PBD Podcast - Political Operative Roger Stone & CIA Agent Ric Prado | PBD Podcast | Ep. 166
Episode Date: June 28, 2022In this episode, Patrick Bet-David is joined by Roger Stone, Ric Prado, and Adam Sosnick to discuss Ron DeSantis as possible candidate for 2024, CIA and FBI involvement in politics, and Roe V. Wade, P...utin and much more... TOPICS 0:00 - Intro 9:31 - Is Ron DeSantis running for president in 2024? 19:33 - Could Dwayne Johnson be the next president? 24:41 - Reaction to people saying Roger Stone is polarizing 27:52 - CIA and FBI's involvement in politics 35:37 - Bill Maher claims Trump will win easily if he runs in the next election 39:37 - More than a million voters have shifted to the republican party. 53:06 - People are scared to say what they feel 57:28 - Joe Biden's gun reform bill 1:15:04 - Putin's goals of expansion 1:34:46 - Reaction to Roe v Wade About Roger: Roger Jason Stone is an American conservative political consultant and lobbyist. Since the 1970s, Stone has worked on the campaigns of Republican politicians, including Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Jack Kemp, Bob Dole, George W. Bush, and Donald Trump. About Ric: Enrique "Ric" Prado is a paramilitary, counter-terrorism, and special/clandestine operations specialist, with a focus on international training operations and programs. Mr. Prado is a twenty-four-year veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency where he served as an Operations Officer in six overseas posts. He was Deputy Chief of Station and "Plank Owner" of the original Bin Ladin Task Force/Issues Station under Senior Analyst, Michael Scheuer, as well as Chief of Station in a hostile Muslim country. Try our sponsor Aura for 14 days free - https://aura.com/pbd to see how many times your personal information was found on the dark web today. To donate to the Stone Family Support Fund: https://bit.ly/3OGNpyk To purchase Ric Prado's book, Black Ops: https://amzn.to/3bBHL2w For all things Ric Prado: https://bit.ly/3OD1lJU Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get added to the distribution list Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. To reach the Valuetainment team you can email: booking@valuetainment.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Are you out of your mind? Here's the debate. Here I'm set. They're saying we believe.
This is it. Since the night I thought that.
Alright, so podcast episode number 166. We didn't have any podcast last week.
We're back, baby. We are fully bad. We got some guests with two
Special guests today with a lot of topics to discuss. We have
Potentially the greatest marketer ever in politics. He could have been a CMO at a fortune 100 company and
If his father was a gangster from an Italian family, he could have been a boss. Okay, and that's Roger Stone
but many call him
a one of the greatest political lobbyists of all time
with you, a love of more hate him.
He's very, very good at what he does,
an absolute strategist.
Roger, it's good to have you here.
Great to be back.
We also have Rick Prado here with us,
for those of you that don't know who Rick Prado is.
24-year vet with the CIA he served in the operations
Officer in six overseas posts. He was a deputy chief of station and a plank owner of the original Ben Laden task force issues
station under senior analyst Michael Schur
And he was also chief operations in the CIA counter terrorist center, CTC
during this September,
11 attacks, 9-11 attacks were proud to help coordinate
CIA special operations, activities
with the National Security Council and the FBI,
as well as the elite, US military representatives
from Delta Force, SEAL Team Six,
then detailed to CTC.
Thank you for being on as well.
And you run a company today right co-owner of camp x
yeah this is the uh... training facility for our special operations forces
yes so there there's a lot of uh...
there's a lot of things going on that we can cover today that has to do with
your background and as well as has to do with your background i'm curious to
know what your positions have changed
with presidency coming into twenty twenty twenty. If you were a, the people
in Vegas who are looking at odds and who could be the president, they're probably curious
to know who you think has a shot at being president. You saw a Trump years ago when he was in
his 40s and you said, this guy's got what it takes to be president one day. You ended up
being right. People thought you were crazy, but it is what it is. And one of Roger's favorite
lines that stuck with me after the first time we did an interview. it is what it is. And one of Roger's favorite lines that stuck with me
after the first time we did an interview.
I love what you said.
You said there's four phases we all go through, right?
Who is Roger Stone, okay?
Get me Roger Stone, get me someone like Roger Stone,
and then who is Roger Stone, right?
We all kind of go through that phase and we'll process that.
But folks, if you're on here,
we got a lot of topics to cover. Let me kind of give you an idea what topics we're going to be
discussing today before we go through our first sponsorship and then we'll get right into it. First
topic we'll get into is I just put it as clearance Thomas. I mean, obviously I know with Supreme
Court, I know it's Roe v Wade, but it's, you know, clearance Thomas has done a lot of things
in the last-
Making a lot of headlines.
A lot of headlines and he's not slowing down.
He seems like he wants to go after the LGBT, you know,
it's a same-sex marriage.
He's talking about morning after pill.
People are losing their minds.
Riot's protesting all over the country.
We'll talk about that.
Number two, we'll talk about what happened with Russia,
going into default mode.
And then at the same time g seven nations to
announce ban on russian gold
as masco sanctions widened and then put in uh... says warns london
will be bombed first if a world war three was uh... was to break out and then
topic number three will be trump
uh... bill marra claims trump could win easily
because of drag queens but he can't let go of the election kusano what you think
about that
more than a million voters have switched to republican party in the last year
that's a new york post-story
and then uh... a uh... apparently a big fist fight broke out with Rudy
Giuliani i don't know if you guys are not
something that happens to have to do it again
well i don't know how he did it's it's either Nancy polosi's elbow or Rudy
getting padded in the back,
we got to talk about that.
And then Biden says we have to prepare for the next pandemic.
We need funding for the next pandemic,
which maybe a former CIA agent has some information.
We don't know about it.
Last but not least, retirement.
Savers have lost three trillion dollars in the stock market.
That's three trillion dollars in the stock market
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your fourteen day free trial having said that let's get right into it i figured the first
topic we we could go to roe v wait but i figured it's appropriate for us to go maybe into
the trump topic first and address that because you know it Roger if you don't mind most of
the world who's in the political world knows who you are but some don't can you take a minute and give everyone
your background of what you done and politics the next 30 the last 30 40 years.
Wow.
Well, I have worked on 11 national presidential campaigns starting with Richard Nixon,
three campaigns for Governor Ronald Reagan, later President Ronald Reagan,
worked in the U.S. Senate for Senator Bob Dole, one of the greatest men of the 20th century,
did service for George W. Bush, and then, of course, Donald Trump.
I am a Trump supporter. I make that very clear. I think I may have been among the earliest
people in the country to see his potential as not only a great presidential candidate,
but a great president.
He certainly changed history in many ways.
I do think people underestimate the extent to which
he dominates the Republican Party at the grassroots level.
Not among the party leaders, those are the guys who like with Reagan
had to pretend they liked him
because he was so popular among their voters.
But this is still his party.
He has transformed the party from being the party
of country clob elites to being the party
of working class people based largely
on his economic record.
And therefore, I think he's in a commanding position
if he wants to run again. I think he does want to run again. I actually think his announcement
of candidacy may come as early as July, this July, for a couple reasons. One, of course, is the
ongoing effort by the Democrats to disqualify him, fabricate some
crime that would prevent him from running, clearly what they're trying to do in connection
to January 6th.
And also, there are, you know, he has a rival out there, our own governor, Ron DeSantis,
who's made it pretty clear that he might want to try to take on the champ.
The national polls show that Trump would prevail
in that contest as well.
But I think he's highly likely to run again.
He's highly likely to run again.
I believe so.
And there's two camps.
There's a camp that says the Santa's won't run directly
against Trump.
And there's a camp that says no, he's going to run.
Because the opportunity is so hot right now
for the Santa's with the record.
He's at him floor Florida last two years. This
is a perfect time for him to run. What do you stand with that?
First of all, he needs to get himself reelected. He's got a
contest this November. He should not take that for granted. I
think he's favored. But Florida is not a red state and it's not a
blue state. It's a purple state. And the governor's poll is
very popular. I'm certainly going to vote for his reelection.
But he's also very polarizing. So, you know, Richard Nixon lost the presidency in 1960, decided to run for governor in 1962
on his way to the 64 nomination.
Something went wrong.
He didn't get elected governor, and that was the end of that comeback attempt.
Interesting.
DeSantis, I think, would be wise to pay attention to the contest before him, before he gets
ahead of himself.
This is...
He would be a formidable candidate.
I don't deny that.
But he doesn't have the charisma that Trump has.
He doesn't have the presence that Trump has.
The governor is very good in a control atmosphere.
When he has the microphone and nobody else does,
he does great.
But he's not self-deprecating, he's not funny,
he's not entertaining, he's kind of stiff.
He's a Trump self-deprecating.
All the time.
Yeah, absolutely.
Trump makes jokes about himself.
And you say DeSantis is kind of a stiff.
Kind of a stiff.
I mean, he's very focused.
He's very disciplined, which is a key factor Kind of a stiff. He's very focused.
He's very disciplined, which is a key factor in politics.
But he's not very charismatic.
He's a little more, he's a little boring.
Is charisma the most important quality a president could have?
We live in the television age.
You know, they asked Ronald Reagan, do you think it was detrimental to your prospects to
be president that you were an actor and he said you know
i don't see how how a guy who wasn't an actor could ever do this job this is in nineteen eight year
part of the way he was president i don't see someone who's not an actor can do this job can you
imagine that line for regina say which which makes sense okay uh... rick in the the trump camp where
do you stand on this you live in florida so you probably have strong opinions on DeSantis, Trump, all that.
Well, I voted for Trump both times.
I think that he has put together the best policies
for this country.
I love his patriotism.
I love his support for our law enforcement,
and of course, for our military, special military,
and law enforcement and federal agencies.
I also like DeSantis.
I think that he's done an incredible job here in Florida.
And I've talked to a lot of people about this. A lot of people don't want the centrist to
run because they don't want him to leave Florida. It's a very selfish, very vocal about that.
That's a big concern. A lot of Floridians have. But I think the biggest question is the
following. And I'm curious to know what you say about this. So you know how in MMA or in boxing,
certain people that come from the same camp,
you know, they don't fight each other.
And then if they do, there's a big, you know,
riff, there's a big following out between the two.
Yeah, Mazavidal had a following out with Kobe.
They've come from the same camp.
So if you follow MMA, you're both, you know,
so your your stories like that.
What do you, so visualize the the stage which is what everybody is
Wanting to see if it's gonna happen or not. Oh first Republican, you know
Presidential debate on the Republican side. Okay, so we're looking all the candidates on stage
You're gonna see say Rubio maybe Cruz you see all the candidates that we see right they're on the stage
Maybe mayor swires. I don't know, But you got these names on the stage, right?
They're debating.
Everybody knows it's really two names.
It's not any other names.
The other guys are up there just to kind of be up there,
but we know it's only two names.
Do you remember the scene when Kamala Harris
went right after Biden?
Do you remember that one scene when Kamala Harris
went after Biden?
Yeah, busing back in the 80s.
And then it's surprisingly she ends up becoming a VP which is a very weird thing that happens.
But what happens when these two go at it?
You know, what happens when they call each other out?
Who calls each, who calls who out first?
How is the market gonna take it?
How Republicans gonna take it?
How are Democrats gonna use it?
How are the other side gonna be prepared?
Let's just say Trump takes a shot at the Sanctus.
Is the Sanctus gonna come out strong towards Trump? If the Sanctus comes just say Trump takes a shot at the Sanctus. Is the Sanctus going to come out strong towards Trump? If
the Sanctus comes out first and takes a shot at Trump, is Trump
going to come out and bully him like it typically does? Is that
good for the party? Have they spoken prior? Are they going to
call each other out and say, listen, hey, the Sanctus, we know it's
you and I. Let's take it easy on each other. Is that going to be
the conversation or it's Trump going to say, no, I'm not going to
do that. We're going out it this. He was going to win.
How do you see this happening?
Boy, there's not too many questions there.
First of all, it's two years from now.
And two years is a lifetime in politics.
A month is a lifetime in politics.
Governor Santos did not fare very well in his two debates
with Mayor Gillum.
Again, an uncontrolled atmosphere.
He does very well in a controlled atmosphere
where he has the podium and the microphone. Trump will be entertaining, always entertaining.
And that's very important in our culture. Mim politics is entertainment. The worst thing
in politics to be is boring. Trump is never boring. But the handicap something that's two years from now
is extraordinarily different, difficult.
