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0:00
to the issues of our day. America
0:03
was created at a time of great turmoil, tremendous
0:06
disagreements, anger, hatred. It
0:09
was a book written in 1776 that guided much
0:13
of the discipline of thinking that
0:15
brought to us the discovery of our freedoms,
0:18
of our God-given freedoms.
0:21
It was Thomas Paine's Common Sense, written
0:23
in 1776, one of the first
0:26
American bestsellers, in which Thomas
0:28
Paine explained by rational
0:30
principles the reason why
0:32
these small colonies felt the
0:35
necessity to separate from
0:37
the Kingdom of Great Britain and
0:39
the King of England. He explained
0:42
their inherent desire for liberty,
0:45
for freedom, freedom of religion,
0:48
freedom of speech, the
0:51
ability
0:51
to select the people who govern them, and
0:54
he explained it in ways that were understandable to
0:57
all the people, not just the elite,
1:00
because the desire for freedom is
1:03
universal. The desire for
1:05
freedom adheres in
1:07
the human mind and it is part
1:09
of the human soul. This
1:11
is exactly the time we should consult
1:14
our history, look at what
1:16
we've done in the past, and
1:18
see if we can't use it to help us now. We
1:21
understand
1:21
that our founders created the greatest country
1:23
in the history of the world, the greatest
1:25
democracy, the freest country, a country
1:28
that has taken more people out of poverty
1:30
than any country ever. All
1:33
of us are so fortunate to be Americans,
1:37
but a great deal of the reason for America's
1:40
constant ability to self-improve is because
1:43
we're able to reason, we're able
1:45
to talk, we're able to analyze.
1:49
We are able to apply a God-given
1:52
common sense. So
1:54
let's do it.
1:59
Good evening! Welcome to
2:01
America's Mayor live from Washington,
2:04
D.C. I
2:09
used to say that with great pride, tremendous
2:12
patriotic fervor. And
2:15
I am about right now,
2:18
I think less than a mile from the Capitol. Oh,
2:21
much less than a mile, Mayor. Much less than a mile. A
2:23
stone's throw, you could say. Yeah,
2:26
we're on Capitol Hill. And
2:28
it's a sense of great depression
2:30
let down. When
2:36
I consider the Durham
2:38
report the other day and the testimony
2:41
today in
2:43
front of Congressman Jordan's Judiciary
2:46
Committee, I
2:48
don't know what was worse, the testimony
2:51
of the whistleblowers, FBI agents.
2:54
The FBI agents I feel are
2:57
a kinship with the Brotherhood with. I
3:00
don't know nowadays, Brotherhood and
3:02
sister, for the
3:04
female FBI agents, however you would
3:07
describe that.
3:08
Please don't take any offense. I just don't
3:10
know the right way to say that. Please.
3:20
I was there the day they opened the new
3:22
FBI building dedicated
3:24
by President Gerald R. Ford.
3:27
It was very exciting for a
3:30
person who had just finished a tour
3:32
of duty as an assistant US Attorney, head
3:35
of the
3:36
Narcotics Division in the US Attorney's Office.
3:39
I had had a very successful
3:42
career as an assistant US Attorney.
3:44
I prosecuted a sitting Congressman
3:46
and
3:47
convicted him
3:50
by getting him to basically confess on the
3:52
witness stand.
3:53
It was the front page of the New York Times. I convicted
3:56
mafia members. Tremendous
3:59
numbers. the drug dealers, white collar
4:01
criminals, fraudsters.
4:06
I had also been the administrative assistant
4:08
there. Now,
4:12
all of a sudden I was asked to come to Washington to be
4:14
the associate deputy
4:16
attorney general in
4:19
the Ford
4:22
administration, but really under Deputy
4:24
Attorney General Tyler and Attorney
4:27
General Levy,
4:29
who had been appointed to fix the
4:31
Justice Department after
4:33
the misdeeds
4:36
of Watergate. My goodness, the
4:38
Watergate Justice Department was nothing
4:40
compared to the current
4:43
version of it, which is more
4:45
similar to a policing
4:50
and law enforcement institution and totalitarian
4:52
state where it's a one party state.
4:57
I believe that for some time now it's
4:59
been clear, it has been clear
5:01
to me from the time that Comey fixed the
5:03
Hillary Clinton case that the FBI
5:06
was no longer at the top. The FBI
5:09
that I knew it
5:11
took a while to realize that it had become
5:13
really a
5:16
police, a private policing operation
5:18
and intelligence operation
5:21
of the Democrat Party. It's
5:23
a regime police. It's like the Stasi
5:26
in East Germany used to be, or
5:29
the secret police they now have in
5:31
totalitarian countries. It responds,
5:35
it responds to the wishes and desires
5:37
of just one political faction,
5:39
and it persecutes and
5:41
steps all over the rights of the other political
5:44
faction, including often
5:46
and at times, uh, clear
5:49
violations of constitutional rights.
5:52
And then prosecutions for crimes that
5:54
were non existent, didn't crimes
5:57
that didn't exist didn't happen. one
6:01
very, very distinguished reporter
6:04
summarized the
6:07
entire Durham report by saying
6:09
a corrupt FBI tried to rig the outcome
6:11
by favoring one candidate over
6:14
the other.
6:15
That's how you would describe the 2016
6:19
election and the FBI's participation
6:21
in it.
6:23
My goodness, that was clear four years ago,
6:26
wasn't it?
6:27
When the first time you saw the text
6:30
between
6:31
high ranking FBI officials struck
6:33
in his mistress Lisa Page,
6:35
in which they talked about how they were going to get Donald
6:37
Trump. And if they didn't stop
6:39
being president, they had an insurance policy
6:42
to get them out. And
6:46
they did have an insurance policy to get them
6:48
out. And it was attempted
6:50
and it was carried out. It was the impeachment.
6:52
It was the Russian collusion.
6:56
But what we didn't know right away, even though
6:58
we knew that, we didn't know that it was approved
7:01
by President Obama, Vice President
7:03
Biden.
7:05
We didn't know that in the summer of 2016,
7:08
in
7:10
the middle of the election, in the height of the election,
7:13
President Obama was briefed
7:15
by his scurrilous,
7:19
scummy CIA
7:21
director Brennan, one
7:24
of the principal signatories
7:27
of the letter accusing
7:30
the people handling the hard drive of being Russian
7:33
agents. I was one of them. I was
7:35
specifically falsely accused by
7:37
President Biden, for
7:40
which he's never apologized, even though
7:42
it's become crystal clear in
7:45
every area, including in the New
7:47
York Times and the Washington Post, that it was
7:49
a
7:51
legitimately
7:53
Biden's son's
7:55
computer containing massive
8:00
crimes, including inordinate
8:03
amounts of money that flowed to the Biden crime
8:05
family, most
8:07
of it from foreign enemy
8:10
governments, hostile
8:12
governments, if you consider China
8:15
and Russia hostile. And
8:20
definable favors by Biden
8:22
in return for that,
8:24
many of which we've seen play out to the disadvantage
8:26
of the United States.
8:29
So
8:32
I'd say this is a
8:34
corrupt FBI tried to rig the outcome
8:37
by favoring one candidate over the other.
8:40
Yeah, but then it went a lot further than that in
8:43
the report, right? It
8:47
was put very gently by Durham,
8:51
who really did a great disservice
8:53
and not recommending prosecutions.
8:56
Great disservice. As I say, he should be
8:58
ashamed of himself for not doing that. Obviously
9:02
not cut out to be a fair
9:06
and honest prosecutor in the United States of America,
9:09
maybe in some other country, not
9:11
ruled by law, but by
9:14
political women, political
9:16
dictatorship. Their
9:19
crimes were so apparent it jumped
9:21
off the page. But
9:24
he buried it. He buried maybe one of
9:28
the biggest crimes in
9:31
recent years that a president has committed,
9:33
considerably worse than anything Nixon did.
9:37
Nixon didn't sit there and listen
9:39
to how one presidential
9:41
candidate, the presidential candidate, his party
9:44
had concocted a phony scheme
9:46
that she paid for to defeat
9:49
the other presidential candidate
9:51
and then didn't sit by for years
9:53
and watch it play out as an attempt
9:56
to remove
9:57
a lawfully elected government. So,
10:00
I mean, you
10:02
go to page, you
10:05
go to page, let me
10:07
see if I can find it here. I
10:16
guess it's about 12 of the report. And
10:20
it is quite clear that
10:22
in late July
10:24
of 2016, Brennan
10:27
entered the Oval Office with Obama sitting
10:30
in his crown
10:32
seat. Biden
10:35
sitting on his lap, I guess, or being
10:37
fed by someone, I would imagine. The
10:40
Attorney General there waiting for
10:42
her attempt to
10:44
leak things to Bill Clinton. And
10:50
other intelligence officials, all of whom
10:52
were not working for
10:55
us, working for somebody else. I
10:57
mean, they all were more
10:59
than willing, in a very short time,
11:01
to lie for partisan
11:03
reasons, and
11:06
to defame others for partisan reasons, and
11:08
to disgrace their country for partisan reasons. Every
11:13
one of those 51 people should have their names
11:15
taken down from any honors or whatever
11:19
that's granted to them in any of the agencies
11:22
they worked in. Each and every one of them dishonored
11:24
themselves, their families in the United States, by
11:26
signing that. But none
11:29
of
11:29
these things are being done.
11:33
Well, Brennan flat out
11:36
told the crooks that were sitting there that Hillary
11:38
Clinton
11:38
had come up with
11:40
a scheme to involve
11:44
Trump with Putin
11:47
so that she could get emphasis off all the problems
11:49
she was having with her emails and smashing
11:53
up the server and committing perjury. In
11:57
other words, all the crimes that Obama had
11:59
to do.
