Rebel News Podcast - May 02, 2018


Off The Cuff Declassified - John Cardillo - May 2⧸2018


Episode Stats

Length

51 minutes

Words per Minute

169.9094

Word Count

8,695

Sentence Count

706

Misogynist Sentences

19

Hate Speech Sentences

26


Summary

When Robert Mueller was appointed as Special Counsel in 2016, many thought he would be a fair and impartial investigator. However, it turns out, he's much more like Andrew Weissman, the man who brought down Jimmy "Whitey" Bulger and John "Johny" Connolly.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Today on Off the Cuff Declassified, President Trump's former attorney claims that Robert
00:00:04.480 Mueller is threatening a grand jury subpoena. American public schools are in worse shape
00:00:10.060 than anyone thought. I mean, really, really bad shape. Kanye West is under fire again,
00:00:17.100 this time for his comments on slavery. And members of the Democratic Party are demanding
00:00:22.380 that Hillary Clinton return millions of dollars to the DNC.
00:00:30.000 Robert Mueller, the special counsel, will now apparently stop at nothing to take down
00:00:38.220 President Donald Trump. Now, look, when Mueller first began his investigation back before I was
00:00:43.840 here on The Rebel, I had my radio show, Robert Mueller, I gave the benefit of the doubt to
00:00:48.840 Robert Mueller. Robert Mueller had, well, he had a reputation, not all good. Many people said he
00:00:54.540 was a guy with integrity, an honest actor, an effective investigator, an ethical attorney.
00:01:00.000 You know, I had my doubts about Mueller. I saw the way he handled the anthrax investigation
00:01:04.480 in 2001. I remembered how he ran Whitey Bulger and John Connolly. You know, Jimmy Bulger went
00:01:11.220 away on the lam for 17 years, 1994 to 2011, while John Connolly went to jail. Bulger now serving time,
00:01:18.340 of course, in federal prison after being caught by the FBI in Santa Monica in 2011. And but I said,
00:01:25.760 you know what? Hey, sometimes you got to lie down with dogs to catch fleas. And that's often the
00:01:31.800 case in investigations. You've got to get your hands dirty, dealing with the wise guys, dealing
00:01:36.260 with the drug dealers. And sometimes you have to cut deals with the devil that you don't want to cut
00:01:40.460 to get many more bad guys. The government also did it with Sammy the Bulger Vano to get John Gotti.
00:01:45.620 It's the nature of the beast. It's the business, right? And I started seeing who he was adding to
00:01:50.400 his team. The farthest left of the farthest left, most namely Andrew Weissman. Now Weissman
00:01:56.600 is almost identical to Mueller, but a little bit worse. Weissman has a history of being
00:02:02.740 excoriated by judges for withholding exculpatory evidence. He's had convictions overturned. He's been
00:02:08.180 admonished. And what Weissman did with Greg Scarpa and Linda Vecchio was very similar to what
00:02:16.580 Mueller did with Jimmy Bulger and John Connolly. Now, if you don't know who Greg Scarpa and Linda
00:02:23.420 Vecchio are, I'll tell you. This is a New York-based mob. Greg Scarpa was a capo, wise guy,
00:02:30.540 you know, street captain in the Italian mafia. Linda Vecchio, an FBI agent who allegedly was in bed
00:02:36.500 with Scarpa, very dirty together. Scarpa died in jail of throat cancer. DeVecchio is still around,
00:02:41.640 lives in Tampa, Florida. I did an expose on my radio show about these guys a few years back,
00:02:46.080 and I get a call from Linda Vecchio, the agent. He wanted to buy me dinner in Tampa,
00:02:50.860 tell his side of the story. I had no interest in speaking to DeVecchio, but I reached out
00:02:55.900 to Joe Coffey. Joe Coffey, legendary New York City detective, took down the mob.
00:03:01.800 Back in the 70s, also worked on the Son of Sam case. Joe was an organized crime,
00:03:05.840 major case detective. You've probably seen Joe on television. He's on A&E. He's on Discovery
00:03:12.240 Channel, all these mob shows. Sadly, about a week or two after my conversation with Joe,
00:03:18.540 where he said, I wouldn't go sit with DeVecchio. That guy is filthy. He's dirty. Now, again,
00:03:21.900 this is all alleged. DeVecchio has never been convicted of anything because all the witnesses
00:03:25.280 died. But I trusted Joe. I got to know Joe. Joe actually was a friend of my father,
00:03:31.340 same group of friends. And I got to know Joe and I called Joe. I said, hey, Joe,
00:03:34.860 would you go sit with Lynn DeVecchio? That guy's no friend of mine. I'd never sit with that guy.
00:03:38.860 That guy is as filthy as they come. So Joe sadly passed away. He was very ill. And a couple of
00:03:43.240 weeks after that call, sadly passed away. This is going back to 2015, 2016-ish. But these are the
00:03:50.800 guys Weissman ran. He ran guys as dirty, if not dirtier, than Bulger and Connolly. Scarpa,
00:03:58.500 every bit as deadly as Bulger. And it appears alleged that Lynn DeVecchio, every bit as dirty
00:04:03.960 as John Connolly. Needless to say, I never went and had that steak with DeVecchio. Maybe one day I
00:04:09.660 will. I'd like to hear his story. So that might be a dinner I'll have sooner rather than later,
00:04:14.820 because these guys intrigued the hell out of me. And I'm going to hit him with some hard questions.
00:04:19.320 But these are the people that Mueller started to put on his team. And I became really,
00:04:25.060 really concerned. Then I watched Mueller's incredibly heavy-handed tactic, right?
00:04:30.600 Having his investigators kick in the door of Paul Manafort and his wife at 5 a.m., 4.45 a.m.,
00:04:35.860 whatever it was. Now, you don't do that in white-collar cases. Agents do typically come
00:04:41.040 early in the morning. They give you a heads up and they knock on the door and they sit down normally
00:04:46.220 and they have a cup of coffee and the agents go through things. They don't come in guns blazing,
00:04:50.280 white-collar criminal cases against senior citizens. It's just not the way it's done.
00:04:55.460 I happen to know an older couple who were investigated for some, not really insider trading,
00:05:02.740 but failure to disclose certain things on the stocks their firm was trading. Subsequently,
00:05:06.640 they were exonerated. They were fined. The FBI did raid their home at 5 o'clock in the morning.
00:05:11.200 It was a beautiful mansion on the postal. They worked very hard, did very well. And it was during
00:05:15.720 the Obama administration and there was a really a war on wealth. It's a series of segments I'll do
00:05:20.840 soon enough. And this poor couple who did nothing but work their whole lives, made their money by
00:05:26.620 going into the office at 6 a.m. every day and leaving at 10 p.m. were subject to about three
00:05:31.800 years of intense investigation, about $2 million in legal fees until a letter came from the IRS,
00:05:37.340 the SEC, and the FBI saying, oops, our bad, you did nothing wrong. But they were raided at 5 a.m.
00:05:43.040 There were no guns. There were no doors being kicked in. The FBI rang the bell at their gate
