00:00:00.000Simply because people are trying to fill in the blanks.
00:00:03.040So after all of these months of waiting for some kind of progress, the whole world, and not least the G7 leaders meeting with President Trump,
00:00:10.140dining with him right now here in Evian, are very keen to see that text.
00:00:14.340Now, we've been hearing conflicting reports.
00:00:16.480We heard from one American official earlier today that he believed the details of what's inside that memorandum of understanding would start to be released within 24 to 48 hours.
00:00:27.920But as you heard just there, President Trump himself saying that this is likely to happen after the official signature that's due to happen in Geneva on Friday.
00:00:35.820And that really is in line with what we're hearing from the Iranian side as well.
00:00:40.180Still, a lot of hope and optimism being expressed by the American president as he stood alongside the French president here earlier today.
00:00:47.300I'm very happy to say very signed. The deal's all signed.
00:00:54.140and the strain is already partially opened.
00:00:57.200As you know, they're doing a little hunting
00:00:59.340for a couple of mines that they've already found.
00:01:04.840But it's essentially ships are starting to go out.
00:01:08.180Now on Friday, it'll be completely opened.
00:03:56.900When I terminated the JCPOA, that was the Obama deal, the Barack Hussein Obama deal.0.87
00:04:04.120And when I terminated that, it was very important because it was a road to a nuclear weapon.0.73
00:04:09.420It was a horrible deal for the United States.0.53
00:04:11.720It was a deal where billions of dollars was given to Iran.
00:04:16.040there was a deal where 1.7 billion in cash was put on a
00:04:20.300Boeing 7, well, not a 7.7, a 57, I guess, right?
00:04:26.400But it was put on a big, beautiful Boeing 757.
00:04:30.420They needed a Boeing 747, to be honest with you, because it was a lot of cash.
00:04:34.7401.7 billion was taken out of the banks and given to Iran.
00:04:39.740And on top of that, tens of billions of dollars was paid.
00:04:42.900So they tried to bribe them to make a deal, and that didn't work. It never works.
00:04:49.240And we've done a great job, and hopefully it's going to be a good relationship, and we're going to get along.
00:04:57.320And if we don't, we go back to where we started, but I don't think that's going to be necessary.
00:05:02.220It's very temporary. It is meant, I think, by both sides to calm markets, bring prices down, get shipping moving again.
00:05:10.400Ukrainians, I'm sorry, the Iranians will get revenue out of this.
00:05:14.580So they want it, and I think President Trump wants it to stabilize the economy and gasoline prices.
00:05:20.380But it doesn't actually resolve anything.
00:05:23.360It's a temporary memorandum of understanding to set the stage for new negotiations.
00:05:29.100Iran is going to very strenuously try to cling to a nuclear enrichment program, to storage of enriched uranium.
00:05:36.760and they want to assert some kind of control over the Strait of Hormuz going forward.
00:05:41.880And these are all going to be points of contention as we continue.
00:05:45.080Now, part of the problem is that we've been here so many times before,
00:05:47.960understanding from the American side that the deal was close.
00:05:50.280It does seem that the fact of this digitally signed memorandum
00:05:54.640is certainly giving a lot of optimism here
00:05:57.420and really changing the dynamic between President Trump and his G7 counterparts.
00:06:01.380This was likely to be a sore point, as it has been over the course of the last few months.
00:06:05.640The fact that he's arrived with at least this hope looking ahead to Friday, even as the world waits to see the detail of it and prays that nothing derails this.
00:06:15.120There is this sense that he has arrived here with an important win, something to show for those negotiations.
00:06:21.980We await now the detail of it and see whether it can hold even until Friday.
00:06:26.760This is going to dominate discussions tomorrow.
00:06:28.500There are conversations with President Zelensky about Ukraine, but there are also conversations that will be taking place here tomorrow with Middle Eastern leaders about Iran in a whole new context, this time a memorandum that the world awaits to see.
00:06:43.780Monday, 15, June, Year of Our Lord, 2026.
00:06:48.320Natalie Winters is going to join us here momentarily.
00:08:13.460rarely come on this show and say, I don't
00:08:15.700know, but I think to that I'm going to say
00:08:17.660I don't know. And watching that cold open, the
00:08:19.660only thing I could really think was, wow, imagine
00:08:21.680If the legacy media had been that critical of Obama's version of his Iran deal, I can only imagine what we would have heard.
00:08:27.700And when he was sitting there saying, well, I don't really think there's anything meaningfully different from what President Trump is doing and from what I was doing.
