1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:03,560 Speaker 1: ABC News Washington Post pole finds that Trump's economic approval 2 00:00:03,640 --> 00:00:07,360 Speaker 1: stands at thirty nine percent versus sixty one percent of disapproved. 3 00:00:07,760 --> 00:00:11,920 Speaker 1: Just two months ago, before announcing his wide ranging tariff plan, 4 00:00:12,720 --> 00:00:16,040 Speaker 1: forty five percent had approved, with fifty three percent disapproving. 5 00:00:16,239 --> 00:00:17,040 Speaker 2: Let's real drop. 6 00:00:17,480 --> 00:00:21,119 Speaker 1: The latest AP and rcpole finds Trump twenty four points 7 00:00:21,200 --> 00:00:23,680 Speaker 1: underwater on the issue of the economy, while the latest 8 00:00:23,680 --> 00:00:26,720 Speaker 1: New York Times Siena College Pole finds Trump twelve points 9 00:00:26,800 --> 00:00:30,600 Speaker 1: underwater on that issue. The poll also finds that Trump's 10 00:00:30,600 --> 00:00:34,320 Speaker 1: pursuit of widespread tariffs opposed by fifty five percent of 11 00:00:34,400 --> 00:00:38,320 Speaker 1: voters and sixty three percent of independence gaz If you 12 00:00:38,320 --> 00:00:39,640 Speaker 1: look at this right here, if you look at some 13 00:00:39,640 --> 00:00:42,080 Speaker 1: of the issues what is fueling this right now, which 14 00:00:42,120 --> 00:00:44,599 Speaker 1: jos is really across the board right now, and if 15 00:00:44,600 --> 00:00:46,839 Speaker 1: you look at where he was in mid February and 16 00:00:46,880 --> 00:00:48,600 Speaker 1: you look where he is right now. 17 00:00:48,600 --> 00:00:52,280 Speaker 3: He is underwater on every issue from a minimum of 18 00:00:52,680 --> 00:00:56,640 Speaker 3: three percentage points to a maximum of nine percentage points. 19 00:00:57,160 --> 00:01:00,200 Speaker 3: Specifically when it comes to inflation in the econ to me, 20 00:01:00,240 --> 00:01:02,360 Speaker 3: as you point out, which is supposed to be his 21 00:01:03,960 --> 00:01:07,520 Speaker 3: you know, his expertise at this point, what's Also interesting 22 00:01:07,640 --> 00:01:11,360 Speaker 3: just overall to Sarah, is that he is down seven 23 00:01:11,640 --> 00:01:15,320 Speaker 3: points from late February, as we note him being an 24 00:01:15,360 --> 00:01:16,119 Speaker 3: all time low. 25 00:01:16,560 --> 00:01:17,600 Speaker 2: That is an. 26 00:01:17,440 --> 00:01:21,480 Speaker 3: Amazing drop in such a short period of time. So 27 00:01:21,560 --> 00:01:24,400 Speaker 3: Donald Trump right now is having to deal with some 28 00:01:24,480 --> 00:01:28,160 Speaker 3: of this, some of the follow with the reality that 29 00:01:28,240 --> 00:01:31,399 Speaker 3: many of his programs that he's trying to institute and 30 00:01:31,480 --> 00:01:33,720 Speaker 3: many of his cut studies trying to institute, are. 31 00:01:33,640 --> 00:01:34,640 Speaker 4: Just not taking hold. 32 00:01:35,120 --> 00:01:36,920 Speaker 5: One thing that was not on the screen that has 33 00:01:36,959 --> 00:01:39,240 Speaker 5: been rumored that I have to ask you about is 34 00:01:39,480 --> 00:01:43,160 Speaker 5: should the American people expect an increase in the top 35 00:01:43,240 --> 00:01:46,000 Speaker 5: marginal tax rate. There have been some reports out there 36 00:01:46,280 --> 00:01:49,200 Speaker 5: that the Trump administration is looking at pushing the top 37 00:01:49,320 --> 00:01:51,920 Speaker 5: tax rate for those making over a million dollars back 38 00:01:52,000 --> 00:01:55,080 Speaker 5: up towards thirty nine to forty percent. Is that something 39 00:01:55,120 --> 00:02:01,960 Speaker 5: that we should expect from a Republican bill. 40 00:02:00,120 --> 00:02:02,960 Speaker 6: Not expect that we have been working against that idea. 41 00:02:03,400 --> 00:02:06,280 Speaker 6: I'm not in favor of raising the tax rates because 42 00:02:06,320 --> 00:02:09,920 Speaker 6: that's our party is the group that stands against that traditionally. 43 00:02:10,000 --> 00:02:11,720 Speaker 6: So there are lots of ideas throwing out on the 44 00:02:11,760 --> 00:02:14,080 Speaker 6: table along this process over the last year. But I 45 00:02:14,080 --> 00:02:17,720 Speaker 6: would just say, for everybody, just wait and see. There's 46 00:02:17,720 --> 00:02:19,440 Speaker 6: more details coming, and I think you're going to be 47 00:02:19,480 --> 00:02:21,079 Speaker 6: very pleased by what you see. I don't think we're 48 00:02:21,120 --> 00:02:23,519 Speaker 6: raising taxes on anybody. What we're trying to do is 49 00:02:23,600 --> 00:02:25,720 Speaker 6: prevent the largest tax increase in US history. 50 00:02:25,840 --> 00:02:27,360 Speaker 1: Before we let you go, we want to get your 51 00:02:27,360 --> 00:02:30,520 Speaker 1: reaction to something that just occurred. The White House has 52 00:02:30,639 --> 00:02:33,480 Speaker 1: put up about one hundred posters of what they say 53 00:02:33,480 --> 00:02:37,160 Speaker 1: are unauthorized immigrants who have been arrested for violent crimes. 54 00:02:37,280 --> 00:02:38,840 Speaker 4: You can see them there. They put them up on 55 00:02:38,919 --> 00:02:40,880 Speaker 4: the driveway of the White House. 56 00:02:40,960 --> 00:02:43,200 Speaker 1: If you look here, that's the West wing, just at 57 00:02:43,200 --> 00:02:46,600 Speaker 1: the forefront the Executive Mansion itself to the left. But 58 00:02:46,639 --> 00:02:49,800 Speaker 1: what's particularly noteworthy about this location is it is right 59 00:02:49,880 --> 00:02:55,000 Speaker 1: directly behind the positions where TV correspondents do their hits 60 00:02:55,280 --> 00:02:57,480 Speaker 1: from the White House lawnch So, therefore, no matter what 61 00:02:57,639 --> 00:03:02,520 Speaker 1: network you're on, includes MSNBC, if you're doing it from 62 00:03:02,520 --> 00:03:06,240 Speaker 1: the White House right now, those pictures will be behind you. 63 00:03:06,400 --> 00:03:08,560 Speaker 1: White House doing a briefing in about a half hour 64 00:03:08,639 --> 00:03:09,160 Speaker 1: about what. 65 00:03:09,080 --> 00:03:10,000 Speaker 4: They're doing here. 66 00:03:10,320 --> 00:03:13,919 Speaker 1: Maria, your response to this image. 67 00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:16,079 Speaker 7: So I have to say, one of the biggest challenges 68 00:03:16,120 --> 00:03:19,560 Speaker 7: that we have with the deportations that we know of 69 00:03:19,639 --> 00:03:23,160 Speaker 7: so far, for example, with Kilmer of Veryo Garcia. 70 00:03:23,360 --> 00:03:24,840 Speaker 2: We don't know if they've had to due process. 71 00:03:24,880 --> 00:03:28,040 Speaker 7: We don't know if in fact these individuals do have 72 00:03:28,080 --> 00:03:32,160 Speaker 7: a wrap sheet. So I would encourage those individuals that 73 00:03:32,240 --> 00:03:34,600 Speaker 7: have that as a backshot to flow those people out. 74 00:03:35,000 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 7: The job of journalism is to ensure that we are 75 00:03:38,040 --> 00:03:41,640 Speaker 7: presenting the facts that we are cross referencing. We know 76 00:03:41,800 --> 00:03:45,960 Speaker 7: that polyfact actually checked the Trump administration because of an 77 00:03:46,000 --> 00:03:49,520 Speaker 7: earlier picture that they released on Kilmer, recognizing that it 78 00:03:49,600 --> 00:03:52,680 Speaker 7: was altered, that it was false, that they placed gang 79 00:03:52,760 --> 00:03:56,400 Speaker 7: signs on gang signs tattoos on him, that that weren't real, 80 00:03:56,840 --> 00:04:00,240 Speaker 7: And so I would really the press right now, well, 81 00:04:00,760 --> 00:04:05,000 Speaker 7: we are absolutely under attack. Our job is always to 82 00:04:05,040 --> 00:04:07,600 Speaker 7: have our true norse, to make sure that we're presenting 83 00:04:07,640 --> 00:04:11,600 Speaker 7: balanced news and making sure that we are not putting 84 00:04:11,600 --> 00:04:16,000 Speaker 7: folks that are potentially in danger and having that representation 85 00:04:16,520 --> 00:04:20,960 Speaker 7: of those pictures in the background. We can't allow that 86 00:04:21,200 --> 00:04:23,920 Speaker 7: to be for us to carry the water of potentially 87 00:04:24,080 --> 00:04:27,160 Speaker 7: innocent people. So I would encourage I recognize live shots 88 00:04:27,200 --> 00:04:29,840 Speaker 7: are tough, but I encourage folks to actually make sure 89 00:04:29,880 --> 00:04:32,120 Speaker 7: that those shots are blurred to the best of your abilities. 90 00:04:32,680 --> 00:04:35,000 Speaker 8: Well, first of all, how many illegal ails? I think 91 00:04:35,040 --> 00:04:37,800 Speaker 8: in the United States at least twenty million here? So 92 00:04:37,800 --> 00:04:39,400 Speaker 8: where'd you come on that? And we didn't speaking about 93 00:04:39,400 --> 00:04:42,440 Speaker 8: twelve million for twenty years? We know yet at ten 94 00:04:42,480 --> 00:04:44,360 Speaker 8: point five that we know of came to the border. 95 00:04:44,400 --> 00:04:47,000 Speaker 8: How many don't we know? I talk about knowing god 96 00:04:47,000 --> 00:04:49,279 Speaker 8: aways at two million? How many unknown? God of ways 97 00:04:49,320 --> 00:04:52,000 Speaker 8: we have liketuring the big ben sector in Texas where there's. 98 00:04:51,800 --> 00:04:54,560 Speaker 2: No technology, how many thousand. 99 00:04:54,160 --> 00:04:57,159 Speaker 8: People dig across it there? We will know, We will 100 00:04:57,200 --> 00:05:00,280 Speaker 8: know now. But you know so I would get venture 101 00:05:00,320 --> 00:05:03,359 Speaker 8: over twenty million. But your question is last count we 102 00:05:03,400 --> 00:05:06,640 Speaker 8: gots last light looked, there is about seven hundred thousand 103 00:05:06,720 --> 00:05:10,280 Speaker 8: illegal aliens for criminal charges walking streets of this country. 104 00:05:10,640 --> 00:05:14,000 Speaker 8: Seven hundred thousand. And that's what we're looking for now. 105 00:05:14,040 --> 00:05:17,919 Speaker 8: That's where we're prioritizing them, and that security threats. The 106 00:05:17,960 --> 00:05:21,200 Speaker 8: registration requirements on AUSC. Thirteen oh two. If your illegal 107 00:05:21,200 --> 00:05:25,239 Speaker 8: ani United States dis messages for you, you cannot hide from Ice. 108 00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:29,920 Speaker 8: We're actively looking for you. Frederal law requires every alien 109 00:05:30,000 --> 00:05:32,839 Speaker 8: United States who has been president in the United States 110 00:05:32,880 --> 00:05:37,200 Speaker 8: more than thirty days needs your register. For those fourteen 111 00:05:37,360 --> 00:05:40,000 Speaker 8: years or older, you need to be fingerprinted with Apartment 112 00:05:40,000 --> 00:05:44,560 Speaker 8: Homeland Security. Bredder law requires every alien the United States 113 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:46,719 Speaker 8: to tell DHS from writing if you have a change 114 00:05:46,760 --> 00:05:49,000 Speaker 8: in the address from ten days of change in the address. 115 00:05:49,440 --> 00:05:52,440 Speaker 8: Failing to register with DHS and faeriiry to tell DHS 116 00:05:52,440 --> 00:05:55,800 Speaker 8: about your new address our criminal offenses, and they're going 117 00:05:55,839 --> 00:06:01,920 Speaker 8: to be treated as such starting today. Make no mistake. 