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00:00:18.100The last few years have taught me something that I don't think enough people want to admit.
00:00:23.180The system we count on every single day in this country isn't as sturdy as it looks.
00:00:27.940All it takes is a little trouble in the wrong part of the world and shipping bottleneck, a shortage of one key ingredient, major disruption overseas, and everything changes.
00:00:36.360And it's getting harder and harder to find the things that you need.
00:00:38.920And when it comes to medication, that's not an inconvenience.
00:25:05.300All right, I'm going to give you some information here that I just, I don't want you to react to
00:25:27.060yet. I don't want you to take this as gospel. I want you to take this as that's important
00:25:31.720information, I should file this away. Um, and we're going to continue to do our homework,
00:25:36.680but I have been following this now for a few weeks. Um, there is a drought going on and I
00:25:42.480want to be really careful. Um, there were several droughts. It's not just one big drought. There are
00:25:47.380several droughts all around the country and they're all, they're all different. Um, but
00:25:52.420they're all causing the same thing. The drought that we are in, they believe that by the end of
00:26:01.880summer, if things don't change, we will be in the drought of 1610. Why is 1610 so important?
00:26:11.8601610 wasn't just one year. And that's the same thing. You know, the Colorado water system,
00:26:21.340this has been going on now for almost two decades um and and that's what happened in 1610 there were
00:26:29.260several things that were happening and going on for a long time and we are in this drought they
00:26:35.680believe it's going to be the compared to the drought of 1610 why that's important what else
00:26:40.540happened in 1610 anybody know anybody bueller anybody cannibalism okay in in 1610 remember
00:26:51.200this is jamestown and remember they couldn't make a go of it because of a couple of things0.72
00:26:56.180they couldn't make a go of it because they were bad people um and the indians turned on them um
00:27:01.360the indians thought they were such bad people that they actually put a fence around the jamestown
00:27:07.160colony. I mean, the Indians were like, yeah, I don't want anything to do with you guys. You stay1.00
00:27:11.980there. And so we were just bad people, those people who came over because they were seeking
00:27:19.400gold, not God. And then the second thing is, again, they were trying before it was called
00:27:25.700Marxism, before Marx was alive, they were trying socialism. We're just going to put it all into a
00:27:29.940big pot and you just take what you need and people stop working, et cetera, et cetera. And then on
00:27:36.840top of it the weather conditions and the the drought of 1610 was the breaking point nobody
00:27:45.040could grow anything um and think of the dust bowl except much much much much worse and all over the
00:27:53.080country um they got so hungry that when the ship finally came back from England um what they found
00:28:03.240were just a few survivors. And one of the guys was eating, I think his child. And as they dug up
00:28:09.200bones, they found teeth marks on a lot of the bones. They were starving and they began to eat
00:28:14.660each other. It was that bad. Now, hopefully we're not going to get to that point, but I want to
00:28:20.920talk to you about this drought. This is a mega drought that is now happening. Um, and it's,
00:28:27.600our farmers already know it that, you know, there are crops out there that won't germinate
00:28:32.160right now. And some of these crops are very heavily dependent on water. For instance,
00:28:41.980I grow alfalfa on my farm. I feed that, I store it up and I feed it to my cattle in the winter.
00:28:50.000Really important, but a lot of water. Well, in my part of the country, I live in the high desert
00:28:56.420And in the high desert, we share water.
00:29:00.940And so we get it from a dam, we get it from a reservoir, and you get certain shares, and that's all the water you get.
00:29:07.400And you hope that God's going to, you know, rain at the right times, not rain at the wrong times, and you'll have just enough water to do it.
00:29:16.260Well, it is getting bad, not just in my part of the country, but all across the country.