Well, you do that 30 years though.
You handicap 30 years prior to Trump being present.
I was just able to start.
That's been more difficult.
I was just actually able to see a, you know,
a prime piece of political horse flash.
I was prepared to see a guy who I thought had the size,
I don't mean the physical size,
but the presence in the courage and the stamina and the willingness to say anything to be an
interesting and provocative, not only candidate, but then have the courage to be a strong
president.
Trump broke the mold.
Before Trump, we had no president who wasn't a general, or a senator, or a governor.
We never had a business person as president.
So on paper, Trump shouldn't have been able to win.
He broke all of the rules.
Didn't spend millions of dollars on network television advertising.
Still got elected president.
So I still think he's the favorite.
On the other side of the coin, not to shock you, but my prediction on the Democratic nominee
for President in 2024, Michelle Obama, almost certainly.
I agree.
You're saying most certainly.
Yeah, I mean, this book tour, she said yesterday.
Yeah, she's out there being very, go ahead.
She's very active right now.
She's out doing this book tour, these voter registration drives, and so
on. She's certainly not doing for the money. So no, I think she's positioned herself. And
by the way, I think she'll be a very formidable candidate.
Do you think she could beat Trump too far away? Our gas prices the same as they are today.
Do we have food shortages? Are we still dying from this rampant inflation, are we shipping $40 billion to Ukraine when we can't
spend five or nine to set points of $7 million to seal our southern border? I mean, the
issue situation today would favor any Republican, at least in the next election round and perhaps
the following round. But again, Reagan had a sour economy in the middle of his first
term. The economy was roaring by the end of his first term,
and he got reelected.
So meaning if things change and power increasing the rates,
doing what he does, maybe flattening inflation,
and then he can lower interest rates a little bit.
So then we go back to having a decent economy,
and gas prices go lower,
everything is now a little bit more settled.
You think the likelihood of bite getting reelected
it's higher or you just don't think he's gonna run again i don't see him
running okay got so no matter what on the left it's gonna be somebody else
outside of bite is what your sense my belief you also agree absolutely who do
you think it's going to be
uh... i don't know in the news of the uh... michelle obama scares me because uh...
she is uh...
i consider her a very drastic left-wing individual.
You know, from my, and I'm not a politician, that's obvious,
but from my perspective, you know, the far right is always going to both right,
and the far left is always going to both left.
So we need a candidate, especially in our Republican party,
somebody that could bring in that middle America,
you know, that average American out there that finally cannot afford to be the silent majority anymore and become a that's so silent majority.
So are you are you going to when you said that are you saying the Santis is that kind of where you were going with them?
No, neither one either one. I
You know, let the best men win, but I know which way i would be voting would be still but but let me ask the question roger from your from your
uh... having done this for a while
how often do do candidates leading candidates of the same party talk to
each other before the first debate
almost always
and what does that call sound like what's that conversation sound like
you know it can be like the way off in uh... in a price fight you know they can
trash talk each other or but I think the I think the president's kind of nonchalant about this if he's quoting the New Yorker
last week is saying look it's his prerogative if he runs he runs I'll beat him. I think that's
the right attitude. Got it, but it's not a deals are not made pre or our deals made pre first
debate that takes place. I don't think everybody makes a deal because everybody goes into that debate thinking,
I'm the guy, this is my opportunity to break through.
Maybe I'm back in the pack right now, but this is my opportunity to break through.
The field of window pretty close pretty quickly because Trump is so completely dominant.
The only one is you correctly pointed out, who potentially is a challenger
who can get anything together, is Ron D'Assages. I mean, Mike Pompeo, who out on the street
in front of the studio, and that's the first seven people you see who Mike Pompeo is.
They don't even know who Marco Rubio is, and we live in Florida.
That's pretty, so this is a complete different question
about since we're on this year.
So far, three names, which I fully agree on those three names,
Michelle Obama, you got Trump, you got the Santa, it's great.
But let's talk about wild cards.
And wild cards are somebody we least expect.
OK, there were talks of a rock saying, hey, one day, you know, he wouldn't mind becoming the
president.
You hear Logan Paul and Jake Paul talk about they're going to be presidents.
Logan Paul told me, I think that guy's got a big upside.
He's entertaining, he's smart, he's good-looking, he's a good talker, he's a great market,
he's a good storyteller, but he's young, right?
But in a setting, we're a Dwayne Johnson, the rock.
My opinion, this is a perfect time for him to run if he wants to win. Now politically,
would you agree with him? This is not about politics. I'm not asking policies. I'm asking timing-wise. The left doesn't have an exciting
candidate, okay? The right is
confused between two different candidates. If there's ever been a
time for guy like to jump in there, whether you like his policies or not, it's irrelevant. Do you
think this will be a good time for the rock to make a move? It's a tremendous advantage
in American politics, particularly presidential pandemics, to begin well known.
Ronald Reagan had a career before politics. Donald Trump had a career before politics.
So they were both able in a way to skip the first step
of politics, which should become well known.
Candidates like the rock begin well known.
Now I'm not sure which party he's in.
I don't really clear what his politics are,
but it is not inconceivable that he could be
a viable candidate because he has that elusive quality
It's got celebrity quality is extremely well known. That's an excellent leg up
It's one of the principal reasons why Trump was able to be nominated so if we do matchups we do matchups
You know how you
See the boxing match up 74 inch rage versus 72 and a half hide wait 178, 178, let's do a matter.
The tale of the tape.
Exactly, right?
So you got the rock versus Reagan.
Reagan was a bee.
Level actor.
It wasn't an eight.
But he'd been governor and he had a very successful
termist governor.
Perfect.
Fair enough.
So that's the edge.
So the rock somebody could say, highest paid actor, right?
He's made his money.
He's got God knows how many followers on social media.
He's an international figure, so he's got that part.
Then if you look at some of the other names,
if you compare him to Trump, well, Trump
wins on success of business, what he's built, his brand.
But the rock may win for being you know, being more famous policies.
Trump's been talking policies since the 80s.
I don't know if the rocks been talking politics for 30 years.
So that's the one part where he has, even he himself said, this is not an area where I
excel in, but all I'm asking is in a situation like this, if you got a call from one of these
guys, from one of their handlers saying,
hey, we want this thing to be, you know,
we want you to sign an NDA,
and we don't want you to say this to anybody.
We are willing to hire you as a, you know,
political strategist, but no one knows this.
If feedback was given to them,
what would you say to some of these guys?
You want to be president, run for governor.
You want to be president, run for senator.
And others, Trump would run on a four-year record
of unprecedented economic growth,
rebuilt of our, rebuilding of our military appointments
to scores of conservatives to the court.
He's got a record to run on.
I don't think you can go from actor to president
without an intermediate step.
Reagan had two terms as governor of California,
very successful terms. That's what qualified him to be president his
his his presence obviously his charisma made him a strong candidate but it was
the record that matter. Great question for you Arnold was born in US could he have
been a president? He may have been of course his politics shifted over time
right so he started as a Reagan Republican he ended up as a Kennedy
Democrat right right that's not too far removed though these days these days shifted over time. Right. So he started as a Reagan Republican. He ended up as a Kennedy Democrat.
Right.
Right.
That's not too far removed though.
These days.
These days, yeah.
That's true.
He wrote a 40 yard line, a 40 yard line, that's the way I would
interpret that.
Is there anybody else you see there that's a wild card that has a shot at, you know, shaking
things up in 2024?
I don't see it.
Okay.
It's two years from now.
It's very hard to say.
Two years is a long time of politics. It is. Really? A month is a long time.
Okay. All right. Well, listen, I'm talking to the guy that predicted things 30 years ago. I thought maybe you had that mojo today.
You're going to tell us something but we can go to Vegas. I think some of what we got some Vegas people on here. What our friend Roger Stone is saying is that I think you once said it is better to be infamous than to never be famous at all.
I did say that. And you are, is it fair to say that you are living in infamy?
I am today, yes, thanks to the folks at CNN.
You may have seen my early morning CNN TV show.
I had 29 FBI co-stars.
Yeah, that was a great show.
You're all carrying fully automatic M4 assault weapons
to arrest a 68-year year old man with no priors
for the white collar crime of lying to Congress,
which I wasn't even guilty of.
How do you lie about Russian collusion
when there is no Russian collusion, not possible?
Did you have a follow-up?
I'm waiting for you to see if you have.
Well, I thought, where are you going,
assemble with that?
I feel like there's a couple,
there's many different directions.
I've asked many friends, friends at Roger Stone coming on.
You wouldn't believe the wildly different opinions I have.
I wrote some of them down.
Some of them said he's a national treasure and he's a American hero.
Some says that guy's not in jail.
Some says that guy is a treasonist and he should be locked up.
Why are you such a polarizing figure?
Because I tell you what I really think,
because I've beaten a lot of Democrats in elections,
because I believe in loyalty.
Look, I was charged for one reason,
to pressure me to testify falsely against Trump.
I refused to do that.
That aggravated a lot of people,
and I was marked for destruction.
It is only through an act of mercy and justice
that the president pardoned my conviction. But two years after I was convicted by court order,
Robert Mueller and the DOJ are forced to release the redacted section, the report in which they
admit they never had any evidence against me of Russian collusion or WikiLeaks collaboration
evidence against me of Russian collusion or WikiLeaks collaboration or any other criminal act.
So, no, I think good to half the people.
I'm a hero, to the half the people.
It's a villain.
I've at least made my mark.
It's better than being no one.
Yeah.
So you're comfortable being the villain to half of America?
I don't have any choice.
It's not a question whether I'm comfortable with it or not. I do find it odd that violence has become acceptable.
I went to a restaurant and I saw someone across the room that I disagreed with politically.
I wouldn't start screaming or throwing things at them or threatening them.
I'd ignore them.
But that is not the case today.
And public shaming and violence are all too common.
I can't leave South Florida without a professional security.
It's not viable.
Not viable.
Not viable.
Some may say that you were the head of the snake
for how ugly politics is today.
You started what they called negative campaign advertising.
Do you feel any sort of like,
I'm not gonna say remorse,
but like, or maybe it's pride
that you were kind of the originator
of how dirty politics is,
or has it always been this dirty,
but you've been sort of nicknamed this dirty trickster,
even though that's not the terminology you use,
but they use for you.
I think you once said on your tombstone
It's not gonna say what you describe yourself as the agent provocateur. You're certainly provocative
But it'll likely say dirty trickster. However, you don't use those words. Correct. So how would you explain that?
You know every him Lincoln's opponents handed out leafler saying that he was a mixed race. I'm sorry
I didn't I didn't invent make it
You weren't around in the Lincoln
days. I was not the head of youth for Lincoln. The point
I'm making is that politics has always been a context
port in America. I didn't change that. I'm not
responsible for that. I have always played the game by
the rules and the laws, I would just regulate it as
politics has changed. You have to change. Got it.
Requestion for you and Roger, I'd like to get your commentary on this as well
I was speaking to a friend of mine who's a also former CIA agent yesterday when I got back and I asked him a question
I said so
When it comes on to these agencies FBI and CIA right where did they recruit from did they recruit people from
Where did they recruit from? Did they recruit people from these big Yale schools
that they go to these big Ivy League schools
and they're picking people up from there.
And if they do, most of them are indoctrinated
in one side politically, but their job is to protect everybody.
How often did you see in the CIA, or in the FBI,
the individual person's political leanings
influenced their decision-making and their job?
I never really saw it.
I think that that is a new trend.
Part of the issue that I have is,
our federal agencies need to be headed
by people that were part of that agency.
Political appointees do not do well
as a head of something that they don't understand.
If you've never been in a car meeting with a terrorist in a dark alley, how can you make
decisions that affect me on the street?
So I think the politicization of our agency is part of the problem.
I mean, you have people that go in there, their political appointees, their old alliance
to whoever I allowed them to go in there rather than to those people that work in there, their political appointees, their ol' alliance to whoever I allowed
them to go in there, rather than to those people that work for them or her.
Roger, what do you think about what Richa said?
I think the vast majority of rank and file FBI and CIA employees and agents are honest
people who have no politics.