118 00:06:02,000 --> 00:06:04,119 Speaker 8: If you're in the country I legally and you fail 119 00:06:04,480 --> 00:06:07,320 Speaker 8: to do with the law requires, we will prosecute you. 120 00:06:07,320 --> 00:06:11,000 Speaker 8: You will go to jail, then we'll deport you. Second 121 00:06:10,960 --> 00:06:15,400 Speaker 8: off penalties for ferry to depart eight USC. Twelve fifty three. 122 00:06:15,640 --> 00:06:18,320 Speaker 8: If you're ailing inside the United States has a final order. 123 00:06:18,440 --> 00:06:21,000 Speaker 8: This message for you. If you have a final order. 124 00:06:21,839 --> 00:06:25,239 Speaker 8: The Trump administration is committed to enforcing our immigration laws, 125 00:06:25,680 --> 00:06:29,000 Speaker 8: especially for those aliens who have received final orders of deportation. 126 00:06:29,680 --> 00:06:30,640 Speaker 2: There are currently. 127 00:06:30,360 --> 00:06:33,839 Speaker 8: Around one point four million illegal alilents who have been 128 00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:36,919 Speaker 8: order to remove but remain here in violation of the law. 129 00:06:37,720 --> 00:06:43,320 Speaker 8: We will aggressively prosecute, consistent with long standing law, those 130 00:06:43,360 --> 00:06:47,159 Speaker 8: aliens for failing are refusing to depart, or who takes 131 00:06:47,200 --> 00:06:52,040 Speaker 8: other related actions aimed at handling the removal. You cannot 132 00:06:52,080 --> 00:06:54,240 Speaker 8: open the door, you cannot answer that questions, you cannot 133 00:06:54,279 --> 00:06:56,400 Speaker 8: open your car door. You can consider it to be 134 00:06:56,480 --> 00:07:01,240 Speaker 8: evade law enforcement. If you fail the United States, you 135 00:07:01,279 --> 00:07:03,760 Speaker 8: have to receive and remove order. We can and will 136 00:07:03,800 --> 00:07:06,440 Speaker 8: issue monetary finds up to nine and ninety eight dollars 137 00:07:06,480 --> 00:07:13,480 Speaker 8: a day. Evating your arrest knowing you have a final 138 00:07:13,600 --> 00:07:17,800 Speaker 8: order or removal is a criminal offense. We will prosecute 139 00:07:18,520 --> 00:07:21,960 Speaker 8: then then we'll deport you. Get your affairs in order. 140 00:07:21,960 --> 00:07:25,960 Speaker 8: If you're in the country illegally, work with ICE, go 141 00:07:26,000 --> 00:07:28,520 Speaker 8: to CBP one all map and leave on your own 142 00:07:29,360 --> 00:07:32,040 Speaker 8: because we have to find it, deport you and prosecute you. 143 00:07:32,800 --> 00:07:34,800 Speaker 8: You'll have a bar play center you and you won't 144 00:07:34,800 --> 00:07:35,200 Speaker 8: come back. 145 00:07:35,080 --> 00:07:36,160 Speaker 4: To this country. 146 00:07:36,440 --> 00:07:37,800 Speaker 8: You won't be able to come back on a visitor's 147 00:07:37,920 --> 00:07:40,160 Speaker 8: visa to words visa. If you have your assistant child 148 00:07:40,200 --> 00:07:43,960 Speaker 8: competition for you. If you're in this country, where you 149 00:07:43,960 --> 00:07:46,640 Speaker 8: get your affairs an order and work with us and 150 00:07:47,000 --> 00:07:49,440 Speaker 8: get yourself removing this country. That's what it all requires, 151 00:07:49,520 --> 00:07:52,920 Speaker 8: and we'll go enforce that law. 152 00:07:53,520 --> 00:07:58,720 Speaker 2: This is the climal scream of a dying regime. Pray 153 00:07:58,800 --> 00:08:02,200 Speaker 2: for our enemies because we're going to medieval on these people. 154 00:08:03,440 --> 00:08:06,040 Speaker 2: You've not got a free shot. All these networks lying 155 00:08:06,840 --> 00:08:09,080 Speaker 2: about the people, the people have had a belly full 156 00:08:09,080 --> 00:08:11,200 Speaker 2: of it. I know you don't like hearing that. I 157 00:08:11,200 --> 00:08:12,480 Speaker 2: know you've tried to do everything in the world to 158 00:08:12,480 --> 00:08:14,040 Speaker 2: stop that, but you're not going to stop it. It's 159 00:08:14,080 --> 00:08:14,920 Speaker 2: going to happen. 160 00:08:15,040 --> 00:08:17,240 Speaker 9: And where do people like that go to share the 161 00:08:17,240 --> 00:08:17,840 Speaker 9: big line? 162 00:08:18,480 --> 00:08:19,760 Speaker 4: Mega media? 163 00:08:19,880 --> 00:08:23,000 Speaker 10: I wish in my soul, I wish that any of 164 00:08:23,040 --> 00:08:24,600 Speaker 10: these people had a conscience. 165 00:08:25,280 --> 00:08:28,480 Speaker 2: Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? 166 00:08:29,120 --> 00:08:33,280 Speaker 11: If that answer is to save my country, this country 167 00:08:33,559 --> 00:08:36,280 Speaker 11: will be saved warm. 168 00:08:36,280 --> 00:08:45,240 Speaker 2: You use your host, Stephen K. Mas Monday twenty eight 169 00:08:45,280 --> 00:08:48,080 Speaker 2: April year Earler, twenty twenty five. How does the President 170 00:08:48,200 --> 00:08:52,160 Speaker 2: start off the week of his hundred days? Is Tom 171 00:08:52,200 --> 00:08:55,520 Speaker 2: Holman to a press our? Caroline Levett and Tom Holman 172 00:08:55,600 --> 00:08:58,880 Speaker 2: started eight thirty this morning with a double barrel shotgun 173 00:08:58,920 --> 00:09:02,640 Speaker 2: blast Dave Bratt's riding shotgun of the day. I'd love 174 00:09:03,840 --> 00:09:07,120 Speaker 2: for the first hour, Harnwell for second hour. Bratt. I 175 00:09:07,240 --> 00:09:11,520 Speaker 2: love Tom Homan. Get your affairs in order right, because 176 00:09:11,520 --> 00:09:14,320 Speaker 2: you're you're leaving the yard. They throw down hard. This 177 00:09:14,360 --> 00:09:16,720 Speaker 2: is for President's already stopped the invasion of the country. 178 00:09:16,720 --> 00:09:19,800 Speaker 2: Now it's time to reverse it. Holman says, hey, there's 179 00:09:19,800 --> 00:09:21,880 Speaker 2: twenty man. We're just focused on the ten mini of 180 00:09:21,880 --> 00:09:23,920 Speaker 2: they're here on the bidon. Let's get that done first. 181 00:09:23,920 --> 00:09:26,880 Speaker 2: But Homan, I think is is focused in and they've 182 00:09:26,920 --> 00:09:29,880 Speaker 2: got the they got the one ads, they got that 183 00:09:30,040 --> 00:09:32,840 Speaker 2: the wanted I think one hundred or two hundred signs 184 00:09:32,880 --> 00:09:34,760 Speaker 2: in back of the mainstream media over this, so they 185 00:09:34,760 --> 00:09:36,760 Speaker 2: can't avoid it. They got to talk about it right 186 00:09:36,920 --> 00:09:40,720 Speaker 2: up in your grill, happy happy White House correspondence weekend 187 00:09:40,720 --> 00:09:44,160 Speaker 2: to you. No, it's it's a beautiful thing. U. The 188 00:09:44,240 --> 00:09:46,360 Speaker 2: rule of law is just what it says. 189 00:09:47,040 --> 00:09:47,199 Speaker 12: Uh. 190 00:09:47,240 --> 00:09:50,400 Speaker 11: And we've just gotten the the the press, the the 191 00:09:50,440 --> 00:09:54,640 Speaker 11: mainstream media always talks about inclusivity, carry about everyone, the 192 00:09:54,720 --> 00:09:57,960 Speaker 11: pope over the weekend, inclusivity for all the voices, the 193 00:09:58,040 --> 00:09:59,959 Speaker 11: only voice though that's not been listened to. 194 00:10:01,679 --> 00:10:04,040 Speaker 2: The pope. Inclusivity. What are you talking about, oh, the 195 00:10:04,080 --> 00:10:07,720 Speaker 2: mainstream media. That's oh, yes, yes, yes, inclusivity. Yeah, another 196 00:10:07,760 --> 00:10:09,360 Speaker 2: mainstream media propaganda lie. 197 00:10:09,400 --> 00:10:12,160 Speaker 11: Yes, yes, they put him forward as mister inclusivity. 198 00:10:12,679 --> 00:10:14,480 Speaker 2: Uh. That the Vatican's got walls. 199 00:10:14,800 --> 00:10:14,959 Speaker 4: You go. 200 00:10:15,320 --> 00:10:18,280 Speaker 11: But his his remarks, and even in the int his funeral, 201 00:10:18,720 --> 00:10:21,319 Speaker 11: the Vatican couldn't resist putting in a mark about it 202 00:10:21,440 --> 00:10:24,240 Speaker 11: took a couple yeah, building bridges. 203 00:10:24,360 --> 00:10:26,079 Speaker 2: No, No, the homily, they took a shot right at the 204 00:10:26,120 --> 00:10:26,720 Speaker 2: President Trump. 205 00:10:26,920 --> 00:10:29,480 Speaker 11: Trump's building bridges to the rest of the world. He's 206 00:10:29,520 --> 00:10:31,960 Speaker 11: going to end up saving Europe from itself. He's going 207 00:10:32,040 --> 00:10:33,959 Speaker 11: to save the world. He's going to save this country. 208 00:10:34,160 --> 00:10:37,240 Speaker 11: He's going to save the American worker through manufacturing. And 209 00:10:37,440 --> 00:10:40,040 Speaker 11: there's no competing plan that. The mainstream media is just 210 00:10:40,880 --> 00:10:47,000 Speaker 11: continually deconstructing everything. They're they're incapable of constructing a positive vision. 211 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:50,160 Speaker 11: And so Holman, thank god we got a few patriots left. 212 00:10:50,320 --> 00:10:52,640 Speaker 11: You follow the law in these judges, these court cases 213 00:10:52,679 --> 00:10:55,040 Speaker 11: coming up. Trump was funny the other day in the news. 214 00:10:55,080 --> 00:10:57,480 Speaker 11: He said, uh, I think this is going to be 215 00:10:57,559 --> 00:11:00,480 Speaker 11: kind of like another men in the women's locker room issue. 216 00:11:00,640 --> 00:11:03,960 Speaker 2: You know, these jobs going down to lock him, lock 217 00:11:04,000 --> 00:11:06,360 Speaker 2: him up. A judge sitting there letting an illegal alien go, 218 00:11:06,400 --> 00:11:08,080 Speaker 2: and the FBI is on on the lobby, she knows 219 00:11:08,080 --> 00:11:09,200 Speaker 2: and lets it go, lock her up. 220 00:11:09,240 --> 00:11:11,720 Speaker 11: And we got a Democrat congressman who is a friend 221 00:11:11,760 --> 00:11:14,120 Speaker 11: of mine. When I was in Uh, he's one boy. 222 00:11:14,120 --> 00:11:16,520 Speaker 11: He said, I don't think this is the guy yet 223 00:11:16,559 --> 00:11:19,800 Speaker 11: to go save right, the the. 224 00:11:19,440 --> 00:11:23,320 Speaker 2: The no, no, no, the guy's a human trafficker. John 225 00:11:23,400 --> 00:11:28,040 Speaker 2: Solomon and Michael Patrick Leahy in the team Bensman have 226 00:11:28,160 --> 00:11:32,400 Speaker 2: proven he's a human trafficker. But it's it's emblematic of 227 00:11:32,480 --> 00:11:34,160 Speaker 2: what they want to do. We're pretty packed today. We 228 00:11:34,200 --> 00:11:36,160 Speaker 2: got I want to talk about Canada gat Viva Fry here, 229 00:11:36,200 --> 00:11:39,240 Speaker 2: also Mark Mitchell saying this polling is a psi op. 230 00:11:40,280 --> 00:11:46,360 Speaker 2: Also yesterday in Freedze Cars GPS the show on Saturday, Yeah, 231 00:11:46,760 --> 00:11:52,560 Speaker 2: he had he had Zandy the head the Zany's the 232 00:11:52,559 --> 00:11:56,840 Speaker 2: the head of the economist she was on, but it 233 00:11:56,880 --> 00:12:00,960 Speaker 2: also had Ray Dallyo and Dally Ok have talking. They 234 00:12:01,000 --> 00:12:02,720 Speaker 2: would answer to z Any something. She would give all 235 00:12:02,760 --> 00:12:05,120 Speaker 2: this kind of you know, Trump's this trade, this all 236 00:12:05,120 --> 00:12:08,840 Speaker 2: this kind of superficial. Ray Dallyo, who I'm no fan 237 00:12:08,920 --> 00:12:12,000 Speaker 2: of and he's no fan of war Room, he would 238 00:12:12,000 --> 00:12:15,160 Speaker 2: come back with pure war room. This model is unsustainable. 