Episode Transcript
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0:13
I fly family, you know what time it is.
0:15
I'm flying solo the day so I hope them
0:18
up to the occasion. This is our chance to
0:20
build a to look at the current news cycle
0:22
which is wacko crazy and dog. With.
0:24
More elements in it than ever before
0:26
that are very interesting. And you gotta
0:28
break down the thing behind the thing.
0:30
A person's doing this. But why are
0:32
they doing that? Why are they pushing
0:34
this legit? Were they going that direction
0:36
that the stuff you get when you
0:39
look at news through the eyes of
0:41
a professional news producer? She's former Fox
0:43
News left them because she said, you
0:45
know what, I'm not going to take
0:47
your forced mandate I can wrap blaze
0:49
my own trail. She's been approved with
0:51
Newsmax Major League Baseball. I'm kind of
0:53
you'd you. Name it and Done
0:55
is incredible stub sub stack and
0:57
credible show of her own and.
1:00
It's a great way to be able to get
1:02
poke at the news cycle and cause the not
1:04
just the thing they're telling you about. Why are
1:07
they telling you that? What's the next move of
1:09
the host? The Brown Morello Show The one only
1:11
Brown Umbrella. Maybe
1:16
it's not easy doing this on your own,
1:18
but you're crushing at So Congratulations. So so
1:20
far so good. I'd say what you know we
1:22
go through your twitter feed and where it can
1:25
examine all this stuff and so it's always kind
1:27
of like fresh to the minute news. And I
1:29
love your show because you know we can. A
1:31
flight maybe fifty thousand feet look more like culture
1:33
current events you know what that but you're kind
1:36
of down in the muck. In
1:38
in the Nitty Gritty like interviewing people
1:40
from In Obe, Jim Jordan, to lawmakers
1:42
to to newsmakers all the way round
1:45
every single day. And.
1:47
And.in. You. Know
1:49
you're in there wrestling wrestling with the pigs you
1:51
know and and put in the news hour and
1:53
A were so thankful for what you're doing because
1:55
you're the build is A, Know what? I can
1:57
buy my own microphone and I can do these
1:59
myself. I don't need the Fox
2:01
News machine behind me. And I tell
2:04
you what, truth, and
2:06
your ability to break that apart and look at the things
2:08
has just increased in value because
2:10
it's become so rare. If diamonds washed up on
2:12
the beach, they'd be as cheap as sand. Anytime
2:14
something's rare, it becomes more valuable. And your ability
2:17
to break down stories is
2:19
really the best there is on Rumble or any
2:21
platform out there. Thank you. Thank
2:23
you. I appreciate it. Yeah, it's
2:25
not easy. There's a lot going through, especially nowadays
2:27
with the talks about just the news cycle. It
2:29
seems to be switching every couple hours. And so
2:32
it writes itself, but it's interesting at least.
2:35
I encourage, you know, fly for family, go to brownandbarilla.com.
2:37
There's also a way that you can support her
2:40
because you're doing that with Fox and other places
2:42
if you don't know it. Like they're brought
2:44
to you by Pfizer, brought to you by all the people that
2:46
they're kind of trying to supposed to be, you
2:50
know, independent journalists of. And if you like
2:52
the kind of reporting that she's doing, you
2:54
can go there and support her, you know,
2:57
$5 a month, $7 a month, $20 a month, or
2:59
just a one-time donation. But
3:02
the work that she does going to
3:05
DC, going to Rumble headquarters, having these
3:07
kind of conversations, she went to Dallas
3:10
to follow a case. She's doing this all
3:12
on her own and remains the kind of
3:14
autonomy that allows this to be possible. So
3:16
if you want to get behind that way,
3:18
you can do it. Go to supportbree.com,
3:20
supportbree.com, and encourage you
3:23
to go to brownandbarilla.com
3:25
that's how you can get a launching
3:27
pad into her sub-stack or Rumble channel.
3:30
But her Twitter following has been huge
3:32
because you've been building that the whole
3:34
time when you were working, you know,
3:36
for the machine. And then when
3:38
you stepped out, you
3:41
just said, hey, you know, what, the gloves are off and
3:43
I'm going to tell my stories. And the
3:45
first one to jump in here is the news
3:47
cycle has shifted. The media and our politicians want
3:49
us to focus on these
3:51
pro-Hamas college protests. What
3:54
are they trying to redirect you from looking
3:56
at? And that's an interesting question that I
3:58
don't hear anybody else ask. What do you
4:00
mean by that? And when you
4:02
see these protests on campuses, what are you
4:05
seeing that we're not seeing? Yeah,
4:07
well, we're heading into an election year. Four years
4:09
ago, we had the summer of love, and we
4:12
saw how politicians were able to manipulate the media
4:14
and have the media manipulate the American people into
4:17
creating chaos in our society, and they were
4:19
doing so, and everyone was getting super emotional
4:21
about it. And so I
4:23
think we need to remember that four years ago,
4:25
that was happening, and yet again, it's happening as
4:28
we're looking to head towards November. So I
4:30
think a lot of people need to be on high
4:32
alert for just emotional stories that are kind of getting
4:34
people involved and getting them out there on
4:36
the streets. Now, ultimately, these pro-Hamas
4:39
protesters who are going nuts in
4:41
these college campuses, I
4:43
am not bothered by it as much, and here's why.
4:45
Number one, they do have a right to protest. Now,
4:48
hear me out. I understand that a lot of people are saying
4:50
that they don't have a right to be there if it's private
4:52
property, and the school doesn't, they weren't licensed to have a protest
4:54
that can't be there. But these colleges,
4:56
these universities, they raise these machines. These
4:59
kids, who they've manipulated their minds into
5:01
thinking just this, this is their fault.
5:03
So they need to figure out and dig their way out of
5:06
it, instead of using law enforcement, state resources, county
5:08
resources. They have their own police
5:10
department. Let them handle it. I'm
5:13
so tired of seeing other members of other
5:15
law enforcement agencies get dragged into this, because
5:17
we all know in New York, for an
5:19
example, Attorney General Tish James actually went after
5:21
the NYPD after the Summer of Love and
5:23
sided with the protesters and actually forced the
5:25
NYPD to give over a settlement, when in
5:28
fact, they shouldn't have had to do that
5:30
at all. There shouldn't have been
5:32
the violence that took place at all. And
5:34
for some reason, still our top attorney in
5:36
the state sided with
5:38
the violent protesters. So I
5:40
don't want to open up law enforcement to any more liabilities
5:43
when they have to. So that's
5:45
another angle of all of it. But also
5:47
remember this weekend, and they specifically waited to
5:49
this weekend, or last weekend, I should say,
5:51
to push forward foreign aid funding, over $95
5:54
billion worth of it. Of
5:57
course, more than half of it goes to Ukraine. Then
6:00
the rest goes to Taiwan and it goes
6:02
to Israel and then they're giving it to
6:04
NGOs as well I believe it's 3.5 billion
6:06
is going to NGOs to keep bringing more
6:08
illegal into our country And so what
6:11
I mean by that is speaker Mike Johnson
6:13
has a black eye that's nothing for conservatives
6:15
It does nothing for Republicans. It was him
6:18
just pretty much falling to his knees and just say, okay
6:20
Whatever you guys want to do for you And
6:23
I think people need to realize that yesterday
6:25
he was actually at Columbia University Speaking
6:28
about the protests and then was doing
6:30
immediate tour And so what that
6:32
does is it doesn't have people asking questions about
6:34
the foreign age funding anymore The media is no
6:36
longer asking about now They're focused on what he's
6:38
telling him to focus on and that's the Columbia
6:40
protest And so I think people need to
6:42
kind of just look at it from that angle This
6:44
is being used to kind of deflect the attention from
6:46
what he's been doing these last couple of weeks Even
6:48
waving your fourth amendment rights. I think people need to
6:51
pay attention to that. Let's frame it like
6:53
that then so As
6:55
a magician, you know You'd be like get to somebody
6:57
distracted with this hand and then they don't see what
6:59
they're doing with this hand So that's that's kind of
7:02
how you're framing it like okay, this
7:04
is happening But
7:06
it's meant to be a distraction from
7:08
the bigger thing that's happening It's like,
7:10
you know throwing a rock over there
7:12
and then attacking over here. It's like
7:14
distracting somebody But let's stick just with
7:17
the Hamas protesting alone What
7:19
is your stance and there's a lot of
7:21
controversy in the comments of your tweets on
7:23
this of like, okay, then They're
7:26
calling for the genocide of a people group You
7:29
know, so is that fine, you know, why where
7:31
do we let how do you look at a
7:33
college campus? you look at it being like its
7:35
own independent little country that should be run by
7:37
the administration and Whatever happens
7:39
there they they make their bed They
7:41
sleep in it, you know and just kind of let them
7:43
suffer the repercussions you look at at Columbia University We're showing
7:46
clips of it there a second ago, and I think they've
7:48
now canceled all Physical classes they've
7:50
gone virtual for the rest of the year We had a
7:52
parenting philosophy when our kids were growing up and it was
7:54
like simply I'm gonna give you opportunity to control yourself When
7:57
we go into a store and we ride in the car if you
7:59
can't control yourself then we will. So if our kids
8:01
couldn't control their hands, then their hands were in time
8:04
out. Or their hands were in their pockets when they
8:06
were in the store. Everything scales
8:09
down until eventually, like, if I can't control how
8:11
I drive, please are going to pull me over.