The political corruption is at the top of those agencies. When FBI
agents are raiding the home of journalists to find out whether they have a copy of Joe
Biden's daughter's diary, I think that's crossing a line when FBI agents are raiding the
home of the number three guy at the Department of Justice because he held a different legal opinion than others
I don't think I don't think that's I don't think that's appropriate. Yeah, you talk about James O'Keefe when they yeah, okay, Finn in this case
Jeffrey
Clark Jeffrey Clark. Yeah, yeah, I did the DOJ. Yeah, I wonder when I think about
I wonder when I think about the two parties. Can you pull up to see which, not parties, the two agencies?
Which agency does America trust more?
CIA or FBI?
I'm curious, who's trusted more?
Do you guys know these stats or no?
Are you familiar with, if I were to ask you,
if I were to ask that, so you're not a part of it
at all before they say anything.
Do you trust the CIA more?
Do you trust the FBI more?
Folks, if you're listening as well, I'm curious.
Comment below.
Do you trust the FBI more to CIA more?
What would you say?
Just on the sheer fact that you've heard
the CIA might have been responsible
for the Kennedy assassination.
Just because of that, I would lean towards the FBI,
but I think they both these days have a damaged reputation.
Well, what is that public holds to a positive views
across 10 federal agencies, departments,
number one is what, postal service?
Favorable?
Seriously?
Have they been to the post office?
CDC, this is positive or unfavorable?
78% now this is 2018. Okay, my list is to eight percent. Now this is 2018.
Okay, my little sister is 2018.
It's quite the same.
Well, then if you look at this,
FBI and CIA is pretty much around the same thing.
Okay, I'd love to see what this is in 2022
because the world has changed in four years.
This is nothing anymore.
I actually think what you would find is
that the public has a distrust
of all political institutions, both parties, Congress, the
FBI, the CIA, the media, that's a fairly new development.
I think that there is a fundamental distrust of all of our institutions by the American
people.
Do you have some thoughts on this?
Yeah, I do.
I really do.
You know, that is the reason why I wrote Black Black Ops because I got so tired of my agency being
maligned in Hollywood.
We're not Jason Bourne, we're not American made.
Those things, assassinating Kennedy, you know, these are, you know, rumors and stuff that
goes out there, part of the political game.
You know, the agency is put together by literally from all the classes.
We recruit a lot from the military, because former military
has a lot more diversity.
They have languages.
Remember, we, the United, the CIA, we do not operate
in the United States.
We're not allowed to operate in the United States.
So all our work is done overseas.
So for that, you need people that can fit in
in different geographical areas
without causing attention
because everything that we do is black ops
under the shadow of darkness
or that we cannot afford for our mission to be compromised.
Rick, you made a comment earlier.
You said I'm uncomfortable with folks who are not from CIA
or FBI to be directors of the CRDFBI.
And if you've never sat there and negotiated with a terrorist,
you don't know what it's like to sit there
and negotiate with a terrorist.
That statement means that you have.
You've sat there and negotiated with terrorists.
Yes, I have.
Are you able to name some of the folks you've sat down with
and have negotiations with?
No.
I can tell you that I did recruit and...
No one's watching this, by the way.
No, I don't have such a...
Yeah, I don't have such a...
Yeah, no one's watching this content.
But you were saying.
No, I did recruit a terrorist in a Latin American country,
which I wasn't allowed to say in the book.
But it was a member of a Maoist insurgency.
And I literally recruited this guy under coercion.
I had a police officer friend.
We busted him.
I had that, you know, alias documentation with me.
And you know, the guy decided to cooperate because we made him an offer that he couldn't
refuse.
He would be in jail for the rest of his life.
And I ran this guy for a good year,
and he gave us some incredible information.
So yeah, I have done that.
And my point is, the FBI should be led
by a senior FBI individual that understands those laws,
that understands the culture, and understands the trials that our officers
go through.
Interesting.
Well, you know, I never forget my dad pulled me aside
eight years ago, seven years ago, something like that.
We have some people in our family who have done some work.
From Iran, so Iran had Savak and different kinds of things
that they were dealing with back in the days. He says to me, then he says, he
went to him, he says, you can tell me. I said, I can tell you what that. He says, you can
tell me, it's okay, it's just you and I said, that what am I to tell you? He says, I know
you're with the CIA, just wink, just say one thing, but I know you are. I said, that I'm
just an insurance guy. He says, no, you're not. I don't believe you. We also true lives.
Yeah. That's right. That's right. How do you think the current director of the CIA I believe his name is William Burns.
How do you think he's doing? You know, he has a good reputation as an ambassador. And
he's always had a very cordial and supportive post year overseas when dealing with our
chiefs of stations. That's his reputation. It's a guy that appreciates the CIA.
But you know, if you're going for eye surgery,
you don't go to a knee doctor.
And that's my point.
You gotta have somebody that has been there,
even half a degree, to understand
what our job is all about.
Roger, when's the last time you sat this close
to someone affiliated with the CIA? It's hard to say that might be shadowing me out. I know it. There's the next
to two potential CIA and from right now. Oh my god, far from it. Far from it. I was good. I was a joke.
So let me go through the story of Bill Marce that I want to get your commentary or thoughts on this.
Bill Marque claims Trump could win so easy because of drag queens, but he can't let go of the election.
This is a mediates a story.
Comic-Con pun and Bill Mark claimed that the former president Trump could win easy because of drag queens, but can't let go of elections.
On Friday night edition of HBO's Real Time with Bill Maher, the host took a table bit about future headlines that included
libraries in Texas to offer impotent, gun nut story hour to banter with guests and
resullivan and Katie Herzog about what a drag culture issues like a drag queen story hour
are on democrats marx explained that poor trump could easily win if he could let go the 2020
because of the drag queens do you agree with them well i'm upset with bill first of all because
he had me on malignine me as a Russian spy.
Now he himself admits there was no Russian collusion, but he won't have me back on.
You know why?
I'm way funnier than he is.
Way funnier.
You think you're funnier than Bill Marseille?
No, no, no, no.
You go to Bill Marseille, they take you in your dress room, and his producer comes to
you and says, well, great to have you.
Please give me one favor.
Don't try to be funnier than Bill.
I said, Bill's got an entire group of writers, group of writers who are cracking out of stuff.
Yeah. I'm all by myself. They ask you to do that. Oh, yeah. Absolutely. No, look, I've
been on Bill show several times. Yeah. And it's always lively and he's entertaining.
It's not the drag queens of the reason Trump can win. It's gas prices, food shortages,
inflation, leaving several billion dollars worth of equipment in Afghanistan,
shipping $40 billion off to Ukraine when we can't spend the money to seal our own border.
Those are the reasons that it can win. The 2020 election is kind of tricky. It would be false
to say that people are not concerned about it. That doesn't mean it's going to get undone or redone,
are not concerned about it, that doesn't mean it's going to get undone or redone or that's not realistic.
But voter integrity, the integrity of the roles, that's a legitimate issue.
And I don't think Trump can stop talking about it in that sense.
You think he should?
In terms of the fact that our next election needs to be honest, fair and transparent, yes,
absolutely.
No, no, do you think he should stop bringing up that there was fraud in the last election?
Do you think he needs to just move on
and focus on today's issues?
It's the precursor to insisting
that there be no fraud in the next election.
So I don't think it should be the raison
and dept of it to his candidacy,
because politics is never about the past.
It's always about the future.
Let me ask you a question on Bill Mark,
because I watch his show religiously,
or you might say religiously or whatever his thing is.
But when you sit down with him,
you're not on the panel typically.
And with the last time I saw you did the one-on-one,
the sort of like the pre-game to the show.
And it's really almost like,
I don't wanna say an interrogation,
but he's coming right at you.
And whatever you're talking points are,
he's going to dismiss them and get to his point.
So sitting down with Bill Mar,
you must have seen how he's sort of,
what does he famously say these days, Pat?
I haven't changed the Democratic Party has changed.
They've moved a little bit far left.
What have you seen him update his opinions?
What's your take on Bill Maher these days?
Because a lot of people are basically saying,
hey, you know what, this Bill Maher
I never really agreed with him.
It's kind of making sense these days.
Are you starting to see more of that?
On some issues I think he's been very consistent
and I agree with him.
So for example, he's always been a critic of radical Muslim.
He's always been a critic of Islamic terrorism.
He's always been pro-candabous legalization, position I've helped for 30 years.
He's joined on the reggae.
As a libertarian.
I do think that he has come around on the hypocrisy of the American left.
So yeah, a lot of my conservative friends are like having a new appreciation for Bill
Mark.
Do you?
Yeah, I do.
I think he's being honest.
Why won't he have you back on?... because he doesn't want to get best
it again
or you think so
anytime i think bill market handle you though any time
you hear that bill mar roger stoned on the pbd podcast and value tamed is calling
you out he wants to see it against by the way on top of that more than a million
voters have a swish to republican party in the last twenty four in the last
twelve months uh... and that's a big number including tens of thousands of swing boat voters but that more than a million voters have switched to Republican Party in the last 12 months.
And that's a big number, including tens of thousands of swing voters and some declaring they can no longer support the Democratic Party policies according to report Monday.
The move to the GOP is occurring in every part of the country, in Democratic and Republican states.
And since President Biden, the Fedor former President Trump, and analysis of voter registration data by Associate of Press found over the past year, about 2 thirds of 1.7 million voters
who changed party affiliation, shifted to the Republican Party, and overall more than
1 million people become Republicans compared to 630,000 who became Democrats.
What do you think that is?
As I think it was James Carville said, it's the economy stupid.
I mean, yeah, I think it's that simpleville said, it's the economy stupid. I mean, yeah, it's gasping.
I think it's that simple.
Yes, I really do.
You had a boom economy.
You had the most robust economy in our history under Trump.
You had record job growth, record wage growth,
billions of dollars coming back in the country
to be invested here.
You had an optimism in the country,
people's businesses at the small business level
doing extraordinarily well. Now you have apprehension about gas prices, about food shortages, ramping inflation.
I mean, I went to the public the other day and I bought a steak.
Steak cost me seven and a half bucks. It was four bites. It was the smallest steak I've
ever seen in my entire life. So, yeah, I think that that has a lot to do with it. I think
that there are, there's no question that there are
buyers remorse
substantial number of people who
voted for Biden because they didn't like Trump's style. Oh, he's so crude his tweets are so crude
Yeah, but how's how's your business? Oh my business is doing great. So I think that's this is the manifestation of that
You think people are starting to realize that in process it
We're they're saying okay listen. I can't publicly say this
But I kind of wish the other guy was president right now, you know
Minus the stuff that he was doing on Twitter. I'm willing to tolerate him more than I'm willing to tolerate Joe or are people saying
There's no way in the world that could support somebody like him
They're both at this point extremely polarizing figures
but I do think that there is certain some nostalgia
for Trump's economy.
That is for sure.
What would you say Biden has done right?
Has Biden gotten anything right since he became president?
Can't think of anything.
What about the new gun laws that have been passed?
What about the infrastructure bill?
None of that.
I think the infrastructure bill, first of all, has nothing to do with infrastructure, it's
has to do with spending.
It's one of the reasons why we have the inflation we have today.
I think red flag laws are unconstitutional.
It's just my opinion.
You want to weigh it on this, Rick?
A little bit.
I first of all, I totally agree with you. I think the American people vote sometimes for charisma, but at the end of the
day, you're going to vote with your wallet. The average American cannot make ends meet anymore,
whether they were Democrat or Republican before. This is something that our survival is our
family, and how do you take care of your family if gas is $5 a gallon.
So for that part, I totally agree with you.
On the gun stuff, that is such a political football and it shouldn't be because you've got
to look at the real facts.
Every city that has the highest crime rate in the United States also has the strongest
anti-gun laws. Then you go to places like Wyoming, Montana, even Florida, in some areas,
and crime is down because people can defend themselves.
You know, that combination, you were talking about Biden doing something right. Let me tell you something that I think that it is all borders on the ridiculous
You go from saying that crime is rampant
You're allowing crime to be go rampant. You're not persecuting
Criminals you're releasing them is it's a catch and release I can fishy
and releasing them, it's a catch-and-release I can fishing. And how does that make sense to anybody?
Defund the police.
So you're telling me that you who do not like guns
and we are not willing or able to take care of yourself,
who are you going to rely on, the police?
And you're voting to defund your safety net.
That's like buying a parachute on eBay.
What about you, Pat?
Is there anything that you can find
compelling with buying these days?
I know you've been pretty vocal,
you're not exactly a buying guy,
but you do have the ability to reason.
You're not like set in your views,
but I'll also...
I'll unbiased the video.
