FBI Director Nominee Kash Patel Gets GRILLED And Plane Collision!
Episode Stats
Length
3 hours and 29 minutes
Words per Minute
152.6285
Hate Speech Sentences
162
Summary
On this episode of the show, we discuss the plane crash, the confirmation hearing for Kash Patel, and the recent deal between Israel and Hamas. We also have a special guest on the show to talk about Kash Patel's confirmation hearing.
Transcript
00:14:03.000
Y'all know what time it is, y'all know what time it is, we're taking over 20, 25, 0 slash
00:14:20.180
in the chat, you guys know what fucking time it is, 1980s rock, we're gonna keep pissing
00:14:29.120
these idiots off, we're gonna tell the truth, no political correctness over here, we say
00:14:34.680
what the fuck we wanna say over here, let's go baby, the most controversial fucking streamer
00:14:43.920
right now, let's fucking go, fuck album preach, we're taking over 20, 25, fuck those sodomites,
00:15:01.740
all right, all right, welcome to the, welcome to the show, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's
00:15:27.040
welcome to the stream, chat, welcome to the stream, welcome to the stream, guys, happy
00:15:31.720
to have you guys here, we are definitely got a good show planned for tonight, a lot of
00:15:40.560
stuff going on, a lot of stuff going on, as you guys know, we're going live at 5, Monday
00:15:46.340
through Friday, doesn't matter how I fucking feel, how tired I am, whatever, obviously this
00:15:51.720
is, you know, it's, it's, it's a lot more work, but it's okay, I do enjoy these streams, you
00:15:59.440
know what I mean, regardless of how I feel, like I, you know, everything feels better once
00:16:02.360
I'm able to, like, get on air and talk with you guys, get a little bit of caffeine in my
00:16:06.180
system, you know, lean, mean, caffeine machine, and, you know, and then we just start, start
00:16:11.640
Today, we got a couple things we're going to be talking about, obviously, as you guys
00:16:15.480
know, we had the plane crash, the tragic plane crash that went down last night, we have the
00:16:23.460
confirmation hearing for Kash Patel, which is going to be, you know, very interesting, I
00:16:29.300
might cover a little, a little bit of Palestine as well, or I might not cover, or I might wait
00:16:33.860
until tomorrow, when I have, I think I'm going to bring Suleiman on and we'll talk about
00:16:37.560
it, but, but yeah, Hamas did another exchange deal, I see Brett Cooper got her first video
00:16:46.900
out, we might react to that if you guys want, interesting to see what her takes are going
00:16:52.160
to be, you know, I don't think she's going to be saying anything too controversial, and
00:17:01.580
yeah, man, that's pretty much it, let me see here, as you guys know, Myron Gaines,
00:17:07.560
superchatx.com to get involved with the show, that's the best way to superchat get involved,
00:17:12.960
that every single chat that comes through gets shown on screen, as it is like this one
00:17:18.800
right here, that's what it's going to look like, wait, where'd it go, can I show it on
00:17:23.400
screen, what the fuck, I just fixed this yesterday, oh my god, okay, see, things always mess up
00:17:31.900
whenever you fucking are like going to test them, right, but, but yeah, they all show up
00:17:36.280
on screen, let me, well, that's interesting, maybe it's good from yesterday, all right,
00:17:49.060
anyway, um, yeah, someone tests, I think it'll show up on screen, but either way, um, we got
00:17:55.600
that, and, uh, yeah, man, we got, we got some stuff to talk about, so it's going to be, it's
00:18:00.340
going to be a good time, chat, it's going to be a good time, um, so let's see here, let's
00:18:05.060
get into the first story, uh, with our boy, let me pull this up real quick, so I think,
00:18:17.480
let me, first, before we even do this, let me go ahead and, I'm going to give you guys,
00:18:25.160
uh, a quick little overview of who this guy is, I understand that a lot of you guys might
00:18:30.060
not necessarily follow politics like that, and you guys get your news and politics from
00:18:33.860
me, so, you know, uh, you know, it's, it, I think it's my duty to kind of explain things,
00:18:40.060
even at a remedial level, right, because we don't know everything, so let me go ahead and
00:18:45.040
give you guys a quick little intro to who this guy is, so,
00:18:57.620
for his participation, okay, so who is Kash Patel, right, here he is right here, guys,
00:19:08.300
um, Kashyap Premad Vinad Patel, born February 28, 1980, is an American lawyer and former federal
00:19:15.600
prosecutor at the U.S. Department of Justice, okay, so this guy used to be in AUSA, okay,
00:19:20.660
previously served as the chief of staff to the acting U.S. Secretary of Defense Christopher C.
00:19:24.400
Miller and senior advisor to the acting director of national intelligence, Richard, uh, Grinnell,
00:19:29.720
both during the first presidency of Donald Trump in November, 2024, President-elect Trump nominated
00:19:34.180
Patel to succeed Christopher A. Ray as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and if,
00:19:40.420
unless you've been living under a rock, I do know that we have a lot of, um, you guys in here that
00:19:44.400
might not be, uh, Americans. The FBI, right, Federal Bureau of Investigation, guys, is the, um,
00:19:50.220
it's the main federal law enforcement agency in the United States, right? I'm a former HSI guy,
00:19:55.380
you know, we hate to admit it, but the reality is the FBI is the big dog in the house when it comes to,
00:20:00.500
um, federal law enforcement agencies, um, they are the premier agency, okay, um, they investigate,
00:20:06.820
and I know the FBI intimately, by the way, I was actually, you know, it's fucking funny, dude,
00:20:10.760
um, while I was watching the confirmation hearing, uh, I have a buddy of mine, uh, he's an FBI agent,
00:20:15.960
we, we've known each other for, damn, 10 years now, plus, um, we met, uh, working a lot at King
00:20:22.180
Case back when I was in Texas, and he's here in Florida now, who's at a San Antonio field office,
00:20:27.040
now he's down here in South Florida, um, and I was, I messaged them the, uh, the thing, I said,
00:20:31.160
hey, bro, they're grilling your fort, your, uh, your, your new boss, um, but, you know,
00:20:35.860
he's actually excited for it, he likes Cash Mattel, you know, a lot of these FBI agents,
00:20:39.500
guys, the corruption, the issues, et cetera, it's at the high levels, man, the, the,
00:20:44.480
the regular, you know, agents, the guys at the GS-13 level and below, uh, super, you
00:20:49.420
know, first-line supervisors, shit like that, like, these guys are just doing their job,
00:20:52.560
bro, right, it's the brass that are the problems, right, the SESs, right, senior executive levels,
00:20:59.500
but, um, but, yeah, you know, the main thing that they investigate, guys, obviously, is, um,
00:21:05.540
who's this, what the fuck, okay, Brian Driscoll, I guess he's the acting,
00:21:09.260
okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, so this guy's the acting, um, director, because Christopher Wright was,
00:21:13.860
but as soon as Trump went office, he got the fuck up out of there, bro, he got the fuck up out of
00:21:18.280
there, um, but, yeah, so, uh, the way the FBI works, guys, is, it's his, yeah, let me go ahead
00:21:26.620
and, okay, because this, if I'm going to go ahead and explain this shit, this is a whole other,
00:21:30.060
all right, so, what is the FBI, and I think this is very important, uh, because as you guys watch
00:21:38.500
this confirmation here, you guys are going to see people continuously say, you know, they're brave
00:21:42.540
men and women, 38,000 employees, one of the most important law enforcement agencies, so let me go
00:21:47.700
ahead and just go through this real quick. The FBI is the largest federal law enforcement agency in the
00:21:52.740
United States, it's the premier law enforcement agency, okay, the second biggest is HSI, the agency I
00:21:57.120
used to work for, but the FBI historically has always been the lead agency on many of the biggest
00:22:03.460
cases in the country, whether it's organized crime, counterterrorism, espionage, etc., they do it, um,
00:22:10.260
after 9-11, their mission perspective changed significantly, they took a more counterterrorism
00:22:16.940
route, more counterintelligence route, more national security route. Now, if there is a criticism I have
00:22:21.920
of the FBI, there's many, one of the big ones is it's actually a dual mission agency, what do I
00:22:27.100
mean by this? They're a law enforcement agency, but they're also an intelligence-gathering
00:22:31.840
agency. Man, what the fuck is the difference? What are you talking about, bro?
00:22:35.720
Stupid. Well, the difference is this. Law enforcement, your job is to build an investigation,
00:22:42.960
gather evidence, get probable cause, arrest the individual, get them indicted with even
00:22:47.940
more, you know, with, with, through, you know, get them charged and indicted through probable
00:22:51.440
cause, working with an assistant United States attorney, which is what Cash Patel used to be,
00:22:54.880
by the way, right, a.k.a. federal prosecutor, and bring that case to, um, to fruition, and if they
00:23:00.960
decide to go to trial, et cetera, prepare for trial and prove them guilty in a court of law,
00:23:04.380
beyond a reasonable doubt. That's criminal, right? That's the criminal side. This is like
00:23:08.240
their safe streets house force. This is, um, a terrorism case if something actually goes down
00:23:12.500
and they have a suspect, but most terrorism cases, people don't know this, actually are
00:23:16.100
preventative. They're not necessarily, they don't even lead to arrest. A lot of times they're
00:23:19.440
preventative, right? Um, what else? Uh, so, and they have a bunch of different missionaries
00:23:27.920
that they, that they investigate. Crimes on the high seas, right? Uh, they do, um, limited
00:23:32.420
immigration type stuff, typically with HSI, um, safe streets house force where they're going after
00:23:37.280
gang members, organized crime like they did with the mafia, et cetera. But after 9-11, they really
00:23:43.080
started to focus more on the counterterrorism stuff. Now, going back to the intel, right, and the
00:23:47.400
law enforcement, you got the law enforcement side, which I just described. Then they also
00:23:50.640
do intel, guys. They're an active member of the intelligence community. Well, gathering
00:23:53.380
intelligence, guys, isn't necessarily law enforcement. Why? Because intelligence, a lot
00:23:58.060
of the times, you're dealing with classified documents, you're dealing with sensitive material,
00:24:01.720
et cetera. That material can't come in during trial, okay? And that's very important that people
00:24:09.140
need to understand this. Classified material, right, isn't going to go into a normal court of
00:24:14.340
law? Because when you arrest somebody, everything that you have on that individual needs to be
00:24:18.660
turned over to the defense, okay? So if you're doing, uh, an espionage case, counterintelligence,
00:24:25.120
whatever it may be, for you to prosecute that individual, you're going to have to work with
00:24:29.780
the FBI to get that case, um, get the materials that you're using declassified so that you could
00:24:35.620
bring it in trial to use against the individual, right? So a lot of the times, these counterintelligence
00:24:41.900
cases, these cases that, um, deal with a lot of sensitive documents, et cetera, they don't
00:24:47.200
necessarily get prosecution like that, right? Because, um, because FBI doesn't like declassifying
00:24:51.580
stuff. So they'd rather just prevent it. So they're a dual agency. They're intelligence,
00:24:55.860
but they're at the same time, they're law enforcement. They do both, okay? Um, and obviously,
00:25:01.660
uh, you know, when you try to do two things really well, it's hard to do. So they've gotten a lot of
00:25:06.820
slack for, um, you know, having information, not acting on it. Someone was on their radar.
00:25:12.120
They didn't arrest them back then. Then he ends up shooting a school or whatever. This happens all
00:25:15.800
the fucking time because the FBI does have a pretty robust intelligence gathering system,
00:25:20.500
but, um, the mission of intelligence versus the mission of law enforcement are two completely
00:25:27.480
different things. This is why when I was an agent, right? I never liked dealing with sensitive
00:25:32.400
material. Why? Or classified material? Because it's problematic. It's problematic. You can't use
00:25:37.300
it in court, storing it and looking at it as a pain in the ass. You got to go in a fucking skip room,
00:25:41.700
put your phone up, go look at it, right? And you can't even fucking use it, right? So the way
00:25:46.840
classified information, right, is useful is what you do is you do a parallel reconstruction.
00:25:54.200
Holy shit, we're really going, Chad, you better like this goddamn video, bro.
00:25:58.440
You're talking to someone that actually did these fucking cases out here. So I'm giving you guys
00:26:05.220
real sauce. What the fuck is a parallel reconstruction, Marin? Well, what that is, is you use a parallel
00:26:13.360
reconstruction is taking information that you get and reconstructing it parallel in a parallel manner
00:26:20.700
where you don't necessarily have to disclose where you got that source of information.
00:26:23.620
And you guys are probably like, uh, wrong sound effect. You guys are probably like, uh, what?
