The Left’s New Rosa Parks Is an Alleged Wife-Beater | 5⧸6⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 9 minutes
Words per Minute
176.89513
Summary
Glenn Beck is back on the air! Glenn and Sarah talk about the latest in the Trump administration and how it could affect the future of the country. Glenn also talks about how he almost died on an American Airlines flight.
Transcript
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Where shadows hide, feel the dark on every side, stand your ground when times get dark, gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
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Another press conference from President Trump yesterday.
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Man, he's been answering a lot of questions from a lot of reporters lately.
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We'll get into some of the things he had to say and some of the plans this administration has coming up in one minute.
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I know he had some issues with American Airlines.
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Did Glenn survive the airport situation that he had to deal with?
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It sounded like trials and tribulations of Glenn Beck.
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I mean, he was, this is, I feel very scared of what we're going to get on the air tomorrow.
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It could just be a three-hour straight monologue about how much he hates American Airlines.
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I would enjoy that because I share some of that enmity for American Airlines.
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I've had nothing but good experiences with them.
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I mean, and that's the one I fly all the time because it's in Dallas.
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Their hub is here, so every flight is basically American Airlines unless you intentionally
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I mean, I think the thing to consider is maybe they just don't like you and Glenn.
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I've been reading it online a lot the last couple of days.
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A lot of people just saying, you know, Glenn should stay in Europe.
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So what are your thoughts on gain-of-function research?
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Can I give you a very, very mild hot take here on gain-of-function research?
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It's not going to be one of those situations that you're going to be like, you know, oh,
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gosh, the roof of my mouth, it feels all like just the skin is coming off.
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First of all, gain-of-function research should be banned.
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So I'm going to tell you right now, it's not any hotter than that.
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But secondarily, I think I'm the only person left that could theoretically see a benefit to it.
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Like, I thought if we were responsible as a species, right?
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If governments were competent, which they're not, if all these things existed, you could
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paint me a picture in which actually get a lot of good out of gain-of-function research
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trying to figure out, hey, okay, you make a disease a little bit more applicable to humans
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that it could be spread and then try to cure it.
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You could see why getting ahead of something like that might be beneficial.
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The gain-of-function thing really should have been shut down completely in 2020 at the very
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I mean, we're just hearing about this from Trump, which is the executive order.
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Donald Trump can't ban gain-of-function research because a lot of it's done in China.
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Well, you know, there's some limitations, obviously, to executive orders.
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But he can ban and target it here in the United States from happening.
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But, like, President Xi doesn't listen to Donald Trump's bans.
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He doesn't seem to care at all about what we say.
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Up to and including, hey, can you guys tell us if you release a virus that's going to
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And they still, I just saw a thing last week where they were still blaming us and claiming
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And I think the entire world knows it came from the Wuhan lab.
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I mean, even the left has settled in on that here in America.
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Now, of course, they are going to deny it to the end of time.
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Because they have no pressure to give the truth to anybody at any time.
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So, I think this is a decent step in the right direction.
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Not because of Donald Trump's fault, by the way.
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This is something that should have been done in the Biden administration at the very latest.
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But the fact that he has to, I mean, it's almost insulting to all of us that this still
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RFK Jr. talking about gain-of-function research.
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In 2014, three of those bugs escaped from U.S. labs.
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And President Obama declared a moratorium on future use.
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And instead, a lot of that research was moved offshore to the Wuhan lab.
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We have, and it launched bioweapons arms race all around the country, all around the world,
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so that China's engaged in it, developing all kinds of weapons using AI and CRISPR technologies
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Russia is deeply engaged in it, Iran and many other countries.
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It's a kind of weapon that always has blowback.
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And the justification for this kind of weaponry was, and this kind of research, was always
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that we have to do this, develop vaccines to counter a future pandemic.
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In all of the history of gain-of-function research, we can't point to a single good thing that's
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And today, I commend President Trump for his courage and his vision in ending U.S. bioweapons
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You can't point to a single good thing that's come from it.
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I mean, bioweapons research, not really a, not really a something that we should be playing
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And, you know, I think, you know, the, I mean, if you want to make the argument against
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this is, the research is going to happen probably.
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And if you say, we're not going to do it in the U.S. borders, you have no control over
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I think it's true at some level that this research is going to continue in places like
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Wuhan in, you know, BSL-2 type laboratories that cannot handle it under any circumstances.
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I mean, I am really skeptical of it at the highest levels of security.
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But you're, they're at places where, like, they should be handling, you know, the lowest
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Those types of labs doing gain-of-function research on bat diseases we don't understand.
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It just, we just haven't had another one of these big outbreaks.
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But, like, it is around the corner at some point.
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This is not, this is not a problem that is over.
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I mean, we're told all the time to prepare for the next pandemic.
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It's almost like, I mean, they talk about it so much, you almost think, well, are you
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Is that, is that how you know that one's just around the corner?
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I mean, we do know, though, that these things happen.
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They happen with or without government research.
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They happen, this is part of life as a human being, unfortunately.
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I don't necessarily think that at the Wuhan lab they released COVID-19 on purpose.
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I think they screwed up and it got out and they didn't want to admit it.
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You know, with the Chinese, I don't think that's what happened, though.
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I mean, it certainly deserves an investigation or deserved.
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I think we've seen, and I've read a few, you know, books on this over the years and they
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Virus by Alina Chan and Matt Ridley is a good one to look at how the real scientific evidence
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behind how this came out, their conclusion was largely that it came from the lab unintentionally.
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You know, and when you say unintentionally, that means like, oh gosh, this thing happened
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Well, I mean, that's not exactly what we're saying either.
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What we're saying is they were doing risky research in a lab that was not prepared for
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And that wound up leading to a release that they didn't try to infect their people with,
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but was egregious when it comes to just the recklessness of the situation.
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And the evidence does point back to that lab pretty convincingly.
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Did you see the documentary Contagion with Gwyneth Paltrow?
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In fact, she was patient zero, if I remember correctly.
00:14:08.240
She continued to have, I think she had a bunch of posthumous projects already in the
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And she seemed to have created an entire company based on nothing.
00:14:27.200
Well, I think, like you said, she had a big catalog of movies she'd already done that were
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And so, but she showed us how these things can happen, right?
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I mean, you go to dinner sometime in Hong Kong or wherever she was in the beginning there,
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and you just start spreading it before you even know you've got any symptoms.
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I mean, this going way back before COVID, we talked about this on the air a bunch of
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times that it is one of the most serious threats to human life.
00:15:09.660
Because of the way COVID was handled and because of the way the government dealt with it and
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kept your seven-year-old home from school for four years, I don't know how we're going
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to deal with the next one, because I think, rightfully so, 75% of the population is going
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to be like, I am not listening to anything you say this time, right?
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Like, and I don't know if that's the right approach either.
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I think we may go too far on that because these are real.
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And likely the next one that happens is going to be met, if it happens anytime soon, is going
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They lit their credibility on fire for multiple years and it's going to be really hard to
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And they're a little bit like Chicken Little too, because everything.
00:16:07.500
And in fact, a lot of times your parents would get you together with people with measles.
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So you get it as a child and not have to wait till you're an adult when it's more serious
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That's a, you know, back long, long, long, long, long time ago.
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I mean, it was like, you know, that might not necessarily be the best approach, but still
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But I mean, yeah, obviously that's going around quite a bit lately.
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Where did you get the idea for reopening Alcatraz?
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Just an idea I've had, and I guess because the judges, so many of these radicalized judges,
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they want to have trials for every single, think of it, every single person that's in our country illegally,
00:18:43.240
that came in illegally, that would mean millions of trials, and it's just so ridiculous what's happening.
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And it's long been a symbol, Alcatraz, of whatever it is.
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I mean, you know, it's a sad symbol, but it's a symbol of law and order.
00:19:00.320
And, you know, it's got quite a history, frankly.
00:19:03.540
So I think we're going to do that, and we're looking at it right now.
00:19:06.840
So without helicopter engines roaring in the background, he also talked about the plans for the 2027 NFL draft.
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Roger Goodall, he's the commissioner of the NFL, and he was with Trump talking about where the NFL draft in 2027 is going to be.
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I'd like to thank NFL Commissioner Roger Goodall, Washington Commander's owner, Josh Harris,
00:19:34.640
and Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, Secretary Scott Turner, Secretary Doug Burgum,
00:19:41.020
and I see Howard Lutnick is here too, Commerce, and some others.
00:19:44.940
If I can see past the press, I'd name you, but I can't.
00:19:50.100
I'm pleased to reveal that the 2027 NFL draft, that's a big thing, will be held right here in our nation's capital,
00:20:13.320
I don't think, I was just saying to Roger, I don't think there's ever been anything like that.
00:20:18.280
In fact, maybe we could use it for other things also.
00:20:24.160
It's going to be something that nobody else will ever be able to duplicate that, I don't suspect.
00:20:29.140
I don't know his politics, but Roger Goodell looks quite uneasy there.
