PBD Podcast - Tom Fitton: Biden’s Crimes, Trump Verdict, & Disgraced Former Protectees Act | PBD Podcast | Ep. 422
Episode Date: June 7, 2024Tom Fitton is the President of Judicial Watch, a public interest group dedicated to investigating and prosecuting government corruption. Fitton's commitment to transparency and accountability in g...overnment has made him a respected figure in the conservative movement. Fitton and Judicial Watch have been involved in high-profile cases including a FOIA request for Clinton tapes, advising Trump on retaining presidential records, seeking the release of the Tennessee Covenant school killer manifesto, and a lawsuit over an FBI memo on the protection of legacy tokens. —— Purchase tickets to The Vault Conference 2024 featuring Patrick Bet-David & Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson: https://bit.ly/3X1JBzm Purchase the new "Angry Patriot" t-shirt for $34.99 at VTMerch.com: https://bit.ly/4c3WsW2 Connect one-on-one with the right expert for you on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3MC9IXE Connect with Patrick Bet-David on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3OoiGIC Connect with Tom Ellsworth on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3UgJjmR Connect with Vincent Oshana on Minnect: https://bit.ly/47TFCXq Connect with Adam Sosnick on Minnect: https://bit.ly/42mnnc4 Connect with Ricardo Aguilar on Minnect: https://bit.ly/4c7rxrY Connect with Rob Garguilo on Minnect: https://bit.ly/426IG0R Purchase Patrick's new book "Choose Your Enemies Wisely": https://bit.ly/41bTtGD Register to win a Valuetainment Boss Set (valued at over $350): https://bit.ly/41PrSLW Get best-in-class business advice with Bet-David Consulting: https://bit.ly/40oUafz Visit VT.com for the latest news and insights from the world of politics, business and entertainment: https://bit.ly/472R3Mz Visit Valuetainment University for the best courses online for entrepreneurs: https://bit.ly/47gKVA0 Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! Get PBD's Intro Song "Sweet Victory" by R-Mean: https://bit.ly/3T6HPdY SUBSCRIBE TO: @VALUETAINMENT @vtsoscast @ValuetainmentComedy @bizdocpodcast @theunusualsuspectspodcast Want to be clear on your next 5 business moves? https://bit.ly/3Qzrj3m Join the channel to get exclusive access to perks: https://bit.ly/3Q9rSQL Download the podcasts on all your favorite platforms https://bit.ly/3sFAW4N 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. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
They indicted Hillary Clinton and she's not president of the United States
because of the misconduct that Judicial Watch caught her in with her email scandal.
But the scandal of our generation is what's going on with the targeting of President Trump.
This is part of a conspiracy to deprive President Trump of his civil rights under color law
and the next honest president should appoint a special counsel to figure out what went on here.
To prosecute a former president without political motivation motivation it doesn't pass the smell test. I feel I'm so good. It's like a taste for victory. I know this life meant for me. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Why would you bet on Goliath when we got bet David?
Valuetainment, giving values contagious.
This world are entrepreneurs.
We get no value to hate us.
I ain't running homie.
Look what I become.
I'm the one.
Okay, so if you're watching this podcast, episode 423, and you're somebody that believes
there is such a thing as an establishment or you believe there's a deep state, I don't
know, maybe you've read a couple books about it, maybe you're not 100%, but you're thinking
there's a possibility that it does exist.
The guy here today, Tom Fitton, is one of the most hated guys by the deep state, by
the establishment.
Let me tell you why.
He's like one of these guys that
just constantly wants to sue you. His organization, the Judicial Watch, let me give you a couple
of the lawsuits that he's done. Just very annoying type of lawsuits. So here we go.
Filed for records related to the death of Tafari Campbell. If you remember who that
was, he was the chef for Obama's, you know, when he was a swimmer but three feet deep, you know, he died and all this stuff and everybody wanted to know what happened
there.
Obviously no one's talking about it now.
He's the guy.
Bad swimmer.
His organization, Judicial Watch.
Then he had wrongful death against the US government for Ashley Babbitt.
This is the girl in the middle inside the Capitol.
Then he filed for records, his organization, for CBP, that's the Customs and Border Protection
Agency, welding open floodgates into border wall in Arizona.
Then filed records regarding communication between DHA Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency.
Then they challenged Illinois election laws and handling of voter registration.
Then filed for records concerning censorship of social media users.
Then filed for records of payments made by the FBI to Twitter.
File for communications between agencies and social media platforms regarding content moderation
censorship. Suit for YouTube censorship of a judicial watch video by Biden,
corruption and election integrity. Uncovered coordination between Facebook and the CDC to
control the COVID narrative. I mean, I can go on and on and on. It's constant. And Judicial Watch got started in 1998.
This goes all the way back to having numerous high profile investigations including uncovering
of Hillary's private email server, obtaining documents related to the Benghazi attack,
the IRS targeting scandal, the misuse of FISA warrants during the Russia investigation.
I can go on and on and on, but it's great to have you on Tom Fitt.
Tom Fitt, Good to be with you.
Yeah, so I'm thinking I got to find out what we got from some of those lawsuits you're
reading.
And that's what I'm curious about.
So for me, so this is I got I got a series of things I want to go through with you that
I'm curious about.
I want to talk to you about the, you know, what Jim Baker and Jimmy Carter did years ago to try to have
the mail-in ballots, the integrity of elections.
I want to talk to you about the HR 8081, which I don't know if you've been following that.
I'll read it to you.
I want to see your thoughts on that.
I got some questions on the Invention Secrecy Act of 1951.
The DOJ can't release Biden, her due to deepfakes AI concern.
A couple of questions with China being held accountable.
And then US soldiers, 300,000, Russia, the story just came out, Bannon today, I'm sure
you saw that, you know, stuff that's going on.
There's a bunch of things to cover, right?
But here's the first one.
So for me, you know, you watch the Democrats, they get up there, Letitia James, right? All these kids are, we're
gonna get him and we're gonna get him and we're gonna go after him, we're gonna
get him. I was like, okay, this is just a campaign. They're not gonna do it, right?
No. Here we, $430 million. You know, E. Jean Carroll, $83 million. What the fuck is this?
$330 million, $83 million dollars, convicted felony. Holy shit.
