Trump NY Prosecutor Commits FRAUD? Nick Fuentes EXPOSES Darryl Cooper!
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 59 minutes
Words per Minute
159.21329
Hate Speech Sentences
138
Summary
Breaking news on the shooting at Wullmer Hutchins High School. The suspected shooter turned himself in and is now in jail with a bond of $600,000 bond! Stay tuned for the latest on that and much more!
Transcript
00:10:48.000
Oh wow... awesome, we're here with a black screen...
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i bet chat camera should be back on here in a second
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all right we're here what's up guys welcome to the stream man welcome to the stream
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sorry about that um yeah it just went right into flashing lights right after
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um but anyway guys what's up welcome to the stream i got my hat on here because it's cold
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as hell in here bro i gotta keep the i gotta keep the goddamn uh ac up so that the cameras don't
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turn off but it's cold as hell in here man so what's up guys welcome to the stream welcome to
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the stream um we are here um obviously we got uh fresh to fit later so you know won't be as long
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of a show as usual um we're gonna be doing fresh to fit at 8 p.m tonight ladies and gentlemen and
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then we're gonna be doing a zoom call after that so um definitely got some interesting topics
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to talk about what i'll do right now is um i see that there's something going on right now
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looks like there was a press conference right now so let's go ahead and see and jump on that
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as you guys know anytime there's uh breaking news oh there's a transgender lawsuit against
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maine okay that's interesting um oh okay here's a 17 year old suspect that looks like that
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might we are back to breaking news this is from overnight an important update on the shooting
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of wilmer hutchins high school just a few hours this is the high school from yesterday to go the
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suspected shooter turned himself in yeah this is a scene we've been following you can see the aerial
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footage from the aftermath of that shooting yesterday lacy beasley joining us live and lacy
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we know that three students were shot another injured in that shooting on campus uh what's the
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latest and especially in light of the fact that the shooter is now turned him or the alleged
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shooter has now turned himself in good morning carmen and madison we're just now learning the name
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of that suspected shooter 17 year old tracy haynes the dallas morning news report said he turned
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himself in with the help of an organization called urban specialists and they advocate against
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violence apparently a family member called their helpline now here's some video of haynes
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surrendering last night in dallas video never fails was taken by smashed a topic and shared online
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and shared online shows officers puffing the suspect dallas isd confirmed that the suspect was
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arrested but did not share any additional details he's charged with aggravated assault mass shooting and
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is in jail on a 600 000 bond now it's important to note dallas isd police tell us this was a student
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on student shooting not an intruder you can imagine the chaos and fear here at wilmer hutchins high
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less than 24 hours ago take a listen to some students and parents reactions shortly after the
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gunfire i heard like six shots and then teacher ran to the door and closed it and told us to hide in
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the corner he told me they were shooting at the school for me to go up there so i just jumped above the
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bed you can see hundreds of people running across the lawn in panic yeah for those of you that are
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unaware that uh maybe you didn't catch yesterday's episode we were live and a school shooting
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happened literally while we're on air pretty much um so i went ahead and um jumped on and we talked
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quite a bit about gun control in america we talked about um uh school shootings and how things have
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changed and i actually proposed uh a um solution to the school shooting problem um that we have
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that's literally dominating the united states now over the past 20 30 years man there's been like a
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fucking surge in school shootings according to police four boys were hurt in the shooting three
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of the four were hit with gunfire the dallas fire department says injuries range in severity from
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non-life-threatening to serious we also know the high school does have metal detectors which every
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student should pass through at the beginning of each school day though during tuesday evening's
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press conference disd assistant police chief christina smith says this was not a failure of safety
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protocol and the gun got in somehow another way gun did not come through during regular intake time
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so it was not a failure of our our staff of our protocols or of the machinery that we have
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the district says there will be no class here through the end of the week and there will be
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mental health experts for students and staff who need them carmen madison all right lacy a story with
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a lot of moving parts we're going to be on top of all of those continuing details later today and
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throughout the morning so you can find the latest coverage on cbsnewstexas.com all right interesting
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uh what is this so they got someone in custody okay and then here we go uh trump holds situational
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meeting on iran amid nuclear talks okay let's uh let's uh see this and then um obviously uh we'll talk
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um i'll go into a little bit more detail with iran and the pressure campaign on iran continues but as
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you know the president has made it clear he wants to see dialogue and discussion with iran while
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making his directive about iran never being able to obtain this was literally earlier today or no this
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was yesterday this was yesterday um uh during the uh white house press conference is there still
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a white house press conference right now let me look
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the next pressure campaign on iran i think they're done
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this was today so i don't think she's live anymore because i remember seeing that they were live
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earlier when i when i had this thing all right so we got along a crime network
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pain a nuclear weapon quite clear so here we go standing firm right now the trump team on nuclear
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talks with iran reiterating its demand that tehran eliminate its nuclear program uh there is action on
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this we're bringing retired general jack keen fox news senior strategic analyst and general thank you
00:17:18.620
for your time good morning to you there's been one meeting already uh there's another one scheduled
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in the coming days in rome italy we'll see how that goes on tuesday so yeah guys we're covering
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some of the news stories that are popping off right now at the moment and then obviously we're
00:17:30.280
going to cover the main ones which are going to be uh the new york attorney general uh her name is
00:17:38.260
leticia by the way um we're going to be covering her and potential mortgage fraud uh
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uh leticia um leticia james and we will also be covering uh the beef i want to say beef but there
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is a back and forth going on with um nick fuentes and a guy named daryl cooper aka martyr made which i
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think is a important first to discuss for a couple of different um reasons when it comes to a certain
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topic so today axios reports that the white house had a situation room meeting on the fate of iran in
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that room vance rubio hegseth whitkoff ratcliffe waltz all the players including the president now the
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president has said he can solve this through diplomacy without taking military action off the
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table where does trump 2.0 now stand with iran and the possibility of going nuclear
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yeah i don't think the president's policy has changed one iota i mean i even had a conversation
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with him about just prior to the inauguration and he was unequivocally clear and he has been
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very clear on this issue like he is on a lot his policy is simple iran is not going to have a
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nuclear weapon and he has put together a negotiator the personal envoy to the middle east to be the
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implementer of that and and he has issued an ultimatum to back that envoy up the ultimatum is
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pretty simple iran you voluntarily dismantle your program eliminate the enriched uranium hand it over
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destroy the centrifuges that are deeply buried in those secret facilities and destroy the
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intercontinental ballistic missiles or ballistic missiles excuse me that could deliver them
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yeah and that's not going to happen bro see in the like so basically what what what they want is
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they want for um what this administration wants is they want iran to basically neuter itself
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okay and completely remove its capability of um defending itself now the missile program that
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they have guys right um and we can actually talk about this because i didn't get to talk about this
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yesterday but the most the ballistic missile program they have guys is very um good okay um and not
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only is it good they have very good air defense all right a war with iran wouldn't be a good idea for us
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and not only that let's go ahead and pull up a map here and go through this and really break this down