00:20:36.520
They're like unrelated, and he's like, uh, I'm a football commissioner.
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Every one of these franchises is worth 8 to 10 billion dollars now.
00:21:08.640
I don't know why they hate for Roger Goodell all the time.
00:21:14.020
I mean, that, I think, has just become fun for the audience.
00:21:19.340
I think it started with, after, like, Deflategate and a bunch of the Patriots fans wound up starting.
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They started booing him at the draft, and now everyone does it, which is kind of funny.
00:21:33.180
I think he's kind of just embraced the Darth Vader thing, and it's fine.
00:21:38.820
Like, he's worth way more than $60 million a year.
00:21:42.860
He's an incredible CEO of that organization, in a way.
00:21:52.000
They've turned it from, like, something that you might flip on on the weekends on ESPN until this big event where 100,000 people, hundreds of thousands show up.
00:21:59.680
In Green Bay, Wisconsin, which is a town of 105,000, they had 600,000 people more than 600,000 over the three days.
00:22:15.060
And some of them have been at the most historic, like, scenic...
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You know, they did it on the museum staircase at Philly.
00:22:22.560
They've done it in, like, these really beautiful places.
00:22:25.920
You know, Green Bay, they basically did it in a parking lot.
00:22:36.540
Now, these, like, cold-weather teams that don't normally get Super Bowls are able to have a big event, which is kind of cool.
00:22:45.000
I was like, why would you want to go there and watch names get read?
00:22:52.620
They had one in Dallas, and I went to one of the nights.
00:22:57.000
Now, that one was inside the stadium where they actually did the picks and everything, if I remember right.
00:23:10.900
It's just, like, it's a fun event to get around a bunch of other football fans, and, you know, you can eat, and you can drink, and you can go sit down.
00:23:18.000
And these are huge moments when these guys get picked, and it's fun.
00:23:26.040
You boo Roger Goodell, the guy who makes $60 million a year.
00:23:28.880
Maybe that's why they're booing, because they're not making $60 million a year.
00:23:34.100
Which, again, I don't know, America now, like, we have to just boo every guy.
00:23:40.140
I'm like, oh, gosh, yeah, what a terrible thing.
00:23:44.340
I came from an American in which I aspire to have lots of money if it was possible.
00:23:50.020
So I don't know why we hate everybody who's rich these days, but that's what we're supposed to do.
00:24:01.080
Did you know that, just like here in the U.S., Israel celebrates their Independence Day?
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In case you missed it, this year, Israel's Independence Day was just a few days ago, on May 1st.
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It's difficult to find moments of joy while there's so much suffering.
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00:25:15.320
President Trump was also asked yesterday, who blew up the Nord Stream pipeline?
00:25:24.840
I've been dying to ask you this question for a long time, which is that two and a half years ago,
00:25:31.620
And despite what people like John Brennan and all the hawks said,
00:25:35.000
you were one person who said Russia probably did not blow up its own pipeline.
00:25:39.180
You can believe they said Russia blew it up, yeah.
00:25:41.480
And so I'm wondering now that you're president, if you would consider launching a formal investigation into what happened there and who actually did blow it up.
00:25:47.700
Well, probably if I asked certain people, I'd be able to tell you without having to waste a lot of money on an investigation.
00:25:55.420
But I think a lot of people know who blew it up.
00:25:59.300
But I was the one that blew it up originally because I wouldn't let it be built.
00:26:02.720
And then when Biden got in, he allowed it to be built.
00:26:35.240
There was a story that came out, too, about that they followed around a ship of people from...
00:26:41.740
Yeah, the Ukrainians who went around and did that.
00:26:44.660
They got drunk one night and decided to blow up the pipeline.
00:26:47.740
However, in that report also said that the Ukrainian government was behind the effort.
00:26:59.100
And the way the story went, if I remember correctly, Pat, correct me if I'm wrong.
00:27:17.080
And Zelensky supposedly tried to stop it, but then was unable to get it stopped because they'd already left.
00:27:23.780
Now that, see, that part sort of falls apart to me there.
00:27:28.800
And it's obviously pretty convenient to us to be able to say, oh, we tried to stop it.
00:27:36.420
Are they going to come up with cellular telephones?
00:27:43.460
We have no way of communicating unless they had a landline.
00:27:46.520
And, you know, of course, they said they went offline, which would make sense if the story were true.
00:27:52.280
However, I think there's details around it that I don't necessarily 100% believe.
00:27:56.380
It would be nice to find out once and for all, though.
00:28:00.360
I think all of us would probably like to know, but we probably never will.
00:28:05.600
The other topic that came up yesterday with President Trump, he covered a lot of stuff.
00:28:11.100
He talked about a Mexican president being scared of the cartels.
00:28:17.020
She's so scared that she can't even think straight.
00:28:20.720
Because he's offered to send, you know, the U.S. military into Mexico to deal with the drug cartels.
00:28:38.380
They are horrible people that have been killing people left and right.
00:28:43.400
They've made a fortune on selling drugs and destroying our people.
00:28:53.440
If Mexico wanted help with the cartels, we would be honored to go in and do it.
00:29:04.340
And, you know, we had 300,000 people die last year from fentanyl and all of that.
00:29:11.080
We had millions of people brought into this country that shouldn't be here.
00:29:16.800
So if she said that I offered to do that, she's 100% right.
00:29:19.980
Well, she's so afraid of the cartels, she can't walk.
00:29:32.760
But she is so afraid of the cartels that she can't even think straight.
00:29:42.900
Just incredible difference between two presidents where we get answers on every issue every day from this guy.
00:29:51.160
I mean, you can hear even his voice is starting to give...
00:29:53.640
He's talking so much to the American people where we didn't hear word one.
00:30:00.280
Multiple years without a meeting with Congress between Biden and his congressional leaders and parts of the cabinet.
00:30:09.560
And he did a fraction of the press conferences that other presidents have done.
00:30:15.880
Honestly, like, Trump is going above and beyond when it comes to this.
00:30:21.060
Like, I mean, it's why you have a press secretary.
00:30:31.980
He likes to slap people down when they deserve it.
00:30:43.120
When was the last time you even heard about the Nord Stream pipeline?
00:30:46.760
It's been a long time since I've even heard that discussed or brought up.
00:30:51.560
And so, the Zero Hedge guy was only too happy to bring that up.
00:30:58.080
Now, will we ever find out the truth on that one?
00:31:01.820
And will U.S. forces ever go into Mexico and deal with the drug cartels?
00:31:09.980
I mean, he has alluded to the fact that it's a definite possibility all along, ever since
00:31:17.900
he declared them a terrorist organization, which enables us to go after them now.
00:31:24.160
Although, yeah, you want the permission of Mexico if we're going to go into Mexican territory.
00:31:29.020
That would be a problem if we violated their sovereignty in order to go in and take care of the drug cartels.
00:31:35.300
So, she's going to have to be upset about if that happened to us.
00:31:39.940
You know, again, there are some arguments that are made that you can do that in limited ways when the threat across your border is as real as it is.
00:31:52.420
But generally speaking, that's the better way to go.
00:31:57.500
You know, again, that's certainly the way that Trump is trying to do it here and I think makes a lot of sense.
00:32:05.040
Obviously, we could start a full-out war and, you know, go in there and go after the cartels.
00:32:18.380
He also discussed the plan for self-deporting illegal aliens in this country.
00:32:25.540
What we thought we'd do is a self-deport where we're going to pay each one a certain amount of money
00:32:32.100
and we're going to get them a beautiful flight back to where they came from and they have a period of time.
00:32:38.500
And if they make it, we're going to work with them so that maybe someday with a little work,
00:32:43.240
they can come back in if they're good people, if they're the kind of people that we want in our company,
00:32:47.640
industrious people that could love our country.
00:32:52.520
But it will give them a path to becoming, you know, to coming back into the country.
00:32:57.700
If they miss that limit, they're going to be taken out of our country.
00:33:02.220
And they will never get a path to come back in.
00:33:12.720
And by doing that, you know, you're talking about so many millions of people.
00:33:17.240
And I think we've even offered to pay $1,000 to them and to give them a free flight back home.
00:33:25.460
Well, yeah, especially if you're going to wind up getting deported anyway.
00:33:27.900
Like I can see, you might say, well, I'm making much more money than I would make at home.
00:33:35.460
Well, first of all, you should leave anyway, because it's the wrong thing to do for you to be here illegally.
00:33:39.440
But secondarily, like when the alternative is running around, we're told all the time they're kept in the shadows.
00:33:45.460
They're looking over their shoulder the whole time they're here.
00:33:47.520
Every Maryland father ends up in a El Salvadorian prison.
00:33:53.540
So why not take the $1,000 and get the free flight and go back and have a chance maybe to come back later the right way?
00:34:00.180
My favorite part of the entire thing, though, is how they just took the CBP1 app and just changed it to CBP Home.
00:34:07.280
So they had this app that Biden came up with, which was like, hey, here's how you can come through the border without really any effort whatsoever.