00:05:48.840 and they went out. And FBI agent, they told me it was very nice. They knew they did nothing wrong.
00:05:55.120 The lead agent said, look, I don't see anything here. The IRS wants this case. I'm really sorry.
00:06:00.380 I have to be doing this. They made the agent coffee. They sat there and showed pictures of their kids
00:06:04.380 and grandkids. And they were subsequently cleared. And that agent actually called them and apologized
00:06:09.960 again. So that's the way white collar cases typically go down. What happened with Manafort
00:06:16.280 and his wife and my friend's story is one of many. I've heard the same way from even Wall Street guys
00:06:21.740 I know that were never implicated in anything, but the FBI raided the offices. You know, they would
00:06:26.660 just sit there and chat with the agents and the agents would say, hey, you know, it was never gunpoint
00:06:31.600 and harassing and what we saw with Manafort and his wife. That made me disgusted. It made me beyond
00:06:40.240 uncomfortable because it's simply not the way it's done. You do that for one reason. To intimidate.
00:06:46.420 You do that to mob bosses like Greg Scarper and Whitey Bulger. You do that to drug kingpins. You do
00:06:52.540 that to gun runners. You do that to human traffickers. You don't do that for 11 year old white collar
00:06:58.700 crimes that took place offshore. You just don't do that. Paul Manafort may or may not have done the
00:07:03.940 things he's accused of. He may have engaged in financial misdealings, but he's never been accused
00:07:08.360 of being violent. That would have warranted a an entry team with firearms executing a no knock warrant
00:07:15.800 at 5 a.m. That that showed me the character of Robert Mueller and Andrew Weissman and how they operate
00:07:23.520 not to find justice and the truth, but to intimidate and terrify people into doing their bidding. That's
00:07:30.600 not how our system is supposed to work. It's just not how our system is supposed to work.
00:07:36.880 So Mueller has gone on and then he decided to start prosecuting people on process crimes when he
00:07:43.580 couldn't find them on the things that he thought they did. But what's a process crime? You hear that
00:07:47.800 term quite a bit. You hear it in the New York Times and the Washington Post and CNN. You hear it even more
00:07:51.700 in conservative media when they complain, when we complain in conservative media, about process
00:07:56.860 crimes. And I've been remiss in not explaining. All that really means is you're not being charged with
00:08:01.960 an overt act. You're not being charged with stealing something or engaging a bad guy or plotting a criminal
00:08:10.100 conspiracy. You're merely being charged with violating a very ambiguous, oftentimes, and random
00:08:16.840 procedural statute. And in this case, false statements, misleading false statements to
00:08:23.420 federal investigators. Now, remember, James Comey and Peter Strokes said on the record, not on the
00:08:29.320 record in court, but we have text messages and emails now that have been released by DOJ. They said
00:08:34.120 on the record that they did not feel that General Flynn lied. We're talking about General Flynn being
00:08:40.560 charged with misleading statements to investigators. They didn't feel he lied. I believe Comey also said
00:08:45.200 that in one of his bouts of testimony. But eight to nine months later, Robert Mueller subjectively
00:08:50.520 reinterpreted the statute and felt that General Flynn did lie and charged him with a process crime.
00:08:56.200 Now, I don't believe General Flynn lied. General Flynn was was met in his office by two FBI agents
00:09:01.220 who began a conversation with him. From everything I understand it, he felt they were meeting him as
00:09:07.460 the National Security Advisor. Talk about a host of issues. Very common for FBI counterintel people to
00:09:14.100 meet with the National Security Advisor. General Flynn's never been charged for his conversations
00:09:17.740 with Sergey Kislyak. In fact, those were all deemed to be legal. Those were all deemed to be facilitated
00:09:24.080 by the incoming administration to jumpstart foreign policy. Perfectly legal. Donald Trump was the
00:09:29.960 president-elect. He was allowed to begin engaging in the early stages of foreign policy, having his people
00:09:36.980 meet one another, setting agenda items. He wasn't allowed to engage in foreign policy. He wasn't sworn in.
00:09:43.160 But there was nothing remotely improper. And in fact, it was what he was supposed to be doing
00:09:48.680 by getting his National Security Advisor meeting the different ambassadors and setting the stage for
00:09:54.060 when he was about to be inaugurated in a matter of weeks to have them come into the White House.
00:09:58.180 I mean, obviously, you're not going to have people come in cold. You want your people to start
00:10:01.240 introducing. If I'm right, I was brought on here to the rebel. We knew there was a week or two to start
00:10:06.540 the show. I started exchanging emails with producers, the executives, the editors, started,
00:10:12.840 you know, bouncing ideas. What are my content ideas? What do they expect from me? What do I expect from
00:10:17.520 them? How should my lighting be set? Adjusting the color and the white balance on the camera. All the
00:10:23.560 things you do to get ready for your launch. And that's all General Flynn was doing. General Flynn
00:10:29.300 was simply doing, putting all those little mechanical pieces in place so that when President Trump was sworn in,
00:10:35.900 they could hit the ground running that afternoon. But every administration has done in the history
00:10:40.600 of the presidency. In fact, it would have been incompetence to not do it. But the left wants you
00:10:44.860 to think that there was some massive plot to undermine the U.S. It's so stupid. Well, Robert
00:10:51.900 Mueller couldn't handle the fact that he couldn't, in my opinion, anyway, find any wrongdoing on the part
00:10:56.840 of General Flynn. So he railroads the general by charging him eight months later with false statements
00:11:02.380 that I don't believe the general ever made. I think the general said, I do not recall. Well,
00:11:06.900 I don't think that's according to the transcript. And Robert Mueller charged somebody with not
00:11:10.960 remembering something or remembering it differently than Mueller's investigators. It is a travesty of
00:11:17.040 justice like we've never seen. But that's all Mueller's had beyond financial crimes with Manafort.
00:11:23.080 Robert Mueller does not have one instance of Russia collusion. Now they point to,
00:11:26.700 he indicted 13 Russians. Okay. So what? Russia meddling in our election, Russian bots. And by the
00:11:35.040 way, he indicted 13 Russians. We don't even know if they were people. They could have been anonymous
00:11:43.580 bot accounts. They could have been computer code. He indicted 13 Russian somethings. None of them will
