Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:00
Politics without the soap opera
0:02
with unfiltered constitutional conservative
0:05
truth. The conservative review,
0:08
Danny Burns. And welcome
0:10
back fellow american patriots and
0:12
minutemen to the year twenty
0:14
twenty three here at CR Podcast. Your
0:17
host, Horowitz, back here
0:19
It's been way too long. New
0:22
Year, it might be twenty twenty three.
0:24
But for us at Sierra Podcast, it
0:27
is always twenty twenty
0:29
because we strive to provide you that
0:31
one and only twenty twenty crystal clear
0:33
vision on politics policy
0:36
Most importantly, what matters in the
0:38
way it matters, at the time
0:40
it matters for the future of
0:42
our life liberty and property,
0:44
and boy is our life at stake. You
0:47
know, it's been a two week break. It's been very
0:49
tough to be away from you, but hopefully, you
0:52
guys are still following me. I've been pretty busy
0:54
on Twitter. Like a couple
0:57
hours after I signed off for the
1:00
old year, I was restored.
1:03
And you know what, I could take that as
1:06
a means of success. Wow. Here
1:08
I am. I'm back on Twitter. But
1:11
Twitter is not an end. Messaging
1:13
and tweeting is not an end to itself. It's
1:15
a means to do what's right
1:18
and I consider it a privilege
1:20
to come before you every day
1:22
and try to make a difference.
1:25
And this is the key to a new year.
1:28
New horizons. Look
1:31
for what wasn't working and try
1:33
to ascertain something new
1:36
that will work and I am sick of
1:38
beating my head against the wall with failure.
1:41
And I am very clear that
1:43
nothing will change until we
1:45
burn the down to the
1:47
ground. That's the reality. We'll
1:50
work on covering what's going on in the house
1:52
and what should be done. More importantly,
1:54
what's going on state legislatures and governors
1:56
and what should be done. Upcoming
1:58
gubernatorial elections, candidates
2:01
we should be supporting, but usually don't win.
2:04
But at some point, we have to realize. We
2:07
will have to slay the shibeless. The
2:10
shibeless. The idolatry
2:13
of what we've been putting our hopes
2:15
and aspirations into this false hope
2:17
before we could see what is
2:19
justice and right. Ezekiel
2:22
thirty seven twenty three. And
2:24
they shall no longer defile themselves with
2:26
their
2:27
idols, where their detestable things
2:29
or with all their transgressions. And
2:32
notice only then God says and
2:34
I will save them from their their
2:36
land in which they have sinned and I will purify
2:38
them and they shall be to me as
2:40
a people and I will beat them as a God. And
2:42
my servant David shall be king over them
2:45
and one shepherd shall be for them all.
2:47
And they shall walk in my laws and observe
2:49
my statutes and perform them.
2:51
But the only way you can come
2:53
to that is by slaying the
2:55
idols. And this is the problem. We have a
2:57
lot of solutions. A lot of good things
2:59
can be done. We're at
3:01
a crossroads. The public recognizes
3:04
to some degree, at
3:06
least a percentage of
3:08
the malfeasance of our government. There's
3:11
a lot we can do But
3:13
the GOP stands as an obstacle
3:16
in the midst and we have to slay that.
3:19
So folks, there is a lot to get
3:21
to or recording a little
3:23
bit early because I need to be involved
3:25
in the speaker speakers' fight. I'm gonna have to be on
3:27
the phone. So We'll
3:29
focus on that more for Wednesday's show.
3:32
We'll talk about it maybe a little bit. But
3:34
just to set the table here again, I'm on Twitter
3:36
at r m conservative. I'm back
3:38
that is going to be my primary venue
3:42
of dissemination of information. Obviously,
3:44
my columns at conservative review and the
3:46
blaze In addition, you
3:49
could always email me daniel herwood
3:51
at start mail dot com. Now first, our
3:54
first advertiser this year
3:56
is a new one. Very important one.
3:58
JACE Medical, JAE Medical.
4:02
One of the big things you might have noticed, especially
4:04
if you're a family with kids, so we have a
4:06
food crisis, an energy crisis.
4:09
Well, we have a medicine crisis.
4:11
We dealt with this during COVID because that was
4:13
more because they were banning
4:15
these drugs, but notice
4:18
there is a shortage
4:21
of amoxicillin, doxycycline
4:25
isithromycin, basic drugs,
4:28
antibiotics. Isn't
4:30
it interesting? Suddenly kids are
4:33
getting sick as anything, filling
4:35
up hospitals relatively? And
4:39
we have a supply chain shortage. Very
4:42
interesting. This is all part of
4:44
the controlled demolition. So I've
4:46
always been looking for ways to empower
4:48
you guys so we can all
4:51
prepare. The preppers
4:53
were ahead of their
4:53
time, food, fuel, you
4:57
know, having canisters of gas. I mean, all
4:59
this stuff. Who knows? But one
5:01
of the things that has to be part of
5:03
your emergency supplies. Is
5:05
a JACE case. A
5:08
JACE case is a pack of five
5:10
different courses of antibiotics. This
5:12
is a certain amount enough for an adult
5:14
to full course of doxycycline.
5:16
Is it vermecin? Obviously,
5:20
amoxicillin I believe,
5:22
two two more, to
5:24
treat a long list of bacterial illnesses
5:26
from UTIs, respiratory infections, sinusitis,
5:29
skin infections. You name them. People
5:31
were freaking out about toilet paper, but what's gonna
5:33
happen when you can't get medicine? Well, it's
5:35
already happening. That's why my friends at
5:37
Chase Medical want to help you and your
5:39
family to be as prepared as you
5:41
can possibly be.
5:44
And and this is good for, you know, if you're traveling,
5:46
global pandemic, natural disasters, I
5:49
used to think, oh my god, you cannot have
5:51
this without having the doctor right
5:53
away with you in this, but look, what we've learned
5:55
with COVID is a lot of us have gotten
5:57
prepared with drugs on our
5:59
own. Now, obviously, this does require
6:01
a prescription, but they do it for you.
6:04
So you go to jace
6:06
medical dot com By the way,
6:08
use offer code review ten,
6:11
REVIEW ten
6:13
at checkout for ten dollars off your
6:15
order. And you fill out an online
6:17
questionnaire. Takes only a couple
6:19
minutes. And then your
6:21
medications will be dispensed by a licensed pharmacy
6:24
at a fraction of the regular cost. Folks
6:26
in an emergency your family will look to you,
6:28
make sure you've done everything you can to prepare.
6:31
Have among your cases a JACE
6:33
case of antibiotics at
6:35
jace medical dot com offer code
6:37
review ten. So,
6:40
folks, I first want
6:42
to make an announcement. I
6:45
am coming out of the closet this year
6:48
that indeed I am a
6:50
non binary American. I'm
6:53
non binary. I
6:55
don't wanna hear this crap anymore,
6:57
that there are only two political identities.
7:00
There's certainly only two genders
7:02
But no, there aren't two political identities
7:05
that you're either a Republican or a
7:07
Democrat because frankly, that's actually
7:09
one political identity. It's
7:11
the same thing. It's the unit party. Same
7:14
deal. You're
7:16
able to be your
7:18
own person. That's
7:21
what you need. Be your
7:24
own person. Stop carrying
7:26
water for Republicans and being but
7:28
the democrats. We've gotten
7:30
the worst we can ever get over the last
7:32
fifteen years. You've got
7:34
to start owning
7:38
ideological space. Meaning,
7:42
understand that this is what should
7:44
happen, this is where it is,
7:46
this is what we stand for. And
7:48
you bring the GOP as
7:50
close that as you can get, also
7:53
while creating something new in
7:55
the long run. Here
7:58
is the bottom
8:00
line. Here's
8:03
the bottom line. If
8:07
someone is burning down your house
8:10
and then person two, is
8:13
blocking the path for the
8:15
firefighters to enter. Who
8:18
is who's the bigger problem at
8:20
that point? Well, yeah, I wish I didn't have the
8:22
arsonist,
8:23
but the arsonist is gonna do what he does
8:25
until he's grabbed and chucked
8:27
out the window and then you start putting out
8:29
the fire. But if there
8:31
is someone blocking that door, you have
8:33
to go through them. So
8:37
any focus on but the democrats
8:40
rather than but the Republicans
8:42
in what they can and should be doing
8:44
is a waste of time. But this year,
8:46
we're gonna have to burn them to
8:48
the ground. And folks, this is
8:50
why it is so important. What
8:53
is happening with this speaker's fight. And again, by the
8:56
time you hear this, a lot of the
8:58
drama could be over unless it's gonna go on for
9:00
a while, the multiple ballots.