00:34:14.360
Register here and come across, like making it as easy as possible for illegal immigrants to come across the border in some sort of like pseudo legal way.
00:34:27.700
And they just took the same app that you already had loaded on your phone and just switched it over to CBP Home, meaning go home and put in messages of like get out basically over and over again.
00:34:39.220
And now that's how you register for the $1,000 and the flight.
00:34:44.760
Nice and convenient by the Trump administration.
00:34:47.680
And, you know, again, just the attitude adjustment here has made all the difference in the world.
00:34:54.600
It's gone from, you know, 10,000 to 12,000 people per day coming across the border illegally to a few hundred per day.
00:35:01.960
I mean, it's a 95% drop in people even attempting to come across the border.
00:35:08.660
We saw some footage over the last couple of weeks about footage during the Biden years and how crowded it was, people coming across the river and coming across the border.
00:35:22.740
And under those overpasses where you had thousands of people waiting to be, I guess, processed into America.
00:35:38.740
It's a completely different feel just from the attitude adjustment alone.
00:35:43.220
And then you have Tom Holman, who has definitely sent a strong message to anybody considering coming here illegally or being here illegally.
00:36:00.740
Well, look, and if you look at what Biden administration did, he gave a free airline ticket to the city of their choice.
00:36:06.460
When they got arrested by the Border Patrol, they picked what city they want to go to.
00:36:17.220
So we're turning the CBP home app, reversing it, and sending people home.
00:36:23.540
I mean, especially in sanctuary cities where there used to be one agent can arrest one bad guy in a county jail.
00:36:30.540
Now we've got to send a whole team for officer safety reasons to look for these people out in the public.
00:36:35.440
But I think this is ideal for, like, the 1.4 million illegal aliens who've been ordered deported but became fugitives.
00:36:46.320
It's going to be extreme cost savings, first of all, for the right people.
00:36:50.020
And I think it's going to help remove those that want to come back under a legal program.
00:36:54.880
For instance, if you're already deported but you have a U.S. citizen child here, well, someday that child can petition for you.
00:37:01.380
But if we have to formally deport you, that puts mandatory bars against you.
00:37:06.840
Even if in other opportunities you can come back on a student visa, a visitor's visa, and come back the right way.
00:37:12.080
But if we have to formally go through the process of seeking you out and deporting you formally, you get all these bars that shut off all these future programs.
00:37:21.500
I think you're looking at, like, a 75% cost savings.
00:37:24.120
Look, the criminals, we still have to go find the criminals.
00:37:26.440
The criminals aren't going to take advantage of this program, but we've got to keep looking at the criminals.
00:37:31.280
That's amazing that giving them $1,000 each and sending them home is a 75% cost savings over us having to find them and deport them.
00:37:41.780
Yeah, the number of fining and deporting each one is around $17,000 each.
00:37:46.840
I don't think I've ever heard that number before.
00:37:58.100
I mean, and you could find—this is why I kind of—I'm surprised that we have not had the—man, look, maybe our standards are too high here.
00:38:08.780
Trump has done a lot, and these things take time.
00:38:11.060
But I'm surprised we haven't seen the focus on, like, widespread workplace raids and, you know, because that's where I think you can get a much more efficient economic process where you can get the numbers higher at lower cost.
00:38:27.220
People who are just, you know, you've got, you know, a thousand people at, you know, a factory and 940 of them are illegal.
00:38:36.100
You get kind of more bang for your buck there, and that has not really been the focus.
00:38:39.880
It's been more about going after the, you know, individual criminals, which are a higher priority, but also aren't going to give you that bang for the buck in the media, per se.
00:38:57.280
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00:42:34.080
An Israeli airstrike has struck the Sanaa International Airport in Yemen's capital and virtually destroyed it.
00:42:43.260
I was going to say, that's a little bit of an understatement.
00:42:44.820
But, yeah, they did warn the people who were there at the airport.
00:42:53.880
And now they are saying, like, for example, the Wikipedia page for the airport now says was.
00:43:22.300
Israel took out the Houthi's main cargo port, two cement factories, multiple power stations, and an entire international airport.
00:43:30.460
And Israeli officials, quote, this is only the beginning.
00:43:34.780
You don't want to screw with the Israeli military man.
00:43:52.200
And I would argue, behind the scenes, we are very much involved in this.
00:43:54.960
Although the Houthis blamed the U.S. and Israel jointly.
00:43:59.140
But a U.S. defense official said we did not participate.
00:44:32.340
If you ever watch one of those heist movies where the thief, you know, doesn't break in through
00:44:35.340
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00:44:40.320
That's what home title fraud kind of looks like.
00:44:45.060
You used to have a criminal kind of probably like sitting, you know, in his mom's basement,
00:44:55.020
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00:44:57.960
And then, of course, it gets worse with the notice of this foreclosure on your house.
00:45:02.560
It kind of sounds like a movie plot, but it's real and it's fast and it's becoming one of
00:45:10.480
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00:45:13.240
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00:45:21.640
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00:45:29.880
Don't let them change the name on your home title.
00:46:41.140
So, a big, big airstrike by Israel against the Houthis.
00:46:50.160
They blew up a lot of the Houthis and the Blowfish, I think, in this particular attack.
00:47:02.700
We'll get into that and much more coming up in one minute.
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00:48:33.640
So apparently in Yemen, where the Houthis are located, they hit not just the airport,
00:48:42.280
It's the second largest in the Red Sea and is the entry point for about 80% of Yemen's
00:48:52.340
Yeah, this is why these types of decisions are major, right?
00:48:59.060
It's because you think, okay, the Houthis, well, they've been hitting us.
00:49:05.280
But this is the main airport for the nation of Yemen, right?
00:49:08.720
Which is a different standard than I'm going to hit a terrorist base, right?
00:49:13.360
This is like they import a lot of their food there.
00:49:16.220
The cargo ports, this is a significant move here.
00:49:22.780
And it's probably the reason why we're saying we didn't have anything to do with it.
00:49:27.740
We don't necessarily want to have our fingerprints on it, even though I think quite obviously
00:49:31.800
this probably doesn't happen without our approval.
00:49:36.680
But this is what happens when you keep attacking Israel.
00:49:50.220
Of course, the Houthis fired at Ben-Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv on Sunday.
00:49:56.440
And so one of the missiles landed near the airport.
00:50:06.660
And so I thought were we with all the attacks on our shipping.
00:50:11.960
Apparently, this continues to happen like almost daily.
00:50:18.080
What's the, that's what we did during the Biden administration.
00:50:20.500
It was just like, you know, it would be great, a great way to push back against this particular
00:50:33.200
And we might, we occasionally would release a press statement that would say we're very
00:50:38.880
But sometimes, yeah, they were strongly worded once in a while.
00:50:43.120
A lot of times they were like, we're disappointed.
00:50:55.220
Uh, but I, I don't, uh, expect that much out of the Houthis.
00:51:00.020
I don't, um, I don't think they deserve strongly worded messages.
00:51:06.040
I, I think that, no, no, I think that this is what they had coming from the Israelis.
00:51:11.420
And, uh, it's great to see because I want the attacks to stop.
00:51:16.300
Part of this too, I think is convincing the nation of Yemen that it would be in their best
00:51:23.980
Uh, yeah, kind of like same thing with, uh, you know, Afghanistan.
00:51:31.660
Like sometimes you have to say like, and you could say this over and over again to them
00:51:36.340
and they can say they're doing it and you might notice it's not being done to your,
00:51:42.460
to your, the levels of, of, of, of happiness for you that they would like.
00:51:47.340
And so you say, Hey, Hey, here's another way of describing this because these types of
00:51:51.780
things will happen to not just the Houthis, but to the nation, if you don't figure this
00:51:57.360
out and, you know, unless we're going to invade, which we're don't intend to do, I think, you
00:52:04.520
know, you, you, this is how you eliminate these problems.
00:52:07.380
You, you need help from the inside and you need someone like, it's just like, you know,
00:52:12.460
You need a government that's actually dedicated to doing it.
00:52:15.480
We saw what happened in El Salvador when you have one, when you have an organization,
00:52:19.760
when you have a government that says, actually, we're going to take this,
00:52:23.280
And, you know, there are lots of complaints about, uh, at times, uh, whether Bekele has
00:52:27.600
crossed certain lines there, but the one thing you definitely knew is he was serious about
00:52:32.640
And now the country is, there's no doubt the country is much better off than it was because
00:52:39.000
Now, look, they don't have the same constitution we have.
00:52:42.800
There are other limitations, um, that they do not have that, that we, uh, we do, but I don't
00:52:54.940
Uh, but what they do have in El Salvador is the Maryland man.
00:52:59.620
The Maryland man is, uh, at the Seacott prison and he should be back in Maryland, you know,
00:53:10.980
A Maryland father with Maryland children and a Maryland wife, um, who he apparently
00:53:21.120
And it's kind of amazing because that's not something you're hearing an awful lot about.