Everything they're saying, they're following with their threats.
On the other side, Republicans file a lawsuit, file a lawsuit, file a lawsuit.
We're going to get them.
Nothing happens, right?
Why do you think, whether it's true, Tom, or if it's a reputation and an impression
being made that the Dems, they follow through with their threats, the Republicans
do not follow through with their threats.
Why do you think that reputation is being built today?
Well, I don't think the Republicans do much in a way of even threatening.
So I don't think there's much they're promising that they need to be held accountable for
because they don't really promise to do anything.
There's not, oh, we're looking at impeachment, we're considering impeachment.
They're not promising to impeach.
And of course, they're not probably going to.
There's an old book title that I like.
You can trust the communists to be communists.
And you know, when your enemies tell you what you're going to do, you should pay attention
to it, especially if they've got a record of actually following through.
And Republicans, or too many Republicans, but the small, the number
of Republicans who I think fully understand this is, is disturbingly small, engage in
a lot of fear based decision making. They don't like scandal politics. They think it's
a loser for them politically. And the target is someone that they don't really like that much, and that's President
Trump.
And so they were willing to see him abused and punished like no other politician in American
history has been.
And even as he's facing, literally going to jail, there's still this muted response to
it that to me is inappropriate because I think, you
know, we've had political prosecutions in the past.
It happens time.
But we never had this kind of general embrace of targeting a candidate or a politician like
Trump by the Justice Department and Democratic Party allies in Georgia and New York.
And that's never happened before.
And it's kind of a brazen attack on the opposition.
I mean, these investigations of Trump
have led to them investigating the fundraising operations
of the Republicans.
In multiple battleground states, they
are trying to imprison those who question the election.
And if the new rule is that we're They're trying to imprison those who question the election.
And if the new rule is that we're going to act like Putin's Russia or Xi and China, that
means the end of the republic practically speaking.
And I kind of worry that if it doesn't matter who wins, but unless we write the ship, we'll
be kind of a zombie constitutional republic where
we've got these kind of, oh yeah, we've got this constitution, we have these alleged civil
rights that protect us and due process and all the Bill of Rights.
But they're not enforced if you're of the wrong political party or you're outside the
narrative that the communist left are pushing.
So let me ask, Rob, we can hear you by the way way that you're listening to it. It comes to us as well.
Yeah, if you can lord a little bit. You know to me,
you know how there's forgive and forget, okay? Okay, let's not, I think the Republican Party
forgives, but doesn't forget.
But I think the Democratic Party
doesn't forgive and doesn't forget.
My opinion. So on one end it's kind of like, well listen, if you get elected, should you
go after them for what they did to you? No, we should just let it go and we should just
move on and we should try to bring the Constitution together. Hopefully that will set an example
to the other side, too, when it down to their term, to be, let's
forgive each other and let's move on, let's make America a better place and let's be
more united than divided, right?
Like when you think about the election fraud that Jimmy Carter believed that the more,
you know, mail-in ballots there is, there's more possibility for fraud.
This is many, many years ago that him and Jim Baker, Jim Baker being the guy on the right who was a heavyweight guy
Anytime, Mr. Republican. Yeah. Yeah, that's right. I know I don't know if you read his book phenomenal book, but I
watched
James Comey
Before he became a convicted felon. They interviewed him and they said so mr. Comey. Do you think?
What do you think is gonna happen with Trump you think he's actually the judge is actually, you know come out and you know
He's gonna be convicted felon and call me says
Yes, I actually think it will so I'm like he actually thinks he will
Yes, he will cuz at that time the country was 50-50. There's no way they're gonna say he's a convicted felon. Boom. Call me was right
Yesterday call me is being interviewed by Rob. If you have the clip from the part that I want
I don't know if you have it on the big clip play this clip
I want to is this the exact same one Rob that we showed earlier today the very the shorter version at the end of it
No, let me go find that you know which one I'm talking. I do this is the first clip that we played where they talk about
I want the one got it the one that you found all the way at the end where Comey's being asked, do you
think Trump will go to jail?
And the person asking the question, what's her name every time I forget her name?
Kaitlin Collins.
Kaitlin Collins.
You know who she is.
She's the one that she the CNN debate.
And Comey's answer wasn't no, wasn't you don't do this.
Because when they asked Manchin, Manchin's like
there's no way he's going to go to jail, there's no way they're going to sentence him, there's
no way they're going to do anything like that, that's just not something to do.
Manchin was there's no way, right?
Comey says something else, Rob, if you got to play the clip, okay?
It was a little bit towards the end of it that you had it, Rob, a little bit more, right
around there is when she starts asking and he gives the answer. Play the clip, we'll hear it.
Find that the defendant had acted in contempt of the court's orders on multiple occasions.
All of that will be part of the picture that the judge looks at to decide whether a message
needs to be sent that involves jail.
As a former FBI director, what's it like to see one of the major nominees of one of our
parties, the presumptive nominee at this point, be a convicted felon?
This isn't it, Rob.
Go back 20 seconds, 30 seconds.
If you put it in the wrong time, I really want to get Tom's feedback here.
Play it right there.
See if it's...
I don't know.
I would ordinarily say it's unlikely.
Go back 10 seconds.
You have it.
Can I see you on this bring it? Okay right here?
She's gonna ask the question Donald Trump since you know
I've last seen you on CNN has now become the first former president to become a convicted felon
You go you predicted before the verdict came down as the jury was still
Deliberating as the case is still being presented that he could potentially be convicted
Do you believe it's likely that the judge will sentence him to jail in this situation?
I don't know.
I would ordinarily say it's unlikely in a white collar offense of this sort, but this
is a defendant who's begging for a jail term by taking a flamethrower not just to the judge,
but to the entire process and the jury.
A judge will take that very seriously into consideration
in deciding whether to deter this person
and to send a message more broadly.
He needs to spend some time behind bars.
You think Judge Mershon should take everything he said.
I mean, he has called Judge Mershon a tyrant.
He likened him to the devil every day
before he walked into that courtroom.
He said he was corrupt, baselessly.
Do you think that the judge will take that into consideration
when he does sentence him in a few weeks?
I do, as well as him having to find that the defendant had acted
in contempt of the court's orders on multiple occasions.
