30 seconds.
00:03
[Applause]
00:07
Adam, what's your point? The future
00:12
looks bright.
00:15
My handshake is better than anything I
00:16
ever sign. It's right here.
00:18
You are a oneonone.
00:21
I don't think I've ever said this
00:23
before.
00:24
[Music]
00:28
Okay, sounds good. So, we are going live
00:30
officially. Uh, it's been now what, nine
00:32
hours, folks, since the government
00:35
shutdown. Nine hours. If you didn't
00:36
know, now you know the government's been
00:38
shut down. People are losing their
00:40
minds. Trump's posting uh memes, smiling
00:41
at uh Hakeim Jeff and Chuck Schumer
00:45
doing his thing that he does. And then
00:49
yesterday, there was a moment where the
00:51
president was very concerned. There was
00:54
a moment where, you know, Bobby Kennedy
00:55
sneezed behind him and immediately
00:58
because of the extremely uh uh aware uh
01:01
paying attention to details, he said, "I
01:04
hope I don't get co from you, Bobby. You
01:06
guys got to see this. This man's a
01:07
comedian." Vinnie is right. He is a
01:09
comedian.
01:10
Funny.
01:11
And uh there's a bunch of other stuff
01:12
that's going on. So, we have to talk
01:13
about the government shutdown.
01:14
Uh uh Netanyahu agreed to a 20point plan
01:16
to end war in Gaza. Trump signals former
01:19
FBI Christopher Ray is being probed by
01:22
DOJ after Comey indictment. Pete Hexit
01:24
starts tell you know he's expecting
01:28
people to be in physical shape and you
01:29
got who's the girl's name from uh uh the
01:31
view? Sunonny Rosen is
01:34
Sunonny Host. Why is it such a big deal
01:36
to get your people to be in shape? You
01:39
have to watch this clip to see if it
01:41
makes any sense to you. And then aside
01:43
from that, Tik Tok bite dance to keep
01:47
50% profit and Trump says Tik Tok should
01:49
be tweaked to become 100% MAGA. This
01:51
stuff you're not supposed to say. He
01:56
keeps saying Tik Tok US is worth only 14
01:57
billion. I think that was a great
02:01
discount. In any other uh part of the
02:02
world, Tik Tok would be a hundred
02:05
billion plus dollar company.
02:06
I have a theory.
02:08
Somebody got an $86 billion discount.
02:09
It's a nice discount. And Tom's got a
02:11
theory, guys. So stick around for the
02:12
theory.
02:14
Elhan Omar doubles down on attack and
02:16
Charlie Kirk. There is no legacy to
02:17
honor. I think that's the conversation
02:19
with Don Lemon if I am not mistaken.
02:20
Yeah. Yes. Walking the streets, man on
02:23
the street.
02:26
That's just phenomenal. Those two
02:26
together is Israel is losing information
02:27
war. Charlie Kirk's letter to Netanyahu.
02:30
Tom's got some thoughts on that.
02:33
There is a poll that shows liberal women
02:35
are on a crash course with dating hell.
02:39
the dating hell they created. What I
02:42
mean this data folks, you have to read
02:44
this on on what it is. The older liberal
02:45
women get, the more open they are to
02:48
conservative men.
02:50
But the older conservative men get, the
02:51
less open they are to liberal women. And
02:54
there is science behind it, folks. This
02:57
is a science-driven poll we're talking
02:59
about from Daily Caller. Uh, and then we
03:01
have Newsome courts big oil as gas
03:03
prices threaten political ambitions.
03:05
Rahm Emanuel weighing presidential bid
03:07
navigates a Democratic party moving
03:09
left. Voters in majority major US city
03:11
view capitalism only slightly more
03:14
favorably than socialism and that pisses
03:16
Tom off. Tom is very angry about that.
03:18
Uh uh very angry about it but slightly
03:20
not that angry because show hit a nice
03:24
home run and the Dodgers won and the
03:26
Yankees lost yesterday. So Tom came in
03:27
here doing back flips celebrating. He's
03:28
been here since 6:00 putting up signs of
03:31
Dodger flags everywhere.
03:33
There was baseball yesterday. I thought
03:35
the season ended on Sunday.
03:36
Yeah.
03:38
Democratic party hits historic low of
03:39
favorability in new national poll. Tom's
03:41
got thoughts. Uh Vinnie's got thoughts
03:43
on the Kim Jeff and Trump. Uh Charlie
03:45
Javis gets seven years for defrauding JP
03:47
Morgan. However, Tom, show me this. I'm
03:51
not going to tell you what the lawyer
03:53
said.
03:54
Said lawyer said to the the judge, you
03:57
have to see what this law this lawyer
04:01
has some audacity to say what he had to
04:02
say to the judge.
04:04
Brass. Uh, as AI threatens white collar
04:05
work, more young Americans chase blue
04:08
collar careers. We got a uh young uh uh
04:10
American here to tell us what he's
04:13
chasing. We'll see what's going to
04:14
happen with them. Now, LA is uh dying as
04:16
Hollywood businesses say tourism cash
04:18
has dropped by up to 50% after Las Vegas
04:22
hit the skits. And then Don Lemon sparks
04:25
fury with wild rant about white men
04:28
broken. Folks, if you're white,
04:32
according to Don Lemon, you're broken.
04:34
He's trying to fix you. He's trying to
04:36
fix you. And uh I don't know.
04:38
Is his wife a white? Oh, never mind.
04:40
Despite being married to one is how the
04:42
story ends. Despite being married to
04:44
one, and Tom, listen, I've kept these
04:46
stories just for Tom. Buttlfts in Miami,
04:49
breast implants in Beverly Hills,
04:51
plastic surgery by region. Tom wants to
04:53
get to the bottom because there's a
04:55
business model behind this. And then
04:56
eventually, God willing, we'll hit that
04:58
coplay story. They need some attention.
05:00
They need some attention. And then a
05:01
novice defense secretary lectures the
05:04
brass on what it takes to win. Pete said
05:05
HUD displays banner blaming radical left
05:09
Democrats for government shutdown.
05:12
Military leaders absorb highly partisan
05:14
presentation from Trump exit. And then
05:17
we got a couple other things to get
05:20
into. Folks, there is a major memo. I
05:21
think you guys have to see it. I think
05:24
it's very very important. Life-changing
05:25
time. You know how every once in a while
05:27
you meet a man who gives you
05:28
life-changing advice and you have to you
05:29
have to make note of it and you just
05:32
like make a note of it. Sheriff Grady
05:34
from Pole County, we're going to show
05:37
this video to you. He's he's and he's
05:39
teaching people why not to hire
05:42
prostitutes.
05:44
And he does it in such a you have to I
05:46
have the clip Rob. I mean he's a legend.
05:50
If you don't know who he is, this man's
05:51
a philosopher. He could have been a
05:53
pastor in a previous life. He could have
05:55
been a comedian. He could have been
05:57
playing baseball with Lou Gary style
05:59
comedy that he's got. He's one of one.
06:00
He's got some advice he wants to share
06:02
with you guys. I think it's important.
06:04
We got to go through it. To all the
06:05
young men that are watching this. And
06:06
then aside from that, I got a couple
06:08
other things that I want to read about
06:10
Maxine Water, the way she reacts. We
06:11
found a guy that says the range broke
06:14
clip that we showed last week. He says
06:16
he debunked it. And we're going to have
06:18
to show this one clip to you. And he's
06:20
got some stuff to say about it. Again,
06:21
the idea with everything that's going on
06:23
with Charlie Kirk, Vinnie called the
06:25
school yesterday. He called the Utah
06:27
University yesterday, talked to five
06:29
people, eventually got a hold of the
06:31
director of communication. He's going to
06:34
probably give the name. Called that
06:35
person five times.
06:36
No pickup.
06:38
Okay. No pickup to see what's going on
06:38
there.
06:40
And so, you know, you know, so he'll
06:41
give you that perspective. And then I
06:44
got a story here that I saw this morning
06:45
which I loved that says, "One bad apple
06:46
destroys a great team." Yeah, the timing
06:49
timing of this story is bad because but
06:51
this this has nothing to do with that,
06:53
you know, apple. He's more like a
06:56
banana. But this this apple here that
06:58
we're talking about is a different story
07:00
that we're talking about, which we'll
07:02
get into. And uh uh uh couple other
07:03
clips. But by the way, can you imagine
07:06
you wake up one morning and you know
07:08
because of them trying to censor you
07:11
when you were running for president,
07:13
something you have the right to do,
07:15
Google, YouTube, Twitter, everybody
07:17
tried to censor you and then 60 Minutes
07:19
agrees to pay Trump $16 million for
07:21
editing Kala Harris's interview. ABC
07:23
agrees to pay Trump $15 million in a
07:26
settlement of a defamation lawsuit.
07:28
Twitter agrees to pay Trump $10 million
07:30
for suspending him. And Facebook agrees
07:32
to pay Trump $25 million for suspending
07:34
him. And then YouTube just agreed to pay
07:37
President Trump $24 and half million
07:39
dollars for suspending his account in
07:41
2021. This is the tweet is from who rap.
07:43
Can we read Danielle Doza Gil? I hope I
07:45
said the last name last name right. Like
07:48
Benji Gil Gil. So he this guy made
07:50
almost hund00 million for just being
07:53
censored and suspended. And the guy
07:57
keeps winning winning. And Jimmy Fallon
07:58
comes out saying, "Look, we're always
08:00
telling jokes on both sides, Fallon.
08:03
Always. We're fair." And Coar, I think,
08:05
went on Keml last night to try to say
08:08
some stuff. And Keml came back and made
08:10
fun of JD Vans hardcore. So maybe we got
08:12
to show some of this stuff to kind of
08:15
see what's going on over there with the
08:16
viewership, which we will. We will. But
08:17
before we get into it, I do want to tell
08:20
you guys if you want to get all the
08:22
notes that we get for free, all the
08:23
notes that we cover, so you have access
08:26
to everything that we're going to go
08:28
through, all you have to do is download
08:29
Manac, go to the PBD podcast circle,
08:31
whether you have an Android or Apple, go
08:33
to our circle, download it, and get the
08:36
notes and follow track. And every time
08:38
there's updates, different things, and
08:39
if you want to communicate and network
08:40
with each other, you pay 10 bucks a
08:42
month and 20 50 a month allows you to do
08:44
the whole thing, the whole benefits that
08:46
comes with it. But for free, you can get
08:47
the notes uh of uh what we're going
08:49
through here on our podcast. And then
08:52
next thing before we get into the
08:54
podcast, guys, this shirt I'm wearing, I
08:55
wear the white, I wear the blue, I wear
08:58
the black. When you wear this shirt, you
09:00
know what it feels like? You ever had
09:02
somebody you love hugs you and tells you
09:04
how amazing you are?
09:05
Cotton hands.
09:06
Let me tell you, I'm not kidding with
09:08
you. Feel the material real quick. Feel
09:09
the material real quick. Do not do not
09:10
feel the love.
09:12
Felt like Don Lemon for a second.
09:13
That's not good, buddy.
09:15
No one's going to buy.
09:16
No, I felt like it was soft.
09:18
No, but let me tell you.
09:20
Oh, you felt Oh, you felt soft.
09:22
The quality the quality of this thing I
09:23
wear like Timmy shows right here. Rob,
09:27
can you zoom in to show different
09:28
features of the shirt? V Tim logo right
09:30
here. Gold future looks bright on the
09:32
side. VT on the side. And anybody and
09:34
everybody who's bought this, this is
09:37
lowkey maybe our best item we have on
09:39
there qualitywise lowkey. If you're
09:41
somebody that wears dress shirts, get
09:44
the white, the black, and the blue. Wear
09:47
it for a month three times. If you don't
09:50
like it, I want to call and talk to you.
09:52
I will literally FaceTime you and say,
09:55
"How can you not like these shirts that
09:56
you wear them?" But you got to order all
09:58
three of them. Go put them on sport and
10:00
leave that button open so people see
10:02
that value tamement logo right there to
10:04
see who you're representing. Especially
10:06
if you support this brand, if you love
10:08
what we do here, go get yourself a polo
10:09
shirt. Rob, if you can put the link
10:12
below to the business section, that
10:13
would be great for people to go place
10:15
the order here. VT, by the way, the
10:16
black is sick cuz it's gold on black.
10:18
Look at that right there. Zoom in a
10:20
little bit, Rob.
10:21
Damn, that's sick. And then what does
10:22
the white one look like? Rob, can we go
10:24
to see what the white one looks like?
10:26
White one looks like you got the gold.
10:27
Ooh, that looks so good. Look at that.
10:30
Guys, you wear this
10:33
and your lady sees you with this. I'm
10:35
telling you right now, studies have
10:37
shown 40 weeks later, something could
10:39
happen. could cost you $350,000 if you
10:40
weren't sure. That's what the quality
10:43
is. The quality has got a lot of uh
10:44
special things that's going on. Again,
10:46
go to vturch.com.
10:47
It's pretty expensive for the whole
10:48
place your order. And with that being
10:50
said, can I start off with just a
10:51
business thing I read before we go into
10:53
shutting the government down? Rob, can
10:55
you pull up the story I just read? I I
10:56
just really like this. I think every
10:58
once in a while, we got to read stories
10:59
like this about bad apples.
11:00
So So this is a story I was just
11:02
reading.
11:04
Science shows how one toxic person can
11:04
drag down an entire team. Okay.
11:07
Go to the next slide, Rob, if you could.
11:10
So, University of Washington research
11:12
study shows that just one persistently
11:14
negative teammate can derail group
11:17
success.
11:20
Major drop teams with one bad apple will
11:21
perform far worse than others. Proven
11:24
impact experiments show negativity hurts
11:27
trust, effort, and outcomes. Contagious
11:30
toxic behavior spreads quickly inside
11:33
groups and worse member. The weakest
11:36
link often provides overall team
11:38
predicts overall team success. So one
11:42
bad teammate can poison the whole group.
11:43
Go to the next one. There are three
11:45
types of bad apple. Zoom in a little
11:47
bit. Rob on 46, please.
11:48
Come on, dude.
11:50
How they ruin everything. The jerk,
11:50
critical, disrespectful, puts others
11:54
down. The slacker, lazy, withholds
11:56
effort, deadbeat behavior. Damn, that's
11:59
very hard. The downer, pessimistic, and
12:02
nothing's going to ever happen here.
12:04
complain, spreads negativity. The
12:07
result, teams argue, stop sharing,
12:09
communicate less. Right? Negative
12:11
behavior hits harder than positive and
12:13
spreads fast. Go to the next one. So
12:15
now, let's go to the top a little bit.
12:17
Your defense strategy number one,
12:18
recognize the signs. Spot jerks,
12:20
slackers, and downers early. Two, set
12:23
boundaries. Limit exposure to negative
12:25
people. Three, don't try to fix them.
12:28
You can't unspoil a bad apple, folks.
12:30
You cannot fix them. Only God can.
12:33
Choose your team. Surround yourself with
12:36
positive people. Address it quickly.
12:38
Don't let negativity spread and take
12:41
root. Last but not least, guard your
12:43
energy. Your success depends on who
12:45
you're around. By the way, 23 years ago,
12:48
my dad. I had this one guy I loved. I
12:52
was in first grade together in Iran,
12:55
junior high school, high school,
12:58
military together, bies together,
12:59
insurance together. Oh my god, this guy
13:00
was negative. funny as hell, but
13:03
negative. Okay. It was always negative,
13:06
negative, negative. He'd always blame.
13:08
It's this person's fault. It's your
13:09
fault. It's that person. It was always
13:10
on negative. And I really wanted to run
13:11
with this guy for the rest of my life
13:14
cuz I love this guy.
13:15
One day, my dad and I get into the
13:17
biggest fight. And he says, "Don't you
13:18
realize he's not going to work as hard
13:21
as you? Let him go. This guy's not going
13:24
to put the effort the way you're putting
13:26
it." I said, "You don't believe people
13:28
can change. I believe people can change
13:29
on their own, but I don't believe you
13:31
can change." So, we're having this feud
13:32
together. We're going back and forth.
13:33
And I will tell you long term, you win
13:35
for believing that people can choose to
13:39
change. There is more positive in you
13:41
believing that people can improve than
13:44
not. However, the affirmation that
13:46
changed my life in one of the biggest
13:49
ways that took so much weight off my
13:51
back was when I finally read this and I
13:53
added to my list. Stop trying to be God.
13:54
That job is already taken.
13:57
You can't fix everybody.
14:00
only they can fix them with a level of
14:02
commitment to it. If they don't,
14:04
sometimes opportunities come up and they
14:06
screw it up and they think they're
14:08
bigger than the whole crew and then they
14:09
take a massive hit. It happens in sports
14:11
organization and families and churches
14:13
and friendships everywhere. And all it
14:15
takes is one time for you to be a little
14:17
bit casual to be like, "Ah, it's going
14:19
to be okay." Boom. Oh [ __ ] I lost that
14:20
opportunity. You were casual and and and
14:22
you face somebody that doesn't want any
14:25
of this kind of stuff to be taking
14:26
place. And it's unfortunate, but that's
14:27
kind of how life works. So, if you're
14:29
watching as yourself, if you're watching
14:30
PBD podcast,
14:33
you probably are not part of the
14:35
community. That's one of these. What was
14:37
it back? The jerk, whatever. Can you go
14:39
back to the jerk? You're probably not
14:40
because the jerk, the slacker, the
14:42
downer.
14:44
Yeah, you're probably not Debbie Downer.
14:45
We would be annoying to watch this. But
14:47
if you're watching this right now
14:48
saying, "Shit, I think I'm a little bit
14:50
of the jerk or the slacker, the downer."
14:51
Well, listen. Get on your knees and
14:53
pray, okay? Or find a way to change. Cuz
14:56
if you don't, you may lose some of the
14:59
biggest opportunities in your life. Cuz
15:01
many times when we're inside the
15:04
opportunity, we don't know it until we
15:06
lose it.
15:08
Yeah.
15:09
And then when you lose it, you're like,
15:09
"Oh [ __ ] what a [ __ ] Why' I do that?"
15:11
Don't do that. Right. Very simple. So,
15:14
anyways, let's get right into it, folks.
15:16
I know you've been nervous because the
15:19
government's been shut down now for 9
15:20
hours and 15 minutes. Don't worry, it's
15:21
going to be okay. But the government's
15:23
been shut down. No one's working. By the
15:25
way, apparently 100,000 people are
15:27
deciding to quit. I don't know if you
15:29
saw this or not, Rob, if you want to put
15:30
this up. This is catastrophic news,
15:32
folks. 100,000 DMV employees are
15:34
quitting. Not DMV, but just government
15:36
employees are quitting. Rob, if you want
15:38
to put that story up. They're out there.
15:39
They're angry. Over a 100,000 federal
15:41
workers to resign Tuesday amid looming
15:44
government shutdown. And look at the
15:47
phones. Look at them running around with
15:48
the phones recording with that beautiful
15:50
pink umbrella while it's not even
15:52
raining. Isn't that awesome? Think about
15:54
how rich you have to be to have a pink
15:56
umbrella while the sky is blue and a
15:59
camera walking around and you're walking
16:00
away from your job. How awesome it is.
16:02
That guy probably doesn't even work at
16:04
the government. It's just a picture that
16:05
they took, but a great angle. Nice
16:07
people walking there. So, here's what's
16:08
going on. Let's talk about this. Let's
16:10
talk about this. Let's talk about this.
16:11
Trump mocks Chuck Schumer and Hakee Jeff
16:14
in an AI generated video after
16:19
government shutdown meeting. You tell
16:22
me. Oh my god.
16:24
When have we ever had a government that
16:25
would post a meme like this? Which, by
16:27
the way, you have to be honest. Hakee
16:31
actually looks good with that mustache.
16:33
Look closely. And that guy, right? He
16:34
can pull it off. What president do you
16:37
know,
16:39
man?
16:40
That is concerned to entertain you and
16:40
mock his enemies and be as straight up
16:43
as this guy here. Go ahead, Rob. Play
16:45
this clip.
16:47
There's no way to sugarcoat it. Nobody
16:48
likes Democrats anymore. We have no
16:50
voters left because of all of our woke
16:53
trans [ __ ] Not even black people
16:54
want to vote for us anymore. Even
16:57
Latinos hate us. So, we need new voters.
16:58
And if we give all these illegal aliens
17:02
free healthcare, we might be able to get
17:05
them on our side so they can vote for
17:07
us. They can't even speak English. So,
17:09
they won't realize we're just a bunch of
17:12
woke pieces of [ __ ] you know, at least
17:14
for a while until they they learn
17:16
English and they realize they hate us,
17:18
too.
17:20
You go. Oh man.
17:21
By the way, this is not a YouTuber that
17:22
posted this. Not a podcaster, not an
17:25
influencer. This is the president of the
17:27
United States posted that video
17:29
and people lost their minds.
17:30
Did he post the one with the mariachi
17:33
band?
17:34
There's another one. Hold on. No. Did
17:35
you see that one? He He didn't stop.
17:36
There's another one. Did you see the
17:38
I sent you the second one?
17:41
There's no way in the world.
17:42
How about this? You're going to laugh
17:43
even harder cuz it's Hakee Jeff getting
17:44
pissed off saying, "How dare he?"
17:46
Say it to my face. I think I
17:49
You did. I got
17:50
Oh, Pat, this one's better. No, I think
17:51
somebody makes them and send them to
17:54
them. This one is even better. This
17:55
This is all because the government shut
17:58
down
17:59
because they're they're playing that
18:00
game. Look. Ready? Ready for this?
18:01
Watch.
18:03
Disgusting
18:03
video. And we're going to continue to
18:05
make clear bigotry will get you nowhere.
18:06
We are fighting to protect the healthare
18:09
in the face of an unprecedented
18:13
[Laughter]
18:16
He's a troll. He's the ultimate troll.
18:23
They don't know what to do with it.
18:25
That's it. They don't know what to do
18:27
with that.
18:28
That is the part about being
18:28
unpredictable. So Rob, can we give the
18:29
story about the government shutdown?
18:31
Let's just kind of go through it right
18:32
now. What's going on? So
18:33
there's a reason for this angle.
18:35
Yeah. So JD Vance predicted that the
18:37
government's going to shut down after
18:38
deadly serious Democrat demand
18:40
concessions. Uh we're headed towards a
18:42
shutdown. Van says after Trump's meeting
18:44
with leaders, is this the clip? Go ahead
18:46
and play this clip.
18:48
I want to make one final point here. You
18:49
will hear a lot from Senate Democrats,
18:50
from House Democrats about the fact that
18:52
American healthcare policy is broken.
18:54
Well, we know that American healthcare
18:56
policy is broken. We've been trying to
18:58
fix it for the 8 months that we've been
18:59
in office. But every single thing that
19:01
they accuse about being broken about
19:03
American healthcare is policy the
19:05
Democrats have supported for the past
19:07
decade. So, if they want to talk about
19:09
how to fix American healthcare policy,
19:10
let's do it. The speaker would love to
19:12
do it. The Senate majority leader would
19:14
love to do it. Let's work on it
19:15
together, but let's do it in the context
19:17
of an open government that's providing
19:19
essential services to the American
19:21
people. That's all that we're proposing
19:22
to do. And the fact that they refuse to
19:24
do that shows how unreasonable their
19:26
position is. I think we're headed to a
19:28
shutdown because the Democrats won't do
19:30
the right thing. I hope they change
19:31
their mind, but we're going to see. I'll
19:33
let the speaker uh say a few words.
19:34
Okay, so we are here not headed to a
19:36
shutdown. We are shut down for 9 hours
19:38
and 19 minutes and 42 seconds. Vinnie,
19:40
your thoughts? Well, let's This kind of
19:42
brings me back to when uh remember the
19:45
border bill was coming through and uh
19:47
they were all losing their mind because
19:49
the border was wide open. So, they
19:51
proposed the bill and they're like, "All
19:52
right, listen. We're going to finally
19:53
we'll shut the border down. We'll admit
19:55
that the border is chaotic and it's
19:56
unsustainable." But in the bill, there's
19:59
tens of billions of dollars that have to
20:02
go to Ukraine. There's billions of
20:04
dollars that have to go to Israel. There
20:05
billions of dollars that have to go to
20:06
uh um Taiwan. And it's like, "No, no,
20:08
no. Time out. Time out. the border, the
20:10
bill for the border should go to the to
20:13
the border. Okay. And this is the same
20:14
situation, Pat, because the the the uh
20:16
Democrats want Medicaid, they want money
20:19
to go to illegals and the bill, it's
20:21
over 1 point some trillion dollars. And
20:23
this just again shows you they're
20:26
willing to shut down and stop going to
20:28
work because they put illegal illegals
20:29
healthcare over Americans, okay? They're
20:32
rewarding illegals. And it's I'm
20:35
actually happy that it's coming to this
20:37
because they talk all this nonsense.
20:39
They're going to blame Trump. They're
20:40
going to blame this and that. It's all
20:41
them. They want money for illegals. And
20:43
guess what? They're going up against a
20:46
president that's America first and he's
20:47
not having it. Plain and simple.
20:48
Tom, there there was a bunch of things
20:50
that came out. Um uh Mark Mitchell was
20:51
posting them all night. There's a bunch
20:53
of very interesting polling. 67% of
20:55
Americans, if you give them a list, do
20:58
you blame Schumer? Do you blame Trump?
21:00
Do you blame Congress? Guess what? 67%
21:02
blame Congress. So in other words, Pat,
21:05
if you take off if if you just put names
21:07
on it, that goes one way. But if you say
21:10
Congress and you add Congress as a name,
21:12
67% blame Congress for it. And people
21:14
said that the last shutdown, they don't
21:17
feel that it hurt their lives. They felt
21:19
that it was newsworthy and a lot of
21:21
things going on, but like 80% of
21:23
Americans said my life wasn't personally
21:25
hurt by the shutdown. Now, we're not
21:28
talking about government employees.
21:29
We're talking about voters everywhere
21:30
else, not government. 80% said, "Well,
21:32
yeah, there was a shutdown, but it
21:34
didn't really affect me, as far as I can
21:36
tell."
21:37
Says, "Next." So, they blame Congress
21:38
next. And now more people say they
21:40
understand uncontrolled spending and our
21:44
national debt is bad and is not just an
21:46
election year thing. It's bad. They
21:49
don't know what to do about it, but they
21:51
understand that it's bad and it hurts
21:53
the economy long term. Isn't that very
21:55
interesting? So, people will directly
21:57
blame Trump. They'll directly blame
21:59
Schumer. But when you step back,
22:01
America's actually said, "If the shut
22:03
here's the punch line. If the shutdown
22:06
gets a change in spending, I'm in favor
22:09
of it." That is a core American voter.
22:11
Here's what Trump had to say. And Adam,
22:14
I'm going to come to you right here. Go
22:15
ahead. Uh uh uh Robin,
22:16
we could come up and and through this
22:18
whole thing, you know, cuz I don't know,
22:20
we'll probably have a shutdown because
22:21
one of the things they want to do is
22:23
they want to give uh incredible
22:25
Medicare, Cadillac, the Cadillac
22:27
Medicare to illegal immigrants. And what
22:29
that does is it keeps them coming into
22:33
our country.
22:34
Yep.
22:35
And like they do in California. And no
22:36
country can afford that. No country. And
22:38
we have the border stopped up. We have
22:41
it closed. We have nobody for four
22:42
months. Zero. Zero people came in. That
22:44
wasn't me. That's be by the authorities
22:46
who happen to be liberally oriented. But
22:48
but just think of that. We have
22:51
I love that
22:53
people offering health care to people
22:54
all over the world that they can't
22:57
afford to pay.
22:59
Now watch this. You can pause it right
22:59
there. Democrats are saying that's not
23:00
true. That's not what happened. A
23:02
podcaster and a a a host goes out there
23:04
asking a question of Maxine Water who
23:07
seems very happy. She's asking Maxine a
23:10
question here. And look at Maxine's uh
23:12
response. Go ahead.
23:14
Are Democrats demanding healthc care for
23:15
illegal aliens?
23:17
That's right.
23:18
Democrats are demanding health care for
23:19
everybody.
23:22
Oh god.
23:23
We want to save lives. We want to make
23:24
sure that health care is available to
23:27
those who would die but having the help
23:30
of their government.
23:36
So you're good with a government
23:37
shutdown even if it means giving
23:38
healthcare to people who aren't American
23:40
citizens?
23:43
Well, you keep That's what you're
23:43
pushing on. What you're trying to do is
23:45
you're standing here and you're trying
23:48
to make me say that somehow we are going
23:50
to put noncitizens over Americans. Quit
23:53
it. Stop it. This is the kind of
23:55
journalism we don't need. You are
23:57
divisive. No, you're not. You're being
23:59
divisive. No. Please don't. You don't
24:02
need to ask that question. You're just
24:04
trying to get controversy here. You're
24:06
not going to get it from me. We want to
24:08
save healthcare for all people. Thank
24:10
you. Thank you, Congresswoman.
24:13
Appreciate it.
24:14
Good work, girl. She did great. Just
24:16
simple. So, Brandon, what do you think's
24:17
going on here?
24:19
No, it's amazing. Like, we spent 2.4
24:20
trillion on healthcare already. Like,
24:22
what do they want to bring it to? You
24:23
know, 67% of the budget goes to
24:24
entitlement. So, like, what's the number
24:26
they actually think is realistic? Like,
24:27
are they genuinely trying to bankrupt
24:29
the country? And, you know, when they
24:30
say the government shutdown's about
24:31
health care, like, nobody in politics
24:32
understands healthcare. I could assure
24:34
you of that. One of the best books about
24:36
healthcare I've ever read was about by
24:37
Marty Mccur, the current head of the
24:39
FDA. And he just goes on to say that
24:41
even genuine geniuses that have deeply
24:42
studied the problems with healthcare. It
24:44
can't explain it that well and don't
24:46
understand that well. So if this is
24:47
about really about healthcare, it's not
24:48
going to get resolved anytime soon. But
24:50
the government shutdown thing is silly
24:51
and I think it'll get resolved pretty
24:53
quickly without serious impact. Like
24:54
last time I appreciated when he did it
24:56
actually to get the border wall done.
24:57
That was one of his epic all-time
24:58
moments in his first administration.
25:00
So what so what were your success? So
25:01
let's just say the government shut down
25:02
to get something out of it. What would
25:04
you consider this government shutdown
25:06
leading to a success? Tom, I'm going to
25:08
come to you as well. Brandon, you first.
25:09
Well, that's the the problem, I guess,
25:11
is that it doesn't seem like Trump is
25:12
asking for anything. It seems like the
25:14
Democrats are asking to increase the 2.4
25:15
trillion in healthcare spending to
25:18
something else, which I don't like I
25:19
think it needs to go down by a lot, if
25:21
anything. So, I I don't think they could
25:22
break on that. Um, it doesn't I haven't
25:24
heard Trump ask for anything, so I I
25:25
don't know if it's going to come to a
25:27
resolution.
25:28
Very interesting. Tom, what would you
25:29
say?
25:30
So, here's here's what's going on,
25:30
America. And Brandon, back me up here. M
25:32
there's a thing called a continuing
25:35
resolution.
25:36
Yes.
25:37
And you'll see CR. You'll see Wall
25:38
Street Journal, you know, your local
25:40
wherever you're getting news, you'll see
25:42
CR this week, you know, um senators,
25:43
congressman arguing over a CR. You have
25:46
AOC telling the Senate saying, "I am
25:48
ready and you can negotiate with me
25:51
directly." Until three senators said,
25:53
"Hey, check you're in the House of
25:55
Representatives. We're the Senate." So
25:56
Grant,
25:59
they said that.
25:59
Well, not like that. I said that, but
26:00
they were like, "Excuse me, the Senate
26:02
will negotiate with itself." But she's
26:04
out there grandstanding. So, everybody's
26:06
grandstanding about CR. What is a CR?
26:07
The continuing resolution is a bill that
26:10
says how to keep a resolution to keep
26:14
the government continuing. But it goes
26:16
back to exactly what Vinnie was talking
26:19
about. Remember when we covered the
26:20
Inflation Reduction Act on this podcast
26:22
and we dove inside and we said, "Wait a
26:24
minute, circumcisions for Tunisia."
26:26
Remember that thing? And there was
26:28
things in there, but it goes like this.
26:30
What does that mean, though?
26:31
Hey, Patision
26:32
for Tunisia.
26:34
We are giving money.
26:35
Hey, Pat, I know you're speaker of the
26:36
house, and I respect you, sir, but um I
26:37
you can have my vote, but I got to have
26:40
the circumcisions in Tunisia. I need 5 a
26:42
half million. It's going to a foreign
26:45
aid organization.
26:46
Is that really an epidemic going on over
26:48
there?
26:49
No, but that's an example. And then they
26:49
go to Vinnie and Vinnie says, "Hey, um,
26:51
we're building a dam in Minnesota. I
26:53
need another 40 million for the dam. you
26:55
got to hide it in here. And then you're
26:57
and then suddenly the continuing
26:59
resolution is is is is bloated with all
27:00
this stuff.
27:04
But but Tom, you you sent a clip to Rob.
27:04
This is something that's important to
27:06
them, right? The 2019 debate that was
27:08
taking place. Watch this clip, folks,
27:09
that uh Tom sent in to Rob.
27:11
This goes to Maxine Waters saying you're
27:13
trying to make me say this. They speak
27:14
for themselves right here.
27:16
Watch this, folks.
27:18
Raise your hand if your government plan
27:18
would provide coverage for undocumented
27:21
immigrants.
27:22
Here we go. Raise your hands, folks.
27:23
Look at that. All of them. Oh, all of
27:25
it. It's unanimous.
27:27
And so, so here's my thing, cuz I now
27:29
cuz as you guys are are all talking and
27:31
Brandon, you too, you made a good point.
27:33
Why Why are the Democrats so so loud and
27:34
so proud and willing to shut down the
27:38
United States government for illegals?
27:40
And I thought of Brandon, am I right or
27:41
am I wrong? It's for for votes and it's
27:42
for power because if you promise them
27:44
health care, then you're creating like
27:47
this long-term dependency. So these
27:49
people that are coming over for the
27:51
future voting base because think about
27:52
it there's Tom Hman said there's almost
27:53
20 million of them here. I think Trump
27:56
and Trump said that they they deported 2
27:58
million. Okay, good for you. But that's
28:00
still 18 million people that are here
28:03
and you incentivize them to stay here.
28:05
And then guess what? We're going to
28:07
we're the party that's going to give you
28:08
free healthcare. Vote for us because I
28:10
mean what why else do Democrats care?
28:13
They don't give a damn. If you if you
28:15
guys think Democrats care about your
28:17
your well-being, you're wrong. And look
28:19
at what this open border that they have
28:22
all these illegals here that they want
28:23
to pay for. How many how many jobs have
28:24
have Americans lost? How many crimes
28:27
have been committed towards Americans?
28:29
How many sexual assaults, I don't want
28:31
to say the R word, but how much stuff
28:33
has to happen to prove to Democrat
28:34
voters they don't care about you. They
28:37
care about the votes and they care about
28:39
their power and that's it. Then then
28:41
they don't care.
28:43
Danny, you hit a great point. I go for
28:43
it. Side point. If Kamla wins the
28:44
election, are they pushing this hard for
28:46
the healthcare right now?
28:48
Of course not.
28:50
Right. But they lost the election, then
28:51
they're looking for more votes.
28:52
Yeah, exactly.
28:54
Okay, so watch this, folks. As we're
28:55
going through this, there's a story that
28:56
comes out that says uh where's the story
28:58
here? Democratic Party hits historic law
29:01
favorability in a new national poll.
29:03
Here's another one. They had one a month
29:05
and a half ago. There's another one that
29:06
comes out if you guys want to go to this
29:08
on page 15. Uh uh uh uhh. Let me go to
29:10
it here. I thought I had it. Page uh
29:14
have 16, but let me see where 15 is.
29:16
You have it? If you just give it to me,
29:19
I'll read it.
29:20
Oh, I have it right here. 15. I was just
29:21
looking at the date that said at 10:1.
29:22
Uh, okay. Here we go. So, Democratic
29:25
Party hits the laws. It sounds in what
29:27
sounds like a broken record. The
29:30
Democratic Party hits another historic
29:31
low national poll this week. 30% of
29:33
voters nationwide question in Quinn
29:34
Quinnipac University survey said that
29:37
they have a favorable opinion of
29:39
Democratic Party. Let me say that one
29:41
more time to you folks. 30%.
29:42
30
29:45
30%.
29:45
30%. And 54% said they hold an
29:47
unfavorable opinion. This is the lowest
29:50
favorability rating for Democratic party
29:52
since the Quinnipac poll began asking
29:54
voters this question in '08, which means
29:57
it's never been any lower. The survey's
29:59
released uh uh noted the Quinnipac
30:01
survey was uh the latest poll this year
30:03
that shows this and obviously there's a
30:05
lot of this stuff going on. So Tom, as
30:07
as they're going through this, don't you
30:09
think, and maybe Brandon, I'll come to
30:11
you. Don't you think as they're going
30:13
through this
30:14
that they have to sit there and realize
30:16
this is real numbers? You can't just go
30:18
up there and keep playing this game.
30:21
People are not liking it. People are not
30:24
happy about this. People want to go back
30:26
to common sense. And the more
30:29
conservatives and Republicans go to
30:31
common sense, the more they feel they
30:33
have to do complete opposite and they're
30:34
thinking like this is our way of winning
30:37
the vote because we have to go against
30:39
the grain.
30:41
Yeah. and favorability goes lower and
30:42
lower and lower. What do you think's
30:44
happening here?
30:45
Yeah. Um I mean it's sad when you have
30:46
to find an entire new voting base
30:48
because your country distrusts you so
30:50
much. Like um if they just, you know,
30:52
like if they just acted like normal
30:55
people, then they'd be fine. I mean,
30:57
most people who are Republicans right
30:58
now used to be Democrats at one point in
31:00
time. Like a lot of people in my family,
31:01
a lot of my friends used to be Democrats
31:02
cuz Democrats used to be the normal
31:04
people. But they won't let a normal
31:05
person get through the gatekeepers in
31:07
their party. like they they've destroyed
31:10
anybody who's been a threat to the
31:11
establishment. People like Bernie
31:13
Sanders and even um you know when Steve
31:14
Nay Smith starts acting like he might
31:16
run for president in a couple years,
31:18
they went on attack mode against him
31:19
right away. So it's they're doing it to
31:21
themselves and you know saying free
31:22
healthcare is like saying the war on
31:24
terror or the war on drugs. It's like
31:26
this open-ended impossible thing that
31:27
sounds good but is isn't feasible. Like
31:29
how about reform the health care system
31:31
instead of just blankly saying free
31:32
healthcare. So, um, yeah, I think that
31:34
they need to let a normal person get
31:36
through the gatekeepers to begin with to
31:38
Okay, so let me ask a question. Uh,
31:40
Brandon, how old are you?
