00:00:00.000not contributing to the accounts of the employees of your kids do so now match
00:00:04.020their contribution double their contribution and to philanthropists go
00:00:09.060adopt a state go adopt your city go adopt a school go say the kids in my
00:00:14.860community the kindergarten class here we're going to help them get started
00:00:19.500this is a moment I believe transformational to make sure the next 250
00:00:25.280is even better than the first thank you mr president early in the morning let's go back
00:00:33.800to the Oval Office yeah so I'm from Indiana and we're going to add $250 following Michael and
00:00:45.080Susan to all kids in the state of Indiana under the age of five Ray Dalio in Connecticut we have
00:00:50.900lots of philanthropists they're adopting states cities now we have the city of san francisco has
00:00:56.080been adopted the city of oakland and recently with uh you know um with katie we've adopted a
00:01:03.420school in the city of durham um we've adopted a boys and girls club in philly we've adopted
00:01:10.020you know a big brothers big sisters in in newark new jersey last wednesday and it's all to show
00:01:16.760the country the art of the possible. When you create an open source platform, anybody
00:01:22.160can give to anybody. These accounts have a QR code in them, and somebody sends you the
00:01:26.700QR code and you just double click on your phone and money goes into the account. Thank
00:01:30.920you to Joe Gebbia and the National Design Studio for their incredible work on the account.
00:01:37.440Thank you, Mr. President. Paul Atkins, Chairman of the SEC.
00:01:46.520So this is an amazing day, and really I salute you and Senator and Secretary Besant for all that you've done, you know, to help these accounts go, and then the philanthropists who have also put money into it.
00:02:03.900We have to remember that all the folks who signed that document 250 years ago, they understood well that America was actually an investment before it was a nation.
00:02:14.280So joint stock companies were stood up in England and France and the Netherlands to establish New Amsterdam, for example, now New York, and to support the people there.
00:02:30.300And everywhere I go around the world to talk to my counterparts, finance and other regulators around the world, they always ask me, how do we replicate America's whole ethos of investment and risk taking?
00:02:43.720well, this is exactly how to do it, and as the Senator said so well, for the next generation
00:02:48.700to have a feeling that they have a real stake in our economy, in the products that are made
00:02:55.620for their benefit and for the benefit of the world, frankly.
00:03:20.740I'd like to tip my cap to Secretary Besant.
00:03:23.940His staff originally told him when this idea was floated that it would take a year or two, and Scott said, no, it's got to be the 4th of July.
00:11:12.100Fast forward 18 years from now and a lot of these kids are 18 and they look at the Trump
00:11:17.100accounts and they see hundreds of thousands of dollars from them.
00:11:20.100What lesson do you hope they'll walk away from and think about you regarding this program
00:11:25.100I mean, do you think this will go down as one of, if not the signature, policy achievements?
00:11:29.980I hope so. I think it will. I really believe it's going to be one.
00:11:32.740I think we've done a lot of great things, but I think this will be one of the top.
00:11:36.680It's going to teach children to be entrepreneurial as opposed to the threat of communism that you're seeing a lot.
00:11:45.020This is not Social Democrats, by the way.
00:11:48.460That's a beautiful year. We're Social Democrats, they say.
00:11:50.940They're not social. They're communists. They want to destroy our country.