00:08:34.720Well, I would say with President Trump, we're negotiating from a position of actually putting America first as opposed to trying to expand Iran's hegemony in the region and frankly here in the United States.
00:08:45.260But, look, I think since the onset of this crisis, War Room, much to, I think, probably the shock of the legacy media, has really called balls and strikes, I think has called this conflict in an even-handed way, which is what exactly is going on here?
00:09:01.500And I think from the get-go, the messaging has been a little spotty.
00:09:06.200You know, at first it wasn't about regime change and nuclear wars and the nuclear programs, and they didn't actually, you know, have clearly defined goals.
00:09:14.160They were sort of shifting, obviously invoking, doing it at the behest of foreign countries, really made the rounds.
00:09:19.640So I don't know why something that would really, I think, be such a pivotal and important kind of culmination point to the kind of original question,
00:09:27.420the idea of why we got into this conflict in the first place, I think really should be treated with more discipline from a messaging perspective.
00:09:34.600Something I've also not heard in any of the discussions is how it's involving the PRC and their involvement there.
00:09:40.660It's not just the proxies with Hezbollah.
00:09:42.320I think that's sort of looking one layer down. I would look one layer up. That is China's involvement there, of course, with their defense tech space, the drones from start to finish, cradle to grave.
00:09:52.060um i i'm not totally sure what is going on with the deal i think that the kind of modus operandi
00:09:59.760and thesis of president trump is not doing these kind of you know deep state establishment games
00:10:06.020of obscuring the text and making it really hard you know playing games whether it's you know
00:10:10.060classification statuses it's letting the people see and decide for themselves um so i think that
00:10:15.180the text of it should definitely um be made available and i would also just encourage our
00:10:19.460audience. Part of the reason I don't have even that strongly formed opinions. I mean, you have
00:10:24.280so many countries in the world right now, from China to Israel to the Iranians to their proxies,
00:10:29.320waging active foreign disinformation campaigns on social media to try to tank the deal, but also to
00:10:34.840try to support the deal, really every corner. So I would say stay very frosty. I know there's a lot
00:10:40.240of reporting going on to how these campaigns are being done. But I also think that there's a lot of
00:10:45.380time before the signatures and maybe the, you know, online link appears. Um, and there's a lot
00:10:50.520of people who want to derail and sabotage it, including, but not limited to the PRC. Um, so I
00:10:56.100would just say, make sure you are thinking for yourselves, but I think the best kind of panacea
00:11:00.720to that problem would be the white house releasing the text to the deal. So people can decide for
00:11:04.500themselves. You are, and they had an explosive story over the weekend that, uh, we know a lot
00:11:11.320about because, in fact, when we play that clip, we actually talked about this Haberman, Jonathan
00:11:17.000Swan book, and we talked about how they were almost verbatim transcripts in these stories
00:11:22.240they released. They released another story today, this story about memos going around about Stephen
00:11:27.560Miller and the process to do mass deportations and really, you know, the habeas corpus,
00:11:34.960these judges going for habeas corpus. What my question is, you cover the deep state, you cover
00:11:40.840this revolution that's going on in the country, you cover really what I think is the most
00:11:45.200important national security threat to our sovereignty, what is going on here in the
00:11:51.240streets, in the universities, in the corporations, and in the deep state of the government that
00:11:56.720really threatens our sovereignty. I've said before, the threat to our sovereignty was not
00:12:00.800coming from Tehran, okay? Like the threat to our borders was not in the eastern Russian-speaking0.99
00:12:06.600borders of the Slavic entity known as Ukraine. Do you see, have those become more and more0.90
00:12:15.180disconnected? In other words, as President Trump tries to rush to some sort of memorandum of
00:12:19.100understanding a deal, the revolution and the fight to take this country down, of which
00:12:25.140we're going to get to your piece after the break, is going full bore. And has the White House,
00:12:30.540you think lost the focus on where the real fight for the salvation of this country is, ma'am?
00:12:38.620Well, I would say that the threat, largest threat to our sovereignty, comes from people like Mark Zuckerberg.
00:12:46.440I think it came from a lot of the tech oligarch types, and I'm not just talking the short-term stuff,
00:12:52.580the explicit censorship, not just of President Trump, but of even the most tame, weakest, edgy-ish,
00:13:00.940you know, right-wing viewpoints, even daring to just question the efficacy of something as basic
00:13:05.920as masks. And what is a broader censorship structure, of course, of really just suppressing
00:13:11.640and completely neutering and silencing political movements that are anti-establishment, i.e. MAGA.
