1 00:00:22,160 --> 00:00:25,279 Speaker 1: Hello, America. Welcome to the Friday edition of Justin News 2 00:00:25,280 --> 00:00:27,520 Speaker 1: Now Noise. I'm your host, Amanda Head, my co host, 3 00:00:27,560 --> 00:00:30,400 Speaker 1: and justin News editor in chief John Solomon is out 4 00:00:30,400 --> 00:00:32,440 Speaker 1: on assignment tonight, so I'm going to be taking you 5 00:00:32,479 --> 00:00:33,920 Speaker 1: through tonight's show solo. 6 00:00:34,080 --> 00:00:34,280 Speaker 2: Now. 7 00:00:34,320 --> 00:00:36,960 Speaker 1: There is a massive problem here in the United States, 8 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:40,000 Speaker 1: and of course it deals with immigration. The fact that 9 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,600 Speaker 1: we have issues with our immigration system is not really 10 00:00:42,640 --> 00:00:45,879 Speaker 1: all that surprising. President Trump won in large part by 11 00:00:45,920 --> 00:00:49,880 Speaker 1: promising to clean up the open border policies of the Democrats, 12 00:00:49,880 --> 00:00:52,760 Speaker 1: and he largely has. But those problems aren't the only 13 00:00:52,800 --> 00:00:56,280 Speaker 1: ones we face, and that was highlighted very starkly yesterday 14 00:00:56,760 --> 00:00:59,120 Speaker 1: and in the last few weeks, as our country has 15 00:00:59,120 --> 00:01:02,560 Speaker 1: seen has been the victim of four Islamic terror attacks, 16 00:01:02,560 --> 00:01:05,480 Speaker 1: one in Austin, another attempted one in New York City, 17 00:01:05,800 --> 00:01:08,800 Speaker 1: a third in Virginia at Old Dominion University, and a 18 00:01:08,920 --> 00:01:11,840 Speaker 1: fourth at a Michigan synagogue. And all four of these 19 00:01:11,920 --> 00:01:15,200 Speaker 1: terror attacks have something in common. They were either attempted 20 00:01:15,200 --> 00:01:19,080 Speaker 1: by naturalized citizens or the natural born children of immigrants. 21 00:01:19,080 --> 00:01:21,360 Speaker 1: So what does that say about who we legally let 22 00:01:21,400 --> 00:01:23,520 Speaker 1: into our country. I don't think it says anything good. 23 00:01:23,920 --> 00:01:26,120 Speaker 1: And Look, one of the big reasons why this is 24 00:01:26,120 --> 00:01:29,399 Speaker 1: happening is because of what I explained in last night's monologue. 25 00:01:29,440 --> 00:01:32,679 Speaker 1: Critical race theory has taken over a good segment of 26 00:01:32,760 --> 00:01:36,760 Speaker 1: America's institutions and political thought. And this ideology is so 27 00:01:36,920 --> 00:01:41,240 Speaker 1: insidious because it tugs on the heartstrings of Americans all 28 00:01:41,280 --> 00:01:44,080 Speaker 1: across our country. It says that we must feel guilty 29 00:01:44,600 --> 00:01:47,560 Speaker 1: about the country's sometimes racist pass if you want to 30 00:01:47,560 --> 00:01:49,000 Speaker 1: call it that, But it's not even. 31 00:01:49,200 --> 00:01:50,600 Speaker 2: It's not enough to feel guilty. 32 00:01:50,640 --> 00:01:54,920 Speaker 1: We must actively make amends through things like DEI initiatives, 33 00:01:54,960 --> 00:01:59,200 Speaker 1: affirmative action, and yes, letting foreigners into the country who 34 00:01:59,280 --> 00:02:02,720 Speaker 1: have no lawyer to our nation at all. Now, being 35 00:02:02,720 --> 00:02:06,080 Speaker 1: able to immigrate to the United States is not a right, Okay, 36 00:02:06,200 --> 00:02:09,919 Speaker 1: It's just not. But too often our political class acts 37 00:02:10,000 --> 00:02:12,360 Speaker 1: like it is, and that is how we have wound 38 00:02:12,440 --> 00:02:15,400 Speaker 1: up in this massive, massive dumpster fire of a mess. 39 00:02:15,440 --> 00:02:18,359 Speaker 1: Now take the gunman in the Old Dominion University shooting 40 00:02:18,400 --> 00:02:22,240 Speaker 1: in Virginia, for example, identified by law enforcement as Mohammed Jala. 41 00:02:22,360 --> 00:02:25,200 Speaker 1: He was born in Sierra Leone in nineteen eighty nine, 42 00:02:25,240 --> 00:02:29,040 Speaker 1: eventually immigrated here and was granted US citizenship. He then 43 00:02:29,520 --> 00:02:32,920 Speaker 1: pled guilty to attempting to provide material support to ISIS. 44 00:02:32,960 --> 00:02:35,560 Speaker 1: He reportedly admitted to trying to get the terror group 45 00:02:35,600 --> 00:02:39,400 Speaker 1: to commit a domestic attack in his name by donating money. 46 00:02:39,480 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 1: He was then sentenced to eleven years in prison, but 47 00:02:42,360 --> 00:02:45,160 Speaker 1: was released early and obviously allowed to stay in the country. 48 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:46,040 Speaker 2: So how could that be? 49 00:02:46,160 --> 00:02:49,480 Speaker 1: Why would our government allow that? Why was he given 50 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:53,239 Speaker 1: citizenship in the first place? And in Austin, a naturalized 51 00:02:53,360 --> 00:02:57,320 Speaker 1: US citizen from Senegal killed multiple people in an attack 52 00:02:57,400 --> 00:03:00,000 Speaker 1: on a local bar, and he was granted citizenship despite 53 00:03:00,200 --> 00:03:03,960 Speaker 1: prior arrests on his record. Not only that, The New 54 00:03:04,040 --> 00:03:07,040 Speaker 1: York Post reports that he was let into the country 55 00:03:07,080 --> 00:03:09,360 Speaker 1: in the year two thousand on a B two tourist 56 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:11,240 Speaker 1: visa and was only. 57 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:13,239 Speaker 2: Allowed to remain here for one hundred and eighty days. 58 00:03:13,240 --> 00:03:16,320 Speaker 1: But but despite that, he was apparently still here in two 59 00:03:16,360 --> 00:03:18,639 Speaker 1: thousand and six when he got married to a US 60 00:03:18,680 --> 00:03:20,480 Speaker 1: citizen and started. 61 00:03:20,120 --> 00:03:21,680 Speaker 2: Working to get his green card. 62 00:03:22,320 --> 00:03:25,840 Speaker 1: And the Michigan synagogue shooting suspect has been identified by 63 00:03:25,880 --> 00:03:29,280 Speaker 1: authorities as forty one year old I'm in Mohammed Ghazali, 64 00:03:29,840 --> 00:03:33,400 Speaker 1: Originally from Lebanon. He entered the United States in twenty eleven, 65 00:03:33,440 --> 00:03:37,800 Speaker 1: and obtained citizenship in twenty sixteen, and apparently lived in Dearborn, Michigan, 66 00:03:37,840 --> 00:03:41,480 Speaker 1: a town that everyone knows is predominantly Muslim. The alleged 67 00:03:41,520 --> 00:03:44,640 Speaker 1: ten terrorists in the failed New York City bombing attack 68 00:03:44,720 --> 00:03:49,480 Speaker 1: were natural born US citizens themselves, their parents having immigrated 69 00:03:49,480 --> 00:03:53,920 Speaker 1: here from Afghanistan and Turkey, respectively. So the government should 70 00:03:54,080 --> 00:03:56,720 Speaker 1: really be questioning how all of these people have been 71 00:03:56,800 --> 00:03:59,160 Speaker 1: let into the country and have been able to commit 72 00:03:59,200 --> 00:04:03,000 Speaker 1: these atrocities, one even after pleading guilty to aiding a 73 00:04:03,120 --> 00:04:06,000 Speaker 1: terrorist group to help kill Americans. And it seems that 74 00:04:06,040 --> 00:04:08,120 Speaker 1: conversation is finally happening. 75 00:04:08,560 --> 00:04:10,800 Speaker 2: Here was Congressmanship Roy earlier today. 76 00:04:11,400 --> 00:04:15,840 Speaker 3: In the nineteen twenties, we paused immigration for about forty years. 77 00:04:15,920 --> 00:04:19,800 Speaker 3: We pretty much had no real significant immigration. The reason 78 00:04:20,080 --> 00:04:27,239 Speaker 3: was we needed to re establish the assimilation and melting pods, 79 00:04:27,480 --> 00:04:30,400 Speaker 3: and by the way, that was with people who wanted 80 00:04:30,440 --> 00:04:36,280 Speaker 3: to assimilate. We must pause immigration now. We must reassert 81 00:04:36,480 --> 00:04:39,839 Speaker 3: American values on those who come here. We must stop 82 00:04:40,200 --> 00:04:43,479 Speaker 3: moving people into the line to become citizens without knowing 83 00:04:43,560 --> 00:04:45,080 Speaker 3: that they're coming here to assimilate. 84 00:04:46,960 --> 00:04:50,680 Speaker 1: Now will an immigration pause actually happened? It seems unlikely, 85 00:04:50,839 --> 00:04:52,880 Speaker 1: but it does make a lot of sense. We have 86 00:04:52,960 --> 00:04:57,400 Speaker 1: gone decades with not only letting illegal immigrants in uncontested 87 00:04:57,440 --> 00:05:00,960 Speaker 1: at our southern border, but also granting US an citizenship 88 00:05:00,960 --> 00:05:03,560 Speaker 1: to people who have absolutely no business. 89 00:05:03,360 --> 00:05:04,160 Speaker 2: Getting in at all. 90 00:05:04,200 --> 00:05:07,000 Speaker 1: Remember, this is a government who can't even agree with 91 00:05:07,120 --> 00:05:10,719 Speaker 1: the majority of the American people on voter id laws. 92 00:05:10,760 --> 00:05:14,640 Speaker 1: Even Republicans in the government can't agree on allowing non 93 00:05:14,640 --> 00:05:17,479 Speaker 1: citizens to vote, or at least not putting safeguards in 94 00:05:17,520 --> 00:05:20,320 Speaker 1: place to make it much harder for illegals to vote. 95 00:05:20,360 --> 00:05:22,000 Speaker 2: It is absolutely insane. 96 00:05:22,040 --> 00:05:25,280 Speaker 1: And all of this is also happening while Democrats continue 97 00:05:25,279 --> 00:05:28,760 Speaker 1: to keep the government partially closed by refusing to fund 98 00:05:28,839 --> 00:05:32,320 Speaker 1: the Department of Homeland Security, whose job it is, among 99 00:05:32,400 --> 00:05:35,719 Speaker 1: other things, to help stop the kind of terrorist attacks 100 00:05:35,760 --> 00:05:38,760 Speaker 1: that we have seen in recent weeks. And why because 101 00:05:38,800 --> 00:05:42,240 Speaker 1: apparently it is somehow racist to want to know who 102 00:05:42,279 --> 00:05:45,480 Speaker 1: is in the country and also who to make sure 103 00:05:45,720 --> 00:05:49,200 Speaker 1: that only US citizens are voting in our election. And 104 00:05:49,240 --> 00:05:51,880 Speaker 1: that kind of thinking is what is doing the most 105 00:05:52,000 --> 00:05:56,080 Speaker 1: damage to our country. All right, everybody to talk about 106 00:05:56,120 --> 00:05:57,640 Speaker 1: all of these things, I want to get to my 107 00:05:57,680 --> 00:06:00,719 Speaker 1: first guest today joining us now Wyoming congress Woman Harriet 108 00:06:00,720 --> 00:06:03,040 Speaker 1: Hageman gogoswoman, thank you so much for being with. 109 00:06:03,040 --> 00:06:05,440 Speaker 4: Us, Thank you for having me again. 110 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:09,800 Speaker 1: Absolutely, and on this Friday, as we look back at 111 00:06:09,839 --> 00:06:12,520 Speaker 1: the last twelve or fourteen days or so and what 112 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:16,360 Speaker 1: has happened to this country these attacks that are either 113 00:06:16,440 --> 00:06:20,120 Speaker 1: being investigated or have already been designated terror attacks, there's 114 00:06:20,160 --> 00:06:21,320 Speaker 1: a common thread. 