00:11:50.220 ever see the inside of a courtroom. It's doubtful they even exist, that they're even real people. No,
00:11:54.860 we've never gotten any names. We've never gotten any proof that these were any more than one developer
00:11:59.520 sitting in Siberia that developed 13 personalities on the internet. It is ridiculous. That indictment
00:12:07.940 was a waste of taxpayer time and money. No justice will ever be served. And all it does is further the
00:12:13.200 bogus collusion narrative. There's nothing there. When you get to the American actors, no one has been
00:12:19.300 indicted for collusion. And we know Russia meddled in the election. We hack them. They hack us. China hacks us
00:12:24.360 all. Iran hacks us all. We hack them back. It is so stupid for those of us who understand how this
00:12:30.060 works that we lose our voices reporting on it because we're so frustrated. So Mueller, knowing
00:12:35.960 he has none of that, now decides to threaten President Trump with a grand jury subpoena.
00:12:42.900 This from Fox News. Special counsel Robert Mueller told President Trump's legal team that he could
00:12:48.980 subpoena the president, might like to see him try that, to appear before a grand jury if Trump refuses
00:12:54.620 an interview with Mueller's team. Trump's former lead attorney, John Dowd, told the Associated Press
00:12:59.620 Tuesday night. Breaking story. Now, I would love to see Robert Mueller try to subpoena a sitting
00:13:06.200 president. That would go to the Supreme Court. And President Trump, like everyone else, has the right
00:13:12.160 to submit answers in writing. You have a Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate yourself. Robert
00:13:19.200 Mueller cannot demand you go to a grand jury if you don't want to sit with him. I mean, an average
00:13:24.660 person could be subpoenaed, but not the president of the United States. It's executive privilege.
00:13:28.600 Now, what does a grand jury subpoena do that the interview with Mueller's team doesn't? Incredibly
00:13:34.320 significant and dramatically different. You're not entitled to the benefit of counsel in a grand jury
00:13:41.260 proceeding. It's a prosecutor's forum. It's a prosecutor's forum. Your lawyer can be there,
00:13:47.760 but they can only object in most cases to the form of the question and nothing else. In other words,
00:13:54.740 your lawyer, if the prosecutor says, where were you on the night of September 16th, 2017,
00:14:03.940 when Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak was having a drink at Trump International Indecent?
00:14:09.560 Your lawyer can't object to that. However, if the prosecutor says, did you facilitate the drink
00:14:17.260 Sergei Kislyak had on September 17th, 2016 at Trump International in D.C., your attorney can say,
00:14:23.740 I object to the form of the question. It's misleading or it's leading or it implies something.
00:14:29.660 And that's really the limit of what they can object to in a grand jury proceeding. And oftentimes,
00:14:34.140 that's restricted even more. And so it's a very dangerous place for a suspect to be under grand
00:14:41.680 jury subpoena. You can be compelled to testify, but they have nothing on Trump. What Mueller is now
00:14:47.420 doing, strikes, I mean, it sticks a very sharp dagger in the heart of our criminal justice system.
00:14:54.260 He's investigating a person, not a crime. Mueller is going to try to throw the constitution out the
00:15:02.100 window, ring and squeeze Donald Trump until he finds something, a misstatement, something that
00:15:07.620 he can charge the president on that will be easily thrown out, but that will make a case for impeachment
00:15:12.880 for the Democrats. That's all this is about. Mueller is now investigating a person, not a crime.
00:15:18.540 And that's not how our system works. When I walked into work with the NYPD, I didn't get a piece of paper.
00:15:24.340 They didn't tell me, hey, Cardillo, John Smith, that's your target today. Find whatever you can on
00:15:29.540 John Smith. We're not a private investigative agency, law enforcement. No, it's, hey, Cardillo,
00:15:34.280 there was a robbery. Here's the address. Go find out who did it. Not go find out if John Smith ever
00:15:40.660 committed a robbery. Or find that if John Smith ever had an unpaid parking ticket or find that if
00:15:47.520 John Smith ever jaywalked. Not the way our system works. That is the very definition of a witch
00:15:54.640 hunt. That is the very definition of a witch hunt. They demonized Donald Trump. They've called
00:16:00.260 him a witch. And now they're out to prove that he is. And if that means tying rocks around his legs
00:16:05.380 and throwing him in a lake. And if he's not a witch, if he's a witch, he can rise to the top.
00:16:12.380 And if he's not a witch, he sinks and dies. And that was how they did it in the Salem witch trials.
00:16:17.040 So it was lose, lose. So if you got out of your shackles, rose to the top and caught your breath,
00:16:21.080 you were a witch, you were burned at the stake. And if you sunk to the bottom, you died. And that
00:16:25.580 is exactly what they're doing to Donald Trump. And why many of us feel this is absolutely a witch
00:16:31.040 hunt. Now, look, there are some interesting developments in this case because they have
00:16:34.880 asked for more time to sentence General Flynn. What am I talking about? Well, General Flynn
00:16:42.000 pled guilty to that bogus process crime. His sentencing was supposed to go down yesterday
00:16:46.740 on that. That was after one delay because there was a change in judges, right? Judge Rudolph
00:16:51.340 Contreras recused. We suspect because he was a judge who signed the FISA warrant. We also now know
00:16:56.480 he's a longtime close personal friend of embattled FBI agent Peter Stroke. The new judge,
00:17:02.820 Emmett Sullivan, is known for spanking down the government for withholding exculpatory evidence.
00:17:06.880 And one of Judge Sullivan's first rulings was to demand Mueller's team give him all evidence of
00:17:14.120 all exculpatory or potentially exculpatory evidence. Things that they didn't think were
00:17:20.620 exculpatory. But the judge said, I'll review these in camera, in private, in chambers. I'll review
00:17:25.860 these and I'll determine what's exculpatory. That leads many of us to believe the judge doesn't
00:17:30.280 trust Mueller's team. Doesn't trust Mueller's team at all. Now, the left is salivating.
00:17:37.440 Natasha Bertrand over at the Atlantic. Oh, this means that General Flynn is cooperating and
00:17:44.920 everybody's going down and that's why they need more time. Oh, nonsense. If they wanted General
00:17:49.420 Flynn to cooperate, they would have twisted his arm on a real charge, not on a bogus process crime for
00:17:54.600 which he would never serve a day in jail as a lieutenant general who honorably served this nation
00:17:59.440 for four decades. That is not it at all. That's not it at all. What I think this is stemming from
00:18:08.200 is the fact that the Mueller team, the Mueller team is in a lot of trouble. I think the 44 questions,
