Episode Transcript
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0:00
Goodness. Stu.
0:03
Is it not so great to be sitting
0:05
here in the same room? We've got
0:07
the beginning. Oh, I was It's
0:09
dreaming about it all vacation. And
0:11
now here it is. Yes. And wow.
0:14
So I had quite a vacation. I I saw
0:18
a lot of things, did a lot of thinking, have
0:21
some new attitude
0:23
and some new ideas that
0:25
we'll be explaining over the next few weeks.
0:28
Some things that we're gonna talk about tonight.
0:31
Big one is the agenda for the Republicans.
0:33
I'm tired of We
0:36
have Chip Roy on today's podcast,
0:38
and I think he's tired of it too, but
0:40
we're gonna talk little bit about what's going on with the
0:42
speaker of the house and I'm great. I'm I'm
0:45
glad. Good. I
0:47
I don't want another mealy
0:49
mouth wishy washy guy who's doing everything
0:51
behind the scenes. You know, no John
0:53
Bainors. No John Bainors. What do
0:55
you say? No? Yeah. No Paul.
0:57
Right? When I heard actually somebody say, well, we maybe
1:00
we can't Paul. Right? Are you
1:02
out of your mind? Oh
1:04
my gosh. These guys don't get it. No.
1:06
They do not get it. They do not understand the base,
1:09
the the voters, don't understand
1:11
any of it. And they're being
1:13
in, you know, embarrassed publicly because
1:15
of that right right now.
1:17
You think they might eventually get it under control,
1:20
but we'll see. We'll see.
1:22
We'll see. We have a lot to talk about that
1:24
and so much more on today's podcast.
1:27
Here it is. And don't forget to review the
1:29
podcast and subscribe that like you're
1:32
a professional. Instead of
1:34
saying, why don't you review the podcast.
1:37
Let's say this before. Take two.
1:39
Make sure that you review the podcast
1:42
and also
1:45
Follow the podcast and also
1:48
studios America, which is also, I guess, here
1:50
it is available. The podcast You're
1:59
listening too. The best
2:01
of the
2:09
What was that you said? Camodio Cordis.
2:11
And that's all you can say. May
2:13
I just wait a minute.
2:15
Just try to talk some common
2:17
sense here. The NFL
2:20
player that had a heart attack on
2:22
Monday night football. Terrifying.
2:25
I don't usually watch sports.
2:27
I've been watching a lot of football with
2:29
my son lately. And
2:31
I was at dinner
2:34
on Monday night and
2:36
didn't see it. My son and I come
2:38
back to the hotel we
2:40
passed the gym, didn't go
2:42
in. God forbid. But
2:44
we pass the gym and the Monday night
2:46
football was on. So this is your use of the
2:48
gym. You look at the TV. It doesn't look in the Yeah.
2:50
Look through the glass at a teething. Right. And
2:52
I was like, whoa, what's happening on Monday night
2:54
football? And so we got
2:56
into the room and we watched it
2:59
and it was It was shocking. It
3:01
was shocking. You
3:03
know, something that it's one of those moments
3:06
that you will you will remember
3:08
if you saw it. Something
3:10
that the sportscasters all
3:12
night, I lost count of how many times
3:15
is it. We're not sure what's gonna happen. There's
3:17
no precedent for this. I've
3:19
never seen anything like this.
3:21
I don't know. Okay.
3:26
I I noticed a couple of things
3:28
that stuck out to me and
3:31
and and bothered me.
3:34
When I had to switch over to ESPN, I
3:36
think it was or the NFL network to
3:38
be able to see what
3:40
was going on they
3:43
didn't replay the
3:47
the scene over and over and over
3:49
again. That's unusual. Not
3:52
like we need to see it over and over but
3:54
that's what television does. K?
3:57
For dummies like me who tune
3:59
in, late. And
4:01
I'm like, where is the footage? Where is the footage? I
4:03
had to go online to see the
4:05
footage. And that shocked
4:08
me. It also
4:11
was I
4:15
I don't know. I I think this is a good thing.
4:18
But I I they they immediately
4:20
changed. Even the sounders, you
4:22
know, usually when the screen changes,
4:25
you'll hear all
4:28
of the noise went away. And
4:31
it so it added to the
4:33
drama of it. Now,
4:38
they wouldn't say and I thought it was extremely
4:40
responsible. They wouldn't say really
4:42
what had happened. I think they a
4:44
new a few minutes
4:47
before, that's usually what happens
4:49
when you're on a network. You
4:51
get word of what is happening, and
4:53
then you're waiting for it to be verified
4:56
before you say anything. So
4:59
I it was like there We're gonna have
5:01
word here in a few minutes. I'm like somebody
5:03
is on the set standing there with what
5:05
exactly happened. But
5:07
we don't know exactly what happened.
5:10
And this was the thing that
5:12
really bothered
5:14
me. It started
5:16
immediately. This
5:20
is a COVID vaccine. No.