239 00:12:15,320 --> 00:12:17,440 Speaker 2: You're you're spending two trade in every you know, every 240 00:12:17,559 --> 00:12:20,200 Speaker 2: hundred days on the trained dolls. Freedze Car could not 241 00:12:20,280 --> 00:12:22,720 Speaker 2: wait to cut this guy's mic off it's pretty amazing. 242 00:12:22,760 --> 00:12:24,840 Speaker 2: We'll see it. Okay, let's go to we have an 243 00:12:24,840 --> 00:12:28,520 Speaker 2: open for viver Fry on Canada. Let's play today's election 244 00:12:28,679 --> 00:12:31,960 Speaker 2: day and whether it's are called the Great White North, 245 00:12:32,040 --> 00:12:34,520 Speaker 2: the old TV show, the old comedy show. Let's go 246 00:12:34,520 --> 00:12:36,080 Speaker 2: ahead and play viver Fry is open. 247 00:12:38,280 --> 00:12:41,640 Speaker 13: Have you taken any steps to carry out President Trump's 248 00:12:41,640 --> 00:12:44,240 Speaker 13: plans as he has said he would like to annex Canada, 249 00:12:44,320 --> 00:12:46,240 Speaker 13: Have you taken any steps in that direction? 250 00:12:46,440 --> 00:12:47,640 Speaker 12: No, I think what no. 251 00:12:47,720 --> 00:12:47,760 Speaker 11: No. 252 00:12:47,880 --> 00:12:50,040 Speaker 10: What the President has said, and he has said this repeatedly, 253 00:12:50,160 --> 00:12:52,520 Speaker 10: is he was told by the previous prime minister that 254 00:12:52,640 --> 00:12:55,720 Speaker 10: Canada could not survive without unfair trade with the United States, 255 00:12:55,960 --> 00:12:58,200 Speaker 10: at which point he asked, well, if you can't survive 256 00:12:58,240 --> 00:13:00,760 Speaker 10: as a nation without treating us on fairly in trade, 257 00:13:00,960 --> 00:13:02,120 Speaker 10: then you should become a state. 258 00:13:02,360 --> 00:13:03,040 Speaker 4: That's what he said. 259 00:13:03,280 --> 00:13:05,120 Speaker 10: They have their elections this week. They're going to have 260 00:13:05,240 --> 00:13:07,280 Speaker 10: the new leader and will deal with the new leadership 261 00:13:07,320 --> 00:13:09,440 Speaker 10: of Canada. There are many things who work with cooperatively 262 00:13:09,520 --> 00:13:11,679 Speaker 10: on Canada on but we actually don't like the way 263 00:13:11,720 --> 00:13:12,560 Speaker 10: they've treated us when. 264 00:13:12,480 --> 00:13:13,199 Speaker 4: It comes to trade. 265 00:13:13,480 --> 00:13:16,560 Speaker 10: And the President has made that point when he responded 266 00:13:16,640 --> 00:13:18,880 Speaker 10: to the previous Prime Minister in regards to this. 267 00:13:19,160 --> 00:13:20,040 Speaker 2: So does the president. 268 00:13:20,080 --> 00:13:22,120 Speaker 13: Does the US still want to make Canada the fifty 269 00:13:22,160 --> 00:13:22,600 Speaker 13: first state? 270 00:13:24,800 --> 00:13:27,480 Speaker 10: I think the President has stated repeatedly he thinks Canada would. 271 00:13:27,280 --> 00:13:28,319 Speaker 2: Be better off as a state. 272 00:13:29,080 --> 00:13:33,400 Speaker 1: Now, it's unclear for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau actually ever 273 00:13:33,480 --> 00:13:36,839 Speaker 1: made that statement to Trump that Rubio claims. But the 274 00:13:36,960 --> 00:13:40,640 Speaker 1: current Prime Minister Mark Carney, who's party is now poised 275 00:13:40,679 --> 00:13:43,439 Speaker 1: to win today's election, well, he's pushed back on the 276 00:13:43,480 --> 00:13:46,199 Speaker 1: idea of the United States ever taking over Canada, saying 277 00:13:46,280 --> 00:13:49,520 Speaker 1: in a recent press conference quote to be clear, as 278 00:13:49,559 --> 00:13:52,440 Speaker 1: I've said to anyone who's raised this issue in private 279 00:13:52,640 --> 00:13:56,960 Speaker 1: or in public, including the President, it will never happen. 280 00:13:58,840 --> 00:14:02,720 Speaker 2: Okay, viv Fry, Viva, just give me a heads up 281 00:14:02,760 --> 00:14:04,880 Speaker 2: because we got to go to break right here, right 282 00:14:05,320 --> 00:14:07,320 Speaker 2: to get that clock right. Okay, just want to make sure, 283 00:14:07,640 --> 00:14:09,640 Speaker 2: Viva you hang on. We're gonna talk about Canada, and 284 00:14:09,679 --> 00:14:13,800 Speaker 2: we're gonna talk about if the quote unquote populace had 285 00:14:13,800 --> 00:14:16,920 Speaker 2: gone more Trump, who would have a better outlook on 286 00:14:17,000 --> 00:14:20,840 Speaker 2: today little cloudy up there in Canada. Carney, I can't 287 00:14:20,840 --> 00:14:24,680 Speaker 2: believe you're gonna elect that Goldman sas guy electing her, 288 00:14:25,160 --> 00:14:27,680 Speaker 2: who who elects Goldman Sachs guys to this day and 289 00:14:27,720 --> 00:14:30,520 Speaker 2: age sure commercial break Viva Fry on the other side. 290 00:14:32,720 --> 00:14:43,080 Speaker 14: Say es side, thank you say this already you win 291 00:14:43,200 --> 00:14:44,680 Speaker 14: in Lost Show. 292 00:14:58,600 --> 00:15:03,560 Speaker 9: America Jonathan and the Greater Toronto area. And first of all, 293 00:15:04,440 --> 00:15:06,680 Speaker 9: if you've talked to Canadians or gone to Canada since 294 00:15:06,800 --> 00:15:08,920 Speaker 9: Donald Trump took over, you know this. 295 00:15:09,800 --> 00:15:10,960 Speaker 2: They are stung. 296 00:15:11,240 --> 00:15:16,120 Speaker 9: They feel betrayed about the treatment, not just the teriff 297 00:15:16,320 --> 00:15:20,240 Speaker 9: the talk of annexation because they're obviously a sovereign country. 298 00:15:20,320 --> 00:15:22,600 Speaker 9: They can't understand why they're best friend to the south, 299 00:15:22,680 --> 00:15:26,000 Speaker 9: a place where they travel to and any Canadian with 300 00:15:26,160 --> 00:15:28,240 Speaker 9: like five bucks in the bank has a condo in 301 00:15:28,320 --> 00:15:31,120 Speaker 9: Florida or Arizona, and they can't understand for the life 302 00:15:31,120 --> 00:15:34,280 Speaker 9: of them why they're being treated like this. Now, politically speaking, 303 00:15:34,840 --> 00:15:37,480 Speaker 9: this has gone from a sure thing for the Conservative 304 00:15:37,520 --> 00:15:39,840 Speaker 9: Party to take back power for the first time of 305 00:15:39,880 --> 00:15:45,360 Speaker 9: the decade to a certainly tilt liberal race, almost entirely 306 00:15:45,480 --> 00:15:49,120 Speaker 9: because of Donald Trump. Here's why the Conservative standard bearers 307 00:15:49,120 --> 00:15:52,720 Speaker 9: in a jam. A third of the Conservative Canadians kind 308 00:15:52,760 --> 00:15:55,280 Speaker 9: of like Donald Trump. Most of the country can't stand them, 309 00:15:55,680 --> 00:15:58,600 Speaker 9: but the Conservative is squeeped between the conservative base of 310 00:15:58,680 --> 00:16:01,720 Speaker 9: his party, especially out as in the Western provinces who 311 00:16:01,840 --> 00:16:03,560 Speaker 9: do like Trump, and the rest of the country who 312 00:16:03,600 --> 00:16:07,000 Speaker 9: hates Trump, so he can't criticize Trump directly like you 313 00:16:07,080 --> 00:16:10,280 Speaker 9: saw Mark Carney the liberal did there and then sort 314 00:16:10,280 --> 00:16:14,000 Speaker 9: of put the conservative and advice. And then secondly, Jonathan, 315 00:16:14,040 --> 00:16:15,520 Speaker 9: what's fascinating about this race. 316 00:16:15,440 --> 00:16:19,960 Speaker 2: Is we're a Bob and Doug McKenzie when you need him, right, 317 00:16:20,800 --> 00:16:25,640 Speaker 2: the famous duo of the Great White North Viver Fry. 318 00:16:27,320 --> 00:16:29,440 Speaker 2: Tell me what's going on up there, because I tell you, 319 00:16:29,840 --> 00:16:33,960 Speaker 2: if Carney does happen to pull this out, the progressive 320 00:16:34,040 --> 00:16:35,800 Speaker 2: is going to use this as the flag they plant 321 00:16:35,840 --> 00:16:38,960 Speaker 2: to say, Okay, this is the international the Americans, the 322 00:16:39,080 --> 00:16:42,360 Speaker 2: Democrats are too screwed up. The progressive movement here is 323 00:16:42,440 --> 00:16:47,560 Speaker 2: too far gone. But the international liberal order will come 324 00:16:47,640 --> 00:16:49,560 Speaker 2: to the rescue to save the world. They'll start in 325 00:16:49,640 --> 00:16:52,200 Speaker 2: Canada and you'll start to see the big universities overseas 326 00:16:52,280 --> 00:16:55,800 Speaker 2: backing Harvard and the Ivys. This will lead to institutional support. 327 00:16:56,240 --> 00:16:58,200 Speaker 2: So this is what they're going to consider their rally 328 00:16:58,280 --> 00:17:01,880 Speaker 2: point will be today. Your thoughts are, why have the 329 00:17:02,440 --> 00:17:06,960 Speaker 2: quote unquote populist not really run as a fire breathing populist. 330 00:17:07,440 --> 00:17:09,359 Speaker 2: Is Canada is just too nice? You just gotta be 331 00:17:09,400 --> 00:17:10,480 Speaker 2: too nice up there, sir. 332 00:17:11,040 --> 00:17:14,879 Speaker 15: Well, that is that analysis was pretty on point in 333 00:17:14,960 --> 00:17:17,560 Speaker 15: that there's a substantial base of the conservatives up in 334 00:17:17,640 --> 00:17:19,680 Speaker 15: Canada who do like Trump or don't have a problem 335 00:17:19,760 --> 00:17:22,399 Speaker 15: with him, but there's a substantial portion that are as 336 00:17:22,520 --> 00:17:25,520 Speaker 15: brainwashed as the liberals as relates to Trump, and so 337 00:17:26,160 --> 00:17:28,480 Speaker 15: Pierre he had a fine line to walk, but it's 338 00:17:28,480 --> 00:17:29,840 Speaker 15: a line that I don't think he had to walk 339 00:17:29,880 --> 00:17:31,560 Speaker 15: in the first place, because he could have just stayed 340 00:17:31,680 --> 00:17:34,680 Speaker 15: silent on Trump and leveled all of his attacks and 341 00:17:34,760 --> 00:17:38,240 Speaker 15: blame against the liberals in terms of blaming whatever Trump 342 00:17:38,400 --> 00:17:41,159 Speaker 15: tariffs and threats of annexation Trump was issuing, blame it 343 00:17:41,240 --> 00:17:43,160 Speaker 15: on the liberals because it was a result of ten 344 00:17:43,240 --> 00:17:46,680 Speaker 15: years of failed liberal policy. I don't think this will 345 00:17:46,720 --> 00:17:51,119 Speaker 15: start a cascade of liberalism or the liberal world order worldwide. 346 00:17:51,400 --> 00:17:54,240 Speaker 15: I do think Canada is something of an anomaly in 347 00:17:54,359 --> 00:17:58,040 Speaker 15: their opposition to or reluctance to embrace populism. We see 348 00:17:58,080 --> 00:18:01,680 Speaker 15: populism thriving in Europe, albeit you know it's struggling, but 349 00:18:01,720 --> 00:18:05,600 Speaker 15: it's it's thriving. In Romania, South America, Brazil, we see it. 350 00:18:06,280 --> 00:18:09,920 Speaker 15: My level of being flabbergasted is how much resistance there 351 00:18:10,000 --> 00:18:12,040 Speaker 15: is to the populist movement in Canada. 352 00:18:12,440 --> 00:18:13,960 Speaker 2: And I think it has to do with having. 