So let me tell you how, and this is gonna sound like this, in your views, but I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I So the benefit of him not being comfortable on state speaking is a good thing because we don't hear him often.
So he's not out there talking all the time, which is a good thing because when he does talk, America doesn't look at when he talks.
Would you be comfortable if you found out that maybe Susan Rice or Barack Obama are kind of pulling the strings behind the scenes?
Would you be comfortable with that? So you're asking policies.
If you're asking policies, I don't support his policies.
I don't support what policies he's getting placed because I don't think his policies are advancing
people.
By the way, a million votes to voters to flip, flip from what?
That means Democrats became Republicans.
What are we talking about?
I mean, that's not a small number, by the way.
Well, and Pat, if you think about that, break down that number.
That's just a broad number where they coming
from they're coming from the latino community and the black community there
and the joe biden is losing black support he's losing latino support the base
of the democratic party is flipping they they are going to lose everything
they keep this up this is right this is the greatest significant
realignment for the first time in the country ever his panics say they split
down the middle republican democrat That's never happened before. And the reality is that under Trump, you
had the highest rate of job growth and wage growth among African Americans, the lowest unemployment
rates, and you had criminal justice reform. The first step back, the second chance act.
So things that the Democrats had talked about, but never enacted.
Look, the people I know,
the who are Hispanic or African-American,
the parents of the people I know when I was in a military,
they were all conservative.
All of them were like, hey son, are you reading the Bible?
Are you doing this?
Are you staying this?
Are you staying that?
There were very much conservatives
who were expecting you to be a good man and not break
the law and not do this stuff, same with Hispanics.
But some of them have been sold back of goods.
That's not working.
You know what I like, you know what I do like on what's going on is on the Roe v. Way topic,
which we'll get into in a minute, is where people on the left got upset with Kamalaala Harris to say this is why you need to vote for us and this is why elections matter
and they said wait a minute.
You can do anything you want to do right now you're not.
So we voted for you to get things done and nothing's getting done.
So no elections don't matter.
Keep telling us to give more money.
A Democrat was out there.
This was a video that won viral.
I don't know if you saw this or not.
She says I'm out of your protesting about Roe v. Wade. And this happened under the watch of a Democratic
president who I voted for. And five minutes before I came out of your protesting, I got
an email from Joe Biden and Kamala Harris telling me to give 15 bucks. I've been given
15 dollars, but you're not doing anything with my money. How much more money should I
give you? So when your own party turns against you,
you got a big problem here.
And a million is a big number.
So if you're asking me that question,
that's a big number we're talking about.
So to address that, whatever that person is,
they probably just don't understand
how the Supreme Court works
because Trump put in what three justices
during his tenure.
Which is someone's ever done that before.
It's not like Biden or Kamala,
I have any control over the Supreme Court.
You're right, but what, what, okay, so go, go with that.
Go with that.
What did Biden promise to his voters?
Are you talking about packing the court?
I'm not, go, go what did Biden?
So people who voted for Trump, okay.
What did Trump promise to people that he did?
What did Trump promise?
What was Trump's promise to his voters
that he said if you elect me i'm gonna do xyz what was gonna make america great
again he's gonna lock her up he's gonna build the wall it's good so a lot of
three word phrases so i'm probably help create he's gonna revive the economy
he's gonna rebuild our military he's gonna point conservatives to the judiciary
correct uh... he's gonna he's gonna point conservatives to the judiciary. He's gonna negotiate better trade deals.
Everything he says.
He did those things.
What did Biden say?
I'm gonna race taxes.
Okay.
I'm gonna, he hasn't raised taxes.
He's gonna build back better.
He has to build back better.
He's gonna re-enter the Paris Accords.
He did that.
Okay, so you got one on his party.
So I'm just thinking of whatever, I get that.
But let me think.
If you wanted to increase multilateralism,
you know, re-engage with NATO,
obviously Trump wasn't a big fan of NATO,
making them pay.
Yeah.
Clearly things with NATO seem to be doing
a little bit better these days,
especially with the war in Ukraine.
I mean, at least the G7 is on the same page,
it seems against Russia.
What else?
Okay, so what, you got a party, another person's got a party.
You vote for your guy, it's percentage, right?
If your policies, you say 10 things you're going to be doing.
If 80% of them you do, then the other party elects a guy, and out of 10 things he said
he's going to do, he does three of them. That's a free throw percentage, 80% wins. Trump did more of
what he said he was going to do. Then Biden did what he said he was going to.
I agree with you. And if we take COVID out, your president today's Trump. By the way, you're
not wrong. I agree with you. Here's the problem and I've said this a million times and and Roger Stone
Maybe want to weigh in on this
Trump didn't
lose the election because of
bad policies
It was because of his bad personality and America was over it straight up
You can we can kind of tap dance around his personality all we want but what makes him charismatic to some
his personality all we want, but what makes him charismatic to some makes him unappealing to others, not his policies.
You could go down the list, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And if you asked most Americans about policies, by the way, most Americans could not elaborate
on most policies.
Like you said, James Carvill, let me push you.
Let me push you.
Let me challenge you on real quick.
Okay, so this the one.
So we're having dinner two nights ago with a guy heart,
you know, who is hard and his wife,
and we're having dinner with Gaines,
and Andrew and Jennifer.
And I'm sitting there and I'm bringing up issues to them.
Like so, so let me answer your question with such and such
thing that Clearness Thomas wants to do.
How do you feel about it?
How do you feel about transgender?
How do you feel about this?
How do you feel about that?
Well, you know, to each a zone and all the sudden stuff.
And I said, really?
Yeah, it's okay.
Cool.
At what point did you form this opinion of to each a zone?
I don't know.
I said 20 years ago, would you have to to each a zone?
Well, yeah, no, I don't know.
I said, look, here's what happens.
Do not let the majority of people,
the minority of people who are allowed
to convince you they're the majority.
So here's what happened.
The minority of people who are complainers, they're like this.
They come and fight you in the street and they go like this.
You want to fight?
Let me tell you who I've got.
I got 200 people back there, round the building.
If you want to fight, I'm going to come and kick your ass and they're going to come and whoop your ass.
And like, oh shit, they got 200 people back there.
So what do you do? You like to out on five T's
guys and you go home, right? And you go around the corner. They got nobody.
They convinced the world they have 200 people around the corner ready to fight
for them. So because they're louder complainers, they have convinced even
Fox News to do a special on transgender calling that family what an honorable
thing to do. What a brave family here.
People are falling for all of these things to say,
well, if everybody else says it's okay,
maybe I should say this well,
what the hell is your backbone on?
Maybe you disagree.
And if you disagree, people may sit there and say,
I can't believe you said this,
I can't, no problem, go for it.
You can come at me, I'm totally okay with that,
but this is my position, I'm uncomfortable with it good for you
Would agreeing with the crowd. I'm not agreeing with the crowd
So if we do go back and we ask the question of many people didn't feel comfortable with Trump
Okay, many people didn't feel comfortable with the Santas is it true?
Many people didn't or is it the fact that the people who said many people didn't are the loudest complainers and we believe that there are many people
But there's only a few that's the question and I think people are starting to realize it when you see million people flipping
Maybe there were not many people. Yeah, you're not gonna see 81 million people flipping
So are you basically say you don't need a one million people? We don't need 81 million that's the point
That's the point totally. Yeah, that's the point
but but you're making the case that
Transgendarism which less than one percent of America what even identify that one percent exactly might even not even know a transgender person
You're not making the comparison that
50% of America who's turned off by Trump
You know doesn't really feel that way. Is that what you're saying or you're saying that people are convinced that they didn't like him?
Let me let me so so one of my guys has a question, so Pat,
this guy's running a real estate office and I'm consulting from his pet.
I have two guys in my office that are trans.
I said, okay, and how do I handle it?
I said, what do you mean how do you handle it?
I'm in the state of California, how do I handle it?
I said, what's your point?
He says, they're making other people feel uncomfortable.
And I have a couple of people who quit, who are my top producers.
And I'm worried if I say something, they could go and say something to the city.
And then I'm dealing with HR, how do I handle this, right?
Okay.
So, how do you handle that situation?
How does an operator handle that situation?
Does the operator go and say, hey man, listen, this is too uncomfortable for us. You're making people around you uncomfortable.
You got what are they doing that's making them uncomfortable? Just being there is uncomfortable.
Just being there is uncomfortable because people are coming. We live by, why do you,
why do you have clothes on? Why do I have clothes on? Why does he have a nice, what do we,
why? Because we live by what? First impression, right? I walk into an office and my first impression is,
oh, okay, interesting, what's going on?
So people sit now, you may say,
what's the big deal with that?
Doesn't matter what's the big deal or not, we judge.
But here's the point,
many people in America today are walking on eggshells.
People are afraid to say what they really feel
because they may get in trouble for that.
And people are getting sick of that. I agree with that.
They're getting the fact that yesterday, Johnny Depp's story,
whether it's a true story or not,
Disney may offer the guy at $301 million to get him to play,
what do you call it, Jack Sparrow Pirates of the Caribbean.
If they give this guy $301 million, guess what?
If he wins, guess who won?
Man's man won.
Man won.
The whole thing of trying to
pancify all men to become softer and sissy. I like the fact that a Johnny
that stood up. Now if he didn't stand up for the rest of us our careers we
would have thought maybe he was a dirt back on what he did to Amber Hurd
and we're saying, ah, you know, well, what an article on value
payment. Yeah, we wrote a great article on that. 30 million dollars. Now, I hope it's a true story.
I don't know if it is right or not.
But can I, maybe, and then this is might be the perfect segue to Roger Stone.
I don't know of men one.
I think maybe being innocent until proven guilty one.
I think, you know, anti-cancel culture one.
I think stop judging, prejudging anything anything before you the facts come out one. Everyone
basically, you know, you just see what Disney, we can go on value time, but Disney basically
gave an apology. Like, we basically came down on one down on Bended Knee and said, our
bet, me a culpa over here, because they, much like the Cantor Culture Warriors out there were quick
to dismiss him.
And now, you know, the reason they're offering him $301 million, it's because he said I would
never play this again, even if they paid me $300 million.
Well, you know, here's a little $301 million, therefore you buddy.
But I mean, maybe you want to weigh in on what it feels like for to do that.
I think I agree with your analysis.
You know, first of all, it was epically entertaining.
So every night you go see what was the latest in the journey.
But I think truth one, I think he acquitted himself well by presenting his side of the case
and doing it compellingly. There was a I think a preconceived judgment for her in the beginning
or a horrible toxic male he was,
what an abusive individual he was.
I was glad to see the way it came out of dig.
Baraj, you should believe all women, period.
Yeah, right.
Why don't you?
Yeah, right.
But what, so you're being sarcastic?
No, well, I'm not being sarcastic.
But you're being sarcastic and you're saying
this has nothing to do with men.
Of course it has to do with men,
but there's more than men.
Of course.
I said yesterday, I'm glad we're transitioning away from guilty until proven
innocent instead of innocent until proven guilty.
I get that.
But the fact that you threw that sarcastic comment at the end means men get
destroyed when it comes onto this topic.
And it's good to see men like him stand up.
If you screwed up, you deserve whatever you're getting.
If you didn't stand up, boom, we're seeing progress.
So America's simply getting sick of it.
The more and more politics is getting involved,
they're just getting sick of it saying,
listen, let me be able to give my opinion
without getting destroyed, my career,
just because I disagree with you, which is good to see done.
But we'll go into that clearance Thomas,
well, what happened with that?
Of course, I made a couple of comments. We'll go into that. But okay, last one I want to read, because you brought up guns, I is good to see done, but we'll go into that. Claire's Thomas will what happened with that. Coach, I made a couple of comments.
We'll go into that.
But okay, last one I want to read because you brought up guns.
I was going to read this before we get into it.
So Congress passes most significant gun reform bill in decade.
Sensor to Biden, CNBC story, scrambling to respond to recent spade,
a spatter of bloody gun massacres, U.S. lawmakers passed the most significant
federal gun restrictions in decades on Friday following years of false starts
and failures to tighten gun laws,
following Senate passage.
Late Thursday, the House passed bipartisan bill
that takes steps to restrict gun access to younger buyers,
domestic violence offenders,
and others who could pose a risk to their communities,
the bipartisan Saver communities act.
Also was with fund the school safety and mental health programs
The house approved it by 243 to 193 and 193 as 14 Republicans joined all Democrats
The legislations has to present a Biden who's expected to quickly sign it into law is this progress?