8:14
If you can't control yourself, someone else does. So
8:17
you just think each campus should be treated
8:20
with autonomy and let their own policies create
8:22
the fruit of those decisions? Yeah.
8:25
So first off, I don't agree with what they're saying.
8:27
And I do want to emphasize that. And I've always
8:29
been very clear about that, that I don't agree with
8:31
these pro-Hamas. That's also why I refer to this pro-Hamas
8:33
rather than pro-Palestine, because that's what they want to be
8:35
referred as to. But they're not, they're siding with terrorists.
8:38
That's the first thing that needs to be driven home
8:40
over there. And I think a lot of people get
8:42
very emotional about it. And in some cases, rightfully so.
8:44
But the reality of it
8:46
is, is these schools need to be held accountable,
8:48
right? These schools need to go after these students
8:50
who are saying, making comments
8:52
referring to genocide. And we've
8:54
seen it before. They're using like Malcolm X terms to,
8:57
by whatever means necessary. And that is unacceptable. But the
8:59
schools should be getting rid of these students, right? They
9:01
should be, they should be forced out of the school
9:03
for doing that. The school doesn't want
9:05
to get involved. The school is just sitting here
9:07
and playing down the middle and doesn't want any
9:09
involvement in any of this. And that's not acceptable.
9:11
So there's different avenues you could go through about
9:13
that. I would definitely tell students that, number one,
9:15
if my school was allowing that stuff to happen,
9:18
I would leave. I've spoken to people who have gone to Columbia,
9:20
NYU and other schools that are going through this
9:22
right now. And they just pull their donations from them. And
9:25
the money speaks volumes. And so eventually the school's going
9:27
to have to answer when everyone's are taking their money.
9:29
But I guess the
9:31
point I want to drive home here
9:34
is we now live in a
9:36
society where the government gets to decide, if they think
9:38
they get to decide what is
9:40
dangerous free speech and what isn't. And I
9:42
think that's kind of the line where I'm
9:44
just getting like, I don't want to touch
9:46
it because I personally believe what
9:48
they're saying is wrong. Yes. But
9:51
if you ask somebody else from their perspective on it,
9:53
they'll tell you that it's not wrong. Right. So we're
9:55
seeing that play out right now in our government where
9:57
they're saying, well, what happened on January 6th? What was
9:59
said? What was done that day was wrong
10:01
because the other people don't agree with you And
10:04
so I would say that it's really
10:06
really hard to kind of dictate and play
10:08
it down the middle on that stuff and
10:10
I For one wouldn't
10:12
want to be the person doing so but I
10:14
think we need to start educating younger people I
10:16
think that they've been completely brainwashed by the schools.
10:19
They have no idea what they're arguing You know, there was a tweet
10:21
that I also posted of a young student who was yeah,
10:23
we're gonna play that clip Luke
10:27
Radowski retweeted it. You said the perfect
10:29
political prop Ignorant liberal
10:31
white and female and
10:33
let's just play that clip and then let's get your comment on that
10:35
because this is kind of what's growing Okay,
11:15
so she doesn't know exactly why she's there
11:17
but they've preached this ideology that that there's
11:19
a oppressors and the
11:21
oppressed and I think I think
11:23
in a lot of their minds like Israel's a
11:25
thriving nation doing well economically they
11:27
have a functioning
11:30
society and then you've got
11:33
these Hamas terrorists that are it's the
11:35
political party basically of The
11:37
opposition and they're not doing as well. These
11:40
people are you know, it's so
11:42
no matter what happens in this conflict I
11:44
think it seemed to that lens of oppressor
11:46
oppressed, you know, and so I think they're
11:48
just kind of like well because if you went down the agenda
11:50
of Hamas's demands
11:53
they wouldn't probably sign with their position on gays they
11:55
wouldn't you know be on board with their position on
11:57
any of these issues if there's a TikTok
12:00
kind of video going around where there's a kid
12:02
saying, hey, will you sign this petition that's pro-Hamas?
12:05
And people are like, absolutely. And they're like, well,
12:07
before you sign it for legalities, I need you
12:09
to check off on each of the positions.
12:12
And they're like, I don't
12:14
agree with that. I don't agree with this.
12:16
I don't agree with that. So when
12:18
they look at the actual
12:20
policies of what is happening, they're
12:23
taken aback. But they
12:25
want to enrage and be involved in these
12:27
protests. So it's going from Columbia University down
12:30
to NYU. It's
12:32
growing in energy with
12:34
all of that. So where does this go to,
12:36
and where do you draw the line of saying
12:39
that's a problem, or it's not a problem? Or is
12:41
there anything that they're doing as long as they're not
12:43
harming others and stopping? What is your
12:45
position on that? What advice would you give
12:47
to this young gal? Yeah, I
12:50
think they're not educated. I think that's the core
12:52
issue here. You're talking about Ivy League schools, and
12:54
these kids are paying thousands and thousands of dollars
12:56
to go to school. I have no idea about
12:58
any of these issues. Listen, Hamas is a terrorist
13:00
organization. What they did to Israel was disgusting. It
13:02
was deplorable. It was something that needs to be
13:04
met with war. I mean, there's no other way
13:06
to do it. That was
13:08
they crossed the line, and everyone needs to understand that.
13:10
And they're calling for a ceasefire, but there was a
13:12
ceasefire prior to October 7, and
13:14
yet they didn't respect it. So this is what happens
13:17
when you do something that egregious. So
13:19
that's that for sure. I
13:21
think that these college students aren't educated. And I
13:23
think it highlights just that. They don't understand what's
13:25
going on right now, and they're being used. So
13:28
I would want to know, number one, who's funding
13:30
these protests? Because they have all these nice tents.