00:11:54.280We're not going to let that happen, but this helps even from the parent standpoint, you know
00:11:58.780They see their child getting richer and richer as he as the market goes up if it goes down
00:12:04.620They don't lose anything. They make money. They have money
00:12:08.100but if it goes up, they could become actually rich and the parents are going to be watching and we're all going to be watching and we're part of a
00:12:16.100Very big a very big and very beautiful game
00:12:20.860uh it's going to bring them into the mainstream it's going to bring them into recognizing like
00:12:25.740michael dell i said how the hell did you start this thing what he built is incredible now his
00:12:31.100product is great but as he said he made them i guess laptops he made a better laptop on his bed
00:12:38.220in a dorm than they sold in the store so he started selling them i guess probably during
00:12:42.700college i don't know where the hell you started selling them but you sold a lot of them and it
00:12:46.540just cascaded and then he his greatest deal was he met susan and she probably guided him beautifully
00:12:53.660that was probably his most important thing but and they have great children great everything but
00:12:59.820you know it's a beautiful story think of it they gave six billion two hundred and fifty
00:13:07.100million dollars and there's a rumor he's giving more i don't know if it's true i'm not holding
00:13:11.340it's hard to say hey how about how about doubling up right but no but think of that and started
00:13:18.260with no money other he had a great brain which is you know that's better than money i think
00:13:25.680but you know it's like an amazing story and that could happen with other people maybe not to that
00:13:31.880extent maybe there could be a few to that extent but not to that extent but that could happen with
00:13:37.740some of the people here, some of some children living in poverty, it can happen. And now they
00:13:43.480have a real chance. It's a big thing. It's a big thing. Yeah, please. I wanted to ask you,
00:13:49.120can you describe your phone call with Johnny Infantino about the red card? And Belgium is
00:13:53.020appealing the decision. You're asking me about the whole soccer thing. So yeah, I did. I spoke
00:13:58.300to Johnny, who's highly respected, who's produced the most successful World Cup in history by,
00:14:04.480they say four times this isn't just a success i actually said johnny we've got all these games
00:14:12.440each one is turning out to be a super bowl and we have all these games you know when you think
00:14:17.040of it every game is like a super bowl yes i watched last night what a game that was with
00:14:22.240mexico and england i mean two countries i don't know the players although i think kane is a great
00:14:28.660player see i played golf with him and i like him a lot he's a good golfer but he's a good he's really
00:14:34.280he's really great but i watched and and no reason for me to watch and you couldn't take your eyes
00:14:41.140off the game because i said johnny you know you have all these games because they edit games
00:14:45.820in a country where really we don't it's not our main sport to put it mildly and this has been four
00:14:52.840times more success we told me last night the numbers are four times greater they think 50 or
00:14:58.24060 million people are going to be watching the game tonight and you know this is getting to be
00:15:01.940Super Bowl numbers but you have a game tonight and I think they were they're
00:15:06.560projecting a minimum of 50 million people watching a game we call it
00:15:11.540soccer it's called football I guess but we can't recall football because it gets
00:15:14.780a little there's a little confusion so yeah you call it soccer we're the only
00:15:18.800ones to do that but we have football and football is great but I've never seen
00:15:23.240anything like it so I saw the play and I'm a person that loves sports and was a
00:15:28.940good athlete and i understand sports really well really well and that wasn't a foul that wasn't even
00:15:38.620an infraction that was two guys running full speed that happened to crash into each other
00:15:43.740you can't take your foot and properly place it on somebody else's foot when you're going no
00:15:49.020these were two great athletes that got tangled up and this referee who
00:15:58.940is a little bit suspect if you check his if you check his past i don't want to say that because
00:16:04.940i don't like to create controversy but but very suspect uh if you'd like i'll provide you with
00:16:12.220the past he made a call that nobody could believe you know even people on the other side they said
00:16:19.340oh we got lucky wow that's and it's very interesting they say they don't show them
00:16:23.900in slow motion and i never realized that i never heard of that before that they're not allowed to
00:16:28.460review in slow motion because it's so different because you'll take one little quarter of a second
00:16:32.940and you'll see that a hand is touching a neck or you see something whereas when you see it in fast
00:16:38.780motion it it will look like two guys collided which is really what happened they got uh sort
00:16:44.460of entangled he didn't do anything wrong and he's our best player or one of our best players a very
00:16:51.100vital player and he gave him a red card i didn't know what that meant i didn't think it meant much
00:16:54.940then i started hearing that that means he can't play in the next game at least in the next game
00:17:01.740i said boy that's a big you know if it happened to another player it would have been unfair but
00:17:06.860when they take your best player or just about they have some great players but and they say you can't
00:17:13.260play that's very unfair that's you know it's one thing to penalize somebody for the game
00:17:19.980But how do you penalize them for a game that hasn't been played yet? It's very unfair. You can't do that. So
00:34:08.840And on her show, they were talking about the dangers of Tick Tock and Chinese, you know, a whole thing with spying and what they're doing with it.0.98
00:34:20.000Well, except it was announced about two days ago.0.92
00:36:19.020The helicopters sometimes miss their little mark.