00:26:29.760
The fuck is this nigga talking about? I'll give you guys an example. Let's say I'm looking at a
00:26:36.840
criminal and I get his phone number through, um, intelligence means, right? Like, um, you know,
00:26:48.380
I use some type of, I get his phone number from some kind of classified document, right? That collected
00:26:53.420
his phone number, right? Or one of his phone numbers. Now, I don't want to put in my report
00:26:58.780
that I got that number through, you know, one of these back channels in the Intel community.
00:27:05.340
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to say, I'm going to, maybe I have an informant to him.
00:27:10.300
Hey bro, do you have, um, phone numbers for this guy? Can you give them to me? Or maybe,
00:27:14.500
uh, I can go ahead and find a way to find that phone number in a manner that is sufficient in
00:27:23.500
a court of law that doesn't necessarily, um, hurt how I got that information. Does that make sense
00:27:28.840
guys? So let's say I get the information through a classified means. Then it's my job to get that
00:27:36.280
same information again, but I get it through a regular means. So I know target's phone number is
00:27:42.300
this. I'm going to go ahead and subpoena that phone number and get that information.
00:27:48.240
Now I can use the subpoena information. I don't need to mention how I got it. Does that make sense?
00:27:52.800
That's called walling off your source. That's called building a parallel reconstruction,
00:27:56.960
or you have an informant. Informant tells you, Hey, right. Let's say you have an informant into an
00:28:02.320
organization, but you also got a guy that's a cooperating defendant. Informant tells you, Hey,
00:28:07.080
this guy likes to go and do X, Y, Z activity every Thursday at 7 PM. Right? Well, you might not want
00:28:14.660
to say that you've got that information from your informant, but you've got a cooperating defendant in
00:28:18.120
that case. He also says something similar, right? This is a strategy that you use when you have
00:28:22.440
informants is you have multiple informants in the same criminal organization and they're telling you
00:28:27.600
different things. And if multiple informants are telling you the same shit, then you know,
00:28:31.660
it's pretty accurate. So let's say your cooperating defendant tells you, Hey,
00:28:35.020
he does X, Y, Z on Thursday at 7 PM as well. Well, now to protect my informant who signed up,
00:28:41.440
who has an actual control number, who I don't want to testify in court. I'll go ahead and take
00:28:47.260
that information and say, I got it from the cooperating defendant. Cause I did technically.
00:28:51.540
Right. And that's, that's called building a parallel investigation where you, you are getting the same
00:28:58.400
information. You got it through a means that you want to protect, but you get it through another
00:29:02.400
source. You disclose that source that you got it from. Okay. And then when, you know,
00:29:07.940
when everything is all said and done, obviously you're working with your U S attorney, you figure
00:29:11.080
out what you guys are going to turn over for discovery, et cetera. But that is what a parallel
00:29:14.800
reconstruction is when you're doing an investigation. Give me ones in the chat. If that makes sense,
00:29:19.660
guys give me ones in the chat and agents that deal with classified information, do this shit all the
00:29:30.520
time. All the time. All right. Awesome. Awesome. Awesome. All right. Cool. So yeah, guys, that's the FBI.
00:29:47.800
Okay. Um, now you guys kind of understand, uh, the scope and the importance of this agency. Um,
00:29:55.920
now, uh, so going back to cash Patel, this is him. Uh, he's a member of the Republican party. Patel
00:30:05.180
was appointed senior counsel on counterterrorism for the house select committee on intelligence 2017,
00:30:08.640
as well as, uh, senior director of the counterterrorism director at the U S national security
00:30:13.500
council in 2019. He worked as a senior, a to Congressman Devin Nunes during the latter's
00:30:17.700
tenure as a chair of the house and sellers committee while working with Nunez, uh, Patel
00:30:21.720
played a key role in helping Republicans in to, um, Trump and the Russian interference, uh, election,
00:30:27.780
uh, in 2016. So now when I knew that they were going to bring, that they were going to nominate
00:30:35.940
Pat cash Patel as the FBI director, I was like, yeah, they're, they're going to fucking,
00:30:39.580
they're going to hammer this guy. There's a couple of things they're going to hammer cash Patel on,
00:30:44.340
right? So he has a book, right? And in this book guys, he names several members of the deep state
00:30:52.780
saying that they're corrupt, et cetera. And he said that we are going to go after them
00:30:56.300
if I'm appointed FBI director, right? So that's number one. Um, it's called government gang. So
00:31:02.280
you can see a copy of it right there. Right. And obviously, you know, we just went through
00:31:09.520
four years where the FBI was being weaponized for political reasons. So that's the last thing
00:31:13.240
they want is for this guy to come in and almost be like the FBI director of fucking retribution
00:31:17.740
and go after everyone that went after Trump because cash Patel is a Trump loyalist. He is a
00:31:23.440
Trump loyalist. He's had his back the whole time. That is why Trump is giving him such a, um, a good
00:31:29.540
position, right? Personally, I told you, I gave you guys my opinion on this. I think cash Patel would
00:31:33.740
have been a better attorney general because as attorney general, you, um, have significantly
00:31:38.780
more power than FBI director. If you guys want me to explain that again, I can, but I don't want
00:31:42.680
to sound like a broken record, but, um, he's a Trump loyalist and, you know, I predicted and
00:31:49.460
rightfully so when I was listening to the, to the confirmation hearing, they were, how can we trust
00:31:55.300
you to be an impartial director and lead the biggest law enforcement agency in the country,
00:31:58.940
right? When you're a Trump loyalist and you have an ax to grind and they use many clips and quotes
00:32:06.900
from his many podcast interviews. This is one of them. The name of the video is, uh, cash Patel
00:32:11.740
and finding Hillary Clinton secret email, Derek Benghazi attacks. Okay. Um, he actually names
00:32:16.720
Hillary Clinton as one of the deep state people here. So let's go ahead and play this clip real
00:32:20.520
quick. Just so you guys get an idea of who cash Patel is. This comes from the Sean Ryan, um,
00:32:24.500
podcast. We're speaking of which this reminds me, I was talking about one of Sean Ryan's people.
00:32:27.880
Y'all want to see my Sean Ryan, bro? I'm a little controversial. I don't know if they'll
00:32:32.900
do it, but I was talking to one of his people. I think that would be a great interview. Um,
00:32:39.380
cause if I'm not mistaken, Sean Ryan was, um, in the Intel world in the military. So yeah,
00:32:47.680
let's play this clip though. Actually, let me go ahead and turn the volume up for you ninjas.
00:32:57.880
And then we're going to get into the confirmation hearing set, uh, this stuff.
00:33:02.900
Well, it's only politically convenient to get one guy and they went and got basically the wrong guy.
00:33:07.520
And then we prosecuted that wrong guy. Not that he wasn't a part of it. He just wasn't like
00:33:12.020
the top tier of guys I would have gone after. And they screwed up the prosecution cause they didn't
00:33:18.400
listen to us and they didn't want to use the right evidence. And it was all political decisions.
00:33:22.040
What do you mean they didn't want to use the right evidence? They wanted to, you know,
00:33:26.700
cause all half of that stuff was classified and they wanted to, I didn't piece this together then
00:33:32.240
because we didn't have. Okay. What did I tell you guys? And by the way, I've never seen this clip
00:33:36.860
chat. I'm watching it fresh with you guys. I've seen parts of this interview. Um, the most notable
00:33:41.660
is when he said that he would close down the FBI Hoover building on day one and make it into a deep
00:33:45.700
state museum, which is fucking funny. Uh, but obviously people in the Senate confirmation
00:33:49.360
did not like that. Uh, but yeah, see, he said they didn't use the right evidence. And then he
00:33:55.200
said half the stuff is classified. What he's not telling you is you can't use classified material
00:33:58.500
in a court of law chat. You have to declassify it. The whole fallout from Benghazi, the hearings
00:34:06.820
and the congressional. Okay. Once again, do this at a media level, but I do want you guys to know
00:34:12.800
what the hell he's talking about. The Benghazi attack. Okay. There was a movie made on this. Okay.
00:34:19.360
Basically, this is, uh, members of Islamic militant group, uh, Ansar al-Sharia carried
00:34:23.320
out a coordinated attack against two United States government facilities in Benghazi,
00:34:26.060
Libya on September 11, 2012. At 9.40 p.m. local time, members of Ansar al-Sharia attacked
00:34:31.200
the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, resulting in the deaths of United States
00:34:34.300
Ambassador, uh, Chris Evans, U.S. Foreign Service Information Management Officer, Sean Smith,
00:34:38.700
at around 4 a.m. on September 12th. The movie launched a, sorry, the group launched a
00:34:42.460
mortar attack against the CIA annex approximately one mile away, killing two CIA contractors
00:34:46.920
and, um, wounding 10 of those. Okay. Obviously, this created fucking, this was during the Obama
00:34:53.580
administration. I remember when this shit happened. Fucking crazy. The Hillary emails,
00:34:58.120
all this shit came out. So, this was a very significant attack, you know, damn, 10 plus
00:35:03.040
years ago. If any of you guys remember. There was a movie made on this. Someone in the check,
00:35:06.920
and when you guys tell me, um, the name of the movie, I, was it Zero Dark, no, Zero Dark
00:35:12.080
30 was Osama. There's a, there was a movie made on this shit. It was very good. Um, I
00:35:16.480
just can't remember it in my head. On, on Benghazi, if you guys want to go check it out.
00:35:23.440
Is it 13 hours? Okay. Thank you, Chad. 13 hours is the name of the movie, guys.
00:35:27.100
13 hours. Um, it, uh, it kind of, you know, obviously it's a movie, but it's based on true
00:35:33.400
events. Go check it out for sure. But they wouldn't let us prosecute, I think, 16 of
00:35:39.800
the 19 that I wanted. They didn't want half this evidence declassified. And I was like,
00:35:44.480
who is they? Bam. Told you guys. Sometimes they'd rather protect the source than prosecute
00:35:53.280
the individuals, because if they prosecute the individuals, they're going to have to
00:35:56.780
disclose how they got that information, right? If they disclose how they got, they got that
00:36:00.800
information. It exposes technology. It exposes informants. It exposes sources. So collection
00:36:06.680
methods, a lot of the times is what makes it classified. Guys, there's information out
00:36:11.600
there. You could fucking say one plus one is two, right? And they'll go ahead and classify
00:36:16.200
it because let's say they gathered that one plus one equals two in a manner that is sophisticated
00:36:20.620
that people aren't supposed to know about. Then that will be classified. The information
00:36:24.760
a lot of times, guys, isn't necessarily classified because of the information. It's because of how
00:36:28.940
the information was procured. Does that make sense, Chad? Give me once if that makes sense.
00:36:34.420
Because this is a common misconception that people think that classified material is all,
00:36:38.660
ooh, it's sexy. This information is like super top secret. No, the information doesn't matter.
00:36:45.540
It's how they got the information that matters. All right? Give me once in the chat if that makes
00:36:50.300
Well, the leadership at DOJ, FBI, and the intel community obviously played a role
00:36:56.000
in that. And so, you know, we were just like, all right, we'll do the best we can.
00:37:02.900
And for example, Katala, Greenbrier River, the guy that's getting, that first got prosecuted,
00:37:08.680
he is getting out for his participation in Benghazi, where he killed four Americans.
00:37:14.520
He'll be out of prison before the next presidential election is done.
00:37:22.680
I mean, I don't mean to laugh at it because it's just, it's just, it's so
00:37:26.140
atrocious because they charge him with the wrong crimes. Nobody at the F.A.R. DOJ wanted to listen
00:37:33.780
to how to turn intel into evidence, into a public display in a court of law.
00:37:39.680
See? There we go, guys. He's telling you guys what I already told y'all, right?
00:37:43.620
You know, everybody working on the case thought they were the best at everything. And the decision
00:37:50.080
from the top down is we're only doing this guy. And if you get the prosecution wrong,
00:37:56.700
What the fuck, what the fuck are we doing, man?
00:37:59.120
What are we doing? Why are we even in, what the fuck are we doing?
00:38:04.700
It was my first kind of foray into it in terms of the two-tier system of justice. And it wasn't
00:38:11.000
happening outside, right? My first experience with that was public defender land. Now it's
00:38:16.740
internal. Now it's the administrative application at the executive branch level in Washington,
00:38:22.920
D.C. And, you know, then you have Russiagate. And then you have all these other things we'll
00:38:27.940
talk about. But the best, I guess, definition of the two-tier system of justice I can come
00:38:35.120
up with for your audience is the classified documents case.