00:53:26.200
For instance, if you heard his wife, uh, go into the courtroom a few years ago and seek
00:53:33.800
not the first protective order against him, but the second.
00:53:37.580
So this wasn't the one where he said, she said, I need a protective order in case he
00:53:46.320
It seemingly had already escalated when she went in and, uh, said all of this.
00:53:57.500
Um, but I didn't show up to the court because his family like washed my brain telling me that
00:54:07.180
Um, so it's, I, I didn't do anything, but after that it was like, um, I would call the
00:54:14.300
I have a lot of police reports and I kept trying to get to the door basement to try to open
00:54:20.440
So then when I was able to go outside to get a phone, I called 911 from a disconnected phone.
00:54:26.960
Um, now they took a long time to get to the house.
00:54:32.160
So I saw a neighbor, um, walking his dog and I opened the door and I was like, help.
00:54:37.800
And then when he heard me, like he grabbed me from my hair and then he slapped me.
00:54:41.380
And then the neighbor, like he didn't know what to do.
00:54:44.340
I have pictures of the evidence, like all the bruises, because even on Wednesday, he hit
00:54:53.260
And then last Saturday for my daughter's birthday party, before I went to my daughter's birthday
00:55:01.860
My sister called the police because he hit me in front of my sister.
00:55:10.720
Especially when you think of the way other cases are handled in this realm.
00:55:16.120
The one that popped into my mind as I was listening to that was, uh, was, uh, Trevor Bauer,
00:55:21.000
the pitcher of the, um, he was on the Los Angeles Dodgers, Cy Young award winner.
00:55:24.620
And he was accused by a woman of, uh, of, uh, you know, abusing her.
00:55:34.620
I remember being released of her and she had like a black eye or something.
00:55:40.120
He has not pitched in the United States since, uh, despite overwhelming evidence that has
00:55:48.800
Like, you know, I, our, our own Sarah Gonzalez interviewed the, the accuser and I, you know,
00:55:56.180
it did not go well for her, uh, the accuser, uh, in that particular case, really, this is
00:56:02.320
This is, it was, it was, Sarah just was like, I don't, was like, I don't believe you at
00:56:11.420
I mean, and, and you go and you look at the evidence of this, um, and yet he's essentially
00:56:26.880
This person's having domestic issues and like, I don't want to get involved in it.
00:56:30.000
He's a middle reliever, you know, he's going to throw 40 innings a year.
00:56:36.240
He, and he has now been pitching overseas for years and years and years and years.
00:56:41.740
Based on this, he went through the evidence, uh, after, you know, they went through all
00:56:46.280
Then he was able to kind of come out with the evidence and laid it out.
00:56:50.460
Like her text bragging about how she was going to do this.
00:56:53.200
She was going to trap him for money, like all this stuff.
00:57:02.000
And he even showed video of, of this girl, uh, the day when he was still there after this
00:57:15.280
Now again, you know, who knows, but I wasn't there, but I will say the, my view of the
00:57:24.000
Are you usually with, uh, Trevor Bauer and his girlfriend?
00:57:29.460
When people have relations, I try to be there, um, was not in this particular circumstance,
00:57:34.460
unfortunately for Trevor, um, because I might've been able to say, Hey, wait a minute.
00:57:41.760
It's for some reason I didn't show up that day.
00:57:44.180
But what I will say is from that one photo that seemingly has all sorts of evidence against
00:57:55.620
Here is, uh, a woman who has now done it, not only in that audio you heard there, also
00:58:03.120
She outwrote, she wrote out all these things against him.
00:58:05.320
And she just said there were a lot of police reports.
00:58:10.240
And this person's the hero of the Democrat party, apparently.
00:58:17.520
And not only can he not, not only is he not being canceled, they're trying to move him
00:58:23.560
When everybody knows he's here illegally and should have been deported a long time ago.
00:58:32.880
It's just absolutely incredible how this happens.
00:58:37.500
And I do, we mentioned this, I think maybe it was even before vacation talking about the
00:58:42.160
But like there is this change I've detected on the left where they've stopped going for
00:58:53.360
Like they, they're not trying to find, because you can do this, right?
00:59:00.420
Elon Musk comes in, he fires 30% of the staff at the, you know, the IRS.
00:59:04.760
And then there's this one person who has been actually doing a great job and has, has a,
00:59:13.460
You find that, you can find a person who is a sympathetic story that is a tough, negative
00:59:22.260
consequence of an, of something you need to do anyway.
00:59:25.420
When you say, hey, you want to deport 10 million people.
00:59:29.180
There are many who are beloved in their community.
00:59:32.500
There are many who are good employees at their jobs that actually do great things.
00:59:41.360
That doesn't mean that they get to live here illegally, but like you can find sympathetic
00:59:47.400
The left seems to have given up on trying to do that.
00:59:51.380
They're not taking wife beaters and they're like, hey, give us more wife beaters.
00:59:56.360
Whether he's in MS-13 or not is, I mean, I want him deported because he's here illegally.
01:00:01.740
One, two, I want anyone who hits their wife deported if I can get away with it, whether
01:00:08.600
If they're citizens, then we deport them to a prison.
01:00:11.860
If they're illegal immigrants, get them the hell out of the country.
01:00:15.180
Anyone who would do that, and especially an illegal immigrant who would beat their wives
01:00:25.080
And yet everyone on television is telling you the opposite should happen.
01:00:31.780
Whereas, I mean, her words, he would wake up in the morning and just hit me.
01:00:51.240
James Carey joined the U.S. Marine Corps because of his grandfather, another proud American
01:01:08.460
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01:02:08.680
I'm a little concerned, Pat, thinking about this story, because Garcia, we know he's a
01:02:30.740
But, I mean, why isn't he living in, like, Ocean City?
01:02:38.420
Because if he moves back in, he shouldn't be forced to just move back into Maryland.
01:02:50.440
You know, where he can kind of kick his feet back.
01:02:54.780
Maybe put him in a bigger house just in case, you know, so his wife has a place to hide in
01:03:00.380
You know, that might be an important thing to do.
01:03:13.700
What was the other show that MTV had where they would take Cribs?
01:03:27.060
Then you're alleging some sort of gang affiliation?
01:03:43.260
And they've all got, you know, they've all got challenges.
01:03:46.080
And he helps him through all of those challenges.
01:03:51.800
I can break down and weep about it right now, just talking about him.
01:04:06.340
She seems to have lots of things she's challenged with.
01:04:16.500
Well, you know, you can only do so much in a day.
01:04:28.700
I mean, how do you even get through life in Maryland without the marijuana tattoo on one
01:04:44.620
You won't consider anybody without one, will you?
01:04:45.840
That was the first thing I looked for when we hired Keith Malinak back in the day.
01:04:49.400
And I said, well, he said, hey, well, I did this.
01:05:02.660
I like it when it's actually tattooed on there.
01:05:05.660
I like it when it's floating a little bit above the skin sideways, which is.
01:05:16.920
I feel like when I'm hiring someone, I want tattoos on each finger.
01:05:28.660
If you're not going to put tattoos on your fingers, what kind of man are you?
01:05:31.300
So, you know, it just seems like it's a basic requirement of employment.
01:05:41.980
Because what I heard, it was, because it says MS-13 on that photo.
01:05:46.840
I heard, they actually mean, it means MDFA, Maryland father.
01:05:57.900
A great guy just trying to make it through life.
01:06:05.080
Get him out of the prison and then bring him back and then leave him alone.
01:06:26.420
Rosa Parks was chosen for a very specific reason.
01:06:34.740
If I'm not mistaken, there was a teenager or something who did this before.
01:06:39.760
She didn't turn out to be the right person for the job.
01:06:42.400
They didn't highlight her case because they were like, people are going to say, oh, she's
01:06:47.700
I mean, it's not exactly celebrated today either.
01:06:50.620
But at the time, it was really like, oh, gosh, this is a bad person.
01:06:54.240
Essentially would not have been welcomed by society.
01:06:56.620
So they waited until they had the right person.
01:07:06.800
He's going to be speaking at the freaking convention, introducing the next candidate for president.
01:07:11.820
If they can get him out of Seacott, he will be.
01:07:27.580
Sometimes in life, if you want to get to the truth, you have to look at the numbers.
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The last minute I decided I got to get up really early.
01:09:00.780
Well, you've got Pat Gray Unleashed, which airs on Blaze TV.
01:09:03.820
And that airs, you know, 6 to 8 a.m. in the East Coast.
01:09:15.880
It's, you know, that's especially the late night like that.
01:09:18.440
Now, I was, I will say, a little disappointed you didn't make it.
01:09:26.220
But I was, no one cares how I feel and how I would interpret black dandyism.
01:09:31.220
But I was, I was interested to hear how you would.
01:09:35.840
When I say those two words to you, Pat, black dandyism, what, give me your initial impressions
01:09:43.000
just so the audience can get a table set, you know, for the conversation.