353 00:18:13,800 --> 00:18:16,560 Speaker 15: A media that is totally corrupt and totally captured by 354 00:18:16,640 --> 00:18:20,360 Speaker 15: the government that basically acts as their watchdogs and their 355 00:18:20,480 --> 00:18:23,840 Speaker 15: their lap dogs and not their watchdogs. And so you 356 00:18:23,960 --> 00:18:27,240 Speaker 15: have the media convincing everybody in Canada that their woes 357 00:18:27,320 --> 00:18:30,240 Speaker 15: are the result of three months of tariff threats and 358 00:18:30,560 --> 00:18:33,960 Speaker 15: discussion of annexation and not a decade of liberal devastation. 359 00:18:34,480 --> 00:18:36,680 Speaker 15: And Pierre fumbled the ball in terms of making sure 360 00:18:36,720 --> 00:18:39,000 Speaker 15: Canadians understood where that blame should lie. 361 00:18:39,680 --> 00:18:40,440 Speaker 2: But we'll see today. 362 00:18:40,680 --> 00:18:43,400 Speaker 15: If the Liberals win, let alone a minority, but I say, 363 00:18:43,440 --> 00:18:46,480 Speaker 15: heaven forbid a majority government. If they win a majority government, 364 00:18:46,960 --> 00:18:48,320 Speaker 15: I do predict that it's going to lead to the 365 00:18:48,359 --> 00:18:49,119 Speaker 15: breakup of Canada. 366 00:18:49,240 --> 00:18:51,840 Speaker 2: Not a liberalist new world order. It's going to lead 367 00:18:51,880 --> 00:18:53,280 Speaker 2: to Alberta moving. 368 00:18:53,119 --> 00:18:55,320 Speaker 15: To secede from Canada because you've got a bunch of 369 00:18:55,400 --> 00:18:59,800 Speaker 15: liberal environmental panicking, you know, anti science nut bags who 370 00:18:59,880 --> 00:19:03,480 Speaker 15: are exploiting Alberta for its resources while crippling Alberta's ability 371 00:19:03,560 --> 00:19:06,680 Speaker 15: to exploit its resources, stealing their money, spreading it throughout 372 00:19:06,720 --> 00:19:09,919 Speaker 15: Canada to the Havena provinces, and Albertas can say we've 373 00:19:09,920 --> 00:19:13,320 Speaker 15: had enough of this Quebec and Ontario dictating the politics 374 00:19:13,359 --> 00:19:16,119 Speaker 15: of the land and exploiting us while crippling us. So 375 00:19:16,440 --> 00:19:18,199 Speaker 15: I think it'll lead to the breakup of Canada if 376 00:19:18,240 --> 00:19:21,159 Speaker 15: the Liberals get a majority. But I'm still mildly optimistic 377 00:19:21,240 --> 00:19:25,080 Speaker 15: that Pierre can eke out a minority Conservative government, and 378 00:19:25,359 --> 00:19:29,000 Speaker 15: one can only hope he manages to get a majority Conservative. 379 00:19:28,560 --> 00:19:33,040 Speaker 2: Government, but that's looking very very unlikely. Okay, as we 380 00:19:33,160 --> 00:19:34,840 Speaker 2: go through the day, we'll try to get back what 381 00:19:34,880 --> 00:19:36,560 Speaker 2: should we be looking for. What are going to be 382 00:19:36,600 --> 00:19:41,879 Speaker 2: the tells that because right there, a liberal majority government 383 00:19:41,920 --> 00:19:44,000 Speaker 2: you said, it leads to a breakup of Canada and 384 00:19:44,119 --> 00:19:47,560 Speaker 2: Alberta with all its resources and kind of I would say, 385 00:19:47,640 --> 00:19:50,880 Speaker 2: cowboy culture, I'd take it and become independent or maybe 386 00:19:50,920 --> 00:19:53,200 Speaker 2: even associate with the United States of America. 387 00:19:53,920 --> 00:19:56,520 Speaker 15: Oh, the move to seceed Like, hey, if Canada finds 388 00:19:56,560 --> 00:20:00,159 Speaker 15: the fifty first state offensive, Albertans certainly don't. And so 389 00:20:00,359 --> 00:20:02,359 Speaker 15: whether or not they succeeded, and it leads to Quebec 390 00:20:02,400 --> 00:20:06,000 Speaker 15: seceeding Quebec tried twice under ordinary circumstances, it'll lead to 391 00:20:06,240 --> 00:20:09,160 Speaker 15: the breakup balconization of Canada. But what to look for today. 392 00:20:09,320 --> 00:20:11,000 Speaker 15: We've just got to wait until the results trickle in 393 00:20:11,359 --> 00:20:15,520 Speaker 15: and the East typically goes liberal. If it goes less liberal, 394 00:20:15,560 --> 00:20:18,040 Speaker 15: then will be more optimistic for the rest of Canada. 395 00:20:18,400 --> 00:20:20,800 Speaker 15: But it's just it's just wild that after a decade 396 00:20:20,840 --> 00:20:24,760 Speaker 15: of literal devastation, everything is worse in Canada, regardless of 397 00:20:24,800 --> 00:20:26,760 Speaker 15: how you want to frame it. After a decade of 398 00:20:26,840 --> 00:20:31,280 Speaker 15: this three liberal governments, people in Canada are sufficiently propagandized 399 00:20:31,440 --> 00:20:34,440 Speaker 15: and ignorant and politically amnesia that they're going to vote 400 00:20:34,440 --> 00:20:37,480 Speaker 15: for the Liberals a fourth time. It's enraging as far 401 00:20:37,520 --> 00:20:40,320 Speaker 15: as I'm concerned watching it transpire from down here, and 402 00:20:40,480 --> 00:20:42,960 Speaker 15: I don't understand what it takes to wake up Canadians 403 00:20:43,000 --> 00:20:45,399 Speaker 15: to the fact that it's the Liberals and not Trump 404 00:20:45,560 --> 00:20:47,040 Speaker 15: that is the source of their problems. 405 00:20:49,040 --> 00:20:52,280 Speaker 2: Viva, how can people follow you today? What's your social media? 406 00:20:52,280 --> 00:20:54,960 Speaker 2: And we'll get you back on to see that. What's 407 00:20:55,000 --> 00:20:58,240 Speaker 2: your social media? People follow you during the day, So Viva. 408 00:20:58,000 --> 00:20:59,720 Speaker 15: Fry on, rumble and I'll be live. I got my 409 00:20:59,760 --> 00:21:01,760 Speaker 15: day line up on Rumble at four o'clock. I'll be 410 00:21:01,840 --> 00:21:05,160 Speaker 15: live streaming the results tonight and Viviva Fry on Twitter 411 00:21:05,280 --> 00:21:09,080 Speaker 15: and Vivapbarnes Law. Locals dot com is our locals community, 412 00:21:09,160 --> 00:21:11,639 Speaker 15: so I'll be live all day. I'm tweeting my needles 413 00:21:11,680 --> 00:21:14,040 Speaker 15: at the Liberals. You know, elbows up. It's really funny 414 00:21:14,040 --> 00:21:15,960 Speaker 15: when you're being held up at gunpoint because crime in 415 00:21:16,040 --> 00:21:19,880 Speaker 15: Canada is at basically a decade high because of liberal policies. 416 00:21:19,960 --> 00:21:22,040 Speaker 15: Gun violence is at a high despite all of the 417 00:21:22,080 --> 00:21:24,600 Speaker 15: gun laws that the Liberals have implemented on law biding citizens. 418 00:21:24,640 --> 00:21:26,880 Speaker 15: So elbows up, Canadians, go vote for the Liberals, your 419 00:21:26,920 --> 00:21:27,840 Speaker 15: abusers yet again. 420 00:21:29,320 --> 00:21:32,320 Speaker 2: Help us up. Viva Fried, thank you brother, appreciate you 421 00:21:35,800 --> 00:21:38,000 Speaker 2: fourth time. Think about that they'll vote them in for 422 00:21:38,040 --> 00:21:43,800 Speaker 2: a fourth time. The Trump derangement system syndrome north of 423 00:21:43,880 --> 00:21:46,960 Speaker 2: the border is something to behold. When you got Castro's 424 00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:50,520 Speaker 2: sons been there and destroyed the country. Although not so 425 00:21:50,680 --> 00:21:53,960 Speaker 2: sure that the populace ran a fire breathing campaign money, 426 00:21:53,960 --> 00:21:56,719 Speaker 2: you should have been ahead. There's conservatives in there saying, hey, 427 00:21:56,800 --> 00:21:59,520 Speaker 2: look this is not Trump's problem, this is not Trump's fault. 428 00:22:00,200 --> 00:22:03,520 Speaker 2: Let's say we got Mark, So Mark Mitchell Rasmus say, 429 00:22:03,520 --> 00:22:05,840 Speaker 2: you're known as the as the person that can poll 430 00:22:05,960 --> 00:22:11,280 Speaker 2: MAGA in, one of the best analytic people following the 431 00:22:11,400 --> 00:22:16,040 Speaker 2: president in his everything associated with the MAGA movement. All 432 00:22:16,119 --> 00:22:19,480 Speaker 2: I hear all weekend in on Drudge and everywhere is 433 00:22:19,840 --> 00:22:22,320 Speaker 2: polls the lowest in one hundred years, the lowest in 434 00:22:22,400 --> 00:22:28,800 Speaker 2: human history, thirty nine percent, forty percent. Every issue immigration 435 00:22:29,680 --> 00:22:32,440 Speaker 2: right which he closed. He basically has sealed the border 436 00:22:32,480 --> 00:22:37,280 Speaker 2: in sixty days on immigration, on economy, on everything, this 437 00:22:37,600 --> 00:22:41,439 Speaker 2: awful upside down, seventy thirty against sixty to forty against, 438 00:22:42,480 --> 00:22:45,600 Speaker 2: although all those issues still seem to be pretty popular 439 00:22:45,640 --> 00:22:48,440 Speaker 2: with the people in the United States. What say you, sir? 440 00:22:50,080 --> 00:22:52,920 Speaker 16: You know that meme with the cat in the tinfoil hat. 441 00:22:53,600 --> 00:22:55,719 Speaker 16: Every day I wake up and there's another side up. 442 00:22:55,840 --> 00:22:58,720 Speaker 16: That's exactly what's happening right now. They have nothing else, 443 00:22:58,800 --> 00:23:00,960 Speaker 16: They have no political power, and so all they have 444 00:23:01,200 --> 00:23:04,560 Speaker 16: is to just rail against Trump. And after the election 445 00:23:04,800 --> 00:23:07,800 Speaker 16: I had an honest question about, well, maybe they'll finally 446 00:23:07,960 --> 00:23:12,200 Speaker 16: put getting into the black ahead of propaganda, and it 447 00:23:12,320 --> 00:23:14,840 Speaker 16: looks like they haven't. And it's because their shills for 448 00:23:14,960 --> 00:23:17,159 Speaker 16: the establishment, and they're going to continue to shill for 449 00:23:17,200 --> 00:23:20,400 Speaker 16: the establishment. But you're spot on. The reason Trump got 450 00:23:20,440 --> 00:23:24,399 Speaker 16: elected is because his policies were more popular than he was, 451 00:23:24,560 --> 00:23:28,160 Speaker 16: overwhelmingly so. And we've measured it so many different ways. 452 00:23:28,240 --> 00:23:30,960 Speaker 16: But I have a new, fresh one to read to 453 00:23:30,960 --> 00:23:33,480 Speaker 16: you here. Do you agree or disagree with this statement? 454 00:23:33,800 --> 00:23:36,080 Speaker 16: You can't just free to criminals and think crime is 455 00:23:36,119 --> 00:23:38,760 Speaker 16: going to go down magically. You have to imprison criminals 456 00:23:38,800 --> 00:23:41,879 Speaker 16: so you can liberate three hundred and fifty million Americans. 457 00:23:42,480 --> 00:23:45,119 Speaker 16: They're asking for the end of crime and the end 458 00:23:45,160 --> 00:23:50,560 Speaker 16: of terrorism. That's Naim Bukelly quote. Sixty six percent of 459 00:23:50,760 --> 00:23:54,640 Speaker 16: US likely voters agree, forty three percent strongly, only twenty 460 00:23:54,720 --> 00:23:59,400 Speaker 16: percent disagree, only nine percent strongly disagree. So Americans overwhelmingly 461 00:23:59,400 --> 00:24:01,520 Speaker 16: see what's happened on the news, they're like, oh sweet, 462 00:24:01,720 --> 00:24:04,879 Speaker 16: legal aliens are getting deported, and so all they have 463 00:24:05,119 --> 00:24:08,120 Speaker 16: to do is try to undermine this guy's approval rating, 464 00:24:08,160 --> 00:24:11,359 Speaker 16: but it's not going to work. After Biden and we 465 00:24:11,560 --> 00:24:13,960 Speaker 16: pull every night, I think we're the ones that people 466 00:24:13,960 --> 00:24:17,080 Speaker 16: should pay attention to because we've done more approval polling 467 00:24:17,160 --> 00:24:20,119 Speaker 16: than any other polster, and we've been pretty good as 468 00:24:20,200 --> 00:24:21,560 Speaker 16: far as elections. 