00:38:42.360
Which one? So let's use the two presidents, right? President Trump gets his home raided
00:38:52.760
on a bogus WhatsApp warrant, which the FBI leaks to the media. Do you know whose name
00:38:59.000
is in the FBI's WhatsApp warrant for President Trump? That was 65% redacted. Trump's name
00:39:05.260
and my name. Then they redacted everything else after my name, which once it finally came
00:39:12.160
out, it was completely meaningless BS. Then they go in there and they stage that photo
00:39:16.940
display and everybody's like, oh my God, look at all those classified materials. What they
00:39:20.580
don't explain to the American public is he's a president, former president, Presidential Records
00:39:24.400
Act. Bill Clinton did the same thing. Every president performs on the same thing. They
00:39:28.020
can take what they want. That's the law. So you can't be prosecuted.
00:39:34.180
The big reason they were so pissed off, right, when it comes to document cases. So the National
00:39:39.640
Archive Records or whatever, like there's an agency that oversees a lot of the presidential
00:39:43.420
like these documents, right? And they had written letters to Trump saying, hey, we want you to turn
00:39:50.000
this stuff back. And he basically ignored them, right? So since he didn't respond, a criminal case
00:39:55.260
was sent to the FBI. And this is outlined in the affidavit. You know, let's show you guys
00:40:01.060
this real quick. So here's a Mar-a-Lago search warrant, right? It's a motion to seal, blah, blah,
00:40:17.340
blah. So, uh, okay. Right here. It tells you exactly how the investigation began, guys.
00:40:25.560
The government is conducting a criminal investigation concerning the improper removal and storage of
00:40:28.840
classified information in unauthorized space, as well as the unlawful concealment or removal of
00:40:32.960
government goods records. The investigation began as a result of a referral to United States National
00:40:37.700
Archives and Records Administration, NARA, sent to the United States Department of Justice on
00:40:41.380
February 9, 2022, here and after referred to as the NARA referral. The NARA referral stated that
00:40:47.080
on January 18, 2022, according with the Presidential Records Act, they received from the office of
00:40:52.700
President Donald Trump, here and after former President of the United States, via representatives,
00:40:56.200
15 boxes of records here in the 15 boxes, which have been transported from the Foreign President
00:41:01.320
of the United States property at 1100 South Ocean Boulevard, here and after the premises of
00:41:05.720
Residence and Club, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But the point is, is that there was an
00:41:09.640
initial review from NARA to the FBI, and the FBI opened the case off of that. Okay? So it really
00:41:22.240
Unit for possessing classified documents. Well, can I, can I add, and I don't know what was in the
00:41:28.320
documents, but I mean. Also guys, we got 384 likes, man. Let's hit one, uh, let's try to hit 1000 likes,
00:41:35.680
man. Let's get the engagement up. You take, and I can't remember who I had this discussion with,
00:41:40.080
it may have been, uh, Tim parlatory, but if you take, I mean, when people say classified documents,
00:41:49.200
taking, taking classified documents, wherever to Mar-a-Lago or, or Joe Biden's garage or wherever,
00:41:54.720
the, wherever it was, I mean, a lot of those documents, people, they make it sound like it's
00:42:00.240
the nuclear codes, or it's, it's the, it's the, it's, but what it actually is, at least what it
00:42:08.240
sounds like to me, or what I've been told is a lot of it is just the daily, just the daily schedule.
00:42:14.960
Hey, today you're giving a press conference here, you're doing this here, you've got lunch with so
00:42:21.040
and so, you got a couple of meetings, and then that day's over and that is no longer classified
00:42:26.080
because it's already happened. But obviously you can't get the president's schedule.
00:42:29.760
There is a problem, uh, where they over classify stuff. This is true.
00:42:33.120
Shit gets classified all the fucking time, Chad.
00:42:36.320
Well, before it happens, because, am I correct in saying that some of these documents that they're
00:42:43.360
saying are classified are, are, are that? And when was this interview? This interview, guys, was on
00:42:48.800
September 5th, 2024, now two, like literally two months before the election.
00:42:52.800
That type of... You're correct, but my point is, under the law,
00:42:59.520
The Presidential Records Act, and Bill Clinton took,
00:43:02.560
literally, recordings of a classified conversation and took them when he left the presidency,
00:43:09.120
and he put them in his sock drawer. It's called the Clinton sock drawer case.
00:43:14.000
This is true. This is true. And this is why a lot of, uh,
00:43:16.640
MAGA supporters got so mad about the classified document case,
00:43:19.280
is because other presidents had done this as well, and they didn't really get prosecuted.
00:43:22.720
And, you know, I told you guys, if you guys watch, you know, been watching, uh, Fed Reacts,
00:43:26.960
right, what this channel used to be, I actually did the classified documents case with Trump.
00:43:31.360
Uh, we read through the entire search warrant, right? We went through it. I explained to you guys,
00:43:35.120
you know, um, how, look how fucking redacted this thing is. Look, look, just you guys,
00:43:40.560
you know, I went through it, which you guys haven't seen that episode. If you guys are interested in
00:43:44.240
this, I break down this, um, look at all this fucking, the redactedness, right? I guarantee
00:43:48.720
you, by the way, this is all to protect an informant. Chat, by the way, FYI. Like,
00:43:52.880
it's very clear they have an informant that was at the fucking Mar-a-Lago giving them information
00:43:56.720
like this. You ain't gonna get a search warrant this fucking detailed, or get a search warrant
00:44:00.160
past the judge and sign, unless you have someone actively inside giving you guys the info. So that's
00:44:04.480
another thing. But I did a whole breakdown on this case, which, by the way, give me ones in the chat,
00:44:10.160
if you guys have seen that episode, twos if you guys did not.
00:44:13.360
Or twos if you didn't even know I did it. Because I'm starting to realize that I'm
00:44:16.400
fucking shadow banning. It's really annoying. So guys, give me ones in the chat. If you have seen
00:44:20.000
it, give me twos in the chat if you have not seen it, and you're not aware of it at all.
00:44:24.400
Twos if you've never seen it, and not aware of it at all. One if you have seen it.
00:44:32.160
Look at that. Yeah, bro. See, I fucking knew it. At least 50% of y'all probably haven't seen it. So...
00:44:46.400
I got y'all ninjas right now. I'mma find it, and give it to you guys.
00:44:51.120
Because it's actually a really good breakdown. I read through the entire search warrant and explain stuff.
00:44:54.400
Look at this, man. Niggas is blackballing me, bro. Goddamn.
00:45:07.040
All right, I'mma find it for you guys. We'll keep playing this Kash Patel thing.
00:45:16.720
The federal court adjudicated that President Clinton, as a president, has the Presidential Records
00:45:21.680
Act. He can take what he wants. The court never even found out what was on the recording.
00:45:25.440
It's that strong. And that's the law. So then why does this DOJ come in and say,
00:45:32.720
well, it doesn't kind of apply to Trump. And then you interview Joe Biden,
00:45:36.640
and he was never president. He had four different locations of 20 years of classified information.
00:45:44.880
Delaware, his offices in Washington, D.C., and two other locations as Beach House and somewhere else.
00:45:49.280
But their excuse to not prosecute Joe Biden was, well, basically, he's too inept.
00:45:58.400
All right, here's the video right here, ninjas. It's called, I dropped this. Damn. Yeah, June 18,
00:46:05.920
2023. This is the case. Oh, this is the indictment. I went through the indictment when he got hit with
00:46:11.920
the classified document case. Hold on, let me see if I get the search.
00:46:16.000
Which, he's too feeble-minded, so we're not going to prosecute them. That's not, I've never heard
00:46:21.200
that. That's legitimately why they didn't prosecute him? That's what the special counsel appointed
00:46:26.320
the investigation, told Attorney General Garland. And Garland came out and literally said,
00:46:32.160
well, we can't really, we don't think Joe Biden meant to do it. And I was like, what? I was like,
00:46:38.800
we're back to the Clinton case, the Clinton server case, right? It's like when Hillary, when,
00:46:42.320
when Comey created this new legal fiction. No reasonable prosecutor. First of all,
00:46:46.960
it's not the FBI's job to ever make a prosecutorial decision, but no reasonable prosecutor would bring
00:46:52.160
this case. I was in the national security division at the time. I was doing the discovery for Benghazi
00:46:56.960
where we found her freaking email. And then they took that investigation away from us. And then it
00:47:01.360
became the Clinton investigation, right? That everybody knows about. I was like, who is this guy talking
00:47:05.600
about? And then I didn't think it would happen, but it did came back full circle with the Biden
00:47:11.120
administration of the Biden prosecution classified docs. And they let the guy off the hook. And they
00:47:16.480
just said, doesn't matter. So we'll prosecute a guy who has a legal justification to have those
00:47:22.320
documents. Okay. So here it is guys. And we are live. Okay. This is me decoding the search warrant
00:47:29.280
with, I actually went through this. This was a good video, man. I did this with legal mindset. I did this
00:47:33.840
with my guy, Andrew. We break down the search warrant together. So this one is really good.
00:47:39.840
If you guys want to like get more deep into the whole Trump document case,
00:47:43.360
I just dropped the link for you guys. It's called former agent and lawyer decode FBI redacted,
00:47:46.800
redacted FBI search warrant for Trump's residence. And we go through this thing fucking line by line.
00:47:52.320
Right. I think one of the best breakdowns on the internet on this search warrant, by the way,
00:47:55.360
I haven't seen anyone break it down to this level where you got a lawyer and a former agent
00:47:59.040
breaking this shit down. So feel free to go check it out. I just, um,
00:48:02.400
I just, uh, dropped the link for you guys. So flag it, save it, watch it later. Right.
00:48:11.920
That's because we don't care. It's Trump. And we won't prosecute the sitting president
00:48:16.960
because you've made up a new legal standard that applies to exonerate him and to not even charge him.
00:48:25.120
That is the two tier system of justice on steroids. And now you're talking about the two guys who are
00:48:29.680
running against now they're not, but two guys who were then running against each other for the
00:48:41.280
Yeah. Everywhere. Um, unfortunately. So we saw it every day on people who are indigent and charged
00:48:53.760
with serious offenses, who were treated differently than folks who were, you know, high level private
00:49:02.480
sector individuals. I mean, if you go to the fraud cases out of wall street or whatever, you know,
00:49:06.720
these guys get to go to club fed for, you know, a couple of years, couple of 10 years, whatever.
00:49:11.920
But the poor guy down at the end of the ladder, he's going away for 40. Yeah. You know, it,
00:49:17.680
you don't need to be a legal expert to have seen this over the years and the classified documents
00:49:22.720
case. That's just, you can apply what they did there out to what they're doing to certain Jan six
00:49:29.120
defendants. And I always say this about Jan six. Some people committed some pretty violent stuff.
00:49:32.560
They needed to go away. But when you're bringing in the 65 year old grandmother who doesn't have
00:49:37.600
any priors and she's held without bond for years to force, please so that you can weaponize and
00:49:46.960
politicize the two tier system of justice even further so that Christopher Ray, the FBI director,
00:49:52.320
can go to Congress and lie and say domestic terrorism prosecutions are on the rise because
00:49:56.480
they classified everything Jan six is domestic terrorism. Of course.
00:49:59.600
And so that he can say him and Merrick Garland can say, Oh, we've got a thousand people under
00:50:03.760
investigation for this insurrection. Well, this insurrection that nobody was ever charged for,
00:50:09.600
but it's a political narrative and it's tough to defeat. It sounds pretty lethal, you know,
00:50:14.560
storming of this hijacking of that insurrection. But when you look at some of the people involved,
00:50:20.080
their lives have been destroyed by the justice department because of a political vendetta
00:50:25.920
they want to enact through the justice system to take out Trump.
00:50:32.800
All right. Now I want to go and show you guys one more clip where he talks about
00:50:38.480
turning the FBI into the Hoover building into a
00:50:49.280
It's probably a good clip. The FBI's footprint has gotten so freaking big
00:50:54.400
and the big, and again, I'm showing you guys these interviews because these definitely came
00:50:57.280
up during his confirmation hearing because probably the FBI has had has come out of its Intel shops.
00:51:02.240
I'd break that component out of it. I'd shut down the FBI Hoover building
00:51:06.880
on day one and reopening the next day as a museum of the deep state.
00:51:13.120
Yo, that's wild to say, man. That's fucking wild to say. I love it though.
00:51:19.280
But bro, you ain't going to get no like, yeah, like to us, right? Because you guys got to remember
00:51:25.040
we're consumers. We're the American public for us. We're like, yeah, let's fucking go.
00:51:28.960
Fuck the FBI, whatever. But like once you actually get into the government sector and you work for the
00:51:33.040
government, uh, saying shit like this is wild. It's funny. It's great for a podcast interview, obviously.