All of that will be part of the picture that the judge looks at
to decide whether a message needs to be sent that involves jail.
Okay, pause it right there.
So, do you think Trump will be sentenced on July 11th?
June 27th is the debate, July 11th is the sentencing, July 15th is an RNC.
Do you think he'll be sentenced to jail?
I think there's a significant chance that he'll be sentenced, incarcerated in some way,
either jailed
directly for a short period of time or a longer period of time, whereas freedom
is restricted through, you know, some type of house arrest or something. And you kind
of see Comey here, who is a deep state operative, a corrupt former FBI director
who was fired, basically putting out the smoke signals for the judge in case the
judge isn't getting enough of them, that we want you to jail him. And this process
is, and I kind of show you the catch-22 Trump is in, we're going to come up with
the manufactured crime, deprive you of your due process rights, impose
unprecedented gag orders that we
know you're going to violate, and then punish you when you complain with jail.
Not necessarily for the crimes, but for complaining about the process that led
to this unprecedented and compromised so-called verdict. It's about as
legitimate as the OJ verdict was. It's about as legitimate as the OJ verdict was. It's about as legitimate as the OJ verdict was, which is you're being
sarcastic, obviously the complete opposite. But the reason why I'm asking this question is the
following reason. Are you following the the HR Bill 8081? Have you read this? I'm
going to read it to you. So this is called the Disgraced Former Protectees Act.
If you can go to the other link, Rob, right there, I just want to read it to you.
So this is April 19th, 2024, right?
Which is six weeks ago.
Ranking member Thompson introduces legislation to ensure no secret service protection for
convicted felons sentenced to prison.
Who's he talking about?
There's no way they're talking about a president here, right?
So let me continue.
Today, Representative Benny Thompson, ranking member of the Committee on Homeland Security,
introduced a denying infinite security and government resources allocated toward convicted
and extremely dishonorable former protectees act or the disgraced former protectees act.
What are they talking about?
This legislation would reform the U.S. Secret Service Protective Mission by automatically
terminating Secret Service protection for those who are those who have been sentenced
to prison, key word, sentenced to prison, following conviction for a federal or state
felony, very specific who they're targeting, clarifying that prison authorities would be
responsible for the protection of all inmates regardless of previous Secret Service protection.
Here's a key sentence.
Unfortunately, current law doesn't anticipate how Secret Service protection would impact
the felony prison sentence of a protectee, even a former president.
This legislation was co-sponsored by Representative Troy A. Carter,
Barbara Lee, Fredricka Wilson, Yvette Clarke, Bonnie Watson Coleman, Jasmine Crockett, Joyce
Beattie and Steve Cohen. So, as a regular person who's not in this space, I'm not a
lawyer, I don't have judicial watch, I'm not involved in politics, I'm a guy that's
been in financial services businessman, but I read contracts and we have
different types of things that we have to go through.
The way I read this, if I was to say the opposition is evil, how would they set it up?
We've tried character assassination.
We've tried trying to take all your money away.
We've tried putting a gag order on you that you can't campaign and have all these audiences
coming up to you.
We've tried silencing you.
We've tried demonizing you. we've tried painting you as a
convicted felon, we already have a mugshot of you, we've sold to the entire
country that you are a criminal is what we're selling you. None of this shit is
working. You just rate a couple hundred million dollars based on the
70 million from small money, another 150, 130, you know, 200 million from big money
that people are coming towards your side.
There's only one thing we got left.
We can't provide him protection.
So guess what we're going to do?
Let them debate June 27th, July 11th, we're going to sentence him to prison.
Then this is in effect, depending on how fast they can apply this.
Now he's not got protection.
Then it's a free-for-all on what happens there.
How do you read this?
This is how I read this. How do you read this? This is how I read this.
How do you read this yourself?
I read it that they want Trump to be dead.
I'm not a lawyer either, but you see enough legislation.
You see who promoted it, Benny Thompson,
the leading Democrat in the House.
They want Trump dead.
To deny a former president secret service protection
in these circumstances would almost certainly lead to his death.
And they know what they're doing, and even talking about it is dangerous because we
understand he still has secret service protection but when you see the media
start talking about this you're going to get a nut or two who interprets it to
mean well he doesn't have secret service protection now now we can go after him
and I'm going to try to target him and who knows what happens when that happens. And it highlights to me that, you know, not all leftists or liberal Democrats or
Democratic Party members or whatever are communists, but they've embraced
communist means to achieve their political ends. They're allied with them
in terms of the street actors and And now, again, this is something that Putin would clearly understand as a technique to
ensure his political opponent is killed in prison.
They want to send Trump to Rikers with no Secret Service protection.
What serious person would think that would result in anything other than the tragic death
of President Trump? Terrible times we're in.
But how is it that if the way the Constitution was set up and the way our founding fathers
created America with the Supreme Court, with any of that stuff, would allow this to even
progress to these levels? How does our system, our current system, allow for this to happen?
How does our system, our current system, allow for this to happen? Our judicial system, especially with respect to Trump, is broken.
They've allowed abuse that's never really happened before.
The only check thus far, and it's not been a reliable one, but it's been a significant
one, is the Supreme Court.
And that's why the Supreme Court's under a vicious attack by the left.
They're targeting conservative justices, their families and such and
in the end that's the most reliable vehicle for protecting Trump from
these abuses because right now this train's left the station. You never want
to be a defendant in a state court and typically it's hard to kind of get off
that train until the process ends and you're incarcerated.
And so the challenge for President Trump
and his legal team, in my view, is
figuring out a way for the feds to get involved,
the federal courts, ultimately the Supreme Court,
to say in response to you, we're not doing this.
It's obviously, it was obvious the deficiencies in this court
process up in New York made this whole process unconstitutional,
designed to interfere in the election, whatever the argument is, have the Supreme Court step
in and stop this notion that Judge Merchant can run our federal election by constraining
the president, President Trump, and his campaign.
He's still under the gag order. So Judge Merchant's still running the campaign. President Trump
can't speak forcefully about these issues, even though he is speaking
forcefully not as much as he could, and his campaign's being restricted. I mean,
our system doesn't contemplate a state court judge managing a campaign like
that. He was a political hostage for six weeks up there as far as I'm concerned.