5:23
This is What is it? Commodio. You're
5:25
talking about Carton -- Elment
5:28
known as Camodial
5:30
Cordis. Right. Commodial Cordis.
5:32
Commodial Cordis. That's what it is.
5:34
All of a sudden, everybody is an expert
5:36
on Comodial Cordis. Cordless.
5:39
Mhmm. Everybody isn't up. That's
5:41
what it is. That's exactly
5:43
what it is. Everyone knows instantly from
5:45
from the video. Right. And then
5:47
everybody knows, no, that's
5:49
not what it is. It's the vaccine.
5:52
And then, shut up
5:54
your anatomy of the state. What
5:56
the hell was that? Okay.
6:01
So memorial courtes
6:04
And I am now an expert on this.
6:06
Once you could pronounce it, you're officially young. Yeah.
6:08
Mhmm. It's rare. It
6:11
happens ten to twenty times a
6:13
year. It happens mainly in
6:15
children under the age of eighteen.
6:17
I don't know if that has anything to
6:19
do with I don't know what the age
6:21
is. Maybe it's eighteen. I think it's a
6:23
little younger than that that you stopped going good.
6:26
I I got it. When
6:29
Doug, out of me. It doesn't
6:31
happen when you're an adult. You know, when you
6:33
get the wind knocked out of you and you're like,
6:37
can't break You ever feel that? That's
6:39
interesting. I I never put that together. That
6:41
doesn't happen later on. I just thought it was because we
6:43
don't fall out of trees or we don't move.
6:45
Right. Maybe I said, you know, we don't we don't follow the
6:48
trees. Right. Yeah. But that stops
6:50
happening. K? So it
6:52
could be part of that that
6:54
you don't really do a lot of
6:56
stuff that when you get the wind
6:58
knocked out of you. But
7:01
it mainly happens with
7:03
people under eighteen. It's
7:05
much more rare in people over twenty.
7:08
Now is that possible? Yeah.
7:13
It's absolutely possible. Weird
7:16
things happen to the body
7:18
under intense situations.
7:21
Car crashes. He had a heart attack.
7:23
How did he have a heart attack? He had a
7:26
car crash. Okay. Might
7:28
have begun as he was going Oh my god.
7:30
Or The steering
7:32
wheel came into his chest
7:35
and stopped his heart. That
7:37
would be Camodio Cordish.
7:39
It's a good job. Yeah. Thank you. Expert. Doctor?
7:42
Well, I am a doctor. Mhmm. So,
7:46
I mean, the hit he took
7:48
or gave her. I don't really took it. Was
7:50
yeah. Was not out of the ordinary? Was
7:52
it in No. It seemed very routine. Yeah.
7:54
Yeah. It wasn't brutal. We've seen
7:57
worse. Much worse. Yeah. He
7:59
took the hit, and then he stood up. And then
8:01
we all watched in horror as he just fell
8:04
to the ground unconscious. He
8:06
was given CPR and
8:09
AED, it was used to shock
8:11
his heart back in rhythm. I found something out
8:13
about AEDs.
8:17
You know, when you're watching you
8:20
know, some hospital show and they're like, quick.
8:22
He's flat line. Get
8:24
that charge. That
8:27
doesn't actually start your heart back
8:29
up. It's I as I
8:31
understand it, it only shocks it
8:33
into rhythm. Right.
8:35
Yeah. Okay. K? Yeah. Because I
8:37
mean and I I would question you on
8:39
this, but you're a doctor who's an expert. Thank you
8:41
very much. Right. So I would only Camodial
8:43
Cordis. Whoa. You know what I'm saying?
8:45
So anyway, the the
8:48
immediate reaction was mix most
8:50
of our thoughts went directly to
8:52
the well-being of of
8:54
Hamlin and his poor family and
8:56
the the teammates. You
8:58
know, and when you hear the NFL's like, well,
9:01
we're not sure if we're gonna continue to play.
9:03
I'm like, look at them.
9:05
Do you think Anybody wants to finish
9:07
this game and
9:10
thoughts and prayers became
9:12
okay again. Nobody
9:14
was saying, those are meaningless. Shut
9:16
up with your thoughts and prayers.
9:19
It became meaningful
9:21
again. In fact,
9:24
one of the sports casters did
9:27
this
9:31
football gave me everything. You know? And I
9:34
think even through the midst of absolute
9:36
tragedy last night, think you
9:38
saw some of the beauty of football as well, but it's
9:40
brought us all here together. You
9:43
know, like, this is a little bit different.
9:45
I heard I've heard all day like thoughts and
9:47
prayers. And you just heard Sherf and Jonathan
9:49
Allen say like all we can do is pray for him
9:51
and I've heard the Buffalo Bills organization
9:53
say that we believe in prayer and maybe this
9:55
is not thing to do, but I want it's just on my heart
9:57
that I wanna pray for this. The
9:59
Marham and I right now.