00:51:38.800
But these words came back to bite them in the ass during today's confirmation hearing,
00:51:41.840
as you guys are going to see. So let's, uh, run this clip, this funny shit, man.
00:51:47.120
Chris Wray, the director of the FBI, and Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general and of the DOJ.
00:51:57.360
We're tasked with helping us at Congress, where I ran the Russian gate investigation,
00:52:01.440
to expose Russian gate. You know what they did? They launched an investigation against me.
00:52:10.000
FBI director James Comey repeatedly denied allegations by President Trump that he was
00:52:15.360
wiretapped by the previous administration. Now here, I think you've said there's been
00:52:19.760
no evidence of an illegal wiretap. I've said the FBI and the Department of Justice have no
00:52:25.360
information to support those tweets. They use grand jury subpoenas to get my personal
00:52:29.840
information, my banking information, my emails, my cell phone information, and everything else.
00:52:33.680
I didn't find out until five years later when Google called me and said, hey, our five-year
00:52:41.280
Okay. Um, and what he's talking about, guys, is, um, this is true. Um, this is why it's so
00:52:46.480
important to do grand jury subpoenas when you're an agent, right? I'm getting in the weeds here a bit,
00:52:49.680
but just to kind of give you guys an idea. When you are, um, when,
00:52:54.400
when the feds go ahead and request your information, what ends up happening a lot of the times is they
00:53:00.640
request that information and the, um, people that they requested through, right? They have a period
00:53:06.720
of time where they won't say anything until, you know, they have to, right? So, um, hold on, guys,
00:53:13.680
I'm letting the people know on, um, so they notified him five years later, right? Because the government
00:53:20.560
will, you know, ask for a subpoena, whatever it may be. Hey, we'll send you a subpoena. Give
00:53:24.160
us this information. Then after a few years, then they notify the person that, you know,
00:53:27.920
was a part that is using that service. Hey, the government asked us for your information.
00:53:32.960
So that's how he was able to become privy to it. I'll tell you the DOJ surveilled you
00:53:50.560
Oh, the Obamas still have heavy sway in that entire operation. And so do people that have
00:53:58.640
been around for 10, 20, 30 years in Washington.
00:54:04.400
And as a Catholic, I resent your using the word hate in a sentence that addresses me. I don't hate
00:54:10.880
anyone. So don't mess with me. Insider trading. I mean, just look at Nancy Pelosi's insider trading deals.
00:54:18.080
Did you consider that? She makes a lot of money, bro. I'll tell you that.
00:54:21.600
I got a buddy who follows her trades, man. That dude would be making crazy dough, man.
00:54:27.120
To be a conflict of interest. I don't know what your point is of your question. Is there some
00:54:34.000
An FBI official is now under criminal investigation for allegedly altering a document related to
00:54:46.000
surveillance of Trump campaign advisor Carter Page in 2016.
00:54:49.920
On paper, and in theory, it sounds like a good idea. I mean, we use the FISA process to stop bombings
00:54:54.960
in America. You would think that's a good thing. The problem is the people given the FISA authorities
00:55:01.680
in the deep state at the leadership levels. These guys took that process.
00:55:05.520
And we've explained FISA on this channel many times, guys. Um, you know, it's, it's kind of a,
00:55:12.720
it's a way to get around certain things under the premise of national security. It is heavily abused.
00:55:19.280
During Russiagate and targeted an American citizen to get into a president's campaign of all American
00:55:26.000
citizens. It should never again happen to another president. It is, uh, incredible. Far worse than
00:55:32.880
I would have ever thought possible. And you saw more Republicans in Trump's administration. For
00:55:37.520
example, his deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, agreed to wear wire because then deputy director of
00:55:43.360
the FBI, Andy McCabe, supposedly another Republican, went to the number two cop in the country and
00:55:49.360
said, I need you to wear wire so we can get information to use the 25th amendment against
00:55:53.280
President Trump. Treason. Treason. It's treason. Look, when I came out a long time ago, I said,
00:55:58.880
they've been spying on my campaign. Turned out I was right. Let's see what happens to them now.
00:56:04.560
Federal prosecutors have decided after months and months not to pursue criminal charges against
00:56:09.600
former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe. I know there's a good portion of this country that will
00:56:15.280
read whatever that print is and take it as take it as gospel. But that's the power of your program.
00:56:20.880
That's the power of your show. You don't have just the goobers in D.C. watching, right? You're so
00:56:26.560
expansive from military to sports to entertainment to Hollywood to everyday Americans that are so fed up
00:56:33.840
with that garbage that they're actually getting educated. I want to pick your brain on what we're
00:56:38.720
facing here at home because everybody knows we're facing something. And when it comes to the deep
00:56:43.840
state, you seem to be one of the most knowledgeable figures out there. Now, who are we supposed to
00:56:51.120
believe? Staff members who we've worked with, who've never misled us, or you guys, who we've caught
00:56:56.960
hiding information from us, who tell a witness not to answer our questions. Who are we supposed to believe?
00:57:01.840
I don't have... And guys, just so you know, intelligence agencies collecting information
00:57:10.000
on American citizens is fucking wild. This is why Snowden blew open, I think it was called
00:57:17.840
Operation Warlord, because they were collecting on American citizens. Not supposed to do that in
00:57:22.640
the intel world. You're supposed to collect on foreign, not on US citizens. That's why this is so
00:57:29.040
problematic for those that are wondering, well, hey, why is it so bad for intelligence agencies
00:57:34.400
to be spying on former President Trump? Aren't they keeping a country secure? It's because you're
00:57:38.480
not supposed to spy on American citizens. That's the problem.
00:57:40.560
Revenge. March I'm on. I want the... You don't have a hit list. I want the...
00:57:47.600
I'll give you one. I'll take it. I simply want the Constitution to be applied to everybody,
00:57:53.200
singularly, singularly, in government and outside of government. That's it. I want the judges to
00:58:00.640
stop being political jackals. The jackals. Hyenas. They're barking at them, laughing at them.
00:58:09.440
They do this, and they get closer and closer and bolder and bolder, until one day,
00:58:30.320
Yeah, you guys can see that, you know, all, like, uh, great production and stuff like that, but, um,
00:58:36.800
but yeah, you guys can absolutely see here that they, um, you know, they're going to definitely,
00:58:41.840
uh, use that against them. Um, let's see here. I'm trying to figure out... God damn it.
00:58:48.800
Okay, let's go ahead and go, um, let me read some of these chats real quick, and then we're going to
00:58:52.880
go into the actual, um, hearing. I think that was a good overview of who Cash Patel is. Some of you guys
00:58:57.520
that might not know. We got, um, let me look at some of these chats. Um, we got Valexia says, um,
00:59:06.640
liberals going crazy about ICE Tano snapping these illegal saying rights being invaded or violated.
00:59:12.160
I find it funny that Obama deports too many and gets an applause, but Trump does a few thousand
00:59:15.520
gets hated. You know it, bro. You know it. Obama actually, uh, deported a lot of people. Hey,
00:59:20.880
Mario, when are you going to bring the next, that ex-CIA guy, uh, guy back on? Uh, I can hit him up.
00:59:25.760
Um, Smashing 304s. I don't know what this thing to put. Um,
00:59:35.280
no way. Someone's saying pilot helicopter that crashed into passenger aircraft DC was a woman?
00:59:41.120
Nah, bro. That's gotta be a joke. Um, Prof11 just says it just came out the... Wow.
00:59:48.480
Bro, you can't make this shit up, man. You cannot make this shit up, bro.
01:00:01.040
I'll tell you this. The, the, the, the jokes are never going to end on that one, dude.
01:00:25.760
Yo, bills. What's up, man? Hey, I'm live right now, bro. For some odd reason, the alert box,
01:00:30.000
when people donate through the Mario games X, I can't see it show up on screen. How do I
01:00:34.000
get it to... I don't know what's going on. You want me to switch to FaceTime real quick?
01:00:38.880
Um, nah, I'll be checking, I'll check and see what's up.
01:00:43.440
Nah, I got, I got the account, you know, that I'll check and see what's up.
01:00:47.360
All right, bro. Yeah, it, it was working fine yesterday, and then now that I'm live,
01:00:50.720
I, like, hit the button and it doesn't show up on screen like it used to.
01:00:56.720
All right, bro. You need anything for me or no?
01:00:58.320
No. No, you're good. All right, man, peace. All right, peace. All right. Uh, okay.
01:01:04.960
Back to the show. Um, that's wild, dude. Um, let's see here. What else we got?
01:01:10.480
Um, AA, plane, collateral, a Blackhawk copter in DC seems sus. That tragedy should have never
01:01:15.360
happened. Yeah, bro. You know, a lot of people, innocent people died. Terrible.
01:01:18.720
Um, can you put all the Trump videos in a playlist? 11 teen? Uh, yeah, I could do that probably.
01:01:23.760
Fitness, uh, can you expound on DEI makes women feel that minorities are safe,
01:01:29.200
are kept safe because of it? I mean, bro, DEI is, you know, diversity, you know, inclusivity.
01:01:37.360
It's, it's stupid. Um, I've been arguing with females and my family about DEI, and they say
01:01:42.720
it's to keep minorities safe. No, nah. Tell them they're stupid, bro. DEI is to, you know,
01:01:51.360
help marginalized people get an advantage from, from, from white people, from white men.
01:01:59.520
That's basically what DEI and affirmative action is. It's a crusade to get minorities and women
01:02:05.760
into positions of power because their argument is white men have had all the leverage for hundreds
01:02:10.800
of years. So it's time for us to even a playing field. You know what I mean? That's, that's what it is.
01:02:16.400
Uh, what else do we got here? We're going to be reacting to this video right here, by the way, too.
01:02:20.800
Um, sorry, let me just finish reading these chats. Um, the helicopter pile was a woman. Of course,
01:02:32.240
it was a woman doing, uh, air drive by crash. Um, is the NBA player, Terry Rozier, that's getting
01:02:38.240
investigated by the FBI for illegal betting cooked? Oh, I didn't hear about that. But I'll tell you this,
01:02:43.360
if the FBI indicts him, then yeah, probably he is going to get cooked. Um, Dimitri, Dimitrios Tevezakalos says,
01:02:50.160
does the White House's new media section for podcasters and independent journalists mean we'll
01:02:53.840
eventually see you ask questions at the press meeting? I don't know, guys. Um, do y'all got the
01:02:58.720
link? Give me the link, man. And look, man, I've tried to apply yesterday, like, but it doesn't like
01:03:14.560
I mean, bro, if they don't let me in, I used to have a top-secret clearance, bro. Like, uh, you know,
01:03:40.320
Okay, this is... Damn it, where's the link? To apply.
01:04:08.480
Now, if any of you guys have the link, send it to me, bro. And I'll, um,
01:04:14.160
and I'll, I'll apply right here on air for you, ninjas.
01:04:16.240
But, I don't, I tried the other day, right? If I type in, this is a White House website,
01:04:45.920
Yeah, somebody drop the link when you guys can.
01:04:50.800
Albois says, Bruh, the pilot of the Blackhawk that crashed the plane was, drum roll, a woman.
01:04:56.080
All right, Pete, everyone involved. Trump was right. DEI ran all over it.
01:04:59.200
Okay, here's the link I got, um, from Albois. Thank you for the link, Albois. I got it.
01:05:07.520
This comes from AF Post. The pilot command of the Blackhawk that crashed in the passenger jet
01:05:15.440
over DC was a woman. Bruh. Nigga. It's, it, it, bro. The co-pilot of the pilot command was a
01:05:22.880
female official told Fox News that she had 500 hours of flying experience. The Blackhawk crew chief
01:05:26.640
identified as Ryan O'Hara was flying the Blackhawk and also being evaluated at the time. O'Hara had a
01:05:30.560
thousand, uh, flight hours. Bruh. The jokes are gonna roll in now, bro.
01:05:37.840
You already know. Cooked. You already know. We'll cover that next, though.
01:05:49.440
Cash joined the O slash today and got the hard R in. Okay. Did he? What are you talking about?
01:05:54.880
My mom is white and she applied for months for a job but couldn't get it when she's more than
01:05:58.400
qualified. Maybe it's DEI. It's definitely DEI, bro. Um, Dr. Disrespect got re-monetized on YouTube
01:06:05.040
today. Maybe possible for FNF to get it back. Really? Good for Dr. Disrespect, bro. Good for him.
01:06:12.160
Well, uh, I know they re-monetized Candace Owens, too. Bro, if we don't get re-monetized,
01:06:16.080
then y'all know that they got an axe to ground with us, bro. Like, but we've been demonetized for
01:06:20.480
like two years. It's going on two years. We got demonetized August 2023. Yeah, August 2023 we got
01:06:28.160
demonetized, bro. We're going on almost two fucking years, man. Uh, so we'll see what happens.