13:33
They're all plopping up onto the grass. Who's
13:35
paying for that? I know it's not college students who aren't
13:37
paying for that. So who's paying for
13:39
that? Who's organizing, setting that message for her to
13:41
go to NYU to help support the NYU students?
13:44
I think that's important. That should have been a good
13:46
follow-up question for this young woman, because I want to
13:48
know who's doing these things. I'm
13:51
more interested in what's going on behind the
13:53
scenes in all of this and why it's
13:55
so well-orchestrated, because again, this could be just
13:57
used to kind of pull at our attention.
14:00
attention to another story instead of looking at what's
14:02
going on. The news cycle
14:04
this week was crazy mainly because, and we'll probably
14:06
talk about this soon, but with President Donald Trump,
14:08
there was redacted documents that were
14:10
now unredacted documents thanks to Judge
14:13
Cannon, and it pretty much highlights
14:15
the coordinated effort between the Biden
14:17
administration to go after President
14:19
Trump. And it does highlight just that. And
14:22
so I think they don't want you paying attention to that. They don't
14:24
want you seeing that. And so that's why they're doing that. And then
14:26
you also have the prosecution that's now going to go be
14:29
taking place in Arizona. So there's a lot
14:31
of things that they're diverting your attention from.
14:34
So I think that has to do with who's behind these protests.
14:37
I don't think that it's a good
14:39
thing for college students to be siding
14:41
with Hamas, but maybe we should be
14:43
doing study abroad programs. Maybe we should
14:45
be sending these students to Gaza and
14:47
see what they like over there for
14:49
themselves. I mean, listen, I strongly
14:52
do not side with Hamas.
14:54
I know that if we were to give
14:56
them, let's say, some of their gods
14:59
or some of their citizens, refugee status here in
15:01
the US, they would want to kill us. They
15:04
are not people that we can associate with.
15:06
And that's just the reality of it. They
15:08
are brainwashed, sadly. So I think these
15:10
college students don't know that, and they think that they're doing
15:12
something for the greater good. But they're not.
15:14
They don't realize that. So I think they need to be put
15:16
in a position where they have to realize that. Will
15:19
the colleges bear the brunt of
15:21
this? Because for years, a
15:24
conservative speaker on a college campus has not been
15:26
deemed a safe place. It's not been deemed a
15:28
safe place for a comedian to go to a
15:30
college campus. Even like a
15:32
Bill Maurer, who's as left as you can
15:34
get on most every issue, says, I no
15:36
longer even go to college campuses because I'm
15:39
going to be shouted down, protested if I
15:41
don't say everything that these kids agree with.
15:44
It's hard to be funny. Hard to do comedy when
15:47
you're just an SNL
15:49
formula playing to one particular party.
15:51
Comedy is kind of eliminated. So
15:53
they've banned conservative speakers from campuses
15:56
for the most part and then
15:58
promoted no. terrorists
16:00
to come on to colleges and speak. They've
16:03
sort of created this culture,
16:07
but will they, you
16:10
know, could the marketplace determine this
16:12
is kind of what you're saying? It should work
16:14
itself out and then they just get defunded and
16:16
become so wacko that people look at them as
16:19
being just a
16:21
big daycare camp for teenagers.
16:25
Yeah. I mean, Kathy Hochul, the governor
16:27
of New York actually went and spoke with the
16:29
president of Columbia and she said that she did
16:31
criticize her for not doing enough. And so that's
16:33
a Democrat saying that. So hopefully that works out.
16:35
Now what should happen on the back end and
16:37
all this is they should lose funding. And
16:39
if you're a parent who's sending your child to Columbia, you should
16:41
pull it out. Those universities, those
16:43
colleges, their degrees honestly do not have
16:46
value anymore. They used to be highly
16:48
respected. I know when I went
16:50
to college and it wasn't that long ago when
16:52
somebody in our high school was going off to
16:54
an Ivy league school, I was jealous because I thought, wow,
16:56
this person is going to have a great head start in
16:58
life. And it's the opposite. And so I
17:00
think people need to realize what you're actually doing and start
17:02
pulling your money out of these institutions. Because
17:05
you think from a corporation, if you're going to hire
17:07
somebody that came out of Columbia out of NYU, out
17:09
of one of these schools, you're like, oh my gosh,
17:11
we're getting a nightmare. What
17:14
kind of a person are we getting? I want to go
17:16
to your next week because we could spend all day on
17:19
that topic and you know, you've got Jewish professors being locked
17:21
out of colleges. It's a crazy time and
17:23
it is a fair thing. If
17:25
somebody is a free speech absolutist, you
17:27
know, where do you land on that? And
17:29
I do think that needs to be
17:31
looked at closely. All right. Ukraine is
17:33
losing this war. Thousands more will be
17:35
slaughtered. Billions more will go towards funding
17:38
the war machine. In the end, America
17:40
will suffer its greatest loss. I
17:42
think one of the saddest moments in history when I saw the
17:44
House floor, over half of the
17:48
residents of our elected officials are waving Ukrainian
17:50
flags in there. The
17:57
video speaks for itself. You listen to this on audio only. seen
18:00
this go around, but literally the House
18:02
of Representatives looks like it would have
18:04
been from a foreign nation.
18:09
What's next? What's next for our country when
18:11
those are our elected officials and they seem
18:13
to care much more about creating
18:16
wars in foreign countries than they do about
18:18
taking care of their own citizens? Yeah,
18:21
I don't know if they're just ignorant or if they're all just
18:23
corrupt at this point, honestly. They're
18:26
funding the war machine and they're going to continue to fund it.
18:28
Probably Ukraine is going to lose this war. We
18:31
hear all these politicians saying, this isn't just a
18:33
giveaway, this is a loan. What
18:35
happens when countries lose wars, especially ones over
18:37
territories like this and it's going to happen?
18:40
Ukraine might not be a country and that's just
18:43
the reality. You can't sit there and say we're giving them a loan, but
18:45
you might never get that loan back. That's
18:48
just the reality right now that we all have to deal
18:50
with. It's not just we're
18:52
giving them a loan. We're getting loans ourselves.
18:54
We can't even fund our own government. We
18:56
can't even single-handedly fund our own government. We're
18:58
running deficits every year, as you know, obviously,
19:00
David, you're very well in the economic situation
19:02
right now in our country. I
19:05
would say that this is just heartbreaking to see
19:07
because, again, we could end all this. I
19:09
think Russia and Ukraine would come to the table and decide
19:11
because at this point, Ukraine is not
19:13
keeping its entire country. It's going to lose territory.
19:16
At this point, it's a matter of how much?
19:19
They're losing and they're going
19:21
to lose. The Russian
19:23
military is now 15% bigger than it
19:25
was the day they invaded Ukraine and they're
19:28
more equipped and well-funded. Even
19:30
if you just look at the breakdowns of
19:32
the amount of rounds of ammo that they
19:34
make per day compared to the
19:37
NATO-aligned nations, it's not even close. It's
19:39
like 1,000 to 1. They are equipped
19:42
to stay in this and be successful. It
19:46
seems to be just funny. The nuclear
19:48
threats, too, between Poland and the
19:51
Russian border is getting increasingly intense.
19:55
It seems like we're just egging them on, egging them on, egging
19:57
them on until eventually this thing is going to become kinetic on
19:59
a much larger scale. Yeah. And
20:02
we can't sit here and keep saying that we're not involved in
20:04
the war while we continue to fund it by billions and billions
20:07
of dollars. We are involved
20:09
in this war. And I think, you know,
20:11
all of these globalists and all these people
20:13
just right now, the folks you saw just
20:15
waving their flags, right? They think that it's
20:17
okay to sacrifice Ukrainian lives because in the
20:19
long run, we're just weakening the Russian army
20:21
is how they kind of view it. Not working. They're
20:23
going to lose life. And it's not working. It's
20:25
not working at all. And honestly, that's a heartbreaking,
20:28
disgusting way to even think in the first place
20:30
because I don't think the Russian
20:32
people are bad people. I think they have a bad
20:35
leader. And I can
20:37
only imagine what people think of us because we
20:39
have bad leaders too. So I just, my heart
20:41
breaks for all of them because, you know, they're
20:43
being forced to go and die in these wars.