10:01
I'm gonna do it out
10:01
loud. I'm gonna close my eyes. I'm gonna bow my head and I'm
10:04
just gonna pray for him. God,
10:07
we come to you in these moments that we don't
10:10
understand that are hard because
10:12
we believe that your
10:14
god and coming to and
10:16
praying to you has impact.
10:19
We're we're sad. We're
10:21
angry. And we want answers,
10:23
but some things are unanswerable.
10:25
We just wanna pray,
10:28
truly come to you, and
10:31
pray for strength for
10:33
Lamar, for healing, for Lamar,
10:35
for comfort for Lamar, to
10:37
be with his family, to give them peace,
10:40
If we
10:40
didn't believe that prayer didn't work, we
10:42
wouldn't ask this of you god. I
10:45
believe in prayer. We believe in prayer.
10:48
We lift up Demar Hamlin's name
10:50
in your name. Amen.
10:52
Amen. Amen. Ah,
10:54
that's ESPN. That's
10:56
ESPN. Wow. Now, this
10:58
is sheer coincidence, but I read yesterday,
11:01
that Disney is thinking about
11:03
selling ESPN. So
11:06
so here's the thing.
11:10
If you look at the stats
11:13
According to doctor McCullough,
11:15
who is a
11:17
world famous, probably one of the most
11:19
respected and decorated cardiologists in
11:21
history, Peter McCullough. He
11:25
published a paper and I shouldn't say it that way because it
11:27
was just an op ed. It wasn't a
11:30
peer reviewed paper. He
11:32
said there is a sharp rise in
11:35
athlete deaths deaths
11:37
since vaccination fifteen ninety
11:39
eight athlete suffered cardiac AC arrest,
11:42
eleven hundred and one died.
11:45
Over the prior thirty eight years,
11:47
eleven hundred athletes aged
11:49
thirty five no. Sorry. Eleven
11:51
hundred and one athletes died
11:53
of the age of thirty five
11:57
sorry, the ages of
11:59
twenty nine and
12:02
younger was thirty
12:05
five. So
12:08
it was mainly kids In
12:11
thirty eight years, he says, we
12:16
had still less athlet
12:18
cardiac arrest than we've had in just a
12:20
couple of years since the COVID
12:22
vaccine. I don't
12:24
know. This is not a peer
12:26
reviewed study. I don't even know if I
12:28
trust peer reviewed anything anymore.
12:32
But I don't know. You
12:34
don't know. I don't
12:36
think McCullough knows if this is
12:38
what it was. It it
12:41
would depend on what they're
12:43
finding. My my real problem
12:45
and my point on all of this
12:47
is twenty twenty three
12:49
has to be the year of questions
12:51
asked and answered. Asked
12:55
and answered. If we
12:57
are going to live in a free
12:59
society, then no questions
13:01
are off the table. It
13:03
used to be. Well, that's a stupid question. These
13:05
aren't stupid questions. Could
13:08
it bend coyote, cartilage, aortis?
13:10
Yes, it could be. It might be. Probably
13:13
is. Could it be
13:15
that it was the COVID vaccine?
13:18
Might be? Could be? Probably
13:20
is. Could it
13:22
be both of them? Maybe
13:24
a mixture of four different things, might
13:26
be, could be, probably is.
13:30
We have the same answer until
13:32
we actually know. The
13:36
thing we have to get to is
13:39
being willing to
13:41
ask the questions. The
13:44
biggest problem comes
13:48
from the CDC and
13:50
the the
13:53
AMA and
13:56
Fauci and the government
13:58
and Twitter in its old
14:00
form and Facebook and
14:02
Google that if all
14:04
colluded to
14:06
shut you up from asking questions, you
14:08
know how this wouldn't have been a
14:10
big deal? If we
14:12
would have seen and been
14:15
they would have been open about
14:17
all of the side
14:19
effects of the vaccine. If
14:21
they just would have come out and said, hey, look, there's
14:23
a possibility of these things, this
14:26
is the way it is. Instead, we weren't
14:28
allowed to question. So
14:30
you find out, wait a minute. That's not what you
14:32
said. Now everything
14:35
you say is questioned. And
14:37
don't blame it on the conspiracy theorists.
14:40
Blame it on those who
14:43
refused to allow Quest
14:45
to be asked and
14:47
answered in a reasonable
14:50
fashion. This
14:54
is the best of the Glenbeck program and we
14:56
really want to thank you for listening.
15:01
Welcome to the Glendbeck program.
15:04
We're glad you're here. Really
15:06
glad that Chip Roy is
15:08
with us. Talk to us
15:10
about the battle for the speaker of the house.