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okay so here we are on the world map right let's talk a little bit of uh you know geopolitical stuff so
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here we are right we're over here united states now we got to go all the way over to the middle east
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bam iran is right here right now as you guys can see it borders iraq and it shares
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um bodies of water with the gulf states right and the gulf states guys are like you know your your
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qatar's your uaes oman uh kuwait etc right saudi arabia of course the big one right and here's iran
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right here now the thing with iran is if the united states were to attack iran okay
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we would win the conflict all right and then we're going through a you know a game day here what
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would happen we would win the conflict we would we would be able to defeat them but it would be so
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and so costly that it would not be worth it okay and one of the biggest things that iran will do
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there's two big things that iran will do if we were to actually attack them with their ballistic
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missile program right here is called the strait of hormuz okay guys the strait of hormuz and this
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area you can see right here on the on the thing i don't know if you can read that okay this area
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is a critical chalk point to get something like 30 percent of the world's oil right into trade
00:21:39.680
all right and what they would do is that they would effectively close this down and fuck everything
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up they'd close it down destroy it whatever it is right and basically that would send the entire
00:21:55.700
world economy into catastrophic levels of decline okay because 30 percent of the world's oil goes
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through this little narrow thing right here okay that's one two they would attack all of our allies
00:22:10.260
saudi arabia qatar uae oman all these kuwait there's military bases in some of these countries
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they would attack all of them and destroy them okay so not only would trade be significantly
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hindered for the world economy we would also get our american bases destroyed because they have
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hypersonic missiles that would literally and they're made in iran by the way they're not like um
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they're domestically made they're not russian they're domestically made then on top of that
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they have a very good air defense system okay so our air force would need to be able to get around
00:22:52.460
the air defense to be able to bomb these nuclear sites that they have which are all underground by
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the way the other nuclear facilities guys are underground why is this well because we go back
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in time roughly 1981 israel bombed the fuck out of iraq because saram hussein was pursuing a nuclear
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program one mistake though the nuclear program facilities that iraq had were above ground so
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israel found them and destroyed them right so obviously iran realized oh if we want to run a
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nuclear program or want to be able to you know enrich uranium etc we need to put everything underground
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so the only way to destroy these facilities is with bunker buster bombs okay that really
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um the israel the israel israel doesn't have united states has them but israel doesn't really have
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them like that and not only that you'd have to do multiple camping uh bombing campaigns to be able to
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to truly ensure that you destroy all of the different facilities all across iran
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okay so again number one we'd have to fight their air their air defense iran's air defense to be
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able to get in in the first place we would lose a lot of jets that's number one number two it would
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basically halt 30 percent of the world's oil trade with the straight of her moose and other trade as
00:24:21.260
well okay that would send the economy into a free fall globally then third our bases in the middle east
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would be absolutely decimated by iran so would we win the war yes but at what cost and that is
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currently what we are potentially facing chat all right give me ones in the chat if that all makes
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sense give me ones if that makes sense i don't think uh i've explained this before to you guys so
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this is uh very important that you guys um know what we're looking at if we actually do um go to war
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with iran give me ones if that don't make sense then just
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and what uh president trump has said if looks and if you don't voluntary volunteer and also keep in
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mind iran is a much bigger country than iraq they have a bigger military than iraq it wouldn't be like
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the iraq war of 2003 it would not be um iran does have a strong military and a big military
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and and very capable of weapons to defend themselves so it wouldn't be a a cakewalk
00:25:28.480
like it was iraq in 2003 apparently dismantle and eliminate the program then we meaning israel
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united states will destroy the program that's pretty simple and uh this got off message somehow i think
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iran has 300 000 missiles chat 300 000 missiles oh and i forgot what else they would do they would
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literally rain hell on tel aviv they've already shown that they could strike to strike israel so as you
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guys know israel's over here right the gaza strip is down here tel aviv is over here right so what
00:26:04.620
would happen is they would also not would they only only destroy the american military bases they would
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also launch fucking hell into israel okay so and they would destroy all the major cities
00:26:18.360
okay so um yeah dude that's another thing as well to keep in mind with with um with iran if they were
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to attack and they've already demonstrated for anyone that says oh myron what about the iron dome
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for those who are unaware the iron dome is a missile defense system that the israel utilizes to
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shoot down rockets that are coming into israel from you know hezbollah up here in the north or
00:26:41.540
the houthis down south over here in yemen right uh the thing is is that um iran already proved that
00:26:50.140
they can hit israel despite the fact that they have an iron dome they've already proven that um they
00:26:54.480
bombed them late last year um and what how they basically do it is they have a bunch of cheap drones
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and other missiles that they send in uh to basically take a lot of the um attention off
00:27:05.680
of those missiles they they basically they long story short this is what they do they flood israel's
00:27:13.420
airspace with cheap drones and cheap missiles the iron dome has to respond and shoot these missiles down
00:27:20.280
when these missiles are shot down then iran shoots the real stuff in does that make sense chat because
00:27:27.000
here's the problem the cost of defending is more expensive than the cost of sending i'm gonna say
00:27:34.720
that again the cost of defending is far more expensive than the cost of sending so for israel to shoot down
00:27:43.860
these cheap drones or these cheap missiles that iran shoots over kind of as like decoys is going to cost
00:27:49.760
them quite a bit more money and be far more intensive okay uh then it would be for iran to shoot cheap
00:28:00.620
missiles in and then follow up with more sophisticated more damaging missiles okay and that's why the last
00:28:08.360
time they had an escalation iran and israel late last year and iran launched their first ever attack
00:28:14.180
into israel they did this to show israel because many of the missiles actually hit their targets chat
00:28:19.200
many of the missiles actually hit their targets in israel so they did this to let israel know that
00:28:24.000
we can touch you despite your iron dome despite all your support despite um uh you scrambling jets
00:28:30.600
in the air from jordan and united states and egypt right because that is what israel did because iran
00:28:36.060
told them that they were going to attack them so what ended up happening was jordan um egypt and other
00:28:40.260
allies and the united states of course we had a aircraft carrier we all scrambled to help israel and they
00:28:46.340
still were able to get missiles to penetrate into uh israel okay and that was with a warning
00:28:53.020
and it cost them so much money to uh reload the iron dome to be able to shoot these missiles down
00:28:58.740
versus it doesn't cost iran anything to shoot the missiles
00:29:02.000
so anyway a little bit of uh warfare strategy there for you guys okay um oh yes thank you brett i see your
00:29:12.540
your message okay um what else do we got here soft life let's read some of these chats
00:29:21.520
um when trump said shalom after deporting the student does that mean trump has converted to
00:29:28.520
judaism or was he just being petty uh below see slide for looks like trump has converted um no he did
00:29:35.780
that to be petty bro he did it to be petty brett osika uh reminder to put me yep got you on that
00:29:42.520
one uh shout out to my guy brett soft life says when
00:29:49.260
no i read that already what the hell okay bear with me here chat real quick i gotta fucking
00:29:58.100
this always happens there's always some tech stuff going on my stream elements thing is acting funny
00:30:48.300
w uh the three camera angles in each view you kill it with your points
00:30:57.020
i don't know what you're trying to say here loso
00:31:01.340
guys please spell check before you send in chats so that i know what you guys are saying
00:31:05.680
carderman says yo myron is it me or does it seem like your channel growth has been halted a bit
00:31:17.000
we're still grinding bro i mean uh we're you know that you're always gonna have ups and downs
00:31:34.460
and then uh aj sandy ball says uh thank you for the show sir appreciate that got you
00:31:40.160
um let's see here uh slide dog says a high minor you with password bros because women are uh their high body count and fuck all types of men's no i'm not a passport bro
00:31:52.360
uh fdaari says have you watched the recent podcast of avoiding babylon about father sharon speaking about the woke right lots of negative comments people starting to wake up about israel um no i did not see it
00:32:05.640
um i will tell you this rogan had uh some fucking pro
00:32:09.820
zio idiot on i think yesterday or some shit and i was like oh he must have got the call
00:32:14.440
qanimals wm i appreciate that nightly wisdom says like the video ninjas i appreciate that my friend
00:32:20.600
i listened to the space you hosted with simon about four times last one hour is where all the sauce is at highly recommended yes
00:32:30.040
so guys what i'm gonna do is i'm actually gonna put that space
00:32:34.340
all right i'm gonna put that space up on castle club for y'all
00:32:40.300
but yeah lots of really interesting stuff on um finances in that
00:32:48.140
making sure i don't miss any of your guys's chats and i appreciate you guys as you guys know
00:32:51.880
if you want to get involved in the show guys super chat myringainsx.com as you guys know that is
00:32:56.660
the way to um get all your chats right on air and shown on screen
00:33:00.320