11:59
had
12:02
told Comey to fix, which
12:05
he did. There's
12:07
no one in the world that would not have been prosecuted
12:10
for that other than Hillary Clinton or to
12:12
have it come from Obama,
12:14
who now may start challenging
12:17
Biden for who was the
12:19
most corrupt.
12:21
No question Biden was in terms of
12:23
taking money,
12:25
but in terms of distorting government
12:28
and turning it into some form
12:31
of fascist socialist
12:34
government,
12:35
kind of on the model that we always
12:37
suspected he probably liked
12:39
the most, which is communist. It
12:42
looks like Obama was a key player. No
12:47
honest man would have sat there
12:51
and allowed that to go beyond the conversation.
12:55
You know, if you go back to 15 when
12:57
it was first revealed that Hunter Biden
13:00
was working for the most crooked man in Ukraine,
13:02
no honest president would have allowed that to
13:05
go on either.
13:06
To allow that, you have to have been a
13:08
dishonest chief executive,
13:13
enabling the
13:16
crimes of Joe Biden, which
13:20
means he
13:22
can't be the only one you were enabling. Of
13:25
course, he did come from Chicago and he was
13:27
suspected of all kinds of activity.
13:30
And
13:30
he did sit in a church every Sunday and listen
13:32
to a minister
13:34
viciously, falsely, maliciously
13:37
and horribly attacked the
13:40
country that he should love. If
13:43
that country made him his president, although
13:45
his wife thought that was the
13:47
only good thing his country ever did.
13:50
That's a hell of a thing to have said, but probably
13:53
came right from a very warped
13:55
heart about the United
13:58
States. Has to have been warped.
14:01
The best thing we ever did in America is to
14:03
elect a totally unqualified
14:06
guy for president who virtually
14:08
destroyed this country, who
14:12
gave cash to terrorists, oodles
14:16
of cash, who slept through
14:18
Benghazi, who
14:22
sold us out to Iran. And
14:30
no one, of course, made much of his
14:32
comment to Medvedev, you know, after the
14:34
election.
14:36
Whatever he said, I can give Putin
14:39
a lot more. I can do a lot more
14:41
for Putin. Get
14:43
an idea how dishonest he is? But
14:45
he was the prince. He
14:50
was the prince, wasn't he? Not to me. But
14:54
to the crooked press that we have, and
14:57
for all the worst reasons. Well,
15:00
today's testimony was not
15:03
a surprise. Not after
15:06
the understated, much
15:10
too little and drastically too
15:12
late Durham report, but
15:16
devastating Durham report, which
15:19
makes it clear that a corrupt FBI
15:21
tried to rig the outcome by favoring
15:23
one candidate over the other. I like
15:27
that brief description from
15:29
Michael Goodwin. It
15:32
takes a very ponderous, long
15:36
report that could have been issued before the 2020 election
15:39
if the
15:42
author and the people involved in Barr didn't
15:44
hold it up on purpose to hurt Trump.
15:50
Just like he consistently would not investigate
15:54
any allegation involving
15:56
Biden, Barr, that is, or election
15:59
for us. He
16:01
would take him in the garden.
16:05
I
16:05
can give you a chapter and verse on that. She'd like
16:10
to call me as a witness. Well, today, today we had
16:12
we had
16:17
FBI agents. I always like to see FBI
16:19
agents. These are the FBI
16:22
agents I saw today reminded me
16:25
of the men and women I work with. Boy, these
16:27
people have been
16:29
kicked around and kicked around. I don't
16:32
know. They don't know me. I know them in spirit. And
16:37
given the fact that I've been kicked
16:40
around and kicked around and kicked around,
16:42
but you notice I'm still smiling,
16:44
right?
16:48
I feel a kinship with them. I do.
16:51
I feel a
16:54
real kinship with them and I honor them.
16:56
That's Special Agent Garrett O'Boyle
16:58
and Special Agent Steve Friend
17:00
and a very impressive field specialist Marcus
17:05
Allen.
17:05
Very special because
17:08
he made a total fool out of the nitwit Congresswoman
17:11
from, I guess, California, where
17:13
every Democrat is probably a nitwit.
17:15
Look at the condition of the state. Not every
17:17
Democrat person. They're
17:19
unfortunate.
17:20
They're either they don't know
17:22
it, but they're really subjects. They're
17:25
not citizens anymore. They're
17:28
subjects of what is something that is much more
17:30
akin to a socialist republic than a democracy
17:34
and a woke kingdom that
17:38
lives under woke principles, many
17:41
of which are very, very dangerous
17:43
for your health and certainly disastrous
17:45
for
17:46
your morality. It's
17:50
good that a Congress, a person
17:52
like me, is going to be a good that a Congress,
17:54
a person like that, made an utter complete
17:57
idiot and fool out of herself.
17:59
happens every day. I mean, I could spend every
18:02
day up here. I
18:03
was true
18:05
way back when I lived here, you could
18:08
spend every day up here pointing out
18:10
the incredible number of nitwits that sit
18:12
in the Congress.
18:14
But I just proportionate number
18:16
right now on the Democrat side,
18:18
because they're having to follow policies
18:21
that are Marxist,
18:24
anti-American,
18:25
hateful, dishonorable.
18:29
They attack these whistleblowers. I
18:34
mean, the whistleblowers they used
18:36
were unwilling to come forward, just
18:40
total cowards.
18:42
And the one main whistleblower they used
18:44
was a massive liar. I know who it is. I
18:47
can tell you, I know who the whistleblower
18:50
is. Without any doubt,
18:52
I know who the whistleblower is. There
18:55
isn't anybody who doesn't know who the whistleblower is
18:57
who paid attention to the case. The
19:00
whistleblower is about as suspicious as
19:02
he can get. The whistleblower who came
19:04
forward to create the
19:06
phony Ukraine extortion
19:10
was involved trying to frame Trump four
19:12
years earlier. And I've got the witnesses
19:14
that identify him.
19:18
That's why a dishonest,
19:22
dishonorable, shifty
19:24
shift pulled him back.
19:27
Pulled him back because everything he said
19:29
could have been disproven
19:31
if he testified. And number two would have been shown
19:33
that
19:34
this guy was obsessed
19:36
with getting Trump. Been
19:39
involved in an early stage at committing crimes
19:42
and trying to get foreign involvement and
19:47
foreign information to help the Clinton
19:50
campaign and to obtain false
19:52
or damaging information about the Trump
19:55
campaign from Ukrainians,
19:57
which is a crime if
19:59
it's Ukrainian. if it's a crime if it's Russians.
20:01
I mean the odd part of it is they
20:03
charge Russian collusion, turns
20:06
out now to be completely false. And
20:09
not just false, but please understand
20:12
this, paid for false. It's
20:15
a, it's a, I don't
20:18
know Ted, you got a fiction book around it somewhere? It's
20:21
a, it's a fiction book. It's
20:25
a, it's a complete work of fiction, uh,
20:28
paid for by Hillary Clinton. There's
20:32
a battery that's running low
20:36
and it's not mine. My battery is really
20:38
charged up. Did you know that?
20:41
Being here in Washington may make
20:43
me depressed in terms of my spirit,
20:46
but it makes me, uh, fight
20:49
back in the world.
21:11
Testimony today, which I haven't
21:14
frankly, uh, been able to, to
21:16
absorb as well as I should
21:18
because I get
21:21
absorbed the key parts of it. Um,
21:25
oh, Boyle friend and, and, and
21:27
Alan, uh, have in common,
21:30
uh, from the inside, having
21:33
observed what all of us see from the outside
21:35
that the FBI, with regard
21:37
to the headquarters and they
21:39
take it a step further than I can
21:42
necessarily tell you, because
21:44
I can tell you that the headquarters is thoroughly
21:46
corrupt and that Ray
21:48
is as guilty as Comey.
21:51
Uh, I shouldn't say that, uh,
21:54
Comey is, um, horrifically
21:57
guilty
21:58
of some of the worst crimes committed by
22:00
a person serving in government,
22:03
knowingly
22:06
freeing and allowing a major
22:08
criminal at the highest level of government to go free
22:11
Hillary Clinton,
22:12
and then attempting to frame an innocent man,
22:14
Donald Trump,
22:16
when he knew from somewhere
22:19
around August 1, 2016, that
22:23
what he was pursuing was untrue, and
22:26
that it was a concoction of Hillary Clinton.
22:29
He was told that by the head of the CIA,
22:31
yet he allowed his worst agents,
22:34
Strzok and Page,
22:38
who had a psychotic
22:40
hatred of Trump,
22:42
to go ahead and pursue.
22:45
And there's no accident
22:47
that their
22:50
first preliminary investigation,
22:52
their second full investigation,
22:55
yielded no evidence of Trump
22:58
or Trump campaign involvement with Russians.
23:01
It was put by Strzok as there's no
23:04
there there,
23:10
meaning
23:13
there's no evidence.
23:14
It was also put that way in a memo.
23:16
I don't want you to think, we've got to deal with ambiguities.
23:19
But then they went ahead and started a second investigation,
23:22
came to the same result. And
23:26
then as Durham
23:28
made clear yesterday, they started the $40
23:31
million investigation without
23:33
an iota of evidence that
23:35
Trump did anything wrong. And
23:37
then when they got a piece of evidence, the
23:40
original FBI agents who got it disregarded
23:43
it. And it was only Strzok that took
23:45
it up and went with it. And he didn't
23:48
do a preliminary investigation, but instead
23:50
started a full investigation. And
23:53
then Durham compares it to all the
23:55
times that he stopped
23:57
investigations of Clinton. including
24:01
disgustingly stopping
24:03
investigations of the completely fraudulent
24:05
Clinton Foundation, time
24:08
after time. So
24:13
there's no doubt then that agents like,
24:16
like O'Boyle and Friend,
24:19
when
24:22
they're being asked to do things that good FBI
24:24
agents wouldn't do, object to it. I
24:28
mean, look at the way they would conduct these raids.