Patrick, the election already is compromised.
It already is compromised.
And the question is, will the outcome in November be sufficient in a way that people are reassured
that the election's been fixed and that the
right person won in the circumstances that we're facing. And if Trump loses,
many people are rightly going to say, well, they had their thumb on the scale,
so it's no surprise. If you think, you know, as an enemy, as a competitor, you
sometimes have to sit there and think about
The moves your opponent and your enemy is gonna make and you have to go from fair play
To gray area to dark to deception right so fair play this guy's gonna be a fair fighter
All right, if he beats me and knocks me out. He's a better fighter fine
You know great he may throw sand on my face and then boom try to get me not to see and then outside He's gonna beat me. Yeah, it's a little fighter, fine. You know, gray, he may throw sand on my face
and then boom, try to get me not to see
and then that's how he's gonna beat me.
Yeah, it's a little gray, but okay, fine.
You know, dark, he's gonna pull out a knife.
Deceptive, there's a guy behind me that's gonna,
he's not even gonna fight me,
he's gonna kill me way before I get there, right?
Let's go to putting fair play out,
because we know that's not gonna be the case, right?
Go to gray, dark, and deceptive what what tools what weapons what methods that are
left that hasn't yet been used can the opponent still use the next four and a
half months on the president well they can jail him I think the president
president Biden and the Biden administration could restrict access he has
that candidates typically would to national security information, which would impair any
transition to power. I think they could mess with the Secret Service short of this legislation.
I think they would be tempted to do so. They've already misused the Secret Service
to help enable that improper rate of his home.
So who knows what else they'll do.
The Secret Service is compromised at the top,
in my view, and is politicized as any other deep state agency.
I don't know why we would think it's any better
than anything else in DC.
So it's really bad.
Now, on the other hand, they're kind of losing in some respects.
As you pointed out, Trump is still doing well.
And there are charges here in Florida and up in DC.
The federal versions of the Get Trump effort have been stalled.
Fannie Willis, because of her own misconduct, shut that case down.
So they're losing some additional, you know, they're losing some key vehicles there.
Now, what did the left do in 2020? They went to the streets and engaged in violence.
And so that's another arrow in their quiver. It's a reliable one.
They use it time and time again.
Political violence is key to the left's political thinking.
They don't always use it, but they're willing to use it, and it wouldn't surprise me if
they escalated it in that regard as well.
Got it.
Yeah, I mean, if that's the case, a couple of them it's it's publicly we're looking at it
And it's obvious that they're doing it what I'm curious about is what are they gonna do that?
We're not thinking about because this this is not being covered enough by the market right the fact that they're putting this HR
Bill 8081 that they're trying to get him to lose Secret Service. This only tells me one thing
There's no other way to process this why would you want to to take secret service away from them? Check. That's easy, right? A couple of the other ways. I'm
trying to wonder if there's anything else we're not paying attention to. Tom, you
look like you're thinking something. I am. I'd like to ask Tom a question and I'll
premise it with something. First of all, thank you for all you do, personally.
This is for me personally. And I think part of of this people can get a civics lesson if they just
follow some of the things for the completely agree to approach or not
remit your tank
you can get a civics lesson and what the freedom of information act another
things you can do is a citizen
but i think a very important to be part of the process
my observation is
think they went from and i'd like to know what you think, to he won't win,
but it was always a comma. We're gonna hit him with all these indictments. We're
gonna say 96 counts, he won't win because the voters will be thinking he's a
criminal and that'll do it. It didn't and he went up in the polls and he even went
to a point, North Carolina and Georgia as you know, that all of the polls, including
their polls, he's like like eight nine points up now
say what you will about Fulton County the rest of Georgia is bright red and
upset right then well we'll convict him in New York he'll be a convicted vet
he's a convicted felon comma he won't win and the next day we saw everyone in
the in the media they were using convicted felon in the same way right on script
Do you think from your perspective that we've crossed from if we do this he can't win to
we can't allow it and
Therefore the kitchen sink is on the table including, you know a manipulated homicide
The kitchen sink is on the table, including a manipulated homicide. Well, they're sending a signal out there that they want to put the president's life at risk,
President Trump's life at risk.
In 2020, they contemplated Trump winning and what they would do if he won. And the war game included John Podesta and John Podesta pretending to be
Joe Biden in a war game where there was a dispute about the electoral college, a close
count where Trump was winning. They would have the left leaning states demand that the
electors be seated they supported in order to change the outcome of the election.
And the threat would be, we're gonna withdraw
from the union if they do, if they don't do what we say.
So they were actually contemplating civil war in 2020.
Yeah, so that's what they were planning to do in 2020.
So of course, who gets prosecuted?
People who actually disputed the election under law,
rather than those who were evidently conspiring ways
to engage in civil war against
the republic.
Then now we hear Democrats talking about even if Trump does win, we're going to object
to his electoral counts in Congress, not because the election was compromised, not because
there was any evidence of fraud or administrative deficiencies that require a do over, not because there was any evidence of fraud or administrative
deficiencies that require a do-over, but because we don't think Trump is eligible
for other reasons. So just a pure power play to overturn the outcome of the
election. So they're never going to stop. I mean, they've impeached him twice,
they're trying to jail him, they want him dead, and so, and they're telling us what
they're planning to do.
They're talking about figuring out what to do in January if Trump wins.
And you can bet there'll be more efforts to impeach him.
They'll probably target his family more directly.
They're never going to stop.
They're never going to stop.
And it's up to, you know, if you like the republic, whether you're liberal or conservative, I think you should be very
upset about what's happening here.
And I think this is where they're making a political mistake because you understand why
some of the bad guys do what they do because they see a political benefit.
But when Biden's out there advocating for, quote, democracy all the time. I think a lot of the blowback in favor of Trump is a concern about democracy or the
constitutional republic.
And they don't see a vote for Biden as advancing democracy.
They see a vote for Trump as ensuring that sort of crazy politicization of justice stops. And so the pro-democracy vote, in my view,
you know, Trump is in a position to benefit from.
Trump is in a position to benefit from. Okay.
If you want to protect democracy, you remove from power those who are using the Justice
Department to jail their political opponents, purely because they're political opponents, not for any other substantive reason.