9:02
I'm recording before the vote is taking place,
9:07
but we always
9:09
beg for a leader. We want
9:11
a savior. We won a presidential
9:13
candidate. We'll
9:15
hear five individuals stepped
9:18
up to the plate. They
9:21
did what we always ask them to do.
9:24
Matt Gates, Andy Biggs, Bob Good, Matt
9:26
Rosendale and Ralph Norman. Now
9:30
there's about ten to fifteen
9:32
others in the background, but
9:34
those five were willing to put their names
9:36
out because you need a minimum of four
9:38
or no five really. He could afford to lose
9:40
four and still get two eighteen, he
9:43
loses five, then Kevin McCarthy
9:45
doesn't get a majority. So
9:49
they put themselves out there.
9:51
Well, everyone's saying, you're you're
9:53
obstructing and and holding up the
9:55
house majority from all the beautiful
9:57
things that they're they might do
9:59
for us. Nonsense.
10:03
Those five finally did it.
10:05
Do we have their back? Obviously,
10:09
there's The nine people who signed the letter
10:11
making demands for more
10:13
policy changes. Perry
10:16
Goser, Chipotle, Bishop
10:18
Paris, Clyde, and then
10:20
two representatives elect,
10:22
new ones, Luna from Florida,
10:26
or actually three Oglis and Crane,
10:28
Eli Crane from Arizona. And
10:33
they are demanding that
10:37
we actually have a New Year's
10:39
resolution to finally do something
10:41
new rather than invite
10:43
the guy who is part of senior
10:45
leadership for fourteen freaking years.
10:48
It's in those fourteen years
10:50
that our country was lost.
10:53
When Kevin McCarthy was in leadership.
10:55
And somehow he's the future. Are
10:57
you kidding me? He is the biggest
10:59
sneeze, the biggest liar.
11:02
And yes, he is a sneeze. Everyone
11:05
kind of snickers about it and
11:07
laughs about
11:07
it. But really, like a guy
11:10
sleeping around with every female freshmen. Like,
11:12
that's kind of the
11:14
new the new hotness. This is the new conservative
11:16
leader. But
11:19
here we have, all the
11:21
conservative talk show hosts either are
11:23
silent on this or they're downright
11:25
supporting McCarthy. Which
11:27
underscores the danger of McCarthy becoming
11:29
leader. Because he'll
11:32
get conservatives to stand down
11:34
because of this relationship he
11:35
built, he's so good at that. He doesn't
11:37
believe in anything, but he's really good at
11:40
building relationships. It's
11:43
like everyone on, I won't change. I
11:45
won't change. I don't Daniel, I
11:47
don't like politics. I
11:50
don't like what's going on.
11:52
Or or like Republican votes. Republicans,
11:54
between us. Okay. So what are you gonna do
11:56
about it? I'm not gonna come
11:58
to you every new year, after
12:00
every year, every year. And
12:03
Tom is, you know, sixty, seventy
12:05
years old. Like some of these other legacy
12:07
talk show hosts saying and doing
12:09
the same things. I'm just
12:11
not. I'm not
12:13
doing it. I am
12:17
not doing it. We're
12:20
done with this. And
12:23
I want I want to talk a little bit about
12:26
what I mean by this same
12:28
agenda rather than doing something new.
12:30
What to expect from this new GOP
12:33
house, and
12:36
the game they're gonna play. Okay?
12:38
The type of issues that they're
12:41
gonna focus on, the way they're gonna
12:43
focus on, and at the time they're
12:45
gonna focus on it. It's
12:48
designed perfectly to
12:51
give a theater to conservative
12:53
talk radio and fuck snooze
12:55
in these writers and tweeters.
12:57
Oh, no. Trevor Crutch doing this. I'll
12:59
Biden and crime family this or Oh, look
13:01
to borders like this and Oh,
13:04
look what they're doing to China like that.
13:07
It's just gonna be a talking
13:09
point. A talking
13:10
point. In
13:13
other words,
13:14
the two things you need
13:16
to do is, the
13:18
things that matter at the time they matter you need to fight them
13:20
in the budget. Oops, They already up the
13:22
budget leverage for this year, so we have to wait
13:24
till later in the year. Then
13:26
the next thing is, even what you
13:28
message as stand alone bills, which
13:30
won't go beyond this in it.
13:32
Right? You have them
13:34
be generational
13:36
changing pills and ideas.
13:39
Earth shattering bills and ideas
13:43
that give
13:45
message to what we're staying
13:47
for and importantly signal
13:50
for what Republicans should be
13:52
doing in the states independent
13:55
of what the feds do. But
13:57
instead what Republicans do is they give up
13:59
the budget leverage, and then the stand alone
14:01
bills will be like this, like,
14:03
tiny little glancing
14:07
you know, all this
14:09
aspect of the energy agenda I don't like, we're gonna
14:11
go through some of the specifics of what they
14:13
plan on doing. But
14:16
again, the speakers race will talk about that
14:18
more post op tomorrow
14:22
post analysis assuming it's still
14:23
over, hopefully it's not. To
14:26
me, the longer the chaos, the better.
14:29
We need this national
14:31
dialogue that we've been avoiding
14:34
really since Reagan left office and we're stuck
14:36
with the bushes. Tried to
14:38
have it a little bit with Perot, the ninety
14:40
four revolution. We went
14:42
backwards. Dark ages,
14:44
the bushes. Finally, we thought
14:46
we regained our footing with a tea party. But
14:48
the tea party fizzled out to a
14:51
large degree because
14:53
Mcarthy and his ilk were in
14:55
leadership, and we still
14:57
haven't learned our lessons. Now,
15:01
speaking of not learning our lessons, are
15:03
you gonna continue allowing
15:07
Big tech and big government to spy on
15:09
you, censor you, and then make
15:11
money off of selling your info.
15:15
Let's hear a proud gun owner. You
15:17
wanna talk on social media about the right to bear
15:19
arms. Well, you're being flagged.
15:21
We learn that now. They're working together.
15:24
They're not private organizations. So
15:26
to fight back against having your voice censored,
15:29
By both big tech and big government, I
15:31
recommend express VPN. It's
15:33
about three years ago at this time. I
15:35
installed express VPN on all
15:37
of my devices, so desktop,
15:39
laptop, iPhone.
15:41
You could have as many as
15:43
five on one family plan when I
15:45
use express VPN they
15:47
cannot see my IP address. Picture
15:49
it as a mask that actually works.
15:52
Plus, express VPN encrypts a hundred percent of
15:54
my Internet data for
15:56
protection from both hackers and
15:58
government ease droppers. Express b VPN
16:00
is by far the best VPN I've tried. It's
16:02
rated number one by cnet business insider.
16:05
And countless other tech publications. And
16:07
what I love most of that express VPN is
16:09
even technical illiterate
16:11
people like me could use it without
16:14
messing it up. It's literally a tap of a button
16:16
and you're protected. It's that simple. So stop
16:18
letting big tech and big government
16:20
sensor and track you defend your rights and
16:22
protect yourself at expressvpn dot
16:24
com slash conservative. That's EXPRESSVPN
16:28
dot com slash conservative to
16:30
get three months free. So you get a
16:33
quarter of your first year free. Again,
16:37
freedom is not free. Just like your email is
16:39
not free. Your Internet usage
16:41
is not free. It's worth it.
16:43
Visit expressvpn dot com slash
16:45
conservative to learn more. So
16:49
folks, I wanna
16:51
delve into what these clowns plan
16:53
on doing. This is
16:55
from the hill dot com.
16:58
Okay? So
17:02
it's titled, immigration,
17:04
energy, and abortion. Scalise
17:06
announces first legislation for House
17:08
GOPs. Scalise is the majority leader. He's
17:10
the floor leader. By the way, that's
17:12
the position Kevin McCarthy was
17:15
in. Throughout the GOP trifecta when he failed
17:17
those. But I digress.
17:20
So what are their
17:21
plans? What are
17:23
they planning on doing? So right off the bat,
17:26
immigration, energy, and abortion. Notice
17:30
This is the first time you're
17:33
getting back into the house. Control.
17:35
Majority control since COVID.
17:38
And somehow, the
17:40
mandates, the liability, the
17:42
genocide. That's not in the top
17:44
three. Now, there
17:46
there are legitimately a lot of terrible
17:48
ways that they're destroying our civilization. So,
17:52
you know, different people have different
17:54
priorities. But right away for that not to be in
17:56
the top three is pretty crazy.