20:45
These young men are being forced to die for
20:47
their country in wars that are just completely preventable.
20:50
They're just territory wars. There's nothing to this. And
20:52
so it's heartbreaking that we continue to fuel this
20:54
because I just don't, I don't think we have to at all.
20:56
There's a reason why our show is not called the
20:59
Flyber Republicans. It's
21:01
Flyber conservatives specifically because we don't
21:03
necessarily, if you
21:05
watch this show very long, we hold
21:08
Christians and Republicans accountable probably more than anything
21:10
that we focus on and call out those
21:12
double standards. And I want people
21:14
to know exactly where you align politically. You got a
21:16
tweet that breaks it down pretty simple. I think this
21:19
is pretty good ideology. You say, I don't align any
21:21
political party. My political beliefs are simple though. Okay.
21:24
Here it is. I'm not going to
21:26
talk or something coming behind this, but I
21:28
believe in prioritizing Americans, keeping Americans safe, limiting
21:31
government, defending the constitution
21:33
and eliminating pedophiles. I
21:36
don't know who's going to push back on that. Probably
21:38
people are against America and a pro pedophilia. Those
21:41
beliefs are now viewed as radical. Maybe
21:44
we're onto something. All right. That's
21:46
pretty good. A wrap up of people want to
21:48
know, well then Brianna, you're not for this. You're
21:50
against this. And where do you stand? I
21:52
think you make it pretty clear where you stand that I think most
21:54
Americans probably on the left and the right. Probably
21:56
if you sat them down one on one, they probably would agree
21:58
with that statement. Yeah,
22:00
I mean, I'd hope they would. I mean, listen,
22:02
I just want to see America thrive. And we're
22:04
not thriving right now. And there's a lot of
22:06
changes that need to be made because of it.
22:08
We're not going to have, you know, we can't
22:10
just sit here and keep importing migrants from other
22:12
countries and have, you know, we're literally
22:15
importing more migrants than we are creating American life.
22:17
And so I think we have a massive issue on
22:19
our hands right now. And people just don't understand it.
22:22
I used to, you know, I went from believing that I
22:25
was a Democrat to a Republican to a conservative. To now
22:27
I'm just saying I'm done with all of you. And this
22:29
is my, this is what my moral compass is. And you
22:31
either fall in line with it or you don't. And that's where
22:33
I'm going to fall on all my beliefs. So
22:36
as of right now, I mean,
22:38
I used to be super enthusiastic about
22:40
a lot of Republicans these days. I
22:42
just don't trust anyone. I think they're all telling
22:44
us how. And so I think a lot of
22:46
Americans need to stop getting upset. So like the
22:49
first tweet you decided before we started this segment fired
22:52
up a lot of people because they thought I
22:54
was anti-Israel. And that's not what it is. But
22:56
ultimately my point is this, we should all
22:58
be able to have disagreements and
23:01
not get upset, not get infuriated, not get
23:03
nasty. And always like, I mean, everyone was
23:05
coming after me on Twitter for my first
23:07
tweet. We could have
23:09
conversations, we could have debates and you get back to that.
23:11
We need to get back to the core of our American
23:13
values and stop getting so
23:16
nasty and stop getting so vile. We're just
23:19
little things that we should be able to debate openly.
23:21
And we sadly no longer can. I think it's really
23:23
upsetting. You talk about the
23:25
J6 cases a lot. You've
23:27
probably done more one-on-one conversations, bringing light
23:29
to these as they've unfolded. You've made
23:31
sure that these men and women are
23:34
not forgotten and that
23:36
justice needs to be upheld
23:39
in these, what I consider very politically
23:41
motivated FBI raids and things.
23:45
You got a tweet here about Ken Harrelson. We
23:47
got a guy now that's free. There's
23:50
a win. Let's talk about something good on that
23:52
front for a second. Yeah.
23:54
Yeah, Sergeant Ken Harrelson. Sadly,
23:56
he was one of the oath keepers. He was put
23:59
on trial. and the Department of
24:01
Justice actually put people who they knew were
24:03
lying on the stand and sadly they sentenced
24:05
him to over three years in prison. But
24:08
he got the lightest of the sentences. The rest of
24:10
them are going away for over a decade, some
24:13
near even two decades and
24:15
no one's really stepped in and called out the
24:17
DOJ for their lives. But thankfully, you
24:20
know, we could celebrate the small win. Ken Harrelson
24:22
is out of jail and he
24:24
will be sitting with us exclusively to discuss what
24:26
happened when he was in jail, his trial and
24:28
everything. Yeah, so that will be on my show
24:31
shortly. I told him just kind of hold on, you
24:33
know, wait decompress, enjoy your life, settle in
24:35
and then we go off and talk about
24:37
all these things. I think it's really important
24:39
people understand what he had to endure. I
24:41
mean, this man literally tried turning to a
24:43
pastor in one of his the persons that
24:45
he was at and asking him for services
24:47
and the pastor turned to him and pretty
24:49
much told him no, because he's a white
24:51
supremacist, even though he has interracial family members
24:53
and they just beat
24:56
this man down. Yeah, yeah, not
24:58
a very good one. No, they
25:00
just constantly beat these people down and
25:02
he's had to suffer a lot while he was
25:04
in jail. So it will be enlightening for folks
25:06
to hear from him. But I know his wife
25:08
is very, very happy that he's home now. Let's
25:10
jump to this next one. I
25:13
don't know how you can look at the indictments in the court
25:15
cases and the things coming against President Donald
25:17
Trump, anything other than election interference.
25:20
The corporate media hacks are drooling on air as
25:22
they detail why President Trump can't campaign seven days
25:25
a week because he's facing bogus criminal trials. You
25:27
have to be a moron in
25:29
order to digest their propaganda. I like how you
25:31
just kind of cut to the chase there. So
25:33
tell me what motivates these morons and
25:35
how do they see this as democracy?