01:09:55.340
You're smart enough to not even try to make a joke about it.
01:10:01.580
So, I, you're going to be surprised to hear this, Pat.
01:10:09.900
And yeah, here it is, the theme of the Met Gala, black dandyism.
01:10:17.240
Black dandyism refers to a cultural and aesthetic movement where black men, and sometimes women,
01:10:23.600
adopt and reinterpret the traditionally European or aristocratic styles of dress, grooming, and comportment.
01:10:39.280
You know, because I know you knew that, but you didn't want to say it.
01:10:42.560
Would you, would you have added in that it often has a flair that asserts individuality?
01:10:48.440
Subverts stereotypes and makes powerful social statements?
01:10:56.960
So, that's like, that was so obvious, you almost felt like you didn't need to say it.
01:11:11.460
When you make racial stereotypes and barriers, but they're the right ones, then it's fine.
01:11:21.280
I think people lost sight of that because at one point we were...
01:11:26.200
We had this idea that maybe the color of your skin shouldn't really matter at all.
01:11:35.640
If you don't think about skin color all the time, you're a racist.
01:11:42.940
And I will say I was a little susceptible to this.
01:11:45.220
I believed maybe we shouldn't care about skin color like in the slightest.
01:11:51.020
You shouldn't even consider it at all when making any decision in your entire life.
01:11:56.940
Now I know all decisions should be made based entirely on skin color.
01:12:02.280
So now we're more enlightened than we were back then.
01:12:07.360
I was really on the opposite side of that for a while thinking, you know, maybe you should
01:12:13.620
go through your entire life and never make one decision based on skin color.
01:12:22.780
You should make all decisions based on skin color.
01:12:29.260
Genitals is another appropriate decision making process.
01:12:40.420
Like if you think of it like the food pyramid, the triangle is now skin color, genitals, and
01:12:51.360
If you can make every decision in that sort of decision pyramid, your life's going to
01:12:58.740
Now, the actual theme, because it was an underlying part, as you know, black dandyism was an underlying
01:13:04.480
part of the overall theme, which was super fine, tailoring black style.
01:13:10.960
Now, I've seen Met Galas before, people walking the red carpet and stuff.
01:13:19.780
Yeah, I was going to say, could only black people attend this event?
01:13:26.840
I think it was the New York Times that highlighted the style of the event.
01:13:29.540
And every single person that they highlighted was black.
01:13:34.540
So, I don't know if this was like a segregated event.
01:13:41.700
Well, it doesn't make any sense if you're white to show up to a black dandy-ism situation,
01:13:48.760
But that's because you're so in touch with the culture.
01:14:02.260
So, on top of all of this, the Met Gala, which is, you know, an event where I think it's
01:14:12.620
You should get the whole place setting for that.
01:14:15.660
Do you take it home with you after most of the galas?
01:14:17.520
Well, if it's $70,000 a plate, yeah, I'm taking the plate and the knife and the fork
01:14:26.560
Like, I know, like, you know, after a big football game or something, if they gave out
01:14:29.780
the, like, you know, the white towels you wave or something, you know, in the fans, sometimes
01:14:35.760
people, like, they'll leave them there and people, I've seen people walk around, they'll
01:14:38.680
take big garbage bags and they'll walk around and take every one of the towels that people
01:14:44.880
That's kind of what you do with plates at the Met Gala.
01:14:48.980
You walk around with a big garbage bag at the Met Gala in your black dandyism outfit.
01:15:00.100
All your previous appearances at the Met Gala, you were already dressing in black dandyism.
01:15:09.460
And so, I don't know, I mean, you really should have gone with all that buildup.
01:15:15.000
Because I remember you back in 1997, 98, going to the Met Gala in black dandyism.
01:15:32.960
I mean, you've been saying this for a long time, but this is your black dandyism era.
01:15:49.720
Pat, as a man of the arts, like you are, I want to make sure this seems appropriate to
01:15:56.120
you, but my thought was we pass a constitutional amendment that if you ever attend the Met Gala,
01:16:03.440
you are constitutionally prohibited from speaking about income inequality ever again.
01:16:12.580
It would have an issue with the First Amendment.
01:16:16.080
It would have to address that free speech no longer exists for those people.
01:16:21.920
But I think if we put it in the Constitution as an amendment, it would work.
01:16:28.000
I never want to hear your mouth running about how income inequality is this vital challenge
01:16:36.420
And by the way, AOC has been to this event, I should point out.
01:16:40.620
Future presidential candidate, leading presidential candidate on the left right now, or one of
01:16:50.520
Wasn't she the one that had the dress that said something about not liking rich people or
01:16:56.660
I think it was a few years ago at that particular event.
01:17:04.240
And I hate to offend you here, Pat, but even maybe more favorite than the black dandyism
01:17:09.040
outfits was the fact that the honored co-chair, honorary co-chair of the Met Gala inexplicably
01:17:27.080
I don't know why he would have anything to do with fashion, why he would be an honorary
01:17:37.240
Number two, in theory, if he had played better, wouldn't he be in the playoffs right now?
01:17:42.960
Like, I know they got eliminated in the first round in five games, so it's all over.
01:17:48.600
However, like, in theory, wouldn't he notice the date and said, I don't think I'm going
01:17:55.520
I'm on the Los Angeles Lakers and we're the three seed, right?
01:17:59.380
And then, in addition, my by far favorite part, because as we all know, Pat, LeBron James
01:18:07.360
suffered a tragic injury in game five of that series when they were down double digits and
01:18:15.060
just conveniently, after he knew he was going to lose, was injured on the court tragically,
01:18:22.480
Now, he was able to play the whole rest of the game, but he was so injured with his sprain
01:18:28.760
of his ACL or whatever it was, in theory, a grade two MCL sprain.
01:18:34.680
His grade two MCL sprain prohibited him from going last night.
01:18:53.300
Would have loved to have seen him in a top hat.
01:19:01.120
There were a lot of top hats, I will say, that I saw.
01:19:06.100
There was the one minor controversy when a black advisory board member said she wanted
01:19:11.640
to make sure she didn't see any, quote, floor-length do-rags or pimp canes in the attendees'
01:19:19.940
And I'm pretty sure they lived up to that standard.
01:19:23.920
Because that would not be black dandyism, as you know, Pat.
01:19:26.620
But the audience might not necessarily be up on that.
01:19:29.820
Was she okay with seeing white people at this event?
01:19:42.160
Let's see if I can find this real quick, because I want to make sure I get the person's
01:20:00.420
So this is, she was apparently also a K-pop superstar, and I guess, let's see, her name
01:20:11.020
Seems like, they're not really a stage name, just one of like Lisa.
01:20:14.260
So Lisa from a K-pop band and also White Lotus wore what appeared to be Rosa Parks underwear.
01:20:25.020
Now, I'm not saying it's the underwear that Rosa Parks wore, because they would be very
01:20:33.640
But these were apparently, they were, the lace pattern on her underwear appears to show faces,
01:20:41.620
one of which many believe looks uncannily like the late civil rights icon Rosa Parks.
01:20:47.760
Now, you'd say, wait a minute, how would we know that if she's wearing underwear with
01:20:54.360
Now, I would say the Rosa Parks underoos, not the best seller, I would say at this point.
01:20:59.500
But, okay, if you want to wear them, how do we know about it?
01:21:08.560
So it's not that she was wearing her underwear over pants or a dress.
01:21:12.220
No, she just, she just didn't have any pants or a dress on.
01:21:18.960
Sometimes I know you might walk out to like the cab out in front of your place and say,
01:21:29.760
I know when I see people dress this way, I try to point that out.
01:21:35.400
Ma'am, I don't think your shirt's buttoned the way it was designed to be buttoned.
01:21:45.560
These apparently people, there are some people who think that perhaps putting Rosa Parks on
01:21:52.420
That was one of the controversies from last night.
01:22:01.840
Did you know that, just like here in the US, Israel celebrates their Independence Day?
01:22:17.740
In case you missed it, this year, Israel's Independence Day was just a few days ago, on
01:22:22.640
But for the people of Israel, freedom is really nothing more than a daily struggle just to
01:22:29.120
It's difficult to find moments of joy while there's so much suffering.
01:22:31.840
And the Israeli government relies on the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews for its
01:22:36.500
ongoing help to make sure of the elderly, the sick, the wounded soldiers, and impoverished
01:22:42.860
We can't even imagine the courage of the Israeli people.
01:22:45.320
They're so brave and worthy of our prayers that we'd like to ask you for a gift to the
01:22:50.440
It'll provide life-saving aid, medicine, hearty meals, safety, and comfort.
01:22:54.540
And I believe when we bless God's people of Israel, we unlock God's blessing in our
01:22:59.160
So show your support for Israel by making a life-saving gift today.
01:23:14.000
I personally can't even imagine if I had to be dating right now.
01:23:17.320
The dating world, it's got to be an absolute mess if you're going through that.