15:13
Hello, Chip. How are
15:14
you? Glenn, I'm
15:16
doing well. We're engaged
15:19
in yet another series of meetings this morning. We
15:21
were here until a bit by a less time for capital and we're
15:23
going to continue to fight for the people that
15:26
sent us here to fight more. Well,
15:28
a, I appreciate that. And I
15:30
hope that America
15:32
responds. III think
15:35
the Carl Rose of the
15:37
world are thinking that
15:39
people like you are gonna get a lot of
15:41
calls and delude delude
15:43
at your office today saying, Don't
15:45
you dare you? You'll go as Peter McCarthy.
15:47
I think the other is gonna happen because
15:49
I'm I'm done, Chip. I'm
15:51
done. When the when the
15:53
senate passed the
15:55
omnibus bill, I
15:57
was done. If
15:59
you guys don't have the freedom
16:01
to investigate and the
16:04
teeth and the backbone
16:06
to actually do things,
16:08
IN THE INTEREST OF ALL AMERICANS,
16:11
WHY DID WE VOTE FOR ANY REPUBLICANS?
16:15
WELL, THAT'S THE QUESTION. THAT IS THE
16:17
CENTRAL QUESTION. People have been asking, like,
16:19
what's the message? And I tried to deliver a message on
16:21
the floor of the house last night. Then what
16:23
we're fighting for? Are the tools in the
16:25
leadership necessary to stop
16:27
the swamp rolling over the average
16:29
American who are sick and tired of seeing
16:31
this town, undermine
16:33
their freedom, spend money we don't
16:35
have. And continue
16:38
to violate every
16:40
promise they've ever made in the campaign. I'm
16:42
gonna come up and I'm gonna cut spending. We're gonna
16:44
balance the budget. Correct. We're gonna secure
16:46
the border. Bowl. You saw what
16:48
happened unfold with that ridiculous one
16:50
point seven trillion dollar bill. There was
16:52
no real significant pushback from the House
16:54
leadership when Mitch McConnell stuck
16:56
it to the American people, made it impossible
16:59
for us to secure the border, took away
17:01
our leverage, and did it so that
17:03
the current DC establishment could
17:05
get what they wanted in terms of a big spending bill
17:07
for the defense complex and
17:09
to jam through something that
17:11
the American people didn't want.
17:14
That's what we have to stop the uptake. So
17:16
That's what this is about. So I am with you.
17:18
So now it will
17:21
will those of you who are
17:24
mounting this battle? Is there a
17:26
compromise McCarthy could
17:28
make? So
17:32
I would have told you
17:34
forty eight hours ago that
17:36
they answered that question was yes.
17:39
The problem is, is there is a
17:41
growing group of hard court no
17:43
votes against Kevin because of
17:45
the way things unfolded yesterday at
17:47
the Republican conference meeting. In
17:49
which Mike Rogers stood up and
17:51
threatened members from losing their
17:53
committees and when lies
17:55
were being told, about what
17:57
was behind the motives of
17:59
members seeking, quote, petty personal
18:02
privileges and being on certain committees, which
18:04
was a total lie because
18:06
members offered in good faith. Alright. Put me
18:08
on the appropriations committee. I don't wanna be in
18:10
the appropriations committee, but I'll do it. Right? Or put me
18:12
on the rules committee. Now that
18:15
was me. I said, sure. Put my name on the
18:17
rules committee as someone who would do it. Even though
18:19
I don't wanna fly away from my home and miss my
18:21
family on Sunday night and fly up here to be here on
18:23
Monday mornings to set the rules, and the World's
18:25
Committee is the funnel through which all things
18:27
get to the floor. The fight in
18:29
nineteen twenty three when there were nine
18:31
rounds of votes for the speaker The
18:33
culmination of that was a complete change
18:35
of the rules committee because it's so powerful.
18:37
It's a secret committee kind of that
18:39
nobody knows about. That sits there and
18:42
decides what bills get to the floor, what's
18:44
in them, and what it looks like. So
18:46
we had a debate about that, and then people
18:48
lied about it. So now you got a bunch
18:50
of members that are saying, you know what?
18:52
I can't trust him. I'm not gonna be able to
18:54
vote for the guy. Now that being said,
18:56
Glenn, literally the conversation that I
18:58
had till midnight last night and this morning, is
19:00
trying to work in good faith on how to change the
19:01
institution. I speaking for
19:04
myself would there would be a path
19:06
for me to
19:06
get there. But the path for me requires
19:09
us to be able to control
19:11
the ability of the control of
19:13
the legislation that gets to the floor
19:15
and stop something like that omnibus
19:18
bill in December. So hang on
19:20
just a second. Man, may I just break this down
19:22
for idiots like me? But
19:24
I think what you're saying is, because
19:26
I was stunned when I saw you all sitting
19:28
in the chamber yesterday. I'm like, wow, I
19:30
haven't seen that since turn of the
19:32
century. Your the
19:34
problem is all of these bills are
19:37
being done behind
19:39
closed doors by just a
19:41
small group then it's brought to the not for discussion,
19:43
but for a vote, yes or
19:45
no. And you want that to stop.