And that's what the partner at Sequoia said in a very long Twitter, McGuire, who summed
it up by saying, and that's why I think it's very important to protect this election, protect
this, and that's why I'm giving $300,000 to the Trump campaign.
I mean, it explains why Biden publicly, at least, is a little bit nervous about talking
about the conviction.
Because I think people have been...
It's destabilized the country.
And an incumbent president doesn't benefit from a country that's destabilized when he's
running for reelection.
Let's stay on this before we go to the next point.
Okay. running for reelection. Let's stay on this before we go to the next point. Okay, so for me, you know how we learned in 2020 that, you know, whoever has
control over the Supreme Court, that's the ultimate power. Okay, we learned that
in a big way that Supreme Court's more important than president. We learned that.
I mean, at least I did. Where for me it's like, oh, you flipped three seats? Damn!
What if it would have gone Hillary Clinton and she would have flipped those
three seats? Imagine the next 20, 30, 40 years what it would have looked like.
These guys, this is not a five-year job or a 10-year job.
They're there for a while, right?
Now when we're seeing this case study with New York and what New York is doing to Trump,
what are we learning?
Are we learning who has more judges, has power?
Are we learning, what are we learning?
Are we learning who has more judges or who is willing to be more corrupt?
Because I just pulled this up Rob, can you go all the way to the top?
If you go all the way to the top, so this shows us, we have a total of, zoom in a little
bit, the United States Federal Court has a total of 1,770 judgeships authorized across
209 courts in the federal court system.
1770-209.
Go lower to break it down by states.
This will tell you by states, but go all the way down to the one that you just had a minute
ago.
So then this shows us on this page, 178 are judges, 84 are Democratic appointed, 92 are
Republican appointed, two vacancies, and then four pending
nominations.
Then go lower, because this is circuit court to judges, right?
Go up.
These are circuit court.
Don't want you just add Rob.
Go all the way up.
No, no, where you were at before.
At the top it says current U.S. Circuit Court to Judges.
Top left, right there.
Yeah.
So then if we go a little lower, then we'll see numbers.
Go lower, Rob, to the next one with numbers.
Keep going, keep going, keep going.
Here is now total judges, 678 by state, democratically appointed 363, Republican appointed 272, vacant
44, pending nominations 26.
Are we learning that the number of judges also appointed, you know, prevents it.
Because I just don't want to see this happen again in the future where somebody uses their
power to bully the other side and Republicans are almost feeling helpless.
It's like we can't do nothing right now.
So Republicans, there's a part of them that's like, I'm glad he's going through this because
I want him to be gone.
What role does this play to prevent this again happen in the future?
Or, no, this really doesn't matter.
If they want to do it again in the future,
they can do it again.
Well, they see judges as an impediment
to what they want to do.
That's why, as I said earlier, they're
attacking the Supreme Court.
So unless their folks are in control of it,
they see the judiciary as an impediment.
So they at least believe that the person appointing the judges matters in terms of their politics.
And typically the Trump judges have tended to be a bit more fair in understanding of
the president's concerns.
It hasn't been perfect.
I mean, many of the judges up in DC are Republican appointed and they've been treating the January
6th defendants miserably.
And they fully have embraced the left-wing narrative about January 6th.
So the fact that they're Republican isn't a perfect measure of how they'll follow in
terms of what they'll do in terms of the rule of law, but it's a reasonable indicator.
Judge Bork had a great book, the late Judge Bork, who failed to become a Supreme Court justice.
And I think the title was Attempting of America.
And he said that, you know, the problem with the judiciary power, you don't want judges
who get up there of either side who see their power and they are tempted politically to
get to the right result.
And that's the danger we face from the judiciary. We don't want judges of either side who, because of the politics, they let that guide their
decision as opposed to trying to apply the law in a dispassionate way.
Now is there a perfect way of getting that, of ensuring that's always the case?
No.
But in the case of Judge Merchant, who gave a donation to Joe Biden and other Democrat
anti-Trump organizations, I mean, that's kind of like an easy call. He should be nowhere
near that case. I mean, in the least, I mean, he broke the rules and suggested in a way
that showed partisan anti-Trump bias. So it wasn't like a contribution he was able to make under law.
And you know, that's just the reality.
Just deal with that.
No, he broke the rules to make that contribution.
And in addition to all of his other displays of bias.
So you know, there is a process for holding people like Judge Merchant accountable, but
he's not fearful of that process, obviously.
And I think the only way or I shouldn't say the only way, but unless there is, unless
there are consequences for what we've seen gone on, Comey suffered no consequences.
None of these folks face any consequences.
You know, Adam Schiff, one of the worst congressmen, this reputable, dishonest, abuses authority
in ways that we don't even fully understand
in terms of going into phone records of innocent Americans just in a secret way.
Just crazy stuff.
He's likely to be the senator from California.
So there have been no consequences.
He was never really sanctioned by the Republican majority.
And I appreciate Republicans are, you know, they are not going to subpoena, brag.
Well, Trump's already been convicted.
Date late and a dollar short.
I was yelling at them, why are you funding this process?
And they didn't want to fight in terms of these government
shutdown fights.
Why not?
Because the leadership didn't want
to engage in the fight because they were fearful of losing.
Which leadership?
Is it McCarthy or Johnson?
Well, McCarthy and then Speaker Johnson.
What did they fear?
Well Johnson feared that if the government shut down, he wouldn't be able to get it open
again without giving Democrats everything they wanted.
And what did McCarthy fear... I think that was
McCarthy's approach too. Same. Yeah. They don't, they post, you know, the
establishment Republicans, and I don't use establishment in the pejorative
sense, but you know the mainline Republicans, folks in leadership,
it's except, it's the accepted theory that we don't shut the government down.
Okay, so what if you do?
Why would the Democrats have control that you would have to give them everything?
I was never persuaded by the argument.
I'm actually curious, why would even Johnson have that fear?
I'm not persuaded by the argument either because I depend on the escalation of powers and the
checks and balances and I depend on that and I'm still a believer of that.
And so what the thinking is this is, you know,
it's the classic, you know, 1980s caricature
of a little boy that says to his mom,
if you don't give me the ice cream,
I'll hold my breath till I die.
And she caves.