24:31
I conducted FBI raids.
24:34
We didn't dress them up like storm troopers.
24:37
They're not supposed to be dressed up like soldiers
24:40
in white collars. Yeah,
24:42
I did plenty of searches in white collars
24:45
cases. They wore suits. I
24:50
don't remember arresting mafia guys with them
24:52
dressed like that. Tanks
24:54
and I
24:59
mean, you go to, even like Roger, Roger,
25:01
Michael Cohen's house. Michael
25:04
Cohen's a pretty bad guy. He's
25:06
a perjurer and stuff like that and a
25:08
fraudster. You don't go to his house at
25:11
five in the morning, dressed up like storm
25:13
troopers and raid them. What's
25:18
that for? The cameras, right?
25:21
Or is that to scare everybody else? Is
25:25
that why they raided me to scare other lawyers?
25:54
Yeah. you
26:30
you you
27:30
you you
28:30
you you
29:30
you
30:04
Sometimes I felt that way
30:06
when lawyers didn't want to participate or I
30:08
tried to convince lawyers to participate
30:11
and when they wouldn't do it I wouldn't
30:14
push too hard.
30:16
I wouldn't push too hard. I'd step back and
30:18
I'd say, you know,
30:20
I'm in my 70s and at the
30:22
end of my career I
30:24
can take it.
30:25
I've always been able to take it. I said, Jesus, you know,
30:28
what are they going to do to me? The mafia wanted to kill me. The
30:30
FARC wanted to kill me.
30:32
The Islamic terrorists would love to kill me
30:34
and twice attempted to do it.
30:38
I never made big deal about these things. I
30:41
don't make a big deal about these things for me now.
30:44
I make a big deal about these things for other
30:46
people. Nothing
30:49
they can do to me. There's nothing they can do to me.
30:51
There's nothing they can do to me
30:54
that will get to me anymore. I'm
30:57
too damn old. I've done too many things
30:59
and I know in my heart what
31:02
I did for my country and you
31:04
can't take it away from me.
31:07
And none of these scum would ever do
31:09
the kinds of things
31:10
that I did for my country. They
31:12
haven't accomplished one-tenth of what I've accomplished.
31:14
So like a guy like Brennan,
31:20
I'm not sure who he's working for. The
31:22
guy who helped to claim that I'm a Russian,
31:25
that I'm a Russian
31:27
agent on no evidence. We've
31:34
got to get rid of them. We've got to root them out
31:37
from the top and the bottom. And
31:40
they say, what should be done with the FBI? Defund
31:42
the FBI? The only reason I don't like,
31:44
and I know former President
31:47
Trump, President Trump said defund
31:49
the FBI. And I understand it. I
31:51
just don't like getting caught up in that verbiage
31:54
because that's the Antifa.
31:56
That's the Black Lives Matter. That's
31:59
the Democratic Party.
31:59
at verbiage. Basically, you
32:02
got to change their name and you got to start over
32:04
again. Like the Democratic Party's got to
32:06
change its name. Well, we
32:08
shouldn't have a major institution
32:12
that was the biggest institution that helped to create
32:15
and maintain or rather maintain slavery
32:17
in the United States. You can't have that
32:20
name for a major political country.
32:22
Democrat Party has to be more
32:25
than a major political country.
32:29
Until they get rid of the name Democrat
32:31
Party,
32:32
everything they're doing is hypocritical. Yes,
32:34
we have some questions.
32:40
Who do we have? We
32:42
have on the line with us our good friend,
32:45
Kirk Elliott, PhD. Kirk,
32:48
how are you? Kirk, can you
32:50
hear us? And
33:05
so, well, I don't buy there for Kirk.
33:07
I'll stand. I'll continue and you
33:10
get Kirk and I will.
33:13
I will. And
33:16
I know we're on the border. The
33:18
reaction to the
33:21
change from Article 42, I guess the
33:25
new one is eight. We described
33:28
the process. I have a chart for it, which
33:31
maybe tomorrow night
33:33
if there isn't a lot of breaking news, we'll
33:35
go through. Kirk, can you hear us? I'll try
33:37
to do it in like three, four minutes because
33:39
it's
33:40
quite a convolution
33:41
process.
33:48
And we're starting to see floods of illegals
33:50
coming in. We'll get these important
33:53
words from Kirk, which is
33:55
so important for you to
33:58
pay attention to. you're
34:00
going to be a police take
34:04
the first step. Please promise
34:06
me you'll take the first step. Meaning, you'll talk
34:08
to him and his people and it'll
34:11
maybe lead you to them, maybe lead you to someone else
34:14
or maybe maybe lead you to make another decision
34:16
but this is extraordinarily important.
34:20
It's hard. Kirk. I
34:23
am. Kirk,
34:27
how are you? I'm doing well. Sir, how are
34:29
you? I'm going to ask you both with
34:31
regard to our specific
34:33
project but also in general because they connect
34:36
together.
34:37
It looks to me like some of the things
34:39
you've been talking about
34:41
are slowly, unfortunately, but surely
34:43
taking place and the economy
34:46
is beginning to really hope,
34:48
I would say, even worse than Sputter. Well,
34:52
I wish I weren't right on that one.
34:54
But you are. I wish you weren't too
34:56
but I'm going to tell you, Kirk, you're right
34:58
about it. You're right about it. Yeah,
35:01
I mean, that's the sad reality. I mean,
35:03
we've been talking a lot over the last few weeks.
35:21
He said during COVID, nobody
35:24
was working. People weren't buying stuff.
35:27
And so then post-COVID, tons
35:29
of stimulus money came in. Which is
35:31
here's stimulus money, one of the problems why we have to keep
35:33
raising the debt ceiling, right? Which
35:36
is big news now. So what are the
35:38
stimulus money manufacturers
35:40
to build up their inventories to
35:43
kind of mask the fact that nobody
35:45
was buying anything. But still, nobody
35:48
was buying anything. So now his
35:50
warning was pretty dire. I've
35:53
never heard this kind of language come out of
35:55
one. But, of course, I've listened to shareholder meetings.
35:58
is typically
36:00
like the populist
36:03
Democrat. And and
36:06
what he said, though, was post COVID,
36:09
after they build up inventories with nobody buying
36:11
now these companies have massive inventories,
36:15
and nobody's buying them. So,
36:17
minvins always
36:20
have a it's it goes like,
36:22
it's obsolete after a year, so they got to sell
36:24
it. So you're going to have 50% off sales, 75% off fire sales,
36:26
the margins, the the
36:32
product, put margins
36:35
for earnings or a good market
36:37
could collapse, right. So this was
36:40
his warning from one of the greatest invest
36:42
that this generation has seen,
36:44
right, but this matches
36:46
the the the warning
36:50
of Janet Yellen.
36:53
So,
36:56
you got to raise the debt ceiling, you
36:58
have to raise it, because if you don't
37:00
the stock market could come down 40%. So, so
37:04
I hear that.
37:05
It's like, wait a second, the stock market's not
37:07
coming down because you don't raise debt ceiling.
37:09
The stock market's coming down because during
37:12
the Biden administration,
37:14
lowers higher taxes, higher interest
37:16
rates, higher inflation,
37:18
nobody's spending, the stock market
37:20
is a function of revenues. But in a pre
37:23
election cycle, politicians
37:25
can't can't run on, well,
37:28
we were so bad at running
37:30
the economy that it shut down
37:32
during my watch. Please vote. Campaign.
37:36
No, so she's now blaming it.
37:38
If the stock market
37:40
collapses, which here it is
37:43
going to come down because of the fundamentals
37:45
of the economy, not because of the debt
37:47
ceiling issue. So here's where they're
37:49
gonna blame it on the other
37:54
one. Oh, I don't I don't know how they
37:56
can.
37:58
Can I just ask you I
38:01
don't Question
38:04
is do you it'll come gradually But
38:07
determinately or do you think it'll
38:10
come down like there'll be a a
38:13
crash or a mini crash I
38:16
think it's going to be a crash. Um
38:19
You know so ernest hemingway what
38:21
he you know, one of the most prolific authors
38:25
All time, you know both In
38:29
a re in a basically an interview with
38:31
them the interviewer asked hey Ernest
38:34
how in the world did you file bankruptcy?
38:36
He said well, it started slowly and
38:38
then it just happened So,
38:42
I mean how appropriate is that
38:46
This didn't just happen
38:49
No, no, of course not for decades
38:52
with the with the fiscal mismanagement
38:54
with printing more money than what we need The
38:57
inflationary pressures the bad politics.
38:59
So so this debt ceiling issue, right?
39:01
The government's spending more money than
39:04
than what they're bringing in so Janet
39:07
yellen screaming you got to raise the debt ceiling
39:09
because june 1st is d-day. Well, that's
39:11
coming right up upon us pretty soon
39:13
Well, let's look at some of this stuff.
39:16
So june 1st 101 billion
39:19
dollars in spending is due but only 26
39:22
billion in revenue So, where's
39:24
that 101 billion in spending? Wow,
39:27
medicare medicare. Wow. I'm
39:29
sorry kirk I gotta stop on that.