19:46
Right? Correct.
19:48
Yeah. And we made progress.
19:50
And look, and Glenn, this is important.
19:53
The progress we've made over the last sixty days
19:55
to get rules is not because Kevin
19:57
was standing up trying to figure out, oh, I've got
19:59
these great ideas on how to make the place better. It was because
20:02
some of us, five in particular,
20:04
were publicly, that were
20:06
nose said they weren't going to support Kevin. And then
20:08
another seven of us signed a letter saying, here are
20:10
the kinds of things we want to see change.
20:12
That forced the conversation to get
20:14
changed. Now these guys are running around
20:16
saying, well, we gave you everything you want. No,
20:18
you did. You gave us some
20:20
things that will be an improvement
20:23
but you didn't give us key
20:24
things, which is what is necessary
20:27
to
20:27
stop big bills that the
20:30
defense world and the liberals
20:32
in the in the among Democrats jammed through.
20:34
Remember and consider. Kevin
20:36
voted in the minority. With
20:38
more Democrats than Republicans on
20:41
multiple bills over the last decade. Since
20:43
he has been a Republican leadership, the debt has
20:45
gone from eleven trillion to thirty
20:47
two trillion. You voted for
20:49
example for good lap? You don't need
20:50
it. I I am not for. Right. I mean,
20:53
and I get it. What tell me
20:55
what the specifics are
20:58
that have to be changed because I think
21:00
people need to know specifically
21:02
what are we fighting
21:03
for. The key
21:07
thing that I believe needs
21:09
to change is that we have
21:11
to have people on the rules
21:13
committee who reflect the
21:15
conservatives who send Republicans to
21:17
Washington to change the town. That
21:20
seems wonky What is the real
21:22
message? Is that we need conservatives, enough
21:25
conservatives. I'm not saying put every
21:27
Freedom caucus member on that. I'm saying you need to
21:29
have actual conservatives who will
21:31
stand up in defense jobs.
21:33
The American people from the big spending
21:35
in this town be on the committees
21:37
that actually determine what gets to
21:40
the floor combined with the
21:42
changes to the rules that we are
21:44
part way down the road and getting
21:46
of opening up the floor so we can
21:48
have amendments and debate on that score.
21:50
So so that we can kill this
21:52
stuff. So we're kinda halfway
21:54
there, but halfway there,
21:56
ain't there. And so if they're
21:58
not going to work with us to get us
22:00
there, then that's the problem. And
22:02
yesterday damaged that and may have
22:04
created where there's too many
22:06
guys here saying, we can't got a deal with
22:07
Kevin. I don't know. That's what we're
22:10
working through. And
22:14
Is there somebody that
22:17
you think everybody could agree
22:19
on? Look, I think there's this
22:21
there's here's the problem. If
22:23
I go out and say, I think person x is the
22:26
guy, then that might poison Got
22:28
it. Got it. Got it. So so,
22:30
like, So we're having conversations. I promise you, there are
22:32
people that would surprise you that
22:34
are in the sort of center of the world
22:37
around McCarthy. Who are having
22:39
conversations openly or
22:41
I say openly. I mean privately with us, but like
22:43
having conversation. But let me give you
22:45
an example. I nominated yesterday
22:48
two guys on the floor. I picked one Byron
22:50
Donald's was my first vote. Why
22:52
did I pick Byron? Because Byron
22:54
is a second term congressman who is
22:56
not solid by the swap.
22:58
Successful businessman, father,
23:01
conservative, he's a friend
23:03
proven track record worked in the Texas Florida
23:06
legislature. He's a good man. The
23:08
speaker doesn't have to know every
23:10
ins and outs of the swamp. To
23:12
make it work. And in fact, we would be great. We would be
23:14
a breath of fresh air to have someone who
23:17
doesn't come with the taint of the swamp.
23:19
Yes. So I picked by
23:21
Donald's. Second, I nominated Jim
23:23
Jordan. He's been here longer, but he's
23:25
got a history and a track record of fighting
23:27
the swamp. That's the whole point.
23:30
Kevin doesn't have that. Okay?
23:32
So if we're cutting a deal with Kevin,
23:34
we better damn well get the rules that we'll
23:36
box him in. Otherwise, you got to have
23:38
a deal with a leader who you can trust
23:40
to break the swamp, to break the cartel that's
23:43
destroying our country, spending money we
23:45
don't have, leaving our borders open,
23:47
continuing to empower bureaucrats that undermine
23:49
our freedom. We have to stop at
23:51
Glen. The tools we need have to give
23:53
us the tools to stop
23:55
continuing to do the same thing we've been
23:57
doing over and over again. While every single Republican
23:59
goes back in campaigns and then comes
24:01
to this godforsaken town and
24:03
throws our country down the
24:05
drain. And undermines everything that's the
24:07
metawomen uniform and so fought so valiantly to
24:09
save for our kids and our grandkids. That's
24:11
what this is about. Do you
24:14
have are you fighting for, or do you
24:16
already have enough
24:19
power of investigation to
24:21
be able to answer the
24:24
questions that must
24:26
be answered this year, must
24:28
be answered. So I would
24:30
say we had -- we were going way down the
24:32
path of organizing and we have the
24:34
fire and we're ready to go
24:36
after a lot of the entities that need Jim
24:38
Jordan and judiciary committee, for example, and we've
24:40
already been having lots of conversations and meetings.
