00:01:18.560Make sure that people understood certain parts of the country what was happening and what was happening about their sovereignty.
00:01:23.920That's why with Brandon Darby and the great team there at Breitbart, we launched Breitbart, Texas, particularly about the Rio Grande Valley.
00:01:31.960I went down and spent a lot of time in the Rio Grande Valley.
00:01:34.120Gosh, that's got to be 2012, 13, 14, to really understand what was going on and how the establishment, the business logo establishment in Texas was involved in that.
00:01:45.940The other part was to launch international sites or international headquarters or bureaus for Breitbart.
00:01:53.520And I was going to do Jerusalem, Rome, and London.
00:09:00.360um i'd like to underline for our largely american audience really the connection here now we say
00:09:08.180constantly on the show how how brexit teed up everything that happened with the trump revolution
00:09:14.500from the election campaign of 2015 and the eventual victory in 2016 onwards i want to
00:09:20.060underline what i think is the the straight line between these two things and that's basically
00:09:24.800not only the fact that the Britons exercised their sense of agency but they really woke up
00:09:31.580to themselves and felt confident in employing that sense of agency it's absolutely fundamental
00:09:37.840and you see the same thing happening now with this mini revolution that we saw at the local
00:09:44.200government level this Thursday and it's something that transcends our two-party system of politics
00:09:52.400It's that people on the left, traditionally voting Labour, people on the right, traditionally voting Conservative, both have peeled away and said we are not going to accept what the regime gives us.
00:10:05.760We are going to go outside of the parameters of seeking permission, if you will, from approval, social approval from our elders and betters.
00:10:17.280We are going to determine for ourselves our own destiny.
00:10:20.740That's the point here. It's really a rediscovery and an insistence on using the British people's sense of agency.
00:10:29.920That's why it's so important. And it shows that the revolution that took place in the UK,
00:10:35.680the absolutely sort of cataclysmic revolution with Brexit, which, as you correctly said,
00:10:40.720would have been sort of considered to be unthinkable just 10 years before it took place.
00:10:46.300why that sense, why that continuing revolution is taking place,
00:10:51.200because it's all a straight line, what happened at Brexit,
00:17:53.340And I'm obviously not going to make the argument that Muslims will vote as a bloc. However, if Nigel Farage started channeling Tommy Robinson too aggressively, they certainly will start acting as a bloc, and that will destroy his chance of becoming Prime Minister.
00:18:12.420If you look at his, see, basically, look, we don't have in the UK, different to the rest of continental Europe, but very similar to the United States.
00:18:20.780We have a first past the post system in the UK. We don't have proportional representation.
00:18:26.820If we had proportional representation in the UK, then Nigel Farage can do exactly what you're saying and get a very large sort of lump of the electorate.
00:18:36.820And that will be guaranteed for his. And then he would start coalition building with other groups of similar direction to get the numbers up to an absolute majority.
00:18:45.640We don't have that. We have first past the post. It's sort of simple majority of one.
00:18:51.720And that's where that while we have these huge swings, not only in the States, but also in the UK, arguably more in the UK, we have a greater tradition of seats changing side direction.
00:19:04.280So Nigel Farage realized that you can't get to the point of invasion that we are in the UK since the 50s onwards and then say, let's run Tommy Robinson as a candidate in a first-past-the-post system, and let's see how far he gets to be coming towards that.
00:19:22.320You do agree it's an invasion in the United Kingdom? There's no doubt in your mind about that?