469 00:24:21,080 --> 00:24:21,440 Speaker 5: Go, too. 470 00:24:21,640 --> 00:24:24,960 Speaker 16: I mean, we've disproven this whole Rasmus and leans right thing. 471 00:24:25,640 --> 00:24:28,720 Speaker 16: And if you look at the polling, you know, take 472 00:24:28,840 --> 00:24:31,560 Speaker 16: the first six months of Obama and set that aside, right, 473 00:24:31,640 --> 00:24:34,960 Speaker 16: because something different was going on there, the great financial collapse, 474 00:24:35,160 --> 00:24:38,359 Speaker 16: recovery and a whole bunch of cultural zeitgeist. 475 00:24:38,760 --> 00:24:39,920 Speaker 4: If you set that aside. 476 00:24:40,200 --> 00:24:43,960 Speaker 16: In our numbers, Trump pretty much polls like Obama did 477 00:24:44,320 --> 00:24:46,800 Speaker 16: and Biden does not. He's like four or five points 478 00:24:46,840 --> 00:24:49,240 Speaker 16: on average lower than everybody else. And I'll tell you what, 479 00:24:49,320 --> 00:24:51,200 Speaker 16: our Biden approval is higher than everybody else. 480 00:24:51,240 --> 00:24:51,840 Speaker 4: So here's the thing. 481 00:24:52,160 --> 00:24:54,360 Speaker 16: Two or three years ago, everybody'd be like, oh, look 482 00:24:54,359 --> 00:24:57,600 Speaker 16: at Quinnipiac. They have Biden approval at a thirty three percent. Well, no, 483 00:24:57,800 --> 00:25:01,320 Speaker 16: bind approval wasn't at thirty three percent. Quinnipiac just sucks. 484 00:25:01,880 --> 00:25:04,119 Speaker 16: So don't quote him now if you're trying to do 485 00:25:04,359 --> 00:25:08,560 Speaker 16: a story about Trump approval, Trump came in north of fifty. 486 00:25:08,920 --> 00:25:12,080 Speaker 16: He's at forty seven percent underwater five right now, the 487 00:25:12,240 --> 00:25:16,119 Speaker 16: real clear politics aggregates underwater seven, so about two points 488 00:25:16,119 --> 00:25:17,800 Speaker 16: to the left of me where it should be. 489 00:25:18,560 --> 00:25:21,520 Speaker 4: And that's what happens. That's what happens to presidents. They 490 00:25:21,640 --> 00:25:22,880 Speaker 4: have a honeymoon, it goes away. 491 00:25:22,920 --> 00:25:26,879 Speaker 16: Trump's going to probably hang around fifty percent, but it's like, okay, well, 492 00:25:26,960 --> 00:25:30,320 Speaker 16: let's focus on the economic issues. And voters are overwhelmingly 493 00:25:30,359 --> 00:25:32,679 Speaker 16: say no, the economy isn't about the stock market, it's 494 00:25:32,680 --> 00:25:35,600 Speaker 16: about jobs. By almost a four to one margin. They 495 00:25:35,720 --> 00:25:38,280 Speaker 16: actually rate him pretty good. We asked in the middle 496 00:25:38,359 --> 00:25:41,080 Speaker 16: of the stock market crisis, and Donald Trump pulled out 497 00:25:41,080 --> 00:25:44,400 Speaker 16: a forty four percent excellent or good as a rating 498 00:25:44,440 --> 00:25:46,760 Speaker 16: on the issue of the economy and also trade, He's 499 00:25:46,800 --> 00:25:50,600 Speaker 16: in the forties too. Those are higher than any issue 500 00:25:50,720 --> 00:25:53,520 Speaker 16: ever in all of our polling that Biden was rated on. 501 00:25:53,720 --> 00:25:56,760 Speaker 16: It just was his best issue is national security. Trump's 502 00:25:56,800 --> 00:25:58,720 Speaker 16: worst issue blows Bien out of the water. 503 00:26:00,200 --> 00:26:02,200 Speaker 2: Hang on one second. I'm going to keep you around, 504 00:26:02,320 --> 00:26:05,520 Speaker 2: Dave Bread and there I'm gonna have some reportee and 505 00:26:05,640 --> 00:26:08,240 Speaker 2: some questions for you. This is quite important. The best 506 00:26:08,840 --> 00:26:12,760 Speaker 2: polster of the mega movement and Trump. What's so bad 507 00:26:12,760 --> 00:26:17,560 Speaker 2: about saying you lean right? Don't you lean right? Mark? 508 00:26:19,080 --> 00:26:24,200 Speaker 2: There's worst things to be said. Short commercial break, Birch 509 00:26:24,320 --> 00:26:27,080 Speaker 2: Gold now more than ever, by the way, as Dave 510 00:26:27,119 --> 00:26:30,560 Speaker 2: Brad's gonna tell us the worst April in the history 511 00:26:30,600 --> 00:26:33,320 Speaker 2: of the stock markets. It's the Great Depression. Remember ladies 512 00:26:33,320 --> 00:26:36,120 Speaker 2: and gentlemen ten days ago, that blaring headline and every 513 00:26:36,240 --> 00:26:39,399 Speaker 2: show that's all they talked about. Stock markets made it 514 00:26:39,440 --> 00:26:45,200 Speaker 2: all back, I think, and maybe a ted up suck 515 00:26:45,320 --> 00:26:49,960 Speaker 2: on that CNBC Birch Gold, Birch Gold dot com, slash Bannon, 516 00:26:50,160 --> 00:26:53,639 Speaker 2: end of the dollar empire. Get it today. It is 517 00:26:53,760 --> 00:27:04,280 Speaker 2: all free. Use your who Stephen k back, it's a Monday. 518 00:27:05,280 --> 00:27:07,159 Speaker 2: Let's get to work. Go to Birch Gold, take your 519 00:27:07,160 --> 00:27:09,399 Speaker 2: phone out, text ban and b A N N O 520 00:27:09,680 --> 00:27:13,399 Speaker 2: N N nine eight. We're trying to make you smarter. 521 00:27:13,520 --> 00:27:16,000 Speaker 2: By the way, I'm so honored to be at Hillsdale 522 00:27:17,040 --> 00:27:22,080 Speaker 2: U to give a talk on on Thursday, and then 523 00:27:22,160 --> 00:27:24,760 Speaker 2: had a great opportunity to have h you know, Chris 524 00:27:24,880 --> 00:27:28,600 Speaker 2: Caldwell and Chris Leonard my favorite book, The Lords of 525 00:27:28,640 --> 00:27:31,520 Speaker 2: Easy Money, joined us out in Candias City. He's Kansas 526 00:27:31,560 --> 00:27:35,200 Speaker 2: City and had Sean Davis from the Federal It's just 527 00:27:35,280 --> 00:27:39,160 Speaker 2: some fantastic people. One thing I got the entire time 528 00:27:39,240 --> 00:27:43,280 Speaker 2: was tremendous compliments on the war room audience. The power 529 00:27:43,320 --> 00:27:45,360 Speaker 2: and stroke you have. One of the reasons is you've 530 00:27:45,560 --> 00:27:50,239 Speaker 2: you're learned up. You go up the learning curve, uh 531 00:27:50,440 --> 00:27:53,000 Speaker 2: Bannon at nine nine nine eight. Textit. You go to 532 00:27:53,040 --> 00:27:56,879 Speaker 2: Birch Gold, you get the ultimate guide for investing in 533 00:27:56,960 --> 00:28:00,720 Speaker 2: gold and precious metals in the era Trump Boom. Get 534 00:28:00,760 --> 00:28:04,200 Speaker 2: it today. Make sure you understand what's going on, particularly 535 00:28:04,280 --> 00:28:07,160 Speaker 2: the dollar as a prime reserve currency. That may come 536 00:28:07,280 --> 00:28:09,920 Speaker 2: back to bite us, but you're gonna be ahead of 537 00:28:09,920 --> 00:28:13,200 Speaker 2: the curve. Trust me. Remember Ray dally On here with 538 00:28:13,359 --> 00:28:18,000 Speaker 2: Freeze car. Do you buy Mark Mitchell's thesis that that 539 00:28:18,200 --> 00:28:20,560 Speaker 2: not not that they're the best polster, but that fact 540 00:28:20,640 --> 00:28:24,560 Speaker 2: that this is essentially a syop that that that you 541 00:28:24,640 --> 00:28:27,480 Speaker 2: know because it's come out in Unison. It's it's hitting 542 00:28:27,600 --> 00:28:31,520 Speaker 2: wave after wave after way. Trump's unpopular although the issues 543 00:28:31,560 --> 00:28:33,960 Speaker 2: and the job he's done and some of the Remember 544 00:28:34,080 --> 00:28:36,160 Speaker 2: Langford had a bill in front of us two years ago. 545 00:28:36,400 --> 00:28:38,520 Speaker 2: You sat right here, We went through it. It would 546 00:28:38,560 --> 00:28:40,880 Speaker 2: take us a decade. We spend another one hundred billion 547 00:28:40,960 --> 00:28:45,640 Speaker 2: dollars to do what Trump did in sixty days seal 548 00:28:45,720 --> 00:28:46,120 Speaker 2: the border. 549 00:28:46,440 --> 00:28:46,560 Speaker 11: Right. 550 00:28:46,640 --> 00:28:48,720 Speaker 2: And now you got Tom Homing up there today saying hey, 551 00:28:49,360 --> 00:28:52,640 Speaker 2: get your affairs in order, because if you're still here 552 00:28:52,680 --> 00:28:55,160 Speaker 2: when we track you down. It's gonna be some it's 553 00:28:55,200 --> 00:28:56,480 Speaker 2: going to be a criminal penalty. 554 00:28:56,600 --> 00:28:56,760 Speaker 4: Yeah. 555 00:28:56,960 --> 00:29:00,360 Speaker 2: Yeah, it's a syop. It's what's covered and what's not covered. 556 00:29:00,640 --> 00:29:03,880 Speaker 11: Can you imagine if the mainstream media went after the 557 00:29:03,960 --> 00:29:08,320 Speaker 11: cell phone records of every Democratic politician and every secretary 558 00:29:08,440 --> 00:29:12,720 Speaker 11: under President Biden and tracked them on national defense issues 559 00:29:12,760 --> 00:29:14,760 Speaker 11: and whatever they were working against the country on national 560 00:29:14,800 --> 00:29:18,120 Speaker 11: defense issues. Our guys are all patriots and cub scouts 561 00:29:18,240 --> 00:29:20,040 Speaker 11: doing good. You hear and they you make a technical 562 00:29:20,080 --> 00:29:23,720 Speaker 11: mistake or whatever. But yet what's covered versus what's not covered? 563 00:29:23,920 --> 00:29:26,040 Speaker 11: I looked up a few stats with the Canada News. 564 00:29:26,400 --> 00:29:27,440 Speaker 11: They won't cover any of this. 565 00:29:27,680 --> 00:29:27,800 Speaker 4: Right. 566 00:29:27,880 --> 00:29:31,479 Speaker 11: Canada's government is a percentage of GDP, Right, so they 567 00:29:31,520 --> 00:29:34,560 Speaker 11: have a huge government. Canada is forty three percent. Their 568 00:29:34,600 --> 00:29:37,680 Speaker 11: government's forty three percent of their GDP of their economy. 569 00:29:38,000 --> 00:29:40,680 Speaker 11: The UK is the same. That's why they're tanking. The 570 00:29:40,880 --> 00:29:43,960 Speaker 11: US is thirty seven, nothing to be proud of, and 571 00:29:44,080 --> 00:29:45,160 Speaker 11: the percent nothing to. 572 00:29:45,160 --> 00:29:47,360 Speaker 2: Be product we're tanking too. You can't be at thirty 573 00:29:47,400 --> 00:29:48,200 Speaker 2: so much? Right too? 574 00:29:48,440 --> 00:29:52,040 Speaker 11: And then Christian only fifty three percent in Canada, US 575 00:29:52,160 --> 00:29:53,200 Speaker 11: is still at sixty seven. 576 00:29:53,240 --> 00:29:55,520 Speaker 2: I think it's a higher than that, but those are 577 00:29:55,560 --> 00:29:58,400 Speaker 2: also correlated. And so we saw with the Pope. 578 00:29:58,720 --> 00:30:00,920 Speaker 11: No one's in the pews in your up and their 579 00:30:00,960 --> 00:30:03,720 Speaker 11: economies are tanken. I ran regressions on this stuff thirty 580 00:30:03,760 --> 00:30:07,040 Speaker 11: five years ago when you weren't allowed to publish that. 581 00:30:07,560 --> 00:30:10,560 Speaker 11: You couldn't say anything in mainstream academia about religion, and 582 00:30:10,600 --> 00:30:14,000 Speaker 11: you still can't. And that's why Harvard and Yale and Columbia, 583 00:30:14,040 --> 00:30:17,160 Speaker 11: all these are under fire. They don't pursue truth anymore. 