I think that the passing of these laws
I think that the passing of these laws, attacking not the problem, but the popularity of the shock of this thing.
You have securing schools.
That's an old brainer.
We should have been doing that for the last 20 years.
My daughter is a school teacher.
I have done the security survey pro bono for every school that she ever worked or led
and they're buttoned down and you have police officers.
We're fighting a political battle where it should be a moral battle, in my opinion.
We have the right to defend ourselves.
I believe that investing in mental health, I think that that's a very important one.
What does that mean, though?
That's what investing in mental health, I think that that's a very important one. What does that mean though? So that's what investing in mental health unpacked.
We have to keep is the see something, say something concept,
translate it into this.
I don't remember where the place was,
but the second, the last incident that we had,
the perpetrator, he went to school for a whole week
wearing a hazmat suit.
Does that mean is that a normal behavior
or is that you should you not look into a pattern of behavior?
It's a thin line because you also have what you just said,
which I totally agree with,
you're in a sit-until proven guilty.
So.
What do you think Roger?
I'm afraid that as he said earlier, I'm not sure any of those things are going to change
anything.
Criminals will always find guns.
Absolutely.
And it is the cities with the most restrictive gun policies in the country where gun violence
is the greatest.
In the case of the Parkland shooter, there were no less than seven calls to this guy's house.
That never seemed to get over to the FBI.
He had been Baker acted.
He'd been taken involuntarily.
They gave him psychotropic drugs.
They put him back out on the street and he killed people.
So I agree with you said, I think there has to be a greater emphasis on mental health.
Guns don't kill people.
People kill people.
Criminals, Miss Creeance will always get their hands on guns.
What does that mean?
A friend says, always say about gangsters and...
Mafia also types, which is happening in the audio.
Yeah, exactly what he just said,
the fact that they'll get their hands on guns.
But you know, like the left and the right
has bullet points of three
things that everybody says and everybody keeps saying it, invest in mental health.
Okay, I've heard a billion people say invest in mental health, you know, do this, do
that.
The other day we were talking with Michael Francis and we said, even if they raise the
what he called age limit, age, even if they they make this even if they do that even if they do this
90% of the what you call it mass shootings would have imprevent it even if they do that it would have imprevent it
Because they still got some of them their guns they got it illegally or some of them they got it
Even the kid who got it he wasn't on any kind of medication. That's anxiety medication or anything like that so
how much of that is deeper that's going on within America's values and principles
and morals.
How much of that is the amount of drugs that's in the hands of kids with big, far more advertising,
the solution being take this medicine, take this medicine, take this medicine.
How much of it is the video games, how much of it is us watching on TV
that over and over and over again,
they keep turning these guys that are doing mass shootings
into heroes and we keep talking about them.
There has to be something because even this strategy
on what they're gonna be doing,
90 something percent of them would have been prevented.
So does anybody really know the solution
or is it just pure political game
that both sides are playing
what do you think
uh... there's no question that uh... had the police officers
either in texas or in parkland
done their jobs
uh... that those mass shootings could have been prevented
ironically here in parkland
the officer in charge of school security
trained others in crisis management,
but then when the time came, he stepped down.
He didn't do his job.
So how do you, so think about that?
So he did the training, and when then came down
to it, still didn't do it.
He froze.
He froze.
So again, so then what is the solution?
Because if we say we need more training, okay, we did, and even the training
that was done, it still didn't happen.
So does anybody really have the solution that's going to help address this?
It has to be a combination of things.
Butting down the schools is something that it's a reality.
You cannot, in good conscience, bring children and put them into that environment unless
you're
able to protect them.
But one thing that we haven't talked about here is how many police officers feel empowered
under this administration, under this current culture, where they're being defunded, you
know, you're, they're always guilty until proving innocent if at all possible.
Don't get me wrong. I've been in harm's way more than once.
So I know what it is to go to a door and go, but I've gone through the door.
And that was their job to do.
But again, there's not 100% fix for any of this.
It's 5% here, 5% mental health, get the button down the schools, better
training for the police,
but also consequences, this gotta be consequences.
These police officers that did not go in there
should be kicked out of the force.
Because if you are in an airborne unit in the military
and you decide not to jump on a combat, guess what?
You're going to jail.
So we need to make a
account over for that mistake. You know what I would love. Here's what I
would love. If a if a actuary, if a BI is listening to this, if a business
analyst is listening to this, if a guy that studies statistics can listen to
this, take time and make this video. This video can actually happen. Take all the
mass shootings of the last five ten years
Okay, create the profile of everybody that did the mass shooting
Put their age how they got their weapon if they were on medication their background put it all at the top and filter it out
And then take the new policies and changes that's coming up and then
Red out the ones that could have been prevented and green out that the ones that would have happened
no matter what, right?
And kind of go through it.
And break down in a video what that percentage comes down to.
Because I think the way they're going,
they're just plain politics and the American people are like,
oh awesome, we passed something.
Yeah, it really didn't do anything.
No, no, but we did pass something.
No, really didn't do anything.
I think we need data and we need somebody to analyze
just like a statistician, somebody needs to do that. Then we can say kind of like where I'm
going with this is money ball. You know how in money ball where the guy comes
out and he says, look, the only stat that matters is what? On base percentage.
You don't win with home runs. You don't win with you won with
on base percentage. This is a guy we need to bring. Okay, great. Then we bring him in.
Then they, you interviewed that guy multiple times. I love that guy. So I think a money ball concept needs to be applied to this for us to figure out what
stat matters to most.
I don't think we're doing that.
That's why I don't think we're doing.
I think we're just kind of all talking and.
But I'm sorry, I would add one extra take on there.
What's that?
And you touched on it, Roger Roger a little earlier on. Make a study of how many of the criminal acts with a weapon that weapon was a legally obtained weapon and in the hands of a legal carry individual.
That's a huge statistic. When people quote gun violence, you have to at least be able to focus on where is the base of that violence and it is the criminal world
And they don't have prosecution the police can can barely do the job as it is
Um, it is that would be it I would love to add that to your your tick-off of things
I mean, I get it that we have a campaign, you know, where the campaign the manager may say listen when it comes on to gun violence
Here's the three points that you have to hit boom boom boom That's what you got to go and then just know these 22 statistics
See which one of these you can remember and recite, but that's where you got to go
But that's marketing that's not when I really it's not really a solution
We're just marketing and saying hey if they ask you to say that I'd love to have somebody comes out and actually breaks this down and say
Here's what it would have changed and not changed. I don't know.
Well, you're going to have that opportunity.
We've now passed these laws.
They'll be an election in two years.
Let's watch the violent crime statistics for those two years and see if they really change
any.
Well, no, there's going to be an election in five months.
I understand.
There's probably not, you know, fairness and not enough time.
So let these policies be in place.
They're going to be in place because they don't see them being revealed removed And you'll know in two years whether they've made a meaningful change what needs to happen almost immediately
Is a bail reform because right now we have a situation in almost every major city in the country
Which they've done away with bail and criminals recidivist criminals are right back out on the street
Many of them to hurt people again
particularly New York City New York so
There's I think something it has to be reformed almost immediately
So you know what I also would want to know out of all these guys at the demands shooting what percentage is alive?
What percentage is on the street?
What percentage is say it's serving a life sentence how bad was the
What do you call it the price that they paid for.
Is it purely all about a, what do you call it?
Celebrity, you know, the 15 minutes of fame.
Is that really what it was all about?
Has somebody taken all of these guys
and gone and done a documentary
to interview every one of these guys
to come out with an analysis to say,
this is the similarity we know.
Is that it?
Like this?
Yeah, I don't know. I don't think they're gonna,
so even to pull up to see out of all these mass shooting guys
that how many of them were from a single parent,
how many of them had a father,
I want all of those statistics to see what commonality do we see.
You can pull up that data, then we say, listen,
these three that you guys keep talking about
would only say 5%, but these two would have eliminated 42%.
Let's address these two
we're not we're just winging it it's just like something a public company or a government agency
would you or if I was a governor if I was a governor of a state or if I was a president I would go
higher 10 engineers okay from Silicon Valley and I would 10 engineers from Silicon Valley
and I would bring them from Silicon Valley
from the best places in the world.
I would bring them that politically,
I would interview them to make sure they're kind of like
you know, you hire a jury and you make sure
how they feel politically, they're not linked
or anyway, they don't have an opinion about the guy.
I would bring them, okay, you guys are neutral, perfect.
Here's $300,000 per year.
What's 10 times $300,000?
Nothing, chump change.
I want you to pull up every data, every stat,
every everything you can, and give us the exact reason
why this is taking place.
If the stats are out there, you can pull it up from the FBI.
We can find that exactly.
This is not going to cost that much money to do.
It's $3 million, maybe a $10 million project,
hired the best analyst guys, data guys, put them
in the room, pull
up all the data within 30, 60, 90 days we can figure this thing out.
But here's the problem with the data.
So the other day you said, we used this story, there were 201.
What does that sound by the way?
Keep hearing a sound like.
Oh, I don't know.
Yeah, so there were 226 mass shootings in the United States through whatever it was,
six months.
Do you know what qualifies as a mass shooting?
It's four people.
If over four people were shot, not killed, were shot know what qualifies as a mass shooting? It's four people. If over four people were shot, not killed,
we're shot that qualifies as a mass shooting.
Where do you think the majority of that comes from?
Gang violence.
The majority of mass shootings in the United States
aren't kids going and shooting up schools.
It's not, I mean, it's gang violence one.
And most of the, again, we cover this.
Most of the mass shootings happen with epistol,
not assault rifle or rifle. Or any other way. All of that is part of the data. happen with epistol, not an assault rifle or a rifle.
Or any other way.
All of that is part of the data.
Yes, but I think the data can be skewed.
But two, it's, people don't want to address,
first of all, mass shootings as they stand
where it's gang violence as opposed to mass shootings of,
like you say, mentally,
deranged people walking in, shooting people,
and those kinds of things.
So again, I think when we say use the data,
again, we have to clarify what data we use it.
But Tyler, that's also in the insurance industry,
actuaries actually do that as well.
They break down by age where you realize,
you know, when we get table D rating,
on most of the people that are table D
are 55 and up, or if I would live in this place,
and a lot of them are from this,
you can track nationality, you can track sex,
you can track Mary, you can track,
you can track any of that stuff.
But with what you just said,
I would add that to the data as well.
I would add that and I would say the mass shooting,
you know what we would put on the mass shooting?
How many people were involved?
This one's four.
Well 42% of them are only four.
Okay, let's put that in this category by itself. 10% is 10 four okay. Let's put that in his category by itself
10% is 10 or more. Let's put that in the category by itself. I don't think this is that complicated
I don't know if they want to find the answer
I don't know if they will because they want to manipulate it
They want to tell you that just what 120 so it's gonna take 10 million
But you just get 40 billion to Ukraine will take you 10 million bucks to figure this thing out put people in a room
Get it funded within a three month period, you get some answers.
But we haven't done that, I don't know why we haven't done that.
Well let me add on to what Tyler's saying, because you do bring up a good point.
If you saw on the headlines, four people shot in the streets of Chicago, you're like,
Mara cool, next story, move on with life, we're so desensitized to these types of stories,
we're America's at, where most Americans are yearningning are when we see dead six year olds.
Innocent dead six year olds in a classroom, there's, I don't care if you're on the left,
you're on the right, we are disgusted by this.
And that's what is grabbing the headlines.
And that's what why literally Congress finally, F and did something.
And I think it's about time, whether it's optics, whether it's the sizzle or the steak remains
to be seen. Like Roger said, we'll find out in two years if they've done anything, but we're fucking
sick of it.
We're sick of dead kids in classrooms.
We're not sick of what Tyler's basically talking about, which is probably 90 plus percent
of the mass murderers is just five people got shot on.
It's gonna happen on July 4th, weekend.
You can book it that right now across America.
Someone in St. Louis shot five people,
whatever, next story, keep it moving.
We are sick of the classroom shit though.
My point on this, by the way,
people have to take emotions out of these kind of decisions.
That's why I like your document and dissect
because if you look at,
forget the four people that get shot in New York
or whatever, that doesn't count.
But schools' best shootings in the last five years,
give me those numbers.
That happens in New York in three months.
Actually, it probably happens in New York in two weeks.
You're saying just in the streets, what happened?
Not in the streets, of course.