00:18:18.820 48 and 49 questions leaking to the New York Times combined with the fact that Mueller's investigators
00:18:25.640 have found nothing. And we now know, we now know there was even more impropriety on the part of
00:18:34.240 Mueller's team. We now know, or we strongly suspect exculpatory evidence was withheld. We now have the
00:18:41.400 testimony of James Comey and Peter Stroke or statements saying they didn't believe General Flynn
00:18:47.040 lied. We now have James Comey, Peter Stroke, Andrew McCabe under a criminal referral from Congress to
00:18:54.680 the FBI. Andrew McCabe with an inspector general referral to DOJ for prosecution. What I meant was
00:19:00.880 Congress referred Comey, Stroke, Loretta Lynch, Cage, McCabe to DOJ for prosecution. McCabe again referred
00:19:09.280 by the inspector general for prosecution. Comey potentially being referred for prosecution.
00:19:13.940 He's already been referred by Congress, potentially by the inspector general for prosecution.
00:19:18.180 I think General Flynn's lawyers are saying, hold on a second. We don't even know if we want to keep
00:19:22.300 this plea in place. We might file an appeal. There's a lot of dirt happening over there.
00:19:27.200 A lot of things were going on that we didn't know when we took this plea. A lot, a lot of impropriety
00:19:32.120 is happening. We do nothing about this. We need another, we need some more time, Your Honor,
00:19:36.800 to see what shakes out before we go ahead and agree to have our client sentenced. Hell, something might
00:19:42.920 break in the next two weeks that necessitate you vacating this plea and dismissing the general's
00:19:47.440 charges. And that's what many of us believe is going on. Not as Bertrand over at the Atlantic's
00:19:53.440 wishful thinking says that General Flynn is cooperating and everybody's going to jail. I don't
00:19:57.740 believe that for one second. If General Flynn had something that would have landed people in jail,
00:20:01.780 General Flynn would have spoken already. It would have, it would have happened because Mueller has,
00:20:06.960 I believe, three targets, three trophies, three heads he wants on the wall. Donald Trump,
00:20:14.120 President of the United States, his son, Donald Trump Jr., and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner.
00:20:19.320 And I say this because I truly believe that Mueller is no longer interested in justice.
00:20:25.480 Mueller is no longer interested in the truth. Mueller now has one mission, and that is to take
00:20:31.840 Donald Trump out before the midterms, allow Democrats to take over the House, preferably
00:20:39.420 the Senate as well, impeach Donald Trump, and put an end to his presidency that every day
00:20:45.440 is putting an end to the deep state.
00:20:47.080 The nation's public schools are in far worse shape than anyone thought. And I'm going to tell
00:21:05.020 you, after I read you these abysmal and really tragic numbers, I'm going to tell you why that
00:21:09.800 is. Not why I think that is, why that is. Okay. This from the National Assessment of Educational
00:21:16.580 Progress Test Results, Test Results, released by the U.S. Department of Education, you're ready for
00:21:21.660 this? Sixty-five percent of eighth graders in American public schools are not proficient in
00:21:29.720 reading. Sixty-seven percent of those same eighth graders are not proficient in math. And in urban
00:21:38.500 areas, predominantly African-American and Hispanic areas, the numbers are even worse. From the study
00:21:44.720 among the 27 large urban districts for which the Department of Education published the 2017
00:21:50.580 NAEP test scores, the Detroit public school system had the lowest percentage of students
00:21:56.760 who scored proficient or better. Now, that's just proficient. That's not satisfactory. That's not
00:22:02.380 above average. That's not average. Okay. Who scored proficient or better in math and the lowest
00:22:07.700 percentage who scored proficient or better in reading. Only five percent of the Detroit public
00:22:14.720 school eighth graders were proficient or better in math. Only seven percent were proficient or better
00:22:20.740 in reading. Meaning, of course, that 95 percent of Detroit's public school eighth graders can't read
00:22:27.400 at their reading level. And 93 percent can't solve math problems at the level of other eighth graders
00:22:36.280 around the country. In Cleveland, only 11 percent of the eighth graders were proficient or better in
00:22:43.560 math. And only 10 percent were proficient or better in reading. In Baltimore, only 11 percent
00:22:51.140 proficient or better in math, 10 percent proficient or better in reading. In Fresno, 11 percent for math,
00:22:57.080 14 percent for reading. Wow. Wow. Now, this is terrible. Now, the urban district that came in
00:23:08.180 number one, which is still abysmal, Charlotte, North Carolina, 41 percent of the students proficient or
00:23:14.980 better in math. Austin, Texas, number two, 38 percent. San Diego, number three, 36 percent. None
00:23:21.720 of these have gotten anywhere near 50 percent. Charlotte, the best, still nine points short. New
00:23:28.040 York City, 28 percent. Hillsborough County, Florida, 29 percent. Chicago, 27 percent. Chicago ranked number
00:23:36.360 eight. Miami-Dade, 24. Los Angeles, 20. District of Columbia, 20 percent. Let me tell you where these
00:23:42.760 cities ranked, the big cities. Boston ranked number fourth, only 33 percent of the students proficient.
00:23:48.280 New York City ranked seventh, 28 percent of the students proficient. Chicago, number eight, 27 percent.
00:23:54.720 Denver, Colorado, number nine on the list with 26 percent proficiency. Miami-Dade County, number 12 on
00:24:01.660 the list, 24 percent proficiency. Houston, Texas, Hyde for number 12, 24 percent. Los Angeles, number 16
00:24:08.820 on the list, 20 percent proficient. Hyde, Washington, D.C., L.A. and D.C. tied at 16. They also tied
00:24:16.220 Dallas, number 20. I'm sorry. They tied Dallas at number 16 with 20 percent proficiency. Atlanta,
00:24:23.100 number 19 on the list, 19 percent proficiency. Number 21, Philadelphia, 16 percent proficiency.
00:24:30.460 22, Milwaukee, 12 percent. Number 24, Cleveland, 11 percent. 22, number 24 on the list, Baltimore,
00:24:37.420 11 percent. Number 27, Detroit, Detroit with five percent. The list was pretty much identical for
00:24:44.320 reading. Now, this tells you something, doesn't it? These are also the places with decade upon decade
00:24:54.360 upon decade of democratic rules. These are also the places where the teachers unions have a stranglehold
00:25:01.860 on education. And therein lies the problem. The American Federation of Teachers is run by Randy
00:25:08.820 Weingarten, one of Hillary Clinton's best friends. In New York City, the nation's largest public school
00:25:15.900 system, about 250,000 members of faculty and staff belong to the United Federation of Teachers.
00:25:24.840 Okay? New York City public school system is so big, it needs its own union. You've got the United