115 00:06:21,320 --> 00:06:23,000 Speaker 2: As I was talking about at the top of the. 116 00:06:23,000 --> 00:06:26,160 Speaker 1: Show, the fact that these are either naturalized citizens or 117 00:06:26,240 --> 00:06:30,320 Speaker 1: they are natural born citizens to naturalized parents who came 118 00:06:30,360 --> 00:06:35,599 Speaker 1: from places like Lebanon and Afghanistan. So my question to 119 00:06:35,680 --> 00:06:38,440 Speaker 1: you is why is there that thread there? Have we 120 00:06:38,600 --> 00:06:42,240 Speaker 1: missed something in our immigration standards and vetting what has 121 00:06:42,279 --> 00:06:43,039 Speaker 1: gone so wrong? 122 00:06:44,040 --> 00:06:45,719 Speaker 4: I think there's a couple of things in one of 123 00:06:45,720 --> 00:06:48,239 Speaker 4: them you just identified, which I think we have missed 124 00:06:48,240 --> 00:06:50,800 Speaker 4: some things. But I also think that we are ignoring 125 00:06:50,800 --> 00:06:53,839 Speaker 4: the fact that throughout history we have expected people who 126 00:06:53,880 --> 00:06:57,400 Speaker 4: immigrated here to become assimilated to the American culture, and 127 00:06:57,480 --> 00:06:59,600 Speaker 4: I think over the last thirty years or so, there's 128 00:06:59,600 --> 00:07:01,800 Speaker 4: been this idea that we no longer need to do that, 129 00:07:02,120 --> 00:07:04,520 Speaker 4: And I think this is an example of the consequences 130 00:07:04,520 --> 00:07:07,680 Speaker 4: of those kinds of bad policies. The reality is is 131 00:07:07,760 --> 00:07:11,280 Speaker 4: that the Iranian regime is the largest state sponsor of 132 00:07:11,360 --> 00:07:14,840 Speaker 4: terrorism in the entire world, and has been for decades now. 133 00:07:15,080 --> 00:07:17,360 Speaker 4: I was a junior in high school in nineteen seventy 134 00:07:17,440 --> 00:07:20,200 Speaker 4: nine with the Iranian Revolution, and I remember it very 135 00:07:20,280 --> 00:07:23,240 Speaker 4: very well, and I've watched over the intervening forty seven 136 00:07:23,320 --> 00:07:27,480 Speaker 4: years as the entire world has continued to tolerate a 137 00:07:27,520 --> 00:07:30,760 Speaker 4: regime that not only punishes and destroys its own citizens, 138 00:07:30,760 --> 00:07:33,040 Speaker 4: but it has been willing to go out and wreak 139 00:07:33,120 --> 00:07:35,520 Speaker 4: havoc throughout the world. I was just reading an article 140 00:07:35,560 --> 00:07:38,960 Speaker 4: before I came on about the fact that even embedded 141 00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:41,920 Speaker 4: within our oil and gas prices over the last several 142 00:07:41,960 --> 00:07:45,400 Speaker 4: decades is almost a terrorism tax, because we all know 143 00:07:45,680 --> 00:07:48,800 Speaker 4: that the habit that Iran can release. And I think 144 00:07:48,840 --> 00:07:51,240 Speaker 4: one of the concerns that all of us have over 145 00:07:51,280 --> 00:07:53,480 Speaker 4: what's happened in the last twelve days is to what 146 00:07:53,600 --> 00:07:57,880 Speaker 4: extent are we potentially seeing sleeper cells activated by the 147 00:07:57,880 --> 00:08:02,640 Speaker 4: Iranian regime or they're out who these hesblah hamas, any 148 00:08:02,760 --> 00:08:05,680 Speaker 4: of those These are people who truly hate America. And 149 00:08:05,720 --> 00:08:08,800 Speaker 4: I think there's a population within the United States, even 150 00:08:08,920 --> 00:08:12,800 Speaker 4: some within our higher education who have been fostering those 151 00:08:12,840 --> 00:08:16,320 Speaker 4: ideals and those ideas, and I think that it's very 152 00:08:16,400 --> 00:08:18,640 Speaker 4: dangerous and I think we're seeing the consequences of that. 153 00:08:20,160 --> 00:08:21,520 Speaker 1: Yeah, well, and Congress went. 154 00:08:21,560 --> 00:08:23,720 Speaker 2: Emotionally speaking, I think. 155 00:08:23,560 --> 00:08:25,520 Speaker 1: That because of what you just said, that is why 156 00:08:25,560 --> 00:08:28,160 Speaker 1: we are here. You've got a portion of our country 157 00:08:28,160 --> 00:08:30,440 Speaker 1: that's bleeding heart, and I think that they feel that 158 00:08:30,760 --> 00:08:32,800 Speaker 1: we should just let any and everyone in because of 159 00:08:32,840 --> 00:08:35,160 Speaker 1: the sins of the past of our country that you know, 160 00:08:35,200 --> 00:08:37,360 Speaker 1: we owe it to the world to let people in. 161 00:08:37,679 --> 00:08:39,120 Speaker 2: But that's simply not the case. 162 00:08:39,160 --> 00:08:41,679 Speaker 1: So on the emotional side, I think that where we 163 00:08:41,720 --> 00:08:45,320 Speaker 1: are now is inevitable. On the legal side of things, 164 00:08:45,600 --> 00:08:49,040 Speaker 1: have we not vetted well enough? Are we not taking 165 00:08:49,160 --> 00:08:51,800 Speaker 1: enough time? I know that, especially under Joe Biden, there 166 00:08:51,800 --> 00:08:54,160 Speaker 1: were people pouring in, so there really wasn't enough time 167 00:08:54,200 --> 00:08:56,520 Speaker 1: or resources to get it done. But some of these 168 00:08:56,520 --> 00:08:58,720 Speaker 1: folks who were naturalized in two thousand and four, in 169 00:08:58,760 --> 00:09:03,400 Speaker 1: two thousand and nine, we had gaps in the vetting 170 00:09:03,559 --> 00:09:05,800 Speaker 1: and the standards for that long. 171 00:09:07,200 --> 00:09:09,640 Speaker 4: And it's partly the betting, but I also think it's 172 00:09:09,679 --> 00:09:12,640 Speaker 4: this concept of toxic empathy, which is what you were 173 00:09:12,679 --> 00:09:15,360 Speaker 4: talking about. A moment ago from the standpoint of this 174 00:09:15,440 --> 00:09:18,200 Speaker 4: emotional idea. But I think it's worse than that. I 175 00:09:18,240 --> 00:09:21,000 Speaker 4: think it's this idea that there are people who, as 176 00:09:21,040 --> 00:09:25,000 Speaker 4: I said, when we had large numbers of Italian immigrants 177 00:09:25,120 --> 00:09:30,760 Speaker 4: or large number of immigrants from other parts of the 178 00:09:30,800 --> 00:09:33,920 Speaker 4: parts of the world, we really did expect them to assimilate, 179 00:09:34,000 --> 00:09:36,440 Speaker 4: and for some reason, with this population we never have. 180 00:09:36,920 --> 00:09:38,959 Speaker 4: So I think it's partly the vetting, but it's also 181 00:09:39,160 --> 00:09:42,320 Speaker 4: the intervening activities that have happened since then. I mean, 182 00:09:42,360 --> 00:09:45,400 Speaker 4: these are people, by every outward appearance, were highly successful 183 00:09:45,400 --> 00:09:47,600 Speaker 4: in the United States, at least in terms of the 184 00:09:47,640 --> 00:09:49,760 Speaker 4: housing that they lived in and those sorts of things. 185 00:09:50,080 --> 00:09:52,560 Speaker 4: And yet we have these young men who have made 186 00:09:52,559 --> 00:09:55,360 Speaker 4: the decision that they would rather act on behalf of Well, 187 00:09:55,400 --> 00:09:57,120 Speaker 4: I guess that they said that they were on behalf 188 00:09:57,160 --> 00:10:00,520 Speaker 4: of isis one of the most cruel and terrorist organzations 189 00:10:00,559 --> 00:10:03,160 Speaker 4: in the history of the world. And that is somehow 190 00:10:03,280 --> 00:10:05,840 Speaker 4: been filling their heads, whether it is with people who 191 00:10:05,880 --> 00:10:08,280 Speaker 4: live here, it is what they're reading online, it is 192 00:10:08,320 --> 00:10:11,000 Speaker 4: what they're being taught by their families, by what they're 193 00:10:11,040 --> 00:10:13,200 Speaker 4: learning in their mosque. I think that we have to 194 00:10:13,240 --> 00:10:16,520 Speaker 4: be asking those questions, and they are absolutely legitimate questions 195 00:10:16,559 --> 00:10:20,520 Speaker 4: to ask. It isn't wrong to expect people who want 196 00:10:20,559 --> 00:10:23,520 Speaker 4: to come here to understand our form of government. You 197 00:10:23,600 --> 00:10:26,960 Speaker 4: made the comment about how we allegedly need feel guilty 198 00:10:27,240 --> 00:10:30,760 Speaker 4: for past since I think there are people who believe that, 199 00:10:30,920 --> 00:10:34,120 Speaker 4: and I think that that's absolutely a failed concept from 200 00:10:34,120 --> 00:10:36,080 Speaker 4: the standpoint of who and what we are. We've fought 201 00:10:36,120 --> 00:10:38,920 Speaker 4: a civil war to abolish slavery, we have the nineteen 202 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:41,760 Speaker 4: sixty four Civil Rights Act. We have done more to 203 00:10:41,840 --> 00:10:45,400 Speaker 4: lift people out of poverty than any other country. We 204 00:10:45,440 --> 00:10:48,800 Speaker 4: are a very compassionate society. We welcome people into our 205 00:10:48,880 --> 00:10:51,520 Speaker 4: midst and we also have a social safety net to 206 00:10:51,600 --> 00:10:54,560 Speaker 4: make so that people are able to actually succeed in 207 00:10:54,600 --> 00:10:57,120 Speaker 4: this country. And in exchange for that, the contract that 208 00:10:57,160 --> 00:10:59,720 Speaker 4: we have with those people when we bring them here 209 00:10:59,840 --> 00:11:02,240 Speaker 4: is we expect them to understand what we stand for 210 00:11:02,360 --> 00:11:05,520 Speaker 4: as well, which is freedom and liberty and people having 211 00:11:05,559 --> 00:11:08,520 Speaker 4: the right to protest, and people even challenging whether we 212 00:11:08,559 --> 00:11:11,120 Speaker 4: ought to be bringing in more people from Muslim countries. 213 00:11:11,400 --> 00:11:13,559 Speaker 4: That's all part of the freedoms that we enjoy as 214 00:11:13,600 --> 00:11:16,520 Speaker 4: American citizens, and we have the right to expect when 215 00:11:16,559 --> 00:11:19,360 Speaker 4: people come here, that they need to adopt our culture, 216 00:11:19,480 --> 00:11:21,800 Speaker 4: they need to adopt our more race, They need to 217 00:11:21,920 --> 00:11:25,800 Speaker 4: understand what our constitution means, what the First Amendment means, what. 218 00:11:25,800 --> 00:11:26,520 Speaker 5: Rights we have. 219 00:11:27,040 --> 00:11:29,160 Speaker 4: They do not have the right to respond with this 220 00:11:29,280 --> 00:11:31,920 Speaker 4: kind of terrorism and this kind of violence. Yet for 221 00:11:32,040 --> 00:11:36,000 Speaker 4: somehow we have allowed this segment of society to embed 222 00:11:36,080 --> 00:11:40,760 Speaker 4: itself with these absolutely abhorrent views of the world and 223 00:11:40,800 --> 00:11:43,959 Speaker 4: then acting out as we have seen and killing innocent 224 00:11:44,000 --> 00:11:47,960 Speaker 4: American citizens or attempting to kill innocent American citizens. And 225 00:11:48,040 --> 00:11:50,000 Speaker 4: I think that it's partly the vetting, but I think 226 00:11:50,040 --> 00:11:52,600 Speaker 4: it's also the follow up to what extent are these 227 00:11:52,600 --> 00:11:54,840 Speaker 4: people being radicalized right here in America? 