01:23:22.720
If you're a guy with maybe traditional values, who loves God, who loves this country, who
01:23:27.660
actually wants to make a commitment one day, the dating apps that are out there probably
01:23:34.080
And that, of course, is because almost every single one of them is a complete waste of time.
01:23:46.300
And right now they're working with incredible women with strong values who are looking to
01:23:50.000
meet men in their late 30s to 50s who are ready for something real.
01:23:54.200
Now, if you happen to be in Southern California and that sounds like you or someone you know,
01:23:59.920
you can apply as a candidate and that is completely free.
01:24:03.760
It's easy and you could be introduced to someone truly extraordinary.
01:24:07.480
Now, listen, you don't have to do dating the way that the left does it.
01:24:10.900
There's no rule in any book anywhere that says that.
01:24:13.740
If you're tired of dating apps and ready to meet real people who are serious about finding
01:24:19.280
love, you can go to SelectiveSearch.com slash California if you're in that area to get
01:24:28.500
You join the candidate program right now or send it to a guy in your life who's ready for
01:24:31.820
something real, the right women could already be waiting for you and just haven't been
01:24:57.300
You were out last week, but did you happen to see Bill Belichick and his Sunday morning
01:25:12.020
That one, even on vacation, I was with some friends who were big Patriots fans.
01:25:21.600
I think everyone's perplexed by the whole situation.
01:25:28.760
And when he did press conferences after games and stuff, he just...
01:25:34.820
And if he didn't want to answer something, he would tell you.
01:25:38.020
And he would just repeat himself over and over and over again if you pushed him on something.
01:25:46.800
He seemed to be intimidated by his 24-year-old girlfriend during this interview.
01:25:55.400
Everybody wants to hear about your relationship.
01:26:03.260
If there's anything that Bill Belichick is famous for other than going to, what, 10 Super Bowls,
01:26:07.820
it is his ability to not feel awkward just not answering questions.
01:26:17.180
Famously, in one press conference, asked a million different questions.
01:26:25.520
So why would he not be able to handle that situation himself?
01:26:33.480
And then she afterward posted a letter or an email from Bill Belichick about how,
01:26:40.780
you know, he was upset about the way the interview had gone.
01:26:44.460
And I think it was, she was trying to do, like, this mic drop moment where she was saying
01:26:53.480
I mean, I've seen this email a million times of personality complaining about the way they're
01:26:58.920
But, like, I didn't understand why she thought it would have helped her at all.
01:27:06.320
And it's probably not going to help him in North Carolina very well.
01:27:11.240
She seems to be, like, running the show there, though, too.
01:28:28.260
We'll get into that and much more coming up in one minute.
01:28:32.120
So you may have heard some of the news in Israel and into Yemen and Gaza and all the other things going on right now.
01:28:40.380
Many families in Israel, war is not something distant.
01:28:43.500
It is something that is a sound outside their window.
01:28:48.800
It is the child that is too young to understand why the world feels different now.
01:28:53.100
Since the attack of October 7th and even long before then,
01:28:56.120
the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews has been on the ground day and night,
01:29:00.500
bringing food and water and shelter and emergency aid to those caught in the chaos.
01:29:06.860
There's elderly men and women too frail to run.
01:29:11.400
The fellowship is often the first to respond, delivering care where it's needed most.
01:29:15.560
They can only do it because of people like you.
01:29:18.680
In a time when so much feels uncertain, your compassion becomes something solid.
01:29:23.040
A box of food, a warm blanket, a safe place to sleep.
01:29:26.420
This is a moment to stand with Israel and the peoples whose lives have really been affected by all of this.
01:29:32.360
Show your support for Israel by making a life-saving gift today.
01:29:50.340
You know, one of the things that the left forgets about Elon Musk is that, I mean, he started companies and took companies to new levels because of his belief in global warming and climate change.
01:30:07.060
And the fact that we were going to have to eventually leave this planet and go somewhere else because it's going to be destroyed.
01:30:16.580
That's why he created SpaceX so that we could escape this planet when it goes bad for this planet.
01:30:24.820
It feels so distant now because of all the political twists and turns since.
01:30:34.060
I mean, I don't know how much more extreme you have to be than investing billions of your own dollars to get us to leave the planet to avoid the one degree temperature rise we've had in the past century.
01:30:48.040
And again, I, generally speaking, really like Elon Musk.
01:30:53.940
I mean, one of the things I liked about his efforts at Tesla is like he kind of tried to do that on his own.
01:30:57.800
Now, there was obviously some government tax breaks that affected a lot of those purchases that I was not a fan of.
01:31:14.920
Is he begging President Trump, hey, please take that $7,500 incentive away?
01:31:20.500
I believe he said he's fine with them going away.
01:31:29.260
But, you know, he thinks it's really important for environmental reasons.
01:31:32.880
I think Teslas are great cars because they're really cool cars.
01:31:36.760
They can go really fast and they're really interesting pieces of technology.
01:31:41.160
I don't care about the global warming thing at all, but would still consider and have considered buying a Tesla at various times.
01:31:48.920
And I love his – even beyond that, the SpaceX stuff is incredible, what he's been able to achieve with that.
01:31:55.460
You know, all of his different companies are really impressive.
01:32:01.380
He kind of came to prominence because he was such a global warming guy that the left embraced him.
01:32:12.960
But he was talking to Jesse Waters yesterday about escaping to Mars.
01:32:20.660
This is a backup plan in case something bad happens here, going to Mars.
01:32:24.480
That's one of the benefits of Mars, is life insurance for life collectively.
01:32:31.800
So eventually all life on Earth will be destroyed by the sun.
01:32:38.320
And so we do at some point need to be a multi-planet civilization because Earth will be incinerated.
01:32:47.940
No one's ever told me the sun is going to burn her.
01:32:53.020
I'm just saying I didn't know this was our destiny, to get roasted by the sun.
01:32:57.480
And I don't think there's anyone who would disagree with that.
01:32:59.520
So we have to set up plans to leave and spread out.
01:33:08.620
But if Earth has been around for four and a half billion years, which is what the fossil record suggests,
01:33:14.240
then Earth only has about 10% more life in it before it gets so hot that life is impossible.
01:33:25.060
And you're going to be the guy to put us closer to where we need to be to get to Mars.
01:33:33.780
We have a long way to go, because it's not about just landing on Mars and doing flags and footprints.
01:33:40.820
It's about creating a self-sustaining city on Mars.
01:33:44.340
With the fundamental fork in the road of destiny being that Mars is sufficiently self-sustaining
01:33:53.460
and can grow by itself, if the resupply shifts from Earth stop coming for any reason,
01:33:59.360
whether that is because civilization died with a bang or a whimper,
01:34:02.980
but if the resupply shifts are necessary for Mars to survive,
01:34:10.620
We've not created life insurance for life collectively.
01:34:12.400
So that's the key point in the future where destiny of life, as we know it,
01:34:20.740
will forever be affected is when Mars becomes self-sustaining.
01:34:29.900
One of them is, okay, we're going to terraform Mars.
01:34:36.480
Well, you've got to create an atmosphere for one thing.
01:34:40.000
But, I mean, on a timescale of 100 million years seems pretty doable.
01:34:45.220
Yeah, you can easily create an atmosphere on another planet if you've got 100 million years.
01:34:58.580
I will say, like, my one, again, you know, Jesse Waters is really funny in that interview.
01:35:04.920
He's like, ah, it's the first time I'm hearing this.
01:35:14.060
And I will say it's not my, I don't dive into this stuff like Elon Musk does.
01:35:17.840
He's really, I mean, legitimately, you know, he has spent his entire life thinking about this.
01:35:26.040
And I disagree with him that the earth is going to burn up due to the sun.
01:35:32.840
The best thing about a prediction like that is you have no idea if you're right or wrong.
01:35:39.180
We're not going to be around long enough to find out.
01:35:41.460
But what I will say is it appears to me, this is just me as an idiot.
01:35:47.640
But it appears to me if we have the technology to create a new atmosphere on Mars within 100 million years,
01:35:54.320
like, why wouldn't we just update our atmosphere and just stay?
01:36:09.380
I think what he believes, though, is that we're going to be too close to the sun
01:36:12.980
and there's nothing we can do on this planet to avoid that.
01:36:16.960
Because the sun is going to be increasingly hot, supposedly,
01:36:20.040
and it'll eventually burn out in 10 billion years, they think.
01:36:27.200
But even Mars wouldn't be far enough away if the sun burns out.
01:36:33.740
You're going to have to come up with a whole new heating system for the globe, too.
01:36:37.280
But all of those things, I think, are theoretically plausible over a timeline like that.
01:36:41.480
I mean, we have no idea what we're going to come up with in 1,000 years.
01:36:48.420
I mean, think about 1,000 years ago what we were doing here, right?
01:36:52.200
Like, this world would be completely unimaginable to the people of 1,000 years ago.
01:37:00.740
And like, so you're telling me 100 million years.
01:37:02.760
I think anything is possible in 100 million years.