39:31
That's a hell of a delta. Wow
39:34
Oh wait till you get june 2nd Wow, 47
39:39
billion veterans benefits 12 billion Military
39:43
pay in retirement 10 billion civil service
39:45
and retirement six, but
39:46
okay go to june 2nd
39:48
40 billion in spending is due
39:50
with only 18 billion dollars in revenue
39:53
That's now social security
39:55
benefits of 25 billion are due
39:57
medicaid 2 billion
39:59
Education programs one billion. So let
40:02
me ask you this because you're you're
40:04
politician, right? You you you've seen
40:06
all this before tired when you're going into
40:09
retired politician, right? Because
40:11
you saved your life
40:13
right now, so so
40:15
When you look at this
40:17
The politicians going into a pre-election
40:20
cycle. They need to raise Absolutely
40:23
because all of these benefits will go
40:25
away Medicare veterans
40:27
benefits That's a big voting block military
40:30
pay and retirement civil service
40:32
retirement Social security benefits
40:35
if they don't raise the debt ceiling
40:38
imagine campaigning on that but
40:40
here's here's where it gets interesting You
40:42
know trump About five
40:44
six days ago said do not raise
40:46
the debt ceiling. This is mortgaging, you
40:49
know future generations, right? But so so
40:51
they always raise the debt ceiling. So here's
40:53
the implications
40:55
Right you you raise the debt ceiling
40:57
you're going to have to print your way out of it Interest
41:00
rates are going to have to rise to slow down that
41:02
inflation
41:03
You don't raise the debt ceiling In
41:05
japan and china and
41:07
the federal reserve and everybody that
41:10
owns u.s treasury state pensions
41:12
the federal pension
41:13
Basically get defaulted on their interest
41:15
payments. Oh, you just created
41:17
a massive geopolitical conference Of course,
41:19
yeah, so there's a no-win situation
41:22
that because of decades of financial
41:25
mismanagement
41:26
So what what I mean, i'll
41:28
tell you the end end result is probably
41:31
going to be they put it off
41:33
or they do some
41:36
Control on future spending
41:38
not nearly anything significant but
41:41
something that's Face-saving and
41:43
then they
41:44
go ahead and fund and fund the debt
41:46
And then they probably don't pay attention
41:48
to the reduction anyway
41:50
And we go through the cycle all over again two
41:52
years from now Well, mccarthy
41:55
and biden have been fighting over this for a couple
41:57
of weeks now
41:58
and biden said we're not
41:59
negotiating, we're simply not going
42:02
to
42:03
to actually negotiate on this. We're
42:05
just going to raise the debt ceiling. And McCarthy
42:07
says, no, we're not raising the debt ceiling.
42:09
Right. So this political talk back and forth. Well,
42:11
then this morning, McCarthy says, OK,
42:14
well, we'll consider raising the debt ceiling
42:16
if you show us future budget
42:19
cuts. And it's like, OK, now you're
42:21
already backpedaling. Right. But
42:22
here's here's my concern. Doesn't that
42:24
mean that Biden or hasn't
42:27
Biden already won the point when he says that?
42:29
Because the theory was
42:31
we don't trust you to do it later. We
42:33
want you to do it now. And if you
42:36
do it now, then we'll raise the debt ceiling.
42:39
So that becomes you can raise the debt
42:41
ceiling.
42:42
And you promise us you're
42:44
going to reduce spending later, which, of course, they never
42:48
do. No, they never do. And so but
42:50
you're looking at this at a time
42:52
in history where now we're looking
42:55
at what France, right. France
42:57
raised the retirement years for their
42:59
retirees. And so now they got riots
43:01
looting. Right. Right. And
43:04
what kind of what kind of increase was it like from 60
43:06
to 62 or something? It was
43:09
it was like a two year. It was a two year. I
43:11
mean, they already retire pretty young, right?
43:14
Yeah. I mean, but here's the thing.
43:16
That's not an entitlement that you pay
43:18
into Social Security your whole life. It's a mandatory
43:20
payment. Of course, you should get it. But because of mismanagement,
43:23
they're not getting it. So now when
43:25
Janet Yellen says we're
43:26
Social Security Trust Fund ends
43:29
in 10 years, it runs out of money, it's bankrupt.
43:32
So now there's talk of austerity
43:34
measures here
43:35
of raising retirement age
43:38
and lowering benefits both. Wow.
43:40
With what happened in France. We're going to see the same stuff
43:42
here. How can you lower benefits, though, when
43:45
you've promised them?
43:48
Well, for this, for the sake of the
43:50
nation. Yeah. I mean,
43:52
that's the that's the talk. It's
43:54
like, but but so here's you've got civil
43:57
unrest always follows economic.
44:00
Turmoil it just it just does
44:02
so these are the the fruit
44:04
on the tree of Biden's
44:07
massively Amazing economic
44:09
plan for America, right? I mean,
44:11
so this is what we're seeing But but all of this
44:13
produces more inflation because they're gonna have to
44:16
print their way out of it
44:17
So the question then becomes how do you
44:19
protect yourself in an inflationary environment?
44:22
Well, it's what we've been talking about for the last few weeks
44:25
Cantable assets do really really good and
44:27
I should say that differently debt
44:29
free tangible assets do really
44:31
good because real estate
44:33
is a tangible asset However, when
44:35
it's a function of borrowing money from the banks
44:38
and banks are running out of money and a rising
44:40
interest rate cycle People can't afford to borrow.
44:42
So real estate actually is gonna hit the skits But
44:45
but debt free tangible assets
44:48
like gold and silver that you just pay cash for
44:50
you don't finance it
44:52
Those things go through the roof in
44:54
an inflationary environment So this is
44:56
where people when they reallocate
44:59
when they reposition into strength
45:01
after they've identified the trend You
45:03
can still have a smile on your face and grow
45:06
and thrive
45:07
and be in a place where your money will
45:09
outlast you Rather than you so tell so
45:11
tell so let's this was a remarkably
45:14
brilliant analysis Kirk
45:18
and and very and very much
45:21
In the general interest, but now I want you to give
45:24
people some advice on what they can do to help
45:26
themselves Which you know you
45:28
are in a position to help them with Well,
45:31
this is what we do. This is what I've done for 29 years,
45:34
right is Strategically map
45:36
out a plan to take advantage of the trends that
45:38
are in front of us rather than the trends take advantage
45:40
of you
45:41
so call our office 720 605 3900 at
45:48
720 605 3900 and just say Rudy sent
45:50
you and what we'll do is we'll we'll set
45:53
up a time to talk Listen
45:55
to your fears your concerns your dreams
45:57
your aspirations your goals and
45:59
map out a strategy where you can thrive or
46:02
simply go to our website, kirkelliottphd.com
46:06
forward slash Rudy and
46:08
just fill out the little form and say, Hey, you want to
46:10
talk to one of us and myself or one
46:12
of my advisors and we'll map out a strategy
46:15
for success because here's the thing, Mayor.
46:18
There's no such thing as a bad investment.
46:21
There's just bad timing for investments. During
46:24
times like Trump and Reagan years, what
46:26
did they have? Lowering taxes, lowering interest
46:28
rates and job creation. Amazing.
46:31
That's when the stock market booms. But now
46:33
under this administration, we've got rising
46:36
taxes, rising interest rates to slow down
46:38
inflation they're creating by printing money out of
46:40
thin air and they're not creating jobs.
46:43
They're shrinking jobs, right? So, so here's
46:45
where we can take advantage of that because
46:48
there's certain times when stocks are good,
46:50
certain times and bonds are good, certain times and gold and
46:52
silver are good and certain times when they're
46:54
not.
46:55
And I tell you what, during this time in history,
46:58
tangible assets like gold and silver are
47:00
thriving and we just need to take
47:02
advantage of that trend. And people, what
47:05
you can do is then tailor recommendations
47:09
to, let's say, my specific problems,
47:11
issues, desires, because
47:15
you really can't do this in general. Everybody
47:17
is different. You know, everybody has different goals,
47:20
different amounts of money, different kinds of assets,
47:22
different sets of problems. It really requires
47:25
a
47:26
conversation with experts, right?
47:28
Absolutely. The different ages, close
47:30
to retirement, far from retirement, debt, income
47:33
needs, growth needs. I mean,
47:35
everybody's different. So anybody who uses
47:37
a cookie cutter approach is just wrong. Yeah,
47:39
of course. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And
47:42
I got to tell you, the people that have gotten back
47:44
to me, you know, that have taken advantage of this,
47:46
have all said one thing uniformly,
47:49
the people
47:51
that you have are remarkably good
47:53
and remarkably nice. Well,
47:56
thank you for that. I mean, I'm biased. Don't
47:59
be scared.
47:59
I mean, sometimes
48:02
people get intimidated because whenever they
48:05
call up, you know, like credit card,
48:08
one for this, two for that,
48:11
three for this, four for that. This
48:13
is not like that. You're going to get very, very good service.
48:16
You're going to get good advice. You
48:19
probably should follow it. But even
48:21
if you don't, it's going to enlighten your viewpoint.
48:24
So this is worthwhile doing. I highly
48:26
recommend it. And we'll
48:28
be talking next week, Kirk. You have a good
48:30
week. All right. Sounds good for
48:33
you too. God bless you. Thank you.
48:35
God bless you, Kirk, for what you're doing. You really are doing
48:37
a public service. God bless you.
48:40
A man's a man's remarkable. Isn't he? I
48:42
mean, I love listening to his analysis of the economy
48:45
and I know he has
48:47
a business and he wants to sell something, but I think
48:49
it's remarkable that he spent so much time on the
48:51
economy in general.
48:53
I got to get him to
48:55
get it down to call seven to 0 6 0 5 3,900.
49:00
Okay. That's right. And they're
49:02
really sent you Rudy sent you. That's
49:04
a good one.
49:06
Maybe they're even nicer to you. I don't know. I
49:08
don't think so. I think they'd be nicer to you anyway, but at least
49:10
that's nice for me. If you do that, he'll see how important
49:12
I am. Right. So you
49:15
go 7 2 0 6 0 5 3, 900 and
49:18
get into this thing about,
49:21
you know, uh, how
49:24
a different times different investments,
49:26
you know, materially different investments
49:29
are really, uh, more sensible
49:32
and probably most of you don't have
49:34
as much experience with
49:36
investing alternatively in
49:39
silver and gold and,
49:41
uh, Kirk, you know, Kirk
49:44
knows both sides of it.