228 00:11:56,120 --> 00:11:58,680 Speaker 1: Absolutely gosh gone in the days of Ellis Island and 229 00:11:59,040 --> 00:12:02,360 Speaker 1: more of our country and died to abolish slavery than 230 00:12:02,400 --> 00:12:04,400 Speaker 1: any other country. So I think that our sins have 231 00:12:04,440 --> 00:12:06,360 Speaker 1: been paid for. I want to ask you about something 232 00:12:06,440 --> 00:12:07,320 Speaker 1: like the Pause Act. 233 00:12:07,360 --> 00:12:08,640 Speaker 2: Chick always got the Pause Act. 234 00:12:09,200 --> 00:12:12,200 Speaker 1: Are we in such dire straits at this point where 235 00:12:12,200 --> 00:12:15,840 Speaker 1: we need to pause all immigration at least for right now, 236 00:12:15,880 --> 00:12:16,720 Speaker 1: just a moratorium. 237 00:12:17,559 --> 00:12:19,040 Speaker 4: So one of the things that I think that we 238 00:12:19,160 --> 00:12:21,720 Speaker 4: continuously have to be thinking about is how we can 239 00:12:21,800 --> 00:12:24,440 Speaker 4: be more nimble when we're talking about something as important 240 00:12:24,520 --> 00:12:27,520 Speaker 4: as immigration or even mass migration, which is what I 241 00:12:27,520 --> 00:12:30,280 Speaker 4: think we've seen over the four years of the Biden administration. 242 00:12:30,600 --> 00:12:34,720 Speaker 4: That wasn't immigration, that was mass migration done primarily illegally. 243 00:12:34,760 --> 00:12:37,600 Speaker 4: And there's definitely a difference, and we can have that 244 00:12:37,640 --> 00:12:40,160 Speaker 4: discussion at a later time, But we need to be 245 00:12:40,200 --> 00:12:42,880 Speaker 4: more nimble with things are changing on the world stage 246 00:12:42,880 --> 00:12:46,360 Speaker 4: in the geopolitical realm. We need to be able to say, now, 247 00:12:46,400 --> 00:12:48,640 Speaker 4: wait a minute, maybe for right now, in light of 248 00:12:48,640 --> 00:12:50,120 Speaker 4: the fact that we've got a war in the Middle 249 00:12:50,120 --> 00:12:53,760 Speaker 4: East where we're attempting to take out really the state 250 00:12:53,840 --> 00:12:57,520 Speaker 4: sponsor of terrorism and free the world from the stranglehold 251 00:12:57,520 --> 00:13:01,160 Speaker 4: that they've had for forty seven years, should we maybe 252 00:13:01,160 --> 00:13:03,840 Speaker 4: be reconsidering what we're doing in terms of bringing people 253 00:13:03,920 --> 00:13:06,720 Speaker 4: into this country. And then again, I'll use the word 254 00:13:06,840 --> 00:13:09,320 Speaker 4: once again, and that is how do we best assimilate 255 00:13:09,360 --> 00:13:13,319 Speaker 4: them into our society and into our culture and understanding 256 00:13:13,440 --> 00:13:15,480 Speaker 4: who and what we are as Americans and what we 257 00:13:15,520 --> 00:13:18,040 Speaker 4: expect of them if they are going to come here. Again, 258 00:13:18,080 --> 00:13:21,640 Speaker 4: I'll use the word contract. We have a contract with 259 00:13:21,720 --> 00:13:24,160 Speaker 4: each other. People who come here should also have a 260 00:13:24,160 --> 00:13:27,440 Speaker 4: contract with us, and so I absolutely think that it 261 00:13:27,480 --> 00:13:29,960 Speaker 4: is time to revisit how many people were bringing in 262 00:13:30,240 --> 00:13:33,319 Speaker 4: from what areas of the world, what is the expectation 263 00:13:33,480 --> 00:13:36,959 Speaker 4: when they come here? Because people are coming here because 264 00:13:37,000 --> 00:13:40,080 Speaker 4: they want our freedoms, they want our opportunities, they want 265 00:13:40,120 --> 00:13:42,600 Speaker 4: to live in a safe and secure society. They want 266 00:13:42,600 --> 00:13:46,280 Speaker 4: the stability of our long standing constitution and the rule 267 00:13:46,320 --> 00:13:49,360 Speaker 4: of law. Yet we're seeing that they're coming here and 268 00:13:49,400 --> 00:13:52,520 Speaker 4: they're rejecting that, and then we seem to be saying, well, 269 00:13:52,520 --> 00:13:55,240 Speaker 4: but we can keep bringing people in. We can bring 270 00:13:55,280 --> 00:13:57,080 Speaker 4: in more of them and maybe they won't do bad 271 00:13:57,120 --> 00:13:59,560 Speaker 4: things to it. We need to be able to be 272 00:13:59,640 --> 00:14:03,160 Speaker 4: nimble enough to address the situations as they occur, while 273 00:14:03,160 --> 00:14:05,560 Speaker 4: at the same time looking at the long term plan 274 00:14:05,600 --> 00:14:08,680 Speaker 4: of action of what kinds of immigrant immigrants should we 275 00:14:08,720 --> 00:14:13,400 Speaker 4: be bringing in and what are our expectations of them? 276 00:14:14,480 --> 00:14:15,360 Speaker 2: Absolutely spot on. 277 00:14:15,400 --> 00:14:16,800 Speaker 1: Before I let you go, I want to ask you 278 00:14:16,840 --> 00:14:19,800 Speaker 1: because there is a very hard conversation I think that 279 00:14:19,880 --> 00:14:24,280 Speaker 1: needs to be had about the shutdown with respect to DHS. Obviously, 280 00:14:24,320 --> 00:14:27,520 Speaker 1: the FBI has its part, the intelligence community has its 281 00:14:27,600 --> 00:14:32,200 Speaker 1: role in identifying sleeper cells and forwarding attacks like this, 282 00:14:32,280 --> 00:14:34,240 Speaker 1: but Department of Homeland Security in the wake of nine 283 00:14:34,240 --> 00:14:36,320 Speaker 1: to eleven. They play a role in this as well, 284 00:14:36,360 --> 00:14:38,840 Speaker 1: and Democrats have them shut down in the name of ICE, 285 00:14:38,880 --> 00:14:41,360 Speaker 1: which has already been funded. So it's just grand standing 286 00:14:41,400 --> 00:14:43,800 Speaker 1: as far as I can tell. But do Democrats bear 287 00:14:43,840 --> 00:14:44,440 Speaker 1: some of the blame. 288 00:14:45,560 --> 00:14:48,280 Speaker 4: I think that they blame that a lot of They 289 00:14:48,400 --> 00:14:50,880 Speaker 4: carry a lot of the blame. The fact is, when 290 00:14:50,880 --> 00:14:54,000 Speaker 4: you attempt to hold the country hostage, especially an agencies 291 00:14:54,040 --> 00:14:57,360 Speaker 4: such as Department of Homeland Security because you don't like 292 00:14:57,400 --> 00:15:00,440 Speaker 4: the existing laws on the books related to immigration, I 293 00:15:00,440 --> 00:15:02,680 Speaker 4: think that you've got a really failed approach to how 294 00:15:02,720 --> 00:15:05,280 Speaker 4: we govern in this country. And so yes, I think 295 00:15:05,280 --> 00:15:08,239 Speaker 4: that they are partly to blame, maybe for these not specifically, 296 00:15:08,920 --> 00:15:12,080 Speaker 4: or maybe specifically for these particular incidents, but it's the 297 00:15:12,240 --> 00:15:16,040 Speaker 4: entire concept of having the Department of Homeland Security shut 298 00:15:16,120 --> 00:15:18,560 Speaker 4: down during a period of time when we have the 299 00:15:18,680 --> 00:15:20,800 Speaker 4: unrest and the issues going on in the Middle East. 300 00:15:20,880 --> 00:15:23,920 Speaker 4: So again, you know, this is just failed governance. But 301 00:15:23,960 --> 00:15:25,840 Speaker 4: we've seen this over and over again. We saw it 302 00:15:25,880 --> 00:15:29,320 Speaker 4: in November when they held the country hostage for forty 303 00:15:29,320 --> 00:15:31,560 Speaker 4: five days, and now they're doing it with this one 304 00:15:31,600 --> 00:15:35,000 Speaker 4: particular agency. It's just a failed mechanism of government. It's 305 00:15:35,040 --> 00:15:38,280 Speaker 4: almost like they're throwing a tantrum because we are enforcing 306 00:15:38,320 --> 00:15:41,400 Speaker 4: our immigration laws for the first time in many, many years. 307 00:15:41,520 --> 00:15:44,800 Speaker 4: And so yeah, I really would like to see us 308 00:15:44,840 --> 00:15:47,080 Speaker 4: go in vote on that. Well, we already voted on 309 00:15:47,160 --> 00:15:49,960 Speaker 4: it again last week funding the Department of Helmeland Security. 310 00:15:50,240 --> 00:15:52,800 Speaker 4: I'm hoping that they can get something dislodged in the 311 00:15:52,840 --> 00:15:55,120 Speaker 4: Senate so that we can get some funding over there 312 00:15:55,160 --> 00:15:57,480 Speaker 4: as well and get this to the President's desk. 313 00:15:58,680 --> 00:16:00,520 Speaker 1: I have someone I know that you have been a 314 00:16:00,520 --> 00:16:03,760 Speaker 1: fighter for all of those initiatives, Congresswoman Harriet Hageman from 315 00:16:03,760 --> 00:16:04,920 Speaker 1: the great State of Wyoming. 316 00:16:04,960 --> 00:16:07,080 Speaker 2: Always a joint of blessing to have you with us tonight. 317 00:16:07,480 --> 00:16:09,520 Speaker 2: Thank you, thank you. 318 00:16:09,560 --> 00:16:11,280 Speaker 1: All Right, everybody, we're going to take a very quick 319 00:16:11,280 --> 00:16:16,480 Speaker 1: break that we'll do write back on the other side. 320 00:16:16,840 --> 00:16:18,440 Speaker 6: Hey, folks, I want to take a minute to talk 321 00:16:18,440 --> 00:16:22,320 Speaker 6: about something that affects almost every single person watching the show, Medicare. 322 00:16:22,600 --> 00:16:25,120 Speaker 6: And I'll be honest with you, Medicare is confusing Part A, 323 00:16:25,280 --> 00:16:28,840 Speaker 6: Part B, Part C, Part D, advantage plans supplements. It's 324 00:16:29,000 --> 00:16:32,160 Speaker 6: amaze right, and I don't think that's an accident Washington 325 00:16:32,240 --> 00:16:35,600 Speaker 6: doesn't make things simple. Simple means you're in control, and 326 00:16:35,640 --> 00:16:37,760 Speaker 6: they don't want that. That's exactly why I want to 327 00:16:37,800 --> 00:16:41,440 Speaker 6: tell you about AMAC, the Association of Mature American Citizens, 328 00:16:41,440 --> 00:16:44,840 Speaker 6: over two million members strong, myself included. They're the conservative 329 00:16:44,880 --> 00:16:48,360 Speaker 6: alternative to AARP. They fight for the values we talk 330 00:16:48,400 --> 00:16:51,960 Speaker 6: about on this program every day, limited government, personal freedom, 331 00:16:52,160 --> 00:16:56,160 Speaker 6: fiscal responsibility. And here's what makes them different on medicare. 332 00:16:56,520 --> 00:16:59,280 Speaker 6: AMAC has licensed advisors who will get on the phone 333 00:16:59,280 --> 00:17:01,640 Speaker 6: with you walking thank you every option, and you help 334 00:17:01,680 --> 00:17:04,320 Speaker 6: you find the plan that actually fits your life. Real simple, 335 00:17:04,520 --> 00:17:07,480 Speaker 6: no pressure, no sales pitch, just straight answers from people 336 00:17:07,800 --> 00:17:10,960 Speaker 6: who share your values. So go to AMAC dot us, 337 00:17:11,160 --> 00:17:14,760 Speaker 6: slash smart or call eight hundred nine zero one eight 338 00:17:14,800 --> 00:17:15,480 Speaker 6: eight nine three. 