17:58
So right after that, their first
18:01
bill will
18:01
be to rescind the boost to IRS
18:04
funding. Now, this is a
18:06
joke. They grease the skids to
18:08
fund the omnibus bill. Oh,
18:11
dude, you'll house Republican, that's the senate.
18:13
The house Republicans opposed it.
18:15
No. Not earlier in the
18:17
year. In September is when it
18:19
mattered. And McCarthy supported
18:21
a CR that would be kicked into December
18:24
when McConnell said at the
18:25
time, it will be used to craft an omnibus
18:28
bill. So now when they already
18:30
lost it, they're gonna have a stand alone bill about the
18:32
IRS. Okay. So
18:34
you
18:34
gave up the budget leverage. At
18:36
least if you're gonna do a stand alone bill,
18:39
You know what I'm saying? If you're gonna do a stand alone bill, it's
18:41
not gonna go anywhere anyway. So at least
18:43
do something that's going to grab people
18:45
by the shirt collar. Not some like
18:48
technical in the weeds. All the extra additional
18:50
funding have
18:52
criminal penalties. For
18:54
not just the IRS, but the FBI and
18:56
the ATF and DHS and CIS
18:59
and BARDA and DARPA and DOD
19:02
and CIA and all of
19:04
them if they are
19:06
proven to target Americans
19:08
for political reasons and have
19:10
a private cause of action from the citizen
19:12
who was targeted to sue in federal
19:15
court. The individual
19:18
FBI agents call it, doing it.
19:20
That is something that we can get excited
19:22
about, even if it doesn't pass, but that
19:24
will de legitimize the government, which is
19:26
what we wanna do. This is just it's
19:28
not It's not strong enough. It's too
19:30
little too late. And that's gonna be the
19:32
theme too little too late.
19:34
And and also nonbinding anyway. Give
19:36
away the budget leverage and
19:38
too little late. What? Don't doubt
19:41
me. As as Rush
19:43
Limbaugh used to say, that is
19:45
what
19:45
their modus operandi is.
19:47
Too little, too late, every sync in
19:50
time. Then they're
19:52
going on to energy bills.
19:55
The first bill would prohibit non emergency
19:58
drawdowns of the strategic petroleum
20:00
reserve. And
20:02
the next bill would prevent
20:04
the secretary of energy from selling petroleum
20:07
from the strategic reserve to China.
20:09
Because this all comes from the report
20:12
that you know, a, we know Biden's been drawing down our
20:14
strategic petroleum reserves. It's the lowest level since
20:16
the eighties, and he's
20:19
been selling it to China.
20:23
But is this fundamentally
20:26
what's destroying our energy and
20:28
destroying our economy and causing that inflation?
20:31
Is it Like, if you have one or
20:33
two bills to pass as a messaging
20:35
that this is what we stand for, this
20:37
will help the American people.
20:40
No. It's a gotcha. It's a gotcha bill.
20:42
And look, I
20:45
don't have anything against it. We all support
20:47
it, but that's the type of stuff they're gonna
20:49
do. What should be done, is
20:51
that a bill to ban
20:53
all global warming regulations
20:55
that cause job losses,
20:58
that cause expensive goods
21:01
and services and
21:05
deplete or
21:07
degrade the quality
21:09
of products. That's what
21:11
we're up again. Banning all
21:13
global warming regulations, banning
21:16
all green energy subsidies.
21:19
You sink or swim on your own
21:21
volition. Banning the green
21:23
scheme, that is something
21:25
different. They'll never
21:27
do it. See, I have to go
21:29
and point this out because otherwise says, I don't know
21:31
what, annually, they're they're pushing good stuff.
21:33
No, they're not. We're
21:36
in
21:36
the eleventh hour. This is
21:39
the
21:39
type of stuff you have to push. And again, all of
21:42
this needs to be echoed on a
21:44
state level. By the way, one of the
21:46
things that I'm gonna be pushing when
21:48
we come out with our list of
21:51
items, and by the way, I'm gonna have
21:53
published for today a
21:55
list. I have and and
21:58
maybe we'll go through some of it if we have time
22:00
today. Dozens upon
22:02
dozens. Of
22:04
medical freedom ideas. It's
22:07
a checklist that I need you to take to
22:09
every one of your state legislatures and
22:11
say, do I have a bill
22:13
doing one of these things in the
22:15
state? But I'll get to that later. For
22:18
energy, my buddy Brian Slaton from Texas,
22:20
he's introducing two bills. One
22:22
will allow the state of
22:24
Texas to invite
22:26
in car manufacturers to
22:28
manufacture cars without
22:30
government regulations you know,
22:32
aside from the basic safety stuff, but I'm talking
22:34
about like the the global warming type of
22:36
stuff and also the tracking
22:38
that they're gonna have in your cars. And
22:40
number two, to be able to make appliances.
22:43
Sains those regulations
22:45
that ensure your appliances break in three
22:47
three years if they ever work to begin with.
22:50
This is the type of thing that grabs
22:52
people. What is degrading your your
22:54
your your quality of
22:56
life? What is degrading our culture. And
22:59
notice the grooming and transgenderism is
23:01
not in there. This is
23:02
and and I gotta give Kevin McCarthy credit.
23:05
This is a reflection of
23:08
his vision, whatever he called it, road
23:10
map, whatever his thing he campaigned on that
23:12
stupid document. He he is sticking
23:14
to
23:14
it. They're not gonna be
23:16
dead bills in a vacuum. They'll they'll be something
23:18
you could vote for in support. It's just like,
23:20
really, like, this is the extent of what
23:23
you're doing. And we're playing catch up. But
23:26
that's what we need, something
23:28
categorical. And
23:32
before before I go on to describe what,
23:34
you know, more things they're doing versus
23:36
what we should be doing, that's that's the
23:39
contrast today. You know, what they are
23:41
doing to what we should be doing. And
23:43
that's kind of the catch call of
23:45
the show. I give
23:47
you a critique of what's wrong and what we
23:49
should be doing, what I would be doing,
23:51
what should be done.
23:54
And
23:54
my gosh. There's just so much to catch up on. I've, like, ADHD
23:57
of the brain today. Like, all over the place.
23:59
There's so much stuff on the
24:02
depopulation and the birth rates pointing from
24:04
the shots and fifty million studies on
24:06
these shots being more deadly long term
24:08
destroying your immune system than we could have
24:10
ever imagined. That we could have
24:12
ever, ever, ever imagined. But
24:16
I wanna say this, I
24:20
believe very strongly
24:22
that this adage politics
24:26
is downstream from culture is
24:28
outdated. I believe they sometimes
24:30
work together, but it's actually more
24:32
the other way. Culture is downstream from
24:34
politics because politics is
24:37
culture. Politics is our life. Politics
24:39
encompasses everything, and I think COVID kinda
24:41
sealed the deal. Right? I mean,
24:45
gone are the days where you have news,
24:47
weather, sports, and politics. Right?
24:49
Different subjects, then if I don't wanna care about
24:51
politics, like most people never did
24:53
and so who cares? Okay? You debate some tax
24:55
rates. You debate some government programs,
24:57
some government bonds, and, you
24:59
know, whatever does affect
25:02
my life. You know, might affect it,
25:04
but it's not like, oh,
25:06
we're gonna kill you. We're gonna make it that
25:08
you can't get medical in the country. We're gonna make
25:10
you can't get food and fuel. We're gonna make it that you
25:12
can't walk around without a shot and a
25:14
mask over your breathing goals. Politics
25:17
is everything. So
25:20
let me give
25:21
you a perfect example. The
25:24
old adage used to be while you have to change
25:26
the culture and you gradually work for ten years,
25:28
and then you could politically or legally
25:30
change a policy. What
25:33
do you think the left did? Did they
25:35
go for ten years and groom
25:37
people in they do groom people,
25:39
but but not always. They don't they
25:41
don't need it. Did they spend ten years
25:44
saying, oh, we're gonna find a way
25:47
to convince people to wear a
25:49
mask? Within a week, they made it universal
25:52
that they were denying rape victims
25:54
entry into places without
25:56
covering their mouth. They
25:59
just did it. This is what we're doing.
26:01
This is what we need to do. Here's the
26:04
rationale. Done and people start doing
26:06
it. And the policy is
26:08
enacted immediately, and people
26:11
aren't principled. You know that. Most
26:13
people are sheeple. People look at
26:15
what is going on in the world and they're like, oh, I guess
26:17
this is what we do now. I guess this
26:19
is what it is. Because the fact that
26:22
it's being done creates
26:24
a veneer of legitimacy.