24:42
Everybody's freaking out, oh, you don't have a speaker. It's like a whole
24:43
lot, like twenty four hours, forty
24:46
eight
24:46
hours. Yeah. The world's not gonna implode if we don't have a
24:48
speaker in place while we try to get it right. But
24:50
we're ready to go on a lot of these things. You would
24:52
ask me, do we have everything?
24:54
I think we need a more aggressive expanded
24:56
church committee style effort to go after the
24:58
Western green government. I think that we got
25:00
some headway in that. There were some offers to
25:03
do it. That was – I think good
25:05
conversations were going on that, but they kind of
25:07
stalled on Monday night around
25:10
other factors. So I think we've made headway
25:12
or in a good place to be able to do some good things
25:14
with
25:14
that, but we got a lot more work we need to do.
25:16
Do you see us, I think,
25:18
in twenty nine or no, it was eighteen
25:20
fifty six, I think, where it went on
25:22
for, like, a hundred and thirty votes.
25:24
Do you see us
25:26
in eighteen fifty six or nineteen
25:29
twenties kind of situation?
25:31
Well, right now, we're through three boats. We're gonna
25:34
go there in an hour and fifteen minutes. We know there's
25:36
gonna be at least a fourth. My guess is there might be
25:38
a fifth or sixth, and we're going to continue to have
25:40
conversations today. There's a
25:42
like I said, Kevin doesn't have the
25:44
votes. So we've got to work through and get it there. And
25:46
we're either going to get it there through fixing the rules and getting
25:48
it to where we can protect the American people and do
25:50
what we said we would do to stop this swamp. Or we
25:52
need a new leader or vote. But we're working on it as hard as we
25:54
know how to do. But the American people need to
25:56
be patient knowing that there is a group of people
25:58
up here fighting for you.
26:01
That's what this is about. Fighting to defend the American
26:03
people against the swamp. That's everything that
26:05
we're trying to do. And the most effective thing
26:07
any listener can do.
26:10
Call your member and tell them
26:12
to stand with us to get what we
26:14
need to get to stop the swamp. And that
26:17
means Kevin McCarthy needs to come to
26:19
the table or we need a new leader.
26:21
But don't go, you know, walk away and
26:23
get get, you know, don't walk away because
26:25
you're hearing people, go, oh my god, you might end up with
26:27
a Democrat speaker. That's only gonna happen
26:29
if Republicans vote for a Democrat.
26:31
Republicans vote for Republicans, you get a
26:33
Republican speaker, and we're gonna keep working to
26:35
do that. Right? Thank you so
26:37
much. I appreciate it. Chip Roy from the great state
26:39
of Texas congressman
26:41
from Texas. Roy dot house
26:44
dot gov. The
26:46
best of the Webex program.
26:51
So the president of
26:53
Ukraine, Zalynn He
26:55
held a video conference meeting
26:57
with Larry Fink, the
26:59
CEO. Is there a guy who has a
27:02
more apt name than Larry
27:04
Fink and black character
27:06
from Threes company. Oh, it's
27:08
a good. It
27:10
says he's like a bond villain.
27:12
I'm gonna go. Larry
27:15
Fink, he is the world's leading
27:17
investment managers at BlackRock.
27:21
They they manage about
27:23
eight trillion dollars. It's
27:25
probably more than that.
27:30
Altogether, but under their
27:32
direct
27:32
leadership, eight trillion dollars.
27:36
Now They had
27:38
some preliminary agreements with
27:40
the head of state and Larry
27:43
Fink. The BlackRock team
27:45
has been working for several months on a
27:47
project to advise Ukrainian
27:50
government on how to structure the
27:52
country's reconstruction funds.
27:54
So I just wanted an
27:56
event. Right? Ukraine
28:00
comes and they want money
28:02
for this war and
28:04
our government gives the money and
28:06
we don't send any accountants
28:09
to track that money. Then
28:12
BlackRock starts working with their
28:14
government and says, we'll help
28:16
you use that money.
28:18
Mm-mm. That's not that's not like No. It's not
28:20
like there's anything we should be watching here. Does
28:23
it? He he
28:25
agreed with
28:27
Larry Fink To focus
28:29
on coordinating the efforts of
28:31
all potential investors and participants
28:33
in the reconstruction, of
28:35
their country channeling investments into the most
28:38
relevant and impactful sectors of the
28:40
Ukrainian economy. During
28:43
the conversation, it was emphasized
28:46
that Blackrock leaders
28:48
planned to visit Ukraine in the
28:51
next year. Our accountants, no.