339 00:17:15,560 --> 00:17:16,280 Speaker 7: It's free. 340 00:17:16,480 --> 00:17:19,000 Speaker 6: You've earned the right to get this decision right. Let 341 00:17:19,040 --> 00:17:20,320 Speaker 6: AMAC help you do it. 342 00:17:33,040 --> 00:17:36,440 Speaker 1: Welcome back, everybody, and Happy Friday. Since President Trump began 343 00:17:36,520 --> 00:17:40,520 Speaker 1: his attacks on the Iranian regime and coordination with the Israelis, 344 00:17:40,560 --> 00:17:44,120 Speaker 1: he's had one clear talking point, we will help take 345 00:17:44,200 --> 00:17:46,480 Speaker 1: out the leadership, but it will be up to the 346 00:17:46,520 --> 00:17:49,520 Speaker 1: people of Iran to actually take the country back. So 347 00:17:49,600 --> 00:17:51,920 Speaker 1: are there any signs of that happening, joining us now 348 00:17:51,960 --> 00:17:55,119 Speaker 1: to discuss all of that. Is former US Undersecretary of 349 00:17:55,119 --> 00:17:58,320 Speaker 1: State for Arms Control and International Security. He was also 350 00:17:58,640 --> 00:18:02,399 Speaker 1: the chief negotiator who helped persuade Libya's Wamar Kadaffi to 351 00:18:02,480 --> 00:18:07,960 Speaker 1: abandon his weapons of mass destructionist programs. Ambassador Robert Joseph Sarah, 352 00:18:07,960 --> 00:18:09,280 Speaker 1: thank you so much for being here. 353 00:18:09,880 --> 00:18:12,399 Speaker 7: Well, thank you for having me on your program. 354 00:18:13,040 --> 00:18:15,520 Speaker 1: Absolutely. I first want to just get your top line. 355 00:18:15,560 --> 00:18:18,959 Speaker 1: Look at the Trump administration what it has done in 356 00:18:19,040 --> 00:18:24,560 Speaker 1: coordination with Israel. This obviously has been a precipitation of 357 00:18:25,040 --> 00:18:28,439 Speaker 1: past terrible policies, too much leniency when it comes to 358 00:18:28,920 --> 00:18:32,600 Speaker 1: Iran JCPOA. I mean, it's a laundry list as long 359 00:18:32,640 --> 00:18:34,160 Speaker 1: as my arm of issues that. 360 00:18:34,119 --> 00:18:35,119 Speaker 2: Have led to this point. 361 00:18:35,160 --> 00:18:37,640 Speaker 1: But when it comes to what the United States has 362 00:18:37,680 --> 00:18:40,240 Speaker 1: done and is doing, are they going about it. 363 00:18:40,160 --> 00:18:42,040 Speaker 2: The right way? 364 00:18:42,840 --> 00:18:49,119 Speaker 8: Well, the regime in Tehran has been at war with 365 00:18:49,200 --> 00:18:52,720 Speaker 8: the United States for the past forty seven years, since 366 00:18:52,760 --> 00:18:56,879 Speaker 8: its very inception, has killed hundreds of Americans, maybe thousands 367 00:18:56,880 --> 00:19:01,840 Speaker 8: of Americans from Beirut to Dhanistan, in Iraq and around 368 00:19:01,880 --> 00:19:07,480 Speaker 8: the world. Violence and murder are in the DNA of 369 00:19:07,520 --> 00:19:10,760 Speaker 8: the regime. And that has not stopped and it will 370 00:19:10,760 --> 00:19:14,520 Speaker 8: not stop as long as this regime continues. Also in 371 00:19:14,560 --> 00:19:18,520 Speaker 8: the DNA, and this is my specialty, is the nuclear 372 00:19:18,600 --> 00:19:23,520 Speaker 8: program and their quest for a nuclear weapon. We know 373 00:19:23,680 --> 00:19:27,399 Speaker 8: that President Trump had tried everything that he could to 374 00:19:27,480 --> 00:19:32,240 Speaker 8: get a diplomatic, negotiated outcome. Previous presidents had done that, 375 00:19:32,560 --> 00:19:35,240 Speaker 8: and you mentioned the jcpoway. They had done that, but 376 00:19:35,320 --> 00:19:39,760 Speaker 8: they had practiced appeasement. They had actually provided resources to 377 00:19:39,840 --> 00:19:44,840 Speaker 8: the regime which they used to enhance their nuclear weapons program, 378 00:19:44,880 --> 00:19:48,520 Speaker 8: to build ballistic missiles, to support terrorism, both directly and 379 00:19:48,600 --> 00:19:49,600 Speaker 8: through their proxies. 380 00:19:51,520 --> 00:19:53,080 Speaker 7: President Trump took a different route. 381 00:19:53,119 --> 00:19:56,119 Speaker 8: He said, we have to have an effective agreement, and 382 00:19:56,280 --> 00:20:00,920 Speaker 8: the regime rejected that, and as a consequence, the president 383 00:20:01,080 --> 00:20:03,760 Speaker 8: is really left with a simple choice. I mean, you 384 00:20:03,800 --> 00:20:07,760 Speaker 8: can confront Iraq now or Iran now, or you can 385 00:20:08,240 --> 00:20:11,399 Speaker 8: confront Iran later, perhaps when it has a nuclear weapon. 386 00:20:11,720 --> 00:20:14,360 Speaker 8: And that should be a choice for any American president. 387 00:20:17,160 --> 00:20:17,800 Speaker 2: I want to ask you, I. 388 00:20:17,760 --> 00:20:19,679 Speaker 1: Want to say on the nuclear issue for a moment, 389 00:20:19,760 --> 00:20:25,000 Speaker 1: because it Ruan's They put it on their billboard that 390 00:20:25,040 --> 00:20:28,000 Speaker 1: they want nuclear so that they can have cheap energy, 391 00:20:28,080 --> 00:20:30,159 Speaker 1: which is a problem with in itself because then that 392 00:20:30,200 --> 00:20:33,240 Speaker 1: gives them, that it gives a malevolent regime more leverage 393 00:20:33,240 --> 00:20:34,080 Speaker 1: on the world stage. 394 00:20:34,080 --> 00:20:36,679 Speaker 2: But putting that aside, because I. 395 00:20:36,640 --> 00:20:38,680 Speaker 1: Think everyone knows that that's not the case, that it's 396 00:20:38,720 --> 00:20:43,200 Speaker 1: not just for clean energy through nuclear Was there anything 397 00:20:43,240 --> 00:20:46,080 Speaker 1: that the Trump administration or the Biden administration or Obama 398 00:20:46,119 --> 00:20:48,720 Speaker 1: administration or anyone before that. Was there anything that they 399 00:20:48,760 --> 00:20:52,240 Speaker 1: could have offered up to Iran to keep them true 400 00:20:52,280 --> 00:20:57,959 Speaker 1: to their word that it really was only for energy. 401 00:20:58,000 --> 00:21:02,240 Speaker 8: Well, Iran is a country that is literally floating on oil, 402 00:21:02,400 --> 00:21:06,520 Speaker 8: so one has to question this notion of nuclear for 403 00:21:06,840 --> 00:21:10,600 Speaker 8: nuclear energy, for peaceful nuclear energy, which they have, of 404 00:21:10,640 --> 00:21:14,520 Speaker 8: course have proclaimed from the beginning. The real mistake here, 405 00:21:14,880 --> 00:21:16,600 Speaker 8: the real mistake was to. 406 00:21:16,640 --> 00:21:18,359 Speaker 7: Allow them to enrich. 407 00:21:18,760 --> 00:21:22,080 Speaker 8: For many years, the United States had taken the position 408 00:21:22,720 --> 00:21:27,720 Speaker 8: that they could not enrich because enrichment is the camel's 409 00:21:27,760 --> 00:21:30,480 Speaker 8: nose under the table. I mean, there's just under the tent. 410 00:21:30,600 --> 00:21:34,879 Speaker 8: There's just no question that once we allowed them to enrich, 411 00:21:35,400 --> 00:21:39,320 Speaker 8: that they would continue to cheat and to enrich further 412 00:21:39,400 --> 00:21:42,800 Speaker 8: and further with more and more centrifuges, to the point 413 00:21:42,840 --> 00:21:47,280 Speaker 8: where they were enriching up to sixty percent in terms 414 00:21:47,400 --> 00:21:50,560 Speaker 8: of the enrichment level of the uranium, which is not 415 00:21:50,760 --> 00:21:55,320 Speaker 8: far at all from weapons grade. And now, as you know, 416 00:21:55,840 --> 00:21:59,239 Speaker 8: they are telling us, and they told this to our 417 00:21:59,320 --> 00:22:05,959 Speaker 8: negotiated most recently, that they have enough enriched uranium. 418 00:22:05,320 --> 00:22:09,399 Speaker 7: For several nuclear weapons. This is all about nuclear weapons. 419 00:22:09,480 --> 00:22:11,680 Speaker 7: It's always been about nuclear weapons. 420 00:22:11,880 --> 00:22:15,320 Speaker 8: It's not about peaceful energy, even though they have used 421 00:22:15,320 --> 00:22:20,040 Speaker 8: that line in order to gain support from outside and 422 00:22:20,119 --> 00:22:25,600 Speaker 8: to mask their program as they moved forward, both overtly 423 00:22:25,680 --> 00:22:26,400 Speaker 8: and covertly. 424 00:22:28,600 --> 00:22:31,640 Speaker 1: I want to ask you about the weapons that they 425 00:22:31,680 --> 00:22:35,800 Speaker 1: have at this point. The administration, our administration has indicated 426 00:22:36,240 --> 00:22:39,240 Speaker 1: that their strikes have become less frequent. 427 00:22:39,400 --> 00:22:41,800 Speaker 2: Does that tell you that they are running out? 428 00:22:43,720 --> 00:22:46,879 Speaker 8: Well, thanks to the men and women in uniform who 429 00:22:46,920 --> 00:22:52,080 Speaker 8: have done an absolutely phenomenal job once again in achieving 430 00:22:52,119 --> 00:22:57,680 Speaker 8: the military objectives. There's no question that the ballistic missile capability, 431 00:22:57,720 --> 00:23:04,760 Speaker 8: the drone capability has decreased dramatically, over ninety percent in 432 00:23:04,840 --> 00:23:08,120 Speaker 8: some categories, and I think that will continue to decrease. 433 00:23:08,440 --> 00:23:11,440 Speaker 8: But one has to always anticipate that they will have 434 00:23:11,480 --> 00:23:17,560 Speaker 8: a capability to retaliate in some form. The Navy's been destroyed, 435 00:23:17,600 --> 00:23:22,359 Speaker 8: the air force has been destroyed. They have very little 436 00:23:22,440 --> 00:23:29,600 Speaker 8: left except except for the residual ballistic missile and drone capability. 437 00:23:30,200 --> 00:23:33,879 Speaker 8: And the administration has also made very clear that one 438 00:23:33,960 --> 00:23:36,720 Speaker 8: of the military objectives is going after not only the 439 00:23:36,800 --> 00:23:41,000 Speaker 8: launchers and the missiles and drones themselves, but the industrial capability, 440 00:23:41,480 --> 00:23:46,280 Speaker 8: the defense industrial capability, and I think again our uniform 441 00:23:46,359 --> 00:23:50,560 Speaker 8: services are doing a tremendous job in degrading that capability, 442 00:23:50,920 --> 00:23:54,320 Speaker 8: and that will have an impact not just immediately but 443 00:23:54,359 --> 00:23:56,119 Speaker 8: for the next several years. 444 00:23:57,760 --> 00:24:02,960 Speaker 1: That's a great point. There is an Iranian opposition network 445 00:24:03,200 --> 00:24:06,280 Speaker 1: that claims that it has these resistance units that have 446 00:24:06,440 --> 00:24:10,359 Speaker 1: carried out I think thirty one coordinated attacks on regime 447 00:24:10,440 --> 00:24:14,880 Speaker 1: targets across Tehran, in across Iran and Tehran, in Mashad, 448 00:24:15,280 --> 00:24:19,320 Speaker 1: a number of cities. There is that bluster and who 449 00:24:19,359 --> 00:24:20,600 Speaker 1: are these resistance units? 450 00:24:21,680 --> 00:24:24,960 Speaker 8: Well, this is war, and with war you always have 451 00:24:25,040 --> 00:24:27,840 Speaker 8: the fog of war. You always have a great deal 452 00:24:27,880 --> 00:24:31,360 Speaker 8: of information, a great deal of misinformation, and a great 453 00:24:31,400 --> 00:24:37,520 Speaker 8: deal of disinformation as well. The MEK has had a 454 00:24:37,640 --> 00:24:43,200 Speaker 8: long term presence inside Iran as well as outsider on 455 00:24:44,560 --> 00:24:47,800 Speaker 8: the MEK I think has stated that they have these 456 00:24:47,880 --> 00:24:51,280 Speaker 8: resistance units and there's a significant degree of evidence that 457 00:24:51,320 --> 00:24:56,480 Speaker 8: these units are attacking the symbols in the centers. 458 00:24:56,000 --> 00:24:57,200 Speaker 7: Of power of the regime. 