26:27
Wow. I mean, it it can't be done
26:29
this universal if there's not some
26:31
legitimacy behind it. You can't have everyone not just
26:33
get giving out the shots, but forcing
26:35
people to get the shots and forcing it's it's
26:37
gotta work, so I'm gonna
26:39
do it. That's what they
26:41
do. They don't they don't debate,
26:43
they don't equivocate, they will
26:45
take the most transformational policies
26:48
and they'll just do them. They
26:51
don't
26:51
they don't cut around the edges.
26:53
Like you're gonna see, I didn't even get to
26:55
immigration what they plan on doing on that.
26:58
They just Like, you know, Republicans cut around
27:00
edges. They're like, hey, hey, hey,
27:02
buddy. You can't function. This is
27:04
a great reset. You can't function without
27:07
the new normal. And they just
27:09
do it and it works.
27:11
But you can do
27:13
it in reverse. Governor
27:16
DeSantis proved this. He
27:19
just enacted one thing after
27:21
another, and he made it the culture in
27:23
Florida. No, in Florida, is
27:25
what we do. I'm not saying
27:27
everything's perfect and we're to the promised land
27:29
there. Before he came in, the place
27:31
was a toilet like every other Republican
27:34
legislature you
27:34
know, place where they controlled for a
27:37
while. So it's only been a
27:39
few years, but he's getting there. Still a
27:41
lot more to be done. And,
27:43
you know, we're looking forward to a really good
27:45
second term there, really good
27:48
legislative session. But
27:50
we need to make sure all states are doing this because this
27:52
is what you do. You don't equivocate.
27:55
People don't understand nuances. Global
27:57
warming is a hoax. We're not doing this. It's destroying
27:59
our quality of life. This is why you
28:01
can't purchase anything anymore. You
28:03
can't find things. Every damn thing you wanna
28:05
do in your life is marred by a supply
28:08
chain. No. This is not happening.
28:10
COVID fascism doesn't happen. The shots
28:12
are killing people. Here's all evidence.
28:14
Not happening. The more you do, the
28:16
more you do. You
28:19
know, in Florida, all the corporations there
28:21
had been quiet since he went after
28:24
Disney. Publix.
28:26
One of the biggest employers
28:28
decided not to administer the shots to
28:30
kids when they came out because
28:32
the governor said, We recommend
28:34
against them. Politics
28:39
controls culture because
28:41
politics is all encompassing now.
28:44
So when
28:44
you legally say this is what we
28:46
do, it creates a culture.
28:49
That's what the left does.
28:53
That's what we need to do in
28:55
reverse. In the
28:58
states and that's why the states are what
29:00
matters. The red states and this is gonna be my
29:02
main focus the legislators. Again,
29:04
I need you guys to help
29:06
me. What is going on in your state
29:08
legislature? That's a problem that's
29:10
good? I can't monitor all twenty five on
29:12
my own. Daniel Horowitz
29:15
at start mail dot com. You could email me any
29:18
time. I'll, you know, definitely try to get back
29:20
to
29:20
you. But
29:22
this is the point. Think
29:25
about all the things the left has done. They
29:27
just do it. They
29:29
do it. And the more you
29:31
allow that cancer to
29:33
percolate without a
29:35
response, the more it does become part
29:37
of culture. Think about the
29:39
trainee issue. Finally, Republicans
29:41
are half haphazardly talking about it. But
29:43
for ten years, they let it
29:44
fester. We're too scared to talk about it.
29:47
The left just does.
29:49
So we need to just do
29:52
its band. No
29:56
transgender bathrooms, no
29:58
castration, no drag shows,
30:00
no library, story time,
30:02
no trench dent gender mention or
30:05
indulgence or policies throughout any
30:07
area of the state government. And at a
30:09
federal level, Yes. They don't have control of
30:11
all three. We get that. But the house,
30:13
at least in your stand alone legislation,
30:15
it needs to reflect this.
30:18
And needs to reflect it. But
30:21
they're just
30:22
mily mouthed. It just allow the
30:24
conservative version of this. Let me give
30:26
you a great example. Last
30:29
week, obviously, it's a quiet
30:31
week. Between Christmas and New
30:33
Year's, not much going
30:35
on. But you know, there were big
30:37
earth shattering studies that came out
30:39
in the shots. And
30:43
if you haven't seen I have them all
30:45
at conservative review. You click on my name and
30:47
you can see the columns that you might
30:49
have missed the last two
30:50
weeks. You know, I didn't take off. I was I
30:53
put out a couple of videos, not as many
30:55
as I wanted, but I did put out a couple of videos
30:57
on rumble. We have a CR podcast
30:59
channel on rumble now. You could you
31:01
could check that out. I'll try to keep
31:03
up, you know, doing some videos
31:05
as
31:05
well. But, you know, we
31:07
didn't have the show. But
31:09
I was tweeting the storm, but
31:12
not just tweeting but, you know, putting
31:14
out real information and
31:16
I had my columns going. But
31:19
anyway, we couldn't gain
31:21
traction on this because you know what the biggest story
31:23
was George Santos.
31:25
This Republican from New York
31:27
that somehow claimed he was Jewish, but
31:29
isn't Jewish, and somehow it was like the
31:31
the biggest scandal in the world. And
31:33
so it's like, I mixed
31:36
feelings here because on the one hand, what
31:38
a stupid story? So these guys are
31:41
literally murdering millions of people
31:43
from COVID shots and the
31:45
COVID fascism. They're destroying the
31:47
supply chain of medicine
31:49
food fuel, you name it. Life liberty
31:51
property, and this guy lied that he
31:53
was Jewish. Like, really, what do I
31:55
care? The bigger issue
31:57
is these stupid clowns
32:00
that speak for Jews like these
32:02
reform, deformed, losers,
32:04
sorrows, fake Jews, they're
32:06
the bigger liars, and that's the
32:08
bigger scandal. But then on the other
32:10
hand, this George Santos guy
32:12
was the embodiment of what's wrong with the
32:14
party. He rose
32:16
to prominence in the GOP why
32:18
because his schtick
32:21
to use
32:22
a Jewish word was that he
32:24
was
32:24
a pro Trump gay Latino Jewish
32:27
Ukrainian. I'm not kidding you.
32:29
So he manipulated the
32:31
very identity politics Republicans
32:34
say they hate but actually love.
32:37
And he did it by the way with the backing of key Trump allies,
32:39
like Elise Stefanic, who's a
32:42
leftist. That's the
32:45
bigger issue. Republicans were
32:47
disappointed. Oh, he lied about one of his
32:49
identities. But the bigger issue is he rose to
32:51
prominence because he
32:53
played the GOP identity politics.
32:55
Which is a reflection of what the GOP stands
32:58
for. That's what they're
33:00
all about is
33:02
identity politics. That's
33:04
all they care about. And that's
33:07
kind of why they're all about
33:09
the little messaging Oh,
33:12
Biden's like this, but we stand for this
33:15
not trying to change outcomes.
33:17
And like I'm telling
33:18
you, no matter what you can't
33:22
get a bill signed into law with just control
33:24
the house. But if you're
33:26
going to change civilization, you
33:29
put categorical bills.
33:32
Categorical
33:32
ones that grab people.
33:34
Imagine if they started out
33:36
the year. No liability.
33:40
For vaccine companies that
33:42
are the greediest, most
33:44
criminal. Do you understand the
33:47
data we have on that? They
33:49
have paid the worst criminal
33:52
payouts in the history of commerce.
33:54
They make more money
33:57
than ExxonMobil. And they
33:59
are exempt from practically
34:01
all liability, and they've
34:04
been proven in the
34:06
government's own data to kill and
34:08
name millions of
34:09
people. Do you know
34:12
how much that would put the world on
34:14
defense? Such
34:16
a legislation, it's not again,
34:18
we're governed by the rule
34:20
of political will, not the rule of
34:22
law. It's not so much about
34:26
enacting the law change.
34:28
You know, because I'm gonna be advocating a lot
34:30
of different bills, certainly where they can
34:32
enact them with their effective control in the
34:34
red states, but still. It's the
34:37
process of saying, this is what
34:39
we stand for, this is immoral,
34:41
this is harmful, this is what's right,
34:43
this is what we're doing. That's
34:45
what the left does. But
34:48
anyway, with that kind of
34:50
long elaborate introduction, let me go on in
34:52
this hill article. So, yeah, those loser energy bills, the IRS
34:54
thing. The next thing is the border safety
34:56
and security act. Would allow
34:59
homeland security secretary to
35:01
turn away certain migrants in order to
35:04
achieve operational control at the
35:06
border. Republicans have repeatedly
35:08
accused Homeland Security secretary Alejandro,
35:11
my work is of not meeting
35:13
the legal standard of operational control.