01:37:05.760
You know, we may very well be teleporting to Mars and wherever we want, whenever we want.
01:37:11.100
I mean, who knows what could be part of that package.
01:37:13.620
So that timeline is so open that, sure, maybe it's possible.
01:37:19.120
I do feel like anyone, one of the biggest mistakes of the environmental movement at large is, hey, we know what's coming with such certainty we can do things now to stop it.
01:37:33.580
You know, we were talking about 1,000 years ago.
01:37:36.160
One of my favorite examples is 125 years ago or so when, you know, the people of Manhattan were saying we need to solve this environmental crisis,
01:37:45.600
which is manure on the streets from all the horses.
01:37:49.500
We have so much manure on the streets of Manhattan, this is going to pile up.
01:37:54.960
We're not even going to be able to live here anymore.
01:37:56.820
It's going to be all we're doing all the time is removing manure from the streets.
01:38:00.040
Remember when New York City got buried by horse manure?
01:38:02.960
That was what they legitimately were worried about.
01:38:12.380
And they had no idea how they were going to get out of it, how they were going to change it.
01:38:16.980
They made all sorts of, you know, there were people making crazy proposals about, you know, digging under the city to bury it,
01:38:24.720
to come up with, like, factories to remove it, like, you know, conveyor belts.
01:38:33.380
Can you imagine the Jersey City apartment looking down on that conveyor belt?
01:38:36.800
The conveyor belt took all the poop out of the city?
01:38:56.060
You can always go take a nice ride around Central Park behind a horse who will poop in front of you.
01:39:05.740
But they've largely solved it, Pat, thankfully.
01:39:20.780
I mean, even, you know, you think of just the developments.
01:39:23.320
Think of the world in 2003 before we get iPhones, right?
01:39:27.740
Like a totally different thing to the point of now that like, what is it, 60, 70% of the population spends more than eight hours of their day on these devices?
01:39:38.640
I'm totally blown away when I see movies that are pre-2007.
01:39:43.300
Because it looks like, what is that thing you're holding in your hand?
01:39:46.800
That ancient technology that I can't even imagine that we existed back then.
01:39:52.120
I mean, it seems like ancient history, pre-2007, pre the iPhone.
01:40:01.260
You know, you've got Wall Street with the big brick the guy's carrying around.
01:40:12.380
But I mean, again, and before that, there was absolutely no way you could communicate.
01:40:16.620
Like when you leave, you don't just like make a call from your car.
01:40:22.380
And all that happened in a very short period of time.
01:40:24.780
So when you're talking about timelines of a hundred million years, God only knows.
01:40:33.240
Like a year ago, what did that chat GPT thing really kind of hit?
01:40:40.260
And now, you know, seemingly anything, the only thing anyone talks about is AI and how
01:40:49.240
And by the way, that's been a big focus of Elon Musk.
01:40:51.220
Obviously he has Grok, which is his AI company.
01:40:57.500
He's been one of the other reasons, because there was multiple.
01:41:00.380
To go to Mars was because he was afraid AI would also take over the world and destroy
01:41:08.440
So we needed a place to go in case it gets out of control.
01:41:16.940
So, I mean, he legitimately has been thinking about it.
01:41:19.560
Although I will say he was included in a conspiracy theory article by the New York Times today.
01:41:25.360
It's the headline is Trump's return to power elevates ever fringier conspiracy theories.
01:41:32.100
Now, I, as a person who likes and respects Elon Musk quite a bit, his version of global warming
01:41:43.640
that makes us need to lead the planet strikes me kind of as a conspiracy theory.
01:41:48.960
Like it seems, it's so funny how we're always seen as, you know, Glenn used to get in trouble.
01:41:54.880
And then you're like, wait, wait, you're telling me we're all going to be destroyed by the sun
01:42:02.620
I want to make sure I understand how this works.
01:42:04.340
But like, that is a, to me, a real fear mongery conspiracy theory type of thing.
01:42:13.780
And, you know, I don't mind people having views that disagree with me.
01:42:22.380
They never said, hey, he takes this way too far.
01:42:25.760
I mean, look, global warming is a problem, but he goes way too far.
01:42:31.140
In this article, though, they do talk about him and Eli Musk.
01:42:34.940
People who question whether the earth is round, a fact understood by the ancient Greeks
01:42:41.320
and taught to American children in elementary school, might have been political pariahs a decade ago.
01:42:47.340
Now, they're running local Republican parties in Georgia and Minnesota and seeking public office in Alabama.
01:42:55.380
Now, there's so much there, just in that one paragraph.
01:43:02.320
The article is about rising to political prominence.
01:43:08.820
If you take your personal time and you go out there and you bust your butt and you show up to a bunch of meetings a year
01:43:14.500
and you try to run a local Republican party in your town, like that is something that is like a great thing to do
01:43:23.840
and something that is a foundational part of our society and something that the founders were.
01:43:32.340
But to describe a local Republican party leader in Minnesota as a is as someone who is politically prominent.
01:43:42.720
is a tad overboard or seeking, not winning, but seeking public.
01:43:53.060
It is literally any single person who signs up.
01:43:58.340
For any reason, with the exception of, I guess, if you've been convicted of certain felonies, you can sign up and run for public office.
01:44:13.780
Another, they go on, a prominent far right activist who has said, despite years of research and intelligence,
01:44:18.780
establishing otherwise, that the terrorist attacks on September 11th were an inside job by the U.S. government
01:44:23.740
commemorated the 9-11 anniversary last year alongside President Trump.
01:44:31.380
It would be, it's kind of weird to commemorate it in a way that if you think that, I guess you still think it was a bad event if you thought it was an inside job.
01:44:42.220
RFK Jr., they go on to talk about him and his belief in chemtrails and such.
01:44:47.700
So, there is some evidence there that some people who believe in what has always been considered conspiracy theories have risen to prominence.
01:44:55.340
I don't know that the flat earth situation is to that level.
01:44:59.300
No, no, I don't think they're necessarily politically prominent, but they're going to blame Trump for that?
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So, it is Donald Trump proliferating the flat earth theory now.
01:46:35.380
He's a man who's traveled the globe quite a bit.
01:46:40.840
So, I don't, I don't know that he's at all on board with any, many, any of these.
01:46:45.940
I don't, I don't think I've ever heard him talk about chemtrails.
01:46:52.760
I don't know if that's going to rise to anything to do with his job.
01:47:00.000
Conspiracy theories are now graduating to the mainstream.
01:47:04.660
And people voicing them are growing more influential.
01:47:07.040
They never address any left-wing conspiracy theories, by the way.
01:47:14.360
Which is, I think, is amazing, considering the fact it's an article about Donald Trump
01:47:22.760
Mr. Trump and Elon Musk, the billionaire who has been called the, quote, unelected co-president,
01:47:30.080
end quote, have repeatedly suggested things about Fort Knox.
01:47:34.480
Now, if you're writing an article, and the point of your article is you should not platform
01:47:42.540
bizarre conspiracy theories, perhaps including the theory that Elon Musk is the unelected
01:47:55.940
The lack of self-awareness in articles like this and with liberals like this.
01:48:08.420
I mean, if anything, I think you'd look at the Doge process and you'd say, I love the
01:48:19.560
I don't think we're going to come even close to what the initial promise was of Doge,
01:48:24.340
unless it continues without Elon Musk, because he can only spend, what, 130 days in that
01:48:30.660
And he's already talked about, he's basically leaving.
01:48:33.420
I mean, you haven't seen him out talking about this as much.
01:48:37.720
That is a known, unless they somehow go through another process and get him hired in another
01:48:42.640
So, you know, if anything, I would say like probably didn't go as far as I wanted them
01:48:51.700
He wanted to be two trillions of dollars of savings.
01:48:53.820
They're not even going to come close to that number.
01:48:57.860
So this idea that he's the unelected co-president is completely a conspiracy theory.
01:49:04.580
The second he says one thing that Donald Trump wouldn't like, he'd be gone.
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She was so focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind her car on her
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We've got a parade of some of the worst people in government, perhaps some of the worst people
01:51:06.280
Ilana Mar, talking about the biggest threat we face.
01:51:12.700
I think you're going to really agree with everything she says here.
01:51:15.340
I would say our country should be more fearful of white men across our country because they
01:51:24.260
are actually causing most of the deaths within this country.
01:51:29.780
We should be profiling, monitoring, and creating policies to fight the radicalization of white
01:51:44.300
If that was said by a white person about any other race.
01:51:52.700
That we've tried to teach over the years, which is take a moment when you're about to say something,
01:51:59.900
and when the color is coming up in the sentence in your head, change it to another color,
01:52:08.320
the opposite color, maybe in this particular case, from black to white.
01:52:20.240
And I would say do this in the comfort and quiet of your own home.
01:52:25.260
And turn off all your devices before you do it.
01:52:35.940
Can you, I mean, that statement, word for word about black people.
01:52:45.440
Any person who would believe such a thing, which should be shunned from our society.