00:13:17.680inviting those people certainly sitting next to them ringside at UFC I think is a horrible idea
00:13:24.680I did not vote for Mark Zuckerberg to be buying you know a 23 million dollar mansion in DC so he
00:13:30.760could be attending parties and hosting all these events and rubbing shoulders with people who he
00:13:36.040used to censor people who he hates to his core and believe me the second Democrats either win
00:13:41.660the midterms or win the next election probably by stealing it which his non-profit arm helped
00:13:47.400facilitate, all of a sudden they'll do another conversion. And trust me, they'll be back
00:13:52.320preaching their core real values, which is that of the Democratic Party and the progressive left,
00:13:57.920but more to the core, like you're saying, this anti-nationalism, anti-populism, this kind of
00:14:03.160status quo perpetuating no change, perpetuating these disinformation grants in the USAID system.
00:14:09.620So I think the other kind of darker side of inviting a lot of these tech types in and stuff,
00:14:15.040And you even see it with people who are staffing the administration.
00:14:18.100You know, one way to look at the potential leaks coming from the situation room is, of course, you know, foreign intelligence, SIGINT operations, who knows what's going on in that room.
00:14:26.600But I also think that when you're inviting a lot of people in who are very much from that world, all those scary things of, you know, hacking, listening devices, you kind of open yourself up on that front, too.
00:14:36.900And I would just say, I think I voted for Mark Zuckerberg to go to prison, not to be going to UFC fights.
00:14:45.040Hold it. And VIP seating. Not just coming. VIP seating. Natalie Winter. Winter, stick around. We're going to play your cold open. Get right to a topic that people will be shocked about.
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00:17:07.160Great to be here this morning with you.
00:17:09.940So mobile voting, the reason that we're here is because voting is just too hard for too many people.
00:17:15.740We work really closely with military members, military families, folks that are overseas, disabled people, rural communities, and it's simply the traditional ways of voting are just not working.
00:17:30.140So that's why we are pushing for communities at the local level to start mobile voting.
00:17:35.340And the way that it works is you download an app, you verify that you live at the proper address, you verify you are who you say you are.
00:17:43.540there's all different kind of measures that a jurisdiction can use it could be biometric
00:17:48.260screening it could be multi-factor authentication once you download the app it's really simple
00:17:54.260ballot you mark you know who you want to vote for you hit submit and then three things happen it
00:18:01.700becomes encrypted your ballots anonymized and you get a tracking number so you could really see
00:18:08.180throughout the process that your vote was cast correctly and that was counted correctly and
00:18:12.980And that's transparency that really doesn't exist in other forms of voting.
00:18:17.380Then it goes over the Internet to your election officials.
00:18:30.580But I just do want to emphasize with so many people, there's so much attention already, the security of our elections.
00:18:37.060How do you get people to know that this can be trusted?
00:18:40.340Yeah, I mean, that is the number one concern that we have. And in providing this technology, it's built really by leading cybersecurity experts who do all kinds of national cybersecurity infrastructure.
00:18:54.080But there's a few things that really guarantee that it is safe. So one is end-to-end encryption, which means that the voter can ensure that their ballot is private. It's a code that only people, the election officials can really decrypt.
00:19:10.340We have end-to-end verifiability, which allows you to see your vote throughout the process.
00:19:15.100It's open source, so anybody can look at it online, can verify that it's accurate.
00:19:21.000So I could go on and on, but, you know, it is quite safe.
00:19:24.980And we've done mobile voting pilot projects in 11 different states that have been really successful.
00:19:32.180We've seen doubling of turnout, for example, in Denver.
00:19:35.420There was a conservation district in Seattle that turned out actually tripled.
00:19:40.560So we're seeing really good results and the security has been solid.
00:19:45.700And as we all know, we probably have you mentioned you have supporters.
00:19:49.960Tell us what this mock election that you're doing at the Capitol tomorrow, what will that look like for lawmakers you're trying to convince?
00:19:58.080Yeah, we will have phones, we'll have iPads, we'll have folks cast their ballot for the best of Minnesota.
00:20:07.600It'll be asking folks what they think the greatest asset is in Minnesota, whether it's the Great Lakes or Prince or some other choices.
00:20:15.920We'll be asking folks about sports teams and we'll be asking about different foods.
00:20:21.120So keeping it light and it's an opportunity for Minnesotans to really show their pride and show how simple and convenient it can be to vote on your phone.