35:16
Like, What?
35:18
We have a freaking invasion.
35:20
The public is a hundred percent on
35:22
our side on this issue. The polls show
35:25
it. You literally have Like,
35:28
the last ninety days.
35:32
Just the last ninety days.
35:36
There's probably been we calculated
35:39
if you look at the first
35:41
three months of the fiscal
35:43
So October, November, December.
35:46
It's a quarter of the year.
35:48
Between the apprehensions and
35:51
the God of ways, probably about
35:53
a million, a million
35:56
people. A
35:58
million people.
36:00
That's annualized, pace
36:03
of four million. K?
36:08
Four million is
36:11
the size of the
36:13
city of LA. One
36:18
year. And that's on top of the first two
36:20
years of of of the
36:22
Biden administration. What's
36:26
so hard about prohibiting
36:28
the release of any
36:31
individual into the
36:33
country? Instead, it's like, turn
36:35
back certain classes
36:38
of what
36:40
ebbs. I
36:40
mean, certain classes. All of them. And
36:43
and and again, they're gonna
36:45
have all these border security
36:48
bills But it's all a sleight
36:50
of hand because you can't force the administration
36:52
to do something it doesn't wanna do. You
36:54
have to put a negative on it. You
36:56
cannot release anyone. If you say, thou shall secure
36:59
the board. They're not gonna do
37:01
it. It's a joke. And
37:03
we all know that you gave up your budget leverage anyway.
37:06
So if you're gonna have a messaging bill,
37:08
make it
37:10
categorical. Go after the benefits.
37:12
Repeat plenary dough. Move
37:15
the Overton window
37:17
push the envelope. No pennies for
37:20
them. Things like
37:22
that, categorical.
37:27
Instead, it's just like this
37:30
nitpicking, which is so
37:31
weird. You know, like, people don't
37:34
understand. You
37:36
can't. Litigate yourself
37:38
out
37:39
of an invasion.
37:42
You can. There's
37:44
there's over two million backlog
37:47
in the immigration courts.
37:51
Okay? What's so hard to message
37:53
that? You you're somehow gonna turn
37:55
away certain classes I'm just reading the
37:57
Hill article. I actually I didn't look at the bill
37:59
yet, but it's like
38:02
really That's
38:04
pathetic. And by the way,
38:06
this is also why it's so important
38:10
to make sure that
38:12
individual members could
38:13
force votes on amendments. Now you might say,
38:16
well, Daniel, didn't Kevin
38:18
McCarthy concede that and agree to
38:20
that? Well, yes
38:22
and no. He did kind of, which is
38:24
only because these guys were
38:26
brave enough to fight him for
38:28
a speaker. But
38:30
if you look at him, it looked very carefully,
38:33
the rules committee could
38:35
still always waive the rule.
38:37
In other words, Let me
38:40
just explain you while everyone's talking about the
38:42
structure and the rules of the house and the
38:44
speaker. One of the things you need to
38:46
understand is, Every bill
38:48
that's written out to the floor, the Rules
38:50
Committee writes the parameters
38:52
of the floor debate
38:54
of that bill. So
38:57
you'll hear a lot of
38:59
headlines at the beginning of a congress.
39:01
Oh, we adopted a standing
39:04
rule of hey, every bill has to be read seventy
39:06
two hours before before you could
39:08
release it. You get
39:10
this not Todd, time, a
39:12
debate, you get these amendments, and that's
39:14
all great. But then there's the
39:16
rules committee that's run by the
39:18
worst pukes, literally,
39:20
Tom Cole. Tom Cole. One of the biggest leftist
39:22
is gonna be the rules committee
39:24
chairman. Tom
39:26
Cole. He
39:30
is gonna waive
39:32
the rules. They have the power to
39:34
waive them. So you can have a standing rule,
39:36
but then in each individual bill,
39:39
that's brought up to the floor that actually
39:41
matters, guess what they
39:43
do. They wave it. This
39:46
is why we need and here's another one. Another bill would
39:48
require the National Instant
39:51
Criminal Background Checks NICS which
39:53
is used during the sales of firearms to notify
39:56
ICE and local law enforcement if a
39:58
person in the US illegally attempts to buy a
40:00
gun. So it's like, okay. Wait
40:02
a minute. So we have all
40:03
these criminal aliens. We have all
40:06
these pennies. And they're like
40:08
picking this this like
40:10
in the weeds thing
40:13
of Okay. Any one,
40:16
any illegal that attempts to buy
40:18
a gun has to notify
40:20
ICE. Again, these
40:22
are all In a vacuum, okay
40:24
ideas. But it's like,
40:26
what? It's just
40:28
so underwhelming
40:30
that, like, we're well beyond that.
40:33
I'm telling you guys
40:34
this because I wanna give
40:37
you a flavor. Of what
40:40
these clowns are doing.
40:42
And what's gonna happen is the conservative
40:44
radio is being like, yeah, look at
40:46
this bill and and you're gonna have this fake fight and
40:48
it won't go anywhere anyway, but not only
40:50
won't it go anywhere, it won't achieve
40:53
any messaging victory because
40:55
it's too nuanced. And
40:58
then finally, they're gonna have two
41:00
abortion bills to codify the high
41:02
amendment permanently, you know, to prohibit federal
41:04
funding
41:05
for abortion. And then the born alive abortion
41:07
survivors protection act.
41:10
And it's like, look,
41:12
you know my view on abortion?
41:15
I cannot get
41:18
excited by a political
41:20
party that literally is
41:23
supported and is still supporting
41:26
the vaccine, biomedical experimentation that's killing
41:29
eminently more people but
41:32
also there is no informed consent. Abortion, again, we
41:34
feel for the babies. But at the end of
41:36
the day, we've done what we
41:39
can. Right? Everyone knows what you're doing with abortion. We
41:41
fought it for fifty years. Whereas
41:44
with vaccines that they're not
41:46
even touching Not
41:48
only don't people know they're killing people,
41:50
but they're they're sold
41:52
as the biggest cure.
41:55
Every child from the time they're born, you know,
41:57
they they plan on coming out
41:59
with this from wire
42:02
dot com. In twenty twenty
42:04
three, we plan to begin clinical trials
42:06
for the first mRNA
42:08
vaccine candidates against malaria and
42:10
tuberculosis that combine known in
42:12
new targets. Malaria, tuberculosis,
42:16
RSV, flu,
42:20
Marburgs, ebola, one after
42:23
another, what they're
42:25
already giving to
42:26
kids. Aside from COVID
42:28
is likely a big problem,
42:30
and we need to learn
42:33
more about that. But it's
42:36
like, really When
42:38
you understand, if you look at the articles,
42:40
how this destroys your God
42:43
given immune
42:44
system? The
42:46
article I did about IgG four,
42:48
the most important study to have
42:50
ever come out in the last two years. If
42:52
you haven't seen it, it's one of my last article. It was a conservative review. Those
42:55
of you who didn't see this
42:57
over over the break. How
43:00
it's been proven that
43:02
the shot you have two
43:04
types of antibodies. They're always like,
43:07
oh, look at how's antibodies? But
43:09
which type in what amount?
43:11
What part of the body? And over
43:13
what time? Those are important details. God
43:16
has that worked out. You wanna mimic that
43:17
with a vaccine? It's not so
43:20
simple. If it
43:22
if it's the wrong antibody is the
43:24
wrong type, it turns out, you have neutralizing
43:27
antibodies IgG one, two, and three, but then
43:29
you have class four, which
43:31
are tolerating antibodies. Why
43:33
would you want to tolerate something? Well, if it's not a
43:36
pathogen and antigen that
43:38
replicates and could be harmful like a
43:39
virus, let's say it's B
43:42
Pallen. Let's say it's peanuts. Let's say it's
43:44
Pallen or B
43:46
Van de My Mint or or or or Pallen.
43:50
Right? So with pollin,
43:52
you obviously don't want a
43:54
hyper inflammatory reaction to
43:58
it. Those of you like me who suffer spring allergies because
44:00
your body is like, oh, I know your body is
44:02
going crazy. You want IgG
44:06
four. Or IgE is another one. That's what that's what's
44:08
usually in the allergy shots that you get.