01:06:36.320
Shout out to Dr. Disrespect, man. He's also a fellow Rumble creator. Um, got a lot of heat for
01:06:41.600
that shit with Twitch, though. Um, with the 17 year old, but, uh, yeah. So we'll see what happens,
01:06:48.720
man. We'll see what happens, chat. If they don't give it to us, then y'all know this is just like
01:06:52.000
bias, bro. Cause honestly, we're not really even that offensive on YouTube. All my most offensive
01:06:57.920
shit is on fucking Rumble. You know? Uh, Issy says, um, I'm at ATC training and we don't even have your
01:07:07.600
DEI initiatives and liberal ask Canada for controllers. Sean Duffy needs to clean house,
01:07:11.440
man. Prayers. Yeah, bro. It's fucking crazy, man. Absolutely crazy. All right, guys,
01:07:16.080
I'm gonna take a quick piss real quick. And then we're going to get into this, um, Senate,
01:07:20.000
uh, hearing and break it down. Give me one sec.
01:08:16.080
So, breaking news, Cash Patel and Adam Skiff have explosive confrontation during, um, hearings.
01:08:23.440
Let's go back to the beginning chat, bring up this volume, and we're gonna react to it.
01:08:30.560
Mr. Patel, early in this hearing, Senator Durbin asked you about the January 6th Choir of Inmates,
01:08:38.800
whose song you promoted. And here's what you said.
01:08:41.840
I did not have anything to do with the recording.
01:08:45.440
I did not have anything to do with the recording. Do you stand by that testimony, Mr. Patel?
01:08:50.000
Senator, what I said was, I didn't do the recording.
01:08:54.320
You said you didn't have anything to do with the recording, which is interesting because here's what
01:09:06.720
Using the podcast interviews against him. They did the same thing with RFK, by the way, chat.
01:09:12.080
What we thought would be cool is if we captured that audio and then, of course, had the greatest
01:09:18.960
president, President Donald J. Trump, recite the Pledge of Allegiance, then we went to a studio and
01:09:24.240
recorded it, mastered it, digitized it, and put it out as a song now releasing exclusively on the
01:09:30.560
war room. We, we, we. If you had nothing to do with it, Mr. Patel, why did you tell Steve Bannon and all
01:09:38.640
those listeners that you did? That's why it says we, as you highlighted.
01:09:43.120
Yeah. And you're part of the we, right? When you say we, that includes you, doesn't it, Mr. Patel?
01:09:49.920
Well, that's new. So when you said we, you didn't really mean you. Is that your testimony?
01:09:58.400
Not unless you have a new definition for the word we.
01:10:01.040
Okay. I, I always thought we included the person who pronounced the word,
01:10:05.440
but maybe not. Well, you also said this, Mr. Patel. We were able to capture the recording
01:10:11.440
thanks to their courageous singing and we were able to take it to a studio. So let me ask you,
01:10:16.400
Mr. Patel, after saying we took it to a studio, did you take it to a studio?
01:10:21.520
Me personally, no. After you said that we digitized and recorded it and all.
01:10:26.400
He's referring to a song that was made about January 6th. That's what he's grilling him
01:10:30.480
about right now, guys. Kind of funny, but yeah, I told y'all guys that they were going to come
01:10:36.080
out of his neck, bro. Look, they don't like that book that he made. Government Gangsters.
01:10:41.760
Yeah. Yeah. Adam Skip, Early Life or every, bro, you, you niggas already know, bro.
01:10:47.840
Well, that, did you take it to a studio and digitize and record it?
01:10:53.440
Okay. So you were lying to Steve Bannon and his audience. Is that what you're saying?
01:10:57.600
No, I was using the proverbial we appropriately as you've identified.
01:11:01.120
The royal we. Oh, I see. Um, and so you certainly promoted the hell out of it though, didn't you?
01:11:09.920
I don't know what that means, but I promoted the heck out of raising money for families in need.
01:11:15.840
With. Good, good, uh, good, good deflection there. That's good.
01:11:20.560
Look, and he knows, man, guys, this is, this is a former attorney, FYI. This guy's not stupid,
01:11:25.600
right? Very educated. I think he went to Pace. He did his, he got his JD at Pace.
01:11:28.720
This guy's a former prosecutor, right? So he knows how to deal with questions like this.
01:11:33.680
Promotions on social media and, and saying you were going to get this to number one on the billboards,
01:11:38.880
right, Mr. Patel? I think it did. Yes, it did. Yes, it did. Isn't that great? People violently attack
01:11:46.160
police have a number one song. Thanks to you, Mr. Patel. That's something to be really proud of.
01:11:51.840
Now you've claimed, you've claimed, Mr. Patel, you didn't know about any of these people in the
01:11:56.160
choir. Is that right? I did not know about the violent offenders and I did not participate in
01:12:02.080
any of the violence in and around January 6th. Tell me, Mr. Patel, what due diligence did you do
01:12:08.800
to find out who was in the choir before you promoted their beautiful music?
01:12:12.960
These people assaulted law enforcement. What due diligence did you do?
01:12:17.120
Senator, I didn't record it myself. So you did no due diligence
01:12:21.200
before you promoted this song by these violent felons. Is that what you're telling us?
01:12:25.920
Senator, I did not record that myself. So you're being considered for director of the FBI.
01:12:33.040
And, and here you did no diligence to find out whether people you were associating with now the
01:12:39.760
President of the United States in song were convicted of attacking police officers.
01:12:46.400
Is that who we want running the FBI? I want you to turn around. There are Capitol Police officers
01:12:51.120
behind you. They're guarding us. Take a look at them right now. Turn around.
01:12:57.520
No, no, no. Look at them. I want you to look at them if you can, if you have the courage to look
01:13:01.760
them in the eye, Mr. Patel, and tell them you're proud of what you did. Tell them you're proud
01:13:06.880
that you raised money off of people that, that assaulted their colleagues, that pepper sprayed
01:13:12.240
them, that beat them with polls. Tell them you're proud of what you did, Mr. Patel. They're right
01:13:17.120
there. They're guarding you today. Tell them how proud you are. That's an abject line. Now you guys
01:13:22.080
got, you guys are noticing, right? Like there's always these theatrics, right? When they do these
01:13:26.560
hearings, because look, they want to embarrass and make people look stupid in the Trump administration.
01:13:35.360
So you got to remember that a lot of these guys is going to be able to last chance to get a lick
01:13:38.640
at these guys while they're getting confirmed. So they're just, you know, they're here to embarrass
01:13:42.080
and ridicule, which I guess is entertaining, I guess. But, um, you know, we saw this coming.
01:13:48.080
I, I literally tweeted this morning before the confirmation. I was like, yeah, they're,
01:13:51.200
they're going to fuck this nigga up, bro. They're going to go after him hard, releasing that book,
01:13:55.280
doing that Sean Ryan interview, going on Steve Bannon's podcast, all these guys that are,
01:13:59.280
you know, uh, Steve Bannon's a hardcore Trump loyalist. Um, they're, yeah, they're going to go
01:14:04.960
after him. Just like PX said, they went after him. They went after RFK. Like, yeah, man.
01:14:09.920
You know it. I've never, never, ever accepted violence against law enforcement. I've worked
01:14:17.520
with these men. This is true. He did say that people, um, that assaulted law enforcement
01:14:25.120
And women, as you know, you glorified it in song. And I did not make a single dime out of it in song.
01:14:32.320
Well, let me, let me. How about you ask them if I have their backs and let's see about that.
01:14:36.640
Let me ask you this, Mr. Patel. Let me ask you this. If an FBI director promoted a song of people
01:14:44.640
who sprayed pepper spray in the face of an FBI agent, would you say they were fit to be director?
01:14:50.320
Mr. Schiff. Yes or no? Would they be fit to be director? I am fit to be the director of the FBI.
01:14:57.040
If, if you were the FBI director and you promoted a song to someone who
01:15:00.960
beat an FBI agent with a poll, would you say you were fit to be FBI director? Mr. Schiff,
01:15:07.600
I am fit to be FBI. All right. I said, uh, guys, I just applied for the White House media pass.
01:15:11.600
So we'll see what happens. Shout out to, uh, who gave me the link? Someone gave me a good link for it.
01:15:14.960
Uh, it was Dai Hakko. Shout out to you, bro. And Big Vic.
01:15:20.080
Both of y'all gave me the thing. Cause you guys saw yesterday, I tried to apply and the link
01:15:23.200
wasn't working. So I guess they fixed it and it works now. So shout out to you guys. Um,
01:15:27.840
Dai Hakko and Big Vic. Thank you guys for sending me the link. I give you niggas a Don DeMarco.
01:15:32.000
I just, I just, um, I just, uh, applied for it now. We'll see what happens, chat. We'll see what happens.
01:15:37.440
Bro, if they don't let me in the White House, this is gonna be fucked up, man. Bro, I used to have a
01:15:40.640
fucking top secret clearance. I used to protect fucking people. You know, I've done secret
01:15:45.520
service details before. So we'll see what happens. See what happens. Shout out to Minitan.
01:15:49.360
Subscribe it to the channel. Yeah, Director, based on my 16 years of government service.
01:15:53.760
And yet you did all these things, Mr. Patel. You can say, oh, I support law enforcement. I,
01:15:58.080
I decry violence against law enforcement. You could say all that. It's what you did,
01:16:02.800
Mr. Patel, that matters. It's what you did that matters. Well, let me ask you about something else
01:16:08.480
that you did, Mr. Patel. Did you claim that Donald Trump declassified all the documents at Mar-a-Lago?
01:16:16.560
Did you, did you claim that? In what proceeding? To the public ever. Did you tell anyone that Donald
01:16:24.400
Trump declassified all the documents at Mar-a-Lago? From publicly available information,
01:16:30.560
President Trump issued a declassification order on a variety of materials. No, no, I'll just ask you,
01:16:34.640
did you tell the public, did you tell anyone, did you make the claim that Donald Trump had
01:16:39.920
declassified those hundreds of classified documents that were Mar-a-Lago? Did you make that claim publicly?
01:16:44.720
From my best of my recollection, I said President Trump issued a declassification order to a large
01:16:49.280
number of documents. Yeah, and, and were you present when he declassified all the Mar-a-Lago documents?
01:16:54.160
Senator, I'm not saying he declassified all the Mar-a-Lago documents. I said President Trump
01:17:00.160
declassified a large number of documents, and I would hope this committee and the rest of Congress
01:17:05.600
would want to get those documents to the American people. Mr. Patel, before a president or anyone
01:17:12.000
declassified documents, wouldn't you want to know whether making the public would, would cause sources
01:17:19.280
to be killed? Wouldn't you want to know that before you just declare they're all declassified? Wouldn't
01:17:24.320
that be the responsible thing for a president to do? It was the responsible thing for us to do,
01:17:29.600
that's why he declassified the UNISMO. And did, and did, and did, and did Donald Trump declassify?
01:17:32.800
And no one died. And did Donald Trump ever ask any of the agencies who produced those documents
01:17:39.120
whether declassifying them would put people's lives at risk? Did he ever do that to your knowledge,
01:17:44.160
Kash Patel? I don't know that he didn't. Do you? No, that's the problem, isn't it? That's the problem,
01:17:51.360
isn't it? So let me just ask Mr. Chairman. And just to have fun with this, right,
01:17:58.240
we're going to go ahead and do what we normally do.
01:18:14.160
If you would, Mr. Patel has said he has no problem. No words necessary.
01:18:27.360
He would support the release of his grand jury testimony in that case. I would ask you,
01:18:31.200
Mr. Chairman, a ranking member, to join me in requesting, with Mr. Patel's approval,
01:18:37.440
the release of those grand jury transcripts. And I would also ask Mr. Patel whether you support the
01:18:42.480
release of volume two, as it pertains to you, of the special counsel's report.
01:18:49.040
Bro, I'm just going to, we're just going to go to the, go to the Wikipedia, go early life,
01:18:53.840
look through, and then just, just keep pushing. What I've got to say is, what's understood doesn't
01:18:58.720
need to be said, right? In reference to you in the report, to your truthfulness,
01:19:03.120
will you support the release to this committee of those sections of volume two of special counsel's
01:19:08.880
report? I support following the law and providing whatever information the law requires.
01:19:12.880
Well, you said to the Wall Street Journal that you support transparency. Here's your chance,
01:19:17.520
Mr. Patel. You support release of that to this committee? Yes or no?