00:19:29.060it's the consequences that we've had an invasion an illegal third world invasion since the late
00:19:37.64050s onward overseen if i may by the the toy party that was then in power um and continued all the
00:19:46.000all the way through that it's the consequences that we have had an invasion in the uk that
00:19:51.480means that nigel farage if he wants to get to number 10 has to be very calculating about what
00:19:58.540his his principal points are in order to get there and he can't run once you get to the stage that
00:20:04.480you are in this main lesson to america right once you get to the stage of invasion and democratic
00:20:11.080ethnic substitution call it what you will once you get to that stage there's no coming back from that
00:20:17.520so as i've said repeatedly on the show since i've been here uh for five years our message in
00:20:23.180continental europe is to show the americans what happens and say do not follow this path
00:20:29.600the way down because you will end up in the same situation and that's where we are in the uk
00:20:33.620okay hang on um peter the big march tommy's going to have and there's a million last year
00:20:41.860it was unbelievable we covered it wall to wall the um this one's supposed to be bigger my
00:20:47.380understanding from you is that the UK government is cancelling the visas of the American speakers,
00:20:54.440sir? Yes, the Home Secretary, who's a Muslim, Shibana Mahmood, has taken issue to Tommy having
00:21:02.660speakers. Who would have thought? So she has cancelled four visa waivers that individuals
00:21:11.180have had. Now, there are two Americans, Joni Maneria, who is a high profile, he's over three
00:21:16.940quarters of a million on on x valenta gomez who i think ran um for a seat in florida also has
00:21:23.680around the same number um the the big one for me is eva let me look at her name vlard vlardinger
00:21:30.560brook i never can pronounce her name he's she's a dutch um commentator very high we've had we've
00:21:36.460had we've had her on the show a number of times we've had a number of shows he's brilliant but i
00:21:40.520also understand lutz backman has been um cancelled and he is probably germany's equivalent of tommy
00:21:46.580So it does seem as though the Home Office, and they've all received a letter or an email to say that their presence would not be conducive to the public good, but they can apply for a lot of money with a lot of forms, paperwork for the privilege of coming.
00:23:40.180But give me a minute on this, on blocking these speakers, the Muslim Home Secretary blocking the speakers to come to Tommy Robinson's rally, sir.
00:23:52.380Well, it's not a surprise. And of course, it's what the Labour Party is going to do.
00:23:56.460huge islamic proponent of its demographic core voters now it's an easy it's picking low-hanging
00:24:04.060fruit in order to curry favor with the the islamic bloc the contingent of labor voters
00:24:10.240isn't it right just block a few uh right-wing rabble vows and you get millions of supports
00:24:16.900arithmetic here steve takes care of itself pretty straightforward uh talk to me i gotta
00:24:41.480Well, it's pretty much, if you look at the analysis
00:24:44.020of the mainstream media following the visit,
00:24:47.700it's pretty much exactly as the war room had predicted
00:24:50.880before little marco's visit during little marco's visit and following little marco's visit it's a
00:24:57.040it's a huge it's it's my worst kind of tragedy steve which is the tragedy of missed opportunities
00:25:03.040it's really where the administration could have underlined the importance of donald trump
00:25:08.140as the key representative in the fight for christendom that's been ditched little marco's
00:25:13.480gone over and shown massive moral authority to a person who is the sworn enemy of maga america first
00:25:20.300and the trump agenda and it comes back to a point that again i say this constantly on the war room
00:25:25.660you cannot fight a religious figure on the political front whilst at the same time giving
00:25:32.920that religious figure moral credence moral authority in the spiritual realm doesn't work
00:25:40.200all you're going to do is undermine yourself and that's exactly what's happened and you can see i
00:25:44.560I know we'll dig into this after the break, but the whole tenor of the media now is that Leo, the first American pope, has massive leeway in the political sphere over the minds and emotional viewpoints of U.S. Catholics.
00:29:18.220it's working for them and they're sticking with it that's because it cuts out the delays the
00:29:23.260middlemen and all the usual nonsense this is about being ready before you need it go to
00:29:30.620allfamilypharmacy.com that's all one word allfamilypharmacy.com slash bannon and use
00:29:37.180code bannon10 to save ten percent the health care system is broken your pharmacy doesn't have to be
00:29:45.020If you step back a moment and ask yourself, who is most aggressively demanding that we, meaning political leaders gathered here today, do the most aggressive regulation, it is very often the people who already have an incumbent advantage in the market.