459 00:24:58,160 --> 00:25:00,280 Speaker 8: I think what is needed is for the p people 460 00:25:00,320 --> 00:25:03,640 Speaker 8: of Iran to rise up. In fact, the President has 461 00:25:03,720 --> 00:25:06,959 Speaker 8: talked about regime change, not with US boots on the ground, 462 00:25:07,119 --> 00:25:12,159 Speaker 8: that's not what anyone's talking about, but to provide the 463 00:25:12,920 --> 00:25:19,200 Speaker 8: Iranian people the ability to cast off this nightmarish regime 464 00:25:19,720 --> 00:25:22,520 Speaker 8: that they've lived under for almost fifty years. 465 00:25:22,880 --> 00:25:26,360 Speaker 7: And I think them ek may be that spark. 466 00:25:26,400 --> 00:25:30,520 Speaker 8: Along with what the United States and the Israeli strikes 467 00:25:30,560 --> 00:25:33,200 Speaker 8: are doing, to get the people to turn out. 468 00:25:33,520 --> 00:25:35,400 Speaker 7: But this is not an easy thing. 469 00:25:35,800 --> 00:25:41,760 Speaker 8: I mean, in January, the regime mass murdered about we're 470 00:25:41,800 --> 00:25:46,159 Speaker 8: told over thirty thousand individuals who were out protesting. The 471 00:25:46,200 --> 00:25:49,920 Speaker 8: regime has said, most recently that anyone who protests is 472 00:25:50,320 --> 00:25:53,600 Speaker 8: going to be killed in the streets, and the regime 473 00:25:53,760 --> 00:25:57,159 Speaker 8: has the guns. So whether it's the IRGC or the 474 00:25:57,160 --> 00:26:00,680 Speaker 8: besiege or other elements of their power, Strugt sure they 475 00:26:00,720 --> 00:26:03,280 Speaker 8: have the guns. But the people have to rise up 476 00:26:03,680 --> 00:26:08,080 Speaker 8: if they're going to free themselves of this scourge. 477 00:26:09,840 --> 00:26:12,360 Speaker 1: Before I let you go, mister ambassador, when it comes 478 00:26:12,400 --> 00:26:16,600 Speaker 1: to the people of Iran, rising up. You know, we've 479 00:26:16,680 --> 00:26:21,320 Speaker 1: seen some of these starts to uprisings in my lifetime 480 00:26:21,320 --> 00:26:24,000 Speaker 1: at least a few times, but this one seems to 481 00:26:24,040 --> 00:26:28,000 Speaker 1: be very, very real and active and aggressive, and it 482 00:26:28,000 --> 00:26:30,520 Speaker 1: seems to me that this is the best chance. 483 00:26:30,240 --> 00:26:32,720 Speaker 2: They've had, maybe in forty seven years. 484 00:26:32,720 --> 00:26:35,560 Speaker 8: So you see it that way, I do, and I 485 00:26:35,600 --> 00:26:39,280 Speaker 8: think it's now or never, quite frankly, for the overthrow 486 00:26:39,359 --> 00:26:42,720 Speaker 8: of the regime. Let me just say one other thing 487 00:26:42,760 --> 00:26:46,200 Speaker 8: about the MK. The MEK has been the number one 488 00:26:46,400 --> 00:26:49,840 Speaker 8: enemy of the regime, defined as such by the regime. 489 00:26:50,200 --> 00:26:54,600 Speaker 8: And the reason is that this is an organized force 490 00:26:55,040 --> 00:26:58,960 Speaker 8: that's capable of inspiring the Iranian people. 491 00:26:59,040 --> 00:27:01,920 Speaker 7: To achieve freedom, achieved. 492 00:27:01,520 --> 00:27:05,960 Speaker 8: Democracy, and that is that is a message that the 493 00:27:06,040 --> 00:27:07,320 Speaker 8: regime cannot tolerate. 494 00:27:09,680 --> 00:27:11,680 Speaker 1: Don't I know that they have been the number one enemy, 495 00:27:11,720 --> 00:27:13,960 Speaker 1: because anytime I have someone on the show from n 496 00:27:14,080 --> 00:27:17,400 Speaker 1: CRI who has an association with m K, I get 497 00:27:17,440 --> 00:27:20,480 Speaker 1: all of these Iranian tyrants on my Twitter feed, people, 498 00:27:21,160 --> 00:27:23,359 Speaker 1: you know, coming on with all sorts of spam and stuff. 499 00:27:23,359 --> 00:27:24,480 Speaker 2: It's absolutely ridiculous. 500 00:27:24,480 --> 00:27:26,320 Speaker 1: So you are you are spot on with that, mister, 501 00:27:26,400 --> 00:27:29,000 Speaker 1: Ambassador Robert Joseph, Thanks so much for being with us. 502 00:27:29,000 --> 00:27:29,280 Speaker 2: Tonight. 503 00:27:29,400 --> 00:27:31,399 Speaker 7: Thank you very much. 504 00:27:31,480 --> 00:27:34,440 Speaker 2: Absolutely, it was a pleasure. Yes, same to you, all right, everybody. 505 00:27:34,680 --> 00:27:37,520 Speaker 1: Next, we're going to talk about securing our elections from 506 00:27:37,600 --> 00:27:40,600 Speaker 1: one of the most important places to do it, Georgia. 507 00:27:40,760 --> 00:28:06,159 Speaker 1: That's right after this break. Welcome back, everybody. As President 508 00:28:06,200 --> 00:28:10,280 Speaker 1: Trump's military campaign against Iran continues, lawmakers here at home 509 00:28:10,320 --> 00:28:14,320 Speaker 1: are also focused on a different battle, restoring election integrity, 510 00:28:14,359 --> 00:28:18,600 Speaker 1: strengthening voter id laws, and defending the Constitution. So what 511 00:28:18,680 --> 00:28:21,240 Speaker 1: are states doing to push back against threats to our 512 00:28:21,280 --> 00:28:24,639 Speaker 1: founding principles and put those priorities back front and center. 513 00:28:24,720 --> 00:28:27,320 Speaker 1: Joining me to discuss this and more is Georgia State 514 00:28:27,359 --> 00:28:31,960 Speaker 1: Senator and candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Georgia, Greg Dilazag Senator, Thanks. 515 00:28:31,840 --> 00:28:34,440 Speaker 9: So much for being with us, Amanda, good to see you, 516 00:28:34,480 --> 00:28:35,200 Speaker 9: Thanks for having me. 517 00:28:36,760 --> 00:28:40,000 Speaker 1: I want to ask you about Georgia and the men 518 00:28:40,040 --> 00:28:43,320 Speaker 1: and women of your state who serve in our armed forces. 519 00:28:43,360 --> 00:28:45,880 Speaker 1: Because there are bases all over the state of Georgia. 520 00:28:45,880 --> 00:28:48,560 Speaker 1: I believe Georgia has either more than any of the 521 00:28:48,760 --> 00:28:51,320 Speaker 1: other state or it's quite up there. When it comes 522 00:28:51,360 --> 00:28:54,320 Speaker 1: to our men and women in service and their sentiment 523 00:28:54,400 --> 00:28:56,920 Speaker 1: towards this war. Are you getting the sense that they 524 00:28:57,000 --> 00:28:59,840 Speaker 1: are supporting it, and I mean, we obviously all want 525 00:28:59,840 --> 00:29:03,200 Speaker 1: it should be done quickly, but as my last guest 526 00:29:03,320 --> 00:29:05,040 Speaker 1: was talking about, it kind of feels like this is 527 00:29:05,040 --> 00:29:06,600 Speaker 1: now or never when it comes to Irun. 528 00:29:08,360 --> 00:29:09,920 Speaker 9: I do you know one thing where none of us 529 00:29:09,920 --> 00:29:12,600 Speaker 9: are privileged to is kind of what the classified briefings are. 530 00:29:12,680 --> 00:29:15,479 Speaker 9: So I trust the President and know that this is 531 00:29:15,520 --> 00:29:19,000 Speaker 9: not something that he wanted to do unless was absolutely necessary. 532 00:29:19,400 --> 00:29:21,080 Speaker 9: And so for us to stand behind our men and 533 00:29:21,080 --> 00:29:24,560 Speaker 9: women as they're executing this attack mission is exactly what 534 00:29:24,600 --> 00:29:27,400 Speaker 9: all Americans should be doing. It's crazy to watch, you know, 535 00:29:27,480 --> 00:29:30,040 Speaker 9: Governor Knews come out and criticize these men and women 536 00:29:30,040 --> 00:29:33,200 Speaker 9: for getting fed steak and lobster once a week. It 537 00:29:33,320 --> 00:29:37,720 Speaker 9: just seems like the Democrats can't help themselves be criticizing 538 00:29:37,720 --> 00:29:40,400 Speaker 9: our troops. And it always seems to come any these 539 00:29:40,400 --> 00:29:43,600 Speaker 9: times of difficulty in war and conflict. And so yeah, 540 00:29:43,920 --> 00:29:45,320 Speaker 9: I do get the sense that A we want this 541 00:29:45,360 --> 00:29:47,360 Speaker 9: to be done as quickly as possible. I don't think 542 00:29:47,360 --> 00:29:50,400 Speaker 9: anybody wants to see boots on the ground, but obviously 543 00:29:50,520 --> 00:29:52,880 Speaker 9: we trust our commander in chief to protect this country. 544 00:29:52,920 --> 00:29:55,320 Speaker 9: And he said that we had imminent threats coming from there, 545 00:29:55,320 --> 00:29:57,360 Speaker 9: and to me, he's earned the right to have our 546 00:29:57,400 --> 00:29:59,520 Speaker 9: trust absolutely. 547 00:29:59,520 --> 00:30:03,480 Speaker 1: And to ask you about the Democrat shutdown of DHS 548 00:30:04,160 --> 00:30:07,560 Speaker 1: all in the name of them opposing President Trump's immigration 549 00:30:07,680 --> 00:30:10,680 Speaker 1: policies and the deportation agenda. I don't know if they 550 00:30:10,680 --> 00:30:12,920 Speaker 1: missed the memo that ICE has already been funded. So 551 00:30:13,120 --> 00:30:18,000 Speaker 1: grand standing on DHS is pretty uneffective when it comes 552 00:30:18,080 --> 00:30:22,600 Speaker 1: to that part of their disagreement. But DHS is very 553 00:30:22,600 --> 00:30:25,920 Speaker 1: effective when it comes to thwarting attacks here at home. 554 00:30:26,080 --> 00:30:28,840 Speaker 1: And when I was a wee thing in the nineties, 555 00:30:28,920 --> 00:30:32,280 Speaker 1: I remember going to the Olympics in Atlanta. Atlanta and 556 00:30:32,320 --> 00:30:35,600 Speaker 1: the state of Georgia is fully capable of handling large 557 00:30:35,600 --> 00:30:36,560 Speaker 1: events like this. 558 00:30:37,160 --> 00:30:38,720 Speaker 2: But I mean, God forbid. 559 00:30:38,400 --> 00:30:42,840 Speaker 1: This DHS shutdown continue into the FIFA World Cup, which 560 00:30:42,880 --> 00:30:45,680 Speaker 1: is happening in July. You've got games happening there in Georgia. 561 00:30:45,760 --> 00:30:46,360 Speaker 2: Are you worried? 562 00:30:47,840 --> 00:30:48,400 Speaker 10: We are worried. 563 00:30:48,400 --> 00:30:49,680 Speaker 2: I'm not only worried about the World Cup. 564 00:30:49,720 --> 00:30:52,280 Speaker 9: I'm worried about the fact that we've had multiple terrorist 565 00:30:52,280 --> 00:30:55,640 Speaker 9: attacks just in the last week right here on American soil. 566 00:30:56,120 --> 00:30:59,080 Speaker 9: And frankly, Congress should be back in session immediately. And 567 00:30:59,120 --> 00:31:02,840 Speaker 9: fully funding DHS and every security apparatus that is designed 568 00:31:02,920 --> 00:31:07,240 Speaker 9: to protect Americans. It's shameful the idea that you know, 569 00:31:07,480 --> 00:31:11,239 Speaker 9: the lines are obviously inconvenience, right, but the idea that 570 00:31:11,280 --> 00:31:14,160 Speaker 9: could cost people's lives is what is really disgusting and 571 00:31:14,200 --> 00:31:16,880 Speaker 9: frankly is political malpractice on behalf of the Democrats. They 572 00:31:16,880 --> 00:31:20,480 Speaker 9: always try to find these ways to make constituents and 573 00:31:20,480 --> 00:31:23,400 Speaker 9: citizens feel the pain, whether it's shutting down national parks, 574 00:31:23,800 --> 00:31:26,880 Speaker 9: whether it's not funding DHS now and ensuring that these 575 00:31:26,920 --> 00:31:30,600 Speaker 9: security lines are really, really long. And meanwhile, we've got 576 00:31:30,800 --> 00:31:33,360 Speaker 9: you know, eighteen year olds lobbying IEDs at the feet 577 00:31:33,360 --> 00:31:36,000 Speaker 9: of NYPD. We've got people, you know, driving through the 578 00:31:36,040 --> 00:31:38,160 Speaker 9: front door of a synagogue, and we've got you know, 579 00:31:38,200 --> 00:31:42,000 Speaker 9: someone taking up arms against an ROTC classroom in Old 580 00:31:42,040 --> 00:31:46,400 Speaker 9: Dominion yesterday. And it's just they are certainly derelict in 581 00:31:46,440 --> 00:31:48,080 Speaker 9: their duty and what they should be doing to protect 582 00:31:48,080 --> 00:31:48,960 Speaker 9: the American citizens. 