because every time you donate it pops up on screen
00:33:02.860
um and that's how you support the mission because we are demonetized because um
00:33:07.340
youtube fucking sucks bro i mean be honest i keep it real with y'all
00:33:15.880
we might make an announcement about it in a little bit
00:33:29.860
as a result of the first talks and subsequent interviews uh on television i think yesterday's
00:33:37.360
meeting was to get input but also most importantly get clarity and it seems to me when the negotiators
00:33:43.140
go before the iranians this weekend it's about implementing the president's policy
00:33:46.400
and and that is is more uh show us your plan to eliminate voluntarily your nuclear enterprise
00:33:54.260
and show us the milestones to do that show us the sites that this is going to take place at
00:33:58.360
and we reserve the right to go anywhere anytime to conduct inspection inspections because we know
00:34:03.860
full well the iranians would retreat it seems to me the meeting is more about getting an
00:34:08.700
implementation plan than there's negotiating some terms about how much of this or how much of that
00:34:13.740
and i think that's how it got off message and recall this in 2019 in hanoi when the trump team
00:34:19.980
went in to negotiate with kim jong-un and they were expecting to see an implementation plan to
00:34:24.000
dismantle his nuclear weapons and he didn't provide that they got up and left that's right
00:34:27.400
and i think that's where we are general um on the middle east um there is movement here on
00:34:33.940
a ceasefire that's really not been joined by the other side hamas is rejecting that
00:34:38.020
uh here's a statement from the israeli defense minister israel's policy is clear he says
00:34:41.580
no humanitarian aid is set to enter gaza mechanism must be built for the use of civilian companies
00:34:45.680
as a tool that will also prevent hamas from accessing this issue going forward israel believes there
00:34:50.500
are 59 hostages of which 24 are still alive including edon alexander an american israeli
00:34:55.500
um and then well i guess two things happened there was a proof of life video given of him recently
00:35:00.760
and then hamas came out a few days later claiming it lost contact with those who were keeping edon
00:35:05.680
hostage you wonder if anyone's going to come out alive general
00:35:09.780
well certainly uh we're all hoping and praying for that and but the reality uh is here is that
00:35:16.500
uh israel has put on the table certainly the release of the hostage in exchange for prisoners
00:35:21.480
but they also have been very clear uh to hamas that they don't want them to remain governing
00:35:26.560
and they also want them to disarm and they they are not going to discuss the after day of hamas
00:35:32.600
until those objectives are achieved so hamas is is pushing back on that because as we know full
00:35:38.340
well keeping those hostages is all about keeping hamas alive and also in power so we're at loggerheads
00:35:45.180
here i think more negotiate yeah well see look even he's saying that and i told you guys this before
00:35:49.820
bro this is why these lies about like um hamas killing the hostages or whatever it's not true
00:35:54.860
it's all cap because at the end of the day the hostages are the only political bargaining tool
00:36:00.460
they have okay for them to get a permanent ceasefire because hamas doesn't want a permanent ceasefire
00:36:06.780
but they know um that they need to negotiate with the hostages they have no other leverage besides that
00:36:13.760
negotiations will take place and because the people always say oh yeah hamas kills the hostages
00:36:18.560
blah blah no the houses get killed by the idf when they bomb um gaza or through the starvation
00:36:26.500
listen the pressure on hamas is pretty significant now because new chief of the idf military and he is
00:36:34.380
posing a difficult different plan he is occupying parts of four different parts of the gaza strip and
00:36:40.660
he's going to expand that occupation and he's moving the civilian population out of those four
00:36:45.360
areas so he can focus on destroying hamas in those areas and taking away any hope that they can govern in
00:36:51.200
that and they are now referring to that is the security zone of the state of israel and that is
00:36:55.980
very different than what the former chief of the idf conducted largely tactical raids and then left the
00:37:01.680
area so this occupation is increasing over time and there's considerably more pressure also on hamas
00:37:07.160
to release those hostages uh thank you general it's good to have you back on and we'll watch both
00:37:11.020
of them carefully important stuff so yeah so we'll see what happens um but um just so you guys know
00:37:16.760
the um they had a meeting so they had a okay so let's go through this timeline right so
00:37:21.600
trump takes office makes it very clear iran you cannot have a nuclear weapon and this has been
00:37:30.060
the status quo for for decades with many different uh presidential administrations the president
00:37:34.820
that came the closest to stopping this was barack obama despite the fact that you know i've been
00:37:39.520
very critical of obama we've made fun of obama on this podcast a million times one of the things i
00:37:44.480
think obama did um that was fantastic during his president uh during his presidency um despite the fact
00:37:50.920
that he was one of the main presidents that um standardized drone warfare by the way that's why
00:37:55.380
they call him odrono uh barack odrono um a lot of people don't know that uh he he basically cultivated
00:38:05.300
the first iran nuclear deal which basically was a deal where you would remove sanctions create
00:38:11.580
sanctions relief for iran um to allow them to get their you know economic um uh get their economy back
00:38:20.020
on track in exchange for them basically lowering their uh uranium enrichment and basically bring
00:38:26.020
it down to levels where it's so low that they'd never be able to actually weaponize obama was able
00:38:30.060
to secure that deal in 2015 and it took years for them to do it after trump came into office in 2018
00:38:37.540
at great pressure from the zionist lobby and benjamin nanyahu he tore up the deal and the reason why
00:38:42.600
is because nanyahu and israel did not want this um plan to be put in place because they hate iran
00:38:50.500
they want a regime change chat they want a complete regime change all right so um and there's been many
00:38:57.660
beefs between the united states and iran for a very long time but israel has always been involved in it
00:39:01.720
and they've tried to start false flags i talked to you guys about jundullah and how they um try to do a
00:39:06.540
false flag there where massad agents pretended to be cia operatives and funded this um this uh
00:39:14.540
basically this terrorist group um of uh diaspora people the uh baloch people um and they gave them
00:39:22.240
weapons and resources and they told them hey go attack this area in iran and they were pretending
00:39:26.440
to be cia operatives but in reality they were massad operatives and when iran captured them uh at
00:39:32.120
first they thought that they were um being backed by the united states well why is that a problem
00:39:35.600
that's a problem because basically terrorists that are caught in their country would have been backed
00:39:40.740
by the united states and they can use that to escalate tensions against us and potentially get
00:39:45.160
us into a world war but what ended up happening was the person that was caught the head of jundullah
00:39:50.060
that was caught um before he was executed he admitted that hey look i don't know if it was really
00:39:54.560
americans i think they were jews i think they're israelis um and what ended up happening was they
00:39:59.920
figured out that those cia operatives that gave them instructions
00:40:02.940
though they thought were americans were actually massad agents so this is not anything new chat
00:40:09.620
that where they try to sabotage um peace talks or whatever because i they want a complete regime
00:40:15.320
change they want the ayatollah gone they want some type of um happy western power there and they
00:40:21.640
haven't had that since 1979 when iran had their revolution okay so first in the 50s they had their
00:40:28.180
mogadesu i think his name was i think i showed you guys this yesterday they had their first
00:40:32.020
democratically elected president right thanks to a ca operation from the united states and uh mi mi5 or
00:40:40.820
mi6 uh we got him out of there all right once he got out of there the shah came in they didn't like
00:40:48.780
the shah so then the shah got overthrown in the 1979 revolution and the uh theocracy that's currently
00:40:58.140
in power now took over right and that's a very again i'm gonna do an episode for you guys on
00:41:03.720
uh middle eastern history i'm gonna cover all this in one nice podcast where i cover um iran to saudi
00:41:11.940
arabia to uh palestine to um syria and cover everything for you guys because if you guys truly
00:41:18.600
want to understand them boys okay and the history of them boys you need to understand the middle east
00:41:24.700
okay because um the war on terror the conflicts we have in the middle east it all stems back to
00:41:32.520
israel but you need to understand israel's role with each of these arab countries and israel does
00:41:36.640
have a unique relationship with each of these different arab countries even even um even the
00:41:42.000
ones that they're adversarial with right they have different rules of engagement with them to a
00:41:47.980
degree okay and some of them are allies because we pay them like jordan egypt i've described this to
00:41:54.960
you guys before how jordan egypt we literally basically play them to play nice with the israelis
00:41:58.820
uh what else um there was something else i was going to tell you guys
00:42:03.420
okay and as you guys know we got fresh of it coming up later tonight as well um
00:42:10.960
at eight o'clock i'm gonna cover some and we're gonna have a zoom call after that
00:42:17.920
as well chat you're gonna have a zoom call after that um rookie band says hey martin it would be
00:42:23.460
cool if i did a stream touching your experience of federal agent why you decide to pursue that
00:42:26.780
career might help people better understand the roles of the feds if you did a stream on your
00:42:31.500
experience of federal agent i mean i've done streams like that before what specifically though
00:42:35.880
do you want to know uh tbc films uh tbc films says uh just wanted to say fuck the viewership
00:42:42.160
bouts about the message equality the content that is the most important because your show is by far
00:42:45.960
the best most easiest political and tending creator i appreciate that bro even my wife enjoys watching
00:42:50.940
uh to get a non-biased perspective on political views and if you can make it easy for women to
00:42:54.260
understand i'd say it's 100 winning um in my book keep with the great work the fight brother and uh work
00:43:00.060
we need to link up and do some real ass uh dope ass intro and outro videos for you yeah appreciate
00:43:05.000
that bro we got to definitely get that going i listen to spacey hosted okay that one's from
00:43:09.020
from before read that one um let me make sure i just didn't miss any of you guys um sand nigga
00:43:15.660
towelhead okay hey man this clip has been going viral 45 million views if frank was being attacked
00:43:20.000
by another dog like this would you have interviewed i didn't mean intervened um
00:43:26.500
all right let me get this x clip here bro frank was getting attacked bro you already know i'm jumping
00:43:35.980
let's see it's like a clip here i probably might not be able to play this on youtube it might be too um
00:43:43.020
oh shit that german shepherd is fucking that dog up bro
00:43:48.780
wow yeah i don't know if i could show this on youtube bro huh
00:43:58.400
but yeah basically it's a german shepherd attacking another dog and
00:44:03.640
the people are not putting in enough effort to stop is basically what it is yeah sorry bro sand nigga
00:44:08.160
uh we i probably can't show that on on stream bro um yeah 47.2 million views on this kingsbury row
00:44:19.020
yeah i don't know if i could show this on youtube i'm looking at it right now
00:44:39.180
all right yeah see this is the problem when you can't control your dog which a lot of people can't
00:44:51.700
bro it's amazing to me chat um now that i got a dog i realize like how many people like can't
00:44:57.220
control their dogs it's actually really bad it's really bad um speaking of iran let's go ahead and
00:45:03.500
watch this video this comes from pbd um they they dropped this video yesterday iran's last chance
00:45:08.660
from final warning amid explosive nuclear deal negotiations face okay rob if you got a clip on this
00:45:14.140
uh u.s middle east envoy steve whitkoff and the iranian foreign minister since we're talking about
00:45:20.920
um the iran thing and then we'll get into uh the next story which is going to be the attorney
00:45:26.060