When in reality, what you need
is somebody on the Republican side with cojones that simply says, I will shut the government
down and we won't open it again. And look them in the eye and say, do it. You know,
do it. It's the same BS that, you know, Kamala Harris and Joe Biden said about oh, what if they use heavier weapons in Gaza?
Do it, you know like if it's some threat you need somebody with cojones and says look you're not gonna threaten me like that
I'm going on the microphone right now. I'm gonna tell the American people look they're gonna keep the government shut down
They're gonna hold back funds. It has to be a Republican that is unafraid to do that
Pat and you and you may lose in the end. Are we tracking the do that, Pat. And you may lose in the end.
Are we tracking the other time?
Yeah, but you may lose in the end.
I'm not saying they would have succeeded.
Lose what?
But they could have at least advanced the ball in terms of highlighting this abuse of
power that was so controversial that Republicans were willing to say, look, if you want to
fund the government, it's not going to include jailing your political opponents, censoring your political opponents, allowing an invasion of the United States.
Pick something to stand on the hill over.
And they refuse to do that.
And now we are where we are.
Why isn't Supreme Court getting involved?
Why isn't Supreme Court getting involved to say, hey guys, knock it off?
Same way they do with Colorado. What are you guys doing? Stop. They can't. Why can't
they though? The Supreme Court, there is a gate at the front of the
Supreme Court and is the Solicitor General. And the Solicitor General hears
with the court what matters. So the Supreme Court... Oh no, no, no. The Solicitor General is
just another lawyer. He's the DOJ lawyer.
Correct.
But he presents, and then the court decides what it will hear.
And the court also pre-filters.
It doesn't go out like an act of police action.
Things come to it.
I mean, you're partly right.
You have to ask the Supreme Court to get involved.
The party does.
Sometimes the government does through the Solicitor General's office.
But in the case of Trump or someone else about this New York conviction, he'd have to go
up to the Supreme Court and...
Who's he?
The President Trump's lawyers would have to bring the case justifying Supreme Court involvement.
They have not.
Why not?
I don't know what their thinking is.
My suspicion is the challenge, now I'm not a lawyer, but I am generally familiar with
the arguments here, is the Supreme Court rarely gets involved in state prosecutions until
they're concluded.
So you get sentenced, you do your federal appeal, and then maybe we'll take a look at it.
So, maybe July 11th or even after that?
Yes, maybe there are opportunities there.
I would argue that under Supreme Court precedent, they can do what they want.
Someone like President Trump who's being victimized in this extraordinary, unusual way that has
national implications is the type
of extraordinary circumstance that
would allow the Supreme Court to get involved.
Now, Trump may lose, but at least the Supreme Court
will have considered some of it.
And you may get good language out of the Supreme Court
from dissenters.
I guarantee you there are members
who would be more than happy to police what's going
on up in New York as wild abuse of power and an attack on the federal system in our constitutional
republic.
And that language might be very useful in the public debates and in instructing the
lower courts in New York if they consider this appeal in the ordinary course on how
they should be proceeding. Who knows, who knows about the
constitutional law, who is the best constitutional lawyer right now that
knows what would be the creative way to go to the Supreme Court, similar way that
Giuliani back in the days went to that professor at Rutgers University to help
him with the RICO law. Who is that person? Used to be Dershowitz many, many years ago.
Who is the formidable name today
that can hold a meeting to say,
this is the right thing for us to do next?
Well, I think there'd be a few people.
And you know, you get, you've dealt with lawyers
in your professional life.
Many.
And they all argue with each other
about what the best way for it is, right?
And it's up to the client to say,
this is what I want to do. And these, there are kind of, there's a mix. Client needs to know the option. the best way for it is, right? And it's up to the client to say, this is what I want to do.
And these are kind of, there's a mix.
Clients need to know the option.
Clients not below you, right?
That's true.
And there's a mix of political and legal consequences
for proceeding in some way versus another way.
If you lose, does that make you worse off than better off
if you proceeded another way?
But as far as I'm concerned, he's facing a real irreparable damage in July with the
sentencing. And if I were Trump, I would be demanding every possible tool be used to stop
that sentencing from happening.
But you got to know it's got to be somebody that's a, like, I'm not looking for a 95% chance. I want the lawyer that said to Giuliani, this is how you can take down the mob.
You can take them down by going this way and this way and this way.
You know how some of these movies you're like, okay, arrest them.
We can't.
We don't have to.
Go ahead and arrest them.
We can't.
We can't arrest them.
I want to know 100%.
And the other trick is from an outsider's perspective.
Outsiders coming in.
So some have suggested that the states could sue New York.
And under the Constitution, the Supreme Court
has original jurisdiction, meaning
they don't have to go through the lower courts.
They can go immediately to the Supreme Court
to handle disputes between states.
And let's say Texas sues New York saying,
you're messing with our election through this process.
You may pretend that's something legitimate that you're doing.
We know what it is.
It's election interference.
You're gagging a candidate for our voters.
You're messing with our ability to participate
in this federal election.
And we want the Supreme Court to shut it down.
You're not going to keep on holding our candidate hostage or the number one candidate for president
hostage and try to rig the election that way.
We have rights too.
And we have a right to hear from this candidate.
We have a right to have him campaign.
Frankly, Democrats and Republicans have that right.
And so the Supreme Court should step in and say,
you're right, New York can't hold the rest of the country
hostage with this kangaroo court proceeding.
And you raise all the issues legally
that raise questions about the deficiency
of the whole process.
This to me.
You've got to just think, you know,
and you don't need to be,
I would submit you don't need to be a lawyer
to think like this.
You just need to kind of say,
what I want every tool available
and kind of figure out what has happened before
and see how it might apply.
But what I want right now is this is no longer like,
let me put it to you this way.
So you got five months is all you got. Okay
After July 11th, you really have how long less than four months? Okay, because it's November 5th
So four months let you say you got 17 weeks is what you have till election from July
Well early voting starts in September. I get that with decision time, you know, I'm saying like November 5th, whatever that line is
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So to me who behind closed doors is holding an emergency meeting with the top 10 most
qualified constitutional lawyers to fly out and have a meeting to say, what are we doing
with this?
Because, you know, here's how this works.
How long did it take?