00:25:29.640 Federation of Teachers, of which Randy Weingarten used to be president. He then moved over to the
00:25:34.560 American Federation of Teachers, become the president of the national organization, not the
00:25:39.000 largest in the country's New York City union. Here's what gets really, really interesting.
00:25:44.660 You want to see what a mess this is. The United Federation of Teachers in New York City is one of
00:25:49.520 the very few, if not the only place, very few places, if not the only place, where the two biggest,
00:25:54.660 most socialist labor unions, AFL-CIO, and the SEIU intersect. Yeah, they intersect. And here's how.
00:26:02.920 If you're a member of the United Federation of Teachers in New York City, which is controlled by
00:26:07.080 the SEIU, the Service Employees International Union, radically far-left organization, you're a member of
00:26:13.260 the UFT, you're also a member of the AFT, the American Federation of Teachers. Their membership
00:26:19.020 is inclusive of one another. The American Federation of Teachers falls under the umbrella
00:26:24.560 of the AFL-CIO. Think about that for a moment. A quarter million far-left radicals in the New York
00:26:35.620 City public school system. I've never met a conservative. I'm sure there's a member or two
00:26:38.880 in there that is a conservative. I've never met him. Let's say 95% of those 250,000 members of the
00:26:46.660 United Federation of Teachers, who are also members of the American Federation of Teachers.
00:26:51.340 Those 200 and some odd thousand radical far-leftists are the nexus at which very socialist AFL-CIO
00:26:58.300 and the very socialist SEIU meet. Not a few people in an office. It's hundreds of thousands of members
00:27:05.340 paying dues to both organizations, hundreds of thousands of members who control the largest public
00:27:12.200 school system in this nation who control education of millions of students. And in that system alone,
00:27:21.340 they could only achieve a ranking, a ranking out of the 30-some-odd schools ranked number 11
00:27:30.080 with 28% proficiency in reading and 28% proficiency in math. You tell me radical far-left unions are good
00:27:43.240 for America. Continue to tell me that after reading these numbers. Every time school choice becomes an
00:27:48.700 issue, these unions, the AFT and the UFT, step in to crush it. Every time we talk about charter schools,
00:27:55.600 they step in to crush it. Every time Betsy DeVos, the Secretary of Education, who's not a rabid far-leftist
00:28:02.280 as was Arne Duncan in the Obama administration, every time she goes out to speak, these groups,
00:28:08.640 AFL-CIO, SEIU, American Federation of Teachers, United Federation of Teachers, they launch an assault
00:28:15.340 on her. They sponsor protests, protests that have become violent, that have threatened Betsy DeVos' life.
00:28:22.140 She's a wealthy woman. She has to put her own bill to fly private with her own security detail
00:28:26.900 because of these radical lunatics. And the only people suffering here of the unions, I've watched
00:28:32.380 New York City public school teachers who were accused of child molestation when we had overwhelming
00:28:36.500 evidence to be able to sit in a cafeteria or a faculty lounge, collect their pension or collect
00:28:42.820 their salary pending their pension, while other faculty and administrators walked in and joked
00:28:47.940 around with them and acted like nothing was wrong. They were child molesters. They were child
00:28:52.700 molesters. But the radical leftists, they don't care about that. These people could not care less
00:28:56.900 about the kids. They care more about their own union dues, their own socialist power. Now, remember,
00:29:03.720 these are very, very powerful unions. My God, what would have happened if Hillary Clinton was elected?
00:29:08.280 People don't remember this. Well, I shouldn't say people don't remember this. Many don't because
00:29:11.660 history moves on and 9-11 happened a year or two later. But Hillary Clinton announced her run for
00:29:17.840 Senate in New York State on stage with Randy Weingarten. She saw a bit of soft announce. Randy
00:29:25.400 Weingarten had a group of teachers. It was a terrible event. I remember it. And are you going to run?
00:29:30.420 Are you going to run? And then it was all staged. And Hillary was like, I mean, and kind of nodding.
00:29:35.080 She was. And she did the official announcement later. And all the radical leftist teachers were
00:29:39.240 cheering in the room. The best they could achieve is 28 percent proficiency in math and reading
00:29:45.320 for their students. And in the areas that are the census tracts that are predominantly African
00:29:51.600 American, those numbers plummet. This is disgraceful. This is disgraceful. But what this
00:29:57.640 really is, when you look at cases like this, when you look at the Democratic Party, that's what they
00:30:03.040 want, right? They want to control the children. They want to keep them stupid. Because if you keep
00:30:07.740 African-American kids below proficiency levels in math and reading, what are you guaranteeing?
00:30:13.940 You're guaranteeing that they're on welfare their whole lives. They can't work. And ultimately,
00:30:18.740 they're dependent on the state. And the state grows. The state grows considerably. You want single
00:30:24.780 payer if you're a Democrat, right? So you can have death panels. So you can decide which of these
00:30:29.820 people gets to live and die if they're sick. I'll tell you what's really sick. The left-wing ideology
00:30:36.740 is really, really sick. This is tangible proof of the agenda of the left. We cannot let this happen
00:30:45.240 here. We cannot let this happen here. This shows us what the left is really about. They want to keep
00:30:53.220 people uneducated, dependent upon government. They want to run your health care. They want to decide when
00:30:59.820 you live and die. These are not conspiracy theories. These are not conspiracy theories.
00:31:05.440 Do your own research. This group is right there in the numbers.
00:31:19.580 Poor Kanye West is under fire again. Kanye can't get a break. Man, I've never thought there'd be a time
00:31:26.380 in history where I would, A, support, and B, feel really bad for Kanye West. But I do.
00:31:31.020 So this comes after Kanye West showed up yesterday at TMZ's offices, Los Angeles. And he made really
00:31:37.800 controversial, according to the mainstream media, but I don't think they were controversial at all.
00:31:41.760 I think they were spot-on comments about slavery. TMZ asked Kanye, and you know how TMZ films,
00:31:48.420 the Harvey Levin shows, it's in their offices. It's a really cool format. I like the dynamic nature of
00:31:53.840 TMZ films. Levin is standing there, interacting with his team, and they're commenting on what
00:31:58.060 they're watching. It's one of the better, I think one of the better visuals in terms of energy