49:46
And right now he
49:49
is, how
49:51
do you, what's the best way to say this? More
49:53
inclined towards silver
49:55
because he thinks it has a sharper
49:57
path of increase. but
50:00
not at all opposed to the idea of gold, if
50:02
that's what you want to do. But I think you
50:04
should listen to why that would make sense
50:06
right now. And right
50:09
now, you remember, we
50:11
got a year and a half to
50:13
go until the next election.
50:18
We've got really two
50:20
years to go before
50:23
there'll be any real change
50:25
in the economy as a result of that
50:27
election. And
50:30
then probably even longer when
50:33
you consider this all, I'm
50:35
thinking to Reagan and
50:37
Trump
50:38
when they made their, and I've lived
50:41
through both,
50:42
when they made their changes in the economy,
50:45
it took Reagan a couple
50:47
of years. In fact, Reagan was very unpopular
50:49
his first year in office. The economy
50:52
was in terrible shape. He had trouble in
50:54
the mid-year elections. And
50:56
then all of a sudden, morning in America.
50:59
I think it took about three years.
51:01
I think I'm going to have to go back and economy.
51:03
I'll go check. I hate to give you any kind
51:05
of information that's even slightly off on the economy.
51:08
But I think I'm right. It was about two and a half years.
51:11
I may be thinking to myself. I
51:14
came into office. The economy was terrible.
51:17
We had 10 and 1.5% unemployment. We
51:20
had 75% of people wanted to leave the city.
51:23
We had more people on welfare than ever
51:25
before. And going up, we
51:28
had a deficit that
51:31
was four times what I was led
51:33
to believe when I was running and then turned out
51:35
to be six times. And
51:38
I made massive cuts in
51:40
city government. Only may I ever
51:42
to do that, ever. And
51:45
man, you put
51:47
together the difficulties in the economy,
51:50
the crime that was going on. It didn't go down on day
51:52
one.
51:53
And by the end of my first year in office,
51:56
nobody thought I'd be reelected, as
51:59
nobody thought Reagan would be. And
52:01
it took Reagan getting
52:04
the tax package through. It
52:09
took me really, I mean, the
52:13
break that I got was I
52:17
got crime down real fast. Just
52:20
wait, Adams got it up real
52:22
fast. I got it down real fast. I
52:25
mean, right now we're operating better
52:27
than we were in the first year, but the first year
52:29
he was in office, we were up 30%.
52:32
First year I was in office, we were probably down 20, 25%. So
52:36
that helped a little. The economy started
52:38
turning about two years into it.
52:41
And very, very much like Reagan,
52:44
I ran for reelection with morning in New
52:46
York and morning in America. The economy was doing fabulous.
52:49
And I won by a little. I
52:53
don't think it's the biggest landslide for a Republican
52:55
close to it. I
52:58
think that LaGuardia and Bloomberg probably
53:03
about the same, but
53:06
always Republicans. They're the ones who straightened
53:08
things out in New York, by
53:10
and large in cities. I mean, Democrats are
53:12
horrible with cities. And
53:15
with Reagan, it took about two years. So the whole point
53:17
of that is the
53:19
situation you're living under, you can be living under figure
53:21
for three years. And
53:24
obviously you can make a move quickly if
53:27
things start to change, but you need good people. And
53:30
these are good people. So give them a
53:32
call, you got nothing to lose, give them a call and
53:35
see what you think. It
53:37
might just inform you in some other
53:39
way. Again, thank you very, very much, Kirk.
53:42
And now
53:43
anybody
53:46
else on the line? Well, mayor, we have
53:49
a special call. Let's
53:51
go to Lena.
53:53
We have Lena on the line. Lena is calling
53:55
us from Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
53:57
Lena, are you there? your
54:00
show and Lena, how are you? I'm
54:03
well, sir. How are you this evening? I'm I'm
54:05
doing I'm considering the fact I'm in
54:08
Washington, D.C. and that always gets
54:10
me down until until
54:14
we get a real president, you
54:17
know, who's compass menace. I'm
54:19
doing well. And and
54:22
Ted is doing a great job. You
54:26
know, Ted
54:28
Ted and I got close when I was
54:31
helping you. Tell
54:34
everybody who you are, Lena. Come on. Thank
54:36
you, Mayor. My name is Lena Rose
54:39
Epstein. I'm a a
54:41
Jewish conservative out of Southeast
54:43
Michigan. And I run the sixth largest women
54:46
owned business in Michigan. God bless you. And
54:49
Lena Lena is a force in nature. She's
54:51
not just
54:52
all what she just said. Lena is a force
54:54
of nature
54:56
and a great patriot.
54:59
Thank you, sir. And it's an honor to be on the show with
55:01
with you and Theodore tonight. The two of you
55:03
are spectacular. Theodore. Oh, yeah. My
55:06
mother used to call my mother used to call me Rudolph.
55:10
Rudolph.
55:12
OK, I'm going to call him Theodore now.
55:16
So what do you think? What do you think about
55:18
this stuff going on with the FBI?
55:21
Lena, how does it how does it feel?
55:24
You know, you're in Michigan a little further away
55:26
from it. How does it what does it look like to you?
55:29
There's just an incredible sense of distrust,
55:31
sir. Yeah. You know, we're we're
55:33
being told inside of Michigan that our that
55:36
our votes were still you
55:38
know, that that the election was stolen and
55:41
that it was won by our side. And unfortunately,
55:44
the Democrats are in power. A lot of people are trying
55:46
to make sense of Kia
55:49
with very little understanding. And I
55:51
think, you know, the reason you're under
55:53
attack mayor is because you speak the truth
55:55
and you speak to the heart of the American patriot.
55:58
And and the left is very. threatened by
56:00
that. So I want to encourage you to keep
56:02
on.
56:02
Well, thank you. Thank
56:05
you. Be
56:09
a fool if I didn't tell you it held a lot when people
56:12
say that, you know, that you've had some, you've
56:14
had some difficult times like we all have too. And
56:16
you've had to fight through and you have now
56:19
your birthday is
56:21
only four days before mine. Did you
56:23
know that? I did not. I'm
56:25
so happy to know that your birthday is
56:27
the 24th and mine is the 28th. That's
56:31
incredible. And, and, and, and you're
56:34
going to be 25 or 26 and I'm going to
56:39
be 39. That's what I decree.
56:41
That's what I decree. But you, but
56:44
in your case, you look 25. In
56:48
my case, I look what I really am.
56:52
I say this to you every time we're on the line,
56:54
sir. But on 9 11, when
56:57
all national leaders, Wilson ran
56:59
the other way, you were the American
57:02
hero that ran into the fire and
57:04
you gave security
57:06
to, to so many millions of
57:08
Americans. I want to thank you for that. Mayor,
57:11
that was you. Well, thank you. Well, I guess
57:13
he forever and ever, no matter what fake
57:15
news media wants to throw in front of us, just as
57:18
a silly distraction.
57:20
I agree. I agree. I agree
57:22
with that. And I had a lot of help. And I appreciate
57:25
you for saying that. And you just
57:27
have a wonderful birthday and I can't wait
57:29
to see you.
57:30
I can't. Thank you. Come visit us
57:32
in deep. I will. I will. Working
57:34
incredibly hard. Oh, and
57:36
we feel, we feel strongly that Michigan's
57:38
in place. So anytime you want to talk about that,
57:40
sir, I'd be happy to,
57:42
I was with him that faithful
57:44
morning of the election when
57:46
he decided to make that last
57:48
trip to Michigan in 16. In fact, I
57:52
woke up just as he was
57:54
coming off the plane. I had to introduce him
57:57
and Bannon had to pull me out of my seat.
58:00
I don't want to look at that introduction. I
58:03
don't remember if I actually pronounced his name right.
58:05
I was half asleep. You know, he
58:07
was supposed to finish before New Hampshire
58:10
and he decided, oh, let's go to New Hampshire. Remember
58:13
Lena, the last stop in 2016. And
58:15
I believe the mayor was with him in Grand Rapids,
58:18
Michigan. That's the last place they stopped. But you
58:20
gotta remember we did,
58:21
up until then we have done five
58:24
that day. I introduced him five times
58:27
and we go to Michigan.
58:29
Michigan, I got to introduce, New
58:31
Hampshire I got, New Hampshire I thought was the last
58:34
one. So I tore up my speech. I threw it away.
58:36
We get on the plane and he's jumping up and down
58:38
and saying
58:39
he was talking to,
58:42
it was a hanger if I recall correctly.
58:44
He went, wasn't it a hanger,
58:47
Ted? It was an airport.
58:49
It was an airport note, but
58:51
the last rally, I believe was actually at a sports complex
58:54
at the Deltaplex. We drove in. The
58:56
Deltaplex in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
58:58
I remember. I drove in because I sleep in the car too. Yes, and
59:00
I remember what a genius. And I knew this
59:03
campaign knows what they're doing.
59:04
That the president at the time, then
59:07
he knew what he was doing by going to Michigan. And
59:09
Lena can speak to this and you know Michigan mayor.
59:11
You ran for president.
59:13
The people there, right? A message like President Trump.
59:15
It was all done for that. It was done. It
59:18
was a- President Trump worked
59:20
so hard, gentlemen, in Michigan. I was the
59:22
statewide co-chairman for the 2016 election.
59:26
And when Hillary Clinton
59:29
was declaring the win,
59:32
days in advance and not taking the time to come
59:34
here, but President Trump, he came in the middle of
59:36
the night. I know,
59:37
I remember. That was a
59:39
Bannon- It was the Delta. That
59:41
was a, even Bannon
59:43
had pretty much mapped out that whole day.