584 00:30:17,520 --> 00:30:21,240 Speaker 11: The mainstream media says that in the open clip. But 585 00:30:22,320 --> 00:30:24,000 Speaker 11: the role of the media is to tell the truth. 586 00:30:24,520 --> 00:30:27,760 Speaker 11: You tell everything except the truth. Right, Just these basic 587 00:30:27,840 --> 00:30:31,040 Speaker 11: stats I looked up in five minutes. The mainstream reporters 588 00:30:31,120 --> 00:30:33,280 Speaker 11: can't seem to find any of them. And so yeah, 589 00:30:33,600 --> 00:30:36,720 Speaker 11: Mark Mitchell, he's always solid that he gives the numbers. 590 00:30:36,760 --> 00:30:40,680 Speaker 11: We need to do more of that, and so congratulations 591 00:30:40,760 --> 00:30:41,560 Speaker 11: to Rasmussen. 592 00:30:41,720 --> 00:30:44,920 Speaker 2: So Mark, just lay out the thesis once again. With 593 00:30:45,560 --> 00:30:49,600 Speaker 2: people being bombarded this weekend and this morning with the 594 00:30:49,800 --> 00:30:51,320 Speaker 2: and you're going to see it all the way through. 595 00:30:51,600 --> 00:30:54,400 Speaker 2: Trump is going to go to Michigan for a rally. 596 00:30:55,040 --> 00:30:57,080 Speaker 2: We're going to do special curvature in the war room. 597 00:30:57,720 --> 00:31:00,480 Speaker 2: Eric Bowling will be in studio. We're going to do 598 00:31:00,520 --> 00:31:05,160 Speaker 2: a special like four hours, Eric Bowling, myself, Brian Glen 599 00:31:05,240 --> 00:31:07,640 Speaker 2: will be on Air Force one with the President, and 600 00:31:07,680 --> 00:31:10,480 Speaker 2: the Great Steve Gruber will be up in Michigan because 601 00:31:10,480 --> 00:31:13,440 Speaker 2: he's the Rush of Michigan. He'll be up there hosting 602 00:31:15,480 --> 00:31:18,400 Speaker 2: all day, Mitchell. They're gonna be bombarding us on one 603 00:31:18,440 --> 00:31:22,760 Speaker 2: hundredth day that Trump is the most unpopular is the 604 00:31:22,880 --> 00:31:26,640 Speaker 2: most unpopular president in one hundred years? 605 00:31:28,800 --> 00:31:30,720 Speaker 16: Yeah, I'd like to back up what I've been saying 606 00:31:30,760 --> 00:31:32,600 Speaker 16: with a little bit of evidence. So don't just take 607 00:31:32,640 --> 00:31:35,320 Speaker 16: it from me that there's a psychological operation going on. 608 00:31:36,360 --> 00:31:38,040 Speaker 16: I will say if you look at the real their 609 00:31:38,080 --> 00:31:41,960 Speaker 16: politics aggregate right now. Just in the last like two days, 610 00:31:42,080 --> 00:31:44,160 Speaker 16: a whole lot of holes dropped and they were all 611 00:31:44,360 --> 00:31:47,560 Speaker 16: they all look the same. Reuters zipsos negative eleven, Fox 612 00:31:47,680 --> 00:31:52,080 Speaker 16: News negative eleven, CBS negative ten, CNN negative fourteen, New 613 00:31:52,160 --> 00:31:56,200 Speaker 16: York Times Who's been Missing an Action? Negative twelve, and 614 00:31:56,520 --> 00:32:00,600 Speaker 16: ABC News Washington Post negative thirteen. They all dropped double 615 00:32:00,640 --> 00:32:03,200 Speaker 16: digit underwater poles for Donald Trump within a few days 616 00:32:03,240 --> 00:32:03,720 Speaker 16: at each other. 617 00:32:04,280 --> 00:32:07,280 Speaker 4: And it's all these people that haven't been polling that much. 618 00:32:07,440 --> 00:32:08,840 Speaker 4: They did it for the one hundred days. 619 00:32:09,280 --> 00:32:11,360 Speaker 16: But then go to Google Trends, which is one of 620 00:32:11,440 --> 00:32:13,880 Speaker 16: my favorite tools, and look at all of the search 621 00:32:14,040 --> 00:32:17,600 Speaker 16: history going all the way back for the terms Trump approval, 622 00:32:17,840 --> 00:32:21,200 Speaker 16: Biden approval, Bush approval, and Obama approval, and what you'll 623 00:32:21,240 --> 00:32:24,400 Speaker 16: see is that for some reason, there's something different about 624 00:32:24,440 --> 00:32:25,000 Speaker 16: Donald Trump. 625 00:32:25,360 --> 00:32:27,520 Speaker 4: For some reason, Trump approval. 626 00:32:27,440 --> 00:32:30,880 Speaker 16: Drives way more, way more organic search volume than any 627 00:32:30,920 --> 00:32:34,120 Speaker 16: of those other presidents, which is totally crazy considering how 628 00:32:34,280 --> 00:32:39,440 Speaker 16: popular Obama ostensibly was. And what you see this April, 629 00:32:39,600 --> 00:32:41,880 Speaker 16: it looks like it's going to be the second highest 630 00:32:41,960 --> 00:32:45,200 Speaker 16: month of all of Google polling history, or of Google's 631 00:32:45,280 --> 00:32:48,840 Speaker 16: data history of searches for Trump approval. So that's how 632 00:32:48,880 --> 00:32:51,200 Speaker 16: I know it's a sy op. People are getting these 633 00:32:51,240 --> 00:32:53,520 Speaker 16: stories shoved down their throats, they're going on Google, they're 634 00:32:53,520 --> 00:32:55,720 Speaker 16: trying to check it out themselves, and the mainstream media 635 00:32:55,800 --> 00:32:58,320 Speaker 16: is going to Information gatekeep and shove a Quinnipiac pole 636 00:32:58,360 --> 00:33:00,600 Speaker 16: in their face that says negative twelve. These guys were 637 00:33:00,600 --> 00:33:03,840 Speaker 16: all between seven and nine points left of me in September, 638 00:33:04,200 --> 00:33:06,440 Speaker 16: and this is the exact same thing they were doing 639 00:33:06,520 --> 00:33:09,800 Speaker 16: back then, trying to use the TikTok videos and Kamala 640 00:33:09,840 --> 00:33:13,840 Speaker 16: Harris's debate performance to create a fake lead. But I 641 00:33:13,960 --> 00:33:15,520 Speaker 16: have one other thing I want to bring up and 642 00:33:15,560 --> 00:33:18,920 Speaker 16: look at everybody focuses on trump approval, and what we've 643 00:33:18,960 --> 00:33:22,560 Speaker 16: been focusing on is how highly approved of his policies are. 644 00:33:22,920 --> 00:33:25,280 Speaker 16: But if you look at the electoral math, if you 645 00:33:25,440 --> 00:33:30,400 Speaker 16: take turnout as a percent of voting eligible population or 646 00:33:30,480 --> 00:33:33,600 Speaker 16: voting age population, depending on what data is available, and 647 00:33:33,640 --> 00:33:36,720 Speaker 16: then you take each president their share of the national 648 00:33:36,760 --> 00:33:40,400 Speaker 16: popular vote that they won, and then stack rank them 649 00:33:40,520 --> 00:33:44,800 Speaker 16: based on how many what percent of Americans that president 650 00:33:44,960 --> 00:33:48,240 Speaker 16: got to vote for them. Trump two point zero got 651 00:33:48,320 --> 00:33:51,200 Speaker 16: thirty two percent of the electorate to vote for him. 652 00:33:51,680 --> 00:33:55,040 Speaker 16: Where does that stack up higher than JFK, George W. 653 00:33:55,240 --> 00:34:00,320 Speaker 16: Bush two, Obama two, Reagan one, FDR Number four, Bush, 654 00:34:01,720 --> 00:34:06,520 Speaker 16: HW Bush, Carter Trump won, Nixon one, George W. Bush won, 655 00:34:06,800 --> 00:34:10,080 Speaker 16: George W. Bush one was twenty six percent. Donald Trump's 656 00:34:10,080 --> 00:34:11,080 Speaker 16: got thirty two percent. 657 00:34:12,120 --> 00:34:14,520 Speaker 2: Hey won me through that formula again. It's it's early 658 00:34:14,600 --> 00:34:17,880 Speaker 2: on the Monday morning and I'm only halfway through my 659 00:34:18,239 --> 00:34:20,919 Speaker 2: I had a tough weekend, I was under the weather, 660 00:34:21,040 --> 00:34:23,200 Speaker 2: and I'm still going through my warpath. Coffee. Give me, 661 00:34:23,520 --> 00:34:26,279 Speaker 2: give me don't hit me with that, Mitchell, give it 662 00:34:26,320 --> 00:34:26,840 Speaker 2: to me again. 663 00:34:28,080 --> 00:34:30,320 Speaker 4: Well, it's like, okay, do people like Trump or not? 664 00:34:30,520 --> 00:34:32,360 Speaker 16: They saw him first time around, and they got a 665 00:34:32,480 --> 00:34:35,160 Speaker 16: chance to vote for him again, right, and you take 666 00:34:35,440 --> 00:34:39,000 Speaker 16: how many people turned out, like actual voters, and then 667 00:34:39,040 --> 00:34:42,040 Speaker 16: you take the national popular vote, So it's like, Okay, 668 00:34:42,120 --> 00:34:44,560 Speaker 16: of the voters that turned out, how much did that 669 00:34:44,719 --> 00:34:47,640 Speaker 16: winner get? And Trump two dot zho got way more 670 00:34:47,719 --> 00:34:50,440 Speaker 16: than Trump one dot oh thirty two percent compared to 671 00:34:50,520 --> 00:34:55,080 Speaker 16: twenty eight percent, and he improved massively, and his electoral 672 00:34:55,160 --> 00:34:58,880 Speaker 16: performance was better than like pretty much everybody except for 673 00:34:59,040 --> 00:35:01,920 Speaker 16: like really Trump two dot zero was only beaten by 674 00:35:02,040 --> 00:35:05,680 Speaker 16: FDR number three Reagan number two. Obama won, but again 675 00:35:05,760 --> 00:35:08,080 Speaker 16: we all know, wow, craziness that was going on there, 676 00:35:08,160 --> 00:35:11,440 Speaker 16: and then Biden with that really huge asterix about the 677 00:35:11,560 --> 00:35:14,759 Speaker 16: highest turnout ever in the history of American elections. 678 00:35:15,080 --> 00:35:17,800 Speaker 4: Right there, there's that. But my point is is that 679 00:35:18,000 --> 00:35:19,560 Speaker 4: the eight. 680 00:35:19,560 --> 00:35:21,400 Speaker 2: Man votes have never showed the may and votes have 681 00:35:21,520 --> 00:35:23,600 Speaker 2: never showed back up since then, right, And we're just 682 00:35:23,760 --> 00:35:24,400 Speaker 2: saying where they go. 683 00:35:24,640 --> 00:35:30,800 Speaker 16: Right, So Obama went from thirty three down to under thirty. 684 00:35:31,440 --> 00:35:34,320 Speaker 16: Donald Trump went from twenty seven point seven up to 685 00:35:34,480 --> 00:35:38,320 Speaker 16: thirty two, Donald Trump's first time in office and the 686 00:35:38,400 --> 00:35:41,239 Speaker 16: four years of Biden convinced way more people to vote 687 00:35:41,280 --> 00:35:44,239 Speaker 16: for Donald Trump. And listen, we're only a few months 688 00:35:44,320 --> 00:35:47,520 Speaker 16: into this second term. The election was barely six months ago, 689 00:35:48,040 --> 00:35:50,160 Speaker 16: and so you're just not going to like, that's not 690 00:35:50,440 --> 00:35:53,319 Speaker 16: what's happened. Millions of people did not change their mind 691 00:35:53,320 --> 00:35:56,799 Speaker 16: about Donald Trump. It's all a media circus. It's all 692 00:35:57,200 --> 00:35:59,640 Speaker 16: cherry picked stuff in order to drive a narrative. It's 693 00:35:59,640 --> 00:36:02,560 Speaker 16: probably coming from the top down, still, is my guess. 694 00:36:02,840 --> 00:36:04,560 Speaker 16: You know, I'd love to see the talking points that 695 00:36:04,600 --> 00:36:07,239 Speaker 16: are still being distributed to the news. But here we 696 00:36:07,360 --> 00:36:10,879 Speaker 16: are until somebody, until something pops off, right, until there's 697 00:36:10,920 --> 00:36:14,319 Speaker 16: a violent riot, or until some state decides to get 698 00:36:14,400 --> 00:36:16,440 Speaker 16: up at you with the feds. This is what they 699 00:36:16,560 --> 00:36:19,000 Speaker 16: have to just trying. It's like the mean girls tactic. 