44:10
It gives you tolerating
44:12
that nobody You're
44:14
gonna be exposed to this many times. It's not a problem. It doesn't replicate.
44:16
It's okay. Chill out.
44:18
But you don't wanna
44:20
tell the body is guns to
44:23
chill out and lie still in the
44:26
face of a virus. It turns out
44:28
your body is flooded with
44:30
IgG four telling your body to tolerate COVID, which
44:32
is why? It's the
44:34
best explanation so far for the more you
44:36
inject, the more you infect, and boy do we have
44:38
data
44:39
on that now? Well, three years later,
44:41
it never goes away. People getting it
44:43
multiple times. Largely, it's not
44:46
really that dead, but, you know, they're saying
44:48
hospitalizations are
44:50
the highest they've been
44:52
in eleven
44:52
months, why is that?
44:57
Why is that? Because they screwed up
44:59
your
44:59
god given immune system.
45:02
In other words, what I'm trying to tell you
45:04
is, even
45:06
if you're the type who didn't get blood clots and heart failure strokes and
45:09
neurological damage, and
45:12
autoimmune But for so
45:14
many people, and we don't know, is
45:16
it a third, a quarter, a half?
45:19
Three quarters, all are
45:22
gonna get immune suppression. And
45:24
what does that do for the
45:27
long run? This is a
45:29
pro life issue. This
45:32
is a big issue.
45:34
You know, I've been dealing a lot with some
45:36
cancer over the break. So
45:38
the two d family members, friends, it's terrible. And I'm not saying
45:41
we have a cure to cancer.
45:43
We don't. But
45:46
I'm positive. That
45:48
if we allowed a fraction
45:50
of the research that goes to the cartel
45:52
to develop yet another chemo drug that
45:54
doesn't work but destroys your body, to
45:57
looking at all the anti inflammatories, all the immunomodulators, all the
45:59
anti parasitics and antifungals that
46:01
had brought action that
46:05
are antitumor and you put them
46:08
together, there's no way
46:10
because I already know with low dose
46:12
naltrexone and things like that. They definitely
46:14
have some action at a
46:16
minimum extending your life with some of these
46:18
cancers. And unlike chemo
46:20
doesn't do
46:20
and, you know, doesn't make you sick.
46:24
That's pro life.
46:26
And Republicans are part of
46:28
the medical cartel. So I don't wanna hear out on pro
46:30
life. You know, let me let me give you
46:32
a great example of
46:34
this. So Trump made these comments, you know, earlier this
46:36
week, blaming the pro
46:38
life movement for losing the election.
46:42
I obviously don't agree with him.
46:44
Certainly not defending him. But
46:49
An amazing thing happened.
46:52
Dave Filan tweeted out
46:54
a whole rant against Trump.
46:56
Now, those of you who aren't
46:58
in tech this might not know Dave Filan
46:59
is. He's the speaker of the Texas house.
47:02
Okay? Speaker of the Texas house.
47:06
Now, this man is the
47:08
reason why Texas is
47:10
nowhere near Florida and nowhere near being a
47:12
red state. I mean, along with Greg Abbott,
47:16
No question. No question
47:18
along with Greg Abbott. But he
47:20
is why the legislature is a toy
47:23
He's the one that gives half the committee chairman
47:25
chips to Democrats. He is a chamber
47:27
of commerce teachers union,
47:30
communist, transhumanist, WEF
47:34
blah. No. And nobody will disagree
47:36
with that characterization of him
47:38
in Texas. Even the media in
47:40
Texas, they'll
47:40
say, the moderate date feeling, k, no
47:42
one will do that. But listen
47:44
to what he tweeted out. GOP has lost
47:47
control of the senate three cycles in a row
47:49
and it was not the fault of the pro life
47:51
movement. It was your hand
47:54
picked candidates who underperformed and lost bigly. My twenty
47:56
twenty three, twenty twenty
47:58
four may May twenty twenty
48:00
three bring the GOP leadership
48:02
proud to protect the unborn.
48:04
You see what I hate about
48:06
the abortion issue. It allows the
48:09
Communist Republicans to be hardcore
48:12
on one issue and virtue signal
48:14
it over over it at the expense
48:16
of everything else. So you see, even Dave
48:18
Feelin, who is A rhinos,
48:20
rhino, look how tough he talks on
48:22
abortion. I'm sick of
48:24
that being the go to issue.
48:26
I'm just sick
48:28
of it. If you're good at other things,
48:30
then fine. But if you're in the back pocket promoting the vaccines,
48:33
promoting opposing any
48:36
anything to go after vaccine injury,
48:38
vaccine liability, an entire COVID biomedical state.
48:43
And not pushing a medical freedom agenda, doctor's
48:46
freedom. Remember,
48:48
most people have comorbidities. They
48:52
need help. They need treatment. They
48:54
need a better system. This
48:56
is life.
48:59
Okay? You can't avoid the vaccines.
49:02
Most of them. Try
49:04
finding
49:04
a pediatrician. Some of them
49:07
are
49:07
mandated. You can't avoid the
49:09
hospital system and medical care because we don't have
49:12
another system. You can
49:14
absolutely avoid abortion. It doesn't mean
49:16
I don't think we shouldn't fight
49:18
against it. But it means
49:20
that it is so inverted when
49:22
abortion is always their first and only go
49:24
to and then their bet on every other
49:26
issue. But this is the
49:28
broad point. With the
49:30
GOP distracts and deflects
49:32
and creates a circus, a
49:34
theater so that we can
49:36
never focus on what matters.
49:38
But I am absolutely committed to focusing
49:40
on the issues that matter in the
49:42
way they matter and at the
49:45
time they matter.
49:48
So folks,
49:54
as we're talking, I'm watching the
49:56
split screens
49:58
You know, as they're gearing up for the speakers' vote and all the
50:01
acrimony and everything, and
50:03
it's important to remember. When
50:05
we talk about the issues that matter at the time
50:07
they mattered, as early
50:11
as March twentieth, Andy Biggs, who's leading this
50:13
fight against McCarthy, called on
50:16
Fauci to resign March
50:18
twentieth before the Republicans
50:20
even passed the worst
50:22
legislation in history guided by
50:24
the way by Kevin
50:26
McCarthy. If Thomas Massey was the
50:28
hero of the COVID
50:30
shutdown
50:30
bill, Well, who is the
50:32
zero, Kevin McCarthy? And, you know, just
50:34
to kinda tie this together, the issues
50:38
that matter. You know, rather than
50:40
focusing on the legacy issues,
50:42
the legacy processes, looking
50:44
at politics, the same conventional
50:46
one dimension no thing. Ours versus d, same
50:48
issues. Year in, year out, decade in,
50:50
decade out, like all these conservative talk
50:52
show
50:53
hosts, and the lack of a voice, not just a vote, but
50:56
a voice on the issues that
50:58
matter. Right? This is why we
51:00
are where we are with vaccine
51:02
injury now. Where the is
51:04
ahead of the Republican elected
51:06
officials who won't even talk about
51:07
it. Just what
51:10
embodies this?
51:12
Before we go on, as I'm
51:14
talking, I'm seeing Ben
51:17
Shapiro tweeted out McCarthy's
51:20
job as speaker and the job of the GOP
51:22
is to say no. That's
51:24
it. Since Denzel's control the senate in the
51:26
White House, What is the actual policy advanced by stalling here
51:28
other than to hand them to PR
51:30
win by depicting the House GOP as a
51:32
clown show?
51:34
So first of all, like, this is all that matters in politics,
51:36
a PR win of
51:38
the house in disarray.
51:40
But putting that aside, with
51:43
all due respect then, it's not true. The job is a
51:45
lot more than just saying no. It's
51:47
it's it's more than
51:49
just mechanically, oh, the
51:51
senate and the White House want something, so we're
51:54
gonna say no. You're not just
51:56
a a vote, you're
51:58
a voice. Okay. You
52:00
give voice to something. It's
52:02
a matter of what you're gonna investigate, what
52:04
you're going to deliver in
52:06
terms of message every day. And then
52:08
also mechanically too, it's it's holding up the budget bills,
52:11
the defense bills, the authorization
52:13
bills, things like that. But
52:16
the point is a lot
52:18
of these guys act as if Kevin
52:20
McCarthy was
52:22
created today. They don't
52:24
follow congress and the
52:26
legislative issues with the degree of
52:28
specificity we have here for the last
52:30
fifteen
52:30
years. So none of this is
52:32
new to us. They act like, oh, I don't know
52:34
what you're talking about. But this is this
52:36
is what it means to give voice. Kevin
52:39
McCarthy will never do
52:42
that. We'll
52:42
never do that. Do you
52:45
know that Mitch McConnell is set
52:47
to become the longest serving leader today, fourteen years.