31:41
30.
31:43
Just turned 30. Okay.
31:43
30. 30. So 30 years old.
31:44
It was a great party, by the way.
31:46
Yes.
31:47
So 30 years old. So the question is, uh,
31:48
where do you see like if you're if if
31:52
they hire you as a consultant, you're a
31:54
younger guy, you read everything and
31:55
anything that's on politics, you're, you
31:57
know, go through the material that's out
31:59
there. What are two or three areas that
32:01
you think Democrats could go attack?
32:04
Think about blue ocean strategy to say
32:06
if they went here they can get some
32:08
common sense people to join them. Where
32:11
would it be?
32:12
Okay, easy. I both parties should do
32:13
this. The cost of living number one. So
32:15
the immigration affects this too. The
32:17
cost of a house is went from I think
32:18
$350,000 on average to $475 over the
32:21
last six years like postco after
32:24
printing all the money. So you know we
32:26
used to build 500,000 houses a year in
32:28
the 70s. this now it's like 50,000
32:30
houses a year. So massive
32:31
from 500,000 in the 70s to 50,000 today.
32:33
So they don't make it conducive or easy
32:37
at all for home builders to build homes
32:38
profitably. You know like my grandfather
32:40
was a home builder. He said it was very
32:41
profitable back in the day but today
32:42
it's not even worthwhile to try to build
32:44
a starter sized home. So that I think
32:45
that's number one
32:48
for people. And then just simply
32:50
reforming the health care system like
32:51
maybe giving government grants to um
32:53
provide more doctors because it's
32:56
actually very hard to become a doctor or
32:57
a PA like they have a limited amount of
32:59
um doctors they take in their programs
33:02
like really qualified people don't get
33:03
into the programs a lot of the time. So
33:05
investing into things there are
33:06
shortages in like there shortages in
33:08
doctors there shortages and houses. So
33:09
like addressing market side pain points
33:11
instead of just saying like oh let's
33:13
throw money at it.
33:14
Okay third one. So I got the first one I
33:16
got the second one. What's the third
33:18
one?
33:19
Um, how about not being so inclined to
33:20
go to a war? You know, because both
33:22
parties seem that seems to be a really
33:24
bipartisan thing is to, you know, just
33:25
get into other people's business and,
33:27
um, assist in wars across the country or
33:29
across the world that we have nothing to
33:31
do with.
33:32
So, how do you do that? How do you do
33:33
the last one?
33:34
Uh, the last one I would say, uh, stop
33:35
giving money to Ukraine. Say, Ukraine,
33:37
hey, I'm sorry it's, you know,
33:38
unfortunate that you lost some land, but
33:40
we're going to have to give some land to
33:42
Russia because that's the only way
33:43
around this. What if what if you can get
33:44
some minerals in return for us to be
33:46
protected long term because they have a
33:48
lot of good things that they're offering
33:50
that US has to kind of like what the
33:52
deal he just did on the lithium deal
33:54
that the president went in and they
33:56
bought into it what 10% to say hey
33:57
we're going to have this problem in the
34:00
future we may as well protect ourselves
34:01
I think it was a Canadian company if I'm
34:03
not mistaken right
34:05
Canadian is in there and General Motors
34:06
Yep. So, so you know, somebody may say
34:07
to you, well, you know, we kind of need
34:09
that deal because Ukraine has some of
34:11
the best resources in the world,
34:13
but we didn't need that deal before this
34:15
war was happening. And I don't think
34:17
Ukraine's the only place in the world
34:18
where we could get those minerals and to
34:19
in order to get that deal and to end
34:21
this war. Like, so there's I don't see a
34:23
way in which they could get that
34:25
territory back without losing much more
34:26
than we gain with the mineral deal. You
34:28
know, Russia has those minerals. I think
34:30
a lot of countries in that area, even
34:31
Canada has a lot of the minerals. Canada
34:33
has like all the minerals we could ever
34:35
imagine that we would need, most of
34:36
which Ukraine has. So, I think the
34:37
minerals thing is just something that
34:39
sounds good,
34:40
right? So, you just have it. Tom, what
34:40
would you say?
34:42
Well, I agree with him because uh where
34:42
in that poll that we were just talking
34:45
about, the Quinnipac poll that led to
34:47
your question, um the Republicans have
34:48
made gains among black, Hispanic, and
34:50
younger voters. And that's it. It wasn't
34:52
more middle class people. It wasn't more
34:55
old people. Those blocks were there. It
34:57
was shifts among black, Hispanic, and
35:00
younger voters that led to the
35:02
Republicans under Donald Trump winning a
35:04
little bit more of every county and we
35:07
saw the red map. That's why the younger
35:09
voters, what did they do? They went
35:12
after social media. They want us, can we
35:13
censor the Republicans on social media
35:15
where the younger voters are and then we
35:17
can convince the younger voters of this?
35:19
And now they go the other way. Voting
35:21
block. Where's the next voting block?
35:23
All the undocumented. I don't care where
35:25
you came from. Let's give them
35:26
something. we will be the generous one.
35:27
Hey, you just got here. You're in
35:29
trouble. You're sick. You know what? We
35:31
will be the generous one. It's all about
35:32
manipulating the voting block. And I
35:34
think the first two things you said for
35:36
the uh younger voters, the cost of
35:39
living and healthcare. I happen to agree
35:41
with that. When you take a look um if
35:43
you go to get a job, you really need to
35:45
to get healthcare coverage. And young
35:49
people will tell you that they look for
35:51
the jobs where the benefit is like for
35:53
one healthcare. A lot of times you get
35:55
one person covered, just you. Or you
35:57
only have to pay a small amount and now
36:00
you have good health care. You break
36:02
your leg, you don't have to go to wait
36:03
in line at some low low rent HMO or or
36:05
deal with Medicaid. You can actually go
36:08
and get a good doctor and get good care.
36:10
So health care is big. And then cost of
36:13
living. We need more building and we
36:15
need more starter homes. And we need
36:18
starter homes. And by the way, we need
36:20
jobs in cities. We need jobs to return
36:23
to cities and we need like condos and
36:25
town houses, homes that young people
36:27
could afford in safe cities where there
36:29
are jobs. The whole thing would work if
36:31
you get one handwashing another on that.
36:33
But he hit the nail on the head on cost
36:35
of living.
36:37
And Becca, I just ask one question like
36:38
I'm just taking a step back and you you
36:40
guys all make great points there. It's
36:41
clearly it's obvious with the numbers
36:43
and the numbers are freaking screaming
36:45
through the roof. Democrats are they're
36:47
it's gone. The support is gone.
36:49
Everything is gone. Uh I don't see them
36:51
shifting. Do does anybody see them
36:53
changing gears, Pat, anytime soon? So,
36:55
and we all know that they could play
36:57
dirty, think of it in that sense. What
36:58
are they going to do? What can they do?
37:00
Because they know this ship is beyond
37:02
sinking, Pat. It's they're done.
37:04
Everybody, Hispanics, everybody is is
37:06
jumping ship. What is What is their
37:09
other option, Brandon? What else?
37:11
If they just take it. If they just gave
37:12
up, take it.
37:14
I But Tom, they don't just take it. Look
37:14
at Look at the history of what we're
37:16
just seeing and the stories are going to
37:17
come. January 6, Russia, these people
37:19
don't play. They're not They're not
37:21
finished. voting doesn't work, rig the
37:22
voting and just take it and then shift
37:24
to a socialist Marxist. That's the
37:27
That's the globalist agenda.
37:29
They will adjust. Now, I'm going to a
37:30
different place. Let me tell you,
37:32
Vinnie, this goes back to
37:33
uh uh this goes back to three years ago
37:35
when Trump uh lost. It was four years
37:38
ago, but three years ago when we're in
37:41
it,
37:42
everybody is like, "Oh my god, it's the
37:43
end of the world." You know, when we're
37:45
in COVID and we're getting strikes and
37:47
all this stuff is happening and my guys
37:49
are like, "Pat, what do we do? we got to
37:51
be creating. And I'm talking to a bunch
37:52
of the guys like I'm back in the days
37:54
there was a guy named Brian Rose who did
37:55
a podcast one time and he had 65,000
37:57
live watching him concurrent and
38:00
everybody's like, "Oh my god, look how
38:02
many people this guy watching." He had
38:03
all these guys that were doing like this
38:04
is in 2000. You know, you would see Meet
38:07
Kevin doing great things with podcast
38:10
and he was doing a great job every day
38:11
talking about the
38:13
the next stimulus package, the next
38:15
stimulus package and he was one of the
38:18
best guys doing it. Graham Stefen was on
38:19
all these guys that were doing stuff and
38:21
and giving their message and you're
38:23
like, "Hey, what's going to happen?
38:25
Who's going to stay up? How long are
38:27
they going to be able to do this?" And I
38:28
kept saying, "Let me tell you one thing
38:30
about common sense, man. Sometimes
38:31
common sense takes a minute,
38:33
but it's it's undefeated."
38:35
Yeah,
38:37
Vinnie. Common sense is truly
38:37
undefeated.
38:40
It is. And eventually anybody that's
38:41
manipulative, deceptive, dark,
38:44
you're you're eventually gonna get
38:47
exposed.
38:50
Exposed. And by the way, probably you
38:50
could have gotten away with it a 100
38:54
years ago.
38:55
Maybe you could have gotten away with it
38:57
60 years ago. An assassination attempt
38:58
happens. You could get away with it
39:00
because there was only one camera.
39:02
Yeah.
39:03
This is the worst time.
39:04
Yeah. This the worst time because a
39:06
podcaster can be saying something and
39:08
next thing you know five people can send
39:10
an anonymous email to you giving you
39:13
intel on what happened with the FBI,
39:16
what happened with CIA, what happened
39:17
with certain thing, blowing the whistle
39:19
in a indirect way with an anonymous
39:20
email, giving you all the intel and no
39:23
one's going to know that happens today.
39:26
Didn't happen 50 years ago. Didn't
39:28
happen 60 years ago. This is a time that
39:29
I think Democrats are going to adjust. I
39:32
just don't know who that person's going
39:35
to be that's going to come and have have
39:38
that conversation with them. Of course,
39:39
you're seeing a mass exodus of people
39:41
that are leaving. Their arguments suck
39:43
right now. Truly, their arguments and
39:45
their ideas suck. Let me read this
39:47
article to you that has nothing to do
39:49
with politics, but it has to do with bad
39:50
ideas. So, this article here says, "Poll
39:52
shows liberal women
39:56
are on a crash course with the dating
39:58
hell they created." What do you mean
40:02
crash course? Rob, if you want to pull
40:04
up the story here.
40:06
So, is there a glimmer of hope for
40:09
bitter single liberal women? A new study
40:11
shows from the Institute for Governors
40:16
and Civics at Florida State University,
40:18
which knows a lot about this because
40:21
they party hardcore. If you if you know
40:23
people from Florida State University,
40:24
they typically get stuck in traffic a
40:26
lot showed that yes, there might be
40:28
hope. Yet for single liberals who hate
40:31
conservatives so much that they would
40:35
never be willing to date one. Let me
40:38
read this again to you.
40:40
There might be hope yet for single
40:42
liberals who hate conservatives so much
40:44
that they would never be willing to date
40:46
one. But this study found out that
40:48
generally as liberal women age and
40:50
gravity takes over,
40:53
they become more that's the article
40:54
doesn't say that. I'm just
40:56
Yeah. They become they become more open
40:57
to dating a conservative man.
41:00
Weird.
41:02
However, their openness with age might
41:03
be for might all be for nothing.
41:06
According to the study, as conservative
41:10
men get older, they actually become less
41:12
open to dating a liberal. The result of
41:15
the study are not definitive by any
41:18
stretch of the imagination. Though there
41:20
is a certain kernel of truth to it.
41:23
There are plenty of young men in the
41:26
world who might not be fullon mega die
41:27
hard but hold conservative beliefs. They
41:30
are not so far right as to be unwilling
41:33
to date a liberal. Right. You just went
41:36
somewhere.
41:39
Stay with me.
41:40
They may I have a question already for
41:41
you. That's where I'm going with this.
41:43
They may have voted for Trump, but they
41:44
are fairly open-minded. Young liberal
41:46
women, on the other hand, would outright
41:49
reject this person as potential romantic
41:51
or life partner. It doesn't matter if he
41:53
voted for Trump, but disagrees with the
41:55
president's tariffs or deportation
41:56
policy. There is no nuance for a liberal
41:58
woman. They are completely intolerant.
42:00
And it's this intolerance that leads to
42:03
conservative men becoming more closed
42:06
off in older age. Again, this is a Daily
42:08
Caller story. How many conservative men
42:10
have seen
42:13
their relationships blow up because of
42:15
politics? How many have been rejected
42:17
just because they think abortion should
42:19
be reserved for extreme cases like
42:21
incest or dire medical emergency? I'd
42:23
better fair share. So Vinnie, I got a
42:26
question for you. You're you and I are
42:27
the same age. Okay. But let's go to the
42:30
28-year-old Vinnie.
42:32
Yeah.
42:33
Would the 28-year-old Vinnie consider
42:33
marrying a li marrying a hot 24 year old
42:35
liberal AOC voting socialist? 28. 28. If
42:38
I wasn't into politics.
42:42
You're not into politics. Of course, you
42:43
would have married her. Of course. Would
42:44
you even thought about it?
42:45
No.
42:46
She's hot.
42:47
I wouldn't even thought like hot. Like I
42:48
would
42:50
Brandon, you're 30.
42:50
Yeah.
42:52
A a a that girl that came that did a
42:52
commercial for us whom you introduced to
42:55
us, right?
42:58
If she was a hardcore liberal,
42:59
okay,
43:01
she's dropped that gorgeous.
43:02
You'll like her. She's attractive.
43:04
You're probably going to share this with
43:05
her. He won't stop talking. You ought to
43:06
go on a date with them already.
43:08
By the way, if she's a hardcore liberal
43:11
Mhm.
43:14
AOC
43:14
armpits the whole night, but she's
43:16
dropped it. Gorgeous.
43:17
Would you marry her?
43:20
No. No.
43:20
Why not? Why wouldn't you marry her?
43:21
Oh, they they'll ruin your life.
43:22
What do you mean by that?
43:24
Cuz they're they're just nasty. Like
43:25
that.
43:27
She's gorgeous, though.
43:27
I know, but it's like a trap.
43:28
Brandon, be careful. She's hot.
43:30
But the problem is with them is that
43:32
they they want to control the
43:33
relationship. They want control of
43:34
dynamic and they they just have like
43:36
this nasty.
43:38
You don't think as a man you can impose
43:38
your, you know, masculine side and raise
43:40
the kids the way you want?
43:42
No. They'd call that toxic masculinity.
43:43
They would. So even if she's gorgeous,
43:45
hot, dropped it. You walk in the mall,
43:48
everybody's having, you know, necks just
43:51
breaking because they're checking out
43:54
your girl. You don't care. You wouldn't
43:55
marry here if she was a liberal.
43:57
Mary, no. I might get tricked like
43:59
initially, but um Mary, no. That'd ruin
44:01
your life. You know, you always you
44:04
always say you can make the wrong
44:05
decision with who you marry and it could
44:06
ruin your life.
44:07
It's so true though. Mind you, if I if I
44:08
was meaning 28 and like his age and like
44:09
involved with politics the way that
44:12
absolutely not because the values aren't
44:13
there. The child upbringing is not
44:15
there. The letting them be whatever they
44:17
want trans. I'm not with that. And then
44:18
Pat and I understand that there are
44:20
Democrat Christians. I'm not I'm not
44:22
stupid. But do they really give in to
44:23
God? Are they really going to raise the
44:25
family under?
44:27
What if she's a challenge?
44:27
What do you mean a challenge?
44:28
Like you like a challenge. You're like,
44:30
I think I can convert her.
44:33
Convert. I don't
44:34
you you you like you you guys are laying
44:35
in bed and you kind of drop a MAGA hat
44:36
next to her.
44:39
You like give her like a pink, you know,
44:40
lingerie with MAGA sticker on the back
44:43
of it. I just bought it from Victoria
44:45
Secret. You drop it. She's wearing it.
44:47
She has no clue. There's a sticker on
44:48
the back that says MAGA. And he said,
44:50
"Babe, you look so good. Turn around.
44:51
Let me take a picture of you." Look at
44:52
the
44:53
What is that you put on?
44:54
You got the home of the Patriot missile
44:55
boxer shorts
44:56
and the makeup breakup. But you wouldn't
44:58
do it. You're not going to do it. I
45:00
can't do it because I already know long
45:02
run like it's not worth it's not worth
45:03
the effort to try to fix her to get on
45:05
the journey that we're on.
45:06
So, you know what's happened with them?
45:07
Yeah.
45:08
Because they the looks, you know, go so
45:09
quickly, right?
45:12
I guys, I got kicked in my hand by my
45:13
son in the pool 3 months ago.
45:16
Let me tell you, it's still there. I
45:18
would have recovered within 24 hours.
45:19
Oh, easy money.
45:21
It's still there if I was in my 20s,
45:22
right? It's a very different life. I
45:23
went to the doctor yesterday. I gave
45:25
enough blood to, you know, share with a
45:27
small little village in uh Africa.
45:30
Literally, I gave so much blood. I'm
45:32
like going like this. I'm like, "No,
45:33
there's only like eight more left." And
45:34
she keeps taking blood and I'm just
45:36
watching the blood squirting into this
45:37
thing. I'm like, "How much more blood do
45:39
you need from me?" Like, I mean, am I
45:40
getting paid to give you all this blood?
45:42
No, we just kind of need to test your uh
45:43
whatever stuff. And I'm 46. So, the
45:45
doctor's like, "Look,
45:47
you're kind of that age." I said, "I
45:49
know. I'm thinking I'm going to do it at
45:50
50." Well, the doctor's saying you got
45:52
to do it at 45. I said, "I can take some
45:53
time." No, you kind of got to do it.
45:55
It's now. Now or never.
45:56
You want me to really do it? Yeah, you
45:57
got to do it. I said, "Dude, I don't
45:58
want to do it. It's a little bit
45:59
awkward. You got You know what I'm
46:00
talking about. You know, you just did it
46:01
a few months ago. It was like the
46:02
greatest day of your life. You were
46:04
coming in here celebrating, excited. You
46:05
felt lighter, happier."
46:06
The doctor was very happy.
46:08
Okay. Yeah. The doctor was like, "Yeah."
46:09
So, but go into it. I mean, think about
46:13
this, Tom. Think about this. Think about
46:16
this.
46:18
Think about just that look right there.
46:18
Right.
46:21
Go a little bit lower. Go a little bit
46:22
lower. They don't want to have kids.
46:23
They don't want to get married. They're
46:25
angry. They hate men. They're angry. But
46:27
do you think they were born this way?
46:30
No, Pat. I think the system did because
46:32
what those women look at this group and
46:33
look at the epidemic that's happening.
46:35
They're not having kids. And what's the
46:37
globalist Brandon idea is less people.
46:38
We There's too many you you you've heard
46:41
it from Bill Gates and them. What's the
46:43
biggest problem? There's too many human
46:45
beings. They've said these words. Who
46:47
was the the prince um the Duke of
46:49
Jack? No, no. The guy the the the guy
46:50
from England that died. He was a prince,
46:52
I believe, of York. When they they said
46:54
he goes, "You know what? If I die, I
46:56
would love to come back as a virus just
46:58
to kill as many people as I can." He
47:00
This is a a a loyal a royal family
47:02
member. It's too many people, Pat. And
47:05
guess what? This is a whole huge
47:07
generation of women that are like, "I
47:09
don't need men. I'm independent. All I
47:11
need is my dog and my cat." Prince
47:13
Phillip, he said, "If I reincarnated,
47:15
I'd come back as a deadly virus to solve
47:16
overpopulation." So that whatever that
47:18
well I mean he looks like a total
47:20
street
47:21
zoom a little bit. He looks like
47:23
somebody.
47:25
Tell me that guy if you want.
47:25
He's like a Bondville.
47:28
He died. He's dead if I'm correct.
47:29
Oh, he was dead.
47:32
He looks like he looks like a white
47:34
walker from Game of Thrones. But my
47:35
point is P I I go in a bigger umbrella.
47:37
It's it's this is a mission complete cuz
47:39
look at how many women right now are
47:42
like, "No, I don't need a man. I don't
47:44
need nothing. I'm independent." But then
47:45
once it gets to a certain age, it's
47:46
like, "Oh my god." Looking back, I was
47:48
fooled. It's like the people that were
47:49
that bought the Russia collusion, bought
47:51
the Trump as Hitler, it's like now it's
47:53
now it's too late.
47:54
Yeah, but that's the part. So, where I'm
47:55
going with this, Tom, and I'll come to
47:57
you to wrap this one up. Uh, unless if
47:58
you have anything else to say. So, where
48:00
I'm going with this is the following. If
48:02
if your bad policies
48:05
destroy people's lives and they
48:08
eventually figure it out, there is
48:10
nothing worse than, for example, okay,
48:12
you guys going to hear I'm going to make
48:15
an announcement here probably next week.
48:16
I have been wearing this same exact shoe
48:19
for the last two weeks.
48:22
I've been wear I'm not even kidding.
48:24
I've been wearing the same exact shoe
48:25
every day the last two weeks. Okay. the
48:27
same shoe every day for the last two
48:31
weeks
48:33
with three-piece suits and everything.
48:33
I wear I'm wearing a suit, right? I'm
48:34
about to go to Vegas. With everything
48:36
I'm wearing, I wear this shoe, right? Do
48:37
you know what's worse
48:39
than when you come out with a product
48:42
and people don't like it? What do they
48:44
do when they don't like the product?
48:47
When when you go to a store, No, worse
48:49
than bashing. Yeah, we'll come back to
48:50
this, Rob. We'll show it. But when you
48:52
go back to it, you buy product.
48:54
What's the worst thing you want to
48:57
happen with your product? When you when
48:58
you come out with a product,
49:00
like you as as a product maker,
49:01
say you came out with a product.
49:02
Oh, reviews. People People trashing it.
49:04
What's worse than reviews?
49:06
No sales.
49:07
What's worse than sales?
49:08
Uh like something wrong with returns.
49:10
Yeah. People not wanting it.
49:11
Hey, man. I want a refund.
49:13
Yes.
49:14
This sucks. Yeah. Right. I want a
49:15
refund.
49:17
We're at the vault conference. Vault
49:18
ends for the magical event. Do you know
49:20
how many tickets we sold to next year's
49:23
Vault Conference?
49:24
4,100
49:25
plus tickets to next year's V
49:27
Conference.
49:28
From one year from
49:28
from one year from that, that's going to
49:29
be at the MGM Grand Arena.
49:30
Holy moly. I mean, people come I just
49:31
came as a general four years ago. Then I
49:34
bought an executive. Then I bought five
49:36
of my guys. Then I bought a co ticket
49:37
and came with 28 of my employees. What?
49:39
I'm bringing my team next time.
49:40
Yeah. I mean, it's that's the most
49:42
beautiful thing. But here's the bad
49:43
thing about bad products is you're
49:45
seeing so many people asking for refunds
49:48
of democratic policies.
49:52
As they age, they're coming back and
49:54
saying, "I want a refund. You destroyed
49:56
my life.
49:59
I was a hot 23-y old girl. You convinced
50:00
me to go around and who cares? My body
50:03
body count doesn't count." I went
50:06
through 68 guys. Jeez,
50:07
I did all this stuff and now no man
50:09
wants to marry me and everybody wants to
50:11
know what my body count is and I'm a
50:12
Christian woman out and I want to tell
50:14
them the truth, but at the same time
50:16
when I do they run. What should I do?
50:17
What should I do? The only thing I can
50:19
do is settle for this guy and settle for
50:21
that guy. What do I do now? Right?
50:22
Because somebody bought them that sold
50:25
them that these ideas are okay to buy
50:27
into. So to me, I do think eventually
50:30
they have to figure it out because
50:33
Vinnie, if they don't,
50:34
it's going to be a shellacking for 20
50:36
years.
50:38
I think so.
50:39
It's going to be a shellacking for 20
50:40
years. I really mean it. It's going to
50:41
be bad for 20 years. Tom, your thoughts
50:43
on the story here?
50:45
Well, I I'll give you a a personal
50:45
experience I had. Um, you know, I was
50:48
redoing my kitchen on a house I had. I
50:51
was single. I hadn't met Kim yet. I
50:53
would meet Kim like five years later.
50:55
Now, maybe not an appropriate story.
50:56
No, no, no, no. you're going to go.
50:58
But the um the contractor, his kind of a
50:59
foreman, was a form woman. She went out,
51:03
checked on the guys and everything.
51:04
She was?
51:06
Yeah. She was like 40 years old.
51:06
I'm telling you, don't do the story.
51:08
No.
51:10
I didn't I didn't date her. Uh but I
51:12
noticed I noticed the way she talked to
51:14
the She was very attractive and she was
51:16
out there every every day
51:19
coming by the house, making sure that
51:21
the cabinet makers are on time, all
51:23
this. She was a good foreman for the
51:25
owner of the construction company. And
51:26
one day the owner of a construction
51:28
company says, "Hey,
51:30
um, remember she's coming to my house,
51:31
she can she sees the Ferrari I'm
51:34
restoring with a million parts in the
51:36
garage, right? She sees where I'm
51:38
living. She sees that I'm single and
51:40
she's I believe she was 40. I I was less
51:42
than that. I was like 34 at the time.
51:45
And the guy says to me, Pat, he says,
51:47
"Hey, you know, she's not dating
51:49
anybody." And I said,
51:51
"No, she I think she she thinks," and I
51:54
remember the word. She says, "She thinks
51:57
you're interesting." And I said, "Yeah,
51:58
yeah, that's very nice of you." Cuz I
52:00
just was trying to be nice, but I'm not
52:02
interested. Cuz I thought she seemed,
52:04
here comes the word, bitter. The way she
52:05
would talk to the guys on the job site
52:08
and then I would see her out then talk
52:09
on her phone, she just came across to me
52:11
as like a bitter person. So here you
52:13
have the biz.
52:15
So guess what? No,
52:16
she wanted she wanted the biz dock.
52:18
So I looked back at this and I just
52:20
pied. I said, "No, no, thanks." And
52:22
because I said no,
52:24
tell the real story. She was sound like
52:25
super nice.
52:27
Told me a different version of how to
52:27
try to be more nice.
52:29
Was she wearing a tool belt?
52:30
No. Like
52:31
was she wearing a tool belt? Tom,
52:33
my mind's telling me no.
52:35
No, no, no. The point is I saw it. I saw
52:37
it. And I feel that she was bitter and
52:41
she was reaching out. She tells
52:44
you telling the full story.
52:45
No, I I had nothing to do.
52:46
She reached out and then Tom
52:48
I had nothing to do and it she was super
52:49
from then on she was even nicer. will
52:52
tell you a similar story because I said
52:54
I will tell you a similar story.
52:56
You guys are teasing me. I'm saying I
52:57
saw it.
52:58
I just don't want the whole story to cuz
52:58
you told me the story how it went and
53:00
she upstairs
53:01
because Yeah, I don't want to get into
53:03
the That's what I'm saying. You know, if
53:05
you get No, there was there's no other
53:07
story to it because but the the survey
53:09
is right.
53:11
Yeah.
53:12
If I had said, "Yeah, maybe let's let's
53:12
go out. Let's go out grab hamburger, you
53:14
know, just have a casual lunch or
53:16
something.
53:18
Can you run a poll?"
53:18
10 minutes into a poll.
53:19
You know what happened? Hang on a
53:20
second. Run this. Run a poll. And I want
53:23
this to be the poll. How many of you
53:25
think
53:27
Tom hooked up with him? Yes or no? Run
53:28
this poll. But let's see what the
53:31
audience thinks.
53:33
We can see what they think.
53:33
Let's see what the audience think. You
53:34
know what's going to happen? Just if
53:35
you're going to tell them you were going
53:36
to 5 minutes after you're at lunch, how
53:38
do you feel about abortion?
53:41
Do you think abortion is okay in extreme
53:43
cases? What do you mean like rape,
53:45
incest, or Chuck Schumer? I you know,
53:47
what do you believe? People People are
53:50
voting, Tom. They don't believe you.
53:52
1,7
53:56
people listen to the podcast. Two.
54:01
Oh, come on. Bisc army.
54:03
I didn't. I'm telling you. I I saw it
54:06
though. I was looking
54:09
said something to her.
54:12
No, she looked bitter. But let me tell
54:14
you, I was like not interested.
54:15
At this point, it's 3,000. She's about
54:17
to get into the message right now. and
54:18
she she's going to become she's going to
54:20
get a membership and comment.
54:22
Uh by the way, if you're out there
54:23
listening to this, the lady foreman who
54:24
was kind of bitter many years ago, you
54:26
had a chance to get the vis
54:27
and you didn't.
54:30
You had a chance. And if you're there
54:31
watching this, you can connect Tom.
54:33
It's been many years and maybe connect
54:35
us and give us some intel, get back to
54:37
the story. Let me tell you, obviously
54:40
we're having a lot of fun here. We're
54:41
having a lot of fun here. And you know,
54:42
I will tell you true story. I'm 28. I've
54:44
already made a decision to get married.
54:49
I want a wife and I'm talking to four
54:50
girls and all the four girls I'm seeing
54:52
who's going to be my wife, who's not.
54:54
One of the girls I really like and her
54:56
and I have spent a lot of time together
54:58
since I was probably 24, 25. We just
55:01
enjoyed each other's company, Persian
55:03
girl. And she was really cool. I looked
55:06
past the fact that I took her to a Billy
55:09
Graham event that took place in Pasadena
55:13
in 03. It was a November event. Can you
55:16
Rob, can you pull up to fact to check my
55:19
numbers?
55:21
Did Did Billy Graham speak in Pasadena
55:21
in 2003? November. Four nights at Rose
55:24
Bowl. Type in Rose Bowl. I want to know
55:27
if it's 03 or 04. I went three out of
55:28
the four 04.
55:31
What was the day? 04. Okay. That I took
55:32
her there.
55:34
So it was 04. I took her there and I
55:35
took a bunch of guys there and Billy
55:37
just crushed it. I'm trying to see what
55:39
she's going to be doing. And then fast
55:41
forward uh the the the day before it's
55:43
got to be like a week before Jen and I
55:47
start dating. I'm single
55:50
and we're at a bar in Pasadena Opas and
55:53
she is telling me, "Pat, please be
55:56
honest with me. Do you want to be with
56:00
me? Cuz I love you. I want to be with
56:02
you, but I you're going to break my
56:04
heart if we get together and you leave
56:07
me. I will be destroyed. Please don't do
56:09
that to me. And she's crying telling me
56:11
this at the bar at 1:00 in the morning.
56:13
Mhm.
56:15
And I truly enjoy this girl's company.
56:16
Nothing's happened with Jen. Jen and I
56:18
are not on a date. This is a week before
56:20
Jen and I start dating.
56:21
And I'm sitting there and I'm just kind
56:24
of going through it. I'm like, "Dude,
56:25
politically,
56:27
you're a hardcore John Ky person.
56:29
You're UNICEF.
56:31
You know, this person, she hated
56:34
Republicans." And I'm not even a
56:36
political person at this time. I'm just
56:38
a 28-y old guy that's just making money.
56:40
That's I'm not even talking politics.
56:42
I'm just trying to do my thing. But I I
56:43
had to in that moment say, she says,
56:46
"Only pursue me if you know you're going
56:49
to marry me one day, please." And I
56:52
said, "I know I can't marry you one day,
56:54
so I can't do this." And I walked away.
56:57
And she's in tears crying, but says,
57:00
"Thank you." We hug. It's the last time
57:02
I ever spoke to her.
57:04
Wow.
57:05
I was 28 years old. So then this Lady
57:06
Foreman showed up, okay?
57:09
And you hooked up with her on the way
57:11
home
57:12
and 20 years later, we meet each other
57:14
and we say the foreman, the foreman.
57:19
And she said, "Hey, listen. I was
57:22
working for this one fellow, call him a
57:24
biz Doc, and he never introduced me to
57:27
his bisc. And I will meet you. I don't
57:29
even want to marry you." Oh. Oh, he's
57:32
talking about his listen. I was I'm
57:34
singing like, you know, she's playing
57:35
the other song, Jaguar Edge, let's get
57:37
married. I'm like, dude, I don't want to
57:38
get married. I just want to like
57:39
Oh, man.
57:40
But anyway, so that true story. True
57:41
story. Simply because the kids would be
57:43
confused when it comes down to the
57:45
values and principles I want to share.
57:47
Marriage is already hard enough when
57:49
politically you're on opposite sides. It
57:50
is so challenging. A Christian can marry
57:52
a Catholic. A Christian can marry a Jew,
57:54
but their own on the same side
57:58
politically. They have a higher chance
58:00
of making it than a Christian marrying a
58:02
Christian where one's a socialist and
58:04
one's a Republican.
58:06
Yeah. No,
58:07
policies and ideas got to be on the same
58:08
page.
58:10
And uh anyways, John Kerry, it was all
58:11
your fault. Just so you know that. But
58:13
what an incredible foreman she was. I
58:14
mean, you got Tom respect. All right,
58:16
let's get to the next story here. Let's
58:18
get to the next one. Pete Hexet wants
58:19
you to get in shape, folks. And he's
58:21
like sick of it. Okay. No more, you
58:23
know, eating cheesecake six nights a
58:27
week and putting on weight and you can
58:29
only run a two mile in 17 minutes and 58
58:30
seconds. He wants you to get in shape
58:33
and some people don't like that. Some
58:35
people want their military veterans to
58:37
be little fatties going out there to
58:39
where they get tired after jogging for 2
58:41
minutes like the people at the view. But
58:43
Pete wants you to be in shape. Pete
58:46
wants you to do pull-ups, push-ups, get
58:48
back into masculine soldiers that we
58:50
have. And this is a speech that he gave
58:52
and some people are not happy about
58:55
this. Go ahead, Rob.
58:56
Frankly, it's tiring to look out at
58:58
combat formations or really any
59:00
formation and see fat troops
59:02
body.
59:05
Likewise, it's completely unacceptable
59:05
to see fat generals and admirals in the
59:07
halls of the Pentagon.
59:09
Fat generals commands around the country
59:10
and the world. It's a bad fat general.
59:12
It is bad. It's not who we are.
59:14
Okay, so listen. That's fat shaming to
59:16
some people, right? He continues, Rob.
59:19
Is this another one?
59:21
Yeah, I have a bunch of clips. This is
59:22
him talking about him not wanting his
59:24
sons um to fight with uh overweight
59:25
troops. Yeah,
59:29
he doesn't want that. Go ahead, Rob.
59:30
I don't want my son serving alongside
59:32
troops who are out of shape or in combat
59:34
unit with females who can't meet the
59:36
same combat arms physical standards as
59:38
men or troops who are not fully
59:40
proficient on their assigned weapons,
59:42
platform, or task. or under a leader who
59:44
was the first but not the best.
59:47
Standards must be uniform,
59:52
genderneutral, and high.
59:55
Okay, so he's saying this now, Sunonny
59:58
Host, Rob, if you can find out from the
00:00
view. She finds this slightly, you know,
00:02
inappropriate. Why why would we want to
00:04
do this? What's wrong with having fat
00:07
people in the military? Go ahead, Rob.
00:10
really befuddled by why by that the
00:12
optics were terrible, meaning all of our
00:15
top military brass are all in one place
00:18
and we spent $6 million to get them
00:20
there. That that didn't make a lot of
00:22
sense to me. It also didn't make a lot
00:24
of sense um to me that he was saying
00:26
that he was going to toughen physical
00:29
standards and re and review the
00:30
anti-hazing policy um by sort of
00:32
implementing a hazing policy. And then
00:35
also he said he was going to um return
00:38
to the highest male standard for combat
00:42
positions because the troops were fat.
00:44
Like I I just I I don't understand how
00:47
that was supposed to be an uplifting
00:50
message for our military.
00:52
Maybe he's referring to Colonel Sanders.
00:53
It was it was just it was it was really
00:55
a bizarre thing. He started talking
00:57
about woke DEI policies. By the way,
00:59
there are no gender quotas in the
01:02
military. By the way, he um fired uh
01:04
more than a dozen military leaders, many
01:07
of them people of color and women. He
01:08
fired the chairman of the Joint Chief of
01:10
Staffs, General Charles Brown, Jr., who
01:12
is African-American. He fired the first
01:14
woman to command the Navy, Admiral Lisa
01:16
uh Franetti. I I I just I don't
01:18
understand the sort of hypocrisy of
01:21
firing these people, having all these
01:24
people meet together, and then
01:26
denigrating them.
01:28
Did you see Did you look at it? They
01:29
look like They're looking at him like he
01:30
has two heads. Well, they
01:31
Okay, Vinnie, thoughts.
01:33
Okay. Well, first of all, I absolutely
01:34
love what he did. It's it, by the way,
01:38
the military, for everybody that knows
01:40
out there, it's not a it's not a fashion
01:42
show. It's not a freaking summer camp.
01:44
We are in the business of war. And war
01:46
is is having trained killers to go and
01:49
fight and fight the enemy. Okay? And we
01:51
have to be war ready at every single
01:53
moment. Okay? Look, by the way, have you
01:57
seen videos of China and Russia,
01:58
Brandon? Those people do not play games
02:00
over here. Like last the last four years
02:03
when Biden was in, I was watching more
02:05
transgender Tik Tok videos of guys like
02:07
yes on like on aircraft carriers and all
02:10
that stuff. It's like guys that's not
02:12
what we need. And this is the prime
02:14
example of DEI will have you DIE. Okay,
02:15
I'm sorry and I'm I'm not sorry because
02:20
even did you notice the views audience?