700 00:36:19,080 --> 00:36:21,480 Speaker 16: They're just going to try for months and months to 701 00:36:21,560 --> 00:36:24,680 Speaker 16: convince everybody that Donald Trump's not cool enough. But Americans 702 00:36:24,719 --> 00:36:25,799 Speaker 16: can't put food on the tap. 703 00:36:27,160 --> 00:36:29,279 Speaker 11: Yeah, hey, Mark, I got a quick one for you too. 704 00:36:29,360 --> 00:36:34,800 Speaker 11: I saw the consumer sentiment index. Republicans ninety two percent, 705 00:36:35,360 --> 00:36:40,439 Speaker 11: Democrats thirty five percent on consumer sentiment. Can you break 706 00:36:40,520 --> 00:36:43,480 Speaker 11: that down for us just to hear, because that seems 707 00:36:43,520 --> 00:36:47,279 Speaker 11: more like a political sentiment. The economics is missing, right, 708 00:36:47,360 --> 00:36:50,720 Speaker 11: There's no way you're going to have Republicans with consumer 709 00:36:50,800 --> 00:36:54,799 Speaker 11: expenditures or anything correlated at ninety two percent with Democrats 710 00:36:54,800 --> 00:36:57,719 Speaker 11: at thirty two. So are all these variables just being 711 00:36:57,800 --> 00:37:02,040 Speaker 11: conflated with the political variables and Trump derangement syndrome. 712 00:37:03,960 --> 00:37:06,000 Speaker 16: I mean, there's so many different ways to measure that. 713 00:37:06,200 --> 00:37:10,640 Speaker 16: But the Republican Party and Trump supporters are all in 714 00:37:10,800 --> 00:37:13,200 Speaker 16: on this, right, and so there's an aspect of optimism. 715 00:37:13,320 --> 00:37:15,719 Speaker 16: Their number is definitely ticked up a lot. And I 716 00:37:15,760 --> 00:37:19,279 Speaker 16: think it's this idea that overwhelmingly Republicans say that the 717 00:37:19,360 --> 00:37:22,359 Speaker 16: economy is jobs and Democrats are a lot less likely 718 00:37:22,480 --> 00:37:25,160 Speaker 16: to say that. But then there's just the fact that, 719 00:37:25,280 --> 00:37:27,320 Speaker 16: like you can call it chaos. But we polled, we 720 00:37:27,440 --> 00:37:30,400 Speaker 16: asked this specific question, is this what you voted for? 721 00:37:30,680 --> 00:37:32,760 Speaker 16: It was like a week or two ago. Eighty percent 722 00:37:32,800 --> 00:37:35,800 Speaker 16: of Trump voters say yeah, like yes, this is what 723 00:37:35,880 --> 00:37:38,399 Speaker 16: I vote And so there's a bunch of different ways 724 00:37:38,440 --> 00:37:40,719 Speaker 16: to measure it. But remember we asked that is this 725 00:37:41,080 --> 00:37:46,279 Speaker 16: going to be olden age? And Republicans overwhelmingly agreed yeah. 726 00:37:46,360 --> 00:37:46,520 Speaker 4: Good. 727 00:37:46,600 --> 00:37:49,880 Speaker 11: And this is a little tongue in cheek, but I 728 00:37:50,000 --> 00:37:52,719 Speaker 11: just looked up the S and P five hundreds up 729 00:37:52,960 --> 00:37:57,319 Speaker 11: eight percent for the past year, not year to date, 730 00:37:57,360 --> 00:38:00,920 Speaker 11: but for the past year, and it's up twenty three 731 00:38:01,000 --> 00:38:04,040 Speaker 11: percent over the past three years, might be twenty eight percent. 732 00:38:04,520 --> 00:38:07,279 Speaker 11: Have you ever asked a question just to see if 733 00:38:07,400 --> 00:38:12,760 Speaker 11: people know what's going on? Is the is the stock 734 00:38:12,880 --> 00:38:16,000 Speaker 11: market up over five percent this year? And just see 735 00:38:16,080 --> 00:38:18,760 Speaker 11: what they say, right, because if you read the mainstream media, 736 00:38:19,160 --> 00:38:21,480 Speaker 11: there's just this over you know, it's a great depression. 737 00:38:21,960 --> 00:38:24,800 Speaker 2: They're leading this narrative that's just so priffic. But I 738 00:38:24,880 --> 00:38:27,879 Speaker 2: think the general public think the stock markets is the casino. Yeah, 739 00:38:27,960 --> 00:38:30,640 Speaker 2: that's true. At casino, I don't think the feeler relates 740 00:38:30,680 --> 00:38:32,640 Speaker 2: to their preser and most of it doesn't. Most of it, 741 00:38:32,920 --> 00:38:36,000 Speaker 2: you know, an equity market, so you have lower lower 742 00:38:36,360 --> 00:38:39,000 Speaker 2: cost of capital equity to build businesses and to reinvest. 743 00:38:39,080 --> 00:38:42,080 Speaker 2: But the stock market is past that. These stocks trade. 744 00:38:42,640 --> 00:38:45,680 Speaker 2: It's a casino mentality. Whether it's Tesla a at a 745 00:38:46,160 --> 00:38:49,279 Speaker 2: eight hundred billion dollars or the mag seven. You know, 746 00:38:49,400 --> 00:38:52,839 Speaker 2: these the ai companies of trade. And so first time 747 00:38:53,080 --> 00:38:55,399 Speaker 2: you hit a speed bump, they flate. I think most 748 00:38:55,400 --> 00:38:57,279 Speaker 2: people think it's a casino. So it's not a question 749 00:38:57,440 --> 00:38:59,600 Speaker 2: that because I think most people just don't pay attention 750 00:38:59,640 --> 00:39:03,480 Speaker 2: to because don't impact their daily lives. Mark Mitchell, one 751 00:39:03,560 --> 00:39:06,880 Speaker 2: last time to bounce for this. Go ahead, Yeah, go ahead. 752 00:39:07,800 --> 00:39:07,840 Speaker 11: No. 753 00:39:07,960 --> 00:39:09,480 Speaker 16: I mean, well, first off, we know the S and 754 00:39:09,560 --> 00:39:12,000 Speaker 16: P is driven by like seven or eight stocks. It's 755 00:39:12,080 --> 00:39:14,920 Speaker 16: not a real accurate measure, and I think the problem 756 00:39:15,080 --> 00:39:17,319 Speaker 16: is is that Americans don't trust the government, and they 757 00:39:17,360 --> 00:39:20,600 Speaker 16: certainly don't trust the government to measure things. Federal Bureau 758 00:39:20,600 --> 00:39:23,719 Speaker 16: of Labor Statistics admitted that it previously overestimated the number 759 00:39:23,719 --> 00:39:25,680 Speaker 16: of new jobs created in the past year, which is 760 00:39:25,719 --> 00:39:27,840 Speaker 16: more likely that it was an honest mistake or that 761 00:39:27,880 --> 00:39:30,839 Speaker 16: it was politically motivated. Only thirty four percent say an 762 00:39:30,840 --> 00:39:33,920 Speaker 16: honest mistake. Fifty three percent say politically motivated. So I 763 00:39:33,960 --> 00:39:36,359 Speaker 16: think the issue is they don't really trust anything out 764 00:39:36,360 --> 00:39:37,640 Speaker 16: of the media or the government. 765 00:39:38,520 --> 00:39:42,080 Speaker 2: Yeah, unbelievable, Mark Mitchell. Where do people go to get 766 00:39:42,160 --> 00:39:44,680 Speaker 2: all this brain analysis on this whole Thing's been a 767 00:39:44,800 --> 00:39:46,600 Speaker 2: sigh up and you get the numbers to back it up? 768 00:39:46,640 --> 00:39:47,040 Speaker 2: Where they go? 769 00:39:48,560 --> 00:39:51,480 Speaker 16: Yeah, Twitter Rasmus an underscore poll and my account is 770 00:39:51,640 --> 00:39:55,800 Speaker 16: honest polster. And we also stream most Monday, Wednesday, and 771 00:39:55,800 --> 00:39:59,960 Speaker 16: Friday nights, usually at nine pm Eastern on Twitter, YouTube, 772 00:40:00,400 --> 00:40:03,719 Speaker 16: rumble Getter even and so hope to see everybody there. 773 00:40:05,480 --> 00:40:09,880 Speaker 2: Perfect. Thank you, sir, appreciate you smart guy. You need 774 00:40:09,960 --> 00:40:12,719 Speaker 2: smart guys. Start about smart guys. Jim Rickards, Ricords war 775 00:40:12,840 --> 00:40:16,480 Speaker 2: Room dot com. If you like capital markets and geopolitics, 776 00:40:16,600 --> 00:40:21,839 Speaker 2: national security intelligence, all of that. The newsletter Strategic Intelligence 777 00:40:21,920 --> 00:40:25,640 Speaker 2: is what's the top leaders in the world, reads CEOs, chairman, 778 00:40:26,280 --> 00:40:30,800 Speaker 2: government officials. You can get the inside scoop in printed 779 00:40:30,880 --> 00:40:32,839 Speaker 2: form even more than you get here in the war room. 780 00:40:33,400 --> 00:40:37,279 Speaker 2: And Rickards is one of our best contributors. By the way, 781 00:40:37,560 --> 00:40:40,879 Speaker 2: speaking about contributors, Ricansworom dot com. Go check it out 782 00:40:40,920 --> 00:40:42,560 Speaker 2: that you get a free book. He tossed in money 783 00:40:42,680 --> 00:40:46,439 Speaker 2: check Ebt Scott Besson talk about a leader. Four pm 784 00:40:46,520 --> 00:40:49,439 Speaker 2: today just came across the wire. He is sitting down 785 00:40:49,640 --> 00:40:51,880 Speaker 2: with the House in the Senate to start banging heads 786 00:40:52,520 --> 00:40:55,319 Speaker 2: on the big beautiful bill. It's going to start today 787 00:40:55,360 --> 00:40:59,480 Speaker 2: at four with our old contributor. Back says. 788 00:41:00,760 --> 00:41:03,520 Speaker 17: It reflects what Zannie was saying and says that all 789 00:41:03,560 --> 00:41:08,439 Speaker 17: of this produces huge risks. We expect policy induced slow down, 790 00:41:08,600 --> 00:41:12,719 Speaker 17: including probability or a recession. The FED is going to 791 00:41:13,239 --> 00:41:16,319 Speaker 17: be less able to handle this, and so there are 792 00:41:16,800 --> 00:41:20,640 Speaker 17: risks of stagflation, the combination of slow growth and inflation. 793 00:41:21,320 --> 00:41:26,200 Speaker 17: US corporates under threat. There's the exceptional risks to US assets. 794 00:41:26,280 --> 00:41:27,200 Speaker 4: Would you agree with that? 795 00:41:30,160 --> 00:41:32,880 Speaker 12: Buy a large detigree that. I don't think it covers 796 00:41:33,280 --> 00:41:36,279 Speaker 12: what's going on. So let me just clarifying. We have 797 00:41:36,480 --> 00:41:39,239 Speaker 12: a problem with the debt. We have a problem with 798 00:41:39,520 --> 00:41:42,760 Speaker 12: internal order. Democracy is where we know it, the system. 799 00:41:43,200 --> 00:41:47,120 Speaker 12: We have a problem of the geopolitical order, rising power, 800 00:41:47,280 --> 00:41:51,080 Speaker 12: challenging and existing power in that global environment. These things 801 00:41:51,239 --> 00:41:55,160 Speaker 12: exist as the backdrop of this set of circumstances. Now 802 00:41:55,320 --> 00:41:58,840 Speaker 12: there's been volatility, there's been yes, in. 803 00:41:58,920 --> 00:42:01,600 Speaker 17: My opinion, I guess what I'm trying to get at 804 00:42:01,719 --> 00:42:07,120 Speaker 17: is you seem to be reluctant to comment directly. 805 00:42:07,520 --> 00:42:08,440 Speaker 2: I'll come it directly. 806 00:42:08,719 --> 00:42:10,200 Speaker 4: What are the effects of. 807 00:42:10,400 --> 00:42:14,120 Speaker 17: The Trump administration's policies in the last one hundred days economically? 808 00:42:15,840 --> 00:42:20,000 Speaker 12: The effects of those policies economically is to bring to 809 00:42:20,160 --> 00:42:24,560 Speaker 12: the surface issues about the polarity that exists, and at 810 00:42:24,600 --> 00:42:29,399 Speaker 12: the same time, it's doing it in a volatile way 811 00:42:29,600 --> 00:42:32,800 Speaker 12: that is causing that is causing trouble in terms of 812 00:42:32,840 --> 00:42:36,440 Speaker 12: the volatility of that. So it is dealing with problems 813 00:42:36,920 --> 00:42:39,960 Speaker 12: and at the same time it is the way it 814 00:42:40,120 --> 00:42:45,160 Speaker 12: is dealing with problems could be done more smoothly, more cooperatively, 815 00:42:45,360 --> 00:42:47,240 Speaker 12: to produce a less volatile result. 