general of new york or well yeah the of new york city leticia abos adachi uh adachi held the first
00:45:34.420
face-to-face talks since the obama era with the white house stating so check this out first face-to-face
00:45:40.260
talks with iran were held basically this past weekend guys there were indirect talks but they were done
00:45:47.920
uh i forget where they met exactly somewhere i think in the in europe or the middle east members of
00:45:53.600
the trump administration and members of the iran's regime special envoy whitkoff's direct
00:45:59.100
communication today was a step forward in achieving mutual beneficial outcome trump's commented on air
00:46:03.140
force one is this one that you have rob yes i have to i have uh president trump and then i also have
00:46:06.760
pete hegsat discussing what would happen if they don't come to a deal go to trump first and then we'll
00:46:10.360
go hey guys do me a favor uh we got 600 likes right now let's uh let's get to uh let's get to a
00:46:16.960
thousand and just go to hexa go for it can't have nuclear weapons and i think they're tapping us
00:46:21.500
along because they were so used to dealing with stupid people in this country and i had iran
00:46:26.840
perfect you had no attacks you would have never had october 7th in israel the attack by hamas
00:46:32.260
because iran was broke it was stone cold broke when i was president and i don't want to do i want
00:46:37.120
he had very high sanctions on iran have to be a rich great nation when he was in
00:46:40.820
the only thing is one thing simple it's really simple they can't have a nuclear weapon
00:46:45.020
and they got to go fast because they're and that's because of israel they can't have a nuclear weapon
00:46:50.460
fairly close to having one because the united states basically figured out that when countries
00:46:54.720
have nuclear weapons they can start to bully you kind of like what um israel did to us in 1973
00:46:59.740
when the yom kippur war was going on and they were losing and goldemeyer called nixon and said if you
00:47:05.300
don't give us aid we are going to hit the arab world with nuclear weapons and obviously that would
00:47:11.800
have affected our bottom line in saudi arabia and the petrol dollar that nixon had just literally just
00:47:16.180
put into effect so yeah we ended up giving them the biggest airlift of aid ever okay that is the real
00:47:23.980
reason why they don't want iran to have a nuclear weapon when you have a nuclear weapon it forces other
00:47:29.600
countries to think twice before they attack you and it would force israel's hand to the table to
00:47:35.080
negotiate more than likely a two-state solution which we know israel does not want to do i told
00:47:40.140
you guys this before i'll say it again netanyahu the prime minister of israel is not interested in
00:47:45.300
a two-state solution whatsoever he is more interested in having palestinians operate as controlled
00:47:54.080
opposition so that he can continue to say look i can't do negotiations with these people they want
00:47:59.260
to kill us they're savages and as long as he can maintain that status quo and as long as the united
00:48:04.180
states gives them aid what incentive do they have to make a two-state solution they have none that is
00:48:10.440
why they keep expanding the settlements the illegal settlements by the way which the um international
00:48:14.600
world is condemned and that is why they continue to blockade they continue the occupation
00:48:19.160
because we don't hold israel accountable for anything
00:48:23.680
so they know that if iran were to get a nuclear weapon like they have
00:48:30.660
that would mean that israel would have to concede as the world power in the middle east they would not
00:48:40.740
have the hegemony like they're trying to get the greater israel project will be halted and
00:48:45.520
they would be forced to the negotiation table to have diplomatic relations and uh one of the things
00:48:54.400
i guarantee you that iran would probably want they'd want a lifting of the sanctions that's for sure
00:48:59.900
and they'd want israel to come to the table about a two-state solution for uh palestine and israel
00:49:07.820
does not want that at all and they're not going to have one and if we have to do something very
00:49:14.620
harsh this is why trump ripped up the nuclear deal we'll do it and i'm not doing it for us i'm doing
00:49:19.180
it for the world for the israelis i'm doing it for the world no you're doing it for israel
00:49:24.020
come on donnie we know why you're doing it i love you man but we all know why you're doing it
00:49:29.880
radicalized people and they cannot have a new you had a fantastic nuclear deal that
00:49:34.020
uh president obama negotiated where they would not have the nuclear weapon
00:49:38.080
and you ripped it up why because of pressure from the zionist lobby and pressure from that yahoo and
00:49:43.100
israel clear what i think he's being very nice i think iran is a state sponsor of terror they've
00:49:50.640
always been they will never not be i think he's right um october 7th wouldn't have happened if trump
00:49:56.360
were president i don't think russia would have attacked ukraine if trump were president i i don't
00:50:00.980
yes try and prohibit that that's debatable because people got to understand why october 7th happened
00:50:06.760
the reason why october 7th happened chat was because the gulf states in the arab world was on the cusp of
00:50:11.940
um recognizing israel as a um uh as a uh as a nation formally recognizing israel so that would have
00:50:22.280
normalized relations between um uh israel and the arab world now here's the problem okay here is the
00:50:30.500
problem with that the reason why the um hamas and the palestinian people had a big issue and they
00:50:39.720
invaded on october 7th uh was because they wanted the palestine question being solved for many years
00:50:45.920
one of the biggest reasons why the arab world right side araba qatar uae etc would not um normalize
00:50:53.280
relations with israel and become a full partner and ally is because of the problem with palestine
00:50:59.400
the blockade the occupation etc the lack of a two-state solution so many arab countries um and
00:51:07.540
monarchies etc would say look israel we will normalize relations with you once you give the
00:51:12.700
palestinians their sovereignty and the right of self-determination right now this has been the
00:51:18.460
status quo for decades but obviously over time they get weaker and weaker in their stance you know
00:51:24.800
maybe we should just you know normalize relations we can make some money uh right so basically they
00:51:30.640
were supposed to have a meeting to kind of finalize things and what ended up happening was the hamas and
00:51:36.900
the palestinians realized oh shit they're about to start normalizing relations without coming to the
00:51:44.520
table with some type of two-state solution so they knew that if relations were normalized they would be
00:51:49.260
stuck in that position forever now i want to be clear about this i'm not justifying what they
00:51:54.240
did on that day at all i'm just telling you why they did with that day okay because i think it's very
00:51:59.980
important to understand why people do the things that they do right nothing just comes out of nowhere
00:52:05.980
randomly there's typically um very serious geopolitical reasons as to why um military uh insurgent
00:52:13.260
uh insurgent groups commit uh attacks or terrorist attacks or whatever it is and in this case um and
00:52:20.160
there were other escalation things as well with uh in jerusalem and everything else like that uh with
00:52:24.720
the elx mosque um but the big one one of the biggest reasons why that that's not the only reason
00:52:31.280
when i just told you guys but one of the biggest reasons why biggest reasons why was because they
00:52:36.300
were going to normalize relations with israel without answering the palestinian question
00:52:39.660
so they were like okay if we're getting removed from the table and we're no longer a part of the
00:52:47.340
discussion and these arab countries are going to go ahead and normalize relations with our oppressor
00:52:51.860
we're going to take action and that's why they run they ran that military operation on october 7th
00:52:59.520
right um so this is very important guys and especially in western media they don't talk about
00:53:04.280
this they never tell you guys about the why they just tell you what happened but they don't tell you
00:53:07.320
the why and i think it's extremely important to understand even if they're your enemies right
00:53:12.200
why they do what they do because once you understand why they do what they do you could
00:53:17.480
predict the next thing but many americans are not told the truth when it comes to this matter and why
00:53:22.180
they did what they did a lot of people think it's just a bunch of bloodthirsty savages that ran into
00:53:26.680
um the kibbutzes and started killing people and they were just like there to um to create pandemonium
00:53:33.080
but the reality was it was a military operation to kidnap as many hostages as they could to use as
00:53:39.220
political um bargaining chips to uh negotiate the release of palestinian prisoners in the israeli jails
00:53:48.180
okay because a lot of these people have no due process a lot of them are being held illegally in
00:53:53.820
israel uh for a multitude of different crimes you know some have been convicted some have never even
00:53:59.500
had a trial so that's why they did what they did again not rationalizing it not justifying it i'm
00:54:04.760
just explaining to you guys why they did it okay and i think it's very important to understand why
00:54:08.760
people do things um let's see here what we got uh softlife says uh when you get a chance what are
00:54:16.700
your thoughts on this trump's conversion uh bro you've been spamming me with this fucking stupid
00:54:20.400
ass article bro like dude you could look i don't think even if he did convert to to judaism he would
00:54:30.800
never be looked at as as a real jew bro softlife so please stop spamming me with this article bro
00:54:36.000
i i looked at it trump is undergoing i've heard this this rumor for literally years um of him trying to
00:54:43.500
convert to judaism it's it you guys got to understand judaism is not a um it's not an inclusive
00:54:50.760
religion bro it's not a inclusive religion they they do not really actively look to convert people
00:54:57.260
like christianity and islam does they it's a very um exclusive religion versus an inclusive religion
00:55:06.140
like the other abrahamic ones so even if let's say let's assume this article is right which i don't
00:55:11.500
think it is literally comes from the jewish press as a blog like come on dude you think that's
00:55:16.020
reputable even if that is true he's never going to be um a full-fledged jew he just won't
00:55:25.380
he's not ethically jewish his mother isn't jewish so therefore he will he will never be considered a
00:55:33.620
full-blooded one and from getting a nuclear weapon at all costs i'm not sure it's going to happen but
00:55:37.860
i think the smarter thing to do is continue the the massive sanctions on that country until they
00:55:42.560
i don't know patrick they they're they're run by religious fanatics and they hate the west they
00:55:48.400
hate everything we're about i don't think there's any changing their mind and it certainly that's
00:55:51.900
our fault though that's our fault we we removed their democratically elected president which led to
00:55:56.920
the 1979 revolution where it became uh a theocracy so we got to also be honest here with how
00:56:04.180
the ayatollah came into power and why there are theocracy now
00:56:08.340
not in our lifetime i i think a tough hand with iran is better than trying to negotiate with him
00:56:14.760
here's exit and of course i'll come to you go ahead rob we've had direct talks yesterday they began
00:56:19.500
in the past it's been indirect talks with a mediator but there's steve whitkoff meeting with
00:56:23.120
the foreign minister of iran what can you tell us well i can tell you that president trump is dead
00:56:27.220
serious on this issue he's he's dead serious uh that iran cannot have a nuclear weapon he's said that
00:56:32.020
for 20 years he's been consistent that is clear dead he's dead serious that he wants it done at
00:56:36.580
the negotiating table he wants it done peacefully and that's why he's going straight to these talks
00:56:40.060
he set that deadline these were productive talks yesterday i don't want to get ahead of our skis
00:56:43.740
steve whitkoff does a fantastic job but it was a good step and they're gonna they're gonna go at
00:56:47.120
it again on saturday but he's also dead serious that if we can't figure this out at the negotiating
00:56:50.560
table then there are other options to include my department uh to ensure that iran never has a
00:56:54.920
nuclear bomb we hope we never get there we really do maria uh but what we're doing with the
00:56:58.660
houthis and what we're doing in the region we've shown a capability to go far to go deep and to go
00:57:02.740