Just in the streets.
So, you know, we cannot focus on the problem emotional.
Yes, I personally, you know, I cannot.
If I was in that school, I would have had to go in.
I couldn't live with myself.
I could not live with myself if I didn't go in there
and try to help them out.
But that is still a minority.
And it is very serious and use that tipping point
to make things make sense. And I think that approach of statistics not skewed to statistics.
I think would help create a real plan that they can implement.
I run one to many companies to do this. I would have taken, I would have done this myself
as a project just to turn it into a documentary.
To a 60, even if it's 70 minutes, 75 minute documentary
just to go out there and say,
let me tell you what approach we took this.
Here's a problem, here's the approach we took.
We wanted to find out what's going on,
this is the data we came up with, okay?
And we brought five people from the left,
five people from the right, five people in the middle,
they all have strong opinions.
We all want to find that, we're all open to finding out
what's going on, what the solution is. Here's what we're proposing to the middle, they all have strong opinions. We all want to find that. We're all open to finding out what's going on with the solution is here's what we're proposing
to the world.
I would take that approach.
Anyways, I hope somebody does it because I think it's that important of an issue that
we need to invest that money into doing this.
If I have to choose between spending $40 billion into Ukraine and $40 billion into finding
out why this is happening in our schools in America, what do you think we're doing with
that $40 billion?
It's a lot better 40 billion dollars spending
to finding out why this is happening to our kids,
rather than why this is happening.
Nothing wrong with me, listen, I don't want to see anything
happen to anybody, but this is our homeland.
If this is what we live, and you're proud of what you are,
that's investin' money into those resources
into our country instead of others.
Okay, so next, is this, did you have anything to say about this?
You know, when you heard it, were you like, you know, the,
the paranoid side come out to say, why did he just make that comment when
Biden went out there, what pages does on, let me find this page six.
So a president Biden says, US needs more funding for the next pandemic, Reuters, June 21st.
President Joe Biden said on Tuesday, the United States has enough COVID funding to get through
at least this year, but it needs more money to plan for the next pandemic. We need more money
to plan for the next pandemic. There's going to be another pandemic. We have to think ahead,
Biden said and remarks at the White House to mark availability of vaccines for young children, which he said we are the first country in the world to have vaccines for kids under the age of six
months, which he celebrated. And the commentary, if you read it, it's actually 95% of people who
commented on it was negative. But are you reading into this comment? Or is it just, no, we do need to
prepare for the next pandemic. First of all, how does he know we're going to have another pandemic?
Number one, number two, I'm not one who believes
that the COVID-19 vaccination is necessarily safe
nor effective.
But I also believe that if you decide you want to take it,
that's fine, that's up to you.
Nobody should be required to take it.
I believe in health freedom.
But you also wonder whether there is a political motivation.
In other words, if you wanted to say, for example,
that going to the polls was too dangerous because of a pandemic,
and that all voting should be done by mail-in ballot,
I think that's an open invitation for voter fraud.
Good point.
Any thoughts on your end or no?
No, you know, the one that I do have a comment on
because both of you have used the term
a couple of times of giving money to Ukraine.
I'd tell you a slightly different ulterior motive for this
and that comes because of my background.
Russia, second only to China,
is a problem that we have had since 1917
and we will continue to have as long as they're in power.
And if you look at history, Afghanistan war, we helping the Afghans, and I know that
with 20-20 hindsight we go, we should have taken the missiles back before we left, but the
Ukraine can be the downfall of what the Soviet Union is trying to become. Because when the Russian body bags start going back home,
and let me tell you something,
the U.S. has been helping the Ukraine's
and the Ukrainians since 2015.
They did not learn how to fight and how to run
intelligence networks in the last three months.
Because there has been a big shift from fighting wars to taking steps to
prevent wars.
And the only way you can do that is working with individuals in countries that are allies
fortifying them and if there's an issue, let them fight that fighting you support it.
But I am all for keeping Ukraine as that thorn in the side of the Russians.
Besides the humanitarian part and the atrocities are being committed.
This is where we're going to have to disagree.
We signed a treaty in 1994 promising not to have Ukraine join NATO, which is defined
as putting missiles aimed at Russia in NATO.
We're now seeking to do that.
This is not different than 1962 when the Russians put missiles in Cuba and President Kennedy
objected, and that was resolved, thank God, diplomatically.
We do have bio-weapons labs in Ukraine.
The silos are actually built.
We haven't just dropped the missiles in.
I think this could have been resolved diplomatically.
Had the Ukrainians not agreed to join NATO,
which is defined as putting Western missiles in their country.
The idea that Putin, who's not a good guy,
want to be very clear, I mean, my family were rushing to,
mowed down by Russian tanks in Budapest.
I have no truck for the Russians. He's a thug.
But at the same time, the idea that he just wants to occupy Ukraine, he can't
even afford that. His economy is a basket case. So this is going to be a costly war for him,
but I think it could have been resolved short of the carnage we see today.
I don't disagree with that, but the thing that that ship has sailed, we are at war.
And if you go to get any silver lining out of this is less really button that up.
You know, if the argument that Putin uses about Ukraine being a threat to them, well, why
are we doing something against Cuba?
Cuba is the cancer of Latin America, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Colombia now.
All these are funded and influenced and led.
There are more intel officers from the Cuban service in those kind of countries, propping
them up.
Did it didn't?
Columbia just get the first socialist Democratic president, which is their next Venezuela.
He was actually the former senior terrorist.
But part of the guerrilla camp.
He was one of the commanders of guerrilla camps.
But you have to wonder why the US Senate
and the one hand votes to give $40 million
and aid mostly military,
lethal aid supposedly to Ukraine.
But then they vote down a motion
to have an inspector general track
where that money's going.
Why wouldn't you want to know where that money's going?
It makes no sense to me.
Yeah, somebody just commented, andception Child said, what will it take to put Putin on a
terrorist list like Ben Laden was?
Or is he a terrorist only if he attacks America?
So do you see Putin as somebody that should be on that list?
Or no, he shouldn't be on that list?
Well, you know, he should for the different reasons, but you got to understand that what,
why are we surprised at what Putin is doing, the kind of person he is? He's not the anomaly in
Russian and Soviet government. If you go back to Stalin and Khrushchev and everybody in between,
the majority of those leaders
of Soviet Union and now Russia are of that criminal bet.
They have that mentality.
The oligarchs that you got 100 billionaires in Russia that are bleeding money.
Those things, all these things, they're bad for Russia.
But that would be another
nail on his coffin declaring him that because he is, he is responsible for the acts that
the military is committing in Ukraine.
Would he be held accountable for war crimes?
Is that what you're saying?
Absolutely.
Let me ask you to follow up on that, Rick.
You basically have said that Russians and Communists are expansionists, right?
And you followed up and you said, you know, regarding Putin's goals.
And I want to ask you about Putin's goals.
You said that a terminology I used was creeping normalcy,
which is basically, you know, take a piece,
you wait for a little bit, and then, you know,
kind of wait for things to simmer down again,
and then boom, you attack again.
So what do you think Putin's goals are?
He said it when he first took power.
I will reconstitute the Soviet Union to his previous glory.
That's a clue right there.
How do you create the Soviet Union again?
You take over Romania.
You take over Georgia.
You take over Ukraine.
They are inspectionistic. I don't think the Russians
are creeping normalcy types. They're too blunt. They're too blunt of an edgy. Koreans and
Asian, Chinese are extremely good at that, that creeping normalcy. Whereas we have barely three-year plans,
because of the fourth year the President has to start focusing on the reelection,
the Chinese or the Russians don't have that problem.
They can have a 50-year plan, a 100-year plan, and you tweak it according to what it is,
but the end goal is still the same.
Our end goal as America should be to remain a republic.
Their goal is to world domination.
When you say they, what do you mean?
The Russians in the Chinese.
Do you agree?
We should stop pretending the Ukrainians are a democracy.
They're not a democracy.
After the last election, Zelens arrested the guy who ran second, closed down and arrested
all the leaders of the opposition party,
and closed down the three TV stations that supported his opponent.
This is not a democracy.
It's an epically corrupt government.
I'd like to know where the money is going.
So let's get has it, by the way, a beautiful $3.5 million condominium right here in Miami
Beach.
How did he get that?
He's an actor.
He was an actor prior to his public service.
So I think it's an epically corrupt government. And I just don't think the issues that are being
used to rationalize the war are accurate. I think this could have been resolved by Sour
Simply agreeing to honor our commitment 94 not to put missiles into into a Ukraine.
But Roger, you know how many wealthy Russian oligarch types have condos and sunny
aisles not too far from here. They all do. But they're not in government service, though.
And I'm not, and by the way, I'm not defending the Russians. I just would like to see us
not have a war. I'm not, I'm not for this becoming being conflagrated
into World War III.
Let me ask you, we recently had on your old buddy,
Paul Manafort, who was very outspoken
on what we should do with Ukraine.
Do you guys still in touch?
Do you guys have similar opinions on this matter?
He knows far more about the area than I just,
because he's worked there and never worked there.
And I'm not as familiar with the geopolitics of it as he is.
I only, you know, my views are formed by what I read. So I can, I can either, first I can see your show. So I
never agree or disagree. We're in touch and we're certainly friendly. We've had a similar experience show we say.
Well, you guys used to have a lobbyist firm. Yes, you'll call the, what? Black Maniford's Stone. Black Maniford's Stone, right?
30 years ago.
Yeah, exactly.
And he was very outspoken on Ukraine.
He was actually very informed.
So is that someone you consult with on Ukraine matters?
Or are you guys still friends?
First of all, he worked for the Ukrainians
20 years after that firm was dissolved.
So I've never, I was not involved in any of that, and
I didn't have an international practice. We haven't talked about that. This particular
issue, our conversation is more about how my wife's doing, how is wife doing. I mean,
his wife has had some health problems, and my wife has had some health problems. So,
no, we have a cordial relationship. We're still friends. Good day.
Well, but let's, let's stay on this topic. Let's stay on this topic because we kind of
this led into the challenges with Russia.
So, three topics I'll read altogether
and then I want to process all of it together
on how bad things are in Russia.
You see one side where you hear the approval rating
of Putin is what, the highest it's ever been.
It's that, what was the number we were looking at?
Tyler, 83%.
Something like that. Something like that, that's high. But at the same time Russia
sinks into historic default as sanctions muddy next steps tougher Western sanctions
that shut down payment routes to overseas creditors for months. Russia had found paths around
the penalties imposed after the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine. But at the end of the day on Sunday
the grace period on about a hundred million of a trapped interest payment, due May 27, expired, a deadline considered as an event of default, if missed.
This is a Bloomberg story.
Then, there was a G7 story with G7 nations to announce import ban on Russian gold and
Moscow sanctions, Whiten.
The leaders of G7 nations will announce that on ban for Russian gold imports, on unprovoked
the nation of Ukraine, et cetera, et cetera.
So the move would add to a series of punitive penalties
imposed by the West on Russia,
since it's onslaught of Ukraine on February 24th.
And Alasba Nalis, which, you know, when a commentator
says this, it is what it is.
When a writer says it, it is what it is.
When a leader of a superpower says this,
you have to actually, you know know consider what he's saying Vladimir Putin ally warns London
will bomb will be bomb first if world war three were to break out one of his allies that
says this uh... London will be the first strategic NATO target to hit by Russian missiles should
a third world war erupt a close
ally of Vladimir Putin has claimed speaking on the Russian state TV Andrei Guruloyev on
NMP who sits on Moscow defense committee described how possible full-scale invasion of NATO
ballistic Baltic state members would work.
He a former military commander member of the pro-Putin United Russia party, said, will destroy the entire group of the enemy space, satellites during the first air operation.
No one will care if they are American or British. We would see them all as NATO.
Second, will migrate the entire system of anti-missile defense everywhere and 100%.
Third, we'll certainly won't start from
Warsaw, Paris or Berlin. The first to be hit will be London. How much credence should we give to this?
I think that's political barking. Look at the Russian army's performance in Ukraine.
They've had their asses handed to them. They were bringing in these young, untrained,
well, you know, not well-prepared individuals, and has been a massacre. You know, the might
of the Soviet Union is part of the illusion, just like the statistics of this popularity,
when you control the media, look what's happening in this country, when you control the media,
you control the minds of a lot of people or at least which are projecting out there.
So what are you saying?