02:22
Not a laugh, not an applause, not
02:24
nothing. I want my soldiers to be
02:26
because they're not stupid, Pat. Because
02:28
at the end of the day, remember um Jack
02:30
Nicholson in um Few Good Men. You want
02:32
me on that wall. You need me on that
02:35
wall. That's who you need. You need a
02:37
soldier like that, like Pete Hexipath. I
02:39
was like, "Listen, with all the stuff
02:41
that's happening inside of America, we
02:42
could argue, we could fight, gaze, this
02:44
bathrooms, all that, whatever. When it
02:46
comes to war and protecting the country,
02:48
you need a leader like that. You need
02:50
trained killers to go out there and
02:52
fight for us when it comes down to it."
02:54
Thank God we haven't had anything crazy
02:55
since um you know 9/11 Iraq and all that
02:57
stuff. But Pat, that's the attitude. And
03:00
I'm sorry those generals, get your ass
03:01
in shape. He's only having two. How many
03:03
uh PT tests a year did you have Pat? I
03:06
had one. We had one and we had to take
03:08
care of ourselves. And if he's taking
03:10
care of of himself and he's a secretary
03:11
of war, all those other guys need to
03:13
know what a PT test is. A lot of people
03:15
It's push It's push-ups, sit-ups, and a
03:17
two-m run and pull-ups. Okay? And you
03:18
have to do it within a specific amount
03:20
of time and reps because guys at the end
03:22
of the day if god forbid crap hits the
03:25
fan we're going to war. You don't want
03:27
some overweight guys or some people that
03:29
are like you know my feelings I'm trans.
03:31
You know you know what the thing with uh
03:33
Sunonny Hust right is am I saying her
03:35
last?
03:37
Okay. Would you say she's pretty?
03:38
I think she's she's a good-look girl.
03:40
I think she's gorgeous. I I think let's
03:42
just say it. I'm not going to you know
03:44
if you pull up her pictures I think
03:46
she's beautiful. Yes.
03:47
Okay. Sunny. Do you think you get the
03:48
job that you have if you were 80 lbs
03:50
heavier?
03:52
Why not? Do you think you get this show,
03:54
the job that you have if you were 80 lbs
03:57
heavier?
03:58
Well, they give it to
03:59
Do you think No, but but no, but Whoopi
04:00
is actually a lot older. But Whoopi is a
04:01
very very very very famous individual,
04:04
an actress. She's made it. Okay.
04:07
But do you think Sunny gets the job if
04:09
she's
04:11
not that attractive?
04:12
No.
04:13
Do you think Sunny woke up one day and
04:14
look like that?
04:15
How hard do you think Sunny works out?
04:16
Oh, she's
04:18
How hard do you think Sunny goes to the
04:19
gym and the way she takes care of her
04:20
body? I'm sorry, Sunny. How hard is it
04:21
to look like you? So, why shouldn't we
04:23
have that expectation of them? Why are
04:25
you playing a victim for these other
04:27
guys? I'm feeling sorry for him. How
04:28
much does Sunny make per year? Can you
04:29
type in how much Sunny makes per year?
04:31
What does Sunny make per year? What's
04:32
her salary? I actually don't know what
04:34
million, let's say.
04:35
I don't know what it is, but whatever it
04:36
is, 5 million. Guess what? She deserves
04:37
it because she takes care of her body.
04:40
Now, do I agree with her politics and
04:42
all this other stuff? No. Even a guy
04:43
that doesn't agree with your politics
04:45
respects the hell out of you working
04:47
out. And by the way, guess what's never
04:48
gonna happen? Oh [ __ ] we're under war.
04:51
Is Sunny Hust ready to go to war? They
04:53
don't care if you're going to go to war
04:55
or not. But we do with the folks in the
04:56
military. Bingo.
04:58
And let me tell you, I saw a lot of
04:59
generals when I was in the military that
05:00
were out of shape. My colonel,
05:01
Lieutenant Colonel Peacock, was in top
05:03
shape. He's a general now on in top. He
05:05
respected the hell out of that guy. It
05:08
was nothing like chasing a man that was
05:10
20 years older than you that was running
05:12
13 miles 13 a minute a minute two miles.
05:14
You're like, "Dude, that's my They had
05:17
the moral authority to punk you a little
05:19
bit."
05:21
Hey, this old man's whooping your ass.
05:22
Don't let this old man. Don't let this
05:23
old man, you know, you're left, you're
05:25
right. Hey, get your It was such a great
05:26
thing to see somebody doing that. So,
05:29
even for Sunny, when you're going out
05:30
there playing this political [ __ ]
05:33
that you're playing, you still work your
05:34
ass off to look like the way you do.
05:38
They need to work their ass up to make
05:40
sure we're protected. I don't see any
05:41
problems with that that uh they need to
05:43
be doing that. I'm so glad uh Hexadet is
05:45
doing this. There's another clip I want
05:47
to play before I come to Tom and
05:48
Brandon. Rob, if you want to play the
05:50
other clip by Pete Hex and then Tom, I'm
05:51
coming to you. Uh I think this is the
05:53
one. Go for it. No more identity months,
05:54
DEI offices, dudes in dresses.
05:57
Good. Bingo.
06:02
No more climate change worship.
06:03
Let's go.
06:04
No more division, distraction, or gender
06:04
delusions. No more debris.
06:07
Good.
06:09
As I've said before and we'll say again,
06:10
we are done with that [ __ ]
06:13
Nice.
06:15
And by the way, that's exactly how I
06:16
view the leader of the military to
06:19
speak.
06:21
Period.
06:21
Like that. You want to see him speak
06:22
like that. You go back and think about
06:25
in the history books, but Ulysus Srand
06:26
or some of these guys that maybe would
06:28
have drank or partied on, but when it
06:30
came down to war and Lincoln needed
06:32
somebody to get the job done, it wasn't
06:33
Mlelen that got the job done. It wasn't
06:35
a lot of other guys. It was Grant who
06:37
was a little bit rough around the edges
06:39
that was able to go out there and talk
06:40
to the troops and they respected the
06:42
hell out of him. He got the job done.
06:43
And to me, I'm getting the vibe that
06:45
he's doing this. And by the way, you
06:46
know, good for him because at first, you
06:48
know, I was a little bit like, you going
06:50
to go from TV to this? But I'm loving
06:51
the way he is going about this, the way
06:53
he's driving the initiatives for our
06:55
military. I prefer this. Tom, your
06:57
thoughts on this?
06:59
Well, common sense is making a comeback
07:00
because you know what? A poll of
07:03
American people yesterday.
07:04
Two to one two to one believe women
07:08
should be allowed in combat roles. Two
07:12
to one. However,
07:13
there's a comma.
07:17
and 77%
07:19
felt they must meet if they must meet
07:21
the physical requirements of the job.
07:26
So 2 to one says if you if your daughter
07:29
wants to go off in the army and wants to
07:32
be a Green Bray, okay, but 77% said she
07:34
better measure up to the requirement. Y
07:38
isn't that interesting?
07:41
And it's lead by example.
07:42
And there it is upside down. Only 25%
07:43
think women should have lower physical
07:46
requirements. That means 75% I read 77
07:47
think that they have to meet the
07:51
requirements. Common sense is making a
07:52
comeback. Yeah. And you nailed it. He
07:54
look at him. Look how much shape he's
07:57
in. You have to lead by example. You
07:58
can't be even a full colonel going,
08:00
"Hey, here's the standards that the
08:02
Secretary of War passed on for me to
08:04
you, but you're out of shape." No, bro.
08:06
I want But like other countries have to
08:08
look at us guys and be fearful. You know
08:09
what I mean? During the Biden, bro, let
08:12
me explain something to you. They were
08:13
laughing at us. They were laughing at us
08:14
and now it's serious business.
08:16
Pat, you used to share a story I love.
08:18
You said there was an older I don't know
08:20
if he was a drill sergeant or a colonel
08:21
or somebody that three of you needed an
08:23
attitude adjustment and he took you out
08:25
to the back corner. What happened there?
08:27
And he was older than you.
08:29
Of course he was. He was 20 or 15 years
08:31
older than us. So he took us to the back
08:32
and we were acting like we're gangsters
08:34
and tough. And he says, "Oh, really? You
08:35
guys are gangsters? You're tough. No
08:36
problem."
08:38
Gets into Humvey. We go to the back and
08:39
takes his rank off
08:41
and says, "Okay, who wants to go first?"
08:43
And we're like, "Drove." He wasn't a big
08:45
guy. He was a 5'8 guy. 5'8 and 58 5'9
08:47
guy. And we're big boys. And he says,
08:50
"Who wants to go for?" Like, "Dro,
08:52
sorry. We don't want to hurt you." No.
08:53
No. No. I won't tell anybody.
08:55
[Music]
08:57
Like, I'm good. He was one of those guys
08:58
that was a black guy that talked so
09:01
slow.
09:03
Oh, God. Scary.
09:04
Private bet. David,
09:05
I need you to drop and give me 20 right
09:07
now. He spoke like that. Everybody else
09:09
would scream.
09:11
This guy would speak to you.
09:12
Come
09:13
like dead.
09:14
It's even scarier.
09:15
You're dead. And he beat But he was so
09:16
smart about the way he beat us. He only
09:19
hit us in our stomach. Didn't hit us in
09:20
the face. No bruises.
09:22
Everything was here.
09:23
And we were like, we're done. And he
09:24
brought us back wherever he is right
09:26
now.
09:28
Because of that, I have mental issues.
09:29
Brandon, go for it.
09:32
Yeah. So, I'm in I look incredibly
09:33
favorably upon fat shaming, I think it's
09:35
um really good, necessary. Yeah. I mean,
09:37
cuz I think it's like like to say fat
09:39
shaming is bad. Like to say smoke
09:42
shaming is bad. Like to say um if you
09:43
say it's negative to smoke cigarettes,
09:45
like would we say that's socially
09:47
unacceptable? No. It's like objectively
09:48
unhealthy to be fat. So, you know, in
09:50
the military and the police department
09:52
and the fire departments, you know, you
09:53
you still see fat people in those
09:55
departments. And then in the military
09:56
too, I I know a lot of guys in the
09:58
military and they said in 2018 it went
09:59
from you you would discipline people and
10:02
um they call them smoking them out and
10:04
stuff for things and to uh higher
10:06
ranking people were literally afraid to
10:08
do that to newer people because they
10:10
would could get in trouble and lose
10:12
their rank or lose their um their jobs
10:13
and get kicked out of the military. So
10:15
literally privates were disrespecting
10:16
higher ranked people after 2018 because
10:18
they were no longer able to discipline
10:20
them because of the way that uh like the
10:22
HR stuff got in the military. They went
10:24
from the uh they called it Shark Week to
10:25
the Thunder Run. So they they changed
10:28
all the hazing stuff. They like took
10:30
hazing out of the military and that's
10:32
detrimental.
10:33
Well, they as I was leaving as a great
10:34
point, Brandon, as I was leaving the
10:37
military, 2001, 2002, uh they started
10:38
doing uh forms like they started giving
10:43
like if somebody yelled at you too much,
10:45
you could write it and like get I'm not
10:47
even joking and I'm at and I'm like
10:48
leaving and I'm like bye. It got soft.
10:50
You know, it's bureaucracy. If there's a
10:53
form.
10:55
Yeah.
10:55
It's like, how are you supposed to
10:56
instill fear and respect into people if
10:57
you can't hold them accountable?
10:58
No, I want I want I want killers, bro.
11:00
Like, we need we need killers. We don't
11:01
need emotional.
11:03
I'm with it. I'm with it. I'm with it.
11:03
So, you know, we'll see. We'll see
11:05
what's going to happen. By the way, Rob
11:06
ran a poll. Rob, can you pull up the
11:07
last poll you ran? Not about that, Tom.
11:09
At this point, we all know what happened
11:11
there. No, no, it's a different poll
11:12
that Rob ran about being in shape. Look
11:14
at the percentage of how people voted.
11:16
Look at the percentage of how people
11:18
voted.
11:20
Let's go.
11:20
7,300 people voted. Do you think members
11:21
of the US military should be in fit and
11:24
in top shape?
11:27
I guarantee
11:28
you some cheesecake and cheesecake.
11:33
We have a new V tame of future looks
11:34
pride. It's faith over fear cheesecake.
11:37
I got some faith over fear. I'm not
11:40
afraid that I'm going to get fat eating
11:42
this cheesecake. We got it for you
11:43
shipping it to you right now for only 29
11:45
bucks.
11:47
It's all in how you take the survey. Are
11:48
you in favor of military being strong
11:50
enough to kick the enemy's ass so the
11:52
enemy doesn't kick yours?
11:54
Yes.
11:55
Yes, I'm in favor of it.
11:55
Yeah, exactly. So funny.
11:56
Okay. All right. So, let's go to the
11:58
next story. Let's go to the next story.
12:01
Next story I want to get to is Trump and
12:02
Netanyahu announce peace plan, folks. US
12:05
President Halls one of the greatest days
12:09
in civilization
12:12
as he reveals the 20point road map to
12:13
end Israel Hamas war. and for him to
12:16
help run Gaza with Tony Blair. Okay,
12:20
here they are. Go for it, Rob.
12:23
This is a big big day. A beautiful day.
12:25
Potentially
12:27
very beautiful day.
12:28
One of the great days ever in
12:29
civilization.
12:32
Things that have been going on for
12:34
hundreds of years and thousands of
12:37
years. We're going to
12:39
at least we're at a minimum very very
12:41
close and I think we're beyond very
12:43
close. And I want to thank BB for really
12:45
getting in there and doing a job.
12:49
We've worked well together
12:51
as we have with many other countries,
12:53
both of us with many other countries,
12:55
which is the only way this whole
12:57
situation gets solved. And I'm not just
12:59
talking about Gaza. Gaza is one thing,
13:02
but we're talking about much beyond
13:04
Gaza.
13:05
The whole deal,
13:07
everything getting solved. It's called
13:09
peace in the Middle East.
13:12
So today uh is a historic day for peace
13:16
and prime minister Netanyahu. Rob,
13:19
you want to pull up the point?
13:21
We just concluded an important
13:22
because in that 20point plan, just so
13:23
you guys know, I believe Netanyahu
13:25
apologizes for the Israel's Qatar
13:26
strike. Okay. Deep regret, expressed
13:28
deep regret to his Qatari counterpart
13:31
Monday over September 9th strike aimed
13:34
at Hamas leaders in Doha, a Jewish
13:36
state. And uh yeah, so that came from
13:38
him. And then at the same time, so here
13:42
we go. Prime Minister Alan welcomed
13:44
these asurances emphasizing Qatar's
13:46
readiness to continue contributing
13:48
meaningfully to regional security and
13:49
stability. Prime Minister Antiotic
13:50
expressed commitment to the same. Israel
13:52
has long expressed annoyance that Qatar
13:54
plays a key role in the Middle East
13:56
peace negotiations. Despite hosting
13:58
Hamas political leaders, the September
13:59
9th attack had targeted top terror
14:01
figures as they gathered with Qatari
14:03
mediations
14:06
for another round of ceasefire
14:08
discussions. But here's a 20point uh
14:10
plan that they have in place. Gaza will
14:12
be dradicalized terror-free zone that
14:14
does not pose a threat to its neighbors.
14:17
Gaza will be redeveloped for the
14:19
benefits of the people of Gaza who have
14:21
suffered more than enough. If both sides
14:22
agree to this propo proposal, the war
14:24
will immediately end. Israeli forces
14:26
will withdraw to the agreed upon line to
14:28
prepare for hostage release. During this
14:31
time, all military operations, including
14:33
aerial and artillery bombardment will be
14:35
suspended and the battle lines will
14:37
remain frozen until conditions are met
14:39
for the complete stage withdrawal within
14:41
24 hours of Israel publicly accepting
14:43
this agreement.
14:46
72 72
14:46
72 hours. All hostages alive and
14:48
deceased will be returned and diseased.
14:50
Deceased and deceased. Yeah. Alive.
14:52
Alive or dead. Got it. Once all hostages
14:54
are released, Israel will release 250
14:56
life sentenced prisoners plus 1,700
14:58
Gazans who were detained after October
15:00
7, 2023, including all women, children,
15:02
and detained in this context. For all uh
15:04
every host Israeli hostage who remains
15:07
or released, Israel will release the Rob
15:09
I can't read the last part. We release
15:10
the something
15:12
the remains of the 15 deceased Gaz.
15:14
Okay, let's go to point number six. Uh
15:17
once all hostages are returned, Hamas
15:19
members who commit the peaceful coexist
15:22
and decommission and to decommission
15:23
their weapons will be given amnesty.
15:26
Members of Hamas who wish to leave Gaza
15:27
will be provided safe passages to
15:29
receive countries
15:31
receiving countries. Wow. Who's going to
15:32
receive that?
15:34
Egypt and Jordan have said no.
15:36
Upon acceptance of this agreement, full
15:37
aid will be immediately sent into Gaza
15:39
Strip. At a minimum, eight quantities
15:41
will be consistent with uh was what was
15:44
included in January 192025 agreement re
15:47
regarding humanitarian aid including
15:50
rehabilitation of infrastructure, water,
15:51
electricity and sewage,
15:53
entry of distribution and aid in the
15:56
Gaza Strip will proceed uh without
15:57
interference from the two parties uh
16:00
through through the United Nations and
16:02
its agencies and let the crescent Rob go
16:04
to the next one. Okay. uh uh opening the
16:06
Rafa Gaza will be governed under the
16:09
temporary transitional governance of
16:11
tech te tech te tech te tech te tech te
16:12
tech te tech te tech te tech te tech te
16:13
technocratic
16:13
interesting
16:15
uh a political Palestinian comm
16:16
committee responsible for delivering the
16:18
day-to-day running of all public
16:20
services and municipalities of the
16:21
people of Gaza huh okay uh Palestinian
16:23
international oversight supervision and
16:27
a new international transitional body
16:29
the board of peace which will be headed
16:31
and chaired by President Donald J.
16:33
Trump. Wow. With other members and head
16:34
of state announced, including former
16:37
Prime Minister Tony Blair, this body
16:38
will set the framework and handle the
16:41
funding for the redevelopment of Gaza
16:42
until such a time as the Palestinian
16:44
Authority has completed its reform
16:46
program. 10. A Trump economic
16:48
development plan to rebuild and energize
16:50
Gaza will be created by covening a panel
16:52
of experts who have helped birth some of
16:56
the thriving modern miracles cities in
16:58
the Middle East. Go to the next one. Rob
17:01
11. uh a special economic zone will be
17:02
established with preferred tariff and
17:06
access rates to be negotiated with
17:07
participating countries. No one will be
17:09
forced to leave Gaza and those who wish
17:10
to leave will be free to do so and free
17:12
to return. Good. We will encourage
17:15
people to stay and offer them the
17:17
opportunity to build a better Gaza.
17:19
Hamas and other factions agree to not
17:21
have any role in the governance of Gaza
17:24
directly or indirectly. That's big. in
17:25
in or any form if they'll be able to
17:27
pull that off. All military terror and
17:29
offensive infrastructure, including
17:31
tunnels and weapon production facilities
17:32
will be destroyed, not rebuilt. Huh. A
17:34
guarantee will be provided by regional
17:38
partners to ensure that Hamas and the
17:40
factions comply with their obligations.
17:41
And Rob, go a little bit. And the new
17:43
Gaza can't see the new Gaza poses no
17:45
threat to its neighbors or its people.
17:48
Okay, let's go to 15.
17:49
Do you have 15 16 or
17:52
I do I have 16 through um
17:53
20?
17:56
Yes. Here.
17:57
Boom. Boom.
18:00
We're almost there. So, let's just wrap
18:01
it. There you go. 16.
18:03
Israel will not comply or annex Gaza.
18:04
Occupy.
18:06
Will not occupy or annex Gaza as ISF
18:07
establishes control and stability. The
18:10
Israel Defense Force will withdraw based
18:12
on standards, milestones, and time
18:13
frames linked to demilitarization
18:14
that will be agreed upon and then go to
18:17
17. In the event Hamas rejects or delays
18:19
this proposal, the above including the
18:21
scaled up aid operation will proceed and
18:23
the terror area free areas handed over
18:25
from IDF to the ISF. An interfaith
18:27
dialogue process will be established
18:31
based on the values of tolerance and
18:33
peaceful exist coexistence to try and
18:35
change mindsets and narratives of
18:38
Palestinians and Israelis by emphasizing
18:39
the benefits that can be deprived from
18:41
peace while Gaza redevelopment vans and
18:43
when the PA reform uh program is
18:46
faithfully carried out the conditions
18:48
may finally be in place for a credible
18:50
pathway to Palestinian selfdetermination
18:52
and statehood. And last but not least,
18:54
the US will establish a dialogue between
18:55
Israel and Palestinians to agree upon a
18:57
uh political horizon for peaceful and
18:59
prosperous coexistence. Brandon, your
19:00
thoughts on this?
19:02
Yeah, so um it's great if that's um
19:03
true. I think that unfortunately the
19:05
reason that this is being talked about
19:08
right now is because uh think they're
19:10
gearing up to go back after Iran. Um,
19:12
just based off uh Rob, I sent you an
19:15
article that US refueling tankers are
19:17
being sent over to the Middle East in
19:20
heavy numbers and that's the it's the
19:21
biggest amount of the activity since the
19:22
last attack on Iran. So, um, yeah, I
19:24
would love to see this plan be carried
19:28
out. Like a lot of the big things is
19:29
that they're not going to be forcing
19:30
them to leave Gaza that because that'd
19:32
be messy. That they're not going to um
19:34
that they're not going to let Hamas keep
19:36
running the country because there was a
19:37
lot of assistance to let Hamas run the
19:38
country instead of the Palestinian
19:40
Authority. So, you know, I think all
19:42
those things are good points and
19:43
necessary to, you know, create the best
19:44
situation that's possible there. But,
19:46
um, I am concerned that this is probably
19:48
gearing up to um, let attention go back
19:51
to Iran.
19:54
Vinnie, what do you think about an
19:55
explosion?
19:56
All I was watching, all I was watching
19:57
was was your drink fizzing up. But, I
19:58
mean, on paper, it looks great, but at
20:01
the end of the day, what are we talking
20:03
about from a military standpoint? It's
20:04
Hamas is in the tunnels with the
20:07
hostages. Okay? Like, that's the main
20:09
goal. What operation? I still don't
20:11
believe cuz America I don't know how
20:13
Israel does it. America doesn't
20:15
negotiate with terrorists. Period. End
20:16
of story. We don't do it. So this
20:18
situation is getting back these how how
20:20
many hostages are left do you guys? Is
20:23
there a number?
20:24
50. What was the number? I may be wrong.
20:25
It's in that it's in the ballpark. It's
20:27
in that ballpark. But at the end of the
20:28
day, what are we talking about? We are
20:30
talking about
20:31
48 hostages.
20:32
48 left. Um and I pray literally pray
20:33
for them every single day for anybody
20:35
that's that's held hostage there. But we
20:36
have to be realistic. These people have
20:38
been probably tortured for what's been
20:40
been two years right now. The end goal
20:42
is like this should have been done
20:44
everything that's talking about that
20:47
with all these strikes and all the
20:48
everything Brandon should have been done
20:49
immediately uh at October 7th. We've
20:50
been dragging this on for for for a long
20:53
time. I don't see Hamas coming to the
20:55
table and going, "Yeah, okay. You can't
20:57
trust them." Okay, you can't trust
21:00
terrorists. So, I think it's been
21:02
dragged on for for way too long. Again,
21:04
all this looks good on paper, but at the
21:06
end of the day, is Hamas going to agree
21:08
with a 20point plan?
21:10
But let me ask you, if they if Hamas
21:12
rejects,
21:14
but hear me out for a second. Israel is
21:16
agreeing to this.
21:18
Yes.
21:20
Okay. And remember, I don't think Israel
21:20
wants this.
21:23
Okay.
21:24
Okay. But they're agreeing to this.
21:24
So now, if Hamas is rejecting this deal,
21:27
and you're seeing the leader of Hamas,
21:29
no, we're okay. Every once in a while
21:31
there's a price for freedom and all this
21:33
other stuff. Who does the onus fall on?
21:35
It's going to be on Hamas. Guess what
21:37
then? And I hate and I just said that I
21:39
pray for them. I'm going to pray for
21:41
them even more cuz they're like they're
21:42
going to kill everybody. And guess what?
21:44
To make an omelet sometimes you're going
21:46
to break a couple of eggs. It's not
21:47
going to be good for them. It's not
21:49
going to be good cuz that's the the end
21:50
game. Cuz even if they try to negotiate,
21:52
we're talking about Hamas, Tom. We're
21:54
talking about Hamas.
21:57
Did you see the interview that the Hamas
21:58
leader did with CNN?
21:59
Rob, can you pull that up? Did you see
22:01
what he had to say? Okay.
22:03
So, the leader of Hamas
22:04
did an interview with CNN. Rob, I just
22:07
texted it to you. If you can go halfway
22:10
through the the interviewer pushes the
22:12
leader of Hamas. You just got the text
22:15
and says, "Are you willing to do it at
22:18
the cost of are you willing?" So,
22:20
eventually, it's kind of like that
22:22
moment of I want the truth. You can't
22:23
handle the truth. And then eventually he
22:25
says it.
22:27
Okay.
22:28
He says it really says it out loud. And
22:28
if you can go halfway, Rob, this is the
22:30
leader of Hamas sitting down with CNN.
22:33
Go to about a minute, minute 40 mark.
22:35
Minute 30 mark right there. Brutal. Keep
22:39
going. Is
22:41
he have gunpowder on his forehead?
22:42
Occupation
22:46
things moment world. Okay, sir. Okay.
22:48
Okay. Go back. Right there. Right there.
22:51
Go back one more second. Beautiful. Go
22:53
for it. Right. Right there.
22:55
Changed now. Sir, you were just saying
22:56
that as a result of October 7th, you are
22:58
seeing millions of people marching in
23:00
the streets. You are seeing countries
23:02
recognize Palestine as a state. You are
23:03
seeing legitimacy for your people. And I
23:05
am asking you whether the price that
23:07
Palestinian people have paid so far was
23:09
worth it.
23:12
I know the price so high, but I ask
23:12
again what is the what is the option?
23:15
What is what is the what is the the the
23:17
the option lift to the Palestinian? You
23:19
know what? We waited for a peaceful
23:21
process for a peaceful uh means since
23:24
194 1993 since Oslo agreement till now
23:27
but I think we got the big deal.
23:31
Let me let me show you the the words of
23:33
your people. Okay, these are people in
23:35
Gaza and I want you to hear because your
23:37
own people in Gaza say that you do have
23:39
responsibility for the situation. I'd
23:42
like to show you this. Watch this.
23:44
[Music]
23:46
Please connect. Please watch. This is
23:54
not it. There's there's more.
23:56
I have seen this video. Yes. Yes. Hamas
23:57
knows who that guy.
24:00
I would like you. There are three people
24:00
here. I would like you to hear their
24:01
voices.
24:02
I know people are suffering. There are
24:03
some people blame Hamas.
24:04
Why will you not listen to the voices of
24:06
Palestinian people in Gaza?
24:07
Yeah. Yeah. I know this is but look this
24:08
is not the whole story. I know because
24:11
this is because of the Israeli crimes in
24:13
the in the Gaza Strip. It seems it seems
24:15
that you
24:18
see what happens right here.
24:19
So this is the part where when you go
24:21
back and forth and you watch who is
24:23
willing, who is not, who started this
24:26
one, Hamas started this one. Israel's
24:28
coming back and saying we're going to
24:31
destroy you. And then now Israel's
24:32
agreeing to pump the brakes because
24:34
you're right. And even, you know, I know
24:36
something's about to happen in Iran.
24:40
Something's going on over there on the
24:41
other side. Tom, how do you process this
24:42
yourself? So,
24:43
I could only get through like the first
24:46
five points and then I sat back and
24:48
said, "Okay, how the hell are they going
24:51
to remove Hamas? How is it going to be
24:54
dradicalized?
24:57
And if we have a place there, Tom,
24:59
how did how did we how did Trump get rid
25:02
of ISIS?
25:04
He just killed everybody.
25:06
I want you to think about this
25:08
because
25:10
bonk bonk.
25:10
How did Trump get rid of ISIS? What what
25:11
happened to ISIS? The the only thing you
25:13
hear about right now is ISIS in certain
25:15
factions of it in Nigeria, what they're
25:18
doing and killing the 125 pastors or
25:20
another faction you hear in Canada that
25:23
burned down 112 different churches in
25:25
Canada, mainly Catholic churches. You're
25:27
hearing about that, right? But if US is
25:29
involved, you don't think he's shivering
25:32
right now?
25:34
I I think so. But the other thing I got
25:35
to in the those first five points was
25:38
and 250 healthy life sentence prisoners.
25:40
How did those people end up in Israeli
25:45
prisons as life sentences?
25:48
They're killers and they killed and they
25:51
committed acts of terrorism. So you're
25:53
going to take 250 guys out of prison. So
25:55
terrorists.
25:58
Now let me give you a copy of this. This
25:58
is a 20point plan. And then point four
26:00
and five is you're not going to be
26:02
radical anymore, but we're letting you
26:04
go back over here.
26:05
Okay.
26:06
So, I I hope that something comes out of
26:07
this. But I clearly see it's just like
26:11
you pointed out in that clip right there
26:14
that there are the citizens want this.
26:17
So, the citizens are going to have to
26:21
hold part of the um it's hard to say
26:22
this, but the citizens are actually
26:26
trying to hold some of the Hamas
26:28
leadership to accountability. These are
26:29
people showing their faces in front of
26:32
TV cameras and are saying things.
26:34
They're disconnected from reality and
26:35
what I'm facing here. And I hope for
26:37
those citizens that they get Gaza back
26:39
so they can live and prosper with their
26:40
families. I hope they're innocent. But I
26:42
look at taking 250 terrorists, you know,
26:45
in prison on
26:49
the case. Now, what are we going to be
27:04
doing now?
27:05
Does this mean the attention is going to
27:07
go from here to Iran? Maybe. You know,
27:09
if all of a sudden we see stuff that's
27:13
going on with Iran right now escalate
27:14
very, very quickly. Also, don't be
27:17
surprised because I I don't think
27:20
they're done there. I I I don't think
27:21
that's uh that's done anytime.
27:23
We got a lot of these things going on at
27:25
once, too. Because I mean, like, this
27:27
can't we don't want this to be an Iraq
27:28
2.0 where we don't have leadership
27:30
there. Like, if they take out Hamas have
27:31
leadership there,
27:33
right? Like if they take out Hamas, are
27:33
they going to put a puppet leader in
27:35
because that's not really stable.
27:36
Yeah. Well, I mean, what what a lot of
27:37
people on the inside are saying, they
27:39
would like this to lead to an election
27:41
where Iranians can actually vote for who
27:44
they want.
27:47
Mhm. Now, will that happen? Will they
27:47
allow that to happen? Who knows whether
27:50
they'll allow that to happen or not? And
27:53
who is going to take his place over? Who
27:54
is that going to be?
27:56
Yeah.
27:57
You know, who are they going to have in
27:58
that place? So, Rob, what is this here?
27:58
This is Netanyahu just last week at the
28:00
UN where he talked about the Iranian
28:02
people getting their freedom.
28:04
Right. Right. Go for it.
28:05
The long-suffering Iranian people will
28:06
regain their freedom. They will make
28:09
Iran great again. And our two ancient
28:12
peoples
28:15
our two ancient peoples, the people of
28:19
Israel and the people of Iran, will
28:21
restore a friendship that will benefit
28:24
the entire world.
28:27
Okay, so now you know obviously
28:29
um Iranian people are sick of what's
28:33
going on there. Can Israel play a big
28:35
role in that? I think it can. Uh is US
28:38
going to need to get involved for the
28:41
Iran regime to fall? No question. Of
28:42
course, it's not going to happen without
28:45
it. Israel cannot do without us. So,
28:46
this is why. What are the chances? You
28:49
think that Netanyahu apologized to Qatar
28:51
that Trump said you better apologize or
28:55
else cuz you're ruining my relationship
28:56
with other dealings that I'm doing. What
28:58
are the chances?
28:59
I'm at I'm over 90.
29:01
I'm a 100%.
29:02
I'm a 100% with this. And I mean 100%. I
29:04
mean, of course, nobody knows for a
29:07
fact, but I'm up there to the point
29:09
where I know he's going to say, "Hey,
29:10
with
29:12
you better you better do this or else
29:12
I'm not going to defend you. Why are you
29:14
doing something? Like you know that
29:15
whole call that everybody talks about
29:16
the shouting match call that happened
29:17
with Trump screaming at Netanyahu. How
29:19
how much you think that happened?
29:20
I'm over 90 again.
29:22
Yeah. Same place.
29:23
So again, the main common denominator of
29:25
the trust goes to who? To one guy.
29:28
If the one guy is involved, I'm more
29:31
comfortable of how these things could be
29:33
executed. If he's not involved, you
29:35
know, and and by the way, flip the
29:38
story. Put Kamala being that one person
29:40
who fears him. Hamas fears Kamala?
29:42
No.
29:44
Will Hamas feel Biden. Fear Biden? No.
29:44
They're sitting there saying, "Thank
29:48
God, you know, it's Biden or Kamla."
29:49
This is the worst thing that ever
29:51
happened to Russia, to China, to Iran,
29:52
to everybody that this guy is now in.
29:56
Nobody wants this guy to be in because
29:59
whatever he says has to go and
30:00
exactly,
30:02
he's getting a lot of stuff done. So,
30:02
we'll see what happened here. Let's go
30:03
to the next story here.
30:04
Next story I want to get to is uh
30:05
Charlie Javis. Folks, after this story,
30:07
to all the single men watching this, we
30:10
have some extremely life-changing advice
30:12
for you. We'll get to that.
30:14
But first, Charlie Jabis
30:15
gets seven years for defrauding JP
30:17
Morgan Chase. Seven years while he's
30:21
getting this. Rob, go ahead and play
30:24
this clip first and then we'll go
30:26
through the whole thing. She was once a
30:27
star CEO on the Forbes 30 under 30 list.
30:29
But now a judge has sentenced this
30:32
startup founder turned fraudster to
30:34
seven years in prison after being
30:37
convicted of duping a major investment
30:38
bank out of a staggering $175 million.
30:41
We started Frank with really thinking
30:45
about how are we the ally for the
30:47
student and the family.
30:50
Charlie Jiz sold her startup company
30:51
called Frank to JP Morgan Chase back in
30:53
2021. At the time, she claimed her
30:56
company, which helped streamline the
30:58
financial aid process for low-income
31:00
college students, had millions of users.
31:02
But after the deal went through, JP
31:05
Morgan discovered that number was close
31:06
to just 300,000, and Javvis had
31:08
fabricated most of the user information.
31:11
Javvis, now 33, was convicted in March.
31:13
Prosecutors requesting a 12-year prison
31:16
sentence, but her lawyer asking for
31:19
lenience, dismissing comparisons between
31:21
Javvis and disgraced entrepreneur
31:23
Elizabeth Holmes, claiming that Javvis's
31:25
company was real, unlike Holmes's
31:27
company, Theronos, which sold a fake
31:29
blood testing product. Javvis's lawyer
31:31
also arguing the bank shouldered some
31:34
responsibility, saying it was a
31:36
28-year-old versus 300 investment
31:38
bankers from the largest bank in the
31:40
world, and claiming they rushed the
31:42
acquisition. The judge agreeing the
31:44
bankers do shoulder some blame, but
31:46
adding the sentencing hearing was about
31:48
punishing Javvis's conduct, not JP
31:50
Morgan's stupidity.
31:52
Prison sentence, the judge also ordering
31:55
Jvis to pay nearly $300 million in
31:57
restitution, telling her, "I don't think
32:00
you'll be committing other crimes, but
32:02
others have to be deterred."
32:04
Jeez,
32:05
there you go.
32:06
And J remains. Well, I'll tell you, uh,
32:06
this is this is the dark side of of
32:10
startups. And there's so many people
32:14
that come to the vault that are honest
32:15
people just trying to build a business.
32:17
And then there are people that get out
32:19
there that say, "Fake it till you make
32:21
it." You know, put together, you know,
32:23
you don't know if it's going to work,
32:25
but you know what? You It's a It's the
32:27
venture capitalist money. I've heard
32:29
young people and entrepreneurs openly
32:32
say that there are things in their deck
32:35
that weren't accurate and stuff. And
32:37
this is what happens. This is that's
32:38
upstream. This is downstream. Downstream
32:40
you end up in a pond of your own deceit.
32:43
And then every now and then somebody
32:46
speaks up. And this was JP Morgan. And
32:48
so you the whole defense here about uh
32:51
oh JP Morgan and the the comment by the
32:54
commentator there I'll read out the
32:58
exact words of the uh lawyer.
33:00
It says um and it was Judge Helerstein
33:03
says judge Helerstein we would never ask
33:06
you to punish JP Morgan stupidity but we
33:08
submit that it's a relevant factor. In
33:11
other words our clients are criminal but
33:13
the victim was too stupid. That's like
33:16
saying that if that if um that if your
33:19
kid stole the lunch money from an
33:22
autistic kid that your kid shouldn't be
33:24
punished because the autistic kid was
33:27
too dumb. No, this is this shows her
33:28
hubris. And I'm glad this has happened
33:31
because this is a cautionary tale. There
33:34
are good entrepreneurs out there that
33:37
are trying to get investment that are
33:38
trying to get their companies going. And
33:40
then there's these people out here that
33:42
just sell it like this. And by the way,
33:44
Adam Newman, the guy from WeWork that
33:46
defrauded SoftBank, I'm still wondering
33:48
why he didn't end up floating in the
33:51
Hudson because he defrauded some very
33:52
big international people of two billion
33:55
with the B issues and figurative speech.
33:58
Fig speech. Yeah, he's he's shocked that
34:00
he wasn't swimming. No, I'm saying yeah.
34:01
No, no, no. I'm not wishing death on
34:04
him. I'm saying but when you defraud
34:06
some big people, sometimes big people
34:07
play big people games and it's not fun.
34:09
Oh yeah. So
34:12
sometimes these big people show up with
34:12
like big female foreman type. Yeah. Just
34:14
like like
34:17
but I think but this is this is a
34:18
cautionary tale and I'm glad to see it.
34:21
And if she's sitting in the prison
34:23
courtyard playing checkers with
34:25
Elizabeth Holmes, well guess what? Good
34:26
for you. Go away for seven years and
34:29
think about it.
34:30
You just pissed Tom off. Charlie, what
34:31
is wrong with you?
34:33
[ __ ]
34:34
We were having a good conversation. You
34:35
pissed Tom off. Brandon, what do you
34:36
have to say about this?