00:30:02.340And when a massive incumbent comes to us asking us for safety regulations, we ought to ask whether that safety regulation is for the benefit of our people or whether it's for the benefit of the incumbent.
00:30:15.380The Trump administration will ensure that AI systems developed in America are free from ideological bias and never restrict our citizens' right to free speech.
00:30:26.640We can trust our people to think, to consume information, to develop their own ideas, and to debate with one another in the open marketplace of ideas.
00:30:38.060Now, we've also watched as hostile foreign adversaries have weaponized AI software to rewrite history, surveil users, and censor speech.
00:30:49.500As they do with other tech, some authoritarian regimes have stolen and used AI to strengthen their military intelligence and surveillance capabilities, capture foreign data, and create propaganda to undermine other nations' national security.
00:31:17.220Now, you've had Scott Besant now give multiple interviews, Joe, where he's saying, hey, he's involved in this now, and safety is a top concern.
00:31:28.860Coming from the meeting he had with the bank guys where they talked about the mythos was a preview that can evaporate, I don't know, can evaporate a money center bank by a cyber attack in like 60 seconds.
00:31:41.120Now you've got Susie Wiles putting out, and this is because Hassett on Thursday or Friday,
00:31:47.880it might have been yesterday, said, oh, we're setting up an FDA-type thing to look at AI.
00:34:06.500That, to me, is a little heavy-handed.
00:34:08.140We don't – the FDA we have doesn't work.
00:34:11.100But an Atomic Energy Commission or something, there must be a framework for regulation here, not just around children, which has to happen because that's horrible, but about exactly what these folks are doing.
00:46:44.840What's happened overseas, got to stop it, got to get ahead of it, or you're going to deal with the consequences, which are so difficult to reverse.
00:46:52.620Artificial intelligence is that to the 10th power of people.
00:46:57.160Once the genie's out of the bottle, you just saw the economic numbers.
00:47:00.100Didn't they say the growth of the American companies because they're building a data center,
00:47:03.780something we think right now ought to be a moratorium?
00:47:07.160Joe Allen, you've been ahead of the curve here.
00:47:43.160And with the mythos moment, right, coupled with OpenAI's GPT 5.5 cyber, this mythos moment, the potential for massive cyber attacks that amateurs can then create, this shows us that these systems are not simply tools that make people's lives easier.
00:48:06.360These are systems that can be extraordinarily dangerous.
00:48:10.580And so the suggestion that you would use an agency like Casey, the Center for AI Standards and Innovation, to test the models before they're released, again, that would be a minimum ask.
00:48:24.360And the suggestion that this should be voluntary, that basically companies would voluntarily submit their models for rubber stamping of safe and effective, it's ridiculous.
00:48:35.920And we hear simultaneously OpenAI pushing, last month as we covered, OpenAI pushing Casey to be basically the hinge upon which the U.S. government and these tech companies would revolve.
00:48:54.300And you also hear the Abundance Institute suggesting the same.
00:48:57.960It tells me that they see this as the weakest point in the system.
00:49:02.460So I think that, again, even if Chris Fall, the current director of Casey, comes from the Department of Energy, I think the Department of Energy is much better equipped to do this sort of oversight because they've already handled things like nuclear threats.
00:49:18.060But in general, Steve, I just if I can end on this right now, we see both the Treasury Secretary Scott Besant and now Vice President J.D. Vance acknowledging the actual danger that has been talked about for years.
00:49:35.700Cyber attacks are one facet. You have to go down the list. Bioweapons, deepfakes, rogue agentic AI, children being groomed sexually, children being given suicide coaching, psychopaths being given mass shooting coaching, on and on and on.
00:49:56.560these systems latent within them have the potential for horrific, malicious sort of
00:50:03.120activity behavior. What we have to do, I believe, is at the very least have agencies accountable to
00:50:10.580the people overseeing this. If you don't, if the companies are allowed to self-regulate,
00:50:15.120they will do exactly what they've done so far, which is run roughshod over the public
00:50:19.700and recklessly deploy an extremely dangerous technology.