00:29:21.860this is going to make i mean if i can't grow alfalfa that means what am i going to feed
00:29:28.920my cattle which makes cattle more expensive in the end which makes your meat go up etc etc so
00:29:34.640we're having a problem with drought i mean talk about the perfect storm having a problem with
00:29:38.640drought cost of diesel and fertilizer good luck on food costs now this is not a done deal yet
00:29:49.140we're at the beginning of the growing season, but it is really bad. And yesterday I sent a story
00:29:56.440that I found to Jason and I said, Hey, Jason, we have to do some work on this, uh, to make sure
00:30:02.380this is accurate before we get into it. And I'm not ready to go in depth on this story, but we
00:30:07.640will be in the next few days. Saw a story about the Hoover Dam. When you look at the Hoover Dam,
00:30:15.580um that is providing i think it's 25 million people with their electricity mainly california
00:30:22.960nevada but mainly california that is powered by the colorado river if you look at the colorado
00:30:30.040river and uh shoot lake uh is it lake mead no it's what lake mead lake mead is hoover what's
00:30:37.400the powell powell has been down for a long time and i mean way down way way way down
00:30:44.880and they've been in this drought for a long time and it's getting worse and worse and worse well
00:30:49.120that feeds in to lake mead lake mead is the lake behind the hoover dam now to generate electricity
00:30:56.660you need to have a lot of water behind that dam and when it goes to a certain level you cannot
00:31:05.840allow air to go through those turbines and so you have those turbines that are spinning if you get
00:31:13.700down, which is, I'll fill you in. If you get down to a certain point, you begin to have to turn
00:31:21.180those things down and be very careful because it's major damage if any air goes through those
00:31:25.560things. And then you get just a few feet later, you get down to what's called Deadpool. And it
00:31:30.800has nothing about being funny movies. It is about, Deadpool means you cannot turn the turbines on.
00:31:39.700You can't generate any electricity. We are down now. We are approaching, and not this summer, but possibly if this does not turn around, in the next two to five years, Hoover and other dams.
00:31:57.880what's the other dam they're feeding, they're transferring water to feed yet another
00:32:01.060hydraulic plant. If this doesn't correct itself, you're going to have major electricity shortages.
00:32:13.260We could be by 2027, 2028, if this doesn't, if we don't get miraculous rain here,
00:32:20.300California is in real trouble and you're not going to have blackouts until you get to Deadpool.
00:32:25.860you are going to instead you're going to start having uh your energy costs everybody is going
00:32:31.300to blame it on inflation if this will not be inflation food uh and electricity will not be
00:32:39.360inflation electricity will be because of the drought and we are we're looking at serious
00:32:49.440serious problems. You can't turn off the main generator for 25 million people and expect
00:32:56.220everything just to continue on. I want you to be prepared as much as you can. I want you to
00:33:05.060make sure your food storage is, you know, is what it needs to be. If you have the ability to start
00:33:15.260a garden, start a garden, even if you're only growing lettuce or tomatoes. Remember, lettuce
00:33:20.740is water dependent. You're going to lose a lot of stuff that is very high in water that requires a
00:33:27.700lot of water. If you're living in a place where you can grow tomatoes or lettuce or anything else,
00:33:33.960grow it, teach it to your children, learn. I believe that we are headed towards a time,
00:33:40.600you know, President Trump just read, what was it, last week in the Oval Office, the scripture,
00:33:48.620if my people will turn their face to me, I will heal their land. Horribly butchering that
00:33:54.800scripture, but that's the gist of it. And I think we think we're in trouble. I think right now,
00:34:01.180people are like, we're in real trouble. I mean, boy, we got, you know, we've got to heal ourselves,
00:34:06.460We're going to lose the Republic. We are at the very beginning of something really unfriendly, to put it kindly, that could put America behind the eight ball so fast.
00:34:25.160And it would have nothing to do with, um, who's president, be that Joe Biden or Donald Trump.
00:34:35.760It would have everything to do with water.
00:46:43.580But I think this is a actual fair court.0.99
00:46:46.080They don't always go the way I want them to go.
00:46:49.080And I don't think I've seen that before.
00:46:51.160But of course, the Democrats are saying everything they need to say to be able to convince their constituents that they need to pack the court.
00:49:04.740Boy, what perfect timing to have you on and to have your new book out with what happened yesterday.
00:49:11.360You want to give us a quick look at what Alito said in his decision and the meaning behind the court decision yesterday?
00:49:19.260Yeah, the Supreme Court has had to deal with all sorts of cases that are very frustrating for them, dealing with conflicting lower court opinions about how to enact the Voting Rights Act.
00:49:31.480Now, we know that the Constitution forbids racism, and so you're not allowed to draw racially based districts in your maps.
00:49:41.300But we also had a bunch of federal courts saying you had to be racist in your drawing of districts.
00:49:46.760And so there was a mess that needed to be settled. Alito wrote this masterful, major opinion saying that the Constitution forbids racism. The Voting Rights Act was not written and could not be written to oppose what the Constitution says.