25:38
I know. Don't
25:40
you cringe whenever they say defend democracy. That's
25:42
when you know it's like the communist dog whistle
25:44
at this point. It's not good when they
25:46
say that. I usually cringe
25:49
every time, but I think
25:51
it's interesting because I was watching MSNBC and
25:53
I'm listening to all of them. I mean,
25:55
they're literally drooling over the fact that he
25:57
can't even campaign. I mean, that's just so
25:59
un-American. But then again, that's why they're doing
26:01
all of it is to keep him busy. So he's
26:03
not campaigning So they're draining and financially they're doing all
26:06
these things to get out to go after him So
26:09
un-american, but I'm not people are calling it out You
26:11
know, we just saw what happened in Arizona earlier on
26:13
this this week and in Arizona They're indicting people close
26:15
to Trump what it's meant to do again Is
26:18
to create pressure on the same characters the Giuliani
26:20
who is a Smirnay? Jenna
26:23
Ellis obviously she's pretty weak. She always falls But
26:26
Christina Bob who should never been indicted in the first
26:28
place She's a great human being a great attorney, but
26:30
it's meant to go after these lawyers So
26:32
if there's pressure involved so they do steal a November election
26:34
again, which I strongly do believe that they will Any
26:37
lawyer would be crazy to take on President Trump
26:39
as a client represent him and go after Whoever
26:42
stole the election because well, they know what comes to
26:44
those individuals And I think Americans need to wake up
26:46
to realize what's going on here. They're
26:49
the cases in Fulton County, New York City
26:51
here in Florida They're all crumbling against President
26:53
Trump And so they're using the Arizona one
26:55
is another thing to pop up and to
26:57
go after him And they don't
26:59
stop what motivates them specifically David is hate they
27:01
have hate in their heart and that's what's fueling
27:03
them They hate somebody they don't even know that
27:06
they never even met but because he he pushes
27:08
back and he doesn't give in to What
27:11
they want and what the establishment wants they
27:13
go back to him full force and that's what you're seeing playing
27:15
out right now This is why so many politicians don't think their
27:18
necks out because they know what will happen to them if
27:20
they do So sadly, this is what we
27:22
have going on right now in our country Yeah,
27:24
and people are living in fear of non-elected
27:27
agencies, you know, they're scared of the
27:29
FBI you're scared of the CIA You're
27:31
scared of like government has never been
27:34
looked at as like oh, you know
27:37
the safest best organization, you know
27:40
In history, I'm talking like Anyone
27:42
that's ever lived throughout all of history their
27:44
government maybe doesn't necessarily operate in their best
27:46
interest and that's kind of why America Was
27:48
a shining light because we had elected
27:52
representation But there's such
27:54
a gap between what the people want what
27:56
they expect and what they were told was
27:58
going to happen and what? Leaders
28:00
do when they get into those positions
28:02
and then we have these lifelong bureaucrats
28:04
that are just they just kind of
28:06
wait it out. Presidents are there for
28:08
years and then you got guys like,
28:10
you know, Mitch McConnell and Joe Biden
28:12
that make a 40, 50 year career
28:14
out of just just ebbing and flowing
28:16
and chipping away and enriching themselves. That's
28:18
why I love the kind of guests
28:20
that you bring on the Brianna Morello
28:22
show because I don't know anybody that's
28:24
diving into the truth of what's going
28:26
on with Julie Kelly. This is an
28:28
incredible interview that you had. I mean, if
28:32
people don't know Julie Kelly, man, she's
28:34
been a guest with Tucker, you know, throughout the years
28:36
and just always doing
28:38
the research behind the
28:41
scenes and some of these documents she's putting out and you had a
28:43
chance to have a great sit down with her. Yeah.
28:46
So Julie Kelly is one of the best. I would
28:48
probably say she is the best, honestly. I don't think
28:50
there's anyone else coming close to her because she could.
28:53
And I joke with her all the time about how
28:55
amazing she is at this, but she could sit through
28:57
a bunch of court documents and figure
28:59
out which ones to pull out. Now, the Florida case
29:01
is going on right now. It's
29:03
in regards to the classified documents. If
29:06
you don't know all the players and all the characters
29:08
involved in that case, it's really hard to find these
29:10
gems that Julie is able to find. And so she's
29:12
able to extract the parts in these documents that are
29:14
being unsealed, tell you who the people who are
29:16
involved here tell you why it's relevant and break
29:18
it down to like the simplest form. So
29:21
sometimes the tweets can kind of be a little
29:23
confusing. So I had her on the show and
29:25
she just did an incredible job simplifying everything so
29:27
that if you weren't paying attention from day one,
29:30
this interview will get you caught up on everything that you
29:32
need to know with all the key players. And she does
29:34
an excellent job of doing that. So we've got that up
29:36
on our rumble page now. But if you're
29:38
looking to follow somebody on Twitter, too, Julie is
29:40
a great follow because there's more documents being unsealed
29:42
and she's the first one to get them. She's
29:44
the first one to dig through them. And
29:47
I mean, even the Supreme Court hearings, opening arguments
29:49
that were happening earlier this week as well, she
29:51
was there. She was listening to it and she was creating the
29:53
simple form of it so you could follow it and feel like
29:56
you're informed. So she's great at that. And I'd
29:58
highly recommend everyone give that a listen because. She's
30:00
one of the best and people got to
30:02
go in the Brianna Morello channel because I tell
30:04
you what literally every day You're uncovering something and
30:06
there's like 20 things I wanted to get into
30:08
with you today because like you're having two three
30:10
guests a day You have a nightly show coming
30:12
out every single night And if people want to
30:14
cut through all the opinions and I think this
30:16
and conspiracy and this is that You
30:18
only talk about things there you have the receipts
30:21
for and it's actual real documents real research
30:23
This is what's happening if you want to know, you
30:25
know, he's a term from the matrix if you want
30:27
to understand the real You
30:29
got to go to Brianna's cello channel
30:31
But you're also kind of like the
30:33
best version of Donald Trump is
30:35
when he's like at the bodega in New York
30:37
He's at the McDonald's and he's Palestine's he's he's
30:39
sort of a man of the people I don't
30:42
know how he how he pulls this off being
30:44
a you know, a New York billionaire And then
30:46
but when he gets with the construction guys, he's
30:48
like is like one of them Eric Trump has
30:50
that same vibe but so do you yeah you
30:52
get down and and rub elbows with all of
30:54
us little people and You did it.
30:56
You did a hike With with with
30:59
Luke there in in Florida
31:01
and shows you out with people. What was
31:03
that like? And what was conversation like hey,
31:05
tell me what's going on with this. Are they asking you questions? Are
31:07
they kind of telling you the things you need to be covering? Yeah
31:13
Yeah, yeah, no there was people I know they
31:15
all don't politically agreement is one person who's a
31:17
progressive running for Congress I mean, there's all these
31:19
different like people who come from all different groups
31:22
Politically just trying to hang out and meet people It's
31:24
so cool to be there because Luke Luke definitely has
31:26
a way of pulling people in like that. Yeah, it
31:28
was interesting We learned a lot we kind of you
31:30
know met a bunch of people His
31:32
his audience was there some of his you know followers
31:35
came out and then just some people who just wanted
31:37
to meet other people came Out so it was definitely
31:39
a cool experience, you know Luke jokes It was like
31:41
oh we didn't get that loss But we did get
31:43
very lost and it was like almost 90 degree
31:45
weather in like Miami weather and it was not
31:47
very comfortable So I helped
31:49
Luke's feet to the fire on that one for getting
31:51
us lost What are you like in
31:53
those settings people see in your studio? And you know, you're
31:56
all on point are you kind of a diva when you
31:58
get out in the bugs and that or you? You
32:00
kind of, you got another edge. You can, are you kind
32:03
of tough too? Are you a
32:05
whiner? What do you,
32:07
what do you like outside of air conditioning in your
32:09
studio? Uh, that's a tough
32:11
question, David. I'd say for the first two hours
32:13
I was calm and then about in the two
32:15
hour market, I was like, Luke, we're going back.
32:20
Sweating, it's gross. We're all dirty. Cause of the dirt's
32:22
kicking up on you. Um, I'm a little high maintenance.
32:24
I'm not going to lie. I will never deny that.
32:27
I warned Luke of it when he invited me in
32:29
the first place. Uh, so I
32:31
won't deny it, but I wasn't complaining.
32:33
I got to see lots of turtles and lots
32:35
of different, uh, different creatures and things, so that
32:37
was exciting. Uh, but once hour two
32:39
hit, I was ready to go to the air conditioner.
32:42
So you're, you're, you're tough, but you got a limit. Yeah,
32:45
we got a limit for sure. Yeah. And even I brought my best friend,
32:47
Ali with me. Ali was done after
32:49
an hour and a half too. She's like, Brianna, I
32:51
can't believe you take me at outdoor events like this.