00:32:02.680 on air. I really like that format. So they asked Kanye West about his support for President Trump,
00:32:08.780 and Kanye said, quote, when you hear about slavery for 400 years, 400 years? That sounds like a choice.
00:32:15.220 Like you were there for 400 years, and it's all of you. Like we're mentally in prison. Like slavery goes
00:32:20.380 too direct to the idea of Blacks. So prison is something that unites us as one race. Blacks and whites being
00:32:27.220 one race. We're the human race. Now this caused one of the TMZ staffers to argue with Kanye West. But I think
00:32:35.600 Kanye West was right. Now Kanye West came with Candace Owens. So the interview was controversial, right?
00:32:43.620 He was filming, somebody at TMZ says, he was filming TMZ Live, which is always filmed in the office,
00:32:48.920 and he just stood up and walked around and pretty much did the interview for the entire office.
00:32:53.600 I mean, this is, I don't mind what he did. So one of the TMZ staffers, Van Lathan,
00:33:01.600 so Kanye West said, quote, do you feel that I'm feeling? Do you feel that I'm being free and thinking
00:33:06.140 free? Van Lathan, TMZ employee said, I actually don't think you're thinking anything. I think what you're
00:33:12.420 doing right now is actually the absence of thought. And the reason that I feel like that is, Kanye,
00:33:16.760 you're entitled to your opinion. You're entitled to believe whatever you want. But there's fact
00:33:20.320 and real life consequence behind everything you just said. While you are making music and being
00:33:25.520 an artist and living the life that you've earned by being a genius, the rest of us in society have
00:33:29.320 to deal with these threats to our lives. We have to deal with the marginalization that has come from
00:33:33.560 400 years of slavery that you said for our people was a choice. Frankly, I'm disappointed and I'm
00:33:39.560 appalled, brother, and I'm unbelievably hurt by the fact that you have morphed into something to me
00:33:43.880 that's not real, end quote. This guy Van Lathan is wrong and Kanye West is right because if you read
00:33:51.380 what Kanye West is saying or was saying unemotionally, what he was saying was exactly
00:33:56.320 what Candace Owens said in that video. The people that are complaining about slavery today
00:34:03.860 never experienced slavery. If you're enslaving yourself, it's in your own mind. Look, Italians
00:34:13.060 suffered when they got here. They were called WAPs without papers. There were signs Italians need
00:34:19.340 not apply. The Irish suffered when they came to America. The Jews suffered when they came to America.
00:34:25.160 It wasn't uncommon outside of certain areas of New York City to see signs that would say
00:34:29.240 Irish, Italians, and Jews need not apply. Go back to where you came from. But you know what they did?
00:34:35.440 They didn't enslave themselves mentally. They said, oh yeah, screw you. So the Irish,
00:34:41.920 they took over the police and fire departments. The Italians took over certain businesses. Now,
00:34:46.560 I'm not going to say that it wasn't without a little, and the Jews alongside of them, right? These
00:34:50.520 three ethnic groups, they would battle each other, but they often work together in New York City and in
00:34:55.600 Chicago and other cities like that. Now, let's be realistic. A lot of it was based on organized
00:35:00.440 crime, but much more of it was based on legitimate business enterprises. And oftentimes, those organized
00:35:07.020 criminals, well, they wanted their kids to be anything but organized criminals. So you had Italian
00:35:12.120 mobsters and Jewish mobsters and Irish mobsters making a lot of money, whether it was bootlegging or
00:35:16.440 numbers rackets or loan sharking, putting their kids through very, very good schools up to Ivy League
00:35:23.180 schools and their kids were coming out as doctors and attorneys and CPAs, business owners. And that's
00:35:28.720 how those immigrant groups, even though they were as oppressed as any other, made it. That's how they
00:35:36.240 made it. And now we see where the Italians and the Irish and the Jews are in America. They are some of
00:35:44.320 the most successful immigrant groups. We see that again with another really great immigrant group living
00:35:49.380 down here in South Florida. I'm fortunate to have many Cuban friends. I think Cubans are one of the
00:35:53.480 greatest immigrant groups to ever come to the United States. They fled communism. Now, I'm not
00:35:57.580 talking about the criminals that came in the Mario Boatlift. I'm talking about those people that were in
00:36:01.760 Cuba under Batista and who came to the United States, predominantly South Florida with pockets in
00:36:07.000 the New York and New Jersey area, fleeing communism, fleeing Castro's revolution. These are some of the most
00:36:13.480 successful people I have ever met. I have many friends down in Miami, Cuban Americans, who are
00:36:21.240 incredibly wealthy, incredibly wealthy. Everyone in their family is not just, doesn't just have an
00:36:28.740 advanced degree, but typically professional. It's a CPA, it's an attorney, it's a doctor. Cubans are one
00:36:33.900 of the most successful immigrant groups. You know what you don't hear from the Cuban community?
00:36:38.400 Whether they be light skin or dark skin, you never hear them say, oh my God, communism took my country
00:36:44.880 away. I've got to go on public assistance. They would be mortified to do that. These are people,
00:36:51.580 their culture instilled in them success. They're coming to the U.S. The U.S. has given you an
00:36:57.000 opportunity. You better work for it. In fact, bar none, every one of my Cuban friends down in Miami
00:37:04.200 is very successful. They are very successful. Six-figure earners, at least, many of them,
00:37:11.120 their families are multi-millionaires. They own properties all over the place. They're physicians,
00:37:15.760 they're attorneys, they're bankers. They never did. They never said, oh, we don't speak the language.
00:37:21.360 I mean, they came here not even speaking the language and they succeeded wildly. It's a work
00:37:27.400 ethic. So Kanye West is right. I'm sorry to say it, but he's a hundred percent. No, you don't,
00:37:32.020 I'm not sorry to say it. I'm sorry it needs to be said. I'm sorry for black America that it needs
00:37:37.760 to be said. You don't see crime in the Cuban communities like you do in black America.
00:37:43.740 You drive down to Little Havana in Miami. Now I've got a bad rap with Scarface and all that, but
00:37:47.700 if you drive down to Little Havana now, Little Havana, a place that when I first moved to Miami
00:37:52.640 back in 2004, well, it was not a rough area, but a lower middle class area. What happened there was
00:38:01.260 all of those wealthy Cubans I talk about that, Hey, you know what? We need to really revitalize
00:38:06.140 area. This is our heritage. If you go to Little Havana now, it is one of the trendiest trips of
00:38:12.160 any city in the United States. Outstanding restaurants, really cool, hip bars. Friend