00:50:05.440And so Section 2, which some people had interpreted as requiring racist maps, that's clearly not the meaning that the legislators who did the Voting Rights Act intended, and the racism is ended.
00:50:19.460Now, the reason why this is interesting is because Democrats have exploited these federal rulings to create these very racial maps that have given them an undue advantage in certain states.
00:50:32.780And so ruling these congressional districts as unconstitutional and contrary to the Voting Rights Act itself means that they're all going to be going away.
00:50:42.340And you saw states, you know, just yesterday saying, OK, we're going to get back into session so we can draw non-racist maps.
00:50:50.620Help me out on gerrymandering. I mean, I know this is comes from one of our founders and they were doing this right at the very beginning.
00:50:58.140i just think it is the worst it's the worst idea of the republic and of the from the founding era
00:51:06.920it's not part of our documents but um it was what eldridge uh gary gary that actually yeah that did
00:51:15.620this um what was the thinking back then and why can't we stop this i mean i think it you know i
00:51:22.520think it was uh jefferson and adams went back and forth and said we should have based it like on the
00:51:26.980bible where it's stakes where you have a hundred people and when it gets over a hundred then you
00:51:32.720divide that equally in half and you just keep making it into blocks um and it's the way to
00:51:38.940keep everybody you know keep your politicians in that block they're not some some you know somebody
00:51:45.780that's from you know on a thin snake-like line across the state they're in your neighborhood
00:51:51.460They're in your area. Why is this still happening? Why can't we get rid of this?
00:51:57.960Well, you know, yesterday's ruling deals only with racial gerrymandering.
00:52:03.100That means you can still gerrymander. And I agree with you, Glenn.0.73
00:52:06.360I think it's very bad for the republic. It's bad because it also divides.
00:52:10.780You know, John Tillman is this guy who lives in Chicago, and he had this point about how when you create these gerrymandered districts that are overwhelmingly one particular interest group,
00:52:20.080It means that the other people who are in that group, who are in that congressional district or a city or county district, they're not getting good representation.
00:52:30.360I think it's very radical, but my idea is that we should just absolutely greatly expand the House of Representatives.
00:52:38.120The real problem is we don't really have any representation at all.
00:52:42.020Very hard to have a member of the House who is even close to representing his constituency because it's gotten so big.
00:52:50.080So I'd like to see almost like a Thunderdome House of Representatives where every 10,000 people gets their own representative.
00:52:57.740It would be messy, but I think you would have more representative government.
00:53:04.780Part of that is that they're so detached from the people they're supposed to represent.
00:53:10.340Well, but gerrymandering actually is a reason for that.
00:53:14.040I just did a monologue in our number one on why this is actually good, because this this ruling for for blacks or anybody who is taken for granted when you create a district where you know how it's going to vote, the politician doesn't have to work for your vote anymore.0.55
00:53:30.960you know so nobody listens to you you wonder why who's representing me why how can they go 80 percent
00:53:37.860the population is 80 percent for you know uh id voter id and yet neither party wants to pass this
00:53:45.740who are they representing well they're not representing you because republicans know they
00:53:50.460can always count on your vote democrats know they can always count on the black vote all they have
00:53:54.840to do is say a few things you know orrin hatch said to me one time and i was so disgusted by it
00:54:00.080I just, I, it said everything I needed to know. It was about 2009 tea party had just started and
00:54:09.680I'm sitting at a table, uh, with a bunch of politicians and Orrin Hatch is sitting there.
00:54:15.220And he said, ah, you don't have to worry about these, these people, meaning the tea party.