01:19:23.600
Your time's up. Before I call on Senator Tillis.
01:19:28.000
I have letters here from law enforcement groups representing 310,000 officers supporting Mr. Patel's
01:19:37.520
nomination. All right. So I got some other clips from this thing. So let's go ahead and pull some
01:19:43.680
of them up. Also, we're going to make fun of dumbass Hassan. Bro, this nigga, man. And then he
01:19:50.000
wonders why people don't want to be on the, people don't like left-wing content anymore. This guy,
01:19:55.920
bro. Like nigga, what do you expect? Oh, God damn it. Hold on, chat.
01:20:12.560
Don't you hate that when you fucking accidentally open up a goddamn window?
01:20:17.440
Sorry, guys. I got like four monitors here. We're going to roast him later on this.
01:20:22.640
Uh, okay. Let's put. Boom. Boom. Boom. Boom. All right.
01:20:48.800
Turn up the volume a little bit. It's always interesting, guys, to watch left-wing media
01:20:55.440
It's more entertaining just to see how pissed off they are.
01:20:57.760
This now from Capitol Hill, where there was a moment of silence this morning before some
01:21:03.760
pretty key hearings got underway. So you've been listening in to this hearing for Trump's nomination
01:21:08.320
for FBI Director Cash Patel. Walk us through the big takeaways so far.
01:21:13.280
Yeah, Democrats have been on Patel for his previous words. A lot of those they're saying are pretty
01:21:19.600
controversial and do not make him qualify to lead the FBI. They're calling into question his loyalty to
01:21:26.320
Trump and whether or not that could impact the Bureau's independence from the president moving
01:21:32.240
forth. The idea behind that is they believe under a Trump-era FBI, it will be weaponized against his
01:21:42.880
Hey, guys. We got 1,300 new ninjas in here. Do me a favor, guys. Like the video. We only got
01:21:46.800
576 likes. Let's hit 1,000 chat. And I'm going to be ending the YouTube stream here soon as well.
01:21:51.920
Enemies. Enemies was brought up quite a few times. Senator Dick Durbin, the ranking member on this
01:21:57.760
committee said that he believed that Patel has an enemies list as he said previously-
01:22:02.960
He does. It's in his book. Literally lists out all- he calls them swamp. The swamp of the deep state
01:22:09.840
officials. And he brought that up on top of going after some of other controversial things that he said.
01:22:17.840
He referred to his association with far-right figures, including conspiracy theorists,
01:22:24.960
and then his association but also connection to January 6 rioters. He questioned him-
01:22:30.400
Yeah. See, this is what they do in media. They use the term far-right or alt-right as a pejorative term
01:22:39.280
to go after anyone that has hyper-conservative viewpoints. They always call it far-right.
01:22:44.000
And then they also like to use conspiracy theorists as well. It's all a way to
01:22:51.600
take away the- what's it called? The credibility of the political commentator,
01:22:59.120
And whether or not it was appropriate for him to have association with the families of people
01:23:06.880
convicted and then ultimately in prison for their involvement in January 6th- the January 6th riot
01:23:12.800
on the U.S. Capitol. As this hearing continues, we're also hearing Republicans speak to the character
01:23:19.440
of Patel, giving him an opportunity to defend himself and clean up some of those statements,
01:23:24.240
oftentimes saying Democrats are taking them out of context. Patel himself has pushed back on the idea
01:23:31.120
that he associates himself with racists, for example, calling or saying, recounting actually,
01:23:36.800
times where he was the victim of racist attacks himself. As this continues, we're expecting to see
01:23:42.400
Democrats come forward and decry to their colleagues on the right that Patel-
01:23:49.840
Also, TPC Films, I see that you sent me a link as well for the White House press out of Castle
01:23:55.200
Club. Thank you so much. I see that you sent it to me as well, dude. Thank you so much. I applied.
01:23:58.720
...minds have no business, has no business being the top pick for Trump's next FBI head.
01:24:05.360
And Torian, it's also day two today of RFK Jr.'s hearing as he seeks to be the head of health and
01:24:12.960
human services for the country. We saw what happened yesterday. It does appear he has sort of sweeping
01:24:18.560
Republican support. Will he have enough support to clinch this nomination?
01:24:24.240
Potentially, yes. There are some holdouts who are usual suspects when it comes to
01:24:28.800
these more controversial picks. Susan Collins of Maine, who is a part of the Senate Health
01:24:34.160
Committee, which is holding the hearing today for Robert F. Kennedy Jr., she said that she has
01:24:39.120
some questions that still need answers. She wouldn't disclose whether or not she will be voting for him.
01:24:45.120
She's saying she's following her protocol of waiting until she listens in full to this hearing.
01:24:50.800
But she has some questions that need answers. There's also Lisa Makowski of Alaska who's been
01:24:57.200
noncommittal about her support for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. And then there's Mitch McConnell. He was the third
01:25:03.040
defector when it came to Pete Hegseth's confirmation. He previously talked about how he had issues or concerns
01:25:11.680
around RFK's association with people who look to repeal the polio vaccine. So these are three people
01:25:18.400
that... And I'll be honest with you guys, look, they got an axe to grind with RFK because RFK came from
01:25:22.800
the Democratic Party. Him endorsing Trump was a big, in their eyes, to the left's eyes, to the liberals.
01:25:31.360
That was a huge slap in the face to them. So they were like, nah, bro. So that's why you have even
01:25:37.680
his cousin coming out, his family members coming out, denouncing RFK. Crazy.
01:25:42.800
We're watching, but that math there, Chanel, still would mean that Republicans...
01:25:47.200
I see that you guys are saying that we need chat mods. Don't worry, guys. I see in the FNF chat,
01:25:50.400
you guys are saying we need chat mods. Well, I'm going to switch over to
01:25:52.800
Myron Gaines X very soon. So what, we got 500 of y'all ninjas over there, I think, right now.
01:25:59.360
Five or 600 of you guys watching on Fresh and Fit. I'm going to end the Fresh and Fit
01:26:02.640
stream here very soon. So probably after this video, I'll go for another, like, two minutes
01:26:08.160
here with this video, and then we're going to switch over to Myron Gaines X. We're going to get
01:26:11.760
off Fresh and Fit on both Rumble and on YouTube. All right, so get ready to go to Myron Gaines X.
01:26:18.960
Americans would have a simple majority if the vice president, J.D. Vance, comes down,
01:26:25.600
steps into his role as the president of the Senate, and casts that tie-breaking vote
01:26:30.080
for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. And finally, one more key hearing we're watching closely is Tulsi Gabbard
01:26:36.640
looking to be director of national intelligence. She is Trump's pick. Talk about her journey,
01:26:41.520
because a bit of an unconventional route to this nomination, and what are her chances
01:26:45.680
looking like today? Yeah, former Democrat, former Democratic Congresswoman,
01:26:50.960
then ran for president. She was then soured in her experience with the party,
01:26:56.000
ultimately defecting, saying that she's an independent because of how she feels she was
01:27:00.480
pushed out of the party by the establishment. She then went on to align herself with Donald Trump,
01:27:07.040
ultimately lending her an endorsement to Trump for 2024, and then joining him on the trail several
01:27:13.200
times at major rallies and events, hosting even fundraisers for the current president. She's now looking
01:27:19.600
to be the top national intelligence director, and that's causing pause for not just Democrats,
01:27:27.040
but some Republicans. They're looking to question her and her association with some controversial
01:27:32.080
political figures abroad, including the ousted Syrian President Assad, whether or not she'll respond
01:27:38.640
to concerns and criticism. Yeah, they're going to definitely use that against her, that she was
01:27:44.320
Assad supporter. And for some of you guys that are wondering, Assad is out of power now. He has
01:27:53.280
effectively been run out of Syria. He is now in Russia under asylum. We saw the collapse of the
01:28:00.960
Assad regime in late 2024 in December, and they took it over within weeks, guys, literally within like
01:28:06.640
two or three weeks. I've never seen a country literally be destabilized so quickly. And this came on
01:28:10.720
the heels of the ceasefire between Lebanon, Hezbollah, and the idea of Israel. Once that ceasefire
01:28:19.520
commenced, that freed up the rebels in Syria to go ahead and launch an attack on Aleppo, and then they
01:28:26.240
eventually worked their way to Damascus, and they ran Assad out. And Jolani now is the self-proclaimed
01:28:33.920
president of Syria. And this guy is a former member of Al-Qaeda. Yes, you heard that right.
01:28:43.120
The current president of Syria was a former member under Al-Qaeda, worked under Osama bin Laden.
01:28:51.360
And they've totally rebranded him. He wears the fucking Zelensky uniform now.
01:28:54.880
And that's the current leader of Syria. And we backed him, chat. The United States and Israel backed him.
01:29:06.480
In this role, if she is to be confirmed, Chanel.
01:29:10.640
All right, Torian Small on Capitol Hill. Thank you.
01:29:13.040
All right, so that one is done. So this is what we're going to do, guys. I want you ninjas to come on over.
01:29:17.920
We've been on for about an hour and a half now. I am going to end the Fresh of Fit streams.
01:29:26.720
Okay, guys? I'm going to end the Fresh of Fit stream, ninjas. So I'm going to drop the link
01:29:32.640
for the Myron Gaines X link. Here it is. Join up, ninjas. Okay? We're switching now.
01:29:40.880
So come on over. I'm pinning it. If you're on Rumble, I pinned it. If you are on YouTube,
01:29:51.920
All right, boom. Now we're going to go. Hold on.
01:30:20.640
Sorry, guys. This is always... I hate this shit.
01:30:24.960
Very soon, we won't be doing this anymore, chat. We're only just going to go live on Myron Gaines X.
01:30:28.640
We're not going to go live anywhere else so you guys know where to go. But I'm just kind of
01:30:32.960
building this habit for you guys to get used to seeing me at 5 p.m. so you guys know exactly
01:30:40.000
So you guys know where to go, but I'm just kind of building this habit for you guys to get...
01:30:49.280
Okay, so there's a link. Mods, drop it in there.
01:30:59.760
I am ending the stream right now on Rumble first.
01:31:02.880
So guys, come on over. Rumble stream is going down.
01:31:05.440
I'm live on Myron Gaines X on both YouTube and on Rumble.
01:31:08.640
I'm ending the live right now on Rumble, on Fresh and Fit.
01:31:19.520
Now we're going to get off Fresh and Fit on YouTube.
01:32:49.440
How the hell did the fucking Myron Gaines X account go down?
01:33:07.360
I don't know why the fuck that keeps happening.
01:33:10.160
Because I'm ending it in the fucking actual studio.
01:33:40.960
Literally, I'm logged in to the fresher fit one.
01:33:46.160
And then for some odd fucking reason, it ends the goddamn other one.
01:34:41.240
Guys, come on over to the Rumble stream if you're watching on YouTube.
01:34:58.440
Uh, and we had a constructive conversation last week.
01:35:02.940
Uh, in particular, a conversation about the prosecution of the World Cup bombing, uh, in Uganda that took the life of a, of a Delawarean whose family I knew.
01:35:14.200
But the role you've been nominated for, uh, is central.
01:35:19.140
Central to the protection of our constitutional rights.
01:35:21.880
And I voted to confirm Trump's previous FBI director, Chris Wray.
01:35:26.220
I believe he's lived up to the Bureau's motto of serving with fidelity, bravery, and integrity.
01:35:31.880
And I also think my vote for him and for many of Trump's cabinet in his first term shows I take my constitutional advice and consent role seriously and do not reflexively vote against his nominees.
01:35:43.060
I look at three factors when I assess a nominee, qualifications and experience, policy views, and whether they're in the best interest of the American people, and character and capacity to do the job independently where called for.
01:35:56.920
Uh, my colleagues have, uh, referenced quotes from Attorney General Barr, National Security Advisor Bolton.
01:36:01.700
Um, the FBI's enormous, 38,000 agents, $9 billion budget.
01:36:06.200
I, I am troubled by your lack of senior law enforcement leadership.
01:36:13.120
But the thing that bothers me the most is a whole series of statements you've made in a variety of settings that suggest you would struggle to be independent from White House direction or control, as has long been the modern history of the FBI.
01:36:27.860
Who does the director of the FBI work for, Mr. Patel?
01:36:34.080
The immediate report for the director of the FBI is into the office of the deputy attorney general.
01:36:39.000
Then that report is taken into the office of the attorney general and ultimately the White House and the chain of command there.
01:36:48.580
No, the FBI is a member of the Department of Justice and has been the longstanding application.
01:36:53.840
And who does the Department of Justice work for?
01:36:55.880
They're in the executive branch, um, as all members do at the White House.