59:46
And he unfortunately,
59:48
he mapped out more places than we
59:50
could go. But
59:52
Trump remembered. So when
59:55
we were finished with the days, but he also
59:57
said New Hampshire and Michigan. Yeah,
59:59
but- everybody's like, we're going.
1:00:03
So there we were in Michigan. And yes, mayor
1:00:05
Lena was proud to serve as president
1:00:07
Trump's. She did a great job. I mean, it
1:00:10
was a great win. It was
1:00:11
a great, it was a great win. And then we're going to,
1:00:14
I know we're going to do it again. I
1:00:16
know it.
1:00:17
I know the people in Michigan have just had it.
1:00:20
They've just had it. I mean, American
1:00:22
people are too smart for all this to take all
1:00:24
this. They're not. I
1:00:26
believe in the silent majority. Do you mayor,
1:00:28
do you believe in the silent majority? And I
1:00:30
think it's getting louder and louder in the right
1:00:33
way. And I, you know, another thing,
1:00:35
another thing I think that changed things a lot,
1:00:38
you know, happened, uh, with
1:00:40
that attack on parents.
1:00:42
Uh, it was McAuliffe sort of symbolized
1:00:45
it all during that, uh,
1:00:48
campaign
1:00:49
when he said that
1:00:50
the parents really shouldn't have anything to say about the
1:00:52
education of their children. But now
1:00:55
we see it's much bigger than that. We see the FBI
1:00:57
involved in investigating parents.
1:01:00
Investigating parents who complain about schools,
1:01:02
investigating parents who are Catholics, investigating
1:01:05
parents who have some concern
1:01:07
about their children being mutilated and not being told
1:01:10
about it
1:01:11
and making them, you know, so I,
1:01:13
I think that, uh, a
1:01:16
lot of people are a lot more
1:01:18
involved now than they were before I'm pretty angry.
1:01:21
And of course, Lena is one of those upset parents
1:01:23
with a five year old.
1:01:25
And Lena, we want to
1:01:27
talk often about, about, um, Emma's
1:01:30
education, my daughter, Emma.
1:01:32
And, um, so it's very, very, very
1:01:34
personal. Yeah. And I think,
1:01:37
I think that, you know, the, the, the critical
1:01:40
urgency of getting Trump back
1:01:42
in office, um, to, to
1:01:44
really stop the bleed on so many of
1:01:46
these extraordinary issues is just essential.
1:01:49
And we need you to work closely and
1:01:50
we need you, you know, his weakness
1:01:53
apparently is a
1:01:55
women, uh, um,
1:01:58
and I don't know. I think there's going to be a. big
1:02:00
appeal, but we need, you
1:02:02
know, we need we need you to help
1:02:05
help with that. And energized him. You
1:02:08
up for Alina?
1:02:10
What theater? Are you up for that? I
1:02:13
would be delighted. And I can tell you that Donald
1:02:15
Trump loves women, respects
1:02:18
women, you're damn right. Surrounded by,
1:02:21
by powerful, smart women
1:02:23
that he empowers. And he, you know,
1:02:25
this is a man
1:02:27
who has, you know, an entire media
1:02:29
industry has,
1:02:30
has, has cropped up
1:02:33
over this one particular man, president
1:02:35
Trump. And so, you know, at the
1:02:37
heart of the matter is a man who loves all people.
1:02:40
He put everything on the line to protect American
1:02:43
freedom and democracy. And,
1:02:45
um, it's just truly my pleasure
1:02:47
to be on the line with you tonight. Please come to
1:02:49
Michigan.
1:02:50
We will, we will, we will, we'll do a broadcast
1:02:52
from there. Couple
1:02:55
of them. Okay. All
1:02:57
right. Thank you. Always happy
1:02:59
birthday to you. Thank you. You
1:03:02
as well, mayor. God bless you both. Thank
1:03:04
you. Good night. You
1:03:06
guys, when we get, when we, when we get our video
1:03:09
capability, which we're going to have in a few weeks,
1:03:11
you're
1:03:12
going to see how remarkable
1:03:14
this woman, very professional, very, very smart.
1:03:16
And she's beautiful. Very kind. Well, mayor,
1:03:19
we have a clip. I know we wanted to play.
1:03:21
We now have it uploaded. Uh,
1:03:24
Sanchez. I think this is in my
1:03:26
dopey Congress person file. Shall
1:03:29
we play it? Yeah. This, this is what happens.
1:03:32
Set it up. Set it up for the, this is how
1:03:34
you, this is what happens when
1:03:36
you are a vicious, malicious
1:03:38
liar and person who
1:03:40
sets people up. You make drastic
1:03:43
mistakes like this.
1:03:45
And they're trying to say the Republicans
1:03:47
are against the FBI
1:03:49
because Republicans are talking about reforming
1:03:52
it, changing it, defunding it.
1:03:56
Look, is there anybody
1:03:58
that's more in favor of the police than I. I am.
1:04:00
I bet not. Right. I
1:04:02
bet not. I mean, I know that because I
1:04:04
get criticized all the time by the other people
1:04:07
for being too pro police. And I
1:04:09
grew up in a family with four
1:04:11
uncles who were police officers, two cousins.
1:04:14
And you my friends
1:04:16
became cops from the day
1:04:18
I started working after being a law clerk.
1:04:20
I was in law enforcement.
1:04:23
Every major case I had, even
1:04:25
when the FBI and I are the New York
1:04:27
City police department right at my side,
1:04:29
I was their boss for five for eight
1:04:31
years. I was the commander in chief.
1:04:34
And I used to be accused of being the other
1:04:36
police commissioner by interfering too much. And I did
1:04:39
because I love them. I
1:04:42
wouldn't let them
1:04:44
go to the hospital for something serious
1:04:46
without my being there.
1:04:49
I used to keep clothes next to me at my bed.
1:04:51
So I get there fast. God forbid
1:04:53
sh, they didn't
1:04:55
get the best of care. I love them. I
1:04:58
still put seven seven oh of
1:05:00
them in prison
1:05:01
when I was a prosecutor
1:05:04
because they violated their oath of office.
1:05:06
I know how to clean out. It's
1:05:08
part of the nap commission. It's a there's a movie
1:05:10
about it
1:05:11
that you may want to see someday about how the
1:05:13
New York City Police Department
1:05:15
it wasn't as bad as the FBI
1:05:18
is now. Well, it was
1:05:20
in the sense that it was more systemic. I will.
1:05:22
I will say that it got down to
1:05:24
the lower ranks. And we'll talk about that sometime.
1:05:27
The issue here is easier in some ways.
1:05:29
It's at the top.
1:05:31
I'm not saying this to suck up to anybody.
1:05:33
I don't suck up to anybody. I probably
1:05:35
should. I wouldn't be in all the trouble I am if I
1:05:37
did. But by
1:05:41
and large, the FBI is a group of wonderful men and
1:05:43
women. This is not a matter
1:05:45
of having to clean out the entire FBI. It
1:05:47
is a matter of having to clean out the entire headquarters
1:05:50
of the FBI.
1:05:51
And I need to do more work on this. But
1:05:53
from what I heard today and the other day and down
1:05:55
here, maybe the Washington office
1:05:57
to
1:05:59
it is very encouraging to see
1:06:02
the reaction of the New York office and the Boston
1:06:04
office to a lot of this, though, including a
1:06:07
lot of the January 6 shenanigans
1:06:09
that
1:06:10
remind you of the incarceration
1:06:12
of the Japanese during World War II.
1:06:17
And I'm not saying some of them didn't commit crimes,
1:06:20
but there are only a certain amount of things you can do to people
1:06:22
who commit crimes. You don't lock
1:06:24
them up for two years without
1:06:26
a trial. We
1:06:28
don't do that to terrorists. But
1:06:31
we're not supposed to. Well, let's
1:06:36
play this clip. This is a
1:06:39
Congresswoman from
1:06:42
from the not free
1:06:44
state of California. So,
1:06:51
Alan, have you ever used Twitter? Yes or
1:06:53
no? I have utilized
1:06:55
Twitter. Yes. Okay. And is your account at
1:06:58
Marcus A970 50645? That is absolutely
1:07:01
not my account. Okay.
1:07:03
That's not your
1:07:05
account. Well, on December
1:07:08
5th, 2022, an account under the name
1:07:10
Marcus Allen retweeted a
1:07:12
tweet that said that
1:07:13
is not my account, ma'am. You
1:07:15
haven't let me finish the question, sir.
1:07:18
You haven't let me finish the question on
1:07:20
this and the time is mine. On
1:07:22
December 5th, 2022, an account
1:07:25
under the name of Marcus Allen retweeted
1:07:27
a tweet that said, quote, Nancy
1:07:30
Pelosi stage January 6th.
1:07:32
Retweet if you agree. End quote.
1:07:35
Do you agree with that statement? Yes
1:07:38
or no?
1:07:40
That that is I don't know, ma'am.
1:07:42
That's not my account at all. I have. I'm asking
1:07:45
whether you agree with that statement. Yes
1:07:47
or no. Can you please rephrase this? Yeah.
1:07:49
Do you think the gentlelady has expired?
1:07:51
Staged January 6th. I just
1:07:54
want him to answer. Yeah.
1:07:56
I just tell you your time's up. Do
1:07:58
you believe that Nancy Pelosi Do you
1:08:00
agree with the statement that this person tweeted
1:08:02
that Nancy Pelosi staged January 6th?
1:08:05
Yes or no? No. So she thinks
1:08:07
it's got a gotcha moment because she finds a Twitter.
1:08:11
Can you believe that? What
1:08:14
a stupid moron. She's
1:08:17
got the wrong Twitter account. I
1:08:20
mean, you could read them 100 Twitter accounts and ask
1:08:22
Rudy Giuliani tweeted today
1:08:25
that Joe Biden is the dumbest person
1:08:27
he ever met. Do you agree with that?