32:53
When I take you to Mar-a-Lago and other events. So
32:56
she wasn't very happy with the trade-off. Well,
33:00
that's good. So you're, you're, you're, you're not as tough
33:02
as Luke, but you're, but you're a fair stretch beyond,
33:04
uh, Ali. Yeah. That's a
33:06
good balance. That's a good balance. It's a good
33:08
place to get a man should know his limits.
33:10
So that's, that's good. No, no, no, no, no
33:12
when to say when. Brianna, thank you for the
33:14
work that you do. And I think the suppression
33:16
of truth caused this like
33:18
whack-a-mole thing of other people popping up.
33:21
And you're literally the best among them.
33:23
And I see in all of media
33:25
at, at breaking these things down, being
33:27
consistent, having a predetermined, uh, moral and
33:29
political compass, and then holding those that
33:31
you're monitoring to that, that standard of
33:33
not only your compass, but also to
33:35
their own standard, uh, which they
33:37
fall way short of. So thank you for what you do
33:40
every single day. All
33:43
right, Clyber family. My name is Avery Whitehead.
33:45
I'm the daughter of David and Stacy. And
33:49
to throw it in, I have to get an order
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33:56
got, uh, my pillow, uh, I
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got some of their Giza sheets. Now I in
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least, it's something for Charlie. Hey,
34:10
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34:12
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And you are a fluffy, perfect,
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35:51
know what time it is. It's
36:00
time for an economic update with Dr. Dr. Kirk
36:02
Elliott. Yay! Yay!
36:10
How's it going? Great, thanks again
36:12
for joining us today, man. With everything
36:14
going on in our country, everybody wants
36:16
to know what is going on with
36:18
the economy and you are the man
36:20
with the answers. Well,
36:22
it's an election year and so everyone's gonna
36:24
be lying about things. Yeah.
36:26
True. More so than normal.
36:29
Yes. More so than normal.
36:32
But here's where if
36:34
we look at what happened during
36:36
the Trump presidency, what happened during
36:38
the Biden presidency, it is so
36:40
opposite, right? But it's the
36:42
difference in ideology, in my opinion. You've
36:44
got Trump, who's a nationalist, which
36:47
means it's not a negative term, it means he
36:49
cares about his country more than the rest of
36:51
the world. Biden is a globalist,
36:53
cares more about the rest of the world than
36:55
he does his own country, right? So
36:58
true. I think it kind of boils down to that. So
37:00
when you have that philosophy as the
37:02
backdrop, it's going to affect
37:05
your decisions, like you're exporting jobs
37:07
to other countries
37:09
and you're printing money and
37:12
trying to get people to purchase,
37:14
but purchase what? Other
37:17
countries' stuff, right? So Trump wanted to
37:19
make America great again. How do you
37:21
do that? Bring jobs back to America.
37:23
How do you do that? Bring manufacturing
37:25
back to America, right? Biden's
37:28
doing the opposite. So every
37:30
decision that these politicians make
37:33
has implications, right? So
37:35
let's look at some of them because I just
37:39
want to show how Bidenomics actually
37:42
stinks and what this is doing and
37:44
how this impacts the markets, right? Because
37:46
when the economy stinks and you have
37:48
inflation that's going up, taxes that are
37:50
going up, cost of borrowing
37:52
with rising interest rates going up, people
37:54
are going to spend less. The stock
37:56
market is a function of revenues and
37:58
there's two ways to get- revenues. Number
38:01
one, stimulus money. Sadly,
38:05
stimulus money is going to be drying up because
38:07
the BRICS nations took away our petrodollar. Now we're
38:09
going to have to print our way out of
38:11
everything. Number two, revenue for
38:14
companies comes from people spending. So
38:17
stimulus money or us spending. Either way,
38:19
it's a section of capital into the
38:22
companies, but we're not spending.
38:25
We're tapped out as a
38:27
nation. We're living hand to
38:30
mouth with rising prices, rising
38:32
interest rates, rising taxes, lowering
38:34
wages, and higher unemployment. It's
38:36
like, wow, that is
38:38
a recipe for disaster. But that's
38:41
the effects of biodynamics. So let's
38:43
look at a few different things
38:45
here. Let's look at gas prices.
38:48
Yeah. In fact, these days, I
38:50
drive a Ford truck, man, every time I fill up, it's
38:52
a hundred bucks, a hundred dollar bill every
38:54
time you fill up. Well, it's
38:56
the same for my truck. It's just a
38:58
little bit more. Sad thing is I have
39:00
to fill up mine more than yours because
39:03
it only gets eight
39:05
to nine miles per gallon. But
39:12
people feel these things. They can hear, oh, the
39:14
economy is better than ever. My uncle was eaten
39:18
by cannibals and the economy is doing
39:20
incredible. But when they're actually paying for
39:25
things, people
39:28
notice. They
39:30
do notice. Yeah. They notice these things.
39:33
This is why Bill Clinton said it's
39:36
the economy's stupid. It's like people will
39:38
vote based on their wallet a lot
39:40
of times. And that's why these numbers
39:42
that we're looking at are important. So
39:45
during Trump, his
39:48
four years, right? Average gasoline prices,
39:50
$2.42. Under Biden, it's $3.54. That's up 46%. Wow. Tell
39:58
me inflation's 3.4%. Yeah, that's ridiculous.
40:01
That's ridiculous. Real wages. So
40:06
prices are going up, but wages
40:09
are coming down, right? So under
40:11
Biden, you know, you look at these wages
40:13
and what are those numbers on the left? Each
40:16
quarter since he's been president, and
40:19
what is the number on the right? That
40:21
is the actually earnings that
40:24
people made during that quarter where
40:26
they come down. So people's average
40:28
salary or average earnings came
40:30
down between $300 and $400 per quarter. Wow.
40:36
So you add up all those
40:39
quarters, right? What are we in
40:42
12, 13 of them now since he's
40:44
been president, something like that. People
40:47
losing $400 a quarter for 13 quarters
40:50
straight, that's a lot of annual
40:52
income. No doubt about it. Right?
40:54
So that's sign of a shrinking
40:57
economy where people, not
40:59
only do they have less earnings,
41:02
prices are going up and so they can't afford to spend.
41:05
This is a big one. Let's
41:07
look at interest mortgage rates, right?
41:09
Because that's one of people's
41:12
biggest expenses is their house, right? So
41:15
mortgage rates, when
41:18
Trump became president, the average mortgage rate
41:20
on a 30-year mortgage was 4.1%. By
41:24
the time he was done, it was
41:26
2.8%. So mortgage rates
41:28
came down 32% while he was president. Biden,
41:32
on the other hand, well, 2.8% when
41:35
he started because that's where Trump ended, but
41:38
now 6.8%. They're
41:41
up 146%. Wow.
41:44
And he's not even done yet, right? But why
41:46
did it go up 146%? Because
41:50
you use rising interest rates to slow
41:52
down inflation because he is creating
41:54
a ton of inflation by printing money like
41:56
there's no tomorrow, which
41:58
brings us to the next stupid
42:01
Bidenomics plan, right? Which is
42:04
so mortgage rates going through the roof. What
42:07
are savings rates, right? People
42:11
aren't saving as much from during Trump's
42:13
years, savings went up 129% during
42:16
Biden's years down 72%
42:20
because they're digging
42:22
into their savings month after month trying
42:25
to make ends meet. Is that signs
42:27
of a strong economy or a sluggish
42:29
one? Definitely sluggish,
42:32
no doubt about it. What's
42:36
that David? Holy cow.