583 00:31:50,080 --> 00:31:50,720 Speaker 2: Absolutely. 584 00:31:51,800 --> 00:31:53,800 Speaker 1: Senator, I want to ask you about the state of 585 00:31:53,960 --> 00:31:57,000 Speaker 1: Georgia and the state of election integrity in Georgia, because 586 00:31:57,000 --> 00:32:00,000 Speaker 1: after the twenty twenty election, Georgia did a pretty bad 587 00:32:00,200 --> 00:32:03,840 Speaker 1: up job of securing elections and it was probably the 588 00:32:04,440 --> 00:32:08,880 Speaker 1: upteenth time that Democrats claimed Jim Crow two point zero, 589 00:32:08,880 --> 00:32:10,920 Speaker 1: and then we found out after the election that there 590 00:32:10,920 --> 00:32:14,720 Speaker 1: were record numbers in voting, including among black Georgians. So 591 00:32:14,760 --> 00:32:18,600 Speaker 1: it obviously was not Jim Crow two point zero. That 592 00:32:18,640 --> 00:32:21,880 Speaker 1: build I think did a lot. I don't think that 593 00:32:22,200 --> 00:32:24,479 Speaker 1: it went far enough. I think a lot of states 594 00:32:24,520 --> 00:32:27,640 Speaker 1: are still way far behind that. But you've got Democrats 595 00:32:27,680 --> 00:32:30,560 Speaker 1: in the Senate and some Republicans who refused to pass 596 00:32:30,600 --> 00:32:33,960 Speaker 1: the Save America Act, which basically lays out a lot 597 00:32:33,960 --> 00:32:36,400 Speaker 1: of things that Americans and I know Georgians do too, 598 00:32:36,600 --> 00:32:37,360 Speaker 1: they already. 599 00:32:37,120 --> 00:32:41,719 Speaker 9: Support yeah, common sense provisions, Amanda, I actually brought a 600 00:32:41,760 --> 00:32:45,080 Speaker 9: save Amendment here to the Georgia Senate. So got tired 601 00:32:45,080 --> 00:32:47,120 Speaker 9: of waiting on the US Senate to pass the Save 602 00:32:47,200 --> 00:32:49,880 Speaker 9: America Act. President Trump's were working hard to get that done. 603 00:32:50,480 --> 00:32:53,000 Speaker 9: So I did the exact same thing with local legislation. 604 00:32:53,080 --> 00:32:55,920 Speaker 9: Here is going to be a constitutional amendment to change 605 00:32:55,920 --> 00:32:59,520 Speaker 9: the Georgia Constitution and just say two things. Two things. One, 606 00:33:00,120 --> 00:33:02,720 Speaker 9: only American citizens can vote in our elections, and two 607 00:33:02,760 --> 00:33:04,440 Speaker 9: you've got to show a photo ID when you're going 608 00:33:04,480 --> 00:33:07,360 Speaker 9: to vote. And every single Democrat in the Georgia State 609 00:33:07,440 --> 00:33:10,160 Speaker 9: Senate voted against it, so they have no leg to 610 00:33:10,200 --> 00:33:13,040 Speaker 9: stand out anymore. When it comes to election integrity, it 611 00:33:13,080 --> 00:33:14,840 Speaker 9: is very clear, and I talked about this on the 612 00:33:14,840 --> 00:33:18,080 Speaker 9: floor of the Senate. They want illegal citizens voting in 613 00:33:18,120 --> 00:33:21,080 Speaker 9: our elections. They're already doing it in California by law 614 00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:24,160 Speaker 9: in local elections. That's where they want to start in 615 00:33:24,200 --> 00:33:27,400 Speaker 9: Georgia as well. And we're trying to stop them by 616 00:33:27,440 --> 00:33:29,880 Speaker 9: changing the constitution so if they ever do take power, 617 00:33:30,320 --> 00:33:33,080 Speaker 9: they can't change the law. But they man, they're locked down. 618 00:33:33,160 --> 00:33:36,600 Speaker 9: This is something that the Democrat Party is fully committed to. 619 00:33:37,000 --> 00:33:39,320 Speaker 9: They're committed to the lie that the twenty twenty election 620 00:33:39,520 --> 00:33:42,280 Speaker 9: was the most secure election here in Persia history, which 621 00:33:42,320 --> 00:33:44,800 Speaker 9: is demonstrably false. But they're really locked down down this 622 00:33:44,920 --> 00:33:47,960 Speaker 9: idea that they've got to preserve the ability for illegal 623 00:33:47,960 --> 00:33:50,920 Speaker 9: citizens to vote in Georgia. And then once again, this 624 00:33:51,040 --> 00:33:52,680 Speaker 9: is just something like you said, it's an eighty five 625 00:33:52,720 --> 00:33:55,640 Speaker 9: to fifteen issue. The bulk of the Americans are with us, 626 00:33:55,960 --> 00:33:58,160 Speaker 9: and the Democrat Party is just dragging their heels on it. 627 00:33:59,240 --> 00:34:01,320 Speaker 1: Well, when you look at the Democrats argument, I can't 628 00:34:01,320 --> 00:34:04,320 Speaker 1: remember if it was BLM, Bureau of Land Management or 629 00:34:04,320 --> 00:34:06,480 Speaker 1: maybe it was Department of Interior, but one of them 630 00:34:06,480 --> 00:34:10,080 Speaker 1: put out a recent updated forestrym map and I just 631 00:34:10,120 --> 00:34:12,319 Speaker 1: happen to notice because Georgia's next to my home state 632 00:34:12,360 --> 00:34:15,560 Speaker 1: of Alabama, that Georgia has a huge part of its 633 00:34:15,600 --> 00:34:17,799 Speaker 1: state that is forestry. So you've got a large part 634 00:34:17,840 --> 00:34:21,200 Speaker 1: of Georgia that is rural. And Democrats argument is that 635 00:34:21,239 --> 00:34:22,800 Speaker 1: people in rural areas. 636 00:34:22,680 --> 00:34:25,560 Speaker 2: Don't have access to the type of paperwork that. 637 00:34:25,480 --> 00:34:27,759 Speaker 1: They would need, which is really what you need to 638 00:34:27,760 --> 00:34:29,880 Speaker 1: get into Costco, to get into a liquor store, to 639 00:34:29,920 --> 00:34:35,080 Speaker 1: get on a plane anything. Does that argument fly with Georgians. 640 00:34:36,280 --> 00:34:38,239 Speaker 9: No, I mean it's laughable. Look, people have to do 641 00:34:38,360 --> 00:34:40,960 Speaker 9: have an idea to function in normal, everyday life here 642 00:34:41,040 --> 00:34:44,040 Speaker 9: in America. You know, first they say that minorities can't 643 00:34:44,040 --> 00:34:46,160 Speaker 9: get IDs. Now they're saying that rural people may not 644 00:34:46,239 --> 00:34:49,280 Speaker 9: have access to a copy machine. You know, they pretend 645 00:34:49,280 --> 00:34:52,000 Speaker 9: like we're living in the Stone Ages if we aren't 646 00:34:52,000 --> 00:34:54,400 Speaker 9: living in their rich country club neighborhoods. 647 00:34:54,000 --> 00:34:54,560 Speaker 7: Or something like that. 648 00:34:54,680 --> 00:34:56,600 Speaker 9: But you know, you ask the average Georgian and they 649 00:34:56,600 --> 00:34:59,239 Speaker 9: think it's laughable. And here's the thing, Amanda, It's not 650 00:34:59,360 --> 00:35:01,799 Speaker 9: that people don't want to show an ID. They do 651 00:35:01,840 --> 00:35:04,080 Speaker 9: want to show an ID and they want to ensure 652 00:35:04,480 --> 00:35:07,239 Speaker 9: that their vote counts and is in no way diluted 653 00:35:07,600 --> 00:35:10,239 Speaker 9: by someone else coming in and doing same day registration, 654 00:35:10,320 --> 00:35:13,280 Speaker 9: which is something we've got Democrats campaigning here in Georgia, 655 00:35:13,320 --> 00:35:14,920 Speaker 9: the idea that you can just walk into a polling 656 00:35:14,960 --> 00:35:17,520 Speaker 9: place on the day of an election register to vote 657 00:35:17,560 --> 00:35:20,480 Speaker 9: without an ID. They want to bring every Californian policy 658 00:35:20,520 --> 00:35:23,560 Speaker 9: here to Georgia. But yeah, this blaming rural Georgia for 659 00:35:23,640 --> 00:35:26,680 Speaker 9: their stand against voter ideas if they're like taking a 660 00:35:26,719 --> 00:35:29,880 Speaker 9: stand for the farmer and the forestry guys, it's just 661 00:35:29,960 --> 00:35:33,360 Speaker 9: laughable and voters see through it. They and frankly, I 662 00:35:33,360 --> 00:35:35,480 Speaker 9: think that the Democrats know this is a losing issue 663 00:35:35,480 --> 00:35:40,000 Speaker 9: for them, but they know that the consequences of moving 664 00:35:40,000 --> 00:35:43,280 Speaker 9: to photo ID ensuring that we have secure elections, frankly, 665 00:35:43,360 --> 00:35:44,920 Speaker 9: is probably going to cause them to lose some elections, 666 00:35:44,920 --> 00:35:46,080 Speaker 9: and so they're willing to die in the hill. 667 00:35:46,360 --> 00:35:48,480 Speaker 1: Tell everybody where they can find your campaign. 668 00:35:48,200 --> 00:35:53,120 Speaker 9: Website, dola'sof for X or Dolzolf for GA, I should 669 00:35:53,160 --> 00:35:56,320 Speaker 9: say on ex and Greg Doldizel dot colhum as the website. 670 00:35:56,760 --> 00:35:59,760 Speaker 1: Perfect Georgia State Senator and candidate for Lieutenant. 671 00:35:59,400 --> 00:36:01,720 Speaker 2: Governor, George Greg delas Ah. Greg, great to see. 672 00:36:01,520 --> 00:36:02,879 Speaker 10: You you as well. 673 00:36:04,239 --> 00:36:06,120 Speaker 1: All right, everybody, more for you coming up on the 674 00:36:06,160 --> 00:36:07,000 Speaker 1: other side of this break. 675 00:36:26,400 --> 00:36:27,520 Speaker 2: Welcome back everybody. 676 00:36:27,560 --> 00:36:29,840 Speaker 1: As we have discussed throughout the entire show tonight, the 677 00:36:29,840 --> 00:36:33,040 Speaker 1: President recently warned of Iranian sleeper cells, but he also 678 00:36:33,080 --> 00:36:35,600 Speaker 1: says that we know where most of them are. We've 679 00:36:35,600 --> 00:36:39,000 Speaker 1: got our eye on them. So what does that mean 680 00:36:39,040 --> 00:36:42,000 Speaker 1: for our national security, especially as we have just seen 681 00:36:42,040 --> 00:36:44,240 Speaker 1: two terror attacks happen just yesterday. 682 00:36:44,560 --> 00:36:45,799 Speaker 2: Joining us to put all of this. 683 00:36:45,800 --> 00:36:49,600 Speaker 1: In perspective is former naval intelligence officer, former Assistant Secretary 684 00:36:49,640 --> 00:36:53,560 Speaker 1: of State, AMAC national spokesman, and now the leading candidate 685 00:36:53,600 --> 00:36:56,040 Speaker 1: for governor of Maine. How lucky main would be to 686 00:36:56,040 --> 00:36:57,560 Speaker 1: have him, Bobby Charles, Bobby. 