00:36:21.400you know they send people out marines i watch them do it they march out so beautiful great guys
00:36:26.600they have a piece of metal that he put down and except for the fact that these pilots are so good
00:36:31.660they almost hit hit the mark all the time but sometimes they miss their half the size of this
00:36:36.360desk think of it you're landing a big chopper but you know years ago and they just got produced
00:36:45.580but during my administration they ordered brand new helicopters the the big ones the ones for
00:36:52.140president it's called marine one and our other marine ones are about 40 years old they're all
00:36:56.740like air force one you know it's time to make a change and other presidents wouldn't do that
00:37:01.260because i think it's not good to make a change to luxury but you got to do it you know other
00:37:05.120countries have them so sikorsky gave we ordered a number of sikorsky's as the helicopters back and
00:37:11.140forth. Well, they're about two and a half times more powerful than the old ones. And when you
00:37:17.200land on the grass, it's not that the grass gets discolored. It gets ripped out, ripped out. And
00:37:24.600it was all over. They landed it once and nobody planned for this. This was a little bit of a
00:37:30.600planning mistake. So they landed the helicopter and half of the grass was sitting in front of the
00:37:36.500Oval Office front door. The rest of it was scattered all over. I mean, literally, it didn't singe it. It also singed it, by the way. But it literally because of the power. It's tremendous. And everybody said, well, we'll keep using the old helicopters when we have to land at the White House. And for everything else, we use the new helicopters. They said, that's a pretty expensive deal. You wouldn't do that for your company. You'd figure out an answer. So I said, because I have
00:38:06.000helicopters and three of them I said because they've been great for my business I think they're
00:38:12.600incredible so Sikorsky's Sikorsky 76 and I always was lucky I always got helipads other people don't
00:38:22.640very hard to get the hardest thing to get is a helipad okay there's no harder zoning thing to
00:38:27.720get is a helipad and I had like seven of them at different places so I could go around by helicopter
00:38:33.420and i said to the people have you ever thought these are generals air force generals that are
00:38:38.320brilliant and you know you get used to a certain thing they bring out the metal
00:38:43.220but this was now the metal didn't work because the power of these helicopters is so great it
00:38:48.120ripped up the grass right so i said has anybody ever thought of a helipad because i build them
00:38:53.740and they go quickly and solves all of the problems he's laughing it's true right it's uh crazy
00:39:02.140So it was funny. I said has anyone ever thought of a helipad? I had like six generals in front of me
00:39:07.920And they're going like wow, that's a good idea. You know, it's like the paperclip
00:39:12.000It was such a simple adventure. Probably he says that about a laptop
00:39:16.940To him. It's a simple thing to other people. Well, but the paperclip
00:39:20.960200 years ago a gentleman came up with the idea for a paperclip
00:39:25.700And he made a lot of money became very rich not as rich as Michael Dell, but rich
00:39:57.600They sold us heli- I like power, by the way.
00:40:00.220think it's great for a helicopter but they probably i don't know they felt a little guilty
00:40:08.780and they are paying for the cost of it's about five or six million dollars they're paying the
00:40:12.700full cost and when i heard they were paying the cost i went out and said let's do a beauty
00:40:18.460let's not just do a piece of concrete and paint it white which is why i just put beautiful concrete
00:40:22.940nice and we paint it white this one is a beauty it's got the seal of the white house it's beautiful
00:40:29.100the eagle and it's carved out of granite it's done by some of the most talented people you'll ever
00:40:34.060meet and you're landing on granite which is the strongest stone that we can like the outside uh
00:40:40.460walk is black granite it's got that's 35 000 pounds per square inch it's got a 1 million plus
00:40:47.900lifetime it's the strongest stone there is and that's being used out there and it's going to be
00:40:52.700i think really beautiful and uh you can see the size it's going to be beautiful it's going and
00:40:57.100it could be used for other things when helicopters aren't landing you can have
00:40:59.980other things out there like events you could have news conferences literally on
00:41:04.060it because it's the right size so by doing this we solve the problem and
00:41:07.660we'll be able to finally retire 45 year old helicopters okay how about how about
00:41:12.400one or two more and we'll get out go ahead please
00:41:14.440about the fifa decision millions of American soccer fans are obviously very happy but what do you say to the critics who say this starts a precedent which other powerful leaders
00:41:23.440Well, I don't know. I mean, I can only say this. I had nothing to do with the decision. What I did have to do is I said, I think that should be reviewed because I watched the play. And he didn't do anything wrong. You know, kind of look. By the way, if he did, I'd feel differently. Probably if he punched him in the face, if he did something wrong.
00:41:43.100I thought your young, wonderful basketball player, Caitlin, I thought that she was treated rather rough, if you want to know the truth.
00:41:55.400That was a much different kind of an event.
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00:48:14.920Okay, we had the President of the United States, the Commander-in-Chief, and we're packed today.
00:48:23.320I want to thank the President for giving us the first 45 minutes off.
00:48:29.620The Trump accounts, start with the Trump accounts.
00:48:33.120I said in this, by the way, it is Monday, 6th July in the year of our Lord, 2026,
00:48:41.700in keeping with the, what is it, the second, third day of the 250th year,
00:48:47.020the beginning of year zero in our year one in our revolution.
00:48:52.260Today on Staten Island, British troops were disembarking, ultimately be 32,000 combat troops and auxiliaries, 302 or 300 plus warships from the Royal Navy and auxiliaries.