At this point, how much does America know those 51 intelligence officers that signed saying there's
nothing in the Hunter Biden laptop, how many people know that that was bullshit?
Everybody knows that was bullshit, right?
But it worked because it was timely for them to put it out there.
Do those people give a shit that now they're caught knowing they lied?
They don't give a shit, it's over with, right?
Okay, how many people in America know that the Russia collusion wasn't Trump, it was
really Hillary Clinton paying that $35 million, you know, whoever she paid.
How many people know that?
Everybody.
But it doesn't matter.
It worked for three years.
Everybody believed that this guy, you know, on the left, that this guy was linked to Russia,
you know.
So how many people does it take for COVID to say, hey, Trump is a racist against Chinese people and
look at this, let's go to Chinatown and the COVID vaccine didn't come from China. How dare you say
such a thing? Call it China virus. I call it China because it came from China. So that's racist,
Mr. President. Would you say that to me because I'm Chinese? Is that why you're saying that? No,
I'm saying it because that's where it came from, right? But it worked and it doesn't need to work for two years.
It doesn't need to work for 10 years.
It just needs to work for five months.
So if this works for the next five months and Republicans are not being paranoid enough,
boom, then we find out next year in July, guess what?
Trump was right.
Who gives a shit?
He lost.
What I'm trying to say is who is that super Avengers lawyers
to put in a room to say what is the right next 15 moves? What needs to happen? Who needs
to get behind it? That's what I'm interested in.
Well, Trump has his team of lawyers. He does pay attention to folks on the outside, you
know, people who talk about this publicly like yours truly. I know that one of the reasons
the left hates me is because I put ideas out
there like this and people pay attention to them. I mean, I had the FBI come knocking
at my door because I was blowing the whistle and Judicial Watch was asking questions and
highlighting the abuse of Trump. I mean, I had to go before the grand jury on this crap
because they wanted to highlight that and abuse me for saying
what they were doing to Trump on this records issue was baloney because we had sued similarly
for Clinton records and they told us, well, you don't have any basis to sue.
The president could do whatever he wants with these records more or less, right?
And so they changed the rules, did a 180 of their own legal position to try to jail Trump.
And what did we get in response for us saying,
well, that's not right.
I had FBI come to my door.
So they're jailing his lawyers.
They're disbarring his lawyers from the previous legal fights.
So I'm sure sure lawyers around him now are probably pretty cautious in light of all that as well.
It's a challenge.
Maybe it's not lawyers.
Maybe it's a governor.
Maybe it's a governor from some of the red states to say the same way that the Santa
sued God knows how many of them.
Maybe it's through that.
But all I'm saying is if I'm in a position like this, and let's just say we're facing
an issue, a crisis that we've never faced before, whatever it may be.
Department of Insurance, I'm in the financial industry.
Okay, there was this lady that was a lawyer in San Francisco.
Do you remember her?
She would pick up my calls at five o'clock in the morning while she's on vacation in
Hawaii, because we paid her $1,200 an hour.
I don't know if you remember her or not. I don't want to say the morning while she's on vacation in Hawaii because we paid her $1,200 an hour.
I don't know if you remember her or not.
I don't want to say the law from where she was with.
But guess what?
Any time we would go through something that we had to really, really, really, 100% find
out what the legal ramification was by the state because we're in 49, 50 states.
So I have to deal with different legalities based on these states.
I can get all the lawyers on, set up a Zoom, let everybody debate each other.
No, that's not true actually.
According to such and such.
Okay, what do you mean by that?
So what do you have?
No, it's actually not.
Let me tell you what happened three years ago.
It's like, no, no, no, both of you guys are wrong.
And then based on that, so I want those 10 people in a room ASAP.
And then based on those 10 people, is it better for us to use lawyers to go?
Is it better for us to use a governor from a state to go who are the short list of governors for them to come together and sue New York? What does
that look like? Because this right here makes a big portion of American voters sit there
and say, hey, if you can do this to this guy, you can do it to another person, does election
really matter? It probably scares the shit out of some people who want to run for office.
Who the hell today? Think about it. Say right now you're a conservative, you're a capitalist, you're a business owner, and
you love America that one day you would think about running for office.
Who in their right mind is inspired to run for office?
And typically the people that you want to run for office are the ones that don't want
to run for office.
Well, this is probably pushing those guys away even more unless if somebody comes down and says you're protected by the
Constitution and the law here's why don't worry about it. But I feel the
urgency on the right is like hey don't worry about it. No we got it you got a
role so I don't know I just don't see urgency there maybe it's happening I'm
not aware of it. Well you and I share the type of same the same type of approach and I've always had urgency about these issues
and you know, I remember after Trump left office I got a call from a reporter and they said well
you know, I've essentially there are all these former DOJ people complaining about
They're all these former DOJ people complaining about my distracting Trump when he was in office with these ideas I had about legal issues and policy issues.
And they just hated it because he would find out about something from me directly or indirectly
and the Justice Department just hated the idea that someone like
Tom Fitton or Judicial Watch had any influence.
And so they're complaining to the New York Times.
And I'm thinking in the end, you know, I'm just a guy on a street corner with a sign.
And these are the top officials of the Justice Department complaining that I was causing
trouble for them.
So, my point is these small voices can have a big impact if you get the right attention
at the right time.
And I think President Trump needs to be urgent about this because I do think as James Comey is slightly highlighting
as we highlighted earlier, you know, he faces jail time and you know, all bets are off if
there's a jail sentence that's recommended.
You know, everyone says, well, he's going to be released pending bail or pending appeal.
Well, I hope so.
I hope so.
I tell you, if it were me, I'd be thinking, how can I avoid
even having to worry about that on day one on that day? Is there anything I can do in
the meantime to derail the sentencing through federal court intervention, or getting the
states intervene or something like that? And I you know, I just don't. I tell you, a lawyer
tells you, don't worry worry the Supreme Court will overturn
your conviction that was sending you to jail, I mean to me that's a loser approach.
It's a slow approach.
It's a loser approach.
Planning to lose is the Republican way and I reject that.
To me, Trump gives me the vibes of a very urgent guy
who asks, what do you think?
He gives me the vibes of what do you think,
and then he makes the final decision at the end of the day,
but I think he's the type of guy
that calls five different random people saying,
hey, what do you think about what just happened?