01:37:01.420
He wants them to say for the American people, but he's giving the actual real answer.
01:37:06.860
Um, Attorney General Bondi gave a different answer when I asked her the same question, uh, that they work for the Constitution and the American people.
01:37:16.300
And Pam Bondi, if you guys are wondering, is the attorney general, uh, nominee.
01:37:19.520
Here, in public statements, he wants to use the FBI to persecute political adversaries.
01:37:26.840
He's publicly said that folks ranging from Liz Cheney to Adam Kinzinger to former Vice President Harris should be investigated and criminally prosecuted.
01:37:35.180
If President Trump were to order you to open an investigation into any of these individuals, let's say Vice President Harris, would you?
01:37:43.280
Senator, this question speaks directly to my ability to leave political bias and allow independent behavior to be the only guiding light.
01:37:50.800
As a public defender, I learned that in the harshest of arenas.
01:37:54.280
And any law enforcement investigation, if I'm confirmed at the FBI, will only be launched on the following qualification, a factual, articulable, legal basis to do so.
01:38:04.560
The President has said publicly that he will allow the FBI to remain independent, and I have said as much as well.
01:38:10.840
So, if FBI agents brought to you a factual, legal basis, a predication, and you are about to refer it to a prosecutor, and you get a call from the White House saying, don't proceed, this is a major donor, this is someone close to the President, this is inappropriate, what would you do?
01:38:30.860
I think you answered it partially in your, in your question.
01:38:33.120
The line agents, the BRIC agents, who are trained to bring investigations on behalf of the FBI, will make that decision-making process, and they will only have my full support so long as it upholds absolutely every value of the Constitution.
01:38:49.720
So, your predecessor, I went back and looked, and I asked the same questions of Director Comey and Director Wray.
01:38:55.700
Director Wray, quoting former Attorney General Bell, said, you should be willing to resign, if necessary, over conduct if you're pressed to engage in it that's unethical, illegal, or unconstitutional.
01:39:12.160
Senator, my answer is simply, I would never do anything unconstitutional or unlawful, and I never have in my 16 years of government service.
01:39:19.020
Would you be willing to resign the post of FBI Director, if pressed, and given no choice but to obey the order or resign?
01:39:29.940
Does obeying the law require you to, as Attorney General Bell said, as FBI Director Wray said, refuse the order or resign?
01:39:39.480
I'm not familiar with the extent of the law that you're referring to, but my answer is simple in my 16 years of government service.
01:39:47.300
We will simply follow the law, and I've done that in Obama Justice Department, in Republican Justice Department, in the Obama military, in Republican civilian capacity.
01:39:58.360
I have never once wavered for my constitutional oath of office.
01:40:01.040
Mr. Patel, your predecessors in this role have been clear that they would be willing to resign, if forced or directed to do something unethical or illegal.
01:40:13.720
Shout out to, I'm JJ, says, just got a tender offer for CBP Marine Interdiction.
01:40:23.420
The kid also subscribed to the channel, Phantom Wolf.
01:40:28.960
It's both a post on Truth Social and something you said in a podcast, the Sean Morgan report, that your predecessor, Chris Ray, has broken the law.
01:40:40.520
And the month before this, in July 2023, you said there should be a criminal referral for FBI Director Ray.
01:40:45.280
If confirmed, are you going to follow through on these previous statements that Director Ray needs to be prosecuted?
01:40:49.940
Senator, this reminds me of the conversation you had, which I greatly appreciated.
01:40:54.880
There is enough violent crime in this country and enough national security threats in this country that the FBI is going to be busy going forward preventing 100,000 overdoses, 100,000 rapes, and 17,000 homicides.
01:41:04.600
We agree that prosecuting violent crime should be the principal focus of the FBI.
01:41:08.160
What I'm trying to get to, Mr. Patel, is a whole series of very troubling, to me, and many other statements you've made about instead using it to pursue those who might be viewed as political opponents.
01:41:15.780
And as I told you in your office, I have no interest, no desire, and will not, if confirmed, go backwards.
01:41:21.860
There will be no retributive actions taken by any FBI should I be confirmed as the FBI Director.
01:41:29.100
It took a couple questions, et cetera, but they don't want him to use the FBI as the, you know, Federal Bureau of Retribution.
01:41:37.480
As the co-chair of the Law Enforcement Caucus with Senator Cornyn, one of the things I've worked hard on, and I hope to continue being able to work hard on with this administration,
01:41:44.960
is partnership between federal, state, and local law enforcement to pursue violent crime.
01:41:48.840
You did say, as my colleague asked, and I look for a longer answer, that you want to close the FBI Bureau's headquarters on day one.
01:41:56.700
Okay, we remember that, right, from the Sean Ryan interview.
01:41:59.720
...down the FBI headquarters impact its ability to prosecute violent crime and drug traffickers.
01:42:04.460
How is that possibly a serious proposal, Mr. President?
01:42:06.280
Thank you for bringing that up and allowing me to answer.
01:42:08.760
It was to highlight the significantly greater point that I was actually making in that interview, which is well-documented over and over again.
01:42:14.080
38,000 FBI employees, 7,500 FBI employees work in the Washington Field Office and Hoover Building alone.
01:42:20.840
If you increase that aperture just slightly to encompass the National Capital Region, that is 11,000 FBI employees work in the National Capital Region.
01:42:28.520
A third of the workforce for the FBI works in Washington, D.C.
01:42:32.500
I am fully committed to having that workforce go out into the interior of the country, where I live, west of the Mississippi,
01:42:37.440
and work with sheriff's departments and local officers, and having one agent prevent one homicide,
01:42:41.680
and having one agent in Washington prevent one rape.
01:42:44.060
And I will do that over and over and over again, because the American people deserve the resources, not in Washington, D.C., but in the rest of the country.
01:42:49.540
And, Mr. Patel, frankly, if that had been your statement, that would be something that would be defensible.
01:42:53.300
Well, that wouldn't be, you know, sexy on a podcast interview.
01:42:55.800
And it's good that he's clarifying this here, right?
01:42:59.980
Because, look, man, the theatrics and shit like that is not going to fly.
01:43:03.060
You know, as a guy that used to be a government agent, like, I just know how these people think.
01:43:09.520
It's one thing to be on a podcast and, you know, have these explosive statements and shit like that,
01:43:14.720
but it comes off as extremely disorganized and unrefined to, you know, politicians and government officials like this.
01:43:29.480
So, of course, I knew they were going to grill him on that.
01:43:31.120
Which, at least this guy is, you know, asking real questions.
01:43:35.520
You know, you can see he's questioning Patel's skill set here, but, you know, it's not bad.
01:43:42.380
It's the rest of it, saying you're going to turn it into a museum of the deep state that causes repeated questions and concerns from people like myself.
01:43:48.740
Before I call on Senator Hawley, I'd like to enter letters into the record from scores of state attorneys general,
01:43:55.780
former U.S. attorneys, former U.S. Department of Justice officials who support the nominee,
01:44:01.120
they state, quote, Mr. Patel will bring to this critically important office his unique and extensive experience combating terrorism,
01:44:12.480
We will have no doubt that Kash Patel will serve our nation in this important post with integrity and tireless efforts to protect the American people.
01:44:33.980
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, ranking member, colleagues on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
01:44:40.540
It's my honor to introduce Kash Patel, President Trump's nominee to be FBI director.
01:44:46.980
I've completed due diligence on his life and career, and I'm convinced that Kash possesses significant expertise and ironclad commitment to justice,
01:44:57.440
and he's an outstanding choice to lead the FBI.
01:45:01.860
I already know you guys probably want to be louder.
01:45:07.640
Kash's parents are Indian immigrants of Gujarati ancestry.
01:45:14.240
The Gujarat state is a melting pot of religions, including Hinduism, Islam, Jainism,
01:45:20.680
with temples, mosques, and other religious sites scattered across the state.
01:45:25.500
His father was raised in Uganda, but his family had to flee the country to escape repression under Idi Amin.
01:45:35.740
They met and married in India and ultimately made their way to New York City by way of Canada,
01:45:41.120
where his parents, along with seven brothers and sisters and their spouses and at least a half a dozen kids,
01:45:49.380
His parents raised Kash in the Hindu faith, and they instilled in him the values of hard work and education.
01:45:57.960
Kash is a devout Hindu, and consistent with his faith, he's shown respect to people of all faiths.
01:46:08.840
I'm about to have a G as the director of the FBI. Let's go.
01:46:11.700
...the University of Richmond, where he earned his bachelor's degree in criminal justice and history.
01:46:17.220
He went to Pace University School of Law, where he earned his JD,
01:46:21.980
and an international law certificate from the University College of London, Faculty of Laws.
01:46:28.220
Kash began his career as a public defender in Florida, where he led or co-led more than 60 jury trials in state and federal court.
01:46:38.220
Kash clearly demonstrated a devotion to uphold...
01:46:44.600
You guys would be surprised at how few attorneys actually litigate cases.
01:46:49.220
...holding the rule of law and defending the rights of individuals.
01:46:54.320
Kash led the defense of Jose Bedrago in United States v. Bedrago, a high-profile case in Florida in 2015.
01:47:03.320
Bedrago was one of the Colombian nationals arrested in a major drug bust involving Operation Backroom.
01:47:12.520
Kash and his co-counsel successfully argued that key evidence was withheld by the prosecution, leading to Bedrago's release.
01:47:21.900
I suspect some of Kash's disdain for prosecutorial misconduct stemmed from this experience.
01:47:30.960
Kash was hired as a senior counsel on the House Permanent Select Subcommittee on Intelligence Committee, I should say, in 2017.
01:47:41.980
He told me he distinctly remembers my friend Trey Gowdy comments shortly after they were introduced.
01:47:51.520
Kash, Congress is where righteous investigations go to die. I hope you're ready.
01:47:58.120
And he went on to establish a solid reputation for pursuing the facts.
01:48:01.860
And from there, he held senior posts at the NSC, the Department of Defense, and the DNI.
01:48:08.040
Since leaving the administration in 2020, Kash has written articles and books on national security, law, and governance.
01:48:14.100
Through his work as an author, Kash continues to advocate for justice and transparency, and to be ever vigilant in defending our great democracy and the rule of law.
01:48:40.680
He's probably a friend of Kash Patel, and he's defending him, right?
01:48:45.120
Bro pulls out a fucking bingo card in a very serious Senate hearing about confirming the director of the FBI.
01:48:57.180
That I have available to any of my colleagues that would like it on the other side.
01:49:11.640
Yo, my man really made sure to make sure that shit looks good.
01:49:21.780
Look, and he already has a couple things crossed out, bro.
01:49:26.900
Sadly, I consider it a serious caricature of what I expect to be witnessed today.
01:49:35.780
I think we'll have words like enemies list and deep state.
01:49:43.980
Yo, when I saw this shit live, I was like, what the fuck?
01:49:50.800
Like, bro, nigga came in with a laminated bingo card with all the terms that he knew that his counterparts were going to say about Cash Patel.
01:50:06.880
And the fact that by the time it came around to him to talk, he literally, you know, already said, I have four things crossed out.
01:50:18.160
The fact of the matter is, some people will be here to simply substantiate a false narrative.
01:50:25.780
At worst, they may be just going through an unfounded litany of quotes and half quotes and half truths,
01:50:34.100
some of which have already been dispelled by the chairman after the opening statements.
01:50:39.480
Mr. Chair and Ranking Member, in my 10 years in the Senate, I hope I've established a reputation for being fair,
01:50:44.520
doing my homework, and taking tough positions that have been met with harsh criticism.
01:50:50.600
Heck, I've even been censured by my entire state and 30 counties for taking tough positions.
01:50:56.280
And I stand by those decisions today and my decision to support Cash Patel.
01:51:00.140
When President Trump announced his intent to nominate Cash, I contacted Trey Gowdy and others who worked with Cash,
01:51:11.060
So I called Cash on December the 2nd, and I offered to help him with his nomination.
01:51:16.760
Since then, we have spent hours together, in person and on the phone.
01:51:20.260
I've asked him difficult questions, and I've urged him to reach out to members across the aisle.
01:51:25.200
In fact, Cash Patel has met with 60 members of the U.S. Senate.
01:51:31.420
Because, as you guys know, some of the other people didn't meet with them.
01:51:35.240
Remember Pete Hexth, guys, when he did his confirmation hearing?
01:51:37.780
One of the things they attacked him on is that he said,
01:51:39.620
you didn't meet with any of us prior to this hearing.
01:51:43.820
You know, between the alcoholism, you know, the sexual assault allegations,
01:51:49.140
womanizing, infidelity, adultery, all this shit.