00:49:12.260Auxiliaries, it actually started, I think the preliminary shift showed up on the 3rd, 2nd or 3rd, which was quite symbolic since the vote really went down on the 2nd.
00:49:24.820The final edited edition was finished on the 4th, not to be too nitpicking, but I think August 2nd was the day that they finally get everybody's signature on it or close to everybody's signature.
00:49:37.800they sent it to the printers i think after the fourth dunlap to the those dunlap editions of
00:49:45.820the first broadsheets of the declaration so and we're going to be covering that kind of tracking
00:49:53.400what was happening happening now because according to the way i look at it and it's
00:49:59.160just one man's opinion i look at the foundation of the country in three phases basically maybe
00:50:05.300before if you take coming over and building the foundation of american culture but as far as our
00:50:11.320freedom in setting up the apparatus it's in you have the american revolutionary phase which is a
00:50:17.420whole distinct thing of how people's mindset started to change how they started to think of
00:50:22.220themselves that's the american revolution part of it that to me the curtain goes down on that
00:50:28.700on the 4th. And the curtain raises on the War of Independence. The War of Independence takes,
00:50:35.940what, five years of combat and another couple of years of quasi-combat or figuring it out
00:50:39.780in the Treaty of Paris. And then you've got the building of the nation. The building of the
00:50:46.900nation is basically take the Treaty of Paris and say, no, we're not going to be hemmed in
00:50:50.400by what the Brits want in the Appalachian Mountains. We're going to expand into the
00:50:55.620higher river valley and in fact the beginning ideas of manifest destiny which would ultimately
00:51:01.800lead as your war room participant through the central pacific into the islands of the three
00:51:06.820island chain because yes the visionaries in our nation realized we're more than a continental
00:51:11.360power we were going to be a world power not an empire but a world power and that the power of
00:51:17.820that in manifest destiny would go all the way through the central pacific to the three island
00:51:22.080chain as clear as Pascal has been so brilliant to lay out for us time and time and time again
00:51:28.740um I want to go back the Trump accounts I said in this political piece this interview with Megan
00:51:35.440Messerly um that got a little bit of attention that um about combating the Marxist jihadists
00:51:44.480and please for the president's speech writers yo I understand we're in a war and you've got
00:51:50.360allies like saudi arabia in uh uae and qatar and pakistan's a mediator you got to put it's
00:51:59.180marxist jihadist it's a red green alliance this is what's taken over western europe this is what's0.83
00:52:04.560taken over london and you can't look away from it you can't look away from you got to dress it head0.77
00:52:09.380on mandani's wife she took this is how uh much the ugandan marxist jihadist mandami thinks of
00:52:19.260the united states the wife the quote-unquote first lady of new york takes off for um takes off for um
00:52:27.580is that clock right i'm just asking my producer i don't think that clock is correct not with the
00:52:34.040break not with the traditional d-block break with 10 minutes would take us to like five i'm just
00:52:39.760having it just having a check i'll do it i'll do it i'm just hey i'm just talent my my my directing
00:52:47.740days are over okay I'm cool I'm just saying it's 10 okay fine okay fine that's even better I just
00:52:55.180hey just every now and again include me Denver you know anytime you can just jump in my ear and say
00:52:59.560hey I'm just the talent here just a front man by the way we have a tremendous production team I
00:53:07.060want to thank them all for going live I had to jump in the beginning it's only so much Ted Cruz's
00:53:11.580voice I can take early in the morning before I've had like three pots of Warpath coffee
00:53:16.560um she goes she goes to a you know she goes to a jihadist spa i think she went to spain that
00:53:26.000should tell spain about how far gone you are right they've kind of taken it back or where's0.64
00:53:30.820queen isabella when we need her she was a hammer she was a flat-out hammer ran him out of there
00:53:39.220and then sent then then then uh hired an italian to go find the world go find me some territories1.00
00:53:45.020hey go find me some silver mines how about that go find me some copper we need a queen isabella1.00
00:53:51.800and we need her now and i'm not a monarchist at all she's just a hammer so the first lady goes0.95
00:53:58.080over to a jihadist training camp oh you can't say that it's just a spot hey it's it's nothing but a0.59
00:54:03.220madrasa for uh for women so that's what that's what mandami and i say in the counter you just0.66
00:54:11.120can't be trash talking them hey as we do here in the war room and have for years and you know
00:54:15.660talking to people about this red green alliance you have to have an you have to have an alternative
00:54:21.580because these kids have been raised on on howard um zen i guess in howard's turn too but howard
00:54:28.740zen and they have a deformed uh opinion of america of course also the lived experience their lives