What do you think is this?
I think it's like that, and I've never,
this is not like I'm taking it based on experience.
I'm just assuming I may be fully wrong.
I wrote a few things down. This is what I just wrote down. Okay.
Strategies on how to fight this. Number one, an all-out public push, if this
is legal or not, to encourage whistleblowers on the higher ups on the inside, DOJ, FBI, CIA, who are high ranking to come
out and talk about what really happened.
Two, retired guys that know there's going to be a big price on the line if they know
anything, if it's legal.
Everything I'm saying is if it's legal.
Number one is whistleblower.
Number two is constitutional lawyer, emergency meeting in Mar-a-Lago or whatever he's going
to be at to have that conversation a few hours and everybody talks to each other.
Number three is getting the usage of governors, House, Senate.
Number four is using WTP, we the people, to rally behind something.
Number six is a massive method of how, remember back in the days in 1985 when we did the We
Are The World, or even
Africa when we raised the money.
There was this massive live aid, that's right, band aid, right?
Let them know it's Christmas time, that song in the next...
So maybe a full on type of a model with five million people live on a platform for you
to raise a billion dollars in a day where you have those kinds of resources.
I think there's got to be some kind of a, hey guys, you ain't got a lot of time.
To me, it drives me insane that they're moving like politicians instead of moving like entrepreneurs,
but the urgency has got to be a little bit higher.
I don't know.
Again, all of this stuff I'm saying right now, maybe some of it is in full effect. But to me, I want the American voter to think, believe, trust that our system is built so
perfectly by our founding fathers that one cannot use the method to go after the opponent
like Russia, Iran, other countries have done, that that is not acceptable in America.
We make an example of it. Go compete equally, equally beat them not the way we're doing it today if
that trust goes down like it is right now trust in government trust in CIA
trust in media trust in all of that that's actually not good for it to be
that low over trust we need to be a little bit higher than what we are today
not a hundred percent but definitely not 23 27 percent which is where we are
today that's horrible that's a way of you saying you don't believe in the Constitution because the people that are running it right now are going based
On the laws that was written
250 years ago, you know 248 years ago, whatever the timeline is so makes me feel very uncomfortable that those laws that you know
Supreme Court and some of these other guys can't come in and say guys you're crossing the line here
Makes me a little bit uncomfortable time Tom, you want to say something?
I'm agreeing with Tom. I think the Republicans are playing to lose here and it scares the hell out
of me because you're exactly correct. Because right now, we already saw that they went with a judge
that was conflicted. Somebody from the, we know the name, from the Biden Department of Justice
suddenly appears in the district
attorney's office in New York.
You look at all these things that they went with, and then everything from the jury instructions
to how he parsed the arguments for deliberation, and the judge really had a someone's skill
manipulating that.
They're not playing by the rules.
So there's the headline, folks, whether you call those big rules or little rules, they're
not playing by the rules. So there's the headline, folks, whether you call those big rules or little rules, they're not playing by the rules. Now we're waiting for
the sentencing and once again, the Republicans are leaning back. Well, and this is absolutely
what I've seen. Well, it's a white collar crime. There's no jail time in New York for
that. It doesn't happen. This is a first offense of a Class E felony, which is class E, which
is pronounced Bear Lee a felony.
That's the joke that they use in the DA's office in New York.
I didn't make that up.
Class E, Bear Lee, a felony.
In other words, it's not really a felony.
No jail time for this.
It just doesn't happen.
Now, if it is reporting dates for these things
that are even worse than this,
for class D, class C felony, reporting dates is usually three to five months and they pull
your passport.
In other words, okay, you will serve nine months in New York prison, you have 90 days
to report, give me your passport.
That happens all the time.
Or you're now under house arrest, and by the way, for the 90 days, here's your ankle bracelet.
You have to check in.
It's going to call your phone. You have to check in. It's going to call your phone.
You have to check in.
Or it's merely, okay, this is 90 days, but it's a suspended sentence and you're on probation
for three years.
And I feel like, by the way, what I just outlined, this is the normal way it works.
But this is Republicans assuming it's going to be the normal way it works.
It's not.
They're bending it. I fully anticipate that what you heard Comey doing, and I heard
the phrase smoke signals, that's what he's doing. He is sending smoke signals
to the judge. It worries me that the Republicans are sitting back saying,
white collar, first offense, classy felony, you're doing jail time. Oh, it'll be three to five
months, he can still do presidential debates with the election. I agree with
you. Why aren't they going down the list and getting a team in
place? If you don't have, like for example, we have
a code of honor in our company. Okay? If I cross the code of honor, okay, what can you
do to come to me? Hey, Pat, I want you to read number 13. What is it? Just read it.
Okay? Bah bah bah bah bah. That is it? Just read it. Okay.
Bah bah bah bah bah.
That's exactly what you're doing.
Not tolerable.
Do you know what we wrote in our constitution that'll happen if you cross the line with
13?
What's that?
It's grounds for termination.
That's where you are right now.
Do you want to continue this behavior?
Or what do you want to do?
Because I can bring this up to the board.
Then I back off and I say, holy shit, he's right.
So then I can either go behind closed doors and manipulate and play more games to make your life a living hell then you
get to go and say hey guys committee I wasn't gonna bring this up this is the
third time he's done it I think it's time we got to make a decision to vote
and fire this guy. I tried to have a conversation, went behind my back, started lobbying, now we're at the board.
This gives everyone confidence. You write a living trust, you do state planning, you put an
up-shoulder agreement in place. What does that say? Here's what you agreed on, you
sign it, lawyers witness everything. There needs to be confidence in
this in America today. This minimizes confidence in this unless if there's
proper methods of holding the opposition accountable, which they're not doing
today. Again, if they do it on November 6th, no one gives a shit.
This needs to happen pre-November 5th for it to have its weight.
That's all I'm talking about. My only concern is that.
And it's not a question of Trump should win, okay?
That's a political argument.
The argument is, should our elections be manipulated and rigged by interference
from political officials in the Justice Department,
elected politicians in New York, Letitia James Bragg,
Biden donor masquerading as an ethical judge?
And the answer is no.
I mean, if I want folks to