00:54:20.020You don't have to worry about these people. All I have to do is get up and I'm going to propose a
00:54:23.980flag burning amendment and they'll all be back on my side. And I was like, oh my gosh, I need a0.97
00:54:29.000bucket to vomit in it was disgusting but that's the difference between being managed and being
00:54:35.420represented well i think you're exactly right and you saw it yesterday democrats said if we're not
00:54:42.040allowed to be racist it's going to hurt our power and i understand that being racist in the drawing
00:54:47.640of maps has helped democrats but i don't think it's an unalloyed bad for democrats or good for
00:54:53.680republicans that these racist maps won't be allowed to stand because of what you just said
00:54:58.460if you aren't allowed to divide people into these super safe districts based on race you'll have
00:55:05.300people who have to represent their whole constituency and i think you will see yes
00:55:09.800seats and more competitive seats is actually you know a good thing right now it's like very few
00:55:16.200switch one way or the other and also that's how you get radical representatives
00:55:23.260I mean look at the people that are representing people in the country or their district you know
00:55:29.400I understand it from San Francisco I don't understand it from 70 percent of our representatives
00:55:36.040they're radicals because they can play that because it's been gerrymandered so much you
00:55:41.800don't have to play to the normal person you play to the fringes it makes it very hard to work across
00:55:49.040party lines uh it just it caused a lot of problems i mean some of those radicals are my favorite
00:55:54.420people um so let's talk about uh the book alito that you just finished you spent a lot of time
00:56:02.900with him um let me start with a broad question i and i'm just a casual i'm not like you i'm a cat
00:56:10.980more of a casual observer of you know the supreme court and watching what they're doing um but my
00:56:16.940impression is molly that this is the fairest supreme court we've had in my lifetime not that
00:56:25.540they agree with me on everything they don't but it seems as though they're trying to get it right
00:56:32.760and they make mistakes they get you know they'll go one way or another but this does not seem like
00:56:38.540a radical supreme court unless you know you're looking for the progressive supreme court that
00:56:44.360will just you know you know interpret the law any way they want and forget about the constitution
00:56:50.220yeah i think that's why is that a fair go ahead i agree and the left has been freaking out about
00:56:57.240this court because for decades they controlled the supreme court it wasn't like other you know
00:57:02.160it wasn't like the presidency which went back and forth they just had complete control and they had
00:57:06.460embraced this idea of rule of men you know you had people like justice brennan saying that he thinks
00:57:12.400that what he feels about the current moment is what's important, not what the Constitution
00:57:16.960meant at its founding. You have this major movement taking place where people say,
00:57:21.740this is just madness. They're just legislating from the bench. And for the first time in our
00:57:26.240country's history, we have a majority of justices who say that they want to adhere
00:57:31.580to the original meaning of the Constitution at the time it was framed. And they're doing really
00:57:37.500good good work logical reasonable work to have a coherent make a make a case for the democrat
00:57:48.120that's listening that actually they are fair they've they've done some things that are good
00:57:53.800for you well you can even look at the you know a lot of my book deals with the overturning of
00:57:59.980roe v wade and a lot of people on the left were very upset about that because they they love
00:58:04.920abortion, or they love this idea that abortion was hidden. You know, Roe v. Wade said abortion
00:58:10.980was hidden in the Constitution by the founders. It's in between a couple of words. Nobody actually
00:58:17.120believes that, but they did like that it gave the fraud right to abortion. And when Justice Alito
00:58:24.060wrote the opinion that overturned that, the media and other left-wing groups definitely freaked out
00:58:30.600about it, but it was actually a very modest opinion that returns power to the, it didn't say
00:58:38.240abortion is now forbidden or unborn children have a right to life that's in the 14th amendment.
00:58:44.300It said that people get to decide what their abortion policy is. You might not like that you
00:58:49.620have to do that work of debating and hashing things out at your state or federal legislature,
00:58:55.940But it's a very modest opinion. And even here, this idea that you cannot be racist, that's in the Constitution. The 15th Amendment was passed precisely so that states would not be racist when it came to election law.
00:59:11.820And you might say, but I like this form of racism because it helps the Democrats. I think we all know deep down that racism is bad and that it's forbidden by the Constitution and that a piece of legislation could not overturn what the Constitution says.
00:59:26.320um molly hemingway we're going to take one minute break and back uh her new book is out um uh about
00:59:34.080justice alito it's called alito um the justice who reshaped the supreme court and restored the
00:59:41.520constitution man that is just such a great title i'm so glad it's true uh more in just a second
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01:01:03.740oh molly i would love to have you back talk more about the book uh because i've got so many
01:01:18.740questions but what about the chatter about alito retiring before the midterms take one for the
01:01:24.500team which i absolutely hate um he's not going to do that is he well i kind of hate that speculation
01:01:31.200about who's going to retire since they have
01:01:33.140lifetime appointments. It really is up to them.
01:04:17.480The Department of Justice did nothing. The media celebrated and encouraged it. You had left wing terror groups posting the home addresses of these federal judges, Supreme Court justices, that is completely against the law and nothing was done.
01:04:32.420And likewise, this guy who goes to try to shoot Trump and his cabinet, he's he's existing in this milieu of support for terrorism, even places like the Atlantic, which I think at one time did have a reputation of not being insane.