34:38
Yeah. Um I might surprise you guys here.
34:39
So, this actually annoys me that um like
34:41
I I get she deserves what happened here,
34:43
but nothing happened to the banks in
34:45
2008 when they stole money from people.
34:47
They defrauded the entire country with
34:49
bad mortgages and then nothing happened
34:52
to them. Not only did nothing happen to
34:54
them, but they were given money by the
34:55
government with the promise of okay,
34:57
yeah, we'll stimulate the economy with
34:58
the money they give us and they paid
34:59
themselves bonuses. So, like um you
35:01
know, if anybody watched the big short,
35:04
there's only one random guy who went to
35:05
jail for that. the guy from Deutschbang
35:07
or a 32-y old guy from Deutsche because
35:09
he lied.
35:11
Yeah.
35:12
You know, so it's ridiculous. I mean, I
35:14
get Yeah, she definitely
35:15
You're not alone.
35:16
She definitely deserves to go to jail,
35:17
but I think a lot of people should have
35:18
went to jail for what happened in 2008.
35:19
Yeah, you are. You are not alone.
35:21
Michael Jackson said, "You're not
35:23
alone." And I agree with them.
35:24
All right. So, listen all to all the
35:25
single folks, you know, if you got kids,
35:28
you may want to listen to this. There's
35:29
a man, some call him philosopher from
35:31
modern day Aristotle. His name is Judge
35:33
Grady from Pulk County. Rob
35:35
Poke. He he wants to share something
35:36
with you guys and it's a very
35:38
sentimental but accurate assessment of
35:40
what could happen
35:43
if you go get a prostitute in Pole
35:45
County and some of the places in America
35:47
and and it's so bad and so true that his
35:49
partner behind him one of his direct
35:53
reports can't even hold himself together
35:55
folks but the level of wisdom is on a
35:57
whole different level. So, whatever
35:59
you're doing, if you're driving and
36:00
listening to the podcast, just please
36:02
keep your eyes on the road or pull over
36:04
because this is dangerous stuff. Go
36:05
ahead, Rob.
36:07
So, this is Pulk, not Poke County,
36:08
right? Poke.
36:10
Do that one more time.
36:10
Do that one more time. Make fun of my
36:12
accent one more time. Go ahead, Rob.
36:14
There's things in life.
36:16
So, you order up a prostitute, right?
36:19
This prostitute lives with his mother,
36:23
by the way.
36:26
He's got a massive criminal history. A
36:27
21. Notice what she said. This
36:30
prostitute lives with his mother. He's a
36:32
hooker. Yeah. So, just just continue.
36:35
It's a very important detail. Go ahead,
36:37
Rob.
36:38
Year criminal history with 31 criminal
36:39
charges. So, you order up a prostitute
36:41
and that's what you think you're
36:45
getting.
36:47
Now, when you look at that, you go,
36:49
"Wow, that's pretty rough, but caught in
36:52
a storm."
36:54
And then the next morning when you wake
36:56
up,
36:58
oh my god,
36:59
you find out this is who it really is.
37:00
Oh my god.
37:02
Yeah, we call that coyote ugly. You see,
37:04
he's laying on your arm
37:08
in bed. Look at
37:10
the guy behind you. It was rough last
37:12
night, but I've sobered up.
37:13
Oh my.
37:16
I think I'll just chew my arm off and
37:17
ease away so I don't disturb him or wake
37:20
him up.
37:22
All right. So you think you're buying
37:24
this, you're getting this. He's got 31
37:26
criminal charges and heck, if you're
37:28
lucky, he doesn't kill you overnight.
37:30
I mean, look, it's called wisdom, right?
37:33
Yeah. You have to know you're you're
37:36
waking up. What do you say? You're
37:37
biting off your arm.
37:39
AR. What do you think about this advice,
37:40
Vinnie?
37:42
I Well, I first of all, I had no I
37:43
thought it was a female. I don't even
37:46
know where this was going. But my
37:48
question is, so is that was that guy
37:50
robbing people or was he actually having
37:52
sex with the the guy?
37:54
Sounds like he was pretending to be a
37:56
girl.
37:57
He's pretending to be a girl and then
37:58
what was he like is he hooking up with
37:59
gay men? I'm so confused.
38:01
He was hanging out. The fact that you're
38:03
interested
38:05
what the hell is going on?
38:07
Tells me why you have such a creative
38:08
wonderful comedic mind.
38:10
Are you ready for this? Cuz my brain is
38:12
is my brain is going this he's having a
38:13
press conference. Were people
38:15
complaining like did they want their
38:16
money back? Was it buyer's remorse?
38:18
Because it looks like first of all, if
38:20
that shows up and that's what you're
38:22
actually into, to each his own. But
38:23
then, how do you not tell that it's a
38:25
it's a dude? Like, how? I'm so confused
38:27
right now.
38:30
It's midnight. You've had
38:31
You saw the crying game.
38:32
Yeah. No,
38:34
surprise.
38:34
Yeah. I But like is like what's he
38:35
trying to say? Don't like know what
38:38
you're buying? Cuz I The prostitution
38:40
part doesn't even look like it's the
38:42
problem. It's the fact that the guy is
38:43
acting like he's a girl. That's the
38:45
problem.
38:47
Brandon, what do you think about this?
38:48
Give us your expertise here.
38:50
Uh,
38:51
I gota admit I'm an amateur in that
38:53
field, so I can't give any expertise,
38:55
but um, yeah. No, it's scary. It's a
38:56
it's a cautionary tale I guess he's
38:58
using there. But I don't know. Should
39:00
should prostitution be legalized? Like
39:02
it, you know, so we don't get up so
39:04
people know what they're getting at
39:06
least. I don't know. That's a a question
39:07
as old as time. I mean is the oldest
39:08
profession but I I'm not
39:10
it's like alcohol you know creates a
39:11
whole big criminal industry because of
39:12
the fact that it's illegal but also it's
39:14
kind of debaucherous for society if it
39:16
is legal. So you know that's a kind of a
39:17
deeper question.
39:19
Yeah it's Listen one of my friends his
39:20
dream was to go to Brazil to go to uh
39:22
what is it called?
39:25
Not the festival. What did they carnival
39:26
carnival in Rio?
39:28
So he went to carnival. He saved up all
39:28
this money for two years to go to the
39:30
carnival
39:32
and he goes comes back has the time of
39:33
his life except for one night. Uh-uh.
39:36
Uh-uh.
39:38
He meets this girl, dropped that
39:39
gorgeous,
39:42
and he can't believe how hot she is.
39:43
They're dancing. They're doing his their
39:46
thing and all this other stuff. And he's
39:48
grinding all this. And grind, baby.
39:50
Grind with me. Relaxing like all that
39:51
stuff, right?
39:54
And then she returns the favor.
39:55
Uhoh.
39:58
Oh boy.
39:59
To him.
39:59
[Music]
40:01
Like, first of all, why are you letting
40:02
her cry?
40:04
It's like I had one too many drinks. He
40:06
says, "When she did, I learned very
40:09
quickly I had to run."
40:11
Oh my god.
40:13
It's like It's like when when Charles
40:14
Barkley, have you ever heard Charles
40:16
Barkley say, "Listen, man. When you when
40:17
you're playing too much defense, I can
40:20
feel your you know, when I can feel your
40:22
thing. It's a little too much defense."
40:23
So, I don't know. You just better got to
40:27
be careful, folks. You know, the
40:29
Barkclay's Wisdom versus Poke County.
40:30
Let me get it correctly for you so
40:33
you're happy about it.
40:35
So anyways, this is just funny man.
40:36
Sometime when this guy speaks, imagine
40:38
him being your father or your
40:41
grandfather and he's telling you a story
40:42
trying to teach you a lesson. Imagine
40:43
you can write a book.
40:45
So how what lessons did your dad teach
40:46
you? Let me tell one time I got caught
40:48
smoking this. Here's what he did to
40:50
boom.
40:52
Took me home. He did this. He did that.
40:52
Just seems like the type of guy I like.
40:54
He's got a sense of you.
40:56
He's like Kennedy in Congress with his
40:56
funniness.
40:58
He's got a sense of you.
40:58
Back at the peak, Dr. Phil used to do
40:59
this at the peak of his show. Yeah.
41:01
Okay. So, you did this, then this, then
41:03
this, and you thought that was a good
41:06
idea.
41:08
Remember those guys? Oh, yeah.
41:09
I I I don't know on what planet that's a
41:12
good idea or even half a good idea. I
41:15
used to love seeing Dr. Phil people up
41:17
for that.
41:20
Still doing that.
41:21
Yeah. Yeah. So, let's go to the next one
41:21
here. I'm gonna get to the next story. A
41:23
couple more stories before we wrap up.
41:24
Don Lemon is talking to Ilhan Omar.
41:26
Okay. uh uh person whom Trump is wanting
41:30
to deport back to her country. He even
41:34
asked the leader of Somalia if they
41:36
would take her back like a refund and
41:38
having that kind of a conversation. But
41:41
she had some things to say. Was she not
41:43
Rob being interviewed by Don Lemon
41:46
Ilhan?
41:48
Yep.
41:48
And right here
41:49
he somehow bumps into her and and is
41:50
interviewing her.
41:53
But go ahead Rob. Let's see what this
41:55
happens here. Go ahead.
41:56
I have I have nothing to apologize for.
41:58
Um, you know, it is it is a tragedy that
42:01
Charlie Kirk was killed in that way. Um,
42:04
I feel for his widow and his children.
42:07
They will have to live with that for the
42:10
rest of their lives. But there is no
42:12
legacy to honor. It was a legacy filled
42:15
with bigotry, hatred, and white
42:17
supremacy. And as a black woman and as a
42:19
Muslim in this country, I refuse for I
42:22
refuse to join the chorus that changes
42:27
the history of what is on the record
42:30
from this man. And so, you know, Nancy
42:33
Mace, the president, like whatever these
42:36
crazy people can do whatever they want
42:40
to do.
42:41
Um, but I am not going to be bullied uh
42:42
into complacency.
42:46
um into, you know, dishonoring who I am
42:49
and what I stand for just to
42:52
How long can you listen to her? Oh, but
42:55
but you know, but do you notice this
42:57
guys? Do you notice the left? No
42:59
security, nobody's they are just they
43:01
know that nobody wants to do anything to
43:04
them because we're we're the the normal
43:05
side, but they're out there spitting
43:07
this freaking poison. And the fact that
43:08
she's saying white supremist and all
43:11
this stuff, not one, she cannot point
43:12
one thing that Charlie said that was
43:15
about racism or white supremacy or
43:17
another. These are just BS talking
43:19
points and she's like disgracing his
43:21
freaking legacy and it's disgusting.
43:23
I wonder what that would have been like
43:25
if she was walking with Van Jones.
43:26
Oh. Oh, it would have been it would have
43:28
been a whole different conversation.
43:30
You think he would have shut it down and
43:30
corrected it?
43:31
You think he would have You think Van
43:32
Jones would have corrected it and Don
43:34
Lemon wouldn't have?
43:35
Uh, maybe. I think Van Jones would have
43:36
stepped further.
43:38
Don't Don't forget, Tom, like the day
43:40
before Trump uh uh Charlie got killed,
43:41
don't forget what Van Jones said about
43:45
Charlie that went viral. Do you remember
43:48
that clip?
43:49
He was talking crap about him.
43:50
Do you remember that? Exactly. A day or
43:51
two, Rob, if you got that
43:53
Van, not Vance. Yeah, Van. Yeah,
43:55
exactly. There you go. So,
43:57
they were, as Van Jones said, we were
43:59
beefing hard in the days before.
44:01
He actually went on video though, Tommy.
44:03
He said something about
44:04
He said something very very direct.
44:05
It was on on CN on CNN.
44:08
Oh. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. He he put the
44:09
onus on Charlie.
44:11
He put the onus on Charlie. And this was
44:12
like literally
44:14
Oh, was it about the Oh, it was about
44:16
the the the the the guy stabbing on the
44:17
on the train. I think he was making some
44:19
comment.
44:21
Yeah, this the one. Go ahead and play
44:22
this clip.
44:23
We don't know why that man did what he
44:23
did.
44:25
And for Charlie Kirk to say, "We know he
44:26
did it because she's white." When
44:28
there's no evidence of that. He said, "I
44:30
got that white girl."
44:31
Race uh race mongering, hate mongering.
44:32
[Music]
44:38
Got that white girl.
44:42
I got that white girl. Yeah. Blood
44:43
dripping everywhere.
44:46
We don't know.
44:49
Yeah. Yes, we did. So the the the point
44:50
is look I give everybody grace that you
44:52
know you you make mistakes but the the
44:55
day before that happened that's a pretty
44:58
direct thing to say. So going back to
45:00
Don Lemon, right? Going back to Don
45:02
Lemon. Don Lemon is continuing here.
45:03
Rob, if you have this clip, go ahead and
45:05
play the clip. Here's Don Lemon. Folks,
45:07
if you're if you're a white man,
45:09
he thinks it's all your fault. Go ahead,
45:12
Rob.
45:14
men who look like you, men who vote like
45:16
you, and men who sound like you.
45:18
White men,
45:22
something is broken. Something is
45:24
cracked deep inside when so many of you
45:29
believe the answer to fear, to loss, to
45:33
change is violence.
45:37
Are you listening to me? I hope I'm
45:42
saying it loud enough for the people in
45:44
the back.
45:46
Brandon, he was talking to you. What
45:50
What do you have?
45:51
I just I just had an epiphany. I think
45:52
he's been watching Nick Fuentes cuz he's
45:54
he's kind of copying Nick Fuentes, but
45:56
in the reverse way. Nick Fentes says
45:57
that about black people a lot in the
45:59
same tone. Tries to be the same
46:00
provocative way. I think he's copying
46:02
Nick Fuentes.
46:03
Very interesting.
46:04
Yeah, that's what I got from Very
46:05
interesting observation
46:07
cuz he's obviously desperately trying to
46:08
get views. He's doing the man on the
46:09
street. He's doing his podcast in his
46:10
living room like a teenager. So, I mean,
46:12
I think he's trying to try things out.
46:14
He sees Fuentes picking up some momentum
46:15
in X. I think he's copying Fuentes.
46:17
How much do you think he watches Fontes?
46:19
Oh, I think he watches all the big
46:20
people, you know, like I think if
46:22
somebody's doing well on social media, I
46:24
think he's studying them and obsessively
46:25
trying to model them.
46:26
I I uh I actually agree with you. I
46:28
think that's a very very good
46:30
observation. But the reality of it is to
46:31
say it's the white man's fault. Tom,
46:33
what what do you have to say about that?
46:35
No, it they need a victim and they have
46:36
to be the victim and so everyone else
46:39
has to be bad to be the vi so someone
46:42
else is a victim. You need a
46:44
protagonist. You need an enemy. And when
46:47
people are moving, and here we go again,
46:51
blacks, Hispanics, and youth are moving
46:54
toward the center and voting this way,
46:56
the these people become apoplelectic.
47:00
And when I say these people, I mean
47:03
these media people. Rachel Matto. Well,
47:04
regardless of their color, whether it's
47:06
Van Jones and and Don Lemon or it's it's
47:08
Jake Tapper, it's not about race. It's
47:12
not about, you know, sexual orientation,
47:14
anything. They can't handle what's
47:17
happening. And so, they need there to be
47:21
an enemy. And the enemy, white privilege
47:24
and white people are broken, is is so
47:27
easy for them, but it's cheap and it's
47:30
wrong. And they know it's wrong. And
47:33
that's and and deep down inside they
47:35
know that it's hollow, but they've got
47:37
no other there's there's no other bullet
47:39
in the gun. Not to use a violent
47:41
metaphor, but there's no other like like
47:43
what else do you pull off the shelf?
47:46
It's not working. He like first of all,
47:48
what about his white husband who's
47:51
probably in the other room doing dishes?
47:53
Like I No, no, no. I'm dead serious. How
47:55
does he feel about it? Okay. And just
47:57
really fast, going back to a hunky
47:59
hubby.
48:00
Yeah, she Yeah, he does. And so does
48:01
Elhan Omar. Well, all these problems are
48:02
white people. She said in the past, "Our
48:04
country should be more fearful."
48:06
Bro, get it.
48:07
Yeah. She more fearful of white men
48:08
because they're actually causing most of
48:10
the deaths in this country. This is her
48:12
um if fear was a driving force, we
48:14
should be profiling, monitoring,
48:16
creating policies to fight the rad
48:17
radicalization of white men. And Don
48:18
Lemon, like how disgusting and lazy and
48:21
dangerous it is what he's saying. And
48:23
Tom, what did your mug Oh, your mug
48:25
right there. Words, talk, numbers,
48:26
scream. Can you imagine if a white
48:28
person, any white, and look at the
48:30
numbers right here. If a white person
48:32
sat in front of a camera, Pat, and just
48:33
said the actual facts that and and said
48:35
that black men are about 6% of the US
48:37
population on FBI data shows that
48:40
they're responsible for nearly half, 50%
48:43
of the murders in this country. What
48:46
would the world say? What would the
48:48
world say? Don Lemon knows exactly what
48:50
the hell he's doing. He's trying to be
48:52
relevant. The fact that they kicked him
48:54
out of a freaking studio. Now he's a man
48:56
on the street talking to other psychotic
48:57
people like Elon M tells you everything
49:00
that you need to know. But think about
49:02
this, Pat. You showed this video a long
49:03
time ago and it stuck with me. What
49:05
happened to the old Don Lemon? Remember
49:06
that video that we have? An old Don
49:08
Lemon that was addressing the
49:10
African-American community.
49:11
Oh, how about lift your pants up? How
49:12
about be respectful that
49:14
you want to see this? Play this, Rob.
49:15
Because black people, if you really want
49:18
to fix the problem, here's just five
49:20
things that you should think about
49:23
doing, here's number five. Pull up your
49:24
pants. Number four now is the n-word. I
49:26
hosted a special on the n-word,
49:30
suggesting that black people stop using
49:31
it and that entertainers stop deluding
49:33
yourselves or themselves and others that
49:36
you're somehow taking the word back.
49:38
Amen.
49:40
Now, number three, respect where you
49:41
live. Start small by not dropping trash,
49:44
littering in your own communities. I've
49:47
lived in several predominantly white
49:49
neighborhoods in my life. I rarely, if
49:51
ever, witness people littering. I live
49:53
in Harlem now. It's an historically
49:55
black neighborhood. Every single day, I
49:57
see adults and children dropping their
49:59
trash on the ground when a garbage can
50:01
is just feet away. Number two, finish
50:03
school. You want to break the cycle of
50:06
poverty? Stop telling kids they're
50:08
acting white because they go to school
50:10
or they speak proper English. Number
50:12
one, and probably the most important,
50:14
just because you can have a baby, it
50:17
doesn't mean you should, especially
50:19
without planning for one or getting
50:21
married first. Weird.
50:23
More than 72% of children in the Africa.
50:24
So, I I'm just curious to Hey, Don, what
50:27
happened to you and shame on you while
50:29
your white husband is back there
50:31
cleaning the house and doing whatever,
50:33
you're saying that he is the problem
50:34
with this country. Shame on you and
50:36
shame on you, Ilhan Omar. Same thing
50:38
happened to him that happened to Aaron
50:40
Bernett. Aaron Bernett was on CNBC in
50:41
the morning uh doing morning show
50:43
talking business opening up opening bell
50:46
squawk on the street. There was those
50:48
programs that you see on CNBC and she by
50:49
all accounts was down the middle and
50:53
there was plenty of of opportunity for
50:54
her there to express her opinion with
50:57
the government on this law that law
50:59
legislation regulation of business the
51:01
Fed plenty of things she was done. She
51:03
goes to CNN, t signs it and takes the
51:05
contract and suddenly is a it's almost
51:08
like did the contracts that Don Lemon
51:11
and Aaron Bernett took when they stepped
51:14
into a bigger chair at CNN, did it
51:16
radicalize them? Were they radicalized
51:18
by the dollars?
51:20
So you put it on Zucker, you put it on
51:21
the heads of CNN. Is that who you put it
51:23
on?
51:24
Well, somebody has to sign the contract
51:25
and be interested. And then there's a
51:27
lot of producers that tell you this is
51:29
the way it's going to be that you may
51:32
not have seen when you signed the
51:33
contract.
51:35
So Rob, why don't we do this? So let's
51:35
go to Charlie Kirk and and new stories
51:37
coming out. So last week we showed a
51:40
clip maybe on Monday, the range day
51:43
broke clip. Guy on the neck sends me a
51:44
message saying, "Pat that range day
51:47
broke clip you played was great, but a
51:49
guy just sent me something showing a
51:51
complete different thing." Fast forward
51:53
the range though range day they uh broke
51:54
clip to about four minutes. Keep going.
51:57
Keep going. Keep going. Keep going. Keep
51:59
going. And go a little bit more. Uh
52:00
okay. Back up a little bit, Rob. Back
52:04
up. Back up. Back up a little bit. Back
52:06
up a little bit. Back up a little bit.
52:07
Where it shows the headset on Charlie's
52:09
uh ear. Uh go back. Go back. Go back. Go
52:12
back. Go back. Go back. Let's see if
52:15
we're going to see it or not. Go back a
52:16
little bit. So he's showing this part.
52:18
Ah man. I Okay. Right there. played from
52:21
right there. Rob
52:23
comes in.
52:25
I don't see people coming in anywhere
52:25
in a circle area. You have the blood go
52:26
down then up and then the exit wound
52:27
emerges.
52:29
You're also going to want to find out
52:29
this guy talks out both sides of his
52:30
mouth. He'll say something like the FBI
52:30
is lying. The official narrative is
52:32
lying. And then he'll say, "I'm not
52:33
accusing anybody of anything."
52:33
What matters is that the official
52:34
narrative is not true. Whether that
52:36
comes out, it looks like it's bloody.
52:38
They will say it's 100% conclusive or
52:40
it's already been proven. You know,
52:42
it looked like blood. Even we thought it
52:43
was blood.
52:45
Now, go fast forward at a different
52:46
angle with him. Just fast forward the
52:49
clip and go until he shows the angle.
52:51
Keep going. Keep going. Keep going. Keep
52:54
going. Keep going. Keep going. Keep
52:55
going. Keep keep going. Okay. Uh right
52:56
there. Right there. Go back about 20
52:59
seconds. Okay. Play it from right there.
53:00
Go ahead. So, we're going through here
53:02
step by step, frame by frame, until we
53:04
find it. So, that right there, you can
53:07
see his him his reaction right here. So,
53:09
this is what I believe to be the first
53:12
frame capturing his reaction of of
53:13
anything from the bullet. So now here
53:16
when you look around his ear I believe
53:18
that is one of those earpiece like you
53:20
know the wire
53:22
and it's often a transparent type wire.
53:22
Now let's go ahead one more frame
53:25
that comes up. So it looks like it's now
53:29
behind him. That is certainly not blood
53:31
splatter like this guy falsely claimed.
53:33
And also where's the blood dripping that
53:35
he was claiming was on dripping on the
53:38
side of Charlie said. There is no blood
53:41
there because there was no entry wound
53:42
here. One more frame.
53:44
You can see that it was up in the air.
53:47
You can see it's still right there,
53:51
still vertical.
53:53
And now it's right there. It just flung
53:54
behind his head and it's kind of going
53:57
diagonal right there. And keep your eye
53:59
right there on that spot. You're going
54:01
to see it disappear on the next frame.
54:03
See, it moved up and gone already
54:06
because it because of the force of the
54:08
impact. Now, nowhere here is there any
54:10
type of entry wound. You would have seen
54:13
an explosive entry wound by now, just
54:15
like we did from the views from the
54:18
front, which shows that there was
54:20
absolutely zero shots hitting Charlie
54:22
from this side. So, anybody that tries
54:25
to show you a video from
54:27
Pause right there. Okay. So, remember
54:29
guys, this is why I love what's going on
54:30
right now. Everybody is what?
54:32
Reacting to whatever they have and
54:35
reacting to whatever they have. Tom,
54:36
when you see this, what do you think
54:38
about? Well, I want to see all the
54:39
perspectives and all the angles. I I I
54:41
don't want to keep seeing, you know,
54:43
Charlie and and the moment of of um
54:46
passing there, but I want to know for
54:49
sure what's up. I want to know for sure
54:52
what's up. And everybody that is a
54:54
forensic analyst is saying the same
54:58
thing. They said that does not look like
55:02
an entry wound on the front of his neck.
55:05
That does not look like an entry wound.
55:08
That looks like an exit wound. You have
55:10
hunters that have talked about this. You
55:12
have people that are coroners that have
55:14
talked about this. And so the question
55:16
is, okay, how did such a cataclysmic
55:18
wound happen there? A and you know, the
55:21
bullet man of steel was lodged in there.
55:27
Okay. Is somebody going to do
55:30
ballistics? So, I'm I'm waiting for
55:31
conclusive data from a real
55:35
investigation other than, hey, his DNA
55:38
was on this firearm. Okay. But was the
55:41
had the firearm been fired? You know,
55:44
did um and do we have ballistics on the
55:46
the the bullet that he said was found in
55:49
his neck just below the skin? I just I I
55:52
want to see all these angles and I'm
55:55
glad that one is keeping others in
55:57
check, but man, that that's an exit
55:59
wound from the front. That's that's my
56:01
opinion based on the folks that I'm
56:05
watching who are experts in these kind
56:09
of forensics. And so the question is,
56:11
how do you get that kind of a wound?
56:14
Vinnie, I'm I'm with Tom 100%. They're
56:16
claiming this is the FBI and everybody
56:19
that it was the 300 6. It was not a
56:22
3006. The official narrative is not
56:24
official. And this guy is just another
56:27
and I I get 100% it looks like an
56:28
earpiece, but from anybody that shotguns
56:30
and knows about this type of thing that
56:32
that if it was a 300 6, it would have
56:34
been a completely
56:36
he would have been rat. It would have
56:39
been disgusting. It would have been a
56:40
lot worse than what you guys saw. Number
56:41
one. Number two, all this footage was
56:42
cameras, camera phones sucked in and
56:45
it's blurry. The main footage is the HD
56:47
camera that was sitting behind Charlie
56:50
shooting down capturing him and the
56:52
entire crowd. But somebody from Turning
56:54
Point grabbed it, was all sneaky with
56:57
it, put it in a hat, and gave it to
57:00
another guy that ran off. And we're
57:02
supposed to just take their word that
57:03
this guy handed it off after he looked
57:05
at it and gave it to the FBI. I'm sorry.
57:07
I don't believe the official narrative.
57:10
You called the school. What happened?
57:11
I called yesterday. I called I called
57:13
and Amanda was with me. She recorded it.
57:15
I called UVU and I called and I I called
57:17
to the the main the main desk and I
57:20
said, "Hey, I'm I'm with such and such.
57:22
I made up a thing and I said, "I'm
57:24
trying to find out if you guys because
57:26
the construction that's happening right
57:28
now is unbelievable. It doesn't even
57:29
look like what it is right now." Okay?
57:31
Doesn't make sense. I said, "Who do I
57:32
talk to? This we just you guys just had
57:34
and I apologize. You guys had the
57:36
biggest assassination since JFK on your
57:38
campus. Was there scheduled construction
57:42
on the exact site where this happened?
57:44
Can you can you comment on that? He
57:47
goes, "Let me let me direct you to the
57:49
right place." You hear conversations,
57:50
you're typing, da da da. Sends me to to
57:51
uh like maintenance or something like
57:54
that and there's a female that picks up
57:56
and I go, "Hey, I'm so and so with with
57:57
um media." I go, "I'm just curious. Do
57:59
you guys have construction setup?"
58:02
Whispering talk to I can't talk to you
58:04
about that. I go, "No, no, hold on one
58:05
second. I don't need information about
58:07
the shooting or nothing like that. Did
58:08
you guys have scheduled maintenance?"
58:10
Because I would assume that if it's a if
58:11
it's an assassination at this magnitude,
58:13
you would leave the crime scene for
58:16
potential bullets, potential, you know,
58:18
fragments, other things to recreate in
58:20
the scene. There's stuff in that
58:22
ceiling, that overhead pat that there
58:23
there's cameras, there's an opening that
58:25
you could get in there. I'm like, how is
58:27
this normal? Who made the decision? I
58:29
can't say anything. Let me give you the
58:31
information to our our um VP of
58:33
strategic uh and communications
58:35
management.
58:38
I called her three times. I don't even
58:39
want to say her name. I called three
58:40
times. Nobody picked up and I left the
58:41
message. I'm just trying to figure out
58:43
with this type of magnitude. And you
58:45
know what's insane? For how many minutes
58:47
after, not one police officer, not one
58:49
police officer went there and secured
58:52
the crime scene. I've watched multiple
58:54
videos. I've watched aftermath of
58:56
videos. I saw people coming and stealing
58:57
hats off a truck and throwing them. some
58:59
guys like, "What the hell are you
59:01
doing?" There's no way this type of
59:02
cover up and the fact that when when you
59:05
That's a fact that you you law
59:07
enforcement should have shown up and
59:08
taped this.
59:09
Why didn't they?
59:10
And you know what's crazy?
59:11
Just like Butler.
59:12
They were there though. I don't know.
59:13
But you know what's crazy, Pat? I saw a
59:14
cop. One cop basically had his gun drawn
59:16
while they were bringing Charlie. God
59:19
rested sold to the vehicle. Your job,
59:20
bro, is to go this this idiot. By the
59:22
way, Candace yesterday was talking about
59:25
this guy pack. She knows him. She goes,
59:26
"Never has this guy ever been around
59:28
when we were on tour."
59:30
Guess who? Back up a second and say who
59:31
we're talking about.
59:32
The guy with the camera that was taking
59:33
the SD card out.
59:34
Who stood on the chair?
59:35
Who stood? Think about this, guys. It's
59:36
a crime scene. You're moving the chair
59:38
that he was shot. There's probably
59:39
evidence in there if there was, god
59:41
forbid, a bullet in there. He's climbing
59:43
up there, moving everything, and
59:45
nobody's saying anything. Common sense
59:46
101. You're touching the crime scene.
59:49
That's the main event. That camera has
59:52
everything. Okay. And I'm sorry. People
59:54
are like, "Who do you trust?" I'm get
59:56
Israel. Get all that out of there. The
59:58
way that it was handled and the fact
00:00
that his friends and everybody else have
00:01
just moved on and they're worrying about
00:04
turning point does not sit with me.
00:05
Well, Pat, I'm talking about my mom. I'm
00:07
talking about people from all walks of
00:09
life are like something doesn't feel
00:11
right. My mom, my aunt, my cousins, my
00:14
friends. I I'm having messages from
00:17
people I haven't talked to in years that
00:18
are like I know I watch the show and
00:20
everything. They go, none of us feel
00:22
like what we're being told is the truth.
00:23
Not with Tyler. Not with any none of it
00:25
is adding up. The boyfriends disappear.
00:28
Now they're trying to say that Tyler
00:30
didn't even step foot on the campus.
00:31
What do you think's going to end up
00:33
happening?
00:34
Just like every single time PBD, they
00:36
always get away with it. Evil. Evil on
00:38
this sense. They get away with it cuz
00:40
we're we're almost 3 weeks into it. And
00:42
And I'm And I'm She's I know some of the
00:44
her points are a little out there. She's
00:47
the only one. Nobody from their side is
00:48
asking questions like this. If you're my
00:50
friend, Pat, and I died. I would want
00:52
you to be like I would want you to be
00:54
like, "Wait a minute. Where the who are
00:55
why are you touching [ __ ] Who is who
00:57
has the footage?" And it doesn't add up.
01:00
Tyler doesn't even happen, Tom.
01:02
So, I I I'm thinking three things
01:04
actually. Actually, more like two. The
01:07
first is there are
01:09
hard facts that dots aren't connecting.
01:12
Did he fire one shot from up on top?
01:17
crowd reaction appears to be a little
01:20
little different. Is and he really ran
01:23
off that way with that gun of that size
01:27
in that in that jacket or blanket,
01:30
whatever he had there. He was walking
01:33
peg leg down the street with the the gun
01:36
down the leg of his pants. You know,
01:38
there's there's things on the the Tyler
01:40
angle that don't add up.
01:43
Why is this this older gentleman
01:45
standing up when everybody would be
01:48
ducking down? You know, uh I I was in a
01:50
restaurant when uh a gunshot went off in
01:53
a in a bar. One one gunshot. Everybody
01:55
was on the ground. We were all under the
01:58
tables until until a server said, you
02:00
know, um our security guy took the guy
02:03
outside. Nobody got shot. And but I I'
02:05
I've seen that. So that's one point in
02:09
my life when I was in college. I heard a
02:12
gunshot indoors. You're all down. Why is
02:14
this whole guy standing up waving a hat?
02:17
So, I see little facts like this that
02:19
just don't seem to add up. Why wasn't
02:21
there police there taping up the the
02:24
scene? Why are people taking cameras
02:26
that would be holding footage that would
02:29
be of great interest to the FBI? Why is
02:32
the Utah governor coming to the
02:36
microphone? We got him and we got the
02:38
gun. It's it it reminds me if you read
02:40
Oswald, they did the same thing. They
02:43
held up the the Italian gun and then
02:45
they talked about Oswald and the day
02:48
later they killed Oswald.
02:50
Yeah. Weird.
02:52
Brandon, what do you think happened?
02:53
What do you think's going on?
02:54
So, I just these facts bother me.
02:54
There's my headline. Pat, the facts that
02:56
we can, what are you thinking?
02:58
So, the only thing I could say for
02:59
certain is that um we're clearly not
03:00
being told everything that the FBI
03:02
knows. We're not being told everything
03:04
the hospital knows. We're not being told
03:05
everything Turning Point knows. That was
03:06
one of the things I was most excited
03:08
about for this administration was the
03:09
notion of h having a transparent FBI for
03:11
the first time where you know we know
03:13
the games they play for like with the
03:15
JFK stuff with the Butler Pennsylvania
03:17
stuff and um even the Epste stuff but
03:19
you know we're not getting that and you
03:21
would think that somebody like Kirk who
03:23
was the almost the most responsible
03:24
person for getting Trump elected like
03:26
Trump could be in jail if it wasn't for
03:27
Charlie Kirk with what the Democrats
03:29
wanted to do for him. you would think
03:30
that he would have come down with more
03:31
vengeance and more curiosity about what
03:32
happened to Kirk and t spoke about that
03:35
more. So I'm surprised to see that from
03:36
Trump's end that he's not more curious
03:38
about what happened to Kirk. I'm
03:39
surprised that Cash Patel is not being
03:40
more transparent and forceful to find
03:42
out what happened. And then not only
03:44
that, they're not they're not they're
03:45
withholding stuff from us in addition
03:47
not being transparent about. So I don't
03:48
think there's enough to say for certain
03:51
who might have done it, but I can say
03:52
for certain that we don't know
03:54
everything they know and they're like
03:56
making it they're forcing us to come up
03:57
with these uh theories and alternate
03:59
opinions because they're being they're
04:01
deceptive.
04:03
How long how long are you willing to be
04:04
patient? Like actually Hanland's razor.
04:06
Okay.
04:09
Aman Hanland's razor.
04:10
What's that one?
04:12
Hanland's razor. If you pull it up, Rob,
04:12
I'll read it. Helen's razor is
04:14
never attribute to malice.
04:18
Never attribute to malice. That which is
04:19
adequately explained by stupidity, Tom,
04:22
or
04:25
a mistake
04:25
or a mistake. So it suggests that
04:26
negative events or poor actions are more
04:28
often the result of ignorance,
04:30
incompetence, carelessness, or other
04:32
non-malicious factors that intentional
04:34
evil than than intentional evil or
04:36
malice. Let's take this as innocent
04:39
until proven guilty perspective real
04:42
quick.
04:44
Mhm.
04:44
None of this stuff makes sense. Bullet
04:45
goes in here. Shouldn't be an explosion.
04:47
Bullet goes in here. It comes out
04:50
because it it it should the damage
04:51
doesn't go in like that. The damage
04:55
comes out. So, I'm with you. I'm on the
04:57
same page.
04:58
That coming out looks like it didn't
04:59
come this way cuz at first I we thought
05:01
it was blood squirting. It's not blood
05:03
squirting. It was actually things. So,
05:04
that's good that we're seeing that. the
05:06
guy standing up automatically and starts
05:07
walking towards the area being shot is
05:09
the same guy that was there on 911. And
05:11
then the guy putting the chip in the hat
05:13
and walking all this stuff. I'm with it.
05:14
And but but to me to me I guess the
05:16
question I'm asking is how long imagine
05:19
you're them. You are cash. You're doing
05:22
the investigation.
05:25
How long should you have to get to the
05:27
bottom of this? I guess that's the part
05:30
that we don't know. And what is the
05:32
protocol? What are you supposed to go
05:34
through? What's supposed to be the
05:36
process? How many people are you
05:38
interviewing? How many people are you
05:40
supposed to be talking to? You know, the
05:41
the the fact that you're seeing the
05:44
place being fixed up and that's where
05:45
the shooting was and you get it fixed.
05:48
Have they made an announcement why they
05:50
did the construction? Absolutely not.
05:52
Has the school made changed?
05:53
I totally get it. Is there any Is there
05:55
any announcement by the university why
05:58
they've done that?
06:01
No. I I took a look this morning. I
06:02
could not find a single news article.
06:03
Nothing about any type of construction
06:05
that was being planned either.
06:07
Can you send me Is that clip on Twitter?
06:08
I have her number.
06:10
Is that Is that Is that
06:11
Yes, Pat. Should I call her again?
06:13
There's no autopsy, right?
06:14
What What is the
06:15
I'm going to call her Her name is Ellen.
06:16
I could call them right now. The
06:18
call them right now.
06:19
Okay. I love this.
06:20
Call them right now. This is what this
06:22
is the university.
06:23
Rob, can we call and you just
06:24
Hang on one second. Hey, and
06:26
what what I'm trying to find out is
06:30
I'm doing it.
06:33
All we want to know is one thing. Have
06:34
you made the announcement
06:36
of
06:38
uh Utah is a one party consent state, so
06:39
you're good?
06:41
Young thought, so I could do this.
06:42
Uh but Florida is two party.
06:44
So you can't do that. You can't do that.
06:47
Well, but by this all I've been getting.
06:48
Nobody picks up.