1:08:30
Probably say yes. But
1:08:33
is this the way we conduct questioning? We
1:08:35
go to Twitter and we pick out
1:08:37
things written by other people and ask them if
1:08:39
they agree. Obviously, the moron
1:08:42
made a mistake or the nitwits
1:08:44
who worked for her picked out the wrong
1:08:46
tweet or they did something that
1:08:48
I was taught
1:08:50
you never should do. Never
1:08:52
assume a damn thing. That's
1:08:54
how I was trained to be a lawyer.
1:08:57
Don't assume a damn thing.
1:09:00
Judge McMahon taught me that about preparing
1:09:02
for trial.
1:09:03
Check it over
1:09:05
or you're going to make an ass out of yourself. It
1:09:07
doesn't matter when a congresswoman from California
1:09:10
makes an ass out of herself because the people
1:09:12
of California, unfortunately, are
1:09:14
brainwashed and they elect morons
1:09:17
like this to office who then get
1:09:19
a chance
1:09:20
to harass patriots
1:09:22
like Marcus Allen,
1:09:24
who put his career and his life on
1:09:26
the line to try to straighten out the
1:09:29
bureau that he loves and the one
1:09:31
and the one that the guy who runs it,
1:09:33
Ray, dishonors just by being
1:09:35
there every day.
1:09:38
Mayor, what motivates these people? Why
1:09:41
on earth would this congresswoman be
1:09:44
so set, dead set to to tear
1:09:46
down somebody like this? She's a stupid
1:09:48
ideologue. That's why. In her case,
1:09:50
I have her figured. I mean, the ones in California,
1:09:53
they're a bunch of stupid communists.
1:09:56
They don't even know they're communists because they're too
1:09:58
stupid to read.
1:09:59
You think they'd be I I
1:10:02
would guarantee you I'll do a
1:10:04
reading Comprehension course with them and
1:10:07
I'll have them read does copy towel and
1:10:09
I'll give them a comprehension test And if
1:10:11
they do better than 20% on the test,
1:10:13
I'll eat my hat
1:10:16
These are nitwits they're morons
1:10:18
sounds like you're gonna go hungry I
1:10:21
mean they are absolute morons
1:10:24
Can you and they are extraordinarily dangerous
1:10:27
to our country a? Country
1:10:29
like America is an extraordinarily
1:10:32
complex enterprise It cannot
1:10:34
be run by people who
1:10:36
have senility
1:10:37
It can't be run by people who are basically
1:10:40
Stupid like this woman It can't
1:10:43
be run by went by people who hate us
1:10:45
like the communists who have charge of a
1:10:47
lot of it
1:10:48
And it can't be run by people who are too damn
1:10:50
interested in money
1:10:52
than anything including patriotism Which
1:10:54
includes right now the entire Democrat
1:10:56
Party because if you were a patriot
1:10:59
you wouldn't stand a single day more
1:11:02
with this incompetent moron
1:11:05
with his hand near the button and
1:11:09
I don't know what you do about Harris who has
1:11:11
her own problem, but right now we
1:11:13
got only one president and
1:11:16
He doesn't have a brain and
1:11:18
It's bad to have a president without a brain
1:11:20
It is put better in
1:11:22
the 25th Amendment Where
1:11:25
it says that he should be removed if he's not capable
1:11:28
of carrying out the duties of his office
1:11:30
It's hard to carry out the duties of you
1:11:33
of your office when your brain
1:11:35
is bleeding out of the back of your head
1:11:38
But
1:11:39
mayor before we go
1:11:41
Can you kind in your words
1:11:44
which I know you've done, but maybe in just
1:11:46
a few minutes Can you
1:11:48
kind of wrap? Give
1:11:51
your I don't know if it's a conclusion
1:11:53
or just thoughts on today's hearings The
1:11:56
thoughts on today's hearing is it's an anti-climax.
1:11:58
It's like an epilogue in a book. The
1:12:01
book ended yesterday in terms
1:12:03
of the FBI with
1:12:06
the Durham report. The Durham
1:12:10
report, which is 1,000 percent
1:12:13
understated but still dramatically
1:12:15
damaging, destroys the
1:12:17
FBI. It reveals it as
1:12:19
an organization that
1:12:22
directly attempted to fix the 2016
1:12:24
election by
1:12:28
assisting Hillary Clinton in what
1:12:30
they knew was her effort to
1:12:32
create false information
1:12:35
about Donald Trump
1:12:36
and to pay, through her
1:12:39
law firm, laundered to
1:12:41
global enterprises to
1:12:45
steal. Now if you go
1:12:47
through it, and now you get into really unbelievable
1:12:50
stuff,
1:12:52
steal didn't write it.
1:12:55
Danchenko, a Russian
1:12:57
spy, wrote some of it, but
1:12:59
most of it was written by a democratic operative
1:13:01
named Dolan,
1:13:04
who first denied doing it
1:13:07
and was lying, and then admitted
1:13:10
he did it, and with the help of a Russian
1:13:12
woman.
1:13:13
None of them writing anything that
1:13:15
amounted to facts, and either
1:13:17
denying ultimately
1:13:20
what they wrote, saying it was untrue or
1:13:23
saying it was gossip that
1:13:25
they had gotten but they couldn't remember where they got
1:13:27
it. So there
1:13:29
was, there's
1:13:31
no support for anything in the steel
1:13:34
dossier, and there was
1:13:37
significant direct contradiction
1:13:40
of it both externally,
1:13:42
like for example, they said that
1:13:46
they said that
1:13:49
Michael Cohen went to Prague to meet
1:13:51
with Russians. Well, Michael Cohen
1:13:53
was in Los Angeles that day, and that's
1:13:56
significant because it shows what a damn
1:13:58
liar
1:13:59
Cohen was when he said, well, you really couldn't
1:14:02
corroborate it, which
1:14:05
is why he excuses himself for lying
1:14:07
and signing that it was verified
1:14:09
when he had to admit that it was never verified,
1:14:12
but it couldn't be verified. Yes, it could.
1:14:14
He could have called up the passport
1:14:16
office and
1:14:19
said, would you take a look at Michael
1:14:22
Cohen's passport? Was he in Prague?
1:14:24
And so
1:14:26
it would be no, Mr. Director.
1:14:28
Oh, strike one.
1:14:30
Then he could have
1:14:32
looked and read the thing, which he probably
1:14:35
never did because he is a phony,
1:14:37
lazy liar. And
1:14:40
he could have asked,
1:14:43
gee, it says here that they had a meeting
1:14:46
in the counselor office or the district
1:14:48
office in Miami. Hey, it'd
1:14:50
be good if, well, let's let's, there's something we can corroborate
1:14:53
on this very sketchy report. Why
1:14:56
don't we call down there and see what
1:14:58
kind of records do they have back on May?
1:15:03
And then one of his little assistants, they probably
1:15:05
too lazy to do it himself. One of his little
1:15:07
assistants is running back and say, boss,
1:15:10
I don't know how to tell you this, but there is no such office.
1:15:12
Or was there one back then? No.
1:15:17
Oh, my goodness. Steel light
1:15:20
about that too. Wow.
1:15:25
Oh, and by the way, he's got a history of being a liar. We
1:15:27
checked him out a little bit. Oh,
1:15:32
he's writing this stuff about Russia, right? And
1:15:34
the kid would say, yeah, yeah, yeah. But I
1:15:37
checked the last time he was in Russia. The
1:15:39
kid take a while to come back. He'd
1:15:42
say, oh, 17 years ago. At
1:15:46
that point, that is what Rudy Giuliani,
1:15:48
who was once offered being director of the FBI.
1:15:50
Did you know that? Mayor
1:15:53
I didn't know that when? Around
1:15:57
what you had? So
1:16:00
during Reagan second term, yes, you
1:16:03
were offered by his chief of staff director of the FBI and
1:16:05
you said Obviously
1:16:07
not. No, no, I was beginning to think about running for mayor
1:16:10
So you knew not to take a job like that. I knew not
1:16:13
to put my name in I'm sorry I was not offered
1:16:15
the job. I was offered the job of head
1:16:17
of the SEC. I
1:16:18
Turned that down
1:16:20
And I was offered what
1:16:22
I consider. Okay. Yeah as an alternative I
1:16:26
was asked by
1:16:31
By senator Baker with senator Baker, okay
1:16:36
Well, you know,
1:16:37
I think you'd be great for the FBI
1:16:39
let me talk to the boss about that Yeah, and
1:16:41
I said no no senator. I That's
1:16:44
a job. I probably would like to have
1:16:46
but I for the first time I'm really starting
1:16:48
to think that
1:16:49
I'm gonna resign pretty soon because
1:16:51
I don't want to think about it too much Well, I'm I'm
1:16:54
I'm I'm the US attorney. He
1:16:56
said oh, is it true? I saw a rumor from
1:16:59
Guy Molinari And
1:17:01
put out that I'd make a great candidate for me. It
1:17:03
gets a little complicated Yeah, but within a month
1:17:05
I resigned I didn't spend a long
1:17:08
time. I
1:17:08
was very very Ethical
1:17:11
about not mixing up politics and I got out
1:17:14
I was gonna say not everyone would do that I
1:17:16
got out before I decided a lot of people would not do
1:17:18
that I don't know what I was doing when I got it. I never
1:17:20
jump
1:17:21
I got out But
1:17:24
you were confident you knew obvious of your skill
1:17:26
set oh, come on I've always been confident, right? You've never
1:17:28
been worried about the next thing like well,
1:17:30
I don't I just put out a shingle and try cases I mean
1:17:32
I can beat anybody or 100% and
1:17:35
I know that I know that maybe
1:17:37
I'm a little biased But I know and I knew that I may
1:17:39
be I may be a little overconfident You can't
1:17:41
be a trial lawyer if you're not overconfident
1:17:43
I mean, how can you how can you take
1:17:46
in your hands the life of other people if
1:17:48
you're not confident in your skills? Like a surgeon
1:17:51
well, you don't stop mayor. I you don't stop
1:17:53
you're And
1:17:56
you gotta get some sleep once in a while
1:17:58
there was a time I did yeah
1:18:00
I enjoy sleep every once in a while. But
1:18:03
in any event, what did you want me to summarize? And
1:18:05
I'll do it real quick because I don't
1:18:07
know. I don't know if they
1:18:09
allow soccer time in DC. They're
1:18:13
probably going to come put us in jail. They're dying to
1:18:15
put us in jail for something. Just maybe a quick
1:18:18
summary of today what we should
1:18:20
take away from it, this hearing
1:18:22
on weaponization. Yeah. The
1:18:25
FBI has to be, I
1:18:28
don't know exactly how you want to put
1:18:30
it, but the
1:18:32
entire top of the FBI has to be
1:18:34
changed. It
1:18:37
needs a new leadership. It needs a new Washington
1:18:40
office. And then you got to look at
1:18:42
how far into the
1:18:45
innards of the FBI the corruption
1:18:47
went. It is a significantly
1:18:50
corrupted organization. It
1:18:52
is now no longer a law enforcement
1:18:54
organization. It's a state
1:18:58
police force. It's a regime
1:19:00
police force. It belongs to the Biden
1:19:02
regime and the Democrat party.