01:51:51.880
Like, they let him have it because he did not meet with them.
01:51:55.420
...worn in, and the majority of the members on the other side of the dais in this committee
01:52:02.460
Chair Grassley, Ranking Member Durbin, friends and colleagues on the committee,
01:52:09.980
and I am honored to provide my strongest recommendation for his confirmation.
01:52:22.340
...or affirm that the testimony you're about to give to the committee
01:52:26.560
will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
01:52:34.600
Chairman Grassley, Ranking Member Durbin, and members of the Judiciary Committee,
01:52:50.280
for the tragic accident that befell our nation last night
01:53:02.420
You know, he's going to be very politically correct.
01:53:12.780
I enjoyed our conversation in my office a while back.
01:53:20.460
Is it appropriate for the Federal Bureau of Investigation
01:53:35.320
Mr. Patel, are you familiar with the recent actions of the FBI
01:53:39.760
in this regard, including this memo that I have right here,
01:53:44.040
making a list of Catholic churches and parishes
01:53:49.360
and directing the potential recruitment of informants
01:53:52.840
and other spies, let's be honest, into those parishes?
01:53:57.640
Mr. Patel, would you commit to me that you will,
01:54:01.420
if you are confirmed, that you will finally and officially withdraw this memo
01:54:06.320
and make it clear that this is not only unacceptable,
01:54:10.240
but that it is an absolute violation of the First Amendment
01:54:13.580
that every American joys under the Constitution?
01:54:22.600
Will you also commit to me that you will conduct an investigation
01:54:27.080
and find out who wrote this memo, who spread this memo,
01:54:34.640
Because I can tell you, we've had your predecessors sit right where you're sitting,
01:54:38.020
and he has repeatedly, repeatedly lied to, there's no other word for it,
01:54:47.900
that the FBI didn't make any lists of churches.
01:54:51.420
A whistleblower brought forward the list for us.
01:54:54.080
He said then that only one field office had worked on it.
01:55:01.500
He said that it was never posted on the internal system.
01:55:06.740
Will you find out who was involved in this gross abuse
01:55:21.040
Yeah, targeting traditional Catholics and calling for spies and parishes,
01:55:25.220
targeting parents, protesting critical race theory and gender ideology
01:55:29.280
Who signed off on the FACE Act investigation of prosecutions
01:55:34.060
Who coerced social media companies to censor Americans' free speech?
01:55:36.960
Mr. Patel, consistent with Department of Policy and Law.
01:55:39.940
Senator, you have my commitment to investigate any matters such as this one
01:55:44.940
I will fully utilize, if confirmed, the investigative powers of the FBI
01:55:48.600
to give you the information you require and also to hold those accountable
01:55:53.320
who violated the sacred trust placed in them at the FBI.
01:55:56.180
I'm glad to hear you say that, and I'm glad you used the word sacred trust,
01:56:00.440
The FBI is the most powerful law enforcement body in this nation,
01:56:03.900
arguably the most powerful law enforcement body,
01:56:08.740
and to have this body corrupted politically such that it is targeting people of faith
01:56:15.140
in this country and then lying about it to this committee and the American people
01:56:20.000
I'll be honest with you, I never thought this would happen in the United States.
01:56:26.480
If you had told me five years ago we'd be reading memos like this,
01:56:30.560
The FBI has a lot of fucking gay people, Chad, if I'm going to be honest.
01:56:35.740
Law enforcement guys, and look, I'm just going to have to say this shit.
01:56:39.940
It's going to be politically incorrect, but I'm just going to say it.
01:56:43.780
A lot of law enforcement agencies have become infiltrated
01:56:47.200
by secular, liberal, wokey motherfuckers, gays, women, etc.,
01:56:57.560
that no longer have traditional conservative beliefs, right?
01:57:07.300
many law enforcement agencies have steered away from the, you know,
01:57:12.080
traditional conservative white males that they used to employ
01:57:17.160
a white male-dominated field with conservative values.
01:57:19.880
Now it's become a DEI, feminist, LGBTQ soundboard a lot of the times.
01:57:30.720
I guarantee you whoever approved and or pushed the investigation
01:57:34.500
into people that are pro-life or people that challenge gender theory,
01:57:40.940
more than likely they're probably secularized, left-leaning,
01:57:47.040
They probably fall into some kind of minority group.
01:58:00.380
and you bring in these wokeys, and they fuck everything up.
01:58:10.160
funny little story for you guys if we go back in time here.
01:58:12.200
It used to be, for the FBI and for many intelligence agencies back in the day,
01:58:26.680
you could not get a clearance in the United States
01:58:28.240
because being gay was looked at as problematic.
01:58:33.560
And if you were gay, they were afraid that if you were compromised,
01:58:39.940
you would sell secrets to keep that information from hitting the limelight of you being gay.
01:58:50.640
Edgar Hoover was a cross-dresser and homosexual.
01:58:55.740
The original, the face of the FBI, this guy right here.
01:59:02.580
The guy that they have the building named after.
01:59:12.480
You think FBI, this is the guy that comes to mind?
01:59:15.960
The building, the J. Edgar Hoover building, the FBI headquarters, is in D.C.,
01:59:21.960
which is the building that Patel was talking about.
01:59:35.960
They've been talking about moving it for a very long time.
01:59:47.960
If I'm not mistaken, he was dating his deputy director.
01:59:53.400
And the reason why this is problematic, because this guy right here,
02:00:01.220
Mayor Lansky, Jewish mob guy, every single time, by the way,
02:00:07.700
very powerful figure, had compromising photos of J. Edgar Hoover
02:00:15.780
So Mayor Lansky used these photos to ensure that the FBI would not come after the mafia.
02:00:25.880
So Mayor Lansky was able to effectively use J. Edgar Hoover's homosexuality against him
02:00:31.580
as leverage to maintain that the FBI would not investigate organized crime for decades.
02:00:41.300
And I do think that's a part of the reason why they've allowed gay people to have clearances
02:00:48.020
But unfortunately, when you allow gays, most gays tend to lean left.
02:00:52.660
There are some conservative gays out there, but not many.
02:00:59.680
And when you're secularized, when you're liberal, etc.,
02:01:02.600
you're more than likely going to look at religious groups as cults.
02:01:12.680
And that is why they end up targeting these churches, as we see here.
02:01:37.060
But they used to advertise this shit all the time, that they're a DEI agency.
02:02:00.560
The FBI also had an employee-run pride group of LGBTQ staffers.
02:02:14.620
This gay guy, after 20 years, the top FBI agent, right?
02:02:29.260
We're absolutely thrilled to be hosting this year's LGBT-A Summit.
02:02:36.620
Here at the FBI, we've released the phrase FBI family.
02:02:42.500
But, you know, they've been running this DEI shit for a long time,
02:02:47.020
When they do recruiting events or take pictures,
02:02:49.600
they often do it with, like, gay FBI agents, women, etc.
02:03:51.980
that showed a bunch of, like, female FBI agents, like, taking a kneel.
02:03:57.640
This is what happens when you have wool culture.
02:04:04.280
The department needs to be cleaned up, the agency does,
02:04:14.360
to be sending agents, including counterterrorism agents,
02:04:19.080
to the parents of children who went to school board meetings
02:04:22.840
and asked about critical race theory in their schools,
02:04:26.120
asked about the school's masking policy during COVID?
02:04:29.040
Should those parents be treated as domestic terrorists?
02:04:31.540
Parents who have the courage to ensure their children are taught
02:04:38.580
and those who have the courage of their convictions
02:04:46.940
You're familiar, I am sure, with this memorandum
02:05:23.880
to look into parents who went to these school board meetings,
02:05:28.860
and we know from whistleblowers who've come forward to this committee
02:05:33.120
the FBI opened multiple cases against multiple parents
02:05:37.000
across the nation, I believe, including in my home state of Missouri,
02:05:40.000
another gross abuse, incredible political power
02:05:51.220
and asked about what their kids were being taught.
02:05:58.980
Will you find out who was involved in this policy within the FBI,
02:06:16.720
that the FBI will never do something like this again?
02:06:19.880
If confirmed in pursuant to your congressional request,
02:06:29.900
particularly those who hold pro-life convictions?
02:06:39.700
There can never be a targeting by law enforcement
02:06:57.680
President Trump has recently pardoned some of these folks,
02:06:59.780
but it also includes individuals like Mark Houck
02:27:44.620
Looking at what could be one of the deadliest aviation disasters in recent memory.
02:27:52.160
One of the big questions, though, is about and they haven't they haven't recovered yet the black boxes.
02:27:56.160
We just got word on that. One of the big questions, though, is whether this helicopter was using any sort of new remote control technology that was just showed off recently.
02:28:04.060
I think it was Boeing that just showed this off a few months ago conference.
02:28:08.260
Yeah. Hey, we've got our Blackhawk helicopters now can be controlled by remote control.
02:28:12.400
So you can just take control, you know, from the land. You don't need to be on board this aircraft to have control.
02:28:17.180
Let me read chats real quick. OK, Topshay says Frank and Barbara got rest their soul.
02:28:22.720
However, it's all come back to me. Barbara stated the camps were built part of Hitler power.
02:28:26.620
How would they build those camps? Meanwhile, Hitler was in power for that little time.
02:28:30.060
Right. In the 1904 prisoners to here, two tribes built those camps.
02:28:33.320
Myron, my ex just sent me a video for getting backshots by a ninja. I'm about to fucking crash out.
02:28:42.400
Nigga, why would? Bro, why are you even talking to your ex, bro?
02:28:47.080
Fuck these thoughts, man. What's wrong with you, bro? Fuck that bitch.
02:28:51.860
Bruv, they're all over. I wonder most of the time the six million happen.
02:28:55.840
They're on the coast and in the gated communities. I and I percent. They're my clients.
02:28:59.020
Back when I lived in Little Italy in Manhattan, I lived with an Italian Jewish family named the Farrells.
02:29:03.400
They vaguely talked about Auschwitz. I remember a long time ago.
02:29:05.540
Mama Barbara stated they're lying in history books during Mussolini.
02:29:09.580
Her husband, Frank, was a soldier whom thought that for the Italians, the state of the camps were fabricated.
02:29:13.920
Yeah, bro. I mean, the numbers ain't numbering, bro. We all know that.
02:29:17.720
I love the content of value. Thanks. That's from Estacapo.
02:29:20.320
Machaka Boss, shout out to Myron, early life. Puts a picture of me as a Jew. All right. Thank you.
02:29:24.740
Myron, name the show, The Gains Train. I don't know how no one came up with this yet.
02:29:29.040
So marketable with lots of potential directions. I don't know.
02:29:30.960
Gains Train kind of sounds like gay porno, bro.
02:29:33.300
Chad, what do you guys think? Against the Graham O'Mara Gains or the Gains Train?
02:29:39.900
It's kind of gay. Let me know what you guys think in chat. I'm looking.
02:29:46.180
You going on Sean Ryan's show would be incredible if you could make that happen would be a huge W.
02:29:52.060
We'll see what happens, bro. I'm very controversial.
02:29:58.960
Right? We don't even got to talk race or any of the controversial shit.
02:30:01.380
We could just talk law enforcement, masculinity, whatever.
02:30:04.600
So we'll see what happens. I just hit up his producer.
02:30:18.120
Yeah. Yeah. See, everyone in the chat is saying it's gay, bro.
02:30:32.440
Myron, what's your thoughts on my 20-year-old friend who is in a relationship with a woman that's 25 years older than him?
02:30:37.000
Well, your friend's a retard. You better not take her seriously. Just have fun with her.
02:30:40.640
Myron, did you see Dr. Suspect got re-monetized on YouTube?
02:30:45.020
Comments on Dana White last night at a press conference about Bryce Mitchell.
02:30:54.260
I mean, I don't really, I don't follow UFC chat. I'll be honest with y'all.
02:30:59.640
Topshay said it's gay. Yeah, I figured it's gay.
02:31:16.480
If one person can control it, can someone else hack it?
02:31:19.420
Well, all of these things, of course, can be hacked.
02:31:27.160
journalist Laura Logan had reported the cyber attack
02:31:30.880
I used to watch these guys when it was morning and best.
02:31:33.440
And then they changed their shit to Redacted and did news
02:31:43.800
that it was, in fact, a cyber attack on that ship.
02:31:56.140
Excuse me, from a rescue to a recovery operation.
02:33:20.520
under a diversity and inclusion hiring initiative
02:33:37.040
Brilliant people have to be in those positions.
02:33:57.300
since he's run the Department of Transportation?
02:34:10.360
It's always funny when he shits on these people.
02:39:50.920
Bryce is a Senior Aircraft Accident Investigator