06:50
I know. You can't do that. So, what what
06:50
what I want to do is I'm going to ask
06:52
the question to see if they've made the
06:55
announcement. You don't just fix up the
06:57
place that got shot up and not make an
06:59
announcement about it. So, play as if
07:01
you're on the inside. What's your
07:05
argument? Don't play the devil's
07:08
advocate. Play the opposite of devil's
07:09
advocate, which is what do you call the
07:11
opposite of devil's advocate? What what
07:13
what is the antonym of devil's advocate?
07:16
How do how do you
07:18
God's advocate?
07:19
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, one like like one
07:20
being the opposite the opposite like
07:22
they're doing everything truthfully.
07:24
Okay.
07:26
What's your argument? You're on Cash's
07:26
team. Give that argument
07:27
on Cash's team. It's like you Well, I
07:29
mean
07:31
the shooter
07:32
you would say that it would be because
07:33
they don't want to um give evidence away
07:34
to that would be um pertinent to know on
07:36
the FBI side. But Cash is the one that
07:38
came out and said, "Hey, we got him
07:40
before they even had him." So he that
07:41
contradicts the notion of them trying to
07:43
withhold things from the public.
07:45
Yeah. Saying saying that you have a
07:46
shooter that fast before you actually
07:48
had the shooter doesn't give you any
07:49
doesn't add any credibility to you which
07:52
you've already lost the credibility.
07:54
Remember you're not doing it. Just do it
07:56
for a second.
07:57
Hand you're the spokesperson for them
07:58
and you truly know everything they know.
08:01
Okay. Speak on their behalf. What do you
08:04
say?
08:06
Hey, I respect the public's curiosity
08:06
here. It's a horrible thing that
08:08
happened to a very public figure. This
08:10
is an active investigation. There are
08:12
multiple angles that are being pursued
08:14
here and we have to pursue those and
08:16
complete the investigation without
08:18
tipping off people or without framing it
08:21
through the media and we can't lose our
08:23
opportunity to prosecute because certain
08:26
things are misrepresented in the media.
08:28
So you need to let us do our work. We're
08:30
interviewing a lot of people and
08:33
following a lot of leads. Now I'm stuck.
08:35
So let's say I'm the um I'm the you know
08:38
press secretary for the FBI.
08:41
says, "Well, so the why did you say you
08:43
have your you you got him? If there's a
08:45
second shooter, don't you have to come
08:48
forward and say you don't got him?" So,
08:49
in that case, Pat, it would be hard for
08:51
me. Now, how do I spin from the inside?
08:53
So, you're saying maybe you don't got
08:55
him. You're saying you're still
08:57
investigating him. Either you got him in
08:58
your FBI or you're pursuing other leads,
09:00
still looking into it. Which which is
09:04
it, sir? And you're kind of stuck. But
09:05
from the inside, that's what I would be
09:08
saying.
09:09
What's up, Rob?
09:09
It's interesting. There's some
09:10
construction um information that's been
09:12
released by the Utah Valley University,
09:15
but none of it has to do with the
09:17
building that you guys are mentioning or
09:18
where Charlie was shot. So, they uh
09:20
released a a student center remodel.
09:22
There's an article about that. There's
09:24
also the Scott M. Smith building that
09:26
they were constructing. There's also the
09:28
uh stadium that they're going to be
09:30
using. So, they do issue announcements
09:31
regarding construction ongoing at the
09:33
campus. There is nothing written about
09:35
where Charlie was shot and construction
09:38
being done there.
09:41
Weird. It's so weird. The the Here's the
09:41
problem. The problem is it's hard to
09:44
make a case for them.
09:48
That's the problem.
09:50
Mhm.
09:51
It's hard to make a case why it's
09:52
I if if let's just say the school does
09:58
have that construction uh uh
10:00
scheduled
10:02
scheduled. You're the FBI. You're the
10:03
local PD. You're guys, you're not
10:05
touching this for three weeks.
10:07
Yeah.
10:08
Yeah. A week.
10:09
Can you look up, Rob?
10:10
What is the longest a crime scene stayed
10:12
intact?
10:17
Good question.
10:18
What is the longest a crime scene stayed
10:18
intact just to get all evidence
10:22
or the average amount of time even?
10:24
I want to know the longest.
10:25
I want to know the longest, not the
10:28
average time. I want to know because
10:29
shortly you average going to be probably
10:30
eight hours, 12 hours, 14 hours. Well,
10:32
what is the longest a crime crime scene
10:35
stayed intact? Uh, and maybe that's not
10:37
the question, Rob. Tom, what's the
10:40
question? Are we asking a question the
10:42
right way? Do you know what I'm trying
10:44
to ask practice? Maybe.
10:45
Yeah. What is Yeah. What is
10:47
modern?
10:49
No, that's not what I'm talking about.
10:51
You're saying the murder scene like
10:52
what's the longest
10:54
40 plus days later in homes containers?
10:55
40 years later. No, but that's not
10:59
that's not real. What I'm asking is what
11:00
is the longest in America after a murder
11:02
took place that the FBI asked to keep
11:06
the murder scene uh untouched for them
11:10
to investigate
11:14
the entire
11:16
you know homicide. Okay. I I want to
11:19
know this question because I want to
11:22
make comps. I want to make comparisons.
11:24
Let's look at this here. in George M
11:26
1969 the FBI exumed the body this
11:28
decades later and get the DNA on Donald
11:31
Jones if you liked it the guy can no I
11:32
want to know how because let's just say
11:35
let's just say we look this up shouldn't
11:38
be hard to find this Rob I I just don't
11:40
know if we're asking the question the
11:42
right way I let's just say if there's
11:43
cases where it was 40 days it better be
11:46
bigger than this assassination let's say
11:49
there's cases that's two and a half
11:51
months I'm sure there are why did you
11:53
move so quickly on this one I I I don't
11:56
I don't understand that. Leave the scene
11:59
the way it is until we get everything
12:02
figured out.
12:04
Okay. World Trade Center eight months.
12:06
Okay. John Morsey house boulder
12:09
six-year-old murderer family home remain
12:11
under investigation
12:12
for months.
12:13
For months
12:14
evidence was collected over a long span
12:15
but the house was eventually released
12:17
and later sold.
12:18
The house remained sealed and under
12:20
investigation for months. Okay. Yeah.
12:22
So, so John Banet Ramsay six-year-old
12:24
murder Oklahoma City bombing. Okay.
12:27
Manson family murder crime scene for
12:30
weeks were okay. The Tate Labanka houses
12:32
were crime scenes for weeks but
12:35
eventually returned to owners for weeks.
12:37
That's weeks, bro.
12:39
Yep. Weeks.
12:40
Typical duration as well. Most homicide
12:41
scenes in the US are held for days to
12:43
weeks, sometimes months if the site is
12:45
large or high profile. Is this not a
12:48
high profile? So, so do me a favor, Rob.
12:50
go with the question and ask how long
12:52
was Charlie Kirk scene
12:54
kept uh uh uh what do you call it? Um
12:58
intact.
13:01
How long did it say?
13:02
No, like how long how long did they say
13:03
you know uh um uh uh yeah, I guess
13:06
intact. How long was Charlie Kirk's
13:09
crime scene kept intact in order to
13:11
fulfill the in order to finish the
13:13
investigation? Okay.
13:15
In order to finish
13:17
the investigation.
13:20
Okay, let's see what it says here.
13:21
I
13:25
mean, it reminds me of them hosing off
13:26
the roof at Butler, Pennsylvania after
13:27
that happened. You think, Rob, how long
13:29
was it? What does it say?
13:30
There is no there isn't any record
13:32
credible evidence, court filings, or
13:34
FBI.
13:36
This guys,
13:36
no, no, no. I don't understand this
13:38
because to me,
13:40
what
13:43
what was that guy's the the something
13:46
collector, bone collector? What was that
13:48
movie? Denzel Washington and uh I don't
13:49
know what it was.
13:52
Well, there's there's a simple question
13:53
I have. Why didn't the police secure the
13:55
area and take all the photographs? They
13:58
have these um these little uh number
14:01
tents. Have you seen them? They say 1 2
14:03
3 4 5 6 7 8 They put them on the ground.
14:05
They take and they take they take
14:08
photographs. I did anybody see any of
14:10
that here?
14:13
No. And there was police.
14:14
So there's a simple without going
14:15
conspiracy go simple fact-based
14:17
question. Why didn't a law enforcement,
14:19
campus police, local police, FBI
14:22
sequester and photograph everything the
14:25
way we see?
14:28
Let me ask you a question. If if this
14:29
happens to me and my wife tells the FBI,
14:31
I don't want you to investigate it. Does
14:33
the FBI still has a duty to go out there
14:35
and investigate it?
14:37
Well, she just made herself the first
14:38
suspect.
14:39
Yeah. That increases the odds of the
14:39
investigation.
14:41
I mean,
14:41
what but but if but a family says,
14:42
"We're good. We're moved." I'm trying to
14:44
find out like who has the authority to
14:45
say, you know how sometimes somebody
14:47
commits a crime against you like we're
14:50
not filing any charges.
14:51
Can that immediately stop an
14:53
investigation?
14:55
Shouldn't the FDI and the police
14:56
department still even if
14:58
in the case of simple battery or things
15:00
like this I can decide. So if there's So
15:02
you punch me
15:05
too many questions.
15:06
You punch me in a restaurant. There are
15:07
no cameras in the restaurant. Nothing
15:09
anywhere.
15:10
And you know where I'm at. Obviously,
15:11
private conversation, but
15:13
Oh, and I and guess what? The more and
15:14
more I think about that, the more and
15:16
more yours is making sense. And so, Pat,
15:17
my cousin Mike's wife, Nina, just
15:19
messaged me. Uh, her kids were at uh the
15:21
SUS school shooting. They closed the
15:23
whole school down for 5 days. 5 days.
15:26
Nobody went to
15:28
You closed. And was anybody killed?
15:29
Sus. Yeah. He started shooting. I don't
15:30
remember how many people, but my
15:32
5 days.
15:34
5 days. The school was shut down. and
15:35
and and for Charlie Kirk to be
15:37
assassinated
15:38
days after it was construction days
15:39
after they were already digging up the
15:41
floor.
15:43
So, by the way, by the way, by the way,
15:43
if if anybody is sitting here and you're
15:45
like, "You guys are going down the
15:48
rabbit hole. I can't believe you're
15:50
doing this." Do you know what you're
15:52
doing? You're giving credibility to
15:54
everybody that's going down the rabbit
15:56
hole by simply doing what you just did.
15:58
So you got other instances you want to
16:02
stay there for four or five weeks,
16:04
sometimes two months. At one case house,
16:05
no one goes in there for nearly eight
16:08
months. And you're telling me for this
16:09
one, nobody wants to come and
16:10
investigate to see what happened there.
16:11
You're you're doing this to yourself?
16:13
Yep.
16:15
Quite by the way.
16:15
Hey Rob, pull this. Do a just search for
16:17
murder scene investigation.
16:19
Three kills. Let's look at the yellow
16:22
tape.
16:24
Kill three people.
16:24
Go images.
16:25
Quick question, though. So the
16:26
take a look right here. You see this?
16:27
That's it. This is FBI taping it off.
16:29
Everything would get tagged, Pat. And
16:32
look at all the pictures they would take
16:34
here. How many items they have there?
16:35
They have in this, this isn't Charlie
16:37
Kirk, but in this FBI investigation.
16:39
Look, there's a phone.
16:41
75 points that are being photographed.
16:43
Just we see just from what we see and
16:45
they just walked away from it. That's
16:48
that sounds that's I gross negligence or
16:50
incompetence. Like what? You guys are
16:52
being
16:54
ne about to say that I think Hamlin's
16:54
razor I mean who made that the universal
16:56
principle? Like I almost think it could
16:58
be the opposite of that sometimes. Don't
16:59
attribute to stupidity what could be
17:01
attributed to malice. I mean
17:02
no no I think Hanland's razor is
17:04
necessary. It's what makes America so
17:06
great. Justice, right? Innocent till
17:08
proven guilty.
17:11
Okay. Yes. Trust but verify. So this is
17:13
the part where I I I I want to I have
17:17
questions. What I'm By the way, we're
17:20
not even professionals. We don't do this
17:22
for a living. We're just asking basic
17:24
questions that you don't have the
17:26
answers for. And in in any case, if you
17:27
come to me and you say, "Dad, I want
17:30
this." No. Well, you did it for uh my
17:32
brother. And you're like, "Ah, shit."
17:35
Okay. So, guess what? The natural
17:38
reaction is to do what? To get a comp. I
17:40
want to My offer is $800,000. This is a
17:43
$1.1 million house. No, it's an $800,000
17:45
house. Why? Because a house that was
17:47
built after yours in better condition
17:49
with recent upgrades with one additional
17:52
bedroom and a swimming pool and.1 acre
17:54
bigger than yours sold for $798 and I'm
17:57
giving you $800,000
18:00
and that happened 3 months ago. I'm
18:02
using the comp.
18:03
Yes.
18:04
So to me the comp on this is if you
18:05
spend weeks at a different place and
18:08
this is the biggest story, the biggest
18:10
assassination we've had in America the
18:12
last six years and you move this
18:14
quickly. I I I uh I don't know. I don't
18:15
to me the biggest thing is this, by the
18:19
way. Okay. To me, the biggest thing is
18:21
when the conversations comes about,
18:23
well, it's Israel. Nope. I'm not putting
18:26
it there. To me, the conversation, well,
18:29
they had a meeting because of this.
18:30
Okay. Belman shows a text. To me, the
18:32
conversation is, you know, okay, you
18:34
want to debunk those or whatever. Fine.
18:36
to me to but then if you're hearing
18:39
conversations about no man, why aren't
18:42
you guys want to ask more questions to
18:45
see what happened? Guess what? You give
18:47
credibility. That's the That's the area
18:50
where you're like, there's a point
18:52
there. You know, there's a point of
18:54
what's going on here. You want me to sit
18:56
on the sidelines and think that's it?
18:58
No. Your your comp sucks. You're losing.
19:00
By the way, again, this this goes back
19:04
to um
19:06
this goes back to the Epstein situation.
19:09
Mhm.
19:11
Where you ask again too suspicious
19:11
that all of these things are going on.
19:17
Who are you protecting? Who are you
19:19
hiding? Who are you defending? Who are
19:20
you worried about? Of course, we heard
19:23
the one story that the guy comes out and
19:25
says, "Bill Clinton, yes, but Trump,
19:27
no." Right. What was that one? Uh
19:29
yeah, the DOJ for James O'Keefe for
19:31
Project Veritas. Yeah. And so, okay. No,
19:33
no, no. He didn't do anything for us.
19:35
Yeah, he actually did for you, right?
19:36
So, we learned. But you make people be
19:38
skeptical. So, to me,
19:41
yeah, the construction of Utah Valley
19:43
University campus site where Charlie
19:44
Kirk was assassined involves removing
19:45
the blood stains, grass, and replacing
19:47
it with bricks. What
19:49
creating a makeshift memorial area where
19:50
people can leave momento momentos?
19:53
There are no confirmed detail on
19:56
additional permanent structures beyond
19:58
this modification.
19:59
What type of construction is being done
20:01
at the campus? Bro,
20:02
and you do it that quickly.
20:03
No. No.
20:04
This Yeah. They say uh the scene was
20:06
held for 8 to 14 days before releasing
20:08
it.
20:10
Yeah.
20:11
That's according to Grock.
20:11
Yeah. Well, guess what? I That's not
20:12
what I saw where where students were
20:14
recording going, "Look, they're already
20:16
digging it up." I'm just curious, too,
20:18
from our audience that poll that you
20:19
ran. What's the percentage of them not
20:21
being convinced about the official
20:23
story? Do we have the I'm curious where
20:24
82 to 18 last time I saw
20:26
82 82% are like, "No,
20:31
that's nearly 8,000 votes."
20:34
That's Yeah. Not believing it. And good
20:35
for you guys. You have to question for
20:37
just this guy's just for his his for
20:39
Charlie, bro. For his soul. Like cuz
20:41
nobody his friends aren't doing it.
20:43
Yeah.
20:45
Like where where is the whole
20:46
Everybody's moved on. They're on podcast
20:47
smiling and yo, your boy, your husband,
20:49
your freaking your guy that was running
20:53
a $500 million company is gone. And
20:55
y'all are just like, "Yeah, we're going
20:57
to just release old footage of him. We
20:59
have we have tons. were so they used the
21:01
word excited and smiled. I know
21:03
everybody grieves in their own way, but
21:05
guys, for his sake, take a time out with
21:07
the future of TPUSA and find out what
21:10
the hell's going on. Ask about that.
21:13
George Zinn, I don't know where he is. I
21:16
don't know where the porn child
21:18
pedophilia on his phone is. There needs
21:20
to be I hope they're doing it, guys,
21:22
because you know what's happen.
21:24
What is Tucker questioning?
21:25
I don't even Have you even guys even
21:26
heard what Tucker had to say? No, but
21:28
we've seen cases like this where, you
21:30
know, the district attorney is downtown
21:32
and all these people show up and they're
21:34
holding little pieces of paper and
21:36
they're usually quiet like a vigil and
21:38
they say answers for Ashley, right? Yes.
21:39
And they have a picture of her and
21:42
they're saying,
21:43
you know, holding it up like this.
21:44
You've seen it, Pat, where they're all
21:46
sitting there,
21:47
you know, um, and and then they like
21:48
they'll ambush the district attorney
21:50
when he's walking out one day. We need
21:52
answers for Ashley. What other
21:54
investigation are you? We need answers.
21:56
Where where is everybody looking? You
21:58
know what I mean?
22:01
I'm I'm so disappointed them. And the
22:02
only thing Tucker did because I haven't
22:04
seen anything cuz Tucker's been doing
22:06
segments and guests and the 911 stuff
22:07
which was which was fantastic. The only
22:09
thing that he did was was the memorial
22:12
which another question. Why weren't
22:14
Charlie's parents at the memorial? I'm
22:17
very curious if anybody knows. I get it.
22:20
It's a it's a it's a tragic. Your son
22:22
was assassinated. This is a big event.
22:24
the president of the United States is
22:26
there. Why weren't the parents there?
22:27
I'm very very curious um as to that. I'm
22:31
very very curious because you would
22:34
think the parents would be at something
22:36
like that monumental that's something
22:37
that they
22:40
have they have they spoken out
22:41
have they said anything Rob have they
22:43
come out and said anything tried to
22:44
parent seen anything
22:46
the only thing and I'm sorry going back
22:47
to my point Tucker the only thing Tucker
22:48
did was speak at the memorial and he and
22:49
he said Jesus was speaking the truth and
22:52
he was murdered same thing that happened
22:54
that was a quick speech to the point and
22:56
and he left and that was it. But is he
22:59
is he speculating and asking any
23:02
questions? I haven't heard anything. He
23:03
is heavily supportive of what's going on
23:04
with Turning Point USA.
23:06
Heavily.
23:07
He's asking whatever you guys need from
23:09
me, I'm here for you.
23:10
Yes.
23:11
So, what does that mean? Do you trust
23:12
Tucker?
23:13
I trust Tucker.
23:14
So, why is Tucker so supportive of
23:14
Turning Point USA? You think he would?
23:16
I think
23:18
if he had some questions.
23:18
Well, I think immediately when it
23:20
happened, he donated
23:21
a million dollar.
23:22
A million dollar. That's That's
23:22
But no, Tucker just a couple days ago on
23:23
the Turning Point USA podcast says,
23:25
"Whatever you guys need from me, I'm
23:27
here for you guys." That's what he said
23:28
immediately. And he he is he is a guy
23:30
that you would have seen in a situation
23:34
like this questioning if he felt
23:36
something he didn't trust.
23:37
And he's not
23:39
he's not he's just saying, "Hey, this is
23:40
what's going on. I lost a friend and
23:42
he's moving with it." So this is this is
23:44
what I'm about. I want to see what
23:46
everybody else is saying because I want
23:48
to see what's going on here.
23:50
I want to see everything. I if you can
23:52
go through this season and just kind of
23:55
hear some of the stuff out and not be
23:57
controlled by the mob and jump to
24:00
conclusion, you'll be ahead of the game.
24:01
Naturally, you're going to want to
24:03
gravitate towards somebody. Naturally,
24:04
you want to you're going to want to
24:06
gravitate towards what you're thinking
24:08
happened. But reason is being willing to
24:09
hear opposing arguments that contradicts
24:14
your own argument if your ego will
24:17
permit to do that. And we're willing to
24:19
do that. And uh we're willing to do
24:22
that. This was a
24:24
this was a very special guy. Charlie is
24:27
a very very special guy and u he will be
24:29
he will not be replaced. There's not
24:32
going to be a guy that's going to come
24:34
and replace Charlie Kirk tomorrow.
24:35
There's a bunch of guys that are going
24:36
out there saying we're continue what
24:37
Charlie did. Yeah.
24:39
Glad you're inspired. He's a good guy to
24:42
replicate and duplicate. But he was a
24:44
one of one. And uh may his soul rest in
24:46
peace as I'm certain it will. Gang, I
24:50
got a flight to catch. We enjoyed the
24:53
podcast. Brandon, good job. If you have
24:55
any mans you want to send to Brandon,
24:58
that is Brandon's QR code right there
25:00
with a beautiful red tie. If you have
25:03
anything you want to share with them,
25:05
send them a man.
25:06
What about the four-woman for Tom if
25:07
she's out there?
25:09
Wow. No, she's she's already she's
25:10
already manacted.
25:12
She manacted.
25:13
She's already manacted. She's like, you
25:14
know,
25:15
four women. What am I Mormon?
25:15
The forman form.
25:18
All right, gang. Do your thing. Are we
25:19
back on Friday?
25:20
Friday? Yes, sir.
25:21
Okay. We'll be back on Friday. God bless
25:22
everybody. Take care. Bye-bye. Bye-bye.
25:23
Lyrics & Translation
[English]
30 seconds.
[Applause]
Adam, what's your point? The future
looks bright.
My handshake is better than anything I
ever sign. It's right here.
You are a oneonone.
I don't think I've ever said this
before.
[Music]
Okay, sounds good. So, we are going live
officially. Uh, it's been now what, nine
hours, folks, since the government
shutdown. Nine hours. If you didn't
know, now you know the government's been
shut down. People are losing their
minds. Trump's posting uh memes, smiling
at uh Hakeim Jeff and Chuck Schumer
doing his thing that he does. And then
yesterday, there was a moment where the
president was very concerned. There was
a moment where, you know, Bobby Kennedy
sneezed behind him and immediately
because of the extremely uh uh aware uh
paying attention to details, he said, "I
hope I don't get co from you, Bobby. You
guys got to see this. This man's a
comedian." Vinnie is right. He is a
comedian.
Funny.
And uh there's a bunch of other stuff
that's going on. So, we have to talk
about the government shutdown.
Uh uh Netanyahu agreed to a 20point plan
to end war in Gaza. Trump signals former
FBI Christopher Ray is being probed by
DOJ after Comey indictment. Pete Hexit
starts tell you know he's expecting
people to be in physical shape and you
got who's the girl's name from uh uh the
view? Sunonny Rosen is
Sunonny Host. Why is it such a big deal
to get your people to be in shape? You
have to watch this clip to see if it
makes any sense to you. And then aside
from that, Tik Tok bite dance to keep
50% profit and Trump says Tik Tok should
be tweaked to become 100% MAGA. This
stuff you're not supposed to say. He
keeps saying Tik Tok US is worth only 14
billion. I think that was a great
discount. In any other uh part of the
world, Tik Tok would be a hundred
billion plus dollar company.
I have a theory.
Somebody got an $86 billion discount.
It's a nice discount. And Tom's got a
theory, guys. So stick around for the
theory.
Elhan Omar doubles down on attack and
Charlie Kirk. There is no legacy to
honor. I think that's the conversation
with Don Lemon if I am not mistaken.
Yeah. Yes. Walking the streets, man on
the street.
That's just phenomenal. Those two
together is Israel is losing information
war. Charlie Kirk's letter to Netanyahu.
Tom's got some thoughts on that.
There is a poll that shows liberal women
are on a crash course with dating hell.
the dating hell they created. What I
mean this data folks, you have to read
this on on what it is. The older liberal
women get, the more open they are to
conservative men.
But the older conservative men get, the
less open they are to liberal women. And
there is science behind it, folks. This
is a science-driven poll we're talking
about from Daily Caller. Uh, and then we
have Newsome courts big oil as gas
prices threaten political ambitions.
Rahm Emanuel weighing presidential bid
navigates a Democratic party moving
left. Voters in majority major US city
view capitalism only slightly more
favorably than socialism and that pisses
Tom off. Tom is very angry about that.
Uh uh very angry about it but slightly
not that angry because show hit a nice
home run and the Dodgers won and the
Yankees lost yesterday. So Tom came in
here doing back flips celebrating. He's
been here since 6:00 putting up signs of
Dodger flags everywhere.
There was baseball yesterday. I thought
the season ended on Sunday.
Yeah.
Democratic party hits historic low of
favorability in new national poll. Tom's
got thoughts. Uh Vinnie's got thoughts
on the Kim Jeff and Trump. Uh Charlie
Javis gets seven years for defrauding JP
Morgan. However, Tom, show me this. I'm
not going to tell you what the lawyer
said.
Said lawyer said to the the judge, you
have to see what this law this lawyer
has some audacity to say what he had to
say to the judge.
Brass. Uh, as AI threatens white collar
work, more young Americans chase blue
collar careers. We got a uh young uh uh
American here to tell us what he's
chasing. We'll see what's going to
happen with them. Now, LA is uh dying as
Hollywood businesses say tourism cash
has dropped by up to 50% after Las Vegas
hit the skits. And then Don Lemon sparks
fury with wild rant about white men
broken. Folks, if you're white,
according to Don Lemon, you're broken.
He's trying to fix you. He's trying to
fix you. And uh I don't know.
Is his wife a white? Oh, never mind.
Despite being married to one is how the
story ends. Despite being married to
one, and Tom, listen, I've kept these
stories just for Tom. Buttlfts in Miami,
breast implants in Beverly Hills,
plastic surgery by region. Tom wants to
get to the bottom because there's a
business model behind this. And then
eventually, God willing, we'll hit that
coplay story. They need some attention.
They need some attention. And then a
novice defense secretary lectures the
brass on what it takes to win. Pete said
HUD displays banner blaming radical left
Democrats for government shutdown.
Military leaders absorb highly partisan
presentation from Trump exit. And then
we got a couple other things to get
into. Folks, there is a major memo. I
think you guys have to see it. I think
it's very very important. Life-changing
time. You know how every once in a while
you meet a man who gives you
life-changing advice and you have to you
have to make note of it and you just
like make a note of it. Sheriff Grady
from Pole County, we're going to show
this video to you. He's he's and he's
teaching people why not to hire
prostitutes.
And he does it in such a you have to I
have the clip Rob. I mean he's a legend.
If you don't know who he is, this man's
a philosopher. He could have been a
pastor in a previous life. He could have
been a comedian. He could have been
playing baseball with Lou Gary style
comedy that he's got. He's one of one.
He's got some advice he wants to share
with you guys. I think it's important.
We got to go through it. To all the
young men that are watching this. And
then aside from that, I got a couple
other things that I want to read about
Maxine Water, the way she reacts. We
found a guy that says the range broke
clip that we showed last week. He says
he debunked it. And we're going to have
to show this one clip to you. And he's
got some stuff to say about it. Again,
the idea with everything that's going on
with Charlie Kirk, Vinnie called the
school yesterday. He called the Utah
University yesterday, talked to five
people, eventually got a hold of the
director of communication. He's going to
probably give the name. Called that
person five times.
No pickup.
Okay. No pickup to see what's going on
there.
And so, you know, you know, so he'll
give you that perspective. And then I
got a story here that I saw this morning
which I loved that says, "One bad apple
destroys a great team." Yeah, the timing
timing of this story is bad because but
this this has nothing to do with that,
you know, apple. He's more like a
banana. But this this apple here that
we're talking about is a different story
that we're talking about, which we'll
get into. And uh uh uh couple other
clips. But by the way, can you imagine
you wake up one morning and you know
because of them trying to censor you
when you were running for president,
something you have the right to do,
Google, YouTube, Twitter, everybody
tried to censor you and then 60 Minutes
agrees to pay Trump $16 million for
editing Kala Harris's interview. ABC
agrees to pay Trump $15 million in a
settlement of a defamation lawsuit.
Twitter agrees to pay Trump $10 million
for suspending him. And Facebook agrees
to pay Trump $25 million for suspending
him. And then YouTube just agreed to pay
President Trump $24 and half million
dollars for suspending his account in
2021. This is the tweet is from who rap.
Can we read Danielle Doza Gil? I hope I
said the last name last name right. Like
Benji Gil Gil. So he this guy made
almost hund00 million for just being
censored and suspended. And the guy
keeps winning winning. And Jimmy Fallon
comes out saying, "Look, we're always
telling jokes on both sides, Fallon.
Always. We're fair." And Coar, I think,
went on Keml last night to try to say
some stuff. And Keml came back and made
fun of JD Vans hardcore. So maybe we got
to show some of this stuff to kind of
see what's going on over there with the
viewership, which we will. We will. But
before we get into it, I do want to tell
you guys if you want to get all the
notes that we get for free, all the
notes that we cover, so you have access
to everything that we're going to go
through, all you have to do is download
Manac, go to the PBD podcast circle,
whether you have an Android or Apple, go
to our circle, download it, and get the
notes and follow track. And every time
there's updates, different things, and
if you want to communicate and network
with each other, you pay 10 bucks a
month and 20 50 a month allows you to do
the whole thing, the whole benefits that
comes with it. But for free, you can get
the notes uh of uh what we're going
through here on our podcast. And then
next thing before we get into the
podcast, guys, this shirt I'm wearing, I
wear the white, I wear the blue, I wear
the black. When you wear this shirt, you
know what it feels like? You ever had
somebody you love hugs you and tells you
how amazing you are?
Cotton hands.
Let me tell you, I'm not kidding with
you. Feel the material real quick. Feel
the material real quick. Do not do not
feel the love.
Felt like Don Lemon for a second.
That's not good, buddy.
No one's going to buy.
No, I felt like it was soft.
No, but let me tell you.
Oh, you felt Oh, you felt soft.
The quality the quality of this thing I
wear like Timmy shows right here. Rob,
can you zoom in to show different
features of the shirt? V Tim logo right
here. Gold future looks bright on the
side. VT on the side. And anybody and
everybody who's bought this, this is
lowkey maybe our best item we have on
there qualitywise lowkey. If you're
somebody that wears dress shirts, get
the white, the black, and the blue. Wear
it for a month three times. If you don't
like it, I want to call and talk to you.
I will literally FaceTime you and say,
"How can you not like these shirts that
you wear them?" But you got to order all
three of them. Go put them on sport and
leave that button open so people see
that value tamement logo right there to
see who you're representing. Especially
if you support this brand, if you love
what we do here, go get yourself a polo
shirt. Rob, if you can put the link
below to the business section, that
would be great for people to go place
the order here. VT, by the way, the
black is sick cuz it's gold on black.
Look at that right there. Zoom in a
little bit, Rob.
Damn, that's sick. And then what does
the white one look like? Rob, can we go
to see what the white one looks like?
White one looks like you got the gold.
Ooh, that looks so good. Look at that.
Guys, you wear this
and your lady sees you with this. I'm
telling you right now, studies have
shown 40 weeks later, something could
happen. could cost you $350,000 if you
weren't sure. That's what the quality
is. The quality has got a lot of uh
special things that's going on. Again,
go to vturch.com.
It's pretty expensive for the whole
place your order. And with that being
said, can I start off with just a
business thing I read before we go into
shutting the government down? Rob, can
you pull up the story I just read? I I
just really like this. I think every
once in a while, we got to read stories
like this about bad apples.
So So this is a story I was just
reading.
Science shows how one toxic person can
drag down an entire team. Okay.
Go to the next slide, Rob, if you could.
So, University of Washington research
study shows that just one persistently
negative teammate can derail group
success.
Major drop teams with one bad apple will
perform far worse than others. Proven
impact experiments show negativity hurts
trust, effort, and outcomes. Contagious
toxic behavior spreads quickly inside
groups and worse member. The weakest
link often provides overall team
predicts overall team success. So one
bad teammate can poison the whole group.
Go to the next one. There are three
types of bad apple. Zoom in a little
bit. Rob on 46, please.
Come on, dude.
How they ruin everything. The jerk,
critical, disrespectful, puts others
down. The slacker, lazy, withholds
effort, deadbeat behavior. Damn, that's
very hard. The downer, pessimistic, and
nothing's going to ever happen here.
complain, spreads negativity. The
result, teams argue, stop sharing,
communicate less. Right? Negative
behavior hits harder than positive and
spreads fast. Go to the next one. So
now, let's go to the top a little bit.
Your defense strategy number one,
recognize the signs. Spot jerks,
slackers, and downers early. Two, set
boundaries. Limit exposure to negative
people. Three, don't try to fix them.
You can't unspoil a bad apple, folks.
You cannot fix them. Only God can.
Choose your team. Surround yourself with
positive people. Address it quickly.
Don't let negativity spread and take
root. Last but not least, guard your
energy. Your success depends on who
you're around. By the way, 23 years ago,
my dad. I had this one guy I loved. I
was in first grade together in Iran,
junior high school, high school,
military together, bies together,
insurance together. Oh my god, this guy
was negative. funny as hell, but
negative. Okay. It was always negative,
negative, negative. He'd always blame.
It's this person's fault. It's your
fault. It's that person. It was always
on negative. And I really wanted to run
with this guy for the rest of my life
cuz I love this guy.
One day, my dad and I get into the
biggest fight. And he says, "Don't you
realize he's not going to work as hard
as you? Let him go. This guy's not going
to put the effort the way you're putting
it." I said, "You don't believe people
can change. I believe people can change
on their own, but I don't believe you
can change." So, we're having this feud
together. We're going back and forth.
And I will tell you long term, you win
for believing that people can choose to
change. There is more positive in you
believing that people can improve than
not. However, the affirmation that
changed my life in one of the biggest
ways that took so much weight off my
back was when I finally read this and I
added to my list. Stop trying to be God.
That job is already taken.
You can't fix everybody.
only they can fix them with a level of
commitment to it. If they don't,
sometimes opportunities come up and they
screw it up and they think they're
bigger than the whole crew and then they
take a massive hit. It happens in sports
organization and families and churches
and friendships everywhere. And all it
takes is one time for you to be a little
bit casual to be like, "Ah, it's going
to be okay." Boom. Oh [ __ ] I lost that
opportunity. You were casual and and and
you face somebody that doesn't want any
of this kind of stuff to be taking
place. And it's unfortunate, but that's
kind of how life works. So, if you're
watching as yourself, if you're watching
PBD podcast,
you probably are not part of the
community. That's one of these. What was
it back? The jerk, whatever. Can you go
back to the jerk? You're probably not
because the jerk, the slacker, the
downer.
Yeah, you're probably not Debbie Downer.
We would be annoying to watch this. But
if you're watching this right now
saying, "Shit, I think I'm a little bit
of the jerk or the slacker, the downer."
Well, listen. Get on your knees and
pray, okay? Or find a way to change. Cuz
if you don't, you may lose some of the
biggest opportunities in your life. Cuz
many times when we're inside the
opportunity, we don't know it until we
lose it.
Yeah.
And then when you lose it, you're like,
"Oh [ __ ] what a [ __ ] Why' I do that?"
Don't do that. Right. Very simple. So,
anyways, let's get right into it, folks.
I know you've been nervous because the
government's been shut down now for 9
hours and 15 minutes. Don't worry, it's
going to be okay. But the government's
been shut down. No one's working. By the
way, apparently 100,000 people are
deciding to quit. I don't know if you
saw this or not, Rob, if you want to put
this up. This is catastrophic news,
folks. 100,000 DMV employees are
quitting. Not DMV, but just government
employees are quitting. Rob, if you want
to put that story up. They're out there.
They're angry. Over a 100,000 federal
workers to resign Tuesday amid looming
government shutdown. And look at the
phones. Look at them running around with
the phones recording with that beautiful
pink umbrella while it's not even
raining. Isn't that awesome? Think about
how rich you have to be to have a pink
umbrella while the sky is blue and a
camera walking around and you're walking
away from your job. How awesome it is.
That guy probably doesn't even work at
the government. It's just a picture that
they took, but a great angle. Nice
people walking there. So, here's what's
going on. Let's talk about this. Let's
talk about this. Let's talk about this.
Trump mocks Chuck Schumer and Hakee Jeff
in an AI generated video after
government shutdown meeting. You tell
me. Oh my god.
When have we ever had a government that
would post a meme like this? Which, by
the way, you have to be honest. Hakee
actually looks good with that mustache.
Look closely. And that guy, right? He
can pull it off. What president do you
know,
man?
That is concerned to entertain you and
mock his enemies and be as straight up
as this guy here. Go ahead, Rob. Play
this clip.
There's no way to sugarcoat it. Nobody
likes Democrats anymore. We have no
voters left because of all of our woke
trans [ __ ] Not even black people
want to vote for us anymore. Even
Latinos hate us. So, we need new voters.
And if we give all these illegal aliens
free healthcare, we might be able to get
them on our side so they can vote for
us. They can't even speak English. So,
they won't realize we're just a bunch of
woke pieces of [ __ ] you know, at least
for a while until they they learn
English and they realize they hate us,
too.
You go. Oh man.
By the way, this is not a YouTuber that
posted this. Not a podcaster, not an
influencer. This is the president of the
United States posted that video
and people lost their minds.
Did he post the one with the mariachi
band?
There's another one. Hold on. No. Did
you see that one? He He didn't stop.
There's another one. Did you see the
I sent you the second one?
There's no way in the world.
How about this? You're going to laugh
even harder cuz it's Hakee Jeff getting
pissed off saying, "How dare he?"
Say it to my face. I think I
You did. I got
Oh, Pat, this one's better. No, I think
somebody makes them and send them to
them. This one is even better. This
This is all because the government shut
down
because they're they're playing that
game. Look. Ready? Ready for this?
Watch.
Disgusting
video. And we're going to continue to
make clear bigotry will get you nowhere.
We are fighting to protect the healthare
in the face of an unprecedented
[Laughter]
He's a troll. He's the ultimate troll.
They don't know what to do with it.
That's it. They don't know what to do
with that.
That is the part about being
unpredictable. So Rob, can we give the
story about the government shutdown?
Let's just kind of go through it right
now. What's going on? So
there's a reason for this angle.