28:53
But BlackRock will be there.
28:58
They are they're going in
29:00
and and looking
29:03
after the allocated funds
29:05
and they're going to advise on structuring the re
29:08
reconstruction projects for Ukraine.
29:11
So why
29:14
has Ukraine
29:17
become such a big deal? If
29:20
you go back in time, do you remember Ukraine
29:22
was a big deal under
29:25
Obama with Biden? Huge.
29:28
Twenty fourteen. Had to have
29:30
Ukraine had to have Ukraine. The state department
29:33
overthrows the sitting
29:35
president and gets in the new president.
29:37
And then Biden comes over and
29:39
threatens them with funds and says, you gotta get
29:41
rid of this prosecutor. Otherwise,
29:44
we're gonna withhold funds and they get rid of
29:46
that prosecutor. This has been a
29:49
money laundering scene.
29:52
For the left for a very,
29:54
very long time.
29:57
George Soros, all of the
29:59
left, is over in Ukraine. Why
30:03
is the question? Now,
30:06
is it because We
30:09
are strategically using
30:11
Ukraine to dismantle
30:14
Russia because there is a
30:16
fight for a new
30:18
world order. And it is either gonna be
30:20
the World Economic Forum's World
30:22
Order or the World Order
30:24
of the Communist in
30:26
China or the Putin's of
30:28
the world. And that is a
30:31
national,socialistic kind
30:34
of nation. Or
30:36
what the World Economic Forum is going
30:38
for is an international,socialistic sort
30:41
of program. K? That's
30:44
truly what it is.
30:47
National and international. They're not
30:49
communists. It is truly
30:51
more fascism. It is
30:53
the definition of fascism. When
30:55
the state and the
30:59
business collude with one another, and the
31:02
government tells business what
31:04
they're going to do and what they're not going to
31:06
do. And it's all privately
31:08
owned but it's a
31:10
public private partnership. That is the
31:12
literal definition of fascism.
31:14
This is what we went through in
31:17
World War, World War II,
31:19
you had the
31:21
national fascists of
31:24
Italy and of Germany,
31:27
and then you had the international communists
31:30
of Russia. At that
31:32
time, we also had the free
31:35
world. This
31:37
time, we don't have the free world. What's
31:40
happening now is we're arguing
31:43
over fascism. China might
31:45
call themselves a communist party, but they're much
31:47
more fasistic in nature
31:49
than communist. This
31:52
is the argument. Are
31:54
we going to be international fascists?
31:57
Or are we going to be
31:59
national fashion fascists. If they
32:01
can take down Russia, which
32:03
is a lot easier than
32:06
China, then you have a much
32:08
better chance of the whole world being
32:10
against China, and you
32:12
have national fascism. I
32:14
think that's one of the reasons, but I
32:16
also think that there is
32:19
there's just a lot
32:22
of money. Slashing around in Ukraine. And
32:24
there's a lot of slime in
32:26
Ukraine. Who's getting rich
32:29
on this? We
32:36
need that question to be
32:38
answered this year.
32:40
Before we go
32:42
to war or give them any more
32:45
money, why
32:47
are we there? Why
32:50
are we now according
32:53
to a source in the CIA? We're
32:56
now directing internal hits
32:58
on Russia for Ukraine.
33:01
Why would we
33:03
do that? And second of all, why would
33:05
we announce that? Why would
33:07
we say that loud? Inside
33:11
voice. It's
33:13
insane. I don't think even
33:15
if rush up if Putin says,
33:18
I'll comply. He's
33:21
not gonna give back Crimea. But
33:23
if he says, I'll comply in everything else, I
33:25
don't think we're gonna make a deal with
33:28
him. We want the destruction
33:30
for some reason. And I and I say, we,
33:32
I don't mean you and me.
33:34
There is some other
33:40
agenda at work, and I have a
33:42
feeling it revolves
33:44
around international
33:47
socialism or the great
33:49
reset. There's a couple of other things that you
33:51
should be aware of. The TSA is
33:54
expanding facial recognition programs
33:57
at major airports. They're
34:00
gonna they're gonna roll this out
34:03
nationally soon But the
34:05
facial recognition program, this
34:07
is this is really, really
34:10
bad. Do not give
34:12
the government a
34:14
scan of your eye.