1:19:05
And that has been so
1:19:07
even during the time it was under the leadership,
1:19:09
falsely
1:19:11
really, pretended to be
1:19:14
of Donald Trump. Why
1:19:16
Gray did that? Or Ray or whatever the hell his
1:19:18
name is. I don't know. We can thank Chris
1:19:21
Christie for it. And
1:19:25
it's an outrage. Did President Trump
1:19:27
know Christopher Ray before? No,
1:19:30
he was pressured very, pressured.
1:19:32
I don't mean pressured in an illegal way. I
1:19:35
mean,
1:19:36
it was just a matter of bad judgment
1:19:38
on the part of Christie. But Christie is the
1:19:40
one who recommended him
1:19:42
very strongly. And that's where I
1:19:44
didn't know Ray.
1:19:45
I had no judgment on Ray and I wasn't even
1:19:47
asked about it, which I think was not probably
1:19:50
a good idea. But in any event,
1:19:54
Ray is, I
1:19:57
don't understand why Ray is such a bad director. Strangely,
1:20:00
I understand Comey. After all,
1:20:02
I hired Comey a long time ago. I
1:20:05
understand Comey. I understand the ambition,
1:20:07
the burning ambition, the hypocrisy,
1:20:09
the
1:20:10
desire to be part of the establishment.
1:20:13
I understand the bar sucking up
1:20:16
because he's,
1:20:19
that's who and what he is. And unfortunately, much
1:20:21
worse than I thought. But I don't get ready.
1:20:24
But in any event, I don't have to get it. He's
1:20:26
destroyed the FBI and should
1:20:29
be, should have been tossed out a long,
1:20:31
long time ago. But it's
1:20:34
got to be done now, as soon as we get a new
1:20:36
administration. But the bureau is
1:20:39
not a law enforcement organization any
1:20:41
longer. It is run
1:20:43
by political crooks. Well,
1:20:46
that's a horrible way to end, except
1:20:48
for the fact that if you don't recognize your problem, you're
1:20:51
never going to solve it. And
1:20:54
your road to solving it is recognizing
1:20:56
it, standing up to it and
1:20:58
not being afraid the way these
1:21:00
three agents were. Their careers were destroyed,
1:21:04
but their characters were both
1:21:06
here and in heaven. God bless them.
1:21:09
God bless all the FBI agents who serve
1:21:11
us under decrepit
1:21:15
leadership. And God
1:21:17
bless America.
1:21:25
Our purpose to bring to bear the principle
1:21:27
of common sense and rational discussion
1:21:30
to the issues of our day. America
1:21:33
was created a time of great turmoil, tremendous
1:21:36
disagreements, anger, hatred. It
1:21:39
was a book written in 1776 that
1:21:42
guided much of the discipline of thinking that
1:21:45
brought to us the discovery of our freedoms,
1:21:48
of our God-given freedoms.
1:21:51
It was Thomas Paine's Common Sense, written
1:21:53
in 1776, one of the first
1:21:55
American bestsellers, in which Thomas
1:21:58
Paine explained,
1:21:59
principles, the reason
1:22:02
why these small colonies felt
1:22:04
the necessity to separate from
1:22:07
the Kingdom of Great Britain and
1:22:09
the King of England. He explained
1:22:12
their inherent desire for liberty,
1:22:15
for freedom, freedom of religion,
1:22:18
freedom of speech, the
1:22:20
ability to select the people who govern
1:22:22
them, and he explained it in ways
1:22:25
that were understandable to all the people,
1:22:28
not just the elite,
1:22:29
because the desire for freedom
1:22:32
is universal. The desire
1:22:34
for freedom adheres
1:22:36
in the human mind and it is part
1:22:39
of the human soul. This
1:22:41
is exactly the time we should consult
1:22:43
our history. Look at
1:22:45
what we've done in the past
1:22:48
and see if we can't use it to help us now.
1:22:50
We understand that our founders created the greatest
1:22:52
country in the history of the world, the
1:22:55
greatest democracy, the freest country, a
1:22:57
country that has taken more people out of poverty
1:23:00
than any country ever. All
1:23:03
of us are so fortunate to be Americans.
1:23:07
But a great deal of the reason for America's
1:23:10
constant ability to self-improve because
1:23:12
we're able to reason, we're able
1:23:14
to talk, we're able to analyze.
1:23:18
We are able to apply a God-given
1:23:22
common sense. So
1:23:24
let's do it.
1:23:46
Yeah,
1:23:46
I know I forgot to mean it. I left
1:23:48
it right. Yeah, in the
1:23:50
car in the corner. Oh, I can use it tomorrow.
1:23:53
Yeah, I missed it. Yeah,
1:23:55
I was kicking myself. I
1:23:58
was actually thinking of buying one. I
1:24:00
was checking myself. I
1:24:30
was checking myself. I
1:25:00
was checking myself.
1:25:10
I'm
1:25:12
going to have to grub a little paper from them. Thank
1:25:31
you. Okay.
1:26:30
Okay. Okay.
1:27:29
Okay. Okay.
1:31:09
I made them,
1:31:11
they're making the food again. Because
1:31:13
I told them, I'm so annoyed. Because
1:31:18
I told them bring it up because we have our show and I wasn't going to
1:31:20
leave you during the show, right? Yeah.
1:31:23
Fuck. Um, excuse my language. And, but they're
1:31:25
doing it. The thing is they're doing it. They're making
1:31:27
it fresh. It's like, I don't understand why you couldn't just brought
1:31:29
it up. You're a hotel. You're a hotel.
1:31:32
You're a church. And,
1:31:35
uh, let's see, what are we going
1:31:37
to leave? I got to take some things with me. Yeah.
1:31:41
Here, your room, your, your, your room. I, well, I
1:31:43
think I can leave this year. I'll leave this year. I'll
1:31:45
leave it back there. I'll leave the light here. I'll get the
1:31:47
chairs. I can leave. I'll
1:31:49
put my chairs
1:31:51
here. I'm
1:31:55
going to leave. I'll leave it back there.
1:31:59
Yeah, we'll leave
1:32:03
the light here, right?
1:32:07
Yeah, I'm going to take
1:32:09
the... I'm
1:32:14
leaving the live stream and you can take your suitcase
1:32:16
with you. No, I'm
1:32:17
going to leave this here. I'll
1:32:20
leave the big one here. I'm
1:32:23
going to take the little one. Put
1:32:26
a thing. It goes
1:32:29
in here. Let's see.
1:32:32
I'm
1:32:41
going to leave this in here.
1:32:47
You
1:32:50
might want this. Here, take this. I'll go. May
1:32:54
help with
1:32:54
what we're doing. Oh
1:32:59
yeah, lightning to HDMI. Oh,
1:33:23
come here. Thank
1:33:53
you. I'm
1:34:47
going to leave this here for tomorrow. Yeah,
1:34:50
put it right there.
1:34:59
I'm
1:35:05
going
1:35:07
to need a lot
1:35:12
of this down here. I can bring the food, I'm going to go
1:35:14
pick it up in 15 minutes. Okay, bring it upstairs.
1:35:17
Yeah, I'll bring it to your room. What do you want? I
1:35:19
got a quesadilla and chicken wings. That's fine. Bar
1:35:21
food. Do you see where my bridge
1:35:23
case is? It
1:35:29
was here. Oh,
1:35:32
my hair. Okay.
1:35:36
Yeah. I'll shut this stuff off. Let me see what
1:35:38
I can do with that. Here. All right,
1:35:40
that's good.
1:35:41
Here. All right, that's good. I'm
1:36:09
going to
1:36:12
pull this out of here wherever it goes.
1:36:15
Oh, you don't know you're going to keep this
1:36:17
for tomorrow. Yeah. Yeah,
1:36:19
we can kind of. This is what I need for tonight.
1:36:21
For your room. Yeah. I'll
1:36:23
take that with me. It goes with. Did
1:36:27
you grab that little
1:36:29
white thing from me?
1:36:54
Yeah. Okay.
1:37:25
Thank you so much. You're welcome. Thank
1:37:27
you. Thank
1:37:54
you. you
1:38:30
you you
1:39:30
you you
1:40:30
you you
1:41:30
you you
1:42:30
you you
1:43:30
you you
1:44:30
you you
1:45:30
you
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