big and again we don't want to do that but if we have to uh we will to prevent the nuclear bomb in
00:57:07.000
iran's hands amen brother chris one i have thoughts on this but well let's do this you have uh a different
00:57:15.480
set of perspectives i want to hear it first then i'll tell you okay for me with this obviously right now
00:57:21.260
everybody is thinking remember how i said the whole thing with negotiating with china okay here's the
00:57:26.180
terms this is how it's gonna work you're gonna do this and we're gonna agree to this oh okay yeah
00:57:30.000
yeah you're gonna do this and we're gonna do this yeah yeah yeah for sure and you're gonna do this
00:57:33.300
and we're gonna oh for sure absolutely all right here's a deal let's sign and we leave we hold our
00:57:37.540
end of the bargain you don't you think iran doesn't already have one if not close to it if you don't
00:57:42.560
think they have one or they're not close to it you're part of the naive community of course they have
00:57:47.180
it they're saying the number they were looking at was the what's the limit said rob if you can pull up
00:57:51.360
the limits of nuclear negotiation with iran is at 3.67 percent i think it's the number for enriching
00:57:56.480
uranium they're at 60 okay and the negotiation was at 3.67 percent over the last 15 years iran
00:58:01.100
would reduce the stock low in rich uranium by 97 they haven't they're not listening to you
00:58:05.260
so well maybe they're taking time because they really want to negotiate this khamenei said i'm
00:58:09.180
neither overly optimistic neither pessimistic so here's the reality of it let's just say you do deal
00:58:15.440
with them how are you going to hold them accountable that they're not doing it let's actually find
00:58:19.380
that part out okay yeah we're not building a nuclear weapon how do you know how do you audit
00:58:23.320
them how do you find them we tried to do that with them once how do you do they didn't well they did
00:58:26.880
it before with the obama um nuclear deal chat they had international inspectors constantly going to
00:58:32.540
iran and checking so they had outside independent people coming in to look that's how they did it
00:58:36.720
with the um obama administration we had inspectors and they shut the door they shut the door so so how do
00:58:43.620
we know anyways they don't this isn't about negotiating with iran this is about saying cut the shit we put a
00:58:48.000
second nuclear strike force in the region sitting there right now we're going to show force and and
00:58:52.500
have them i don't know i don't know pat maybe israel goes in and does what they didn't in 19 what is
00:58:57.120
82 where we're playing games with iran and israel in the middle of night when night wipes out their
00:59:01.080
whole nuclear well here's what happened a lot of people that have um well they've they've built
00:59:04.460
underground bunkers now and um this is in the 80s i mentioned this to you guys earlier with with
00:59:08.420
salam when they did this when they bombed salam in 81 um israel doesn't have the capability to
00:59:12.120
destroy their nuclear program by themselves they don't they need our help that is why
00:59:16.140
they're constantly saying hey we need aid we need a regime change etc israel cannot do it themselves
00:59:21.620
they cannot do it themselves trust me if they could do it themselves they would have done it a long
00:59:26.480
time ago chat a long time ago i have uh foreign nationals a lot of people that have folks living
00:59:32.080
in iran right now for deals they're moving their folks out they're saying come home whether it's
00:59:36.580
europe asia middle east they're saying come home tensions are too high they may be attacking the
00:59:40.740
nuclear facility that they have that threat is there the ships are already out there close to iran
00:59:44.340
anyway so it's like they're closer okay um this chat came in from magaloso magaloso bro i'll be
00:59:49.400
honest with you bro i'm gonna read what you said verbatim marion when you close the show you should
00:59:53.140
end with the three camera angles in each view you kill it with your points you did it once devastating
00:59:59.060
bro you killed it i don't get what you mean by doing that to close the show though bro please man
01:00:07.200
do it do a spell check use some periods use some commas because i just read what you said
01:00:12.400
verbatim out loud and it doesn't make sense it's enough to be able to say we can do something but
01:00:18.280
it's one of two things either you know they got a nuclear weapon and you're not negotiating you just
01:00:24.480
need this as a excuse to attack either that's one okay or two you are naive and you believe they have
01:00:31.740
nuclear weapons or getting close to it and you're trying to find a way to negotiate with them to get
01:00:36.760
something done i don't think that's the case so which one is it is it are we opening up for israel
01:00:41.820
to do what they want to do does israel want to do something would israel like to attack their
01:00:45.460
nuclear facilities do you think is israel as strong of a intelligence unit that they have that they
01:00:50.540
claim they have that you know we've all seen it and read about it do you think they already have
01:00:55.480
some insiders that know exactly where like what do you think are the chances of them knowing exactly
01:00:58.840
where the where the facilities are 100 perfect i'm going 100 i know i'm not gonna say it i'll take
01:01:03.600
the over yeah okay so let's say we're sitting there saying they know all right do you think
01:01:11.580
israel is going to wait on u.s's lead on how to negotiate this or do you think israel's reputation
01:01:17.660
is they may be saying let's put this out there give us the permission to go in and do the job
01:01:22.920
they're going to attack anyway they've um so i think it was the wall street journal or one of these
01:01:28.220
news publications kind of put this out already that um that they were going to attack no matter
01:01:34.700
what this year sometime so i don't know chat i'll be honest with y'all i think some kind of conflict
01:01:44.460
with iran is inevitable this year i truly do think that some type of some sort of conflict with them is
01:01:49.720
inevitable this year um so it is what it is man permission give us the support give us everything
01:02:01.700
we need just give us the wink we're not going to put your fingerprints on it we'll take care of it
01:02:05.600
like we did in the fine support the fine support and assets um intel uh everything whatever they
01:02:11.300
need to get it done the intel they already have the intel okay so yeah so this is all i i would agree
01:02:16.100
with if your thesis is or if your conclusion is that this is doing all the diplomatic steps that
01:02:21.520
they need to take and then figure out the best cia can't do it they're too exposed right now it's
01:02:27.020
if it happens it would have to be through through israel iran needs somebody to get behind because
01:02:31.060
even with this let's just say they do something something happens to khamenei who's going to
01:02:34.540
replace him somebody else from the same exact regime so they need like someone within iran needs
01:02:38.880
to step up all from the outside someone with a strong backbone who wants the job has to rally
01:02:44.060
and win the people over or so that'll never happen they'll get assassinated beforehand one needs to
01:02:48.280
come to there's no democracy in these arab countries man or well these muslim countries
01:02:52.620
people need to come like who were we talking to the other day oh uh jd vance's brother was here
01:02:58.680
yesterday and we're having a great time we're giving a tour of property he wanted to see the place
01:03:02.000
cory we're having a conversation together and they said for many many years um alba says here the only
01:03:07.420
option is complete denuclearization of the middle east including them boys if iran can't have them
01:03:12.300
um neither should they because in uh in my opinion i think it's more dangerous for them boys to
01:03:16.820
have it but we know that'll never happen smh yes bro i agree and i think iran actually said
01:03:22.120
um that we would uh stop our nuclear program if israel gave up their nukes but we know israel
01:03:26.760
number one is never going to give up their nukes and then number two they'd have to acknowledge that
01:03:30.360
they had them in the first place which would fuck them up so um to this day israel will never
01:03:35.220
publicly and uh officially acknowledge that they have nuclear weapons it's implied
01:03:38.640
but to this day it's still not been um formally admitted there's the family and there's a big
01:03:44.940
reason for that i've spoke to you guys before there is a law on the books that jimmy carter uh signed
01:03:50.120
back in like uh 78 where um countries do not qualify for foreign aid if they run uh uranium
01:03:58.020
enrichment programs nuclear programs etc um that isn't sponsored or you know overseen by the united
01:04:04.180
states that we know that israel has their nuclear weapons they definitely didn't get oversighted by us
01:04:08.520
um they did it illegally and they did it behind our backs this is why jfk got killed a big reason
01:04:14.000
why jfk got killed and we never talk about this um in history so that is another big big reason chat
01:04:20.720
why they can't acknowledge their nuclear program it would uh hurt their bottom line with getting
01:04:25.140
aid from the united states and a lot of people don't know that um if you guys want i could pull
01:04:29.200
up the the law for y'all here but i've shown it on air many times but it's a it's a law that was put
01:04:33.520
into place by jimmy carter in 78 family was saying jd you ought to run and jd didn't want to run but
01:04:38.680
for many years like yeah i'm just a business guy no you ought to run you ought to run finally it's
01:04:41.160
like listen i'm getting so much support that i'm running you know sometimes guys like really really
01:04:44.580
want to run and you can feel the ambition then there's the guys that don't want to run but you're
01:04:47.800
the right guy for the job right okay iran needs to get behind somebody to rally to change the flipping
01:04:52.660
climate that's in iran fyi if iranians are watching this you only have three and a half years left
01:04:57.560
that's it you have three and a half years under him trump he's not going to do the job for you guys
01:05:03.480
he said it on the podcast but the climate is ripe right now that if you guys do your part and you
01:05:08.240
get behind somebody and somebody with courage that's willing to come and do something in iran
01:05:11.160
you guys have a fighting chance right now maybe you haven't had a chance like this you had a couple
01:05:16.320
in the last 15 20 years this is a chance for somebody in iran to step up a voice or for you to
01:05:21.200
rally behind to say we want things to change president's not going to do it for you trump's not going to do it
01:05:26.160
for you no yeah but if the iranian people did that bro they'd literally get put in jail and shit man
01:05:30.780
everybody else is going to do it for you it has to be internal if you get close to the finish line
01:05:34.880
then somebody can help you but you have to show that you're getting close to the finish line
01:05:38.460
nobody else is going to do that part you got to go that close to it then if you do then the other
01:05:42.200
person's going to be like great it shows that you're interested it shows that you're committed
01:05:44.980
to it it shows you want to go through the pain but i think if iran similar story for me with china
01:05:48.440
the reason why i'm supported with the tariff stuff that we're doing right now is because i know
01:05:50.900
somebody else has to deal with the tariffs with china in the next 5 10 15 20 years
01:05:53.920
you're not going to have another guy like trump in a while you're not you got one right now and
01:05:59.340
it's not hey come cause a war no why don't you guys do something there to want to change the
01:06:03.300
revolution get up there again start making some noise this is the time for iranians to want to do
01:06:06.800
it i don't say it's an easy thing i'm not sitting here saying hey how come you're not thinking about
01:06:10.360
the livelihood of our families and all this other stuff i don't say it's going to be easy all i'm
01:06:13.440
saying to you is if you want iran to change so when we think about the middle east pre-79 the middle
01:06:18.960
east was pretty peaceful they didn't have a lot of issues in the middle east pre-79
01:06:21.840
khomeini coming in ever since 79 khomeini came in the islamic revolutionary guard came in
01:06:26.960
the middle east has been in shambles not iran the middle east has been in shambles since 79 it's
01:06:31.780
been 46 years now what if some of the folks out there start rallying behind some names we'd love
01:06:36.540
to know some of these names right now if i told you who's the voice who would you say we don't
01:06:39.860
have a lot of names who is it who's going out there who's holding meetings who's going across
01:06:44.340