01:52:56.900
This is when we need Jeffy here so we can have him actually say the thing with the other
01:53:03.440
I would say our country should be more fearful.
01:53:10.420
Our country should be more fearful of, in this case, black men.
01:53:19.920
You wouldn't be allowed in polite society anymore.
01:53:22.040
Not only is she not already out of Congress, which is what, of course, should happen.
01:53:27.360
I mean, it's absolutely disgusting that somebody, she should be, her own voters should take
01:53:32.520
her out immediately at the polls or through some legal process.
01:53:36.820
Because, you know, I mean, George Santos was gone almost immediately after, you know, lying
01:53:44.300
about a couple of things and not defending George Santos or really know, honestly, who
01:53:49.540
But, you know, this is much worse than anything that George Santos did, right?
01:53:53.720
You're saying the thing people should be most fearful of is the other color person that
01:53:59.440
That would, it would be immediate, immediate, Pat.
01:54:09.120
This morning, you'd be out of whatever office you were in.
01:54:20.200
And not only did none of that happen, my understanding of this club, you correct me if I'm wrong,
01:54:24.560
there wasn't like even like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, wait a minute.
01:54:28.160
Are you saying you believe most people in this country died because of white men?
01:54:39.280
Ilhan Omar said, without evidence, that all, we don't even get that.
01:54:44.780
We get nothing, nothing at all happens outside of us ranting about it.
01:54:50.820
You get that commentary from Donald Trump on everything he says.
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Donald Trump says without any evidence that the election was stolen from him.
01:55:01.600
They insert that commentary every single time they say, they mention something that he has
01:55:13.180
And like, you know, some people say crazy things and they're at some lower level of like, you
01:55:20.700
Maybe they don't go after it because it's kind of, I mean, he's saying different crazy
01:55:23.360
things every day and maybe the media is not going to come.
01:55:35.680
Kim Kardashian has said that he's off his medication and this happens when he's off his
01:55:47.580
And by the way, this is an opinion I've held from the beginning all the way back to when
01:55:52.560
he was a George Bush doesn't care about black people all the way through the fancy red hat
01:55:57.040
he wore for two weeks and all of a sudden conservatives loved him.
01:55:59.940
There was never a moment where I didn't think he was crazy.
01:56:06.360
There was never a moment where I did not think he was crazy.
01:56:22.580
But I do know a lot of people who think he's, at least at one point, was a genius when it
01:56:34.220
I didn't see the beauty of even much of the black dandyism we saw last night.
01:56:47.320
But we're talking about a sitting U.S. representative.
01:56:53.280
Claiming that the leading cause of death in the United States is white men.
01:57:07.860
Even if white people were responsible for more murder.
01:57:12.760
So they probably, statistically, should be responsible for more deaths.
01:57:19.660
I mean, if people are being murdered, you would think it would be the large majority of people
01:57:33.340
That does not allow you to have broad generalizations of the people by the color of their skin.
01:57:38.400
It tells you probably more about their circumstances than anything else.
01:57:42.880
Which is why you don't say stupid things like that.
01:57:46.620
How could there not have been pushback from them?
01:57:49.440
It's like once, sometimes you get into a situation where someone says something, you're in an interview.
01:57:53.900
And again, this is supposed to be a news interview.
01:57:55.420
This is not like she's on a progressive left-wing show that is out saying, like, we love Yelan Omar.
01:58:09.460
And he said something like 50% of Chinese people have diabetes.
01:58:21.560
That would be 700 million Chinese have diabetes.
01:58:27.060
I'm pretty sure that's, I could just take a wild stab and say that's not true.
01:58:32.980
You're going to be happy to hear for the Chinese people, half of the population does not have diabetes.
01:58:39.980
I will say, if we're talking about stereotypes in this segment anyway, if there's one about Chinese people, they're generally pretty thin.
01:58:46.500
Like, I would say, pretty, you know, like, if anything, the percentage would be lower than average.
01:58:55.340
They're starved most of the time, but through their history.
01:59:03.220
Well, if RFK Jr. comes on a show of someone who's very, very friendly to RFK Jr. and says 50% of China has diabetes, you could see perhaps a situation where the person says, yeah, I know what he means.
01:59:24.960
Like, I'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt and not call him out.
01:59:27.800
If RFK Jr. said that on Meet the Press, I would assume they'd say, wait a minute, what?
01:59:37.480
As we saw with President Trump a couple weeks ago when he was talking about the Photoshopped tattoo thing we mentioned earlier.
01:59:51.340
Then eventually tried to move on and Trump wanted to keep talking about it.
01:59:54.760
But the point is, that is the way the regular media, when you have a media member, a journalist,
02:00:01.020
that's how you would push back against something like that.
02:00:02.820
You'd immediately say, wait a minute, hold on one second.
02:00:04.860
That's an incredibly, especially, I don't know who he's being interviewed by.
02:00:12.820
Let's go back to it one time so that we can see it.
02:00:15.480
We're going to say our country should be more fearful of white men across our country because they are actually causing most of the deaths within this country.
02:00:29.680
We should be profiling, monitoring, and policies to fight the radicalization.
02:00:46.640
Share with me the statistics you have on that because that's not what I understand.
02:00:54.180
Listen, look at all the breaks we're giving them.
02:00:58.720
You don't want to get in trouble with your buddy.
02:01:11.740
Sometimes someone's talking in your ear, right?
02:01:18.880
Certainly, there should be a plethora of think pieces today showing you that what she said is completely bonkers.
02:01:28.200
Instead, what you'll get, if anything, is a bunch of people saying, actually, she's right.
02:01:36.180
Actually, you know, you might say, well, no, actually, the leading cause of death is heart disease.
02:01:44.240
They'll come up with some justification to say that she's right.
02:02:02.540
A white man singer of a white man group singing very white man music.
02:02:19.040
As is the story earlier when I said I went to the NFL draft and then all of a sudden couldn't remember if I actually went to the NFL draft, which, by the way.
02:02:25.160
You, like, had a stroke while you were on the air?
02:02:30.380
Did I get shot down in a helicopter over Afghanistan?
02:02:39.620
But, like, it could be, it may be the same thing with the Maroon 5 thing.
02:02:49.380
That was where, that's how we know who this person is.
02:02:59.280
I may have heard it and forgot, but what an auspicious start for her.
02:03:06.480
And I don't, I mean, because, you know, you know how these scenes, the back end of the
02:03:11.200
music video world's a little, can be a little crazy at times.
02:03:15.260
I hope her brother was okay with her appearance.
02:03:19.080
The brother she was married to at the time, you mean?
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I hope that, you know, I just hope she checked with her brother before she made the,
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When I found out my friend got a great deal on a wool coat from Winners, I started wondering,
02:05:04.180
Like that woman over there with the designer jeans.
02:05:37.620
Oh, by the way, we should mention that the Elon Omar clip that we just played was from
02:05:46.660
The reason we brought it up is because J.D. Vance was tweeting about it yesterday, which
02:05:50.400
we were told as we went to a break that we did not actually set up correctly.
02:06:00.400
But we should point out that that was the controversy.
02:06:08.680
What a disgrace this person is, which is a fair summary.
02:06:16.180
She says in this nearly eight-year-old clip, I'm referring to the rise of white nationalism
02:06:22.500
Issued by the Anti-Defamation League, which is, of course, ridiculous in and of itself,
02:06:27.320
that said white supremacists were responsible for 78% of extremist-related murders.
02:06:32.680
Now, that's not what she said at all in the interview.
02:06:35.400
You should point out she wasn't talking about just extremist-related murders, which is a small
02:06:40.000
subset of a small subset of a small subset of how people die.
02:06:45.260
By the way, also, most of those people that those extremists kill are other white people.
02:06:54.460
She also says you should look up what genocidal actually means when you're actively supporting
02:07:07.680
Because, you know, you shouldn't mention the fact that you want to talk about, like, the
02:07:11.700
impression she gave in that interview was, if you change the colors, a perfect representation
02:07:17.540
of what you would say happened on October 7th, people just randomly crossing borders and killing
02:07:24.320
people just because of the color of their skin and their beliefs.
02:07:32.040
But that part is completely ignored in the Israeli-Hamas situation.
02:07:41.600
That doesn't matter at all to the supporters of Hamas and the Palestinians.
02:07:46.220
And, by the way, which is why Israel is now talking about just taking back the Gaza Strip,
02:07:57.640
I don't even understand how it's a conversation.
02:08:01.240
Maybe we should leave the terrorists in control.
02:08:07.080
They never should have left there in the first place.
02:08:09.200
They never should have left the situation they had previously, which at least they had
02:08:15.540
And they still have dozens of Israeli hostages and I think five Americans.
02:08:23.500
And we're like, oh, gosh, look at all that genocide.
02:08:28.060
Then we'll start worrying about what's going on over there.
02:08:32.780
And honestly, they're probably just dead bodies at this point.
02:08:35.500
But at the very least have the decency to give us those.