Yeah. So JD Vance predicted that the
government's going to shut down after
deadly serious Democrat demand
concessions. Uh we're headed towards a
shutdown. Van says after Trump's meeting
with leaders, is this the clip? Go ahead
and play this clip.
I want to make one final point here. You
will hear a lot from Senate Democrats,
from House Democrats about the fact that
American healthcare policy is broken.
Well, we know that American healthcare
policy is broken. We've been trying to
fix it for the 8 months that we've been
in office. But every single thing that
they accuse about being broken about
American healthcare is policy the
Democrats have supported for the past
decade. So, if they want to talk about
how to fix American healthcare policy,
let's do it. The speaker would love to
do it. The Senate majority leader would
love to do it. Let's work on it
together, but let's do it in the context
of an open government that's providing
essential services to the American
people. That's all that we're proposing
to do. And the fact that they refuse to
do that shows how unreasonable their
position is. I think we're headed to a
shutdown because the Democrats won't do
the right thing. I hope they change
their mind, but we're going to see. I'll
let the speaker uh say a few words.
Okay, so we are here not headed to a
shutdown. We are shut down for 9 hours
and 19 minutes and 42 seconds. Vinnie,
your thoughts? Well, let's This kind of
brings me back to when uh remember the
border bill was coming through and uh
they were all losing their mind because
the border was wide open. So, they
proposed the bill and they're like, "All
right, listen. We're going to finally
we'll shut the border down. We'll admit
that the border is chaotic and it's
unsustainable." But in the bill, there's
tens of billions of dollars that have to
go to Ukraine. There's billions of
dollars that have to go to Israel. There
billions of dollars that have to go to
uh um Taiwan. And it's like, "No, no,
no. Time out. Time out. the border, the
bill for the border should go to the to
the border. Okay. And this is the same
situation, Pat, because the the the uh
Democrats want Medicaid, they want money
to go to illegals and the bill, it's
over 1 point some trillion dollars. And
this just again shows you they're
willing to shut down and stop going to
work because they put illegal illegals
healthcare over Americans, okay? They're
rewarding illegals. And it's I'm
actually happy that it's coming to this
because they talk all this nonsense.
They're going to blame Trump. They're
going to blame this and that. It's all
them. They want money for illegals. And
guess what? They're going up against a
president that's America first and he's
not having it. Plain and simple.
Tom, there there was a bunch of things
that came out. Um uh Mark Mitchell was
posting them all night. There's a bunch
of very interesting polling. 67% of
Americans, if you give them a list, do
you blame Schumer? Do you blame Trump?
Do you blame Congress? Guess what? 67%
blame Congress. So in other words, Pat,
if you take off if if you just put names
on it, that goes one way. But if you say
Congress and you add Congress as a name,
67% blame Congress for it. And people
said that the last shutdown, they don't
feel that it hurt their lives. They felt
that it was newsworthy and a lot of
things going on, but like 80% of
Americans said my life wasn't personally
hurt by the shutdown. Now, we're not
talking about government employees.
We're talking about voters everywhere
else, not government. 80% said, "Well,
yeah, there was a shutdown, but it
didn't really affect me, as far as I can
tell."
Says, "Next." So, they blame Congress
next. And now more people say they
understand uncontrolled spending and our
national debt is bad and is not just an
election year thing. It's bad. They
don't know what to do about it, but they
understand that it's bad and it hurts
the economy long term. Isn't that very
interesting? So, people will directly
blame Trump. They'll directly blame
Schumer. But when you step back,
America's actually said, "If the shut
here's the punch line. If the shutdown
gets a change in spending, I'm in favor
of it." That is a core American voter.
Here's what Trump had to say. And Adam,
I'm going to come to you right here. Go
ahead. Uh uh uh Robin,
we could come up and and through this
whole thing, you know, cuz I don't know,
we'll probably have a shutdown because
one of the things they want to do is
they want to give uh incredible
Medicare, Cadillac, the Cadillac
Medicare to illegal immigrants. And what
that does is it keeps them coming into
our country.
Yep.
And like they do in California. And no
country can afford that. No country. And
we have the border stopped up. We have
it closed. We have nobody for four
months. Zero. Zero people came in. That
wasn't me. That's be by the authorities
who happen to be liberally oriented. But
but just think of that. We have
I love that
people offering health care to people
all over the world that they can't
afford to pay.
Now watch this. You can pause it right
there. Democrats are saying that's not
true. That's not what happened. A
podcaster and a a a host goes out there
asking a question of Maxine Water who
seems very happy. She's asking Maxine a
question here. And look at Maxine's uh
response. Go ahead.
Are Democrats demanding healthc care for
illegal aliens?
That's right.
Democrats are demanding health care for
everybody.
Oh god.
We want to save lives. We want to make
sure that health care is available to
those who would die but having the help
of their government.
So you're good with a government
shutdown even if it means giving
healthcare to people who aren't American
citizens?
Well, you keep That's what you're
pushing on. What you're trying to do is
you're standing here and you're trying
to make me say that somehow we are going
to put noncitizens over Americans. Quit
it. Stop it. This is the kind of
journalism we don't need. You are
divisive. No, you're not. You're being
divisive. No. Please don't. You don't
need to ask that question. You're just
trying to get controversy here. You're
not going to get it from me. We want to
save healthcare for all people. Thank
you. Thank you, Congresswoman.
Appreciate it.
Good work, girl. She did great. Just
simple. So, Brandon, what do you think's
going on here?
No, it's amazing. Like, we spent 2.4
trillion on healthcare already. Like,
what do they want to bring it to? You
know, 67% of the budget goes to
entitlement. So, like, what's the number
they actually think is realistic? Like,
are they genuinely trying to bankrupt
the country? And, you know, when they
say the government shutdown's about
health care, like, nobody in politics
understands healthcare. I could assure
you of that. One of the best books about
healthcare I've ever read was about by
Marty Mccur, the current head of the
FDA. And he just goes on to say that
even genuine geniuses that have deeply
studied the problems with healthcare. It
can't explain it that well and don't
understand that well. So if this is
about really about healthcare, it's not
going to get resolved anytime soon. But
the government shutdown thing is silly
and I think it'll get resolved pretty
quickly without serious impact. Like
last time I appreciated when he did it
actually to get the border wall done.
That was one of his epic all-time
moments in his first administration.
So what so what were your success? So
let's just say the government shut down
to get something out of it. What would
you consider this government shutdown
leading to a success? Tom, I'm going to
come to you as well. Brandon, you first.
Well, that's the the problem, I guess,
is that it doesn't seem like Trump is
asking for anything. It seems like the
Democrats are asking to increase the 2.4
trillion in healthcare spending to
something else, which I don't like I
think it needs to go down by a lot, if
anything. So, I I don't think they could
break on that. Um, it doesn't I haven't
heard Trump ask for anything, so I I
don't know if it's going to come to a
resolution.
Very interesting. Tom, what would you
say?
So, here's here's what's going on,
America. And Brandon, back me up here. M
there's a thing called a continuing
resolution.
Yes.
And you'll see CR. You'll see Wall
Street Journal, you know, your local
wherever you're getting news, you'll see
CR this week, you know, um senators,
congressman arguing over a CR. You have
AOC telling the Senate saying, "I am
ready and you can negotiate with me
directly." Until three senators said,
"Hey, check you're in the House of
Representatives. We're the Senate." So
Grant,
they said that.
Well, not like that. I said that, but
they were like, "Excuse me, the Senate
will negotiate with itself." But she's
out there grandstanding. So, everybody's
grandstanding about CR. What is a CR?
The continuing resolution is a bill that
says how to keep a resolution to keep
the government continuing. But it goes
back to exactly what Vinnie was talking
about. Remember when we covered the
Inflation Reduction Act on this podcast
and we dove inside and we said, "Wait a
minute, circumcisions for Tunisia."
Remember that thing? And there was
things in there, but it goes like this.
What does that mean, though?
Hey, Patision
for Tunisia.
We are giving money.
Hey, Pat, I know you're speaker of the
house, and I respect you, sir, but um I
you can have my vote, but I got to have
the circumcisions in Tunisia. I need 5 a
half million. It's going to a foreign
aid organization.
Is that really an epidemic going on over
there?
No, but that's an example. And then they
go to Vinnie and Vinnie says, "Hey, um,
we're building a dam in Minnesota. I
need another 40 million for the dam. you
got to hide it in here. And then you're
and then suddenly the continuing
resolution is is is is bloated with all
this stuff.
But but Tom, you you sent a clip to Rob.
This is something that's important to
them, right? The 2019 debate that was
taking place. Watch this clip, folks,
that uh Tom sent in to Rob.
This goes to Maxine Waters saying you're
trying to make me say this. They speak
for themselves right here.
Watch this, folks.
Raise your hand if your government plan
would provide coverage for undocumented
immigrants.
Here we go. Raise your hands, folks.
Look at that. All of them. Oh, all of
it. It's unanimous.
And so, so here's my thing, cuz I now
cuz as you guys are are all talking and
Brandon, you too, you made a good point.
Why Why are the Democrats so so loud and
so proud and willing to shut down the
United States government for illegals?
And I thought of Brandon, am I right or
am I wrong? It's for for votes and it's
for power because if you promise them
health care, then you're creating like
this long-term dependency. So these
people that are coming over for the
future voting base because think about
it there's Tom Hman said there's almost
20 million of them here. I think Trump
and Trump said that they they deported 2
million. Okay, good for you. But that's
still 18 million people that are here
and you incentivize them to stay here.
And then guess what? We're going to
we're the party that's going to give you
free healthcare. Vote for us because I
mean what why else do Democrats care?
They don't give a damn. If you if you
guys think Democrats care about your
your well-being, you're wrong. And look
at what this open border that they have
all these illegals here that they want
to pay for. How many how many jobs have
have Americans lost? How many crimes
have been committed towards Americans?
How many sexual assaults, I don't want
to say the R word, but how much stuff
has to happen to prove to Democrat
voters they don't care about you. They
care about the votes and they care about
their power and that's it. Then then
they don't care.
Danny, you hit a great point. I go for
it. Side point. If Kamla wins the
election, are they pushing this hard for
the healthcare right now?
Of course not.
Right. But they lost the election, then
they're looking for more votes.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay, so watch this, folks. As we're
going through this, there's a story that
comes out that says uh where's the story
here? Democratic Party hits historic law
favorability in a new national poll.
Here's another one. They had one a month
and a half ago. There's another one that
comes out if you guys want to go to this
on page 15. Uh uh uh uhh. Let me go to
it here. I thought I had it. Page uh
have 16, but let me see where 15 is.
You have it? If you just give it to me,
I'll read it.
Oh, I have it right here. 15. I was just
looking at the date that said at 10:1.
Uh, okay. Here we go. So, Democratic
Party hits the laws. It sounds in what
sounds like a broken record. The
Democratic Party hits another historic
low national poll this week. 30% of
voters nationwide question in Quinn
Quinnipac University survey said that
they have a favorable opinion of
Democratic Party. Let me say that one
more time to you folks. 30%.
30
30%.
30%. And 54% said they hold an
unfavorable opinion. This is the lowest
favorability rating for Democratic party
since the Quinnipac poll began asking
voters this question in '08, which means
it's never been any lower. The survey's
released uh uh noted the Quinnipac
survey was uh the latest poll this year
that shows this and obviously there's a
lot of this stuff going on. So Tom, as
as they're going through this, don't you
think, and maybe Brandon, I'll come to
you. Don't you think as they're going
through this
that they have to sit there and realize
this is real numbers? You can't just go
up there and keep playing this game.
People are not liking it. People are not
happy about this. People want to go back
to common sense. And the more
conservatives and Republicans go to
common sense, the more they feel they
have to do complete opposite and they're
thinking like this is our way of winning
the vote because we have to go against
the grain.
Yeah. and favorability goes lower and
lower and lower. What do you think's
happening here?
Yeah. Um I mean it's sad when you have
to find an entire new voting base
because your country distrusts you so
much. Like um if they just, you know,
like if they just acted like normal
people, then they'd be fine. I mean,
most people who are Republicans right
now used to be Democrats at one point in
time. Like a lot of people in my family,
a lot of my friends used to be Democrats
cuz Democrats used to be the normal
people. But they won't let a normal
person get through the gatekeepers in
their party. like they they've destroyed
anybody who's been a threat to the
establishment. People like Bernie
Sanders and even um you know when Steve
Nay Smith starts acting like he might
run for president in a couple years,
they went on attack mode against him
right away. So it's they're doing it to
themselves and you know saying free
healthcare is like saying the war on
terror or the war on drugs. It's like
this open-ended impossible thing that
sounds good but is isn't feasible. Like
how about reform the health care system
instead of just blankly saying free
healthcare. So, um, yeah, I think that
they need to let a normal person get
through the gatekeepers to begin with to
Okay, so let me ask a question. Uh,
Brandon, how old are you?
30.
Just turned 30. Okay.
30. 30. So 30 years old.
It was a great party, by the way.
Yes.
So 30 years old. So the question is, uh,
where do you see like if you're if if
they hire you as a consultant, you're a
younger guy, you read everything and
anything that's on politics, you're, you
know, go through the material that's out
there. What are two or three areas that
you think Democrats could go attack?
Think about blue ocean strategy to say
if they went here they can get some
common sense people to join them. Where
would it be?
Okay, easy. I both parties should do
this. The cost of living number one. So
the immigration affects this too. The
cost of a house is went from I think
$350,000 on average to $475 over the
last six years like postco after
printing all the money. So you know we
used to build 500,000 houses a year in
the 70s. this now it's like 50,000
houses a year. So massive
from 500,000 in the 70s to 50,000 today.
So they don't make it conducive or easy
at all for home builders to build homes
profitably. You know like my grandfather
was a home builder. He said it was very
profitable back in the day but today
it's not even worthwhile to try to build
a starter sized home. So that I think
that's number one
for people. And then just simply
reforming the health care system like
maybe giving government grants to um
provide more doctors because it's
actually very hard to become a doctor or
a PA like they have a limited amount of
um doctors they take in their programs
like really qualified people don't get
into the programs a lot of the time. So
investing into things there are
shortages in like there shortages in
doctors there shortages and houses. So
like addressing market side pain points
instead of just saying like oh let's
throw money at it.
Okay third one. So I got the first one I
got the second one. What's the third
one?
Um, how about not being so inclined to
go to a war? You know, because both
parties seem that seems to be a really
bipartisan thing is to, you know, just
get into other people's business and,
um, assist in wars across the country or
across the world that we have nothing to
do with.
So, how do you do that? How do you do
the last one?
Uh, the last one I would say, uh, stop
giving money to Ukraine. Say, Ukraine,
hey, I'm sorry it's, you know,
unfortunate that you lost some land, but
we're going to have to give some land to
Russia because that's the only way
around this. What if what if you can get
some minerals in return for us to be
protected long term because they have a
lot of good things that they're offering
that US has to kind of like what the
deal he just did on the lithium deal
that the president went in and they
bought into it what 10% to say hey
we're going to have this problem in the
future we may as well protect ourselves
I think it was a Canadian company if I'm
not mistaken right
Canadian is in there and General Motors
Yep. So, so you know, somebody may say
to you, well, you know, we kind of need
that deal because Ukraine has some of
the best resources in the world,
but we didn't need that deal before this
war was happening. And I don't think
Ukraine's the only place in the world
where we could get those minerals and to
in order to get that deal and to end
this war. Like, so there's I don't see a
way in which they could get that
territory back without losing much more
than we gain with the mineral deal. You
know, Russia has those minerals. I think
a lot of countries in that area, even
Canada has a lot of the minerals. Canada
has like all the minerals we could ever
imagine that we would need, most of
which Ukraine has. So, I think the
minerals thing is just something that
sounds good,
right? So, you just have it. Tom, what
would you say?
Well, I agree with him because uh where
in that poll that we were just talking
about, the Quinnipac poll that led to
your question, um the Republicans have
made gains among black, Hispanic, and
younger voters. And that's it. It wasn't
more middle class people. It wasn't more
old people. Those blocks were there. It
was shifts among black, Hispanic, and
younger voters that led to the
Republicans under Donald Trump winning a
little bit more of every county and we
saw the red map. That's why the younger
voters, what did they do? They went
after social media. They want us, can we
censor the Republicans on social media
where the younger voters are and then we
can convince the younger voters of this?
And now they go the other way. Voting
block. Where's the next voting block?
All the undocumented. I don't care where
you came from. Let's give them
something. we will be the generous one.
Hey, you just got here. You're in
trouble. You're sick. You know what? We
will be the generous one. It's all about
manipulating the voting block. And I
think the first two things you said for
the uh younger voters, the cost of
living and healthcare. I happen to agree
with that. When you take a look um if
you go to get a job, you really need to
to get healthcare coverage. And young
people will tell you that they look for
the jobs where the benefit is like for
one healthcare. A lot of times you get
one person covered, just you. Or you
only have to pay a small amount and now
you have good health care. You break
your leg, you don't have to go to wait
in line at some low low rent HMO or or
deal with Medicaid. You can actually go
and get a good doctor and get good care.
So health care is big. And then cost of
living. We need more building and we
need more starter homes. And we need
starter homes. And by the way, we need
jobs in cities. We need jobs to return
to cities and we need like condos and
town houses, homes that young people
could afford in safe cities where there
are jobs. The whole thing would work if
you get one handwashing another on that.
But he hit the nail on the head on cost
of living.
And Becca, I just ask one question like
I'm just taking a step back and you you
guys all make great points there. It's
clearly it's obvious with the numbers
and the numbers are freaking screaming
through the roof. Democrats are they're
it's gone. The support is gone.
Everything is gone. Uh I don't see them
shifting. Do does anybody see them
changing gears, Pat, anytime soon? So,
and we all know that they could play
dirty, think of it in that sense. What
are they going to do? What can they do?
Because they know this ship is beyond
sinking, Pat. It's they're done.
Everybody, Hispanics, everybody is is
jumping ship. What is What is their
other option, Brandon? What else?
If they just take it. If they just gave
up, take it.
I But Tom, they don't just take it. Look
at Look at the history of what we're
just seeing and the stories are going to
come. January 6, Russia, these people
don't play. They're not They're not
finished. voting doesn't work, rig the
voting and just take it and then shift
to a socialist Marxist. That's the
That's the globalist agenda.
They will adjust. Now, I'm going to a
different place. Let me tell you,
Vinnie, this goes back to
uh uh this goes back to three years ago
when Trump uh lost. It was four years
ago, but three years ago when we're in
it,
everybody is like, "Oh my god, it's the
end of the world." You know, when we're
in COVID and we're getting strikes and
all this stuff is happening and my guys
are like, "Pat, what do we do? we got to
be creating. And I'm talking to a bunch
of the guys like I'm back in the days
there was a guy named Brian Rose who did
a podcast one time and he had 65,000
live watching him concurrent and
everybody's like, "Oh my god, look how
many people this guy watching." He had
all these guys that were doing like this
is in 2000. You know, you would see Meet
Kevin doing great things with podcast
and he was doing a great job every day
talking about the
the next stimulus package, the next
stimulus package and he was one of the
best guys doing it. Graham Stefen was on
all these guys that were doing stuff and
and giving their message and you're
like, "Hey, what's going to happen?
Who's going to stay up? How long are
they going to be able to do this?" And I
kept saying, "Let me tell you one thing
about common sense, man. Sometimes
common sense takes a minute,
but it's it's undefeated."
Yeah,
Vinnie. Common sense is truly
undefeated.
It is. And eventually anybody that's
manipulative, deceptive, dark,
you're you're eventually gonna get
exposed.
Exposed. And by the way, probably you
could have gotten away with it a 100
years ago.
Maybe you could have gotten away with it
60 years ago. An assassination attempt
happens. You could get away with it
because there was only one camera.
Yeah.
This is the worst time.
Yeah. This the worst time because a
podcaster can be saying something and
next thing you know five people can send
an anonymous email to you giving you
intel on what happened with the FBI,
what happened with CIA, what happened
with certain thing, blowing the whistle
in a indirect way with an anonymous
email, giving you all the intel and no
one's going to know that happens today.
Didn't happen 50 years ago. Didn't
happen 60 years ago. This is a time that
I think Democrats are going to adjust. I
just don't know who that person's going
to be that's going to come and have have
that conversation with them. Of course,
you're seeing a mass exodus of people
that are leaving. Their arguments suck
right now. Truly, their arguments and
their ideas suck. Let me read this
article to you that has nothing to do
with politics, but it has to do with bad
ideas. So, this article here says, "Poll
shows liberal women
are on a crash course with the dating
hell they created." What do you mean
crash course? Rob, if you want to pull
up the story here.
So, is there a glimmer of hope for
bitter single liberal women? A new study
shows from the Institute for Governors
and Civics at Florida State University,
which knows a lot about this because
they party hardcore. If you if you know
people from Florida State University,
they typically get stuck in traffic a
lot showed that yes, there might be
hope. Yet for single liberals who hate
conservatives so much that they would
never be willing to date one. Let me
read this again to you.
There might be hope yet for single
liberals who hate conservatives so much
that they would never be willing to date
one. But this study found out that
generally as liberal women age and
gravity takes over,
they become more that's the article
doesn't say that. I'm just
Yeah. They become they become more open
to dating a conservative man.
Weird.
However, their openness with age might
be for might all be for nothing.
According to the study, as conservative
men get older, they actually become less
open to dating a liberal. The result of
the study are not definitive by any
stretch of the imagination. Though there
is a certain kernel of truth to it.
There are plenty of young men in the
world who might not be fullon mega die
hard but hold conservative beliefs. They
are not so far right as to be unwilling
to date a liberal. Right. You just went
somewhere.
Stay with me.
They may I have a question already for
you. That's where I'm going with this.
They may have voted for Trump, but they
are fairly open-minded. Young liberal
women, on the other hand, would outright
reject this person as potential romantic
or life partner. It doesn't matter if he
voted for Trump, but disagrees with the
president's tariffs or deportation
policy. There is no nuance for a liberal
woman. They are completely intolerant.
And it's this intolerance that leads to
conservative men becoming more closed
off in older age. Again, this is a Daily
Caller story. How many conservative men
have seen
their relationships blow up because of
politics? How many have been rejected
just because they think abortion should
be reserved for extreme cases like
incest or dire medical emergency? I'd
better fair share. So Vinnie, I got a
question for you. You're you and I are
the same age. Okay. But let's go to the
28-year-old Vinnie.
Yeah.
Would the 28-year-old Vinnie consider
marrying a li marrying a hot 24 year old
liberal AOC voting socialist? 28. 28. If
I wasn't into politics.
You're not into politics. Of course, you
would have married her. Of course. Would
you even thought about it?
No.
She's hot.
I wouldn't even thought like hot. Like I
would
Brandon, you're 30.
Yeah.
A a a that girl that came that did a
commercial for us whom you introduced to
us, right?
If she was a hardcore liberal,
okay,
she's dropped that gorgeous.
You'll like her. She's attractive.
You're probably going to share this with
her. He won't stop talking. You ought to
go on a date with them already.
By the way, if she's a hardcore liberal
Mhm.
AOC
armpits the whole night, but she's
dropped it. Gorgeous.
Would you marry her?
No. No.
Why not? Why wouldn't you marry her?
Oh, they they'll ruin your life.
What do you mean by that?
Cuz they're they're just nasty. Like
that.
She's gorgeous, though.
I know, but it's like a trap.
Brandon, be careful. She's hot.
But the problem is with them is that
they they want to control the
relationship. They want control of
dynamic and they they just have like
this nasty.
You don't think as a man you can impose
your, you know, masculine side and raise
the kids the way you want?
No. They'd call that toxic masculinity.
They would. So even if she's gorgeous,
hot, dropped it. You walk in the mall,
everybody's having, you know, necks just
breaking because they're checking out
your girl. You don't care. You wouldn't
marry here if she was a liberal.
Mary, no. I might get tricked like
initially, but um Mary, no. That'd ruin
your life. You know, you always you
always say you can make the wrong
decision with who you marry and it could
ruin your life.
It's so true though. Mind you, if I if I
was meaning 28 and like his age and like
involved with politics the way that
absolutely not because the values aren't
there. The child upbringing is not
there. The letting them be whatever they
want trans. I'm not with that. And then
Pat and I understand that there are
Democrat Christians. I'm not I'm not
stupid. But do they really give in to
God? Are they really going to raise the
family under?
What if she's a challenge?
What do you mean a challenge?
Like you like a challenge. You're like,
I think I can convert her.
Convert. I don't
you you you like you you guys are laying
in bed and you kind of drop a MAGA hat
next to her.
You like give her like a pink, you know,
lingerie with MAGA sticker on the back
of it. I just bought it from Victoria
Secret. You drop it. She's wearing it.
She has no clue. There's a sticker on
the back that says MAGA. And he said,
"Babe, you look so good. Turn around.
Let me take a picture of you." Look at
the
What is that you put on?
You got the home of the Patriot missile
boxer shorts
and the makeup breakup. But you wouldn't
do it. You're not going to do it. I
can't do it because I already know long
run like it's not worth it's not worth
the effort to try to fix her to get on
the journey that we're on.
So, you know what's happened with them?
Yeah.
Because they the looks, you know, go so
quickly, right?
I guys, I got kicked in my hand by my
son in the pool 3 months ago.
Let me tell you, it's still there. I
would have recovered within 24 hours.
Oh, easy money.
It's still there if I was in my 20s,
right? It's a very different life. I
went to the doctor yesterday. I gave
enough blood to, you know, share with a
small little village in uh Africa.
Literally, I gave so much blood. I'm
like going like this. I'm like, "No,
there's only like eight more left." And
she keeps taking blood and I'm just
watching the blood squirting into this
thing. I'm like, "How much more blood do
you need from me?" Like, I mean, am I
getting paid to give you all this blood?
No, we just kind of need to test your uh
whatever stuff. And I'm 46. So, the
doctor's like, "Look,
you're kind of that age." I said, "I
know. I'm thinking I'm going to do it at
50." Well, the doctor's saying you got
to do it at 45. I said, "I can take some
time." No, you kind of got to do it.
It's now. Now or never.
You want me to really do it? Yeah, you
got to do it. I said, "Dude, I don't
want to do it. It's a little bit
awkward. You got You know what I'm
talking about. You know, you just did it
a few months ago. It was like the
greatest day of your life. You were
coming in here celebrating, excited. You
felt lighter, happier."
The doctor was very happy.
Okay. Yeah. The doctor was like, "Yeah."
So, but go into it. I mean, think about
this, Tom. Think about this. Think about
this.
Think about just that look right there.
Right.
Go a little bit lower. Go a little bit
lower. They don't want to have kids.
They don't want to get married. They're
angry. They hate men. They're angry. But
do you think they were born this way?
No, Pat. I think the system did because
what those women look at this group and
look at the epidemic that's happening.
They're not having kids. And what's the
globalist Brandon idea is less people.
We There's too many you you you've heard
it from Bill Gates and them. What's the
biggest problem? There's too many human
beings. They've said these words. Who
was the the prince um the Duke of
Jack? No, no. The guy the the the guy
from England that died. He was a prince,
I believe, of York. When they they said
he goes, "You know what? If I die, I
would love to come back as a virus just
to kill as many people as I can." He
This is a a a loyal a royal family
member. It's too many people, Pat. And
guess what? This is a whole huge
generation of women that are like, "I
don't need men. I'm independent. All I
need is my dog and my cat." Prince
Phillip, he said, "If I reincarnated,
I'd come back as a deadly virus to solve
overpopulation." So that whatever that
well I mean he looks like a total
street
zoom a little bit. He looks like
somebody.
Tell me that guy if you want.
He's like a Bondville.
He died. He's dead if I'm correct.
Oh, he was dead.
He looks like he looks like a white
walker from Game of Thrones. But my
point is P I I go in a bigger umbrella.
It's it's this is a mission complete cuz
look at how many women right now are
like, "No, I don't need a man. I don't
need nothing. I'm independent." But then
once it gets to a certain age, it's
like, "Oh my god." Looking back, I was
fooled. It's like the people that were
that bought the Russia collusion, bought
the Trump as Hitler, it's like now it's
now it's too late.
Yeah, but that's the part. So, where I'm
going with this, Tom, and I'll come to
you to wrap this one up. Uh, unless if
you have anything else to say. So, where
I'm going with this is the following. If
if your bad policies
destroy people's lives and they
eventually figure it out, there is
nothing worse than, for example, okay,
you guys going to hear I'm going to make
an announcement here probably next week.
I have been wearing this same exact shoe
for the last two weeks.
I've been wear I'm not even kidding.
I've been wearing the same exact shoe
every day the last two weeks. Okay. the
same shoe every day for the last two
weeks
with three-piece suits and everything.
I wear I'm wearing a suit, right? I'm
about to go to Vegas. With everything
I'm wearing, I wear this shoe, right? Do
you know what's worse
than when you come out with a product
and people don't like it? What do they
do when they don't like the product?
When when you go to a store, No, worse
than bashing. Yeah, we'll come back to
this, Rob. We'll show it. But when you
go back to it, you buy product.
What's the worst thing you want to
happen with your product? When you when
you come out with a product,
like you as as a product maker,
say you came out with a product.
Oh, reviews. People People trashing it.
What's worse than reviews?
No sales.
What's worse than sales?
Uh like something wrong with returns.
Yeah. People not wanting it.
Hey, man. I want a refund.
Yes.
This sucks. Yeah. Right. I want a
refund.
We're at the vault conference. Vault
ends for the magical event. Do you know
how many tickets we sold to next year's
Vault Conference?
4,100
plus tickets to next year's V
Conference.
From one year from
from one year from that, that's going to
be at the MGM Grand Arena.
Holy moly. I mean, people come I just
came as a general four years ago. Then I
bought an executive. Then I bought five
of my guys. Then I bought a co ticket
and came with 28 of my employees. What?
I'm bringing my team next time.
Yeah. I mean, it's that's the most
beautiful thing. But here's the bad
thing about bad products is you're
seeing so many people asking for refunds
of democratic policies.
As they age, they're coming back and
saying, "I want a refund. You destroyed
my life.
I was a hot 23-y old girl. You convinced
me to go around and who cares? My body
body count doesn't count." I went
through 68 guys. Jeez,
I did all this stuff and now no man
wants to marry me and everybody wants to
know what my body count is and I'm a
Christian woman out and I want to tell
them the truth, but at the same time
when I do they run. What should I do?
What should I do? The only thing I can
do is settle for this guy and settle for
that guy. What do I do now? Right?
Because somebody bought them that sold
them that these ideas are okay to buy
into. So to me, I do think eventually
they have to figure it out because
Vinnie, if they don't,
it's going to be a shellacking for 20
years.
I think so.
It's going to be a shellacking for 20
years. I really mean it. It's going to
be bad for 20 years. Tom, your thoughts
on the story here?
Well, I I'll give you a a personal
experience I had. Um, you know, I was
redoing my kitchen on a house I had. I
was single. I hadn't met Kim yet. I
would meet Kim like five years later.
Now, maybe not an appropriate story.
No, no, no, no. you're going to go.
But the um the contractor, his kind of a
foreman, was a form woman. She went out,
checked on the guys and everything.
She was?
Yeah. She was like 40 years old.
I'm telling you, don't do the story.
No.
I didn't I didn't date her. Uh but I
noticed I noticed the way she talked to
the She was very attractive and she was
out there every every day
coming by the house, making sure that
the cabinet makers are on time, all
this. She was a good foreman for the
owner of the construction company. And
one day the owner of a construction
company says, "Hey,
um, remember she's coming to my house,
she can she sees the Ferrari I'm
restoring with a million parts in the
garage, right? She sees where I'm
living. She sees that I'm single and
she's I believe she was 40. I I was less
than that. I was like 34 at the time.
And the guy says to me, Pat, he says,
"Hey, you know, she's not dating
anybody." And I said,
"No, she I think she she thinks," and I
remember the word. She says, "She thinks
you're interesting." And I said, "Yeah,
yeah, that's very nice of you." Cuz I
just was trying to be nice, but I'm not
interested. Cuz I thought she seemed,
here comes the word, bitter. The way she
would talk to the guys on the job site
and then I would see her out then talk
on her phone, she just came across to me
as like a bitter person. So here you
have the biz.
So guess what? No,
she wanted she wanted the biz dock.
So I looked back at this and I just
pied. I said, "No, no, thanks." And
because I said no,
tell the real story. She was sound like
super nice.
Told me a different version of how to
try to be more nice.
Was she wearing a tool belt?
No. Like
was she wearing a tool belt? Tom,
my mind's telling me no.
No, no, no. The point is I saw it. I saw
it. And I feel that she was bitter and
she was reaching out. She tells
you telling the full story.
No, I I had nothing to do.
She reached out and then Tom
I had nothing to do and it she was super
from then on she was even nicer. will
tell you a similar story because I said
I will tell you a similar story.
You guys are teasing me. I'm saying I
saw it.
I just don't want the whole story to cuz
you told me the story how it went and
she upstairs
because Yeah, I don't want to get into
the That's what I'm saying. You know, if
you get No, there was there's no other
story to it because but the the survey
is right.
Yeah.
If I had said, "Yeah, maybe let's let's
go out. Let's go out grab hamburger, you
know, just have a casual lunch or
something.
Can you run a poll?"
10 minutes into a poll.
You know what happened? Hang on a
second. Run this. Run a poll. And I want
this to be the poll. How many of you
think
Tom hooked up with him? Yes or no? Run
this poll. But let's see what the
audience thinks.
We can see what they think.
Let's see what the audience think. You
know what's going to happen? Just if
you're going to tell them you were going
to 5 minutes after you're at lunch, how
do you feel about abortion?
Do you think abortion is okay in extreme
cases? What do you mean like rape,
incest, or Chuck Schumer? I you know,
what do you believe? People People are
voting, Tom. They don't believe you.
1,7
people listen to the podcast. Two.
Oh, come on. Bisc army.
I didn't. I'm telling you. I I saw it
though. I was looking
said something to her.
No, she looked bitter. But let me tell
you, I was like not interested.
At this point, it's 3,000. She's about
to get into the message right now. and
she she's going to become she's going to
get a membership and comment.
Uh by the way, if you're out there
listening to this, the lady foreman who
was kind of bitter many years ago, you
had a chance to get the vis
and you didn't.
You had a chance. And if you're there
watching this, you can connect Tom.
It's been many years and maybe connect
us and give us some intel, get back to
the story. Let me tell you, obviously
we're having a lot of fun here. We're
having a lot of fun here. And you know,
I will tell you true story. I'm 28. I've
already made a decision to get married.
I want a wife and I'm talking to four
girls and all the four girls I'm seeing
who's going to be my wife, who's not.
One of the girls I really like and her
and I have spent a lot of time together
since I was probably 24, 25. We just
enjoyed each other's company, Persian
girl. And she was really cool. I looked
past the fact that I took her to a Billy
Graham event that took place in Pasadena
in 03. It was a November event. Can you
Rob, can you pull up to fact to check my
numbers?
Did Did Billy Graham speak in Pasadena
in 2003? November. Four nights at Rose
Bowl. Type in Rose Bowl. I want to know
if it's 03 or 04. I went three out of
the four 04.
What was the day? 04. Okay. That I took
her there.
So it was 04. I took her there and I
took a bunch of guys there and Billy
just crushed it. I'm trying to see what
she's going to be doing. And then fast
forward uh the the the day before it's
got to be like a week before Jen and I
start dating. I'm single
and we're at a bar in Pasadena Opas and
she is telling me, "Pat, please be
honest with me. Do you want to be with
me? Cuz I love you. I want to be with
you, but I you're going to break my
heart if we get together and you leave
me. I will be destroyed. Please don't do
that to me. And she's crying telling me
this at the bar at 1:00 in the morning.
Mhm.
And I truly enjoy this girl's company.
Nothing's happened with Jen. Jen and I
are not on a date. This is a week before
Jen and I start dating.
And I'm sitting there and I'm just kind
of going through it. I'm like, "Dude,
politically,
you're a hardcore John Ky person.
You're UNICEF.
You know, this person, she hated
Republicans." And I'm not even a
political person at this time. I'm just
a 28-y old guy that's just making money.
That's I'm not even talking politics.
I'm just trying to do my thing. But I I
had to in that moment say, she says,
"Only pursue me if you know you're going
to marry me one day, please." And I
said, "I know I can't marry you one day,
so I can't do this." And I walked away.
And she's in tears crying, but says,
"Thank you." We hug. It's the last time
I ever spoke to her.
Wow.
I was 28 years old. So then this Lady
Foreman showed up, okay?
And you hooked up with her on the way
home
and 20 years later, we meet each other
and we say the foreman, the foreman.
And she said, "Hey, listen. I was
working for this one fellow, call him a
biz Doc, and he never introduced me to
his bisc. And I will meet you. I don't
even want to marry you." Oh. Oh, he's
talking about his listen. I was I'm
singing like, you know, she's playing
the other song, Jaguar Edge, let's get
married. I'm like, dude, I don't want to
get married. I just want to like
Oh, man.
But anyway, so that true story. True
story. Simply because the kids would be
confused when it comes down to the
values and principles I want to share.
Marriage is already hard enough when
politically you're on opposite sides. It
is so challenging. A Christian can marry
a Catholic. A Christian can marry a Jew,
but their own on the same side
politically. They have a higher chance
of making it than a Christian marrying a
Christian where one's a socialist and
one's a Republican.
Yeah. No,
policies and ideas got to be on the same
page.
And uh anyways, John Kerry, it was all
your fault. Just so you know that. But
what an incredible foreman she was. I
mean, you got Tom respect. All right,
let's get to the next story here. Let's
get to the next one. Pete Hexet wants
you to get in shape, folks. And he's
like sick of it. Okay. No more, you
know, eating cheesecake six nights a
week and putting on weight and you can
only run a two mile in 17 minutes and 58
seconds. He wants you to get in shape
and some people don't like that. Some
people want their military veterans to
be little fatties going out there to
where they get tired after jogging for 2
minutes like the people at the view. But
Pete wants you to be in shape. Pete
wants you to do pull-ups, push-ups, get
back into masculine soldiers that we
have. And this is a speech that he gave
and some people are not happy about
this. Go ahead, Rob.
Frankly, it's tiring to look out at
combat formations or really any
formation and see fat troops
body.
Likewise, it's completely unacceptable
to see fat generals and admirals in the
halls of the Pentagon.
Fat generals commands around the country
and the world. It's a bad fat general.
It is bad. It's not who we are.