00:38:17.680 of mine just opened a retro donut shop down there. It was an old 1960s, fifties and sixties,
00:38:23.160 Miami donut brand that he brought back with a partner. His family actually owned the brand.
00:38:27.580 He's a bit of an older guy. They brought that brand back. It's booming. There's a line
00:38:31.220 out the door. Some of the coolest spots you will ever go to in Little Havana. There's a Cuban
00:38:36.700 community, came successful, and then they said, now let's work on our heritage. Let's revitalize
00:38:42.260 these areas. Kanye West is essentially telling black America to do the same thing. Get out of
00:38:47.980 your own heads. No, you were never slaves. You're all Americans. Many of you who are engaging in these
00:38:55.340 protests against Candace Owens are doing it on college campuses. Colleges you attend because you grew
00:39:00.700 up middle class or upper middle class. The only oppression you're facing is at your own hand.
00:39:07.300 That's what Kanye West is saying. And it's a sad day of this guy, Van Lathan at TMZ.
00:39:12.180 Now think about it. This guy, Van Lathan works for TMZ. He's on television. He probably went to a very
00:39:19.920 good school. Probably worked really hard to get this job. He was probably much better at other people,
00:39:27.580 his age, trying to go into the same field. He was much better than they were, and he got picked up
00:39:32.860 by a top-tier entertainment show. He doesn't even understand that he's proving Kanye West's point.
00:39:39.680 Here's a guy who succeeded, who's still telling the world, I'm less. I'm less because of something
00:39:47.300 that happened hundreds of years ago. And without even realizing it, this poor guy is proving Kanye's
00:39:53.880 point. It's really mind-blowing, and it's very, very tragic. And then we look, I bring it up all
00:39:59.080 the time, we look at the black-on-black crime stats, we look at the numbers, and I don't know
00:40:04.320 how you solve a problem. I don't know how you solve a problem when a megastar and a thought leader like
00:40:10.740 Kanye West goes out there, takes a chance at the peril of his own brand, his personal safety, right?
00:40:17.640 I brought you yesterday how the Crips gang that was given an alert by some guy named Daz Dillinger,
00:40:23.460 an old music partner, Snoop Dogg, to attack Kanye West. But Kanye West goes out there at the peril
00:40:27.900 of his brand, at the peril of his revenue, at the peril of his own personal safety, of his family,
00:40:32.540 and he says some really uncomfortable things that need to be said. He's attacked by all sides,
00:40:38.940 attacked by black America, white America, liberals. But he's right. He's right. And if a Kanye West
00:40:45.860 can't go out there and say it, who can? If the black community isn't going to, at least,
00:40:51.200 I'm not saying they have to listen and fall in lockstep with Kanye West, but if they're not at
00:40:54.820 least going to open their minds and say, wait a second, maybe some things Kanye West is saying
00:40:59.800 ring true. Maybe we should give some credence to a little bit of what he's saying. Well, that's not
00:41:07.240 happening. Then I don't know how, how we get out of the epidemics of black-on-black crime.
00:41:12.940 I don't know how we take certain communities in this country and really help them do better
00:41:20.360 for themselves.
00:41:32.840 Even Democrats are sick of Hillary Clinton and now they want their money back. This from,
00:41:38.780 believe it or not, the Huffington Post politics section title is some Democrats want Hillary
00:41:45.360 Clinton to return the DNC's money. Does the national party agreed to pay $1.65 million for
00:41:51.960 her campaign email list and other resources. And now several democratic officials are asking Hillary
00:41:58.420 to return the cash. They want her to return the money that the democratic national committee,
00:42:04.360 the DNC paid her political group for a campaign email list and other resources. Here, let me
00:42:10.800 read you this part of this HuffPost story. In February, 2017, the DNC agreed to pay Clinton's
00:42:15.680 group onward together $1.65 million for her campaign email list, analytics, donor data, and
00:42:22.440 related items. The Intercept reported on Wednesday. Today is an early story. The cash of material was
00:42:28.740 worth more than $5 million. Clinton's campaign made an in-kind donation of resources worth $3.5 million
00:42:36.140 and the DNC paid for the rest. Let me break that down for you. It's very common.
00:42:41.360 President Trump's email list, his analytic data, the voter profiles, everybody who voted,
00:42:47.500 is probably at this point, because he won the election, despite all odds, worth in the tens of
00:42:53.180 millions of dollars. So the Trump campaign can do a couple of things with that. That's what the
00:42:59.780 Hillary campaign did. The Hillary campaign had the option to do a couple of things with that,
00:43:03.480 both campaigns. They can sell it to the Republican National Committee. They can sell part of it to
00:43:09.620 the big data company. They can make part of it what's called an in-kind donation. So the campaign
00:43:16.140 gives these things to the Republican National Committee, or in Hillary's case, the Democratic National
00:43:22.640 Committee, and they get credit for an in-kind donation to that committee of fair market value.
00:43:28.840 So say Trump's worth $10 million and the RNC paid him $3 million and he gave him the rest,
00:43:35.500 he would be credited, his campaign would be credited with a $7 million in-kind donation.
00:43:40.700 Very common in politics. Happens on every level. Governors do it on the state level. State
00:43:45.140 representatives do it on a local level. Presidential candidates, presidential, those who win the
00:43:51.060 presidential elections do it on the national level. However, a number of Democratic Party officials,
00:43:57.320 including some Democratic State Party chairs and members of the national DNC, want Clinton to
00:44:04.840 retroactively return the money. They want her to donate campaign materials to the DNC, ongoing,
00:44:11.320 and return the $1.65 million. Alabama Democratic Party chairwoman Nancy Worley, who supported Clinton,
00:44:19.220 said, quote, she should return the money for the love of the Democratic Party to the DNC for its use.
00:44:25.860 And the reason is Democrats are facing a massive fundraising deficit compared to the Republicans.
00:44:32.500 The DNC is raising far less than the RNC. Wisconsin Democratic Party chairwoman Martha Laning
00:44:40.580 and Missouri Democratic National Committee woman Curtis Wilde, likewise, called on Hillary to return
00:44:46.700 the money. Now, in states, I'll explain who these people are. In a state, you have a chairman of the
00:44:50.720 party. Okay, so every state party, whether it be Republican or Democrat, is chartered by the RNC or the DNC.
00:44:57.960 That party has a chairperson. Then you have what are called committee people. You have a committee man