52:49
By the way McCarthy was also
52:52
in leadership. Some of the lower
52:54
rungs if you add them in for fourteen
52:56
years. But McConnell was there
52:58
longer than any party leader. That's
53:00
how flaccid
53:02
and pathetic the Republican movement, the Republican Party and the
53:04
Conservative Inc. Movement is
53:06
that they had the longest serving leader
53:08
on
53:09
their watch. Among either party in
53:12
history, Mitch McConnell. And
53:14
now people like Ben Shapiro, all these guys,
53:18
you know, live in and
53:20
whatever, they'll say, McConnell's bad. But
53:23
mind you, with
53:25
some of them, If you
53:27
would go back, they were bashing
53:30
me or bashing those that were
53:32
trying to get rid of McConnell. When I
53:34
recruited against Mitch McConnell in
53:36
his senate seat, Nobody joined
53:39
me. Nobody joined
53:41
me. So now
53:43
in order to cleanse their support for
53:45
McCarthy. They're like, yeah, McConnell's bad. Yeah,
53:48
fourteen years too
53:50
late. Gee. I
53:53
I've been on his case
53:55
since twenty ten, two thousand
53:57
nine, really. That's the thing
54:00
about all these losers. They're always
54:02
a day late a dollar
54:04
short. So this
54:08
is where
54:10
we are. By
54:11
the way, notice the passion of the backing McCarthy.
54:14
It's the most far left wing
54:16
Republicans that are supporting him.
54:19
Elise Defanek is nominating
54:22
him. She's is she
54:24
she voted to redefine marriage.
54:27
Meaning, if McCarthy really
54:29
were giving into the concessions
54:31
of the conservatives, why would
54:33
they so emphatically
54:36
support him? Again, they know he's a
54:38
fraud. There's only
54:40
one good argument
54:42
against the fight against McCarthy.
54:44
This one good that concede. But the
54:47
problem is that blows up their
54:49
entire toward a force. See,
54:52
the only good argument is this.
54:54
Basically, if I have to make
54:56
the argument against Andy Biggs, I'd say this.
54:59
Mc Kevin McCarthy the problem is
55:01
not Kevin McCarthy per se. The
55:04
problem is the Republican conference.
55:06
He's merely
55:08
a reflection of the Republican conference, we only have
55:10
a few dozen conservatives. I'd I've
55:12
noted this. I noted this in December.
55:15
Before we broke for the year, there is
55:18
actually a much larger caucus
55:20
called the they used to be called a Tuesday
55:22
group. They called themselves the
55:24
governing group. They don't govern
55:26
anything other than govern in accordance with
55:28
Democrat principles, but they're
55:29
larger, meaning the group that's to
55:32
the left of the establishment is larger than the group to the
55:34
right. So it's a
55:36
reflection of the Republican conference. And if
55:38
you have
55:40
a fight, you might risk getting a phony
55:42
conservative like Skalise or Jim
55:44
Banks. Yes. Jim Banks is a
55:46
phony conservative. But
55:49
that in itself is an indictment of their position. That
55:51
shows how broken the party
55:53
is that they
55:56
have been obsequiously, genie inflecting in front of for
55:58
years and promoting rather than
56:00
joining me and trying to do
56:02
surgery with leadership
56:04
elections with primaries and all this stuff
56:07
enforcing policy fights. It's
56:10
always but
56:12
the democrats. So yeah, we're at
56:14
a position where these members are isolated.
56:16
No one supports them. You're right. They don't.
56:18
Because we are the terrinos.
56:22
It it demonstrates that the GOP is
56:24
a stage five cancer.
56:26
Meaning, what's important to
56:30
note? Is it's not just the members of Congress
56:32
at the fringe.
56:35
The in
56:38
d plus two districts.
56:40
You have Mike Rogers from
56:42
Alabama. He's saying we need to
56:44
kick all these guys off committees. He
56:48
represents one of the top five
56:50
conservative bishops in the country. He's a
56:52
leftist, and guess
56:52
what? He is the chairman of
56:55
the armed services committee. All
56:58
the
56:58
super A and A committee chairman
57:01
have failing Liberty
57:04
scores. That's your
57:05
GOP house for you. So
57:07
yeah,
57:08
they might fail in their
57:10
endeavor, but it's only because the
57:13
entire house and the it is
57:15
garbage in the house GOP
57:18
is more conservative than the senate
57:20
GOP. But it's all relative.
57:22
People think, oh, the senate Republicans are
57:24
the problem. Yeah. For the last twenty years, people like myself have been trying to
57:26
deal with that and no one else was. So now the
57:28
hell of a sentence is
57:30
the problem. Yeah. The is
57:32
like, okay, instead of the, you know,
57:34
three conservatives in the senate, so
57:36
maybe you'll have a few
57:38
dozen in the house. But it's
57:41
only a small portion. Small percentage. Remember
57:44
folks that when
57:48
they had that private conference vote to get rid of
57:52
earmarks, that's a small
57:54
potatoes thing.
57:56
That's so consensus that even the Baylor Congress
57:58
already did
57:59
that. Meaning, this wasn't anything novel. It
58:01
was merely reinstating what Pelosi
58:03
got rid of. From
58:06
twenty ten to twenty, what is it?
58:08
Twenty sixteen, they were operating under
58:10
an earmarked band. Only
58:12
fifty two Republicans supported
58:15
it. That's less than quarter. So yeah,
58:18
I guess we are
58:21
the true rhinos. And
58:24
speaking of true rhinos, I wanna
58:26
just end today with
58:30
one
58:31
story. The fact that we
58:33
are so behind the apol,
58:35
two years behind, on
58:38
having a party leadership, giving
58:40
voice to vaccine injured. So
58:44
obviously, the big story one of
58:46
the big new new stories of the day
58:50
is the
58:52
terrible incident
58:54
during the Bengal's Buffalo Bills game when
58:58
Bill Safety Demar Hamlin just
59:00
collapsed on
59:02
the field. No one ever saw
59:04
anything like it. Just had a heart attack on the
59:06
field. And, you know,
59:08
people are out there obviously saying this vaccine
59:10
injured. And then other people are
59:12
like, How dare you say that? How dare you
59:14
say that? But everyone's missing
59:16
the point. It's not about
59:20
Hamlin. I I've said before, I don't like, you know,
59:22
people ask me, do you think this guy died of the
59:24
vaccine or got injured from the vaccine? Like,
59:26
I can't unless
59:28
I have kind of
59:30
specific information, you can't
59:32
really wager definitively about
59:34
that. And I don't like speculating especially
59:36
when you have an individual whose name is
59:38
known His life hangs in the balance, his family
59:40
cares about him. I don't wanna make that the issue. But
59:43
the broader issue is All
59:47
these people are like, how dare you say
59:49
that? There's no problems. All these counting
59:51
people, by the way. I
59:53
can't say anything about Hamlin, but what
59:55
I can say is We
59:58
have one thousand six hundred sixteen
1:00:00
athlete cardiac arrest, eleven
1:00:04
fourteen of them having
1:00:06
been fatal, since the vaccines came
1:00:08
out. Put another way
1:00:10
from nineteen sixty six
1:00:13
to two thousand four There
1:00:15
were two point four athlete cardiac
1:00:18
deaths per month. Since
1:00:20
twenty twenty one, there's forty
1:00:23
six point four. And again, that's together with all the surveys.
1:00:25
You know, Rasmussen has a survey at thirty
1:00:28
three percent of Democrat voters
1:00:30
say they know someone who died from
1:00:32
the vaccine. How do you deny
1:00:34
that? And then there's
1:00:36
the other story that no one's talking
1:00:38
about, another
1:00:40
NFL story. Now he's a former player
1:00:43
and it wasn't on the
1:00:45
field. But we're seeing all of
1:00:47
these it's not when they're not on the field,
1:00:49
it's not so much. Oh, you
1:00:52
know, high adrenaline caused
1:00:54
triggered the myocarditis or something
1:00:56
like that. It's more just it's
1:00:59
a known defined universe of people, you know, because to say the
1:01:01
whole universe, so there's a lot of people dying young.
1:01:04
Well, it's hard to kind of quantify that.