out there at dubai holding meetings with a lot of different leaderships coming through
01:06:46.840
who's doing that i don't know i don't think a lot of it's happening or else the rest of the world
01:06:49.800
will be talking about it but i think iran has a chance to do something with it right now
01:06:52.560
and this discussion i think at any point if the speculation is that these guys israel is hoping
01:06:57.380
to kind of like set it up for us to attack at any point something can happen there and i don't think
01:07:01.480
it's going to be we're trying to negotiate a nuclear deal i don't think so that's my opinion i may be
01:07:06.040
wrong that's right i mean great it's just and i and again we talked about it what two podcasts ago
01:07:11.140
it's about the people and everybody's always talking about we talk about we criticize israel
01:07:14.300
you criticize iran it's not the people that are living there it's the government so for when you're
01:07:18.500
saying like for people to step up that's a really dangerous thing like meaning because like imagine
01:07:22.480
going against that government but i think it's a necessary thing easier said than done because
01:07:26.060
we're here and you guys are over there but it has to happen okay i feel dude my mom and dad are from
01:07:31.280
iran jacob was says uh i think he is saying that you should normalize what you did once in ending
01:07:37.040
your stream you cycle through each camera i don't remember doing that that's why i'm so confused jacob white
01:07:42.080
um hood data says another boomer from the bombs away club estimates check out douglas mcgregor he's
01:07:49.840
real knowledgeable on iran and the border topic yeah i've watched a bit of douglas mcgregor
01:07:53.740
that's fit from iran i love like you guys already know how we feel about you guys but somebody a
01:07:58.880
movement something has to spark or else it's never going to change and what a great freaking point
01:08:03.040
this bull that's in this matador trump he's who knows what's after him but right now right now is a
01:08:08.300
thing and i just pray to god that you know you guys have the support and it'll come but you guys have to
01:08:11.460
step it up it'll be nasty don't yeah oh it's gonna be ugly you probably have to lose one or two or more
01:08:15.160
people in russia i mean they lose them you go every day they lose them every day last night i had giselle
01:08:20.820
sharmad on her father was stolen uh falsely convicted uh tortured executed uh biden couldn't get him back
01:08:30.620
trump couldn't uh wasn't you know wasn't here and um they then sent the body back his tongue was cut out
01:08:38.260
parts of them are missing these are terrorists okay so to pat's point can't be trusted i will say
01:08:46.000
that political payback is sometimes gratuitous well the other thing too is that they can't trust us
01:08:50.340
man like we had that nuclear deal in place and we literally tore it up bro like the the problem is
01:08:55.620
that there's no trust between either country right we don't trust them they don't trust us and you know
01:09:00.120
trump ripping up the nuclear deal for israel definitely didn't help definitely didn't help
01:09:05.340
hurt us quite a bit that's why they said in the first place we don't want to meet with y'all
01:09:09.580
trump sent a letter said hey you guys got to get rid of your nuclear program sent it directly to
01:09:13.700
the iranian government and they said well we're not meeting you guys with you guys directly because
01:09:17.280
this is a non-starter and a big reason why is because they can't trust us because of us ripping
01:09:20.980
the nuclear deal from before so both parties are guilty for doing some sneaky shit both right being
01:09:27.080
very fair here leaving that deal was a mistake it was all you had and now you'll be lucky to
01:09:33.900
agreed get a deal that looks like that to your point it probably won't be a deal at all
01:09:37.640
you don't know any names because they'd be dead that's this is true rare w for cumo why you don't
01:09:43.920
know any names about who may be bubbling up uh to have a populist revolt because this is an oppressive
01:09:49.500
regime i don't know what the answer is um israel needs american support because they don't have
01:09:55.320
the munitions that we call those bunker busters to go deep enough to get where it has to go america
01:10:00.000
has them so we would be involved militarily on it if you keep them from getting a nuke now do you
01:10:05.920
keep them from getting a nuke forever no there has to be regime change there and i don't think we know
01:10:12.260
what to do uh i don't think trump knows what to do i think talking can't hurt but to your point
01:10:17.760
they can't be trusted no way no way no i mean look i put iran and china in the same place
01:10:23.520
i put iran and china in the same place we had richard warner the other day and he's talking
01:10:26.680
about the fact that you know dang jiao pink who was a guy back in the day so he was a pragmatist
01:10:30.600
he went to japan and said hey i know we don't have the best relationship right now how did you kind
01:10:33.640
of fix your economy and he says hey we got 5 000 banks 5 million loan officers doing 35 job
01:10:37.720
loan applications per week she come uh what do you call it dang comes back starts working on the
01:10:42.760
banks the economy changes everything changes she is not dang dang is willing to go talk she is not
01:10:48.280
that guy if she wants to do something with us she would have come to us sit down and have a
01:10:51.780
conversation with if we get that meeting taking place okay then maybe sentiment changes situation
01:10:57.300
changes but hey if i'm trump you know what else i'm doing you want to kind of fix the tariff allow
01:11:01.260
all our social media companies into china why are you worried about it allow our social media
01:11:04.420
companies into china allow facebook google youtube allow us in china why are you worried let's kind
01:11:08.780
of make this thing work it's not going to be happening so the way they're negotiating there's a lot
01:11:12.860
that can be done but we'll see what's going to i'd rather deal with china than iran yeah me too
01:11:16.220
iran has absolutely no upside to the world no china doesn't say death upon america
01:11:19.900
china just doesn't like the western ideas that we have and they're still clinging on to communism
01:11:23.840
and the sanctions squeeze the people that's the one problem with the sanctions is you squeeze the
01:11:28.600
people life becomes horrible for the people that you want to help yes it's hard to do it's hard to
01:11:33.380
do the right way a lot of you have been asking about the cigar lounge you want to come to it
01:11:36.360
and uh we've been having back to back to back this last friday was the biggest event we ever had at
01:11:40.800
the cigar lounge which was fantastic however all right so um let's see here so that this is um
01:11:46.520
that all right so we're going to get into um so we covered some stuff we covered the update on the
01:11:52.660
um iran situation um now we are going to go ahead and go into uh the next topic guys which is going to
01:11:59.940
be um the attorney general which this is crazy stuff fox news reports this uh literally 28 minutes ago
01:12:08.020
um first let's go ahead this comes from the new york post today's cover trump administration refers
01:12:13.280
new york attorney general latisha james for potential prosecution over alleged mortgage fraud
01:12:23.360
and for those of you that don't know who she is
01:12:27.840
she is the attorney general for the state of new york okay uh latisha ann james
01:12:35.100
born october 18 1958 is an american lawyer and politician serving since 2019 as the 67th attorney
01:12:42.880
general for new york state nyag having won the 2018 election to succeed barbara underwood a member
01:12:49.080
of the democratic party james is the first african-american and first woman to be elected new york
01:12:53.260
attorney general so now i know you guys are probably wondering well hold on wait wait one second
01:12:58.340
what's going on here so this woman guys was one of the main people that was behind the prosecution
01:13:05.600
of donald trump um a couple of years back for the falsifying business records okay um her alongside
01:13:15.340
alvin bragg put a face the name for you guys also a lawyer american politician and lawyer who serves
01:13:25.500
the new york city county district attorney covering manhattan okay so the attorney general i've described
01:13:31.200
their duties for you guys before but the attorney general's job guys basically is they are think of
01:13:36.340
her as the um she is the pam bondy for the state of new york so pam bondy is the attorney general she
01:13:41.840
oversees all the law enforcement agencies under the department of justice to include the prosecutor's
01:13:46.020
office right in the state of new york similar structure she oversees all the law enforcement for
01:13:51.960
the state of new york okay and uh prosecutorial offices so she basically is alvin bragg's boss
01:13:57.360
okay and alvin bragg um you know is the main new uh new york county district attorney he runs the
01:14:05.140
office out of manhattan okay this is through the state system of course not the federal system
01:14:10.160
all right now the reason why this is important is because alvin bragg and letitia james led the charge
01:14:16.100
to going after but donald trump for falsifying business records as you guys know with the stormy
01:14:21.100
daniels case basically long story short trump had some type of situation with stormy daniels
01:14:28.300
okay this woman who is a porn star right uh she basically hooked up with trump sometime in like
01:14:40.360
2006 or something like that and uh trump paid her off but the way he paid her off allegedly was
01:14:46.860
illegal and falsifying business records um because they made it seem as though them paying her off
01:14:52.000
was uh you know during the course of everyday business um and uh basically his guy uh cohen
01:15:00.340
uh where is he so basically okay so the an alleged one night stand uh one night sexual encounter took
01:15:08.600
place in 2006 between businessmen and later u.s president donald trump and pornographic film
01:15:11.820
actor stormy daniel followed by a conspiracy on the part of trump to cover up the story in a month prior
01:15:16.580
to the 2016 u.s uh presidential election and trump's falsification of his records as part of the
01:15:21.300
conspiracy the story broke in 2018 when the wall street journal reported that trump's former attorney
01:15:25.080
michael cohen paid 130 000 dollars to daniels as hush money to buy her sounds during the 2016 trump
01:15:30.700
campaign and so to make this clear also cohen basically fronted the money himself he took out
01:15:36.500
like a home equity line of credit or something he paid her off and then he billed trump for it as legal
01:15:42.800
expenses okay um and the reason why trump did this paid this off was because back in 2016 when trump
01:15:50.400
was running for president if you guys remember the um the scandal with the grabber by the pussy thing
01:15:55.540
broke now when that story broke obviously it impacted trump's ability um significantly to be taken
01:16:02.500
seriously it really hurt his campaign so he needed to ensure that any other ugly things that would
01:16:07.740
rear their uh that rear their heads to mess up his campaign would be handled so he basically got his
01:16:13.120
lawyer slash aide kept going at the time to pay off stormy daniel so this wouldn't come back and blow up in
01:16:18.520
his face which ended up coming back later after he was president right um and trump i think got someone
01:16:25.760
else that he was friends with out of the national inquire to pull the story right now when you're a famous
01:16:30.760
individual with a lot of money um you you have guys like this this is called like professional
01:16:35.180
fixers right where um you want to run for some type of public office you want to maintain a certain
01:16:40.320
image or whatever you deal with these people where they dead stories before they get out right that
01:16:44.980
can hurt your image this is just something that the rich and wealthy have right as a matter of fact
01:16:50.140
kanye west had one of these guys um for a while and the loser actually posted a video after uh kanye said
01:16:56.360
the things he said about you know uh them boys he put out like an image of uh kanye like uh like
01:17:06.480
high on some drugs while he would like uh during a video where he hooked up with some chicken vegas
01:17:11.060
like 10 years ago and he said look remember when you paid me to get rid of this story blah blah blah
01:17:15.500
so the point i'm trying to make is high level security is high level um celebrities typically have
01:17:21.580
fixer people that they pay to get rid of shit like this right and make sure it never hits the
01:17:26.500
media it's a very common tactic uh with with the uh with the big celebrities so this scandal okay
01:17:33.020
this scandal between trump hooking up with stormy daniels and the payoff led because he paid her
01:17:40.640