34:16
There is nothing worse
34:19
than giving them a that is
34:21
more unique than your fingerprint. It gives
34:23
more information about
34:26
you than
34:28
your fingerprint. And
34:30
people are just like, yeah, but I'll get
34:32
through the line quicker. Oh my gosh. Don't
34:36
do that? Is now
34:38
being used in more than a dozen
34:40
airports, Vegas, Denver, Dallas, Fort
34:42
Worth, TSA
34:44
says it's gonna destroy most
34:47
of the images. That's kind of like
34:50
mostly dead. They're gonna
34:52
destroy most of the
34:54
images within a couple of weeks
34:56
Mm-mm. I'm sure. Sure. Sure. Let's
34:59
watch for that because
35:02
you are going to see in the next
35:06
year Maybe two, but I I think it's
35:08
gonna be this year. You are
35:10
gonna see the beginning
35:13
of AAA
35:16
tracking system, a global monitoring
35:19
system that is beyond
35:22
your imagination. We
35:24
now have technology through
35:27
low altitude satellites,
35:30
drones, we are
35:32
we are on the precipice of
35:34
not a square inch of earth
35:38
being unseen
35:40
twenty four hours a day, not
35:42
a square inch of earth. They're
35:46
gonna started in the biggest of cities. They already are doing
35:48
it in China, but now we
35:50
have the computing power
35:52
and we have the photographic
35:56
power of being able to
35:58
monitor everything
36:00
and link everything. Did you
36:02
see the movie state of
36:05
fear Who was in that?
36:07
It was Gene Hackman
36:10
and Will Smith, I think. That
36:12
was an enemy of State. Enemy of
36:15
the state. Thank you. Enemy of the state. Enemy of the state,
36:17
if you saw that, I remember watching
36:19
going, that technology doesn't
36:21
exist, does it? The
36:24
answer then was no. But
36:26
the people in the Pentagon and the
36:28
CIA, they were like, hey, that's a
36:31
pretty good idea. There's a fuck toy.
36:33
Yeah. And we are now
36:35
building it. And there's
36:38
probably no stopping it now.
36:40
You know, unless we had congress on our which don't count
36:43
on that one. But that
36:45
is extraordinarily dangerous. What part of that
36:47
technology are you
36:50
talking about? When you say The
36:52
the part of technology that could what
36:54
they're building now is low
36:58
earth or low altitude satellites
37:00
in a string that
37:02
can monitor
37:04
one place all the
37:06
time. So it because the
37:08
satellites move, you need a string of
37:10
them. So it's constantly trained
37:12
on New York City and can
37:14
lock in on New York
37:16
City, continually twenty four
37:18
hours a day. And then it will
37:20
have parameters through the algorithm
37:22
of, that's unusual, that's not right,
37:24
and it can, you know, it it can read you know, the
37:27
back of your credit card
37:30
from space. And the
37:32
algorithm will say something
37:34
terrorist activity, something illegal
37:36
may be happening, and it
37:38
can automatically gin
37:40
down, zoom in on any
37:42
area, alert the police, alert the
37:44
feds, or it can
37:46
zoom in And if it
37:48
can't get close enough, all through algorithm, it will then start to use
37:51
the local cameras
37:55
all the way to your cell phones
37:57
and be able to see exactly
37:59
what's going on everywhere
38:02
in that area. So basically constant monitoring. They're calling
38:04
it the all seeing eye. I wrote
38:06
about it. It's called the eye of Moelok.
38:10
But that is now coming
38:13
coming soon to a world near you.
38:15
And even I I
38:18
know you I think I understand what
38:20
you meant by this, but you said, you know, oh, this is definitely gonna happen unless Congress
38:22
gets on our side. But even if Congress
38:26
was a a congress that
38:28
respected the constitution. China's is
38:30
not. Someone eventually is gonna do that. No. Somebody
38:32
is gonna do it, and that is the excuse that all
38:34
of them use. Look, China is gonna do it,
38:36
so we better do it too.
38:38
Mhmm. The problem the problem with
38:40
it is once you have it,
38:42
no no one No one
38:44
ever gives that power up. No
38:46
one gives that power up. That's
38:48
the problem with the intel being
38:52
so tied into the
38:54
administration. You know, when when you have
38:56
the NSA gathering information
38:58
on every American, their phone calls everything.
39:01
No president is
39:03
going to say, no, we
39:05
should shut that down. Mister
39:08
president, Russia is doing it to the American
39:10
people. China is doing it to the American
39:12
people. We should at least know
39:14
we have the heads up. They're just never gonna get rid of it.
39:16
Never. Well, it's not paranoia
39:18
if they're really after you. Exactly.
39:22
Exactly right. It's not only true, but also the tagline
39:24
for enemy of the state. K.
39:26
So it's I gotta watch
39:29
that again. Yeah. I've been reading up it. I think it's called
39:31
whammy. I've been reading up on it
39:34
lately. And it's a
39:36
little terrifying.
39:38
The stuff that we've talked about it for years and
39:40
said, one of these
39:42
days, well, when I say one
39:44
of these
39:46
days, it could be in the next six months that these
39:48
things begin to come online. I'm a little
39:50
disturbed that if if they're calling it whammy,
39:53
Are they naming it after the creature that steals your points
39:56
on press your luck, the old game show?
39:58
Oh my gosh. She figured
40:00
it out.
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