687 00:36:57,320 --> 00:36:57,920 Speaker 2: Great to see you. 688 00:36:58,560 --> 00:37:00,319 Speaker 10: Amanda's Gray, It's great to be with you. 689 00:37:01,760 --> 00:37:03,759 Speaker 1: Likewise, all right, I want to hit on something that 690 00:37:03,800 --> 00:37:07,080 Speaker 1: I've been talking about throughout the show, and it pertains 691 00:37:07,120 --> 00:37:09,560 Speaker 1: to sleeper cells. But I think that when it comes 692 00:37:09,560 --> 00:37:13,400 Speaker 1: to these most recent attacks, these for in Austin, New York, Michigan, 693 00:37:13,520 --> 00:37:17,239 Speaker 1: and Virginia, there is a commonality that is that they 694 00:37:17,320 --> 00:37:20,880 Speaker 1: are either naturalized citizens or they are natural born citizens 695 00:37:20,880 --> 00:37:25,399 Speaker 1: to naturalized parents from places like Lebanon. Is there an 696 00:37:25,440 --> 00:37:30,120 Speaker 1: issue with our immigration system? Have we allowed the vetting 697 00:37:31,080 --> 00:37:36,319 Speaker 1: and the standards for candidates for citizenship to just completely 698 00:37:36,360 --> 00:37:39,400 Speaker 1: fall off? How is this possible that four out of 699 00:37:39,440 --> 00:37:41,840 Speaker 1: four attacks that we've seen in the last twelve days 700 00:37:42,200 --> 00:37:43,440 Speaker 1: all have that commonality. 701 00:37:44,760 --> 00:37:47,600 Speaker 10: You know, you put your finger on a very All. 702 00:37:47,560 --> 00:37:49,560 Speaker 11: Right, everybody, we're just going to break in because President 703 00:37:49,560 --> 00:37:51,360 Speaker 11: Trump is gaggling at Joint Bass Andrews. 704 00:37:51,360 --> 00:37:51,839 Speaker 4: Here it is. 705 00:38:22,600 --> 00:38:26,520 Speaker 5: I have and we're especially a couple of different things. 706 00:38:26,239 --> 00:38:29,360 Speaker 12: That not only that, but its president on the on 707 00:38:29,440 --> 00:38:32,800 Speaker 12: the Save Act. If Leader Fune cannot whip up the 708 00:38:32,840 --> 00:38:36,440 Speaker 12: Republican support to either nuke to Bilibuster, reopened the government 709 00:38:36,440 --> 00:38:38,759 Speaker 12: and pass the City and Save Act or somehow it's 710 00:38:38,800 --> 00:38:41,239 Speaker 12: that called the Save actors the Save America Act. 711 00:38:41,239 --> 00:38:41,799 Speaker 5: You're right, sir. 712 00:38:42,200 --> 00:38:44,920 Speaker 12: Do you think if if Leader Fune can accomplish that, 713 00:38:45,040 --> 00:38:47,040 Speaker 12: do you think sender needs a new leader? 714 00:38:48,160 --> 00:38:49,839 Speaker 5: Well, it's certainly a very popular thing. 715 00:38:49,880 --> 00:38:51,879 Speaker 13: I don't think there's ever been a bill that's more 716 00:38:51,920 --> 00:38:55,880 Speaker 13: popular than the Save America's voter I hate it's a 717 00:38:56,000 --> 00:38:57,240 Speaker 13: fruitles citizenship. 718 00:38:58,120 --> 00:39:00,920 Speaker 5: It's thinks that they're so No men and. 719 00:39:01,000 --> 00:39:05,720 Speaker 13: Women's sports, no trans gender utilization. 720 00:39:05,239 --> 00:39:08,919 Speaker 5: Of our children, so many different things. It's so good. 721 00:39:09,280 --> 00:39:13,400 Speaker 13: No no running around with the mail in ballot nonsense 722 00:39:13,440 --> 00:39:14,960 Speaker 13: that's gone on for so long. 723 00:39:14,800 --> 00:39:18,439 Speaker 5: That no other country does, no other country. We're gonna 724 00:39:18,480 --> 00:39:19,480 Speaker 5: clean up our elections. 725 00:39:19,480 --> 00:39:22,719 Speaker 13: I don't think I've ever been involved in anything that's 726 00:39:22,719 --> 00:39:25,239 Speaker 13: had to support of the same America Act. 727 00:39:25,440 --> 00:39:32,520 Speaker 5: What's you happen speaking? And are your objectives the same. 728 00:39:33,920 --> 00:39:35,880 Speaker 13: Or I think they might be a little different. I 729 00:39:35,880 --> 00:39:38,480 Speaker 13: guess you're different countries than we are. 730 00:39:39,040 --> 00:39:41,240 Speaker 5: But he will tell you there's never been a power 731 00:39:41,360 --> 00:39:42,760 Speaker 5: like the power of the United States. 732 00:39:42,840 --> 00:39:45,279 Speaker 13: I built our military in my first term. 733 00:39:45,520 --> 00:39:46,520 Speaker 5: Continue to do so. 734 00:39:46,800 --> 00:39:49,440 Speaker 13: But I built our military and rebuilt it. 735 00:39:49,560 --> 00:39:52,480 Speaker 5: Who was in mad shape, just like the walls, just 736 00:39:52,600 --> 00:39:53,000 Speaker 5: like the. 737 00:39:53,200 --> 00:39:56,000 Speaker 13: Border, just like everything else that I got you with 738 00:39:56,120 --> 00:39:59,680 Speaker 13: all advantage. But I rebuilt the military in my first term, 739 00:39:59,800 --> 00:40:02,080 Speaker 13: and we're using it in this term. 740 00:40:02,200 --> 00:40:05,120 Speaker 5: You know, for the sake of good, for the sake. 741 00:40:05,000 --> 00:40:08,239 Speaker 13: Of beasts, for the sake of safety and good. 742 00:40:10,600 --> 00:40:11,440 Speaker 5: I think of'm a love. 743 00:40:12,040 --> 00:40:14,359 Speaker 12: How long now do you think the war is likely 744 00:40:14,440 --> 00:40:14,719 Speaker 12: to live? 745 00:40:14,880 --> 00:40:16,480 Speaker 5: I can't tell you that. I mean, I have my 746 00:40:16,520 --> 00:40:19,000 Speaker 5: own idea, but what good does it do. It'll be 747 00:40:19,080 --> 00:40:21,240 Speaker 5: as long as it's necessary. 748 00:40:22,400 --> 00:40:26,360 Speaker 13: They've been decimated, the countries, their countries in bad shape. 749 00:40:26,440 --> 00:40:29,560 Speaker 5: The whole thing is collapsing. If you read some of 750 00:40:29,600 --> 00:40:32,160 Speaker 5: the fake news, it's like, oh, they're doing lukifully. They're 751 00:40:32,200 --> 00:40:35,399 Speaker 5: not doing what they're doing. The opposite. They're doing as 752 00:40:35,440 --> 00:40:38,239 Speaker 5: bad as you can. If I would say this, I 753 00:40:38,280 --> 00:40:39,120 Speaker 5: won't give you a time. 754 00:40:39,520 --> 00:40:41,959 Speaker 13: But we're way ahead of schedule, and can you comb 755 00:40:42,000 --> 00:40:42,839 Speaker 13: that solatarily? 756 00:40:42,920 --> 00:40:43,719 Speaker 5: What way ahead of you? 757 00:40:50,800 --> 00:40:51,719 Speaker 14: I can't touch you. 758 00:40:51,840 --> 00:40:51,960 Speaker 10: Sir. 759 00:40:52,080 --> 00:40:55,120 Speaker 12: You made a post about Claudia Shinebomb refusing your help 760 00:40:55,160 --> 00:40:57,120 Speaker 12: in Mexico. What's your plan with Mexico? 761 00:40:58,120 --> 00:41:00,600 Speaker 5: Wes you should not have review my help. 762 00:41:00,680 --> 00:41:03,320 Speaker 13: I wanted to get rid of the gartels in Mexico 763 00:41:03,440 --> 00:41:05,520 Speaker 13: and for some reason she doesn't. 764 00:41:05,200 --> 00:41:05,719 Speaker 5: Want to do that. 765 00:41:05,840 --> 00:41:08,319 Speaker 13: I like her very much, but she should get rid 766 00:41:08,360 --> 00:41:11,600 Speaker 13: of the cartels because the guartels are, whether we like 767 00:41:11,640 --> 00:41:14,320 Speaker 13: it or not, the guartels are running Mexico. 768 00:41:14,440 --> 00:41:15,640 Speaker 5: We can't have that tag you. 769 00:41:15,920 --> 00:41:16,200 Speaker 10: Thank you. 770 00:41:35,520 --> 00:41:36,440 Speaker 4: All right, everybody. 771 00:41:36,440 --> 00:41:38,880 Speaker 11: That was a short but sweet gaggle by the President 772 00:41:38,920 --> 00:41:41,399 Speaker 11: of the United States. He is of course, boarding Air 773 00:41:41,440 --> 00:41:44,359 Speaker 11: Force one at Joint Base Andrews. We are going to 774 00:41:44,360 --> 00:41:47,400 Speaker 11: dip back into our program that we took out to 775 00:41:47,480 --> 00:41:48,680 Speaker 11: go to President Trump. 776 00:41:48,760 --> 00:41:50,440 Speaker 2: We are returning to Bobby Charles. 777 00:41:53,480 --> 00:41:55,680 Speaker 1: These are events that if there are super salls in 778 00:41:55,719 --> 00:41:58,160 Speaker 1: this country, that's exactly the kind of thing that they 779 00:41:58,160 --> 00:41:59,800 Speaker 1: would target. And I know this because I was a 780 00:41:59,840 --> 00:42:02,240 Speaker 1: lot when the Olympics happened in Atlanta. I was talking 781 00:42:02,239 --> 00:42:04,640 Speaker 1: to my last guest about this, and I remember when 782 00:42:04,640 --> 00:42:05,920 Speaker 1: there was a bomb threat in Atlanta. 783 00:42:06,800 --> 00:42:10,040 Speaker 14: Well, I go back and I remember, I remember the 784 00:42:10,960 --> 00:42:14,880 Speaker 14: Olympics in which radicals killed a large part of the 785 00:42:14,920 --> 00:42:17,839 Speaker 14: Jewish team, many many, many years ago. And I will 786 00:42:17,880 --> 00:42:22,120 Speaker 14: just tell you we are living in fraught times. And 787 00:42:22,200 --> 00:42:25,120 Speaker 14: for these people, these Democrats, and I include state level 788 00:42:25,160 --> 00:42:29,239 Speaker 14: Democrats and federal level democrats, not to understand that law 789 00:42:29,320 --> 00:42:33,640 Speaker 14: enforcement is a very very very thin blue line between 790 00:42:33,680 --> 00:42:38,279 Speaker 14: total chaos and the preservation of order, or to understand 791 00:42:38,320 --> 00:42:41,880 Speaker 14: that and then act irresponsibly, imagining that by attacking law 792 00:42:41,960 --> 00:42:44,000 Speaker 14: enforcement they advanced their own political cause. 793 00:42:44,480 --> 00:42:47,320 Speaker 10: Is I look for words. 794 00:42:47,400 --> 00:42:51,200 Speaker 14: It's anti American, it's anti constitutional, it's reckless, it's against 795 00:42:51,239 --> 00:42:53,200 Speaker 14: the public interest, it's against public safety. 796 00:42:53,239 --> 00:42:54,160 Speaker 10: And it needs to stop. 797 00:42:55,760 --> 00:42:56,920 Speaker 2: Bobby, before I let you go. 798 00:42:57,000 --> 00:42:58,960 Speaker 1: I have to brag on you a little bit because 799 00:42:59,040 --> 00:43:01,759 Speaker 1: when it comes as go governors or reason Maine, you're 800 00:43:01,840 --> 00:43:04,520 Speaker 1: leading by double digits in all four major polls. You 801 00:43:04,560 --> 00:43:08,000 Speaker 1: have almost four thousand small dollar donors across the state. 802 00:43:08,400 --> 00:43:12,319 Speaker 1: You're getting Democrats to register as Republicans. You've got four 803 00:43:12,360 --> 00:43:13,600 Speaker 1: thousand signatures when. 804 00:43:13,480 --> 00:43:14,800 Speaker 2: You only need a two thousand. 805 00:43:15,560 --> 00:43:18,080 Speaker 1: I mean, this is absolutely you're running away with it. 806 00:43:18,120 --> 00:43:21,239 Speaker 1: I don't want to jinx you, but things are going very, 807 00:43:21,320 --> 00:43:21,920 Speaker 1: very well for you. 808 00:43:21,960 --> 00:43:23,719 Speaker 2: It seems to me that the people. 809 00:43:23,440 --> 00:43:26,880 Speaker 1: Of Maine are finally ready for some Bobby Charles style 810 00:43:26,960 --> 00:43:27,640 Speaker 1: common sense. 811 00:43:28,680 --> 00:43:30,920 Speaker 10: Yeah. What a beautiful boy. I can't I don't even. 812 00:43:30,800 --> 00:43:32,879 Speaker 14: Know what to say there, Amanda, that's a beautiful lead 813 00:43:32,920 --> 00:43:36,279 Speaker 14: in Look, two things really. One, what you just said 814 00:43:36,280 --> 00:43:39,920 Speaker 14: there is absolutely true. Manors are ready for a return 815 00:43:40,000 --> 00:43:43,040 Speaker 14: to Norman Rockwell values, to the idea that common sense 816 00:43:43,160 --> 00:43:46,239 Speaker 14: actually does have a place in our civic society, in 817 00:43:46,280 --> 00:43:49,080 Speaker 14: our day to day lives. And actually the opposite of 818 00:43:49,120 --> 00:43:51,320 Speaker 14: common sense is just going to take us down a 819 00:43:51,400 --> 00:43:53,480 Speaker 14: rabbit hole. We're going to have to climb back out again, 820 00:43:53,719 --> 00:43:55,640 Speaker 14: and we're doing it. We're already having to climb out. 821 00:43:56,120 --> 00:43:58,720 Speaker 14: We're ready for that big change in Maine, and those 822 00:43:58,719 --> 00:44:01,879 Speaker 14: indicators that you just decribed are exactly right, and they 823 00:44:01,920 --> 00:44:03,879 Speaker 14: are the indicators that show there's going to be an 824 00:44:03,880 --> 00:44:04,960 Speaker 14: incredible wave here. 825 00:44:04,960 --> 00:44:06,839 Speaker 10: I believe it'll pull the House, the Senate. 