through his business the trump you know business this led to the state of new york pursuing a criminal
01:17:48.760
investigation against donald trump which ended up getting him indicted later on and this led to a
01:17:54.940
historic event it was the first time that a president or a former president of the united states
01:18:00.000
was charged with a crime in american history okay so obviously leticia james and alvin bragg being the
01:18:08.940
first ones to bring these charges against donald trump set history okay because i told you guys this
01:18:17.460
before when you originally got charged that this was a political witch hunt and people were trying
01:18:20.940
to make their names off of going after donald trump because this falsifying business records uh
01:18:25.180
investigation or charge that they used is typically a misdemeanor but what they did was they upped it
01:18:31.520
to a felony which is very rare and pretty much unprecedented but again like i said before they wanted to
01:18:39.960
get to the table first and charge him because after he was charged by the state of new york for this
01:18:44.960
falsifying business records case the feds followed up and did a search warrant at his house in mar-a-lago
01:18:51.840
okay and uh they ended up going after him for the document case then georgia followed up and charged
01:18:59.600
them for the rico then washington dc followed up and charged them for the insurrection so you guys see
01:19:05.140
where i'm going here four different jurisdictions four different um entities wanted to prosecute trump
01:19:11.960
so new york was the first ones to do it they did it with a bullshit charge they did it with a weak case
01:19:18.820
but they did it they charged them and they actually went to trial and won okay so trump was convicted
01:19:25.220
now with that said i lay the ground there for you guys because now how the tables have fucking turned man
01:19:36.420
so this leads us to our story with um leticia james faces legal peril over alleged fraud let's get into
01:19:46.760
it sandra a lot to get into with this and you've got the perfect guests we've got the perfect guests
01:19:52.080
talk about it he's here retired nypd inspector and fox news contributor paul morrow who reported on this
01:19:56.580
back in early february we'll get your thoughts on this beating bride and moments first this is an
01:20:01.560
incredible story oh the irony yeah what a turnaround so the irony it doesn't even do it justice
01:20:07.660
fucking incredible bro oh late sam mentor as eric mentioned was arrested for a financial fraud
01:20:16.660
himself about 40 something years ago the infamous crazy eddie case that he was part of the architecture
01:20:22.720
of but that said he subsequently after pleading and testifying on behalf of the government went to
01:20:27.960
work for the government helping them make white collar cases so he knows what he's talking about he
01:20:32.640
brings this thing to me on my ops desk blog and he lays it out and he's got documents and it was very
01:20:39.880
compelling it's very hard to argue that to me at least to my eyes the evidence that he's uncovered here
01:20:45.960
really looks like there's a pattern of obfuscation stuff that she has signed and notarized that does
01:20:52.120
not seem to be accurate and so the story has been bubbling up and then when laura ingram breaks it
01:20:56.600
nationally it gets attention and as you mentioned it's been referred to doj for a criminal referral
01:21:02.740
and that is no joke that is the top of the prosecutorial food chain she's yep so the part
01:21:08.360
obviously um the it's going to the feds basically you're going to have to answer this out and you
01:21:13.780
were on this very early as well with your substack when pull up call for number one right here you had
01:21:17.320
the headline a sunday report a tish james scandal is the new york attorney general guilty of exactly what
01:21:24.040
she sued donald trump for you then go into the details of fucking wild bro now obviously it's
01:21:28.620
different right trump was to kind of pay for a cover-up right and use business funds to do it
01:21:34.020
her is real estate fraud which i'm going to talk about that here in a second with you guys it's
01:21:38.340
actually a big reason why i tell you guys to do the things that i tell you guys when it comes to um
01:21:46.460
what she's potentially accused of now so what's it like for you to now see that there are potential
01:21:57.580
criminal charges being referred to doj when you you had this a couple months ago yeah i mean it's
01:22:01.980
gratifying that it's getting attention and we have to be careful look she's a public figure i get that
01:22:05.880
but she gets her chance to answer this out she has it hasn't even been a complaint or an indictment so
01:22:10.980
you know she might have answers but as i said it's really really compelling and i have to give
01:22:15.160
credit to sam antar because he just kept digging away on this there's people have thrown all kinds
01:22:19.520
of shade at him here oh you're working for the trump administration all of that's completely not true
01:22:23.240
he hasn't worked for the government in a long long time but there were two really salient aspects
01:22:27.880
of this that if you have any kind of an investigatory mind you have to say to yourself there looks
01:22:32.160
like there's some real smoke here she's claimed these virginia houses at least one of them as her
01:22:37.360
primary residence when she's the attorney general in fact some of that paperwork was filed
01:22:41.760
when she was about to bring the case against donald trump so that took real chutzpah so the other
01:22:47.020
thing though and i think this is real trouble is that her brooklyn residence she has a residence in
01:22:51.880
brooklyn that she has repeatedly claimed over the course of the ownership that it's only four
01:22:57.380
residences why five or above is commercial and that's going to be a higher rate and so she's so
01:23:04.240
um and i also have the criminal referral right here for you guys as well which we'll go ahead
01:23:10.180
and take a look at this okay we will go ahead and take a look at this as well let's um watch the
01:23:16.400
stories then we're going to go through it it's always claimed she's the attorney general in fact
01:23:20.540
some of that paperwork was filed when she was about to bring the case against donald trump so that took
01:23:25.900
real chutzpah that's crazy she damn imagine going after trump for fossil buying business records while
01:23:33.220
you're committing mortgage fraud bro oh man the pot calling the kettle black quite literally
01:23:39.920
in this case so the other thing though and i think this is real trouble is that her brooklyn
01:23:46.940
residence she has a residence in brooklyn that she has repeatedly claimed over the course of the
01:23:52.340
ownership that it's only four residences why five or above is commercial and that's going to be a
01:23:58.240
higher rate and so she's always claimed through a series of paperwork filings that it's only four
01:24:04.520
residences but the new york city certificate of occupancy which is a determining factor says that
01:24:10.980
it's five and you got to say to yourself something oh lord bro
01:24:14.880
oh man now okay you guys are probably wondering well myra why does it matter so as you guys know
01:24:24.940
i'm heavily into real estate and i literally just closed a commercial deal
01:24:27.440
so in the real estate world there's two different entities okay you have residential and you have
01:24:35.460
commercial residential is typically um a single family home a duplex a triplex or up to a fourplex
01:24:42.460
okay and then commercial is anything above uh four units now why is this important because you're able
01:24:49.020
to get significantly more favorable terms right with a residential loan why is that because with a
01:24:57.700
residential loan um a lot of the times there's more programs and more things put in place with
01:25:03.460
residential loans to allow americans to be homebuyers there's programs for first-time homebuyers
01:25:07.980
there's programs for people that are uh lower earners hell they just literally put out a program
01:25:12.560
like a year or two ago um where um bank of america was literally giving you out a loan if you were a
01:25:18.740
minority okay so even though that's insane uh basically reverse racism the point is is that there's a multitude
01:25:25.600
of programs out there for you to procure your first home as long as it's residential and they tend to
01:25:31.960
have better rates better terms better um payoff options etc all right so there's far more ways
01:25:39.040
to fund a residential deal now on the commercial side
01:25:43.440
winds up happening with the commercial side is you are more evaluated on the property's ability
01:25:50.740
to generate money okay so when you do a residential deal they look at you the uh person that's trying
01:25:57.180
to borrow the money and a lot of stake is put on your credit score uh your debt to income ratio etc
01:26:04.080
a lot of that is put on the line but the positive is is that you're able to qualify for more programs
01:26:09.400
you're able to get away with putting down far less money maybe three and a half percent down five percent
01:26:13.780
down ten percent down you could go ahead and get away with it however when you do a commercial deal
01:26:18.580
you have to put a significant amount of money down typically somewhere between 10 to 25 percent
01:26:23.200
right because most of the time if not all of the time when you buy a uh commercial property you're
01:26:28.800
buying it as an investor and when you buy as an investor you're not going to get the same level
01:26:33.420
um of uh you know good interest rates in terms as you would with a residential deal especially if you
01:26:40.400
live in it if you live in it right you can get and negotiate better interest rates lower um uh down
01:26:47.880
payments etc now where a commercial deal right we talked about the positives with the residential and the
01:26:51.720
negatives where yes you get these good terms but they start to look at you as the borrower more
01:26:55.900
with a commercial deal they don't look so much at you as the borrower rather they look at the property
01:27:00.480
and how the property performs okay so if the property cash flows that's really all they care about
01:27:05.220
they just want to make sure that um the income from the property um covers the debt okay of whatever
01:27:11.660
loan you get but typically you have to put a significant amount of more money down okay 10 like like i said
01:27:17.740
10 to 25 percent 30 percent in some cases um for these commercial loans and i'm keeping this very
01:27:22.280
basic so i don't like confuse you guys right there's adjustable rate mortgages all this other shit which
01:27:26.440
a lot of people do for commercial loans but the point i'm trying to make is pursuant to this conversation
01:27:30.540
here with her why she would go ahead and try to do everything in her power to make a commercial property
01:27:36.940
um be listed as a residential property is because you get far more favorable terms better interest rates
01:27:41.340
uh you could get ask for more money you could put less money down etc and in new york city especially
01:27:48.080
guys okay um real estate is very expensive extremely expensive you're not going to be able to get that
01:27:54.780
fourplex that she has or fiveplex in this case is probably worth a few million dollars okay and it's
01:27:59.740
probably a piece of crap too it's probably not even that nice but it's worth millions upon millions of
01:28:04.380
dollars i wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't up into the three to ten million dollar range even though
01:28:09.840
it's in brooklyn because brooklyn is going through hardcore gentrification right now brooklyn used to
01:28:14.440
be the hood but thanks to the skyrocketing prices of manhattan and the city in general um a lot of those
01:28:20.680
people that can no longer afford manhattan go to brooklyn instead and it's been going through
01:28:26.100
gentrification for the better part of the past decade and property prices have increased significantly
01:28:30.620
so it would make sense why she would try to um get residential type uh uh terms on her contract or
01:28:44.620
on her paperwork over a commercial okay so give me one thing to have that makes sense guys that's a
01:28:50.420
quick little glimpse of how real estate works but from you know the commercial versus the residential side
01:28:55.540
but yes there are heavy incentives to try to get properties under a residential loan or label as a
01:29:03.620
residential over a commercial property because you do get better um more favorable rates in other
01:29:10.060
conditions give me ones that that makes sense guys obviously that's a very um condensed explanation
01:29:19.820
but i'm doing this for the purposes of you guys um simply understanding it for in relation to this
01:29:28.200
topic oh mel she's been on a government salary we should get in all of this property yeah i mean you
01:29:33.900
know she's quite the real estate tycoon seems like a significant yeah let's actually look at what her salary
