the system. Help, help. I'm being repressed, bloody peasant. Oh, what a giveaway. Did you hear that? Did you hear that? Eh, that's what I'm on about. Did you see him repressing me? You saw it, didn't you? You, you, you.

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