1:01:06
But have you ever seen in so
1:01:08
many sports players were
1:01:10
seeing in their twenties, thirties, and
1:01:12
forties, current former even
1:01:14
off the field just dying. So
1:01:16
in the same day you have former Jacksonville
1:01:18
Jaguars player, And
1:01:20
I apologize. I haven't followed NFL in
1:01:22
a while, so I don't even know how to pronounce his
1:01:25
name. Oh, when Nora, I don't
1:01:27
even know how to pronounce it. Sorry,
1:01:29
UCHENWANERI
1:01:33
rest in peace, but he died in
1:01:35
his home suddenly. Suddenly cardiac
1:01:38
arrest according to the tip of the tip of the new county
1:01:40
coroner. He was thirty eight.
1:01:42
He drove up from Georgia.
1:01:46
Was at his wife's home and just collapsed.
1:01:48
And the the problem
1:01:50
is it's not any
1:01:52
one. It's tons of these. And
1:01:55
it's also important to note that
1:01:57
every last person who died of COVID,
1:01:59
they said he's unvaccinated. He
1:02:02
died without the vaccine and they danced on the
1:02:04
person's grave. Now we're
1:02:06
not here to dance on people's grave
1:02:08
and blame them for getting it. We're
1:02:10
we're we're saying from a public policy standpoint,
1:02:12
they have to take these things off
1:02:14
the market. But mind you, they selected people that
1:02:17
didn't get the shot. Meanwhile, tons of
1:02:19
people got the shot died
1:02:21
of COVID, and the ones
1:02:23
who didn't have the shot died of COVID, they died from a
1:02:25
lack of treatment, they died from gain of function
1:02:27
research, they died from bio terrorism,
1:02:30
wasn't their
1:02:32
fault. But
1:02:32
I do have to point out that amidst
1:02:35
everything they're telling us, that
1:02:39
this no one one jury
1:02:42
guy, he did tweet out
1:02:44
on September first twenty twenty
1:02:45
one, long after anyone should have known
1:02:48
these problems, not just he was
1:02:50
supportive of the vaccine.
1:02:52
K? This is dug up on his Twitter,
1:02:54
and it does appear to be
1:02:56
authentic. This appears to be from his
1:02:59
account. Okay. So let's get these vaccine
1:03:01
mandates and vaccine passports up and
1:03:03
running ASAP. We seeing children die
1:03:05
daily from the unvaccinated selfishness,
1:03:07
whatever that could even mean. Pregnant
1:03:09
women at risk to protect life,
1:03:11
mandate the vaccine, jail anyone
1:03:13
who refuses to protect life.
1:03:16
So I do have to point
1:03:18
that
1:03:18
out. So that that's the bigger story.
1:03:20
And also, while while you
1:03:22
can never say definitively on an
1:03:25
individual, we don't even know this
1:03:28
guy clearly was vaccinated. But back to Hamlin, there's
1:03:30
no information into the presumption was he
1:03:32
was vaccinated because most
1:03:33
players, you know, couldn't get out
1:03:35
of the mandate. But we we
1:03:37
don't know. I don't know the
1:03:40
details. So I'm not my
1:03:42
point is not himlin. My point
1:03:44
is broadly what we're seeing in the
1:03:46
macro data. That you can't deny, and mechanism of
1:03:48
action cannot be denied. So all
1:03:50
these con ink types like Eric Ericsson
1:03:52
who's like,
1:03:54
How dare you say that? Okay. Fine. Forget put
1:03:56
a handling on the shelf. But what about v
1:03:58
safe? There's what you don't have a problem
1:04:00
with that. All of it. And
1:04:04
also, what does bother
1:04:06
me is, again, I don't like to say
1:04:08
without evidence that this guy a hundred percent died
1:04:10
of the vaccine. I can't say that.
1:04:13
But the ones that do the opposite. Oh, you know what? It was because
1:04:15
he was hitting the chest. When he he got
1:04:17
up, we've seen fifty times
1:04:20
worse. And in the history of
1:04:22
the NFL, we've never seen that
1:04:24
to go into cardiac arrest. You could say
1:04:26
theoretically it is possible you get hit in the chest
1:04:28
and you could feiorate it, maybe maybe not.
1:04:30
I don't know the medicine and science behind
1:04:34
that, but they're grooming people
1:04:36
to think this is normal. It is
1:04:38
not normal. Now, you could have a
1:04:40
once in seventy year event that happened to happen
1:04:42
then. Maybe. Can't
1:04:44
disprove that. But the
1:04:46
notion that nothing to see to even
1:04:48
speculate. In other words, I don't think it's right to definitively say when
1:04:51
the guy's hanging in life is
1:04:53
hanging in the balance, I'm not gonna sit
1:04:55
and and dump on that. We
1:04:57
don't know for sure, but it's also not right to
1:05:00
dismiss the concerns
1:05:02
that,
1:05:03
whoa, wait a minute. We have
1:05:05
sixteen eleven other people that that's happened
1:05:07
to, and we've never seen this in
1:05:09
the NFL like that. And
1:05:12
the mechanism of action makes sense, and the autopsy
1:05:14
study showed this, the
1:05:18
FDA's own
1:05:20
data They said subclinical Myocarditis is sixty
1:05:22
times greater than even
1:05:25
the clinical level. Pfizer was
1:05:27
supposed to have a study out by the end of the year
1:05:29
on subclinical myocarditis, never published.
1:05:32
FDA doesn't
1:05:34
care. So the intrigue should be there. It
1:05:36
is a legitimate point to raise.
1:05:38
I wouldn't definitively say conclusively it
1:05:40
has had to have been from that.
1:05:44
But in conjunction with everything else we're seeing,
1:05:47
this is the difference. It's not
1:05:49
like,
1:05:49
oh, we're just, you know, conspiracy
1:05:51
theory out of the out
1:05:54
of the blue, it jives with everything
1:05:56
else we're seeing. So if it's not him,
1:05:58
it certainly is something you have
1:06:00
to suspect. And at some point, What
1:06:03
they're trying to do is groom the public to
1:06:06
think it's normal for young
1:06:08
people to
1:06:10
die this you know,
1:06:12
universally, this widespread
1:06:14
from sudden heart attacks
1:06:17
that's not true. That is not
1:06:19
normal. Like, oh, yeah, we got it all. It
1:06:21
makes perfect sense why Hamlin
1:06:24
dropped. No,
1:06:26
it doesn't. So, both
1:06:28
things are true at the same time, but the point
1:06:32
is, how are we two years
1:06:34
behind on this? The same way we're
1:06:36
gonna be two years behind on Ukraine, the
1:06:38
same reason why we're behind on
1:06:40
jailbreaking criminal justice reform and the
1:06:42
border and everything and
1:06:44
global warming. And even then there's still, as I noted, Republicans still buy
1:06:46
into it to some extent. The same reason
1:06:48
we're ten years, four, fourteen years behind on
1:06:50
Mitch McConnell.
1:06:52
Con Inc. Is constantly too little,
1:06:54
too late, a day late, a dollar
1:06:56
short. Here at CR Podcast, we're
1:06:58
always skating to where the puck headed.
1:07:02
Always the leading edge. It is so good to be
1:07:04
back. Send me your comments, questions,
1:07:06
concerns. Daniel Harwood's at start mail
1:07:09
dot com. on Twitter at r m conservative. I'm
1:07:11
gonna be very much on fire. My
1:07:13
comms will be at the blazer conservative
1:07:15
reviews to check
1:07:18
both because a lot of putting a
1:07:20
lot of the COVID stuff at conservative review,
1:07:22
the other stuff at the blaze.
1:07:25
Look, let me know your comments what you wanna cover, but we're
1:07:28
gonna start having guests on as
1:07:30
well. Tons of issues to
1:07:32
catch up
1:07:34
on Make this your one stop shop. Please sign up.
1:07:36
Give us a five star rating on iTunes
1:07:38
if you can with a comment.
1:07:41
It helps us rise above the
1:07:43
ranker of these superficial
1:07:46
idiots. You know, a lot of them are
1:07:48
like, I'm give me, there's nothing
1:07:50
policy related to this. Why are you
1:07:52
gonna comment? Don't lecture me
1:07:54
on policy. I
1:07:56
have out today the most comprehensive policy
1:07:58
list on medical freedom, and we're gonna
1:08:01
do so on on every other
1:08:03
important issue as well. So
1:08:05
we got that cover as well. You could
1:08:07
find that column as well at
1:08:09
conservative review. Make sure to pass around
1:08:11
to your legislators. As the checklist will will get more
1:08:13
into the state issues as the speaker's race dies down as
1:08:16
well until
1:08:17
tomorrow. God bless
1:08:20
you all. And thank
1:08:23
you for listening.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More