00:20:32.080okay okay natalie winters you're this is actually please help me out here we talked before and this
00:20:41.140is actually a psyop to get maga to unanimously agree to mail-in ballots no id right this is
00:20:48.140what this is this is insanity isn't that a sale tactic they they sell you on like the worst thing
00:20:55.040and they give you something then oh but you'll settle for this no i i love it too the dissonance
00:20:59.800of two like HR ladies talking in that interview with these phrases it's too hard for too many
00:21:06.560people the traditional ways of voting are not working and they're laughing and smiling and if
00:21:12.300you really unpack the radicalness of the proposition and proposal it's jaw it's jaw-dropping
00:21:20.180um I want to get specific though so in Minnesota is where you're seeing the latest legislative push
00:21:28.240So that clip that we played was actually from a few weeks ago.
00:21:32.020They held the mock election, and now the House has HF 4962, which would basically offer a proper definition of mobile voting technology, putting that into state election law, where they define it as an application on a mobile device used to, quote, complete and submit a ballot in a secure and encrypted manner.
00:21:50.700So essentially paving the way for this to now be an accepted form of a vote.
00:21:56.700And the group that is behind this is something called the Mobile Voting Project.
00:22:02.620And of course, their websites, they all have the same when they're part of that, you know, left wing dark money network, the same weird kind of postmodern branding.
00:22:11.280But if you look who's behind it, the story gets kind of even more curious and darker.
00:22:16.460since 2018 over 330 cities have actually started to roll out slash implement this concept of mobile
00:22:25.620voting and about 13 states already accept it with the caveat of being for people who are disabled
00:22:30.940but this non-profit uses that as you know evidence is why this can work they have active campaigns in
00:22:37.960Colorado Maryland Minnesota New Jersey Vermont and New York City where they're rallying their
00:22:43.380you know, activist to sign the petitions, to lobby, to do all those things, to get these sort
00:22:47.620of state house bills passed. The founder of it, this guy by the name, his last name is Tusk. He's
00:22:54.380Brian Tusk. He was an early stage investor in Uber, one of those types, but also worked as a
00:23:01.240comms director for Chuck Schumer and on Bloomberg's mayoral campaign in New York. He's also curiously
00:23:08.260the brother-in-law of a bigwig Democrat congressman, Josh Gottheimer, in New Jersey.
00:23:30.280But if you really look even more at the partisanship of this organization, the CEO of it, a woman
00:23:34.520by the name of Sheila Nix was actually, believe it or not, Kamala Harris's chief of staff for her
00:23:40.100campaign in 2024, the former chief of staff to Jill Biden, and a deputy assistant to President
00:23:45.840Obama. And that's sort of the background. So this is the group that's been behind it. The guy's
00:23:51.000written a book, done TED Talks to try to normalize this concept of mobile voting. But what's really
00:23:57.720interesting and where paths converge is Stephen Richer, who I know this audience, especially our
00:24:03.640Arizonans are extremely familiar with, the guy who was sort of the front man, not just for taking
00:24:08.420down Cary Lake, but for all things election fraud and maintaining that what happened in Arizona was
00:24:12.860totally above board. But he, working with Harvard, their Democracy Project, I should add their
00:24:19.520deceptively named Democracy Project, put out this very long form kind of white paper op-ed
00:24:24.800detailing how voting by phone is actually a great idea and how we should be looking at it,
00:24:31.280especially ahead of the midterms, but why his op-ed is so interesting, not just because it's
00:24:36.440him, but is some of the rationale, these kind of tacit admissions, that it's actually a workaround
00:24:42.020for a lot of, I think, the largest reasons that, frankly, the war room posse called him out for
00:24:46.800fraud. In his explanation, most obvious beneficiaries of cell phone voting are the
00:24:52.100voters themselves, because it would mean, quote, no more standing in line, quote, no more worrying
00:24:57.440about the weather. Quote, no more worrying about hurricanes. Quote, no more worrying about showing
00:25:02.560up at the wrong polling location. Those are kind of the funny ones. I mean, I think our republic
00:25:07.800matters more than waiting in line for a few minutes. But the real interesting one is, quote,
00:25:13.120no more forgetting your identification in your wallet that you left in your other car. Now,
00:25:19.480what does that mean? Oh, it's a workaround for people who are lacking proper identification.
00:25:24.960One of his other issues is that we have Americans who speak over 350 languages, so we need to cater to those people because I'm sure they should be voting if they speak some really niche language.
00:25:36.600And apparently we, quote, kill a rainforest every time we ran an election.