816 00:42:48,320 --> 00:42:49,200 Speaker 2: Zannie, let me ask you. 817 00:42:49,360 --> 00:42:51,480 Speaker 17: You said we're still Let me ask you about something 818 00:42:51,920 --> 00:42:55,960 Speaker 17: you know a lot about, because right now the deadlock, 819 00:42:56,120 --> 00:42:59,359 Speaker 17: the most important deadlock, is a US China deadlock. Where 820 00:43:00,200 --> 00:43:02,560 Speaker 17: to get the world economy to a more stable place, 821 00:43:02,640 --> 00:43:05,719 Speaker 17: and you wrote this in your post about a beautiful 822 00:43:05,800 --> 00:43:09,200 Speaker 17: rebalancing between the US and China, you need the two 823 00:43:09,280 --> 00:43:13,480 Speaker 17: sides to start talking. The US says they were waiting 824 00:43:13,520 --> 00:43:17,120 Speaker 17: for China to call. The Chinese say, the US started this. 825 00:43:17,480 --> 00:43:20,360 Speaker 17: You put these tariffs on first, the US has to 826 00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:25,640 Speaker 17: reduce the tariffs, then we're willing to talk. How is 827 00:43:25,719 --> 00:43:28,440 Speaker 17: this going to resolve itself? My sense is the Chinese 828 00:43:28,480 --> 00:43:29,879 Speaker 17: are holding pretty firm. 829 00:43:30,040 --> 00:43:32,719 Speaker 12: The United States has too much debt. It cannot add 830 00:43:32,760 --> 00:43:35,960 Speaker 12: to the debt to the way it is operating. It 831 00:43:36,120 --> 00:43:40,200 Speaker 12: is the world's biggest consumer, largely financed by government debt. 832 00:43:40,320 --> 00:43:43,880 Speaker 12: In the way that it's operated. China is the biggest producer. 833 00:43:44,080 --> 00:43:48,480 Speaker 12: They produce a lot of goods, more than the United States, 834 00:43:48,600 --> 00:43:52,200 Speaker 12: Japan and Germany combined in manufactured goods. And they put 835 00:43:52,239 --> 00:43:55,200 Speaker 12: it out and they save too much and they buy 836 00:43:55,360 --> 00:43:59,440 Speaker 12: the dollars. We cannot continue this debt money problem. We 837 00:43:59,560 --> 00:44:02,160 Speaker 12: have a we're at the end of a debt money world. 838 00:44:02,239 --> 00:44:05,239 Speaker 12: Or so how are we going to get the negotiation 839 00:44:05,560 --> 00:44:12,680 Speaker 12: is only it is only through cooperation, calmness, and analytical 840 00:44:12,840 --> 00:44:18,400 Speaker 12: work in which we recognize that these imbalances are unsustainable. 841 00:44:18,680 --> 00:44:22,160 Speaker 12: They're not just financially unsustainable. In a world that is 842 00:44:22,320 --> 00:44:27,640 Speaker 12: near war that there could be, there cannot be mutual dependencies, 843 00:44:28,080 --> 00:44:30,799 Speaker 12: and so how that is done together is the most 844 00:44:30,840 --> 00:44:31,440 Speaker 12: important thing. 845 00:44:31,640 --> 00:44:33,920 Speaker 17: Okay, let me that he asked you about another thing. 846 00:44:34,000 --> 00:44:39,759 Speaker 2: That womp, womp, freedze car got a big smelly you 847 00:44:39,880 --> 00:44:42,759 Speaker 2: know what right on his head trying to do that 848 00:44:42,840 --> 00:44:45,080 Speaker 2: little you know, a little maneuver he does get. Okay, 849 00:44:45,800 --> 00:44:49,400 Speaker 2: Ray Dalio, largest hedge fund in the world, made a 850 00:44:49,480 --> 00:44:54,239 Speaker 2: ton of money in China. Uh McCormick of Pennsylvania was 851 00:44:54,280 --> 00:44:58,480 Speaker 2: his deputy, was his right hand man. I've got a 852 00:44:58,520 --> 00:45:00,799 Speaker 2: lot of problems with Ray Dalio. And Ray Dalio got 853 00:45:00,800 --> 00:45:03,480 Speaker 2: a lot of problems to steeve in the war room. However, 854 00:45:04,560 --> 00:45:06,920 Speaker 2: ladies and gentlemen, that is the gospel of the war 855 00:45:07,040 --> 00:45:10,640 Speaker 2: room right there, said by supposedly the smartest or at 856 00:45:10,719 --> 00:45:13,360 Speaker 2: least regardless of the smartest or not, he's running the 857 00:45:13,400 --> 00:45:15,520 Speaker 2: biggest hedge fund in the world and managing more money 858 00:45:15,560 --> 00:45:18,640 Speaker 2: than anybody that prior, except for Larry Fink, who's not 859 00:45:18,719 --> 00:45:22,320 Speaker 2: really a hedge fund guy's more of a a asset manager. 860 00:45:23,560 --> 00:45:27,200 Speaker 2: That's the gospel. A corner warrem Zandy from economics. She's 861 00:45:27,200 --> 00:45:30,040 Speaker 2: given a big Trump and tariffs all everything on the surface, 862 00:45:30,080 --> 00:45:33,719 Speaker 2: and and Freied pivots back, and a guy goes, hey, 863 00:45:34,040 --> 00:45:36,520 Speaker 2: full stop, it's all about debt, and it's about this 864 00:45:36,719 --> 00:45:41,480 Speaker 2: is consumer financed by government spending, and it's got to stop. 865 00:45:41,640 --> 00:45:45,760 Speaker 2: There is the problem. The path we are on is unsustainable. 866 00:45:46,320 --> 00:45:48,919 Speaker 2: When they talk about Trump and everything he's done, show 867 00:45:49,000 --> 00:45:51,520 Speaker 2: me what your plan is, because the plans understated. And 868 00:45:51,560 --> 00:45:54,680 Speaker 2: that little weasel Mike Johnson skipping over to see best 869 00:45:54,760 --> 00:45:57,360 Speaker 2: in today, I hope Scott Bessett knowing like I know, 870 00:45:57,480 --> 00:46:00,440 Speaker 2: Scott hits him upside the head and says, hey, what 871 00:46:00,680 --> 00:46:03,560 Speaker 2: you have here? Is unworkable. You have somebody's got a 872 00:46:03,600 --> 00:46:08,240 Speaker 2: step to the table. We have to cut government spending, 873 00:46:08,560 --> 00:46:10,520 Speaker 2: and the cut government spending, you're going to have to 874 00:46:10,600 --> 00:46:14,080 Speaker 2: cut over the Pentagon. We got to start acting like adults. 875 00:46:14,239 --> 00:46:16,520 Speaker 2: Dave Brett, No, you get a bump floor as your 876 00:46:16,640 --> 00:46:19,839 Speaker 2: sirch No, I think you just nailed it. Dalio. I've 877 00:46:19,880 --> 00:46:20,720 Speaker 2: been a little skeptical. 878 00:46:20,800 --> 00:46:23,200 Speaker 11: He's been a little fuzzy, but that's the strongest statement 879 00:46:23,440 --> 00:46:26,160 Speaker 11: I've seen from him. And not only the debt and 880 00:46:26,239 --> 00:46:29,000 Speaker 11: the imbalances, but the debt and the imbalance is tied 881 00:46:29,080 --> 00:46:33,400 Speaker 11: to geopolitics. China a threat coming at us, our dependence 882 00:46:33,520 --> 00:46:36,439 Speaker 11: on them. Everybody's starting to follow that in all the news. 883 00:46:36,520 --> 00:46:38,600 Speaker 11: I wish you'd go to the next point. The ditch 884 00:46:38,680 --> 00:46:40,920 Speaker 11: Trump's been left in, right, it's a bunch of two's 885 00:46:41,400 --> 00:46:44,879 Speaker 11: two percent GDP growth for the next thirty years. That's 886 00:46:44,960 --> 00:46:48,359 Speaker 11: the ditch, right. That that's CBO, that's World Bank, that's 887 00:46:48,400 --> 00:46:50,760 Speaker 11: the Federal Reserve. We're going to grow at two percent 888 00:46:50,920 --> 00:46:54,080 Speaker 11: for the next thirty years. That's on paper. What's correlated 889 00:46:54,160 --> 00:46:57,000 Speaker 11: with that? Wage growth for the American people at two 890 00:46:57,080 --> 00:47:00,680 Speaker 11: percent for the next thirty years? Bear, Why is that 891 00:47:00,840 --> 00:47:04,320 Speaker 11: the case because of productivity at two percent for the 892 00:47:04,400 --> 00:47:05,200 Speaker 11: next thirty years. 893 00:47:05,280 --> 00:47:08,120 Speaker 2: And our friend Bob Gordon, the top guy in the world. 894 00:47:08,440 --> 00:47:11,040 Speaker 2: This is not war room statistic killer twos. These are 895 00:47:11,080 --> 00:47:12,520 Speaker 2: the two to two and two. 896 00:47:12,600 --> 00:47:15,840 Speaker 11: And if Dalyo hits that and shows the ditch we're in. 897 00:47:16,040 --> 00:47:19,759 Speaker 11: But that was a strong performance on his part. And 898 00:47:20,400 --> 00:47:23,600 Speaker 11: that goes to the syop you heard for read way 899 00:47:23,680 --> 00:47:26,120 Speaker 11: in there. And when he pivoted on the language, Dallio 900 00:47:26,200 --> 00:47:28,000 Speaker 11: didn't give him what he wanted. And then he said 901 00:47:28,560 --> 00:47:31,800 Speaker 11: he his tone almost reflected what you should certainly side 902 00:47:31,880 --> 00:47:36,360 Speaker 11: with the China's narrative and talking points right, and the 903 00:47:36,440 --> 00:47:39,200 Speaker 11: pitch was going toward China and I'm going wow. And 904 00:47:39,280 --> 00:47:43,400 Speaker 11: then of course no reportage on China's weaknesses. If you 905 00:47:43,520 --> 00:47:47,040 Speaker 11: really want to finish the story, where's the reporting. China's 906 00:47:47,120 --> 00:47:50,840 Speaker 11: got three hundred percent debt to GDP also, And so 907 00:47:51,320 --> 00:47:54,520 Speaker 11: come on, guys, the psyop is loud and clear. 908 00:47:54,640 --> 00:47:56,799 Speaker 2: You're back with us tomorrow morning, tomorrow all day, you bet, 909 00:47:56,920 --> 00:47:59,640 Speaker 2: Dave Dave Brett is his book to safer and will 910 00:47:59,640 --> 00:48:01,960 Speaker 2: receive tomorrow morning, be right here in the war room. 911 00:48:02,239 --> 00:48:04,080 Speaker 2: But how about that tomorrow we got day Brett in 912 00:48:04,080 --> 00:48:07,080 Speaker 2: the morning, Eric Bowling in the afternoon, kind of the 913 00:48:07,160 --> 00:48:08,560 Speaker 2: invasion of the Visago. 914 00:48:09,920 --> 00:48:10,080 Speaker 4: Day. 915 00:48:10,120 --> 00:48:11,200 Speaker 2: Brett, what's your social. 916 00:48:11,000 --> 00:48:14,080 Speaker 11: Media Dave, Yeah, I did post finally from good Friday, 917 00:48:14,320 --> 00:48:18,719 Speaker 11: Brad Economics on get Her and on x Amen fantastic. 918 00:48:21,040 --> 00:48:22,960 Speaker 2: We're gonna leave you with the right stuff we've got. 919 00:48:23,000 --> 00:48:25,080 Speaker 2: We're gonna go to Rome. We've also going to go 920 00:48:25,280 --> 00:48:28,480 Speaker 2: There was an outage of energy or gets electricity through 921 00:48:28,560 --> 00:48:32,560 Speaker 2: Portugal and Spain. We're gonna find out why. Dave Walsh 922 00:48:32,680 --> 00:48:34,880 Speaker 2: is gonna be here also talk to us about energy 923 00:48:34,920 --> 00:48:38,759 Speaker 2: here in the United States of America. New peace deal 924 00:48:38,800 --> 00:48:41,800 Speaker 2: looks like in Ukraine. A lot going on here. Besson's 925 00:48:41,800 --> 00:48:45,040 Speaker 2: got them stacked up over look like these deals like 926 00:48:45,200 --> 00:48:47,760 Speaker 2: planes of La Guardian on a Friday nights cutting deals 927 00:48:47,800 --> 00:48:49,640 Speaker 2: this week and get in the house and send it 928 00:48:49,719 --> 00:48:52,760 Speaker 2: up there. Start working on this tax deal. All next 929 00:48:53,760 --> 00:48:54,440 Speaker 2: in the war room.