01:04:48.260But they put these magazine covers out where they portray Trump as Hitler, conspiracy theories that he stole the 2016 election or, you know, other things that that the media constantly regurgitate.
01:05:01.000And it's not the fringe. It's MSNBC and CNN and The Atlantic and Washington Post and New York Times.
01:05:08.600And we have, you know, all people are capable of evil, but the embrace on the left of political violence is something we really need to deal with, whether it's against Trump or the Supreme Court justices.0.98
01:05:20.960Can I ask you, this is probably an unsavory question, but Jackson is one of the dumbest people I have ever seen anywhere near a courtroom.0.86
01:05:33.520um and i gotta believe it's hard for you know even liberals to work around they have to just0.97
01:05:41.300go oh god how does she i mean please stop talking how do they get along with jackson because she
01:05:48.640just she's insulting to intelligence in many ways i mean it's actually a legitimate issue
01:05:56.360you take a liberal justice like elena kagan and apart from what i just i've reported in my book0.91
01:06:32.700You bet. Molly Hemingway, the name of the book is easy to remember. It is Alito. Alito, the justice who reshaped the Supreme Court and restored the Constitution. Back in just a second, let me tell you about Z Factor. The one weird thing about sleep is it's the only thing in your life that gets more important the worse you are at it.
01:06:53.880it's like you're trying to live your life with one hand tied behind your back
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01:35:07.600He has a free speech fund where if you're being arrested or persecuted
01:35:12.640or canceled for something you said, they will fund it if you are part of this group.
01:35:16.600It's like a pot of money that you put into, and then if you get sued.
01:35:20.180And he was talking about academia and he said, I started meddling, you know, we're starting to meddle in these colleges in a way that doesn't feel consistent to me with free speech.
01:35:29.820But he goes to fix post-secondary education in Britain and America is a 200 year job.
01:41:10.480We're doing okay for now, although Texas is not looking good and we lost Michigan.
01:41:14.660but uh in britain they've successfully taken over many areas and they're calling for sharia law
01:41:21.300and that's what tommy's about like i did a podcast with the economist yesterday in britain and she's
01:41:27.420like don't you think that um the problem with tommy and what he's doing is that there's he's
01:41:32.220stereotyping people and there could be innocent you know muslims who are falling into this category0.78
01:41:37.780and i'm like you know what's inconvenient being sodomized by an old man when you're 11 years old0.86
01:41:43.580like there are thousands and thousands of child rapes where i'm not even sure i can say it on the0.81
01:41:49.140show what they do like nailing a girl's tongue into a piece of wood while she's being raped no0.60
01:41:53.860raping her under the pakistani flag branding girls with an m for muhammad and the elite's0.98
01:42:00.640takeaway at the economist is but what if we offend people children being raped is much more offensive0.95
01:42:07.100than someone being inconvenienced and if you're being inconvenienced by the way as a moderate0.52
01:42:11.200muslim you should be mad at the jihadis for creating this pattern you're falling into yes
01:42:16.040it's not my problem yes more in just a second with gavin mckenness he's going to open up here0.96
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01:43:36.920you want to break that news sure yeah um gavin's on his way after this to go to
01:43:45.320alex jones he's going to be on with alex jones supposedly today is last day of uh of info wars
01:43:51.980uh it's just going to become the alex jones show you know and on the alex jones network
01:43:56.360info wars was supposed to be sold to the onion but you just got a text he just texted me and
01:44:03.100He's texted me his own tweet that says, for the second time, a major court has blocked the Onions' attempt to fraudulently take over Infowars and, quote, unquote, wear its skin.0.90
01:44:11.180We give thanks to God and Infowars supporters for standing against these pathetic weasels.
01:50:36.700I mean, the prime minister's platform was I hate Trump, which is like saying to your parents, I hate it here and slamming your bedroom door.
01:50:44.360Like 80% of Canada's economy is contingent American business.
01:57:19.100That's just the way it is. And there's something else going on here. I find that there's an underpinning of anti-whiteness in it. It's like white people you're allowed to hate. And it's sort of like a pressure cooker, right? You can't be racist, can't be racist, can't have hate, can't have hate.
01:57:35.980But you can hate whites and you can hate the elite whites.0.90
01:57:40.040So when there's a war that's white on brown, which is Israel versus Gaza, drink, drink in the hate parade around these streets of New York City and say a global intifada, wave the Palestinian flag and the Khafaya river to the sea.0.97