826 00:44:06,880 --> 00:44:10,040 Speaker 14: It'll give us the constitutional officers, and the governorship, which 827 00:44:10,040 --> 00:44:12,560 Speaker 14: will allow me in turn to change out the Supreme 828 00:44:12,560 --> 00:44:14,920 Speaker 14: Court and go after some of these Soros funded. 829 00:44:14,719 --> 00:44:17,520 Speaker 10: Das in Maine. There is a moment where people say, 830 00:44:17,560 --> 00:44:20,520 Speaker 10: I've had it. I've just had it. I can't put 831 00:44:20,600 --> 00:44:21,400 Speaker 10: up with this anymore. 832 00:44:21,440 --> 00:44:24,600 Speaker 14: The high taxes, the high drug trafficking rates, the disintegration 833 00:44:24,640 --> 00:44:27,960 Speaker 14: of the schools, and the fraud in every state government entity. 834 00:44:28,280 --> 00:44:31,799 Speaker 1: Former Assistant Secretary of State AMAC national spokesman and now 835 00:44:31,920 --> 00:44:35,000 Speaker 1: leading candidate for governor of Maine, Bobby Charles, thanks so 836 00:44:35,080 --> 00:44:36,080 Speaker 1: much for being with us tonight. 837 00:44:36,080 --> 00:44:39,000 Speaker 10: Great toe you, Thank you, Aman. I truly appreciate it. 838 00:44:40,120 --> 00:44:42,680 Speaker 1: Likewise, all right, everybody, coming up next, what can be 839 00:44:42,719 --> 00:44:45,360 Speaker 1: done to combat anti American rhetoric in schools? 840 00:44:45,400 --> 00:45:01,520 Speaker 2: That and more? After the break welcome back everybody. 841 00:45:01,600 --> 00:45:05,400 Speaker 1: Lawmaker suggests that our adversaries are using financial contributions to 842 00:45:05,440 --> 00:45:08,360 Speaker 1: push anti American sentiment in our school So here's a 843 00:45:08,440 --> 00:45:10,200 Speaker 1: question what can be done to get. 844 00:45:10,160 --> 00:45:11,600 Speaker 2: Education back on tracks. 845 00:45:11,600 --> 00:45:14,800 Speaker 1: Statistics show that only thirteen percent of eighth graders perform 846 00:45:14,920 --> 00:45:18,160 Speaker 1: at or above a proficient level in American history. So 847 00:45:18,280 --> 00:45:20,719 Speaker 1: joining us now to discuss this and more, professor of 848 00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:23,920 Speaker 1: political science, the hosts of the PAS Report podcast, and 849 00:45:23,960 --> 00:45:28,160 Speaker 1: a fellow at Campus Reforms Higher Education Fellowship, Nicholas Jerdana 850 00:45:28,239 --> 00:45:29,000 Speaker 1: returning to the show. 851 00:45:29,080 --> 00:45:30,040 Speaker 2: Nicholas, great to see you. 852 00:45:30,640 --> 00:45:33,040 Speaker 15: Oh, he's a pleasure to join you. 853 00:45:33,160 --> 00:45:36,400 Speaker 1: All right, that's statistic about eighth graders who know, or 854 00:45:36,440 --> 00:45:38,560 Speaker 1: I should say, don't know American history. 855 00:45:39,239 --> 00:45:40,400 Speaker 2: Maybe that's how we got here. 856 00:45:41,680 --> 00:45:44,760 Speaker 15: Yeah, that's definitely a big reason. And it's not limited 857 00:45:44,800 --> 00:45:47,880 Speaker 15: to eighth graders, because when they get into the college level, 858 00:45:47,920 --> 00:45:51,440 Speaker 15: they still don't know about our government, how our government functions, 859 00:45:51,800 --> 00:45:55,080 Speaker 15: or civics. I give my students the citizenship exam every 860 00:45:55,120 --> 00:45:59,960 Speaker 15: single semester, and this year so in January, as school 861 00:46:00,200 --> 00:46:02,960 Speaker 15: high schools and middle schools were shutting down to engage 862 00:46:02,960 --> 00:46:07,160 Speaker 15: in anti ice protests, only a handful out of nearly 863 00:46:07,200 --> 00:46:10,240 Speaker 15: two hundred students we're able to pass a very basic 864 00:46:10,320 --> 00:46:13,960 Speaker 15: citizenship exam that asks questions like name one of the 865 00:46:14,000 --> 00:46:17,400 Speaker 15: two senators from New York State, who is the Speaker 866 00:46:17,440 --> 00:46:19,719 Speaker 15: of the House, which branch of government has the power 867 00:46:19,800 --> 00:46:24,040 Speaker 15: to declare war. So this is indicative of our entire society, 868 00:46:24,200 --> 00:46:26,160 Speaker 15: and the problem that we have here in the United 869 00:46:26,160 --> 00:46:30,440 Speaker 15: States goes well beyond our classrooms. Because if the people 870 00:46:30,640 --> 00:46:33,719 Speaker 15: of our country don't know it, don't understand it, don't 871 00:46:33,800 --> 00:46:37,239 Speaker 15: understand our history or how the government operates, how are 872 00:46:37,280 --> 00:46:38,200 Speaker 15: we going to survive. 873 00:46:38,440 --> 00:46:39,080 Speaker 7: We're not a. 874 00:46:39,040 --> 00:46:42,000 Speaker 15: Country that has two thousand years of a shared history. 875 00:46:42,080 --> 00:46:45,759 Speaker 15: We don't have a shared culture, shared customs, shared traditions. 876 00:46:46,120 --> 00:46:47,319 Speaker 7: We're a credle nation. 877 00:46:47,640 --> 00:46:50,880 Speaker 15: What links us together is the tenants of the American 878 00:46:50,960 --> 00:46:54,239 Speaker 15: creed through the Declaration of Independence. It's the love of 879 00:46:54,719 --> 00:46:59,680 Speaker 15: liberty and concepts like limited government, the personal responsibility that 880 00:46:59,719 --> 00:47:03,920 Speaker 15: we have within the system, and toecivically engage the appropriate way. 881 00:47:04,400 --> 00:47:07,719 Speaker 15: So if we don't know the very basics of our country, 882 00:47:07,880 --> 00:47:11,279 Speaker 15: what's actually holding us and linking us together? And the 883 00:47:11,320 --> 00:47:14,719 Speaker 15: reality is nothing. And this is very dangerous because at 884 00:47:14,719 --> 00:47:18,960 Speaker 15: the same time we're seeing this anti Americanism being introduced 885 00:47:19,000 --> 00:47:22,040 Speaker 15: into schools that campus reform. We report on it at 886 00:47:22,040 --> 00:47:24,839 Speaker 15: the college and university level, but now it's filtered down 887 00:47:24,880 --> 00:47:27,600 Speaker 15: through the K through twelve system as well, so it's 888 00:47:27,600 --> 00:47:28,759 Speaker 15: a really dangerous time. 889 00:47:30,239 --> 00:47:30,680 Speaker 10: Yeah. 890 00:47:30,719 --> 00:47:34,319 Speaker 1: Well, all of those statistics and questions that you routed off, 891 00:47:34,320 --> 00:47:36,879 Speaker 1: I sure a sugar know them now, but in eighth grade, 892 00:47:36,960 --> 00:47:38,840 Speaker 1: I don't think I knew them either, So that tells 893 00:47:38,880 --> 00:47:39,719 Speaker 1: me that this has been a. 894 00:47:39,640 --> 00:47:40,720 Speaker 2: Problem for a lot longer. 895 00:47:41,719 --> 00:47:44,399 Speaker 15: Absolutely, And I could guarantee you if I went into 896 00:47:44,480 --> 00:47:46,640 Speaker 15: a shopping mall or a grocery store with the same 897 00:47:46,800 --> 00:47:50,400 Speaker 15: citizenship test, I'd get similar results. Other people may know 898 00:47:50,480 --> 00:47:54,160 Speaker 15: a couple more questions, but not as many. They would 899 00:47:54,239 --> 00:47:57,080 Speaker 15: not be able to pass as well. And when we're 900 00:47:57,200 --> 00:48:00,359 Speaker 15: examining it, I asked my students just last week, what 901 00:48:00,400 --> 00:48:03,520 Speaker 15: does it mean to be American? What makes us American? 902 00:48:03,760 --> 00:48:07,120 Speaker 15: And I was met with silence. Nobody could answer that question. 903 00:48:07,200 --> 00:48:11,000 Speaker 15: There was no debate, nobody even attempted to. And that's 904 00:48:11,080 --> 00:48:14,680 Speaker 15: my concern. You have states like Virginia and New York 905 00:48:14,760 --> 00:48:18,120 Speaker 15: trying to introduce and make it mandatory that schools teach 906 00:48:18,160 --> 00:48:22,880 Speaker 15: about January sixth and the political narratives into January sixth. 907 00:48:23,160 --> 00:48:26,280 Speaker 15: Yet these students don't even know the basic structure of government. 908 00:48:26,440 --> 00:48:27,800 Speaker 10: So we see. 909 00:48:27,640 --> 00:48:31,840 Speaker 15: Ideologues have replaced teachers in the classroom, we see an agenda. 910 00:48:31,960 --> 00:48:35,560 Speaker 15: The agenda is clear, and it's the American people that 911 00:48:35,640 --> 00:48:38,680 Speaker 15: are funding this one point five trillion dollars a year 912 00:48:38,680 --> 00:48:41,800 Speaker 15: if we take federal, state, and local level spending on education, 913 00:48:42,880 --> 00:48:45,640 Speaker 15: and the results are a disaster. But it goes beyond 914 00:48:45,680 --> 00:48:48,279 Speaker 15: the classroom, and I think that's the important thing. As 915 00:48:48,320 --> 00:48:51,640 Speaker 15: these students grow up, they enter and they become the 916 00:48:51,680 --> 00:48:55,040 Speaker 15: policy makers, the leaders in business, the leaders in medicine, 917 00:48:55,320 --> 00:48:59,600 Speaker 15: the lawyers. And when you have a system where people 918 00:48:59,680 --> 00:49:02,600 Speaker 15: are to to have disdain for that system, they will 919 00:49:02,640 --> 00:49:05,480 Speaker 15: begin to dismantle it. And isn't that kind of exactly 920 00:49:05,520 --> 00:49:08,760 Speaker 15: what we're seeing in places like New York, in places 921 00:49:08,960 --> 00:49:13,640 Speaker 15: like Illinois, at places like Minnesota. So we're seeing the 922 00:49:13,680 --> 00:49:19,120 Speaker 15: effects of a failed education system today. And even Republicans 923 00:49:19,200 --> 00:49:22,000 Speaker 15: they haven't been appropriately taught. They may love the country, 924 00:49:22,040 --> 00:49:24,719 Speaker 15: they have a genuine love country, But how can you 925 00:49:24,760 --> 00:49:27,080 Speaker 15: defend if you don't know what you're defending? 926 00:49:27,200 --> 00:49:32,040 Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, I mean, Nicholas, I think there's a laundry 927 00:49:32,040 --> 00:49:34,560 Speaker 1: list of things that we could say define Americanism. 928 00:49:34,640 --> 00:49:36,640 Speaker 2: It is rugged individualism. 929 00:49:36,719 --> 00:49:39,600 Speaker 1: It is an obsession with liberty, It is a healthy 930 00:49:39,600 --> 00:49:45,799 Speaker 1: skepticism of government, it is an entrepreneurial grit. I mean 931 00:49:45,880 --> 00:49:48,120 Speaker 1: so many things, but Nicholas, you Ordano. It's always a 932 00:49:48,120 --> 00:49:50,560 Speaker 1: pleasure having you with us. Thanks for being here tonight 933 00:49:50,600 --> 00:49:58,040 Speaker 1: and everybody will be back on Monday. 934 00:50:00,080 --> 00:50:00,120 Speaker 10: M