Okay, so listen. That's fat shaming to
some people, right? He continues, Rob.
Is this another one?
Yeah, I have a bunch of clips. This is
him talking about him not wanting his
sons um to fight with uh overweight
troops. Yeah,
he doesn't want that. Go ahead, Rob.
I don't want my son serving alongside
troops who are out of shape or in combat
unit with females who can't meet the
same combat arms physical standards as
men or troops who are not fully
proficient on their assigned weapons,
platform, or task. or under a leader who
was the first but not the best.
Standards must be uniform,
genderneutral, and high.
Okay, so he's saying this now, Sunonny
Host, Rob, if you can find out from the
view. She finds this slightly, you know,
inappropriate. Why why would we want to
do this? What's wrong with having fat
people in the military? Go ahead, Rob.
really befuddled by why by that the
optics were terrible, meaning all of our
top military brass are all in one place
and we spent $6 million to get them
there. That that didn't make a lot of
sense to me. It also didn't make a lot
of sense um to me that he was saying
that he was going to toughen physical
standards and re and review the
anti-hazing policy um by sort of
implementing a hazing policy. And then
also he said he was going to um return
to the highest male standard for combat
positions because the troops were fat.
Like I I just I I don't understand how
that was supposed to be an uplifting
message for our military.
Maybe he's referring to Colonel Sanders.
It was it was just it was it was really
a bizarre thing. He started talking
about woke DEI policies. By the way,
there are no gender quotas in the
military. By the way, he um fired uh
more than a dozen military leaders, many
of them people of color and women. He
fired the chairman of the Joint Chief of
Staffs, General Charles Brown, Jr., who
is African-American. He fired the first
woman to command the Navy, Admiral Lisa
uh Franetti. I I I just I don't
understand the sort of hypocrisy of
firing these people, having all these
people meet together, and then
denigrating them.
Did you see Did you look at it? They
look like They're looking at him like he
has two heads. Well, they
Okay, Vinnie, thoughts.
Okay. Well, first of all, I absolutely
love what he did. It's it, by the way,
the military, for everybody that knows
out there, it's not a it's not a fashion
show. It's not a freaking summer camp.
We are in the business of war. And war
is is having trained killers to go and
fight and fight the enemy. Okay? And we
have to be war ready at every single
moment. Okay? Look, by the way, have you
seen videos of China and Russia,
Brandon? Those people do not play games
over here. Like last the last four years
when Biden was in, I was watching more
transgender Tik Tok videos of guys like
yes on like on aircraft carriers and all
that stuff. It's like guys that's not
what we need. And this is the prime
example of DEI will have you DIE. Okay,
I'm sorry and I'm I'm not sorry because
even did you notice the views audience?
Not a laugh, not an applause, not
nothing. I want my soldiers to be
because they're not stupid, Pat. Because
at the end of the day, remember um Jack
Nicholson in um Few Good Men. You want
me on that wall. You need me on that
wall. That's who you need. You need a
soldier like that, like Pete Hexipath. I
was like, "Listen, with all the stuff
that's happening inside of America, we
could argue, we could fight, gaze, this
bathrooms, all that, whatever. When it
comes to war and protecting the country,
you need a leader like that. You need
trained killers to go out there and
fight for us when it comes down to it."
Thank God we haven't had anything crazy
since um you know 9/11 Iraq and all that
stuff. But Pat, that's the attitude. And
I'm sorry those generals, get your ass
in shape. He's only having two. How many
uh PT tests a year did you have Pat? I
had one. We had one and we had to take
care of ourselves. And if he's taking
care of of himself and he's a secretary
of war, all those other guys need to
know what a PT test is. A lot of people
It's push It's push-ups, sit-ups, and a
two-m run and pull-ups. Okay? And you
have to do it within a specific amount
of time and reps because guys at the end
of the day if god forbid crap hits the
fan we're going to war. You don't want
some overweight guys or some people that
are like you know my feelings I'm trans.
You know you know what the thing with uh
Sunonny Hust right is am I saying her
last?
Okay. Would you say she's pretty?
I think she's she's a good-look girl.
I think she's gorgeous. I I think let's
just say it. I'm not going to you know
if you pull up her pictures I think
she's beautiful. Yes.
Okay. Sunny. Do you think you get the
job that you have if you were 80 lbs
heavier?
Why not? Do you think you get this show,
the job that you have if you were 80 lbs
heavier?
Well, they give it to
Do you think No, but but no, but Whoopi
is actually a lot older. But Whoopi is a
very very very very famous individual,
an actress. She's made it. Okay.
But do you think Sunny gets the job if
she's
not that attractive?
No.
Do you think Sunny woke up one day and
look like that?
How hard do you think Sunny works out?
Oh, she's
How hard do you think Sunny goes to the
gym and the way she takes care of her
body? I'm sorry, Sunny. How hard is it
to look like you? So, why shouldn't we
have that expectation of them? Why are
you playing a victim for these other
guys? I'm feeling sorry for him. How
much does Sunny make per year? Can you
type in how much Sunny makes per year?
What does Sunny make per year? What's
her salary? I actually don't know what
million, let's say.
I don't know what it is, but whatever it
is, 5 million. Guess what? She deserves
it because she takes care of her body.
Now, do I agree with her politics and
all this other stuff? No. Even a guy
that doesn't agree with your politics
respects the hell out of you working
out. And by the way, guess what's never
gonna happen? Oh [ __ ] we're under war.
Is Sunny Hust ready to go to war? They
don't care if you're going to go to war
or not. But we do with the folks in the
military. Bingo.
And let me tell you, I saw a lot of
generals when I was in the military that
were out of shape. My colonel,
Lieutenant Colonel Peacock, was in top
shape. He's a general now on in top. He
respected the hell out of that guy. It
was nothing like chasing a man that was
20 years older than you that was running
13 miles 13 a minute a minute two miles.
You're like, "Dude, that's my They had
the moral authority to punk you a little
bit."
Hey, this old man's whooping your ass.
Don't let this old man. Don't let this
old man, you know, you're left, you're
right. Hey, get your It was such a great
thing to see somebody doing that. So,
even for Sunny, when you're going out
there playing this political [ __ ]
that you're playing, you still work your
ass off to look like the way you do.
They need to work their ass up to make
sure we're protected. I don't see any
problems with that that uh they need to
be doing that. I'm so glad uh Hexadet is
doing this. There's another clip I want
to play before I come to Tom and
Brandon. Rob, if you want to play the
other clip by Pete Hex and then Tom, I'm
coming to you. Uh I think this is the
one. Go for it. No more identity months,
DEI offices, dudes in dresses.
Good. Bingo.
No more climate change worship.
Let's go.
No more division, distraction, or gender
delusions. No more debris.
Good.
As I've said before and we'll say again,
we are done with that [ __ ]
Nice.
And by the way, that's exactly how I
view the leader of the military to
speak.
Period.
Like that. You want to see him speak
like that. You go back and think about
in the history books, but Ulysus Srand
or some of these guys that maybe would
have drank or partied on, but when it
came down to war and Lincoln needed
somebody to get the job done, it wasn't
Mlelen that got the job done. It wasn't
a lot of other guys. It was Grant who
was a little bit rough around the edges
that was able to go out there and talk
to the troops and they respected the
hell out of him. He got the job done.
And to me, I'm getting the vibe that
he's doing this. And by the way, you
know, good for him because at first, you
know, I was a little bit like, you going
to go from TV to this? But I'm loving
the way he is going about this, the way
he's driving the initiatives for our
military. I prefer this. Tom, your
thoughts on this?
Well, common sense is making a comeback
because you know what? A poll of
American people yesterday.
Two to one two to one believe women
should be allowed in combat roles. Two
to one. However,
there's a comma.
and 77%
felt they must meet if they must meet
the physical requirements of the job.
So 2 to one says if you if your daughter
wants to go off in the army and wants to
be a Green Bray, okay, but 77% said she
better measure up to the requirement. Y
isn't that interesting?
And it's lead by example.
And there it is upside down. Only 25%
think women should have lower physical
requirements. That means 75% I read 77
think that they have to meet the
requirements. Common sense is making a
comeback. Yeah. And you nailed it. He
look at him. Look how much shape he's
in. You have to lead by example. You
can't be even a full colonel going,
"Hey, here's the standards that the
Secretary of War passed on for me to
you, but you're out of shape." No, bro.
I want But like other countries have to
look at us guys and be fearful. You know
what I mean? During the Biden, bro, let
me explain something to you. They were
laughing at us. They were laughing at us
and now it's serious business.
Pat, you used to share a story I love.
You said there was an older I don't know
if he was a drill sergeant or a colonel
or somebody that three of you needed an
attitude adjustment and he took you out
to the back corner. What happened there?
And he was older than you.
Of course he was. He was 20 or 15 years
older than us. So he took us to the back
and we were acting like we're gangsters
and tough. And he says, "Oh, really? You
guys are gangsters? You're tough. No
problem."
Gets into Humvey. We go to the back and
takes his rank off
and says, "Okay, who wants to go first?"
And we're like, "Drove." He wasn't a big
guy. He was a 5'8 guy. 5'8 and 58 5'9
guy. And we're big boys. And he says,
"Who wants to go for?" Like, "Dro,
sorry. We don't want to hurt you." No.
No. No. I won't tell anybody.
[Music]
Like, I'm good. He was one of those guys
that was a black guy that talked so
slow.
Oh, God. Scary.
Private bet. David,
I need you to drop and give me 20 right
now. He spoke like that. Everybody else
would scream.
This guy would speak to you.
Come
like dead.
It's even scarier.
You're dead. And he beat But he was so
smart about the way he beat us. He only
hit us in our stomach. Didn't hit us in
the face. No bruises.
Everything was here.
And we were like, we're done. And he
brought us back wherever he is right
now.
Because of that, I have mental issues.
Brandon, go for it.
Yeah. So, I'm in I look incredibly
favorably upon fat shaming, I think it's
um really good, necessary. Yeah. I mean,
cuz I think it's like like to say fat
shaming is bad. Like to say smoke
shaming is bad. Like to say um if you
say it's negative to smoke cigarettes,
like would we say that's socially
unacceptable? No. It's like objectively
unhealthy to be fat. So, you know, in
the military and the police department
and the fire departments, you know, you
you still see fat people in those
departments. And then in the military
too, I I know a lot of guys in the
military and they said in 2018 it went
from you you would discipline people and
um they call them smoking them out and
stuff for things and to uh higher
ranking people were literally afraid to
do that to newer people because they
would could get in trouble and lose
their rank or lose their um their jobs
and get kicked out of the military. So
literally privates were disrespecting
higher ranked people after 2018 because
they were no longer able to discipline
them because of the way that uh like the
HR stuff got in the military. They went
from the uh they called it Shark Week to
the Thunder Run. So they they changed
all the hazing stuff. They like took
hazing out of the military and that's
detrimental.
Well, they as I was leaving as a great
point, Brandon, as I was leaving the
military, 2001, 2002, uh they started
doing uh forms like they started giving
like if somebody yelled at you too much,
you could write it and like get I'm not
even joking and I'm at and I'm like
leaving and I'm like bye. It got soft.
You know, it's bureaucracy. If there's a
form.
Yeah.
It's like, how are you supposed to
instill fear and respect into people if
you can't hold them accountable?
No, I want I want I want killers, bro.
Like, we need we need killers. We don't
need emotional.
I'm with it. I'm with it. I'm with it.
So, you know, we'll see. We'll see
what's going to happen. By the way, Rob
ran a poll. Rob, can you pull up the
last poll you ran? Not about that, Tom.
At this point, we all know what happened
there. No, no, it's a different poll
that Rob ran about being in shape. Look
at the percentage of how people voted.
Look at the percentage of how people
voted.
Let's go.
7,300 people voted. Do you think members
of the US military should be in fit and
in top shape?
I guarantee
you some cheesecake and cheesecake.
We have a new V tame of future looks
pride. It's faith over fear cheesecake.
I got some faith over fear. I'm not
afraid that I'm going to get fat eating
this cheesecake. We got it for you
shipping it to you right now for only 29
bucks.
It's all in how you take the survey. Are
you in favor of military being strong
enough to kick the enemy's ass so the
enemy doesn't kick yours?
Yes.
Yes, I'm in favor of it.
Yeah, exactly. So funny.
Okay. All right. So, let's go to the
next story. Let's go to the next story.
Next story I want to get to is Trump and
Netanyahu announce peace plan, folks. US
President Halls one of the greatest days
in civilization
as he reveals the 20point road map to
end Israel Hamas war. and for him to
help run Gaza with Tony Blair. Okay,
here they are. Go for it, Rob.
This is a big big day. A beautiful day.
Potentially
very beautiful day.
One of the great days ever in
civilization.
Things that have been going on for
hundreds of years and thousands of
years. We're going to
at least we're at a minimum very very
close and I think we're beyond very
close. And I want to thank BB for really
getting in there and doing a job.
We've worked well together
as we have with many other countries,
both of us with many other countries,
which is the only way this whole
situation gets solved. And I'm not just
talking about Gaza. Gaza is one thing,
but we're talking about much beyond
Gaza.
The whole deal,
everything getting solved. It's called
peace in the Middle East.
So today uh is a historic day for peace
and prime minister Netanyahu. Rob,
you want to pull up the point?
We just concluded an important
because in that 20point plan, just so
you guys know, I believe Netanyahu
apologizes for the Israel's Qatar
strike. Okay. Deep regret, expressed
deep regret to his Qatari counterpart
Monday over September 9th strike aimed
at Hamas leaders in Doha, a Jewish
state. And uh yeah, so that came from
him. And then at the same time, so here
we go. Prime Minister Alan welcomed
these asurances emphasizing Qatar's
readiness to continue contributing
meaningfully to regional security and
stability. Prime Minister Antiotic
expressed commitment to the same. Israel
has long expressed annoyance that Qatar
plays a key role in the Middle East
peace negotiations. Despite hosting
Hamas political leaders, the September
9th attack had targeted top terror
figures as they gathered with Qatari
mediations
for another round of ceasefire
discussions. But here's a 20point uh
plan that they have in place. Gaza will
be dradicalized terror-free zone that
does not pose a threat to its neighbors.
Gaza will be redeveloped for the
benefits of the people of Gaza who have
suffered more than enough. If both sides
agree to this propo proposal, the war
will immediately end. Israeli forces
will withdraw to the agreed upon line to
prepare for hostage release. During this
time, all military operations, including
aerial and artillery bombardment will be
suspended and the battle lines will
remain frozen until conditions are met
for the complete stage withdrawal within
24 hours of Israel publicly accepting
this agreement.
72 72
72 hours. All hostages alive and
deceased will be returned and diseased.
Deceased and deceased. Yeah. Alive.
Alive or dead. Got it. Once all hostages
are released, Israel will release 250
life sentenced prisoners plus 1,700
Gazans who were detained after October
7, 2023, including all women, children,
and detained in this context. For all uh
every host Israeli hostage who remains
or released, Israel will release the Rob
I can't read the last part. We release
the something
the remains of the 15 deceased Gaz.
Okay, let's go to point number six. Uh
once all hostages are returned, Hamas
members who commit the peaceful coexist
and decommission and to decommission
their weapons will be given amnesty.
Members of Hamas who wish to leave Gaza
will be provided safe passages to
receive countries
receiving countries. Wow. Who's going to
receive that?
Egypt and Jordan have said no.
Upon acceptance of this agreement, full
aid will be immediately sent into Gaza
Strip. At a minimum, eight quantities
will be consistent with uh was what was
included in January 192025 agreement re
regarding humanitarian aid including
rehabilitation of infrastructure, water,
electricity and sewage,
entry of distribution and aid in the
Gaza Strip will proceed uh without
interference from the two parties uh
through through the United Nations and
its agencies and let the crescent Rob go
to the next one. Okay. uh uh opening the
Rafa Gaza will be governed under the
temporary transitional governance of
tech te tech te tech te tech te tech te
tech te tech te tech te tech te tech te
technocratic
interesting
uh a political Palestinian comm
committee responsible for delivering the
day-to-day running of all public
services and municipalities of the
people of Gaza huh okay uh Palestinian
international oversight supervision and
a new international transitional body
the board of peace which will be headed
and chaired by President Donald J.
Trump. Wow. With other members and head
of state announced, including former
Prime Minister Tony Blair, this body
will set the framework and handle the
funding for the redevelopment of Gaza
until such a time as the Palestinian
Authority has completed its reform
program. 10. A Trump economic
development plan to rebuild and energize
Gaza will be created by covening a panel
of experts who have helped birth some of
the thriving modern miracles cities in
the Middle East. Go to the next one. Rob
11. uh a special economic zone will be
established with preferred tariff and
access rates to be negotiated with
participating countries. No one will be
forced to leave Gaza and those who wish
to leave will be free to do so and free
to return. Good. We will encourage
people to stay and offer them the
opportunity to build a better Gaza.
Hamas and other factions agree to not
have any role in the governance of Gaza
directly or indirectly. That's big. in
in or any form if they'll be able to
pull that off. All military terror and
offensive infrastructure, including
tunnels and weapon production facilities
will be destroyed, not rebuilt. Huh. A
guarantee will be provided by regional
partners to ensure that Hamas and the
factions comply with their obligations.
And Rob, go a little bit. And the new
Gaza can't see the new Gaza poses no
threat to its neighbors or its people.
Okay, let's go to 15.
Do you have 15 16 or
I do I have 16 through um
20?
Yes. Here.
Boom. Boom.
We're almost there. So, let's just wrap
it. There you go. 16.
Israel will not comply or annex Gaza.
Occupy.
Will not occupy or annex Gaza as ISF
establishes control and stability. The
Israel Defense Force will withdraw based
on standards, milestones, and time
frames linked to demilitarization
that will be agreed upon and then go to
17. In the event Hamas rejects or delays
this proposal, the above including the
scaled up aid operation will proceed and
the terror area free areas handed over
from IDF to the ISF. An interfaith
dialogue process will be established
based on the values of tolerance and
peaceful exist coexistence to try and
change mindsets and narratives of
Palestinians and Israelis by emphasizing
the benefits that can be deprived from
peace while Gaza redevelopment vans and
when the PA reform uh program is
faithfully carried out the conditions
may finally be in place for a credible
pathway to Palestinian selfdetermination
and statehood. And last but not least,
the US will establish a dialogue between
Israel and Palestinians to agree upon a
uh political horizon for peaceful and
prosperous coexistence. Brandon, your
thoughts on this?
Yeah, so um it's great if that's um
true. I think that unfortunately the
reason that this is being talked about
right now is because uh think they're
gearing up to go back after Iran. Um,
just based off uh Rob, I sent you an
article that US refueling tankers are
being sent over to the Middle East in
heavy numbers and that's the it's the
biggest amount of the activity since the
last attack on Iran. So, um, yeah, I
would love to see this plan be carried
out. Like a lot of the big things is
that they're not going to be forcing
them to leave Gaza that because that'd
be messy. That they're not going to um
that they're not going to let Hamas keep
running the country because there was a
lot of assistance to let Hamas run the
country instead of the Palestinian
Authority. So, you know, I think all
those things are good points and
necessary to, you know, create the best
situation that's possible there. But,
um, I am concerned that this is probably
gearing up to um, let attention go back
to Iran.
Vinnie, what do you think about an
explosion?
All I was watching, all I was watching
was was your drink fizzing up. But, I
mean, on paper, it looks great, but at
the end of the day, what are we talking
about from a military standpoint? It's
Hamas is in the tunnels with the
hostages. Okay? Like, that's the main
goal. What operation? I still don't
believe cuz America I don't know how
Israel does it. America doesn't
negotiate with terrorists. Period. End
of story. We don't do it. So this
situation is getting back these how how
many hostages are left do you guys? Is
there a number?
50. What was the number? I may be wrong.
It's in that it's in the ballpark. It's
in that ballpark. But at the end of the
day, what are we talking about? We are
talking about
48 hostages.
48 left. Um and I pray literally pray
for them every single day for anybody
that's that's held hostage there. But we
have to be realistic. These people have
been probably tortured for what's been
been two years right now. The end goal
is like this should have been done
everything that's talking about that
with all these strikes and all the
everything Brandon should have been done
immediately uh at October 7th. We've
been dragging this on for for for a long
time. I don't see Hamas coming to the
table and going, "Yeah, okay. You can't
trust them." Okay, you can't trust
terrorists. So, I think it's been
dragged on for for way too long. Again,
all this looks good on paper, but at the
end of the day, is Hamas going to agree
with a 20point plan?
But let me ask you, if they if Hamas
rejects,
but hear me out for a second. Israel is
agreeing to this.
Yes.
Okay. And remember, I don't think Israel
wants this.
Okay.
Okay. But they're agreeing to this.
So now, if Hamas is rejecting this deal,
and you're seeing the leader of Hamas,
no, we're okay. Every once in a while
there's a price for freedom and all this
other stuff. Who does the onus fall on?
It's going to be on Hamas. Guess what
then? And I hate and I just said that I
pray for them. I'm going to pray for
them even more cuz they're like they're
going to kill everybody. And guess what?
To make an omelet sometimes you're going
to break a couple of eggs. It's not
going to be good for them. It's not
going to be good cuz that's the the end
game. Cuz even if they try to negotiate,
we're talking about Hamas, Tom. We're
talking about Hamas.
Did you see the interview that the Hamas
leader did with CNN?
Rob, can you pull that up? Did you see
what he had to say? Okay.
So, the leader of Hamas
did an interview with CNN. Rob, I just
texted it to you. If you can go halfway
through the the interviewer pushes the
leader of Hamas. You just got the text
and says, "Are you willing to do it at
the cost of are you willing?" So,
eventually, it's kind of like that
moment of I want the truth. You can't
handle the truth. And then eventually he
says it.
Okay.
He says it really says it out loud. And
if you can go halfway, Rob, this is the
leader of Hamas sitting down with CNN.
Go to about a minute, minute 40 mark.
Minute 30 mark right there. Brutal. Keep
going. Is
he have gunpowder on his forehead?
Occupation
things moment world. Okay, sir. Okay.
Okay. Go back. Right there. Right there.
Go back one more second. Beautiful. Go
for it. Right. Right there.
Changed now. Sir, you were just saying
that as a result of October 7th, you are
seeing millions of people marching in
the streets. You are seeing countries
recognize Palestine as a state. You are
seeing legitimacy for your people. And I
am asking you whether the price that
Palestinian people have paid so far was
worth it.
I know the price so high, but I ask
again what is the what is the option?
What is what is the what is the the the
the option lift to the Palestinian? You
know what? We waited for a peaceful
process for a peaceful uh means since
194 1993 since Oslo agreement till now
but I think we got the big deal.
Let me let me show you the the words of
your people. Okay, these are people in
Gaza and I want you to hear because your
own people in Gaza say that you do have
responsibility for the situation. I'd
like to show you this. Watch this.
[Music]
Please connect. Please watch. This is
not it. There's there's more.
I have seen this video. Yes. Yes. Hamas
knows who that guy.
I would like you. There are three people
here. I would like you to hear their
voices.
I know people are suffering. There are
some people blame Hamas.
Why will you not listen to the voices of
Palestinian people in Gaza?
Yeah. Yeah. I know this is but look this
is not the whole story. I know because
this is because of the Israeli crimes in
the in the Gaza Strip. It seems it seems
that you
see what happens right here.
So this is the part where when you go
back and forth and you watch who is
willing, who is not, who started this
one, Hamas started this one. Israel's
coming back and saying we're going to
destroy you. And then now Israel's
agreeing to pump the brakes because
you're right. And even, you know, I know
something's about to happen in Iran.
Something's going on over there on the
other side. Tom, how do you process this
yourself? So,
I could only get through like the first
five points and then I sat back and
said, "Okay, how the hell are they going
to remove Hamas? How is it going to be
dradicalized?
And if we have a place there, Tom,
how did how did we how did Trump get rid
of ISIS?
He just killed everybody.
I want you to think about this
because
bonk bonk.
How did Trump get rid of ISIS? What what
happened to ISIS? The the only thing you
hear about right now is ISIS in certain
factions of it in Nigeria, what they're
doing and killing the 125 pastors or
another faction you hear in Canada that
burned down 112 different churches in
Canada, mainly Catholic churches. You're
hearing about that, right? But if US is
involved, you don't think he's shivering
right now?
I I think so. But the other thing I got
to in the those first five points was
and 250 healthy life sentence prisoners.
How did those people end up in Israeli
prisons as life sentences?
They're killers and they killed and they
committed acts of terrorism. So you're
going to take 250 guys out of prison. So
terrorists.
Now let me give you a copy of this. This
is a 20point plan. And then point four
and five is you're not going to be
radical anymore, but we're letting you
go back over here.
Okay.
So, I I hope that something comes out of
this. But I clearly see it's just like
you pointed out in that clip right there
that there are the citizens want this.
So, the citizens are going to have to
hold part of the um it's hard to say
this, but the citizens are actually
trying to hold some of the Hamas
leadership to accountability. These are
people showing their faces in front of
TV cameras and are saying things.
They're disconnected from reality and
what I'm facing here. And I hope for
those citizens that they get Gaza back
so they can live and prosper with their
families. I hope they're innocent. But I
look at taking 250 terrorists, you know,
in prison on
the case. Now, what are we going to be
doing now?
Does this mean the attention is going to
go from here to Iran? Maybe. You know,
if all of a sudden we see stuff that's
going on with Iran right now escalate
very, very quickly. Also, don't be
surprised because I I don't think
they're done there. I I I don't think
that's uh that's done anytime.
We got a lot of these things going on at
once, too. Because I mean, like, this
can't we don't want this to be an Iraq
2.0 where we don't have leadership
there. Like, if they take out Hamas have
leadership there,
right? Like if they take out Hamas, are
they going to put a puppet leader in
because that's not really stable.
Yeah. Well, I mean, what what a lot of
people on the inside are saying, they
would like this to lead to an election
where Iranians can actually vote for who
they want.
Mhm. Now, will that happen? Will they
allow that to happen? Who knows whether
they'll allow that to happen or not? And
who is going to take his place over? Who
is that going to be?
Yeah.
You know, who are they going to have in
that place? So, Rob, what is this here?
This is Netanyahu just last week at the
UN where he talked about the Iranian
people getting their freedom.
Right. Right. Go for it.
The long-suffering Iranian people will
regain their freedom. They will make
Iran great again. And our two ancient
peoples
our two ancient peoples, the people of
Israel and the people of Iran, will
restore a friendship that will benefit
the entire world.
Okay, so now you know obviously
um Iranian people are sick of what's
going on there. Can Israel play a big
role in that? I think it can. Uh is US
going to need to get involved for the
Iran regime to fall? No question. Of
course, it's not going to happen without
it. Israel cannot do without us. So,
this is why. What are the chances? You
think that Netanyahu apologized to Qatar
that Trump said you better apologize or
else cuz you're ruining my relationship
with other dealings that I'm doing. What
are the chances?
I'm at I'm over 90.
I'm a 100%.
I'm a 100% with this. And I mean 100%. I
mean, of course, nobody knows for a
fact, but I'm up there to the point
where I know he's going to say, "Hey,
with
you better you better do this or else
I'm not going to defend you. Why are you
doing something? Like you know that
whole call that everybody talks about
the shouting match call that happened
with Trump screaming at Netanyahu. How
how much you think that happened?
I'm over 90 again.
Yeah. Same place.
So again, the main common denominator of
the trust goes to who? To one guy.
If the one guy is involved, I'm more
comfortable of how these things could be
executed. If he's not involved, you
know, and and by the way, flip the
story. Put Kamala being that one person
who fears him. Hamas fears Kamala?
No.
Will Hamas feel Biden. Fear Biden? No.
They're sitting there saying, "Thank
God, you know, it's Biden or Kamla."
This is the worst thing that ever
happened to Russia, to China, to Iran,
to everybody that this guy is now in.
Nobody wants this guy to be in because
whatever he says has to go and
exactly,
he's getting a lot of stuff done. So,
we'll see what happened here. Let's go
to the next story here.
Next story I want to get to is uh
Charlie Javis. Folks, after this story,
to all the single men watching this, we
have some extremely life-changing advice
for you. We'll get to that.
But first, Charlie Jabis
gets seven years for defrauding JP
Morgan Chase. Seven years while he's
getting this. Rob, go ahead and play
this clip first and then we'll go
through the whole thing. She was once a
star CEO on the Forbes 30 under 30 list.
But now a judge has sentenced this
startup founder turned fraudster to
seven years in prison after being
convicted of duping a major investment
bank out of a staggering $175 million.
We started Frank with really thinking
about how are we the ally for the
student and the family.
Charlie Jiz sold her startup company
called Frank to JP Morgan Chase back in
2021. At the time, she claimed her
company, which helped streamline the
financial aid process for low-income
college students, had millions of users.
But after the deal went through, JP
Morgan discovered that number was close
to just 300,000, and Javvis had
fabricated most of the user information.
Javvis, now 33, was convicted in March.
Prosecutors requesting a 12-year prison
sentence, but her lawyer asking for
lenience, dismissing comparisons between
Javvis and disgraced entrepreneur
Elizabeth Holmes, claiming that Javvis's
company was real, unlike Holmes's
company, Theronos, which sold a fake
blood testing product. Javvis's lawyer
also arguing the bank shouldered some
responsibility, saying it was a
28-year-old versus 300 investment
bankers from the largest bank in the
world, and claiming they rushed the
acquisition. The judge agreeing the
bankers do shoulder some blame, but
adding the sentencing hearing was about
punishing Javvis's conduct, not JP
Morgan's stupidity.
Prison sentence, the judge also ordering
Jvis to pay nearly $300 million in
restitution, telling her, "I don't think
you'll be committing other crimes, but
others have to be deterred."
Jeez,
there you go.
And J remains. Well, I'll tell you, uh,
this is this is the dark side of of
startups. And there's so many people
that come to the vault that are honest
people just trying to build a business.
And then there are people that get out
there that say, "Fake it till you make
it." You know, put together, you know,
you don't know if it's going to work,
but you know what? You It's a It's the
venture capitalist money. I've heard
young people and entrepreneurs openly
say that there are things in their deck
that weren't accurate and stuff. And
this is what happens. This is that's
upstream. This is downstream. Downstream
you end up in a pond of your own deceit.
And then every now and then somebody
speaks up. And this was JP Morgan. And
so you the whole defense here about uh
oh JP Morgan and the the comment by the
commentator there I'll read out the
exact words of the uh lawyer.
It says um and it was Judge Helerstein
says judge Helerstein we would never ask
you to punish JP Morgan stupidity but we
submit that it's a relevant factor. In
other words our clients are criminal but
the victim was too stupid. That's like
saying that if that if um that if your
kid stole the lunch money from an
autistic kid that your kid shouldn't be
punished because the autistic kid was
too dumb. No, this is this shows her
hubris. And I'm glad this has happened
because this is a cautionary tale. There
are good entrepreneurs out there that
are trying to get investment that are
trying to get their companies going. And
then there's these people out here that
just sell it like this. And by the way,
Adam Newman, the guy from WeWork that
defrauded SoftBank, I'm still wondering
why he didn't end up floating in the
Hudson because he defrauded some very
big international people of two billion
with the B issues and figurative speech.
Fig speech. Yeah, he's he's shocked that
he wasn't swimming. No, I'm saying yeah.
No, no, no. I'm not wishing death on
him. I'm saying but when you defraud
some big people, sometimes big people
play big people games and it's not fun.
Oh yeah. So
sometimes these big people show up with
like big female foreman type. Yeah. Just
like like
but I think but this is this is a
cautionary tale and I'm glad to see it.
And if she's sitting in the prison
courtyard playing checkers with
Elizabeth Holmes, well guess what? Good
for you. Go away for seven years and
think about it.
You just pissed Tom off. Charlie, what
is wrong with you?
[ __ ]
We were having a good conversation. You
pissed Tom off. Brandon, what do you
have to say about this?
Yeah. Um I might surprise you guys here.
So, this actually annoys me that um like
I I get she deserves what happened here,
but nothing happened to the banks in
2008 when they stole money from people.
They defrauded the entire country with
bad mortgages and then nothing happened
to them. Not only did nothing happen to
them, but they were given money by the
government with the promise of okay,
yeah, we'll stimulate the economy with
the money they give us and they paid
themselves bonuses. So, like um you
know, if anybody watched the big short,
there's only one random guy who went to
jail for that. the guy from Deutschbang
or a 32-y old guy from Deutsche because
he lied.
Yeah.
You know, so it's ridiculous. I mean, I
get Yeah, she definitely
You're not alone.
She definitely deserves to go to jail,
but I think a lot of people should have
went to jail for what happened in 2008.
Yeah, you are. You are not alone.
Michael Jackson said, "You're not
alone." And I agree with them.
All right. So, listen all to all the
single folks, you know, if you got kids,
you may want to listen to this. There's
a man, some call him philosopher from
modern day Aristotle. His name is Judge
Grady from Pulk County. Rob
Poke. He he wants to share something
with you guys and it's a very
sentimental but accurate assessment of
what could happen
if you go get a prostitute in Pole
County and some of the places in America
and and it's so bad and so true that his
partner behind him one of his direct
reports can't even hold himself together
folks but the level of wisdom is on a
whole different level. So, whatever
you're doing, if you're driving and
listening to the podcast, just please
keep your eyes on the road or pull over
because this is dangerous stuff. Go
ahead, Rob.
So, this is Pulk, not Poke County,
right? Poke.
Do that one more time.
Do that one more time. Make fun of my
accent one more time. Go ahead, Rob.
There's things in life.
So, you order up a prostitute, right?
This prostitute lives with his mother,
by the way.
He's got a massive criminal history. A
21. Notice what she said. This
prostitute lives with his mother. He's a
hooker. Yeah. So, just just continue.
It's a very important detail. Go ahead,
Rob.
Year criminal history with 31 criminal
charges. So, you order up a prostitute
and that's what you think you're
getting.
Now, when you look at that, you go,
"Wow, that's pretty rough, but caught in
a storm."
And then the next morning when you wake
up,
oh my god,
you find out this is who it really is.
Oh my god.
Yeah, we call that coyote ugly. You see,
he's laying on your arm
in bed. Look at
the guy behind you. It was rough last
night, but I've sobered up.
Oh my.
I think I'll just chew my arm off and
ease away so I don't disturb him or wake
him up.
All right. So you think you're buying
this, you're getting this. He's got 31
criminal charges and heck, if you're
lucky, he doesn't kill you overnight.
I mean, look, it's called wisdom, right?
Yeah. You have to know you're you're
waking up. What do you say? You're
biting off your arm.
AR. What do you think about this advice,
Vinnie?
I Well, I first of all, I had no I
thought it was a female. I don't even
know where this was going. But my
question is, so is that was that guy
robbing people or was he actually having
sex with the the guy?
Sounds like he was pretending to be a
girl.
He's pretending to be a girl and then
what was he like is he hooking up with
gay men? I'm so confused.
He was hanging out. The fact that you're
interested
what the hell is going on?
Tells me why you have such a creative
wonderful comedic mind.
Are you ready for this? Cuz my brain is
is my brain is going this he's having a
press conference. Were people
complaining like did they want their
money back? Was it buyer's remorse?
Because it looks like first of all, if
that shows up and that's what you're
actually into, to each his own. But
then, how do you not tell that it's a
it's a dude? Like, how? I'm so confused
right now.
It's midnight. You've had
You saw the crying game.
Yeah. No,
surprise.
Yeah. I But like is like what's he
trying to say? Don't like know what
you're buying? Cuz I The prostitution
part doesn't even look like it's the
problem. It's the fact that the guy is
acting like he's a girl. That's the
problem.
Brandon, what do you think about this?
Give us your expertise here.
Uh,
I gota admit I'm an amateur in that
field, so I can't give any expertise,
but um, yeah. No, it's scary. It's a
it's a cautionary tale I guess he's
using there. But I don't know. Should
should prostitution be legalized? Like
it, you know, so we don't get up so
people know what they're getting at
least. I don't know. That's a a question
as old as time. I mean is the oldest
profession but I I'm not
it's like alcohol you know creates a
whole big criminal industry because of
the fact that it's illegal but also it's
kind of debaucherous for society if it
is legal. So you know that's a kind of a
deeper question.
Yeah it's Listen one of my friends his
dream was to go to Brazil to go to uh
what is it called?
Not the festival. What did they carnival
carnival in Rio?
So he went to carnival. He saved up all
this money for two years to go to the
carnival
and he goes comes back has the time of
his life except for one night. Uh-uh.
Uh-uh.
He meets this girl, dropped that
gorgeous,
and he can't believe how hot she is.
They're dancing. They're doing his their
thing and all this other stuff. And he's
grinding all this. And grind, baby.
Grind with me. Relaxing like all that
stuff, right?
And then she returns the favor.
Uhoh.
Oh boy.
To him.
[Music]
Like, first of all, why are you letting
her cry?
It's like I had one too many drinks. He
says, "When she did, I learned very
quickly I had to run."
Oh my god.
It's like It's like when when Charles
Barkley, have you ever heard Charles
Barkley say, "Listen, man. When you when
you're playing too much defense, I can
feel your you know, when I can feel your
thing. It's a little too much defense."
So, I don't know. You just better got to
be careful, folks. You know, the
Barkclay's Wisdom versus Poke County.
Let me get it correctly for you so
you're happy about it.
So anyways, this is just funny man.
Sometime when this guy speaks, imagine
him being your father or your
grandfather and he's telling you a story
trying to teach you a lesson. Imagine
you can write a book.
So how what lessons did your dad teach
you? Let me tell one time I got caught
smoking this. Here's what he did to
boom.
Took me home. He did this. He did that.
Just seems like the type of guy I like.
He's got a sense of you.
He's like Kennedy in Congress with his
funniness.
He's got a sense of you.
Back at the peak, Dr. Phil used to do
this at the peak of his show. Yeah.
Okay. So, you did this, then this, then
this, and you thought that was a good
idea.
Remember those guys? Oh, yeah.
I I I don't know on what planet that's a
good idea or even half a good idea. I
used to love seeing Dr. Phil people up
for that.
Still doing that.
Yeah. Yeah. So, let's go to the next one
here. I'm gonna get to the next story. A
couple more stories before we wrap up.
Don Lemon is talking to Ilhan Omar.
Okay. uh uh person whom Trump is wanting
to deport back to her country. He even
asked the leader of Somalia if they
would take her back like a refund and
having that kind of a conversation. But
she had some things to say. Was she not
Rob being interviewed by Don Lemon
Ilhan?