00:45:05.680 and a committee woman. A state committee man or a committee woman are the representatives to that
00:45:11.280 state's party from the county parties. A national committee man or committee woman is the representative
00:45:19.820 from that state. So there are two. There's always a committee man and a committee woman. They're the
00:45:24.380 representatives from the state party to the national party.
00:45:27.960 So this woman, committee woman, a national Democratic, Missouri Democratic National
00:45:32.180 Committee woman, Curtis Wilde, she would be the representative, the female representative,
00:45:36.000 the committee woman, counterpart would be the committee man, from the Missouri Democratic Party
00:45:40.200 to the DNC, the Democratic National Committee. She's a very high-ranking official. There are only 50
00:45:45.160 of her around the country. That's why I'm putting it in perspective for you.
00:45:48.860 So the state chairman, state chairwoman rather,
00:45:51.340 and the state committee woman from Missouri, the state chairwoman from Wisconsin, there's only 50 of
00:45:58.860 each of them around the country. They are both calling for Hillary to return that money. These
00:46:02.900 are very powerful people within the Democratic Party. These are not some, you know, local precinct
00:46:07.520 committee person of which there are thousands and thousands and thousands around the country.
00:46:10.780 These are very significant players calling on Hillary to return the money.
00:46:15.160 Also, Democratic, Nebraska Democratic Party chairwoman Jane Klebe, who supported Bernie Sanders
00:46:21.600 though, she argued Clinton could contribute the equivalent. So give, in other words, Clinton got
00:46:27.460 1.65 million. She wants her, she wants Clinton's campaign or Clinton's PAC or whatever, wherever the
00:46:32.780 money is now, to give that same 1.65 million back to state Democratic Party, split it across the
00:46:39.920 country or give it to big states or give it to states that are red, that they want to turn blue.
00:46:44.900 Other DNC officials, including at-large member Brian Wabi and Kansas Democratic National Committee
00:46:51.100 man, I explained the committee man, committee woman, man named Chris Reeves, only 50 of him around the
00:46:55.420 country. They also welcomed an in-kind donation from Hillary saying it would be the Christian thing to do.
00:47:02.780 Uh, Nick Merrill, a Clinton spokesman, defended the 1.65 million dollar price tag, saying that the
00:47:11.440 DNC has already reaped far more than it paid for the email list. In other words, Hillary's saying,
00:47:15.920 I give you a deal, you're not getting a dime. That's classic Hillary. He wrote, quote,
00:47:21.580 paying a rental fee for use of an email list is common practice. And in this case, the DNC has raised
00:47:26.640 over $30 million with it, an 1800% return on their investment. Never thought I'd say this,
00:47:32.480 but I agree with Nick Merrill. I agree with the Hillary Clinton campaign. Now, the DNC itself is
00:47:38.460 saying, uh, DNC spokesman, I don't know how to pronounce his name, uh, X-O-C-H-I-T-L,
00:47:45.800 Jokito Hinojosa, I don't know how to pronounce, uh, Jokito, I don't know. A DNC spokeswoman
00:47:53.480 agreed that the DNC had gotten, quote, a return on our investment and more since obtaining all of the
00:47:59.100 lists and data, end quote. But look, Hillary Clinton is never going to return any money. Now,
00:48:05.180 onward together where the money went is a nonprofit not required. It's 501c4. So it's not required to
00:48:10.660 disclose financial data. Doesn't have to tell you what it takes in. Doesn't have to give you an itemized
00:48:16.140 list of what it spends, unlike a traditional campaign. But it says it has distributed grants
00:48:21.520 to 11 progressive groups, uh, including, let's read where they've, uh, given their money.
00:48:29.600 They have their partner organizations are, this is Onward Together, Hillary Clinton's, uh, Hillary
00:48:35.040 Clinton's hack. And it's born from conversations between Governor Howard Dean and Secretary Hillary
00:48:42.120 Clinton in the aftermath of the 2016 election. Onward Together was established to lend support to
00:48:48.580 leaders, particularly young leaders, kicking off projects and founding new organizations
00:48:53.160 to fight for our shared progressive values. So their partner organizations, a group called Color
00:48:59.500 for Change, Emerge America, Indivisible, the Indivisible movement, had gotten very violent,
00:49:04.800 swing left, and run for something. In December of 2017, they added six more groups, Alliance for Youth
00:49:11.860 Action, Arena Summit, Collective PAC, I Vote Fund, Latino Victory, and Voto Latino.
00:49:17.920 In other words, Hillary Clinton took that 1.65 million, and I'm sure many, many millions more,
00:49:22.860 and alongside far-left Howard Dean, donated, support, run, control, far-left radical groups
00:49:30.440 that I would venture a guess, if we dug into them, are involved in these Antifa protests,
00:49:35.920 in disrupting conservative speakers on campus, uh, probably involved in the protests around the
00:49:41.400 Mueller investigation, you know, pushing this Russia collusion narrative. It says, this is how they
00:49:47.480 help. Financial support, direct grants, fundraising support, online amplification,
00:49:52.360 online amplification, in-person surrogate assistance, meaning sticking people at protests,
00:49:58.040 one-to-one introductions and meetings with donors and convenings, getting George Soros in a room,
00:50:02.880 give more money to these, uh, another way they do it. Strategic and leadership advice,
00:50:07.040 mentorship training, one-on-one introductions with expert advisors and convenings, nice way to say
00:50:11.440 event. Recognition, online endorsement, surrogate support, offline and event mentions, membership
00:50:18.060 building, growing their organization. Hillary's not giving the DNC a dime back. What the DNC realizes,
00:50:24.640 what the state people realize is, their states are suffering because of Hillary's disastrous loss,
00:50:29.920 because of the Democrats' disastrous policies. They can't raise money, despite the DNC and Hillary
00:50:35.660 people saying they're raising money. They can't raise money. $30 million is nothing. It's $6 million a state.
00:50:40.740 It goes like that. Nothing for candidates. They can't raise any money. The Republicans are out
00:50:46.520 raising them. The inspector general's report is coming out. The Democrats are going to look terrible.
00:50:51.440 It's not going to be a blue wave in November. I think there might be a red wave. The Democrats
00:50:54.560 might pick up a couple of seats, but Republicans will most likely, and now this is being supported
00:50:59.580 by new information on the generic congressional ballot, Republicans will most likely hold the House
00:51:04.220 and Senate. The Democrats are scrambling. They need money. And now they're going to throw Hillary
00:51:08.700 under the bus to try to get some.