42:42
Hope is so important and
42:46
when you remove hope from the population and
42:48
the news cycles, but
42:51
when you've
42:54
used your savings just to
42:56
pay the bills, it
42:58
becomes a very hopeless emotion
43:01
in the country because you know
43:03
you're going backwards. And they can lie all
43:05
they want, they can save everything that they want, but people
43:07
know. People know what they're spending,
43:09
they know what it used to feel like, what it feels like
43:11
now. You can't lie your way out
43:13
of this. Yeah,
43:16
you absolutely can't. Now, this next
43:18
chart that came from MRC's research,
43:22
I don't really like this chart because the
43:24
way that the government measures inflation and prices
43:27
are just totally wrong, right? Consumer price index,
43:29
this is what I did my first dissertation
43:31
on, they substitute things in
43:33
and out. So this
43:35
one's kind of meaningless,
43:37
but what it points to is prices
43:40
went up slower with Trump than they
43:42
did with Biden. I mean, really Biden's
43:44
prices are going up three times faster.
43:47
So the three times faster is an
43:50
accurate number. The number
43:52
that they're reporting is consumer price
43:54
index, which is wrong. Right?
43:57
It's totally understated, but
43:59
the next one... And also
44:01
understated, but what it shows
44:04
is average monthly inflation under Trump is
44:06
1.9% under Biden,
44:08
it's 5.5%. Again,
44:11
that's monthly. Monthly. So,
44:13
so this is consumer price index,
44:16
which is understated on purpose since
44:18
the Clinton years. So
44:20
my, my research that
44:23
I did my dissertation on showed
44:25
that we should be probably unofficially 12 to 15%
44:27
inflation right now. If
44:30
you compare apples to apples of
44:32
where it was in the 1980s
44:34
when they actually measured inflation appropriately,
44:36
right? This is why Reagan
44:38
had to jack up interest rates to 18%
44:40
to slow down inflation that was So
44:44
understated, but what
44:47
this, what this shows is what
44:49
that almost two and a half
44:52
times greater inflation under
44:54
Biden than under Trump. But
44:57
the numbers are off. The
44:59
numbers should be 12 to 15%,
45:03
which would make Trump's inflation truly like
45:05
more than the 5% range, right?
45:07
So, so these numbers have been
45:09
validated last week. One
45:12
of the council of
45:15
economic advisors, economist under,
45:17
under Obama said, you
45:19
know what? Inflation is like
45:21
over 18.1% under Biden. It's
45:24
like, okay, somebody from their own side
45:26
is actually telling the truth about
45:29
inflation. And
45:31
then Larry Fink at BlackRock says true
45:34
inflation is more like 10 to 12%. So
45:37
those numbers are in the ballpark I've been talking
45:39
about for a long time, right?
45:41
Not bogus government numbers, but really we've
45:44
got persisting inflation. The bottom line is
45:46
under Biden, about two and a half
45:48
times greater than Trump prices
45:51
going up three times
45:53
greater than Trump savings
45:55
rates. I mean, totally, totally
45:58
down. 72% Trump
46:00
up 129, mortgage rates up 146% under Biden where
46:02
they were minus 32 with Trump. You
46:08
look at all these numbers and it's like, how
46:11
could anybody vote for
46:14
Biden when Clinton said, it's the
46:16
economy stupid, people vote with their
46:18
wallets. Well, I don't
46:20
know, you've got all kinds of electoral issues and
46:22
things of that nature. But what
46:24
I think we're going to see is
46:27
this is going to spin ugly as
46:29
soon as the stock market comes, starts
46:31
crumbling down and the
46:33
election could be very, very good
46:35
for freedom loving people because the
46:37
economy is so bad. This
46:40
is where Trump got a bad rap a few weeks
46:42
ago when he said that
46:44
he wants the economy to fail before
46:47
the election. That
46:50
was not the intent of that saying. He's
46:53
saying, this is my paraphrase, the
46:55
economy is going to fail. What
46:58
I'd rather be done before I get in rather
47:01
than after, because if it happens after, I'm getting
47:03
blamed for it, right, even though he had nothing
47:05
to do with it. Right. So
47:07
the point is the economy is going to
47:09
fail. These numbers are proving that it's going
47:11
to fail. And Trump
47:13
has shown under his tenure
47:15
as president that he can
47:17
grow the economy. That's what
47:20
this country needs. And
47:22
boy, these numbers are
47:24
pretty drastic. It's no wonder you
47:27
and I keep talking about how the stock
47:29
market is overvalued. It's going to keep coming
47:31
down. This is why gold
47:34
and silver persisting because the inflationary pressures
47:36
are there. And most of
47:38
America is feeling the pinch, the
47:40
hurt of not being
47:42
able to make ends meet. And
47:44
that brings financial stress, relationship, trouble,
47:47
health issues. It's like our goal
47:50
is to take this holistic approach
47:52
to investing, be in the right place at
47:55
the right time, educate you as to why
47:57
we're doing what we're doing so that financial.
48:00
anxiety can melt away over time. So
48:02
good. Can I ask you a question? It
48:06
takes more dollars to get anything. Like I don't
48:08
know, we've had this cup three years, but you
48:10
know, however many dollars it took to get this
48:12
cup, you know, it would take more dollars today.
48:15
And so, you know, if say we were
48:17
investing in this as a, as a store
48:19
of, of wealth, it
48:22
would take more dollars to get it today than it did
48:24
three years ago. How much of it, you use this term
48:26
like gold is going up, silver is going up. Are
48:29
they going up or is it just, it takes
48:31
more dollars to get them. It takes more dollars
48:33
to pay for, you know, everything today. So
48:36
the dollar itself is going like this.
48:39
Is this purchasing power on anything, whether it's this,
48:41
this ceramic mug or this microphone or
48:43
this watch or any, whatever it is,
48:46
everything, it takes more dollars to get
48:48
it. So, so by having something that
48:50
is a solid value and doesn't depreciate,
48:53
is it just as this
48:55
dollar continues to slide at an
48:57
increasing rate, is
48:59
that what makes gold and silver such a good
49:01
place to be? And is it that they're, they're
49:04
going up or is it just that the dollar's
49:06
going down? It's, it's actually
49:08
both. Um, if
49:11
so, if you look at like how many
49:13
ounces of gold did it take to buy
49:16
a house in 1929, you
49:19
know, when the federal was right before the back,
49:22
it was about 129 ounces. Um,
49:25
I'm sorry, 248 ounces today. It's
49:28
like 129. It's like, whoa. So
49:31
yes, it takes fewer ounces of
49:33
gold to actually buy a house
49:35
now, which tells us that gold
49:37
is actually doing better. So
49:40
was silver than just being a one-to-one,
49:42
you know, as prices go up, it's
49:45
in, gold is going up at the same rate. So
49:47
it's a head. Well, that's actually
49:49
going up faster than the prices are
49:51
going up. So it actually is one
49:53
of those, well, this is
49:55
actually really great. Not only are
49:57
you protecting, but you're actually growing.
50:00
So it's some of both, David.
50:02
So it's almost, would
50:05
have been half on the gold. So it was 248
50:07
ounces, you said, and now it's like 120 some? Yes.
50:12
Wow. Okay, so it really is
50:14
holding it. So a lot more dollars, a lot less gold. Yes.
50:18
So that's the trend. I wanna also dispel one of
50:20
the things, with a conversation with
50:22
a friend, who was like, man, I've always wanted to get
50:24
into gold and silver, it seems like a great investment, but
50:26
I wanna keep my money more liquid. I
50:30
think that's a perception people have. When
50:32
you have gold or silver, we were
50:34
obviously all silver, at a depository, like
50:37
it's about 48 hours and you
50:39
have it back in your hands, you can
50:41
do whatever you want with. It's not like
50:43
liquidating a piece of property or anything else.