Yep.
And right here
he somehow bumps into her and and is
interviewing her.
But go ahead Rob. Let's see what this
happens here. Go ahead.
I have I have nothing to apologize for.
Um, you know, it is it is a tragedy that
Charlie Kirk was killed in that way. Um,
I feel for his widow and his children.
They will have to live with that for the
rest of their lives. But there is no
legacy to honor. It was a legacy filled
with bigotry, hatred, and white
supremacy. And as a black woman and as a
Muslim in this country, I refuse for I
refuse to join the chorus that changes
the history of what is on the record
from this man. And so, you know, Nancy
Mace, the president, like whatever these
crazy people can do whatever they want
to do.
Um, but I am not going to be bullied uh
into complacency.
um into, you know, dishonoring who I am
and what I stand for just to
How long can you listen to her? Oh, but
but you know, but do you notice this
guys? Do you notice the left? No
security, nobody's they are just they
know that nobody wants to do anything to
them because we're we're the the normal
side, but they're out there spitting
this freaking poison. And the fact that
she's saying white supremist and all
this stuff, not one, she cannot point
one thing that Charlie said that was
about racism or white supremacy or
another. These are just BS talking
points and she's like disgracing his
freaking legacy and it's disgusting.
I wonder what that would have been like
if she was walking with Van Jones.
Oh. Oh, it would have been it would have
been a whole different conversation.
You think he would have shut it down and
corrected it?
You think he would have You think Van
Jones would have corrected it and Don
Lemon wouldn't have?
Uh, maybe. I think Van Jones would have
stepped further.
Don't Don't forget, Tom, like the day
before Trump uh uh Charlie got killed,
don't forget what Van Jones said about
Charlie that went viral. Do you remember
that clip?
He was talking crap about him.
Do you remember that? Exactly. A day or
two, Rob, if you got that
Van, not Vance. Yeah, Van. Yeah,
exactly. There you go. So,
they were, as Van Jones said, we were
beefing hard in the days before.
He actually went on video though, Tommy.
He said something about
He said something very very direct.
It was on on CN on CNN.
Oh. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. He he put the
onus on Charlie.
He put the onus on Charlie. And this was
like literally
Oh, was it about the Oh, it was about
the the the the the guy stabbing on the
on the train. I think he was making some
comment.
Yeah, this the one. Go ahead and play
this clip.
We don't know why that man did what he
did.
And for Charlie Kirk to say, "We know he
did it because she's white." When
there's no evidence of that. He said, "I
got that white girl."
Race uh race mongering, hate mongering.
[Music]
Got that white girl.
I got that white girl. Yeah. Blood
dripping everywhere.
We don't know.
Yeah. Yes, we did. So the the the point
is look I give everybody grace that you
know you you make mistakes but the the
day before that happened that's a pretty
direct thing to say. So going back to
Don Lemon, right? Going back to Don
Lemon. Don Lemon is continuing here.
Rob, if you have this clip, go ahead and
play the clip. Here's Don Lemon. Folks,
if you're if you're a white man,
he thinks it's all your fault. Go ahead,
Rob.
men who look like you, men who vote like
you, and men who sound like you.
White men,
something is broken. Something is
cracked deep inside when so many of you
believe the answer to fear, to loss, to
change is violence.
Are you listening to me? I hope I'm
saying it loud enough for the people in
the back.
Brandon, he was talking to you. What
What do you have?
I just I just had an epiphany. I think
he's been watching Nick Fuentes cuz he's
he's kind of copying Nick Fuentes, but
in the reverse way. Nick Fentes says
that about black people a lot in the
same tone. Tries to be the same
provocative way. I think he's copying
Nick Fuentes.
Very interesting.
Yeah, that's what I got from Very
interesting observation
cuz he's obviously desperately trying to
get views. He's doing the man on the
street. He's doing his podcast in his
living room like a teenager. So, I mean,
I think he's trying to try things out.
He sees Fuentes picking up some momentum
in X. I think he's copying Fuentes.
How much do you think he watches Fontes?
Oh, I think he watches all the big
people, you know, like I think if
somebody's doing well on social media, I
think he's studying them and obsessively
trying to model them.
I I uh I actually agree with you. I
think that's a very very good
observation. But the reality of it is to
say it's the white man's fault. Tom,
what what do you have to say about that?
No, it they need a victim and they have
to be the victim and so everyone else
has to be bad to be the vi so someone
else is a victim. You need a
protagonist. You need an enemy. And when
people are moving, and here we go again,
blacks, Hispanics, and youth are moving
toward the center and voting this way,
the these people become apoplelectic.
And when I say these people, I mean
these media people. Rachel Matto. Well,
regardless of their color, whether it's
Van Jones and and Don Lemon or it's it's
Jake Tapper, it's not about race. It's
not about, you know, sexual orientation,
anything. They can't handle what's
happening. And so, they need there to be
an enemy. And the enemy, white privilege
and white people are broken, is is so
easy for them, but it's cheap and it's
wrong. And they know it's wrong. And
that's and and deep down inside they
know that it's hollow, but they've got
no other there's there's no other bullet
in the gun. Not to use a violent
metaphor, but there's no other like like
what else do you pull off the shelf?
It's not working. He like first of all,
what about his white husband who's
probably in the other room doing dishes?
Like I No, no, no. I'm dead serious. How
does he feel about it? Okay. And just
really fast, going back to a hunky
hubby.
Yeah, she Yeah, he does. And so does
Elhan Omar. Well, all these problems are
white people. She said in the past, "Our
country should be more fearful."
Bro, get it.
Yeah. She more fearful of white men
because they're actually causing most of
the deaths in this country. This is her
um if fear was a driving force, we
should be profiling, monitoring,
creating policies to fight the rad
radicalization of white men. And Don
Lemon, like how disgusting and lazy and
dangerous it is what he's saying. And
Tom, what did your mug Oh, your mug
right there. Words, talk, numbers,
scream. Can you imagine if a white
person, any white, and look at the
numbers right here. If a white person
sat in front of a camera, Pat, and just
said the actual facts that and and said
that black men are about 6% of the US
population on FBI data shows that
they're responsible for nearly half, 50%
of the murders in this country. What
would the world say? What would the
world say? Don Lemon knows exactly what
the hell he's doing. He's trying to be
relevant. The fact that they kicked him
out of a freaking studio. Now he's a man
on the street talking to other psychotic
people like Elon M tells you everything
that you need to know. But think about
this, Pat. You showed this video a long
time ago and it stuck with me. What
happened to the old Don Lemon? Remember
that video that we have? An old Don
Lemon that was addressing the
African-American community.
Oh, how about lift your pants up? How
about be respectful that
you want to see this? Play this, Rob.
Because black people, if you really want
to fix the problem, here's just five
things that you should think about
doing, here's number five. Pull up your
pants. Number four now is the n-word. I
hosted a special on the n-word,
suggesting that black people stop using
it and that entertainers stop deluding
yourselves or themselves and others that
you're somehow taking the word back.
Amen.
Now, number three, respect where you
live. Start small by not dropping trash,
littering in your own communities. I've
lived in several predominantly white
neighborhoods in my life. I rarely, if
ever, witness people littering. I live
in Harlem now. It's an historically
black neighborhood. Every single day, I
see adults and children dropping their
trash on the ground when a garbage can
is just feet away. Number two, finish
school. You want to break the cycle of
poverty? Stop telling kids they're
acting white because they go to school
or they speak proper English. Number
one, and probably the most important,
just because you can have a baby, it
doesn't mean you should, especially
without planning for one or getting
married first. Weird.
More than 72% of children in the Africa.
So, I I'm just curious to Hey, Don, what
happened to you and shame on you while
your white husband is back there
cleaning the house and doing whatever,
you're saying that he is the problem
with this country. Shame on you and
shame on you, Ilhan Omar. Same thing
happened to him that happened to Aaron
Bernett. Aaron Bernett was on CNBC in
the morning uh doing morning show
talking business opening up opening bell
squawk on the street. There was those
programs that you see on CNBC and she by
all accounts was down the middle and
there was plenty of of opportunity for
her there to express her opinion with
the government on this law that law
legislation regulation of business the
Fed plenty of things she was done. She
goes to CNN, t signs it and takes the
contract and suddenly is a it's almost
like did the contracts that Don Lemon
and Aaron Bernett took when they stepped
into a bigger chair at CNN, did it
radicalize them? Were they radicalized
by the dollars?
So you put it on Zucker, you put it on
the heads of CNN. Is that who you put it
on?
Well, somebody has to sign the contract
and be interested. And then there's a
lot of producers that tell you this is
the way it's going to be that you may
not have seen when you signed the
contract.
So Rob, why don't we do this? So let's
go to Charlie Kirk and and new stories
coming out. So last week we showed a
clip maybe on Monday, the range day
broke clip. Guy on the neck sends me a
message saying, "Pat that range day
broke clip you played was great, but a
guy just sent me something showing a
complete different thing." Fast forward
the range though range day they uh broke
clip to about four minutes. Keep going.
Keep going. Keep going. Keep going. Keep
going. And go a little bit more. Uh
okay. Back up a little bit, Rob. Back
up. Back up. Back up a little bit. Back
up a little bit. Back up a little bit.
Where it shows the headset on Charlie's
uh ear. Uh go back. Go back. Go back. Go
back. Go back. Go back. Let's see if
we're going to see it or not. Go back a
little bit. So he's showing this part.
Ah man. I Okay. Right there. played from
right there. Rob
comes in.
I don't see people coming in anywhere
in a circle area. You have the blood go
down then up and then the exit wound
emerges.
You're also going to want to find out
this guy talks out both sides of his
mouth. He'll say something like the FBI
is lying. The official narrative is
lying. And then he'll say, "I'm not
accusing anybody of anything."
What matters is that the official
narrative is not true. Whether that
comes out, it looks like it's bloody.
They will say it's 100% conclusive or
it's already been proven. You know,
it looked like blood. Even we thought it
was blood.
Now, go fast forward at a different
angle with him. Just fast forward the
clip and go until he shows the angle.
Keep going. Keep going. Keep going. Keep
going. Keep going. Keep going. Keep
going. Keep keep going. Okay. Uh right
there. Right there. Go back about 20
seconds. Okay. Play it from right there.
Go ahead. So, we're going through here
step by step, frame by frame, until we
find it. So, that right there, you can
see his him his reaction right here. So,
this is what I believe to be the first
frame capturing his reaction of of
anything from the bullet. So now here
when you look around his ear I believe
that is one of those earpiece like you
know the wire
and it's often a transparent type wire.
Now let's go ahead one more frame
that comes up. So it looks like it's now
behind him. That is certainly not blood
splatter like this guy falsely claimed.
And also where's the blood dripping that
he was claiming was on dripping on the
side of Charlie said. There is no blood
there because there was no entry wound
here. One more frame.
You can see that it was up in the air.
You can see it's still right there,
still vertical.
And now it's right there. It just flung
behind his head and it's kind of going
diagonal right there. And keep your eye
right there on that spot. You're going
to see it disappear on the next frame.
See, it moved up and gone already
because it because of the force of the
impact. Now, nowhere here is there any
type of entry wound. You would have seen
an explosive entry wound by now, just
like we did from the views from the
front, which shows that there was
absolutely zero shots hitting Charlie
from this side. So, anybody that tries
to show you a video from
Pause right there. Okay. So, remember
guys, this is why I love what's going on
right now. Everybody is what?
Reacting to whatever they have and
reacting to whatever they have. Tom,
when you see this, what do you think
about? Well, I want to see all the
perspectives and all the angles. I I I
don't want to keep seeing, you know,
Charlie and and the moment of of um
passing there, but I want to know for
sure what's up. I want to know for sure
what's up. And everybody that is a
forensic analyst is saying the same
thing. They said that does not look like
an entry wound on the front of his neck.
That does not look like an entry wound.
That looks like an exit wound. You have
hunters that have talked about this. You
have people that are coroners that have
talked about this. And so the question
is, okay, how did such a cataclysmic
wound happen there? A and you know, the
bullet man of steel was lodged in there.
Okay. Is somebody going to do
ballistics? So, I'm I'm waiting for
conclusive data from a real
investigation other than, hey, his DNA
was on this firearm. Okay. But was the
had the firearm been fired? You know,
did um and do we have ballistics on the
the the bullet that he said was found in
his neck just below the skin? I just I I
want to see all these angles and I'm
glad that one is keeping others in
check, but man, that that's an exit
wound from the front. That's that's my
opinion based on the folks that I'm
watching who are experts in these kind
of forensics. And so the question is,
how do you get that kind of a wound?
Vinnie, I'm I'm with Tom 100%. They're
claiming this is the FBI and everybody
that it was the 300 6. It was not a
3006. The official narrative is not
official. And this guy is just another
and I I get 100% it looks like an
earpiece, but from anybody that shotguns
and knows about this type of thing that
that if it was a 300 6, it would have
been a completely
he would have been rat. It would have
been disgusting. It would have been a
lot worse than what you guys saw. Number
one. Number two, all this footage was
cameras, camera phones sucked in and
it's blurry. The main footage is the HD
camera that was sitting behind Charlie
shooting down capturing him and the
entire crowd. But somebody from Turning
Point grabbed it, was all sneaky with
it, put it in a hat, and gave it to
another guy that ran off. And we're
supposed to just take their word that
this guy handed it off after he looked
at it and gave it to the FBI. I'm sorry.
I don't believe the official narrative.
You called the school. What happened?
I called yesterday. I called I called
and Amanda was with me. She recorded it.
I called UVU and I called and I I called
to the the main the main desk and I
said, "Hey, I'm I'm with such and such.
I made up a thing and I said, "I'm
trying to find out if you guys because
the construction that's happening right
now is unbelievable. It doesn't even
look like what it is right now." Okay?
Doesn't make sense. I said, "Who do I
talk to? This we just you guys just had
and I apologize. You guys had the
biggest assassination since JFK on your
campus. Was there scheduled construction
on the exact site where this happened?
Can you can you comment on that? He
goes, "Let me let me direct you to the
right place." You hear conversations,
you're typing, da da da. Sends me to to
uh like maintenance or something like
that and there's a female that picks up
and I go, "Hey, I'm so and so with with
um media." I go, "I'm just curious. Do
you guys have construction setup?"
Whispering talk to I can't talk to you
about that. I go, "No, no, hold on one
second. I don't need information about
the shooting or nothing like that. Did
you guys have scheduled maintenance?"
Because I would assume that if it's a if
it's an assassination at this magnitude,
you would leave the crime scene for
potential bullets, potential, you know,
fragments, other things to recreate in
the scene. There's stuff in that
ceiling, that overhead pat that there
there's cameras, there's an opening that
you could get in there. I'm like, how is
this normal? Who made the decision? I
can't say anything. Let me give you the
information to our our um VP of
strategic uh and communications
management.
I called her three times. I don't even
want to say her name. I called three
times. Nobody picked up and I left the
message. I'm just trying to figure out
with this type of magnitude. And you
know what's insane? For how many minutes
after, not one police officer, not one
police officer went there and secured
the crime scene. I've watched multiple
videos. I've watched aftermath of
videos. I saw people coming and stealing
hats off a truck and throwing them. some
guys like, "What the hell are you
doing?" There's no way this type of
cover up and the fact that when when you
That's a fact that you you law
enforcement should have shown up and
taped this.
Why didn't they?
And you know what's crazy?
Just like Butler.
They were there though. I don't know.
But you know what's crazy, Pat? I saw a
cop. One cop basically had his gun drawn
while they were bringing Charlie. God
rested sold to the vehicle. Your job,
bro, is to go this this idiot. By the
way, Candace yesterday was talking about
this guy pack. She knows him. She goes,
"Never has this guy ever been around
when we were on tour."
Guess who? Back up a second and say who
we're talking about.
The guy with the camera that was taking
the SD card out.
Who stood on the chair?
Who stood? Think about this, guys. It's
a crime scene. You're moving the chair
that he was shot. There's probably
evidence in there if there was, god
forbid, a bullet in there. He's climbing
up there, moving everything, and
nobody's saying anything. Common sense
101. You're touching the crime scene.
That's the main event. That camera has
everything. Okay. And I'm sorry. People
are like, "Who do you trust?" I'm get
Israel. Get all that out of there. The
way that it was handled and the fact
that his friends and everybody else have
just moved on and they're worrying about
turning point does not sit with me.
Well, Pat, I'm talking about my mom. I'm
talking about people from all walks of
life are like something doesn't feel
right. My mom, my aunt, my cousins, my
friends. I I'm having messages from
people I haven't talked to in years that
are like I know I watch the show and
everything. They go, none of us feel
like what we're being told is the truth.
Not with Tyler. Not with any none of it
is adding up. The boyfriends disappear.
Now they're trying to say that Tyler
didn't even step foot on the campus.
What do you think's going to end up
happening?
Just like every single time PBD, they
always get away with it. Evil. Evil on
this sense. They get away with it cuz
we're we're almost 3 weeks into it. And
And I'm And I'm She's I know some of the
her points are a little out there. She's
the only one. Nobody from their side is
asking questions like this. If you're my
friend, Pat, and I died. I would want
you to be like I would want you to be
like, "Wait a minute. Where the who are
why are you touching [ __ ] Who is who
has the footage?" And it doesn't add up.
Tyler doesn't even happen, Tom.
So, I I I'm thinking three things
actually. Actually, more like two. The
first is there are
hard facts that dots aren't connecting.
Did he fire one shot from up on top?
crowd reaction appears to be a little
little different. Is and he really ran
off that way with that gun of that size
in that in that jacket or blanket,
whatever he had there. He was walking
peg leg down the street with the the gun
down the leg of his pants. You know,
there's there's things on the the Tyler
angle that don't add up.
Why is this this older gentleman
standing up when everybody would be
ducking down? You know, uh I I was in a
restaurant when uh a gunshot went off in
a in a bar. One one gunshot. Everybody
was on the ground. We were all under the
tables until until a server said, you
know, um our security guy took the guy
outside. Nobody got shot. And but I I'
I've seen that. So that's one point in
my life when I was in college. I heard a
gunshot indoors. You're all down. Why is
this whole guy standing up waving a hat?
So, I see little facts like this that
just don't seem to add up. Why wasn't
there police there taping up the the
scene? Why are people taking cameras
that would be holding footage that would
be of great interest to the FBI? Why is
the Utah governor coming to the
microphone? We got him and we got the
gun. It's it it reminds me if you read
Oswald, they did the same thing. They
held up the the Italian gun and then
they talked about Oswald and the day
later they killed Oswald.
Yeah. Weird.
Brandon, what do you think happened?
What do you think's going on?
So, I just these facts bother me.
There's my headline. Pat, the facts that
we can, what are you thinking?
So, the only thing I could say for
certain is that um we're clearly not
being told everything that the FBI
knows. We're not being told everything
the hospital knows. We're not being told
everything Turning Point knows. That was
one of the things I was most excited
about for this administration was the
notion of h having a transparent FBI for
the first time where you know we know
the games they play for like with the
JFK stuff with the Butler Pennsylvania
stuff and um even the Epste stuff but
you know we're not getting that and you
would think that somebody like Kirk who
was the almost the most responsible
person for getting Trump elected like
Trump could be in jail if it wasn't for
Charlie Kirk with what the Democrats
wanted to do for him. you would think
that he would have come down with more
vengeance and more curiosity about what
happened to Kirk and t spoke about that
more. So I'm surprised to see that from
Trump's end that he's not more curious
about what happened to Kirk. I'm
surprised that Cash Patel is not being
more transparent and forceful to find
out what happened. And then not only
that, they're not they're not they're
withholding stuff from us in addition
not being transparent about. So I don't
think there's enough to say for certain
who might have done it, but I can say
for certain that we don't know
everything they know and they're like
making it they're forcing us to come up
with these uh theories and alternate
opinions because they're being they're
deceptive.
How long how long are you willing to be
patient? Like actually Hanland's razor.
Okay.
Aman Hanland's razor.
What's that one?
Hanland's razor. If you pull it up, Rob,
I'll read it. Helen's razor is
never attribute to malice.
Never attribute to malice. That which is
adequately explained by stupidity, Tom,
or
a mistake
or a mistake. So it suggests that
negative events or poor actions are more
often the result of ignorance,
incompetence, carelessness, or other
non-malicious factors that intentional
evil than than intentional evil or
malice. Let's take this as innocent
until proven guilty perspective real
quick.
Mhm.
None of this stuff makes sense. Bullet
goes in here. Shouldn't be an explosion.
Bullet goes in here. It comes out
because it it it should the damage
doesn't go in like that. The damage
comes out. So, I'm with you. I'm on the
same page.
That coming out looks like it didn't
come this way cuz at first I we thought
it was blood squirting. It's not blood
squirting. It was actually things. So,
that's good that we're seeing that. the
guy standing up automatically and starts
walking towards the area being shot is
the same guy that was there on 911. And
then the guy putting the chip in the hat
and walking all this stuff. I'm with it.
And but but to me to me I guess the
question I'm asking is how long imagine
you're them. You are cash. You're doing
the investigation.
How long should you have to get to the
bottom of this? I guess that's the part
that we don't know. And what is the
protocol? What are you supposed to go
through? What's supposed to be the
process? How many people are you
interviewing? How many people are you
supposed to be talking to? You know, the
the the fact that you're seeing the
place being fixed up and that's where
the shooting was and you get it fixed.
Have they made an announcement why they
did the construction? Absolutely not.
Has the school made changed?
I totally get it. Is there any Is there
any announcement by the university why
they've done that?
No. I I took a look this morning. I
could not find a single news article.
Nothing about any type of construction
that was being planned either.
Can you send me Is that clip on Twitter?
I have her number.
Is that Is that Is that
Yes, Pat. Should I call her again?
There's no autopsy, right?
What What is the
I'm going to call her Her name is Ellen.
I could call them right now. The
call them right now.
Okay. I love this.
Call them right now. This is what this
is the university.
Rob, can we call and you just
Hang on one second. Hey, and
what what I'm trying to find out is
I'm doing it.
All we want to know is one thing. Have
you made the announcement
of
uh Utah is a one party consent state, so
you're good?
Young thought, so I could do this.
Uh but Florida is two party.
So you can't do that. You can't do that.
Well, but by this all I've been getting.
Nobody picks up.
I know. You can't do that. So, what what
what I want to do is I'm going to ask
the question to see if they've made the
announcement. You don't just fix up the
place that got shot up and not make an
announcement about it. So, play as if
you're on the inside. What's your
argument? Don't play the devil's
advocate. Play the opposite of devil's
advocate, which is what do you call the
opposite of devil's advocate? What what
what is the antonym of devil's advocate?
How do how do you
God's advocate?
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, one like like one
being the opposite the opposite like
they're doing everything truthfully.
Okay.
What's your argument? You're on Cash's
team. Give that argument
on Cash's team. It's like you Well, I
mean
the shooter
you would say that it would be because
they don't want to um give evidence away
to that would be um pertinent to know on
the FBI side. But Cash is the one that
came out and said, "Hey, we got him
before they even had him." So he that
contradicts the notion of them trying to
withhold things from the public.
Yeah. Saying saying that you have a
shooter that fast before you actually
had the shooter doesn't give you any
doesn't add any credibility to you which
you've already lost the credibility.
Remember you're not doing it. Just do it
for a second.
Hand you're the spokesperson for them
and you truly know everything they know.
Okay. Speak on their behalf. What do you
say?
Hey, I respect the public's curiosity
here. It's a horrible thing that
happened to a very public figure. This
is an active investigation. There are
multiple angles that are being pursued
here and we have to pursue those and
complete the investigation without
tipping off people or without framing it
through the media and we can't lose our
opportunity to prosecute because certain
things are misrepresented in the media.
So you need to let us do our work. We're
interviewing a lot of people and
following a lot of leads. Now I'm stuck.
So let's say I'm the um I'm the you know
press secretary for the FBI.
says, "Well, so the why did you say you
have your you you got him? If there's a
second shooter, don't you have to come
forward and say you don't got him?" So,
in that case, Pat, it would be hard for
me. Now, how do I spin from the inside?
So, you're saying maybe you don't got
him. You're saying you're still
investigating him. Either you got him in
your FBI or you're pursuing other leads,
still looking into it. Which which is
it, sir? And you're kind of stuck. But
from the inside, that's what I would be
saying.
What's up, Rob?
It's interesting. There's some
construction um information that's been
released by the Utah Valley University,
but none of it has to do with the
building that you guys are mentioning or
where Charlie was shot. So, they uh
released a a student center remodel.
There's an article about that. There's
also the Scott M. Smith building that
they were constructing. There's also the
uh stadium that they're going to be
using. So, they do issue announcements
regarding construction ongoing at the
campus. There is nothing written about
where Charlie was shot and construction
being done there.
Weird. It's so weird. The the Here's the
problem. The problem is it's hard to
make a case for them.
That's the problem.
Mhm.
It's hard to make a case why it's
I if if let's just say the school does
have that construction uh uh
scheduled
scheduled. You're the FBI. You're the
local PD. You're guys, you're not
touching this for three weeks.
Yeah.
Yeah. A week.
Can you look up, Rob?
What is the longest a crime scene stayed
intact?
Good question.
What is the longest a crime scene stayed
intact just to get all evidence
or the average amount of time even?
I want to know the longest.
I want to know the longest, not the
average time. I want to know because
shortly you average going to be probably
eight hours, 12 hours, 14 hours. Well,
what is the longest a crime crime scene
stayed intact? Uh, and maybe that's not
the question, Rob. Tom, what's the
question? Are we asking a question the
right way? Do you know what I'm trying
to ask practice? Maybe.
Yeah. What is Yeah. What is
modern?
No, that's not what I'm talking about.
You're saying the murder scene like
what's the longest
40 plus days later in homes containers?
40 years later. No, but that's not
that's not real. What I'm asking is what
is the longest in America after a murder
took place that the FBI asked to keep
the murder scene uh untouched for them
to investigate
the entire
you know homicide. Okay. I I want to
know this question because I want to
make comps. I want to make comparisons.
Let's look at this here. in George M
1969 the FBI exumed the body this
decades later and get the DNA on Donald
Jones if you liked it the guy can no I
want to know how because let's just say
let's just say we look this up shouldn't
be hard to find this Rob I I just don't
know if we're asking the question the
right way I let's just say if there's
cases where it was 40 days it better be
bigger than this assassination let's say
there's cases that's two and a half
months I'm sure there are why did you
move so quickly on this one I I I don't
I don't understand that. Leave the scene
the way it is until we get everything
figured out.
Okay. World Trade Center eight months.
Okay. John Morsey house boulder
six-year-old murderer family home remain
under investigation
for months.
For months
evidence was collected over a long span
but the house was eventually released
and later sold.
The house remained sealed and under
investigation for months. Okay. Yeah.
So, so John Banet Ramsay six-year-old
murder Oklahoma City bombing. Okay.
Manson family murder crime scene for
weeks were okay. The Tate Labanka houses
were crime scenes for weeks but
eventually returned to owners for weeks.
That's weeks, bro.
Yep. Weeks.
Typical duration as well. Most homicide
scenes in the US are held for days to
weeks, sometimes months if the site is
large or high profile. Is this not a
high profile? So, so do me a favor, Rob.
go with the question and ask how long
was Charlie Kirk scene
kept uh uh uh what do you call it? Um
intact.
How long did it say?
No, like how long how long did they say
you know uh um uh uh yeah, I guess
intact. How long was Charlie Kirk's
crime scene kept intact in order to
fulfill the in order to finish the
investigation? Okay.
In order to finish
the investigation.
Okay, let's see what it says here.
I
mean, it reminds me of them hosing off
the roof at Butler, Pennsylvania after
that happened. You think, Rob, how long
was it? What does it say?
There is no there isn't any record
credible evidence, court filings, or
FBI.
This guys,
no, no, no. I don't understand this
because to me,
what
what was that guy's the the something
collector, bone collector? What was that
movie? Denzel Washington and uh I don't
know what it was.
Well, there's there's a simple question
I have. Why didn't the police secure the
area and take all the photographs? They
have these um these little uh number
tents. Have you seen them? They say 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 They put them on the ground.
They take and they take they take
photographs. I did anybody see any of
that here?
No. And there was police.
So there's a simple without going
conspiracy go simple fact-based
question. Why didn't a law enforcement,
campus police, local police, FBI
sequester and photograph everything the
way we see?
Let me ask you a question. If if this
happens to me and my wife tells the FBI,
I don't want you to investigate it. Does
the FBI still has a duty to go out there
and investigate it?
Well, she just made herself the first
suspect.
Yeah. That increases the odds of the
investigation.
I mean,
what but but if but a family says,
"We're good. We're moved." I'm trying to
find out like who has the authority to
say, you know how sometimes somebody
commits a crime against you like we're
not filing any charges.
Can that immediately stop an
investigation?
Shouldn't the FDI and the police
department still even if
in the case of simple battery or things
like this I can decide. So if there's So
you punch me
too many questions.
You punch me in a restaurant. There are
no cameras in the restaurant. Nothing
anywhere.
And you know where I'm at. Obviously,
private conversation, but
Oh, and I and guess what? The more and
more I think about that, the more and
more yours is making sense. And so, Pat,
my cousin Mike's wife, Nina, just
messaged me. Uh, her kids were at uh the
SUS school shooting. They closed the
whole school down for 5 days. 5 days.
Nobody went to
You closed. And was anybody killed?
Sus. Yeah. He started shooting. I don't
remember how many people, but my
5 days.
5 days. The school was shut down. and
and and for Charlie Kirk to be
assassinated
days after it was construction days
after they were already digging up the
floor.
So, by the way, by the way, by the way,
if if anybody is sitting here and you're
like, "You guys are going down the
rabbit hole. I can't believe you're
doing this." Do you know what you're
doing? You're giving credibility to
everybody that's going down the rabbit
hole by simply doing what you just did.
So you got other instances you want to
stay there for four or five weeks,
sometimes two months. At one case house,
no one goes in there for nearly eight
months. And you're telling me for this
one, nobody wants to come and
investigate to see what happened there.
You're you're doing this to yourself?
Yep.
Quite by the way.
Hey Rob, pull this. Do a just search for
murder scene investigation.
Three kills. Let's look at the yellow
tape.
Kill three people.
Go images.
Quick question, though. So the
take a look right here. You see this?
That's it. This is FBI taping it off.
Everything would get tagged, Pat. And
look at all the pictures they would take
here. How many items they have there?
They have in this, this isn't Charlie
Kirk, but in this FBI investigation.
Look, there's a phone.
75 points that are being photographed.
Just we see just from what we see and
they just walked away from it. That's
that sounds that's I gross negligence or
incompetence. Like what? You guys are
being
ne about to say that I think Hamlin's
razor I mean who made that the universal
principle? Like I almost think it could
be the opposite of that sometimes. Don't
attribute to stupidity what could be
attributed to malice. I mean
no no I think Hanland's razor is
necessary. It's what makes America so
great. Justice, right? Innocent till
proven guilty.
Okay. Yes. Trust but verify. So this is
the part where I I I I want to I have
questions. What I'm By the way, we're
not even professionals. We don't do this
for a living. We're just asking basic
questions that you don't have the
answers for. And in in any case, if you
come to me and you say, "Dad, I want
this." No. Well, you did it for uh my
brother. And you're like, "Ah, shit."
Okay. So, guess what? The natural
reaction is to do what? To get a comp. I
want to My offer is $800,000. This is a
$1.1 million house. No, it's an $800,000
house. Why? Because a house that was
built after yours in better condition
with recent upgrades with one additional
bedroom and a swimming pool and.1 acre
bigger than yours sold for $798 and I'm
giving you $800,000
and that happened 3 months ago. I'm
using the comp.
Yes.
So to me the comp on this is if you
spend weeks at a different place and
this is the biggest story, the biggest
assassination we've had in America the
last six years and you move this
quickly. I I I uh I don't know. I don't
to me the biggest thing is this, by the
way. Okay. To me, the biggest thing is
when the conversations comes about,
well, it's Israel. Nope. I'm not putting
it there. To me, the conversation, well,
they had a meeting because of this.
Okay. Belman shows a text. To me, the
conversation is, you know, okay, you
want to debunk those or whatever. Fine.
to me to but then if you're hearing
conversations about no man, why aren't
you guys want to ask more questions to
see what happened? Guess what? You give
credibility. That's the That's the area
where you're like, there's a point
there. You know, there's a point of
what's going on here. You want me to sit
on the sidelines and think that's it?
No. Your your comp sucks. You're losing.
By the way, again, this this goes back
to um
this goes back to the Epstein situation.
Mhm.
Where you ask again too suspicious
that all of these things are going on.
Who are you protecting? Who are you
hiding? Who are you defending? Who are
you worried about? Of course, we heard
the one story that the guy comes out and
says, "Bill Clinton, yes, but Trump,
no." Right. What was that one? Uh
yeah, the DOJ for James O'Keefe for
Project Veritas. Yeah. And so, okay. No,
no, no. He didn't do anything for us.
Yeah, he actually did for you, right?
So, we learned. But you make people be
skeptical. So, to me,
yeah, the construction of Utah Valley
University campus site where Charlie
Kirk was assassined involves removing
the blood stains, grass, and replacing
it with bricks. What
creating a makeshift memorial area where
people can leave momento momentos?
There are no confirmed detail on
additional permanent structures beyond
this modification.
What type of construction is being done
at the campus? Bro,
and you do it that quickly.
No. No.
This Yeah. They say uh the scene was
held for 8 to 14 days before releasing
it.
Yeah.
That's according to Grock.
Yeah. Well, guess what? I That's not
what I saw where where students were
recording going, "Look, they're already
digging it up." I'm just curious, too,
from our audience that poll that you
ran. What's the percentage of them not
being convinced about the official
story? Do we have the I'm curious where
82 to 18 last time I saw
82 82% are like, "No,
that's nearly 8,000 votes."
That's Yeah. Not believing it. And good
for you guys. You have to question for
just this guy's just for his his for
Charlie, bro. For his soul. Like cuz
nobody his friends aren't doing it.
Yeah.
Like where where is the whole
Everybody's moved on. They're on podcast
smiling and yo, your boy, your husband,
your freaking your guy that was running
a $500 million company is gone. And
y'all are just like, "Yeah, we're going
to just release old footage of him. We
have we have tons. were so they used the
word excited and smiled. I know
everybody grieves in their own way, but
guys, for his sake, take a time out with
the future of TPUSA and find out what
the hell's going on. Ask about that.
George Zinn, I don't know where he is. I
don't know where the porn child
pedophilia on his phone is. There needs
to be I hope they're doing it, guys,
because you know what's happen.
What is Tucker questioning?
I don't even Have you even guys even
heard what Tucker had to say? No, but
we've seen cases like this where, you
know, the district attorney is downtown
and all these people show up and they're
holding little pieces of paper and
they're usually quiet like a vigil and
they say answers for Ashley, right? Yes.
And they have a picture of her and
they're saying,
you know, holding it up like this.
You've seen it, Pat, where they're all
sitting there,
you know, um, and and then they like
they'll ambush the district attorney
when he's walking out one day. We need
answers for Ashley. What other
investigation are you? We need answers.
Where where is everybody looking? You
know what I mean?
I'm I'm so disappointed them. And the
only thing Tucker did because I haven't
seen anything cuz Tucker's been doing
segments and guests and the 911 stuff
which was which was fantastic. The only
thing that he did was was the memorial
which another question. Why weren't
Charlie's parents at the memorial? I'm
very curious if anybody knows. I get it.
It's a it's a it's a tragic. Your son
was assassinated. This is a big event.
the president of the United States is
there. Why weren't the parents there?
I'm very very curious um as to that. I'm
very very curious because you would
think the parents would be at something
like that monumental that's something
that they
have they have they spoken out
have they said anything Rob have they
come out and said anything tried to
parent seen anything
the only thing and I'm sorry going back
to my point Tucker the only thing Tucker
did was speak at the memorial and he and
he said Jesus was speaking the truth and
he was murdered same thing that happened
that was a quick speech to the point and
and he left and that was it. But is he
is he speculating and asking any
questions? I haven't heard anything. He
is heavily supportive of what's going on
with Turning Point USA.
Heavily.
He's asking whatever you guys need from
me, I'm here for you.
Yes.
So, what does that mean? Do you trust
Tucker?
I trust Tucker.
So, why is Tucker so supportive of
Turning Point USA? You think he would?
I think
if he had some questions.
Well, I think immediately when it
happened, he donated
a million dollar.
A million dollar. That's That's
But no, Tucker just a couple days ago on
the Turning Point USA podcast says,
"Whatever you guys need from me, I'm
here for you guys." That's what he said
immediately. And he he is he is a guy
that you would have seen in a situation
like this questioning if he felt
something he didn't trust.
And he's not
he's not he's just saying, "Hey, this is
what's going on. I lost a friend and
he's moving with it." So this is this is
what I'm about. I want to see what
everybody else is saying because I want
to see what's going on here.
I want to see everything. I if you can
go through this season and just kind of
hear some of the stuff out and not be
controlled by the mob and jump to
conclusion, you'll be ahead of the game.
Naturally, you're going to want to
gravitate towards somebody. Naturally,
you want to you're going to want to
gravitate towards what you're thinking
happened. But reason is being willing to
hear opposing arguments that contradicts
your own argument if your ego will
permit to do that. And we're willing to
do that. And uh we're willing to do
that. This was a
this was a very special guy. Charlie is
a very very special guy and u he will be
he will not be replaced. There's not
going to be a guy that's going to come
and replace Charlie Kirk tomorrow.
There's a bunch of guys that are going
out there saying we're continue what
Charlie did. Yeah.
Glad you're inspired. He's a good guy to
replicate and duplicate. But he was a
one of one. And uh may his soul rest in
peace as I'm certain it will. Gang, I
got a flight to catch. We enjoyed the
podcast. Brandon, good job. If you have
any mans you want to send to Brandon,
that is Brandon's QR code right there
with a beautiful red tie. If you have
anything you want to share with them,
send them a man.
What about the four-woman for Tom if
she's out there?
Wow. No, she's she's already she's
already manacted.
She manacted.
She's already manacted. She's like, you
know,
four women. What am I Mormon?
The forman form.
All right, gang. Do your thing. Are we
back on Friday?
Friday? Yes, sir.
Okay. We'll be back on Friday. God bless
everybody. Take care. Bye-bye. Bye-bye.
Key Vocabulary
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Key Grammar Structures
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