I, in my particular case, I'm human born, I lived under communism, I saw what communism did to my country, I fought it in the carago, I fought it in five different incarnations.
I fought it with five different incarnations. So I am a rabbit anti-communist.
And if we have an opportunity to really hurt
the Russians right now, I think that it's worth the money.
I agree that Ukraine is not the cleanest slate.
Well, neither was Afghanistan, nor he was Iraq.
How many of the warrants have we have spent?
And by the way, guys, both my kids are military. One of them has two combat tours. And I have been in harm's way. So this is,
this is all, like it should be, I think, a personal thing. I saw what communism is. I know
that it is, they have the goal of destroying this country from within, from within. They
don't need to attack us. They're attacking us through the media and all this undermining that they're doing
Let me ask you. What do you think about Yuri Besmanov?
Okay, because if you're going that angle, maybe I thought you were going that angle go ahead Roger
What do you think? Well, I certainly share his anti-communism
But the Chinese communists are far bigger direct to our country than the Russians. And the one thing the Ukraine conflict has done is to push the Russians and the Chinese
together.
They have had a historical distrust of each other.
They share a common border.
Richard Nixon got a strategic arms limitation agreement out of the Russians by playing them
off against the Chinese.
But to the extent that the Russians have economic problems, they have a very wealthy neighbor
willing to prop them up.
And they can, and Deng Xiaoping keeps sending that signal.
So I also don't think that the war is going swimming
away for the Ukrainians.
Ukrainians, I think we're getting a lot of war propaganda.
And it appears to me that there are atrocities on both sides,
that as off brigade, they've got all wars in all wars.
And that's the most important part right there is what Roger just said is that Russia's
economy is smaller than South Korea.
And to date, this is Reuters, June 27th, the world's strongest currency against the dollar.
The Russian economy has not tanked like people expected it to.
It's still smaller than South Korea, but what Roger said, we're pushing, Vladimir Putin
into the arms of Xi Jinping.
Xi Jinping is the threat.
We're sending $50 billion to Ukraine. We're sending missile systems.
We're sending 100,000 troops.
We're not going to be able to defend ourselves in a couple of months with the strongest nuclear power on the face of the earth.
Why are we worried about Russia?
Yes, I agree with an anti-communist stance.
But again, Russia isn't what we should be worried about.
What happens? Three steps down the road when China makes a move on Taiwan.
When China eventually makes a move on Taiwan?
When China eventually makes a move on Japan,
they're building islands in the South China,
China sea to use as airports.
Like they're making serious moves
and we're off concerned with Vladimir Putin,
who's, I mean, he's a bully.
He's nothing more than a bully.
But when you remove the sanctions against the Iranians,
you're sending a signal to the Chinese
that we won't stand up.
So I mean, when your foreign policy exudes weakness, it's an open invitation for the
Chinese to move on Taiwan.
It's an invitation for the world.
I mean, you've heard the comparison of Biden with Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter was at least a very decent moral man and not a corrupt man.
He was a very naive man. But what happened as soon as he took over? Russia takes over
Afghanistan. The Iranian hostage crisis, we had people there for 444 days. Give away
the panel, Pat on Macon Al, which is a huge strategic mistake, but what happened when Reagan came in?
As soon as he swore in
The hostages were released
So I totally agree with you. We need to have leadership and that was one of the beauties about Trump
You don't mess with Trump
Because he is gonna come out you whether it's verbally physically or militarily
He is gonna come out you know this meeting for's verbally, physically or militarily, he is going to come out to you.
You know this meeting for UNI to be introduced
to each other was set up by Carter.
I don't know if you know that or not.
Jimmy Carter set up this meeting for UNI to meet each other.
Because you're here in America.
Because of Carter, I'm here in America from Iran
because of Carter.
So thank you, Jimmy, for introducing me to Rick.
And I would have recruited you for the agency 20 years ago. I would have come across you.
And then you could have winked to your dad, you know.
And then I could have.
A little peanut farmer would have brought you two guys together.
But going back to what you guys were saying. So this is a concern I have and I'm curious
to know if you feel the same way as well. Are the current actions we're taking,
cause in China and Russia to get closer than they were pre to the Ukraine-Russia war?
There's every evidence that is the case, yeah.
Absolutely.
But in the meantime, the Chinese are systematically buying up half of the country, the real estate,
farmland, and banks land across the United States. I mean, there's 300,000 acres in Oklahoma alone.
It's just a guy I read yesterday.
That's phenomenal.
They're buying control of minerals,
almost all natural all over the country.
Everywhere across the globe.
They are a far greater threat to us than the Russians.
I totally agree.
I mean, look what happened when Afghanistan,
the Taliban declared themselves the legal government
of the country.
China was the first one to recognize them.
Why?
Because a lot of those winners you just alluded to are in the end or lands of Afghanistan.
And to go back to the question you asked earlier, in all honesty, Biden's decision to withdraw
our troops from Afghanistan was not the wrong decision.
Trump had been withdrawing our troops.
It was not how he did it, not using our drones, not using our technology to pin down the
Taliban while we were about to cover our back while we were leaving.
And the decision not to remove our equipment or destroy it, which was an option before
we left.
Well, this is great commentary on this topic.
I want us to go to our last topic before we finish the podcast.
We'll spend the last 20 minutes on this topic here,
and that's Clarence Thomas, Roe v Wade,
and all the other stories that come with it.
So, Biden and other critics fear,
Thomas is a position on contraception.
Okay, if you go to page three, let me read this story here.
In an opinion concurring with his conservative colleagues on the Supreme Court to overturn
the fundamental right on abortion, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote on Friday that striking
down Roe v. Wade should also open up the high court to review other presidents that maybe
deemed demonstrably erroneous. Amongst these,
Thomas wrote was the right for married couples to buy and use contraception without government
restriction from the landmark 1965 ruling in Griswald versus Connecticut. In future cases,
we should reconsider all of this court substantive due process precedence, including Grisval Lawrence
and others.
Thomas wrote on page 119 of the opinion in Dabs versus Jackson.
Women's health also referring to the ruling that legalize same-sex marriage relationships
respectively.
Because any substantive due process decision is demonstrably erroneous.
We have a duty to correct the error established in those precedents.
Thomas added, after overruling these demonstrably erroneous, we have a duty to correct the error established in those precedents. Thomas added, after overruling these demonstrably erroneous decisions, the
question would remain whether other constitutional provisions guarantee the myriad rights that
are substantive due process cases have generated. So obviously, we know what's happened the
last weeks since this was announced. We rights are everywhere protesting is going on everywhere people are
going uh... uh... berserk with this decision that's been made
how much more you think this is going to continue
and how far along you think clearest homie says going to know knowing that they
have an advantage right now being six three
well we can assume that there's a six three majority for everything that one
justice sure
so i i i for a surprise that will be was repealed, to be honest with you.
So I didn't, and I don't see those things happen, but I of course could be wrong.
The idea, of course, that saying the state should regulate abortion is extreme.
No, the idea of killing a fetus after there's a heart. That's extreme to me. So
this I think what we've done here is go back to democracy in its purist form. I mean abortion is
going to be legal and in the states where it is legal that'll be because the voters there want
it to be legal if they don't like abortion restriction or they want more restrictions. The voters
have the opportunity to vote in people
who will give them that, but the idea
that abortion will be unavailable, that's not accurate.
You know, it's a very personal item for me
because my youngest, I hold his son,
his wife is pregnant with the baby, she's four months old.
And I saw the sonograms and the heartbeat of that kid in less than two months. It is murder.
If a woman is raped or if giving birth to a child is going to cause her to die or for
whatever reasons, then I totally also agree that the states, like every libertarian would, should be making
the decisions for the people and the voters, the one that does it.
But I would go as far as if you, in a state where it's not legal, you do abortions, that
should be murder.
The minute there's a heartbeat, as far as I'm concerned, you're killing something.
And it's very easy to say, I'm going to have an abortion,
and you don't see what's going on.
But what would 99% of the women do if they say,
OK, abortions are now on as we will retract the fetus.
And before it's dead, you got to kill it.
So there's a few different areas to go with this here, right?
One is the, a procho is pro life debate, okay,
which that debates being had 24, 7 nonstop.
Let's set that aside.
I don't want us to go through that debate
because we would need to have a panel
with a couple other ladies to comment as well.
Let's set that part aside, okay.
The part that we were having this debate in Monaco was the following is, do I want that
decision to be made by the federal, by the state, or permanently making it illegal?
We got really three options if we look at that, right?
So the federal government makes it illegal to have an abortion in any state.
Let's say that's extreme, right?
Or the federal government makes it legal for anybody to have abortion in any state.
Let's say that's extreme to some people, right?
Why do you think some people are having a challenge with it being the state's decision to
do so?
Is it because, in case if I live in a state where I do want to have an abortion, I don't
have the choice to do so, I because in case if I live in a state where I do want to have an abortion I don't have the choice to do so I move to another another state doesn't that sound like
a reasonable thing to do to leave it to the states to make that decision what do you think
Roger that's why I agreed with this decision the decision will now go to the states and
the government that is closest to the people always makes the best decision if the people
in Texas Texas is now a Lee portions illegal in Texas if the people in Texas now abortions, illegal in Texas, if the
people of Texas want to change that, they'll have ample opportunity to do that. Whereas abortion
is readily available in New York, you could probably have it in the late trimesters. The
voters there could also change that if they want to. So I think this is actually the right solution.
If you look at it from a public opinion point of view, a slim majority of voters think
that abortion should be legal, but they also support a number of restrictions on it.
They don't want it available on demand at any time for any reason.
The intensity on this issue is on the extremes. Just prior to row, when people
were asked in a Gallup poll, what are the most important issues facing the country? Four
percent said abortion rights, four percent. So I don't believe this is going to be the
issue for November that brings the Democrats back and lets them detract from gas stations.
No, I think in the end it will end up being a wash actually.
Well, let me give you some stats because the majority of Americans do disagree with this
Supreme Court decision. Can I throw some stats out there?
If they understand it, yeah.
Overall, 56% of the American people disagree with this. 40% support it, 4% are still somehow unsure.
By party Democrats, 88% oppose this.
10% support it.
And the GOP, 77% support it, 20%.
I'm sorry, yes, 77% support this ruling, 20% oppose it.
Independence, and this is what we always talk about,
this is the people you gotta pay attention to,
53% opposed this.
So a slim majority, 41% support by gender, male,
54% opposed this, 43% support,
53% of, sorry, 59% of females oppose this decision
and 38% support. of 5, sorry, 59% of females oppose this decision
and 38% support. So there's a, we could all, you know,
four dudes sitting around in the room,
we could all give our opinions,
who was that poll by I'm curious,
who's this is on NPR, your favorite people.
Well, that makes sense if it's NPR, but go ahead.
But they're polling the American people, they heard that.
So you're saying that it's far off?
I'm saying I can write a poll,
make it say anything I want.
By the way, I word the questions.
I mean, I've seen it.
Well, I think what's gonna happen,
I agree with you that the economy
is gonna be the number one issue in the midterms.
But this is going to be something
that's gonna get the American women to the poll.
I mean, we've said that soccer moms control the votes,
that it was the COVID moms,
women are gonna have a massive vote right here.
Here's some stats for you.
Where is it here?
78% of Democrats say road decision makes them
more likely to vote in the midterms.
78% of Democrats say they are now more likely
to vote in the midterms because of this as Democrats say they are now more likely to vote in the midterms because
of this as opposed to 54% of GOP. That's a 24% difference. We talked about a million Americans
now considering becoming a Republican versus a Democrat. The number one issue for sure is
the economy, but then you're going to have culture wars, guns, abortions, immigration.
This is no small thing. Women are fucking pissed, okay? And I don't have a
horse in this race. I'm not a woman. I got a question. I don't have any. I got a question. I got a
question. So this will be a strange metaphor to me, but to me, it kind of makes sense. You know how we
say, well, you know, we can make guns illegal, but the bad guys always going to find the guns. Okay, where's the bad guy going to buy the guns from?
Probably from another bad guy, right? Let's just save that's the case. Okay. So in these
states where they can't do abortion, and they want to get an abortion, and they can't
afford to go to another state to get the abortion, what did they do? Is there going to be
underground abortion operations being started? Yes. Is there going to be underground abortion operations being started? Yes.
So there's going to be a black market.
Yeah, so if there's a black market for it, where is the protection if that does happen for
the woman that's going to do it, whether you let her or not, she's going to go find somebody
in the black market.