50:45
That you're having to sell yourself because that's a relationship
50:47
we have with Dr. Kirk. I don't have to
50:50
go find a buyer. I just like, bam,
50:52
make a phone call in 48 hours. That
50:54
money is in my account, done without any
50:56
effort. With us it is,
50:58
because we do bullion. It
51:01
has nothing to do with us as a firm. It has
51:03
to do with what kind of gold and silver are you
51:05
buying. Bullion being a manufacturing
51:07
metal, it's always in demand for
51:09
Sony, Samsung, LG, different countries,
51:11
right? If you buy a rare coin,
51:14
like, okay, I love Trump, but like a
51:16
Trump coin, for example, or
51:19
something old that was minted in the 1920s, it's
51:22
not something that the depositories want or need for
51:24
manufacturing. So you're gonna have to sell this guy,
51:26
call and say, hey, have I got a deal
51:28
for you? We've got this excess inventory. And
51:30
let's say that you were trying to sell
51:32
that to your dealer because you wanted money.
51:35
They can't give you money unless they
51:37
sell it to somebody else. So
51:40
there's not a built-in market for rare
51:42
coins, old coins, what we call in
51:44
the industry, semi-neumismatic coins. They're
51:46
not 100% liquid unless the dealer
51:48
you're working with that sold you
51:51
those things can get rid of
51:53
them, right? So what if that
51:55
company goes out of business and they
51:57
were the only firm marketing some kind of
51:59
a. rare coin, it's like, well,
52:02
crud. It's like, I don't know if I can get
52:04
rid of it. You can always get rid of it,
52:06
but you'd have to sell it to the depository and they're
52:09
just going to melt it. So, you're
52:12
going to get like less than bullion prices, you're
52:14
going to get less. So
52:17
this is why it is so, so, so important
52:20
that when you're allocating into gold and silver
52:22
that you simply just do bullion because there's
52:24
always a market for it. I don't have
52:26
to make a market for it. It's already
52:28
there. I just make a phone call. You're
52:30
not selling it like a collector baseball card
52:32
or something like that. Like you got to
52:34
create a market for it. So I love
52:36
that. It makes a difference where you acquire
52:39
your gold and silver when it
52:41
comes time to get back out, especially there's
52:43
no commission. When we sell,
52:46
it's just, it's all wins and we get to
52:48
keep all those games. And it's a relationship that
52:50
you have with Dr. Kirk. It's not a one time
52:52
purchase. So when you go to fly over gold, it's
52:54
a place you can fill out your information. When you
52:56
do that, someone from Dr. Kirk's team will get ahold
52:58
of you to set up a free consultation.
53:00
It doesn't cost you any money whatsoever. Get all
53:02
your questions answered, find out what your options are,
53:04
or you can also call 720-605-3900 to set up
53:06
that free consultation. Again,
53:11
it's 720-605-3900 or go to flyovergold.com. Dr.
53:17
Kirk, thank you so much for your time. We really
53:19
appreciate it. This is a crazy time
53:21
to be alive. Well, just in our lifetime,
53:23
used to be where you'd hear your grandparents talk about
53:25
how cheap gas was and stuff. And it was 75
53:27
years before, 50 years before. Yeah.
53:31
And so we've seen a lot of changes since Biden took
53:33
office, $700 more a month than what you needed
53:37
in January of 21 when
53:39
he took office. You might hear these kinds of
53:41
things and think, oh, that's overwhelming. I can't control
53:43
the government. I can't control what they're doing. I
53:46
can't control the spending, but we can take care
53:48
of ourselves. You want to make
53:50
sure that you're buying bullion from somebody that
53:52
you can trust and someone that does not
53:54
charge you a commission when you go to
53:56
sell. in
54:00
when it skyrockets and now you're like, oh my gosh,
54:02
look at this big huge commission I got to pay
54:04
because it's on the back end before I sell it.
54:06
You can buy an ounce of silver for $23. So
54:09
this is something everybody can get into. And if
54:11
silver goes to $50, if it goes to $75,
54:14
if it goes to $100, all of those
54:16
profits are yours and that's happening while
54:19
the dollar is buying less and less at the actual
54:21
grocery store. So you can
54:23
go to flyovergold.com, fill out your information. When
54:25
you do that, someone from Dr. Kirk's team
54:27
will get ahold of you to set up
54:29
a free consultation. It
54:32
doesn't cost you any money whatsoever or to do
54:34
the same thing, you can just call 720-605-3900. If
54:45
you want to do anything worthwhile in life,
54:49
you've got to be hungry. It's
54:53
better to be prepared for an opportunity and
54:55
not have one than to have an opportunity
54:57
and not be prepared. So
55:00
every day I was working to develop myself and
55:03
that's what you must do. I
55:05
promise you one thing, we will never
55:07
see any player in the entire country play hard
55:09
as I will play the rest of the season.
55:12
Get in here! Hey, we got it! Sorry
55:14
man! For the rest of our lives! Sorry
55:16
man! For the rest of our lives! Therefore,
55:20
that makes me the one and only. Young and single love to
55:22
make a certified bonafide and duality qualified to bring your satisfaction a
55:24
whole lot of action. Look out, baby I'm your love man! I
55:34
was hungry! I
55:38
was hungry! You
55:42
got to
55:44
be hungry! Hey, flyover
55:46
family! We're going to be there with
55:49
Clay Clark and an amazing group of
55:51
individuals that have made
55:58
such a difference in so many people's lives. Do you
56:01
want to increase your production in a job? Do you
56:03
want to make more sales? Do you want to own
56:05
your own business? Do you want to have breakthroughs financially?
56:07
The key to that is knowledge. Clay
56:10
Clark is anointed to help people in
56:12
business. We've watched him over the last couple
56:14
of years and we've been blown away. Part
56:17
owner of over 160 businesses, $2.4 billion in sales.
56:25
Before politics and the great reset came
56:27
into Clay's life, he had the number
56:29
one rated Apple podcast and he interviewed
56:32
people like Anthony Robbins, Seth Godin, the
56:34
top authors, top business minds in the
56:36
world. At this specific event, there's an
56:38
interesting cast of characters that come from
56:40
gangs to American Idol. Some of
56:42
the guests are going to be there. Michael
56:45
Levine, Colton Dixon, Peter
56:47
Tonton, John Lee Dumas,
56:49
Mondo de la Vigal.
56:52
And Tim Sibo, they're there
56:54
to share what they've done and their breakthroughs
56:56
in what their story is. And
56:58
then Clay lays his map of business success,
57:00
calls the path for every person to follow.
57:03
So you may be sitting there thinking, okay, okay,
57:05
I get it, I get it. What do I
57:07
have to do? Go to thrivetimeshow.com. When
57:10
you get there, the tickets are $250 or whatever you can afford. Yes,
57:16
you got that right. $250 or
57:18
whatever you can afford. You
57:21
can name your price. So there are no
57:23
excuses. You have to join us there. There
57:25
are only a few VIP tickets left, like
57:28
David said, special dinner and special time with
57:30
the speakers. That is $500 why they laugh. So
57:35
$500, only a few left if you want a
57:37
VIP ticket. We want to meet these speakers as
57:39
well. So we got VIP. I want to meet
57:41
Tim Sibo. I do too. The
57:43
date is June the 27th and 28th, 2024
57:45
in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Go
57:48
to thrivetimeshow.com to get your tickets.
57:56
For more great content, go
57:59
to flyoverconservatives.com. coming!
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