00:25:40.360But Steve, you get a special shout out in the op-ed because he's extremely triggered by the idea of ICE at polling places.
00:26:17.300But the other meta kind of umbrella, not Mark Zuckerberg's meta, that I would put over this story, which I think is so interesting, is the explicit rationale that they are using to justify this extremely radical, I don't even know if it's constitutional, can't be, proposal, is basically all of the reasons that, like, the war room posse had issues with our current election systems, particularly mail-in voting, right?
00:26:45.880the delays, that it's confusing, all of this stuff. And now all of a sudden, it's okay to
00:26:50.760question the way elections are run so long as it's a means to an end. If that end is ushering in,
00:26:56.780you know, Kamala Harris's chief of staff voting by cell phone, I'm sure their end-to-end encryption
00:27:01.660is extremely legitimate. Case in point, I know she says, you know, quote, we can get people to
00:27:08.220know this can be trusted, not actually make it trustworthy, an interesting slip of the tongue.
00:27:13.040But a lot of cybersecurity experts have already gotten together, including people from Princeton, saying that this is not secure absolutely under no circumstances do this.
00:27:23.320And I think it's quite interesting, even in that interview we just played, the chick from the organization says, you know, we can verify who you say you are.
00:27:31.100And that's precisely the point. If I'm an illegal and I say I'm a citizen, then I can vote.
00:27:35.440If I'm Natalie Winters and I say I'm someone else, then I can vote multiple times.
00:27:39.380So it's not who you say you are. It's who the government identifies you as with a form of validating and verifiable voter ID.
00:27:46.620So this is extremely radical. The posse needs to be very alert to this because they're really doing this from a grassroots perspective,
00:27:52.820really working it up the chain through these state houses, like I said, in Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, Vermont and New York City.
00:28:01.580natalie hang over a second i want to get back into the uh actually what uh was it ricker in
00:28:09.180his essay warns about what we'll do and uh the involvement of bloomberg and all this this is
00:28:15.140much more advanced i think than people people have been talking about for a long time much
00:28:18.400more advanced than i think mag and even the administration's on top of uh birch gold take
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00:29:50.920So, Natalie, can you just repeat what Rickard warns us about?
00:29:56.180Because I think it shows what they fear of what we will do and what we're going to do, ma'am.
00:30:03.500Yeah, the real buried lead, I think, of course, being the line, quote,
00:30:06.920no more forgetting your identification and your wallet that you left in your other car.
00:30:12.080And then he goes on in his nightmare scenario, in which I think you're responsible for engineering
00:30:17.220Basically, all of these ISO polling places doesn't matter if people vote on their phones.
00:30:22.540If there are no mail ballots to disrupt, then it hardly matters that Trump might test the independence of the United States Post Office.
00:30:28.540It no longer matters if Tulsi Gabbard seizes ballot tabulators in Puerto Rico, the FBI takes election materials in Georgia, or Sheriff Chad Bianco seizes ballots in Riverside, California.
00:30:39.460Again, coming from the guy who spent years, years demeaning literally this audience for raising basically the same concerns that he now uses about the election to justify a complete and radical transformation of the country, like Obama said, but particularly about elections are run.
00:31:00.840And when you look at the people behind this, these shady kind of ties, not just to Democratic fundraising, the left-wing progressive dark money networks, this is something that is extremely calculated.
00:31:12.560This is not just like some guy's pipe dream.
00:31:14.680This is something that in multiple states is being worked up through the state houses, so much so the guy's brother-in-law is a congressman in one of the states that may be the beneficiary of this.
00:31:24.120And like I said, they've already, they started as pilot programs in 330 jurisdictions.
00:31:31.520Anchorage, Alaska, they did it in 2024.
00:31:35.040Conveniently in the blue states, I mean, rolling it out in Minnesota, it's a little suspicious if you ask me and New York City and Vermont and Colorado.
00:31:42.240But this is something that I think everybody should check their state.
00:31:45.580If there's been any outreach, specifically in the state houses, you can look for legislation either called cell phone voting, mobile voting, vote by app, and make sure that that's not coming to, again, on the localist levels.
00:32:00.840Look, this is a big thing with Bloomberg. You've got Tusk. You've got Yang. Is it your belief that anybody in the administration is on top of this, particularly how far advanced it is? Because this is just not an early stage concept. They're trying to operationalize this, and they're going to do it in the blue states first, in the sanctuary cities, and then you're not going to be unwinded.
00:32:25.180Do you have a sense that anybody is on top of this in the administration, ma'am?