Let's call it a black market in the States that don't allow it to go get it done.
And maybe the black market's gonna be ran
by people who have done abortions professionally
at a clinic at, you know, because plant parenthood
essentially becomes a black market
and those states that don't allow.
So maybe they start something on the side
and they do it for 250 or whatever,
so they're gonna provide some kind of protection.
But the safety of insurance will ensure,
so if somebody goes and does an abortion
at an illegal place in the black market
and something happens to her health,
well, health insurance not coming and protect them.
I don't think so, because it is an illegal behavior
that's taking place.
So that is a problem that those states have to address.
Now, I left, my position is slightly a different position
to take with this.
I'm a staff guy, right?
I like data because data tells me a story.
So some are saying Clarence Thomas is saving more black lives
than black lives matter.
Because if you look at statistically
in the US population, US population 60% are white.
The US population 60% is white.
Blacks is 12.2%.
Let me say that one more time.
Five times more is the population of whites versus blacks.
Okay?
Meanwhile, 37% of all abortions are black.
Women versus 33% of abortions are white.
So even though whites are five times the amount of blacks, the abortion for blacks is higher
than whites, which is six times the amount of abortions, you know, blacks get, then
white.
So some people say, well, that's racist.
Well, the racist in that topic can be seen in two different ways because more black kids are being aborted than white kids are being aborted.
So who is the racist? Does that decrease the chances of more blacks having a voice in the community make a difference if we're getting five times more
the kids to be aborted? And you know back in the days, this was a conspiracy on the fact that they were doing this because with the whole crack, you know, all the stories that was going on, this is a way to eliminate
from, hey, let's go out there and do this because this can help us with the amount of voice
that they could have.
There is that topic that's coming up, is when you're looking at the stats in regards to
what's going on with clearance timers.
But if you break it down in the state, you're the governor.
Here's how the governor says,
look, in our state, we don't wanna do abortions.
You don't like it?
Guess what?
If a governor really supports this,
this is how the governor's approach should be.
We don't, but there's 17 states you can go to
or you can get it, okay? Very simple. Go to the 17 states you can go to where you can get it.
Okay? Very simple. Go to the 17 states.
If somebody protests and riots against somebody that doesn't allow same-sex marriage,
guess what that state governor can say? We don't.
But there's these 17 states that you can go to that does.
They support you. go to that does they support go to that state
So now pat that's racist well, let me tell you what I did
I'm in California and I'm against the 13 and a half percent state taxes and the gas taxes and this taxes and regulation
All this other stuff and guess what governor Newsom said
He said to me indirectly
Well, if you don't like it
There's these seven states that you don't pay taxes.
And guess what I said.
I said, you know what?
I appreciate the offer, Governor Newsom.
I moved to Texas.
I lived in Texas for five years.
And 18 months ago, we moved to Florida, right?
To be in a state like this, because I like the way
the governor handled it.
So my position here to those that are losing their minds
is the following.
The hypocrisy is when people are riding and protesting
in states where abortion hasn't changed.
California, you're fine.
You're fine, protesting in your,
it's very weird that you're protesting.
You're not affected by this.
This is affected to, some other states that are doing it,
I say, I agree, go in protest.
That's one of the freedoms that we have in America.
But just like a business owner can choose to leave to another state because they have
low regulation and lower taxes to allow them to hire more people, you also have the choice to move
to a different state that gives you those freedoms to do whatever you want to do with your body.
Is that discriminatory? I don't know. I think you have a choice. So if you're in a state that doesn't allow you and that really
infuriates you, you have two choices. Try to make the change in that state, which is kind of what you were talking about, right?
Or number two, go move to a state that allows you to do that. You have a choice. It's America. You're not forced to stay.
And you now have major employers saying that they will pay for the travel. Now, now, are they really saying,
well, paying for maternity leave is a lot more expensive than paying for an abortion.
Right. But first of all, I would say two things. Pulling any question in the eye of the storm
is very difficult. You're going to get, you're going to get a skewed result. Do you agree with
the decision? That, that implies people know what the decision means. Many of my friends said,
oh, abortions now will leave them everywhere. Well, that's not what the decision means. Many of my friends said, abortions now are legal everywhere.
Well, that's not what this decision says.
So what this looks like in three months
could be very different than what it looks like today.
It depends on public understanding of the issue.
Which I'm not sure is there today.
I like what you said,
polling in the eye of the storm
is what, how do you describe it? Yeah, yes exactly. It's what?
Well, whenever you try to take a survey in the middle of a crisis,
Exactly.
Emotions play a huge role.
Right, until things settle down and public opinions are more set,
when you're in the middle of the controversy, it's not the time to measure
the impact of what you're talking about.
Not your time that people are going to want to hear you're going to have to send them to the country.
From, well, but even though recognizing it may be temporary.
Well, let me say one thing, the, as always,
just like in the economy, just everything with COVID,
who's going to get hurt the most?
The poor, like the poor don't have the luxury
of just moving to another state,
or having their amazing fortune 500 corporation
pay for their abortion. Who says? Who says? I was poor. We moved to America. Immigrants
come to America. They're rich. I'm sorry. Do immigrants who come to America or rich
immigrants? Poor immigrants come to America. I'm talking to state to state though. No,
but that's even easier. It's easier to go to another state than to come to country.
It's 10 people are going to go move to another state. They come to country. It's how many people are gonna go move to another state?
They want to get on a move or do.
Are you kidding me?
I'm gonna move.
That's a vision.
No, it's not.
They don't have to.
They don't have to.
They don't have to move.
They have to go there for the procedure.
Yeah.
So if you're in the belly of Texas and you got to,
what's the closest state to Texas that you can go get an abortion?
California.
Okay, so how long is that gonna take?
I mean, I'm just saying, it's not easy as,
yeah, all right.
No, but I tell you, I tell you,
when we went out, I was in California and I was broke.
Guess where I went to a dentist.
Where?
Where?
Mexico.
Mexico.
Jesus.
Yes.
You know what the price is in Mexico compared
to what it is in California?
I would drive five and a half hours to go to teach it to see my dentist that didn't speak
English.
I went there and he got it done and it was good.
And I had your beautiful teeth.
So the point I'm trying to make you, I was poor.
I was 49k in debt and I had barely five hundred bucks in a bank.
Add no money.
But I'm like, listen, my teeth are killing me.
I can't even state.
So I get what you're saying on the fact
that you have the choice to go to another state.
Look, just like the rest of us move,
if you don't like what you're living at
and there are 40 million immigrants are in America,
where did they leave?
If the situation was so great, they would have never left.
They left because they were not happy with something.
If you're not happy living in a state that's red or purple and is
Disagreen with your views. I highly recommend you move to Oregon move to California
Move to New York move to Chicago. It's more of people that agree with you look the story of iron Rand with at the shrug
What is a story? You know the story is there's a city they go to where you're around like-minded people.
If you want to be around like-minded people and you afford this or
Any of this stuff, there's plenty of states for you. Okay. We came up. I never said, hey guys
We should consider moving to Oregon. Did I did you ever hear me say Oregon? No, thank you. Did I ever say or Florida?
Illinois. I said a couple states and we came here. Can I Can I make one quick point about our friend Clarence Thomas?
Yes.
This man does not represent America, okay?
And I'll tell you why.
And this is not my opinion, but I went on to Axios.
They are trustworthy source, anyone?
Maybe.
But they did a, they basically judged the political
leanings of the Supreme Court.
And on the Supreme Court, you have someone that's on the very far left, Sotomayor, and
someone who is on the extreme right, Clarence Thomas.
And they are both on, when you talk about the far left and the far right of the loudest
voices, that's them.
So remove them.
Basically they have a plus one, plus two, plus three, right?
If you're plus three, you're very extreme on the right.
That's where Clarence Thomas is.
Sodomaior is plus three on the left.
These are very extreme liberal and conservative voices.
That's not where America is.
You know where America is?
Everyone's going crazy over Gorsuch.
Everyone's going crazy over Amy Comey Barrett.
Everyone's going crazy over Kavanaugh, right?
But they're just plus ones.
They're right where John Roberts is.
They're not extremists, okay?
And just on the left, you have Kagan and Briar.
This is where America is.
So five out of the seven justices,
what I would say represent most Americans.
Clarence Thomas is an extremist.
Whether you agree with him or not,
he is, you talk about.
It's so to my aunt, that, it's so to my aunt,
also an extremist.
That's exactly what I said.
Yeah, that's true.
That's what I said.
But they were both appointed Supreme Court
by duly elected presidents of different parties.
And we're supposed to believe in the rule of law.
They're the justices whether you like them or not.
I'm not saying that they should be, you know, unhinged
or taken off the court.
I'm just saying, Larence Thomas's opinions are not what 90% of Americans agree with.
He is an extremist, just like she is.
Okay.
But you also, this is a prem-cut upheld Obamacare, for example.
And those Republicans all swung for that.
Not him, though.
Well, I understand that, but he's there for life. Let me let me let me
say something here that we all have learned the last six years. Okay, this is what we've all learned.
To flip three seats, maybe the biggest milestone, if you can be a two-term president and flip no seats
or be a one-term president and flip three seats,
10 out of 10 times any party left or right
would take a one-term president who flips three seats.
That may be the biggest milestone
any president's ever done in mankind
to favor their party.
You talking about Trump?
Oh, Mike.
Yeah.
Can you remember his quote?
What's that?
Whether you love me or hate me,
you got a vote for me because of the Supreme Court. Yeah, remember he came out and said that
At least he was forced he was upfront about what he was going to do
It was interesting that in his comments when Biden has sailed the decision the court
He attacked the three justices appointed by Trump. He didn't mention the two appointed by Bush
Mm-hmm. Who voted the same way? Didn't even mention them. Yeah, and by the way
If you go back and you study clearance Thomas's history
Link to Biden your opinion about clearance Thomas would be very different if you actually go back and see what this guy's done in his life
He's got one of the best resumes on what he's I don't know how I don't know where he came from
I mean he he was raised by his grandfather and literal poverty he couldn't even speak English
Let me tell you something I give two shits about because I don't have an opinion on him.
I'm letting you know what the facts say.
But he also did right during the right Supreme Court justice.
The fact show that I'm not saying that I like him or not like him.
But what are you saying that they that they're not collecting the data correctly.
Nowhere in the United States Constitution is row mentioned at all.
I'm talking about, I'm talking about Clarence Thomas specifically.
But this is the broader issue is everybody wants to talk about row right now.
Okay.
You said 78% of Democratic women are more likely to vote in the midterms.
I said 78% of Democrats.
Yes.
As they should, if you want federally legal abortion, vote on it.
Tell your
Congress people to codify row in the Constitution, get two thirds of the
country to vote on a constitutional amendment. It's not up to nine Supreme
Court justice to make the rules. I will say this to you. If there is
anybody in America right now that needs security around them, I know six
people that do. And I know one that needs a lot of people around them.
Because just the other day, I don't know if you guys are now Jolaine Maxwell was put on suicide watch.
I don't know how they make the decision like that. So that's another news that could be changing anytime soon. Why he was put on that?
She was put on that suicide watch. I don't know. But I hope the right
secret service, you know, security protection is around those people.
You're talking about Supreme Court justice.
Oh my God.
Well, the story about this right now.
The guy who came by Kavanaugh's house, right?
They need protection like there is no tomorrow.
They need protection.
Anyways, great podcast.
Excited to do this again, Roger.
Thanks for coming out, Rick.
Thanks for coming out.
Thursday, we're doing it again.
I'm on this week twice and a massive thing, the biggest exciting thing in business
ever happened this week that we'll talk about on the Thursday podcast.
Yeah, I'm excited for that.
And maybe you're going to feel where you've been for the last 10 days, but it's not just
where we've been because people know where we've been.
It's what's happened when we've been away, which I can't wait for that.
Folks, to the members out there, the PPD podcast, love you.
You guys are constantly, we're reading your stuff,
what you're saying to everybody that contributed today.
Thank you.
And if you enjoy today's format, with Rick Prattell
and Roger Stone, CMO, AKA, many different names we can give
to the guests that we had on today.
Give us a thumbs up.
Subscribe to the channel and let us know
if you want to back on because I know we're gonna do this again
because the next 12, 18 months is gonna be crazy.
We're gonna wanna hear what they have to say.
Take care everybody, bye bye bye bye.