01:29:40.560
let's see governor kathy hochel quarter million attorney general okay 220 000 a year
01:30:16.600
oh what the hell social media posts inflate net worth of ny attorney general
01:30:26.980
okay lisa james new york attorney general has a personal net worth of about 2.7 million according
01:30:33.260
to her recent financial disclosure statement and accounting required of all state officers
01:30:37.100
employees whose annual salary exceeds 108 000 um
01:30:41.020
let's see here or she could be investigated for fraud immediately okay let me see if i can
01:31:01.420
what the hell bro just tell me how much she made man this is shit bro
01:31:13.500
because i remember i looked at this for mayor adams seems as though like new york state has like some
01:31:21.560
type of um situation where they obviously um have to disclose how much money they are worth
01:31:36.120
okay so the new york post reports okay 220 000 roughly okay
01:31:45.480
and this just broke out this morning okay here's our is this her property right here oh this might be it right now okay let's uh
01:31:53.480
okay um and this is from the twitter thing i showed you guys earlier
01:31:59.320
embattled new york attorney uh general latisha james
01:32:03.240
duck reporters outside her brooklyn home wednesday refusing to answer questions about her simmering mortgage fraud scandal
01:32:09.320
well yeah obviously oh here she is right here um
01:32:13.320
james who infamously declared no one is above the law would prosecute a former president donald trump
01:32:17.240
faint talking to her on her cell phone as reporters peppered her with questions about getting slapped with a federal criminal referral alleging mortgage fraud
01:32:30.360
and you guys are probably saying like bro what the hell this looks like crap well this is new york city for you guys
01:32:34.360
according to a letter obtained by a post james who draws an annual salary of 220 000 allegedly falsified records
01:32:42.360
uh for a virginia property she claimed as her principal residence in 2023 while she was still serving as a new york state prosecutor
01:32:48.360
remember when i tell you guys all the time that if you're gonna go ahead and get one of these um loans
01:32:54.680
where you're putting very little money down right uh fha or whatever how many times have i told you guys
01:32:58.760
on air do not get these loans if you don't intend to live in a property and make it your principal
01:33:04.760
home i tell you guys this all the time you guys see why i tell you this how many times a lot of you
01:33:10.120
guys in the chat right now some of y'all are my witnesses how many times have i told you guys do not
01:33:15.640
do not lie on these forms get a favorable loan term
01:33:19.800
right under the premise that you're gonna live in that property as your um uh principal residence
01:33:28.120
and lie why because of shit like this now they're probably gonna cook her for this guys
01:33:33.160
because it's pretty fucking black and white right um so she got a sweetheart home loan for virginia
01:33:41.240
property she claimed as her principal residence to uh 2023 while she was still serving as a new york
01:33:45.320
state prosecutor and here's the uh the form right and i'm gonna go ahead and show this uh we're gonna go
01:33:51.480
through this form here for you guys as well right this came from the u.s federal housing we'll keep
01:34:12.680
all right so niggas actually would have showed up to her house
01:34:14.760
so she purchased it in 1983 it looks like yeah she purchased it in okay yo that thing is worth a
01:34:27.160
bunch of money now bro looks like a good neighborhood uh in brooklyn
01:34:59.160
all right so here it is um yo chat what's the address can one y'all give me the address
01:35:23.160
real quick in chat i want to google this thing and see how much it's worth
01:35:34.000
god damn it let me see if i can up the quality here all right 1080p
01:35:41.740
check one of y'all do me a quick favor uh castle club guys or one of you guys um get the um get
01:35:51.880
out of here i want to put into zillow and see how much this house is worth
01:35:54.960
it's got to be worth a few million bro got to be worth at least
01:36:03.140
i'm gonna say somewhere in the range of two to ten million at least
01:36:08.200
no it's not doxing bro this is public knowledge now
01:36:12.180
see i can't make out this sign if i knew what the fuck this sign was i'd be able to look it up
01:36:23.780
can't make out that sign once again bro this nigga camera trash bro
01:37:18.580
uh okay let me go back i'll show y'all the number
01:37:30.460
11402 right here so this one's probably 1140 or 11404
01:37:36.640
it's one of those two probably or 06 or some shit
01:37:39.140
it looks like it looks like it looks like it looks like it looks like 11404
01:37:46.060
all right you know what chat let's go ahead and try this
01:38:52.460
But it looks like we're in the right neck of the woods
01:38:57.600
Even though all of Brooklyn kind of looks like this
01:39:45.740
Alright, so we see this White House in the corner
01:40:36.720
Let's go ahead and put this shit into, like, Zillow
01:40:58.340
Especially if it's a five unit, like they're saying
01:41:19.660
But the other property in Brooklyn that they're talking about
01:41:22.320
Might be the real estate property that she rents out, chat
01:41:47.860
You mentioned that this was broken on the increment
01:41:50.480
Where she lives in versus the property in Brooklyn that they're talking about
01:41:54.220
Is more than likely probably an investment property
01:44:18.800
Basically her crib is worth like 2 million, chat
01:44:23.500
I said it would be somewhere between 2 to 10 million
01:44:25.380
She's always claimed through a series of paperwork filings
01:44:58.760
Which we're going to get into that here in a second
01:45:03.560
And you've got to say to yourself something else
01:45:10.220
That's not enough to be buying houses like this
01:45:35.460
And that the powerful should not be given a free pass
01:45:44.540
I'm honestly just not sure how you defend against this
01:45:48.240
Unless you say that these are fraudulent documents
01:45:56.500
It's precisely what she brought against Donald Trump
01:45:59.880
Which is to say that you overinflated the value of your properties
01:46:03.420
In order to get more mortgages than your building was worth
01:46:19.220
Now, it's not at the level of what Donald Trump did
01:46:23.380
You're talking about buildings on Fifth Avenue, et cetera
01:46:25.340
But her building is at least four to five times
01:46:32.780
And some of the mortgages are in the public records
01:46:39.800
They're going to have to go into the Virginia records
01:46:48.100
Which is, who's living in the Virginia buildings?
01:46:56.000
And it's probably out of the statute of limitations
01:47:00.400
And put her dad down as her husband, essentially
01:47:19.240
And apparently there is some financial advantage to that
01:47:29.320
It does look like her father went down as her spouse
01:47:57.700
It's important that attorneys general representing our respective states
01:48:10.340
The president of these United States is not above the law
01:48:15.920
No matter how rich, powerful, or politically connected you are
01:48:38.700
Against New York Attorney General Letitia James
02:17:49.680
So, so Martyrmaid, okay, for those that don't know, Martyrmaid, a.k.a. Daryl Cooper, he appeared on this podcast right here, the Tucker Carlson pod.
02:18:04.480
Okay. So this guy blew up from doing this interview right here.
02:18:22.900
I'm American. I'm not English, so I don't have any weird motive in asking this.
02:18:27.940
I'm American. I'm not English, so I don't have any weird motive in asking this.
02:18:35.940
I got in trouble with my podcast partner, Jocko Willink, one time because he's a New England Dutchman who's his family.
02:18:44.300
It's near and dear to their Dutch, but very near and dear to their heart that Winston Churchill is a hero, right?
02:18:52.800
And I told him that I think, and maybe I'm being a little hyperbolic, maybe, but I told him, maybe trying to provoke him a little bit,
02:19:00.660
but that I thought Churchill was the chief villain of the Second World War.
02:19:04.000
Okay. And this statement, this statement right here, chat, sent the internet into a fucking frenzy, bro.
02:19:15.620
I got in trouble with my podcast partner, Jocko Willink, one time because he's a New England Dutchman who's his family.
02:19:38.000
It's near and dear to their Dutch, but very near and dear to their heart that Winston Churchill is a hero, right?
02:19:46.740
And I told him that I think, and maybe I'm being a little hyperbolic, maybe, but I told him, maybe trying to provoke him a little bit,
02:19:54.760
that I thought Churchill was the chief villain of the Second World War.
02:19:57.600
Now, this statement literally created a bomb drop all across Twitter because by Daryl Cooper saying that Winston Churchill was the real bad guy, again.
02:20:16.880
I think, and maybe I'm being a little hyperbolic, maybe, but I told him, maybe trying to provoke him a little bit,
02:20:23.680
that I thought Churchill was the chief villain of the Second World War.
02:20:26.580
Now, we know who everyone thinks is the chief villain of World War II.
02:20:33.200
And to question that will always put you in hot water.
02:20:41.380
I remember when this interview dropped back in what?
02:20:47.500
When this interview dropped and he made this statement, it sent Twitter in a frenzy.
02:20:51.320
Nazi became one of the most popular search terms for, like, two weeks.
02:20:58.260
It reinvigorated a very uncomfortable conversation.
02:21:05.680
And reinvigorated a conversation that a lot of people can go to jail for, guys.
02:21:10.420
And it brought up the uncomfortable topic of World War II revisionism.
02:21:20.580
Engaging in World War II revisionism, especially a certain event,
02:21:26.680
which I'm just going to call the Cookie Monster event.
02:21:35.060
Questioning the Cookie Monster event and how many cookies were baked
02:21:39.260
will always get you in trouble if it's not a certain number.
02:21:50.440
So, if you say that six million cookies weren't baked,
02:21:58.260
There's multiple countries that will put you in jail
02:22:01.660
for engaging and talking about the Cookie Monster event.
02:22:09.880
So, to say that Winston Churchill was the main bad guy
02:22:20.600
basically kind of pushes back against the narrative
02:22:42.520
And this is called revisionism, okay, or denial.
02:22:53.640
who I would argue is probably the biggest conservative podcaster
02:23:01.160
because I don't consider Rogan a conservative at all.
02:23:14.720
You know, I'll say Tucker Carlson is an actual real conservative.
02:23:17.740
He's actual, you know, obviously it's light right-wing,
02:24:07.600
Let's play a little bit more of this from the Tucker stuff
02:24:24.300
you see that he was primarily responsible for that war,
02:24:28.000
becoming something other than an invasion of Poland,
02:24:34.600
like, people are very often, I find, surprised to learn.
02:24:49.700
Well, and the next thought that comes into their head
02:24:51.560
is that, oh, you're saying Churchill was the chief villain,
02:25:00.580
They're the good guys if you think he's a villain.
02:25:14.160
that Churchill might've been the chief villain.
02:25:35.080
that communism, socialism were the enemy and everything.
02:25:52.860
Like, if you take him at his word in Mein Kampf,
02:26:13.900
He had been from, like, small-town Germany, right?
02:26:21.820
His father was a civil servant, respectable people.
02:26:31.620
nationalists, would complain about the workers,
02:26:45.800
from his previous interview with Tucker Carlson,
02:26:53.520
Both people on the left and on the right went wild.
02:27:06.220
Joe Rogan platforming Daryl Cooper's dangerous ideas, right?
02:27:27.780
See, so even these people that are critical of Israel,
02:27:38.480
because they're left-wing political commentators,
02:27:47.300
trying to say that Joe Rogan platformed the Nazi, right?
02:27:57.300
and it's something that I've been thinking about quite a bit,
02:28:01.040
especially as Joe Rogan has had, like, numerous...
02:28:04.940
Joe Rogan has had, like, numerous people on his broadcast
02:28:14.140
who, you know, literally drinks the blood of children.
02:28:21.620
Billionaires who are doing, unironically doing the blood rituals
02:28:30.080
while simultaneously inventing new ways of killing children overseas.
02:28:44.300
He points to other people and tries to say that they're anti-Semitic
02:28:46.740
to try to get the ADL crosshairs off of his own back
02:28:53.720
Oily face after sucking the blood of a baby like a vampire.
02:28:57.000
Bro, it's like these niggas say the same thing over and over.
02:28:59.720
Oh, Joe Rogan interviews billionaires that suck blood.
02:29:10.080
and he's saying the same shit that this motherfucker said?
02:29:12.400
Robert Barron, he's talking to a corrupt Republican politician
02:29:18.960
throughout the entire interview, as we've seen.
02:29:26.140
It's humiliating, is what I would describe it as.
02:29:47.220
So, there's this guy by the name of Daryl Cooper.
02:29:58.540
and he did this retelling of the history of Palestine and Israel.