00:32:30.840Well, I mean, it predates them. They've started rolling it out since 2018. But no, I mean, it's in one hand, sure, the administration's fault. But I mean, the arrows and the quiver with which they are using to destroy America's elections and our country as a whole, it's innumerable. It's in the trillions.
00:32:49.620And I really think it's sort of a throw spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks, except it's highly funded, highly and systematically orchestrated spaghetti where they are systematically plotting to whether it's election systems, immigration, take your pick on the issue.
00:33:04.080um this is one of those that i think has sort of been swept under the rug because it's so radical
00:33:09.340but as someone who is jaded and how media works and has observed this stuff for a very long time
00:33:16.180it is very suspicious that for years it was kind of irrelevant and then all of a sudden they start
00:33:21.820buffing up buttressing their staff with people who are very i mean kamala harris's campaign
00:33:26.620chief of staff and now you have stephen richard who's partnered with harvard university right
00:33:31.600They're kind of front man for election integrity. Now pumping out these op-eds to try to normalize this as an idea using his, you know, creds, his bona fides, which he shouldn't have any, to try to kind of whitewash this. That is how you see narrative and information campaigns. I wouldn't be surprised, honestly, if Stephen Richards getting paid to kind of front for this guy.
00:34:46.360But I was immediately told as I got out of bed that that was actually you and your buddies down at the at the fight on the White House lawn doing fireworks at two o'clock in the morning as the president as as the ceremony wrapped up in the president and the president headed to Andrews Air Force Base to take the red eye.
00:35:05.260Talk to me about it last night. How was your how was the evening stretched into the early morning hours?
00:35:12.120But I guess your babysitter stuck around, right? For you and Tanya Tay?
00:35:16.360uh babysitters uh that's that that's uh mama poso and papa poso taking care of that so we
00:35:23.120have me and tanya tay down there had just a phenomenal time celebrating america's 250th
00:35:28.560birthday uh ran into a ton of people cut a video as well with uh the great mike benz who was down
00:35:35.440there he's a big fight fan out of miami of course brick suit came by and uh you know of course you
00:35:40.940saw all the celebrities and the rest but we were going around we we went over and we're meeting
00:35:45.220with the regular folks and this is something i would say that the ufc what the president did
00:35:51.200put it all together with patriotism with strength with masculinity on display steve this is what
00:35:57.920charlie kirk used to talk about all the time the muscular class that provides something for them
00:36:03.500something that they like try to connect with them i would submit that this was as much of a political
00:36:09.340event as it was a patriotic an event and of course obviously a sporting event and that's
00:36:15.880what it's about it's about reaching out to those low prop voters and doing something that's going
00:36:19.960to be talked about and let me tell you those those fights the way they were steve this is the only
00:36:23.800ufc where every single bout ever for the entire card was decided by knockout it's never been done
00:36:30.300before and some of the fights were just phenomenal what can i say tanya tay coming from eastern
00:36:34.840Europe she loves those combat sports well hang on hang on that's just a Saturday night in Belarus
00:36:40.240isn't it I mean there's nothing but there's no big deal to her this is the uncles getting together
00:36:44.460and having a couple of beers all right I mean this this one this one would have been like a
00:36:48.060holiday this one would have been a holiday I'll give it that I'll give it that very special there
00:36:53.080hasn't been a crowd like this at the White House since Andrew Jackson's inauguration his first
00:36:59.260inauguration sir would you agree with that well i seem to remember there was one in january 2021
00:37:04.520but i don't know if we want to go there that was at the cap that was i guess it started there
00:37:10.780you're right it started no it started the ellipse started the ellipse um we should have covered that
00:37:17.140from the willard our traditional place okay poso hang over a second let's go to the videotape we've
00:37:22.780got uh america's greatest ally here in uh jack so we've had some observations let's go ahead and play0.70
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00:47:48.380What about the people of this country?
00:47:50.780What about the folks, the good men and women, the muscular class that was out there watching UFC last night that wanted to watch it at home?
00:47:57.940the 85 000 steve that president trump and ufc gave for free for free welcomed them in to the
00:48:05.720white house didn't make them pay a dime to have to come in to be able to come in and see one of
00:48:10.020the greatest spectacles of sports entertainment in history no what about them i think it's time
00:48:18.500that you say all right fine you know there's the whole world's going to be a world there's
00:48:21.800monsters all around the world boom got it now it's time to put the american people first and
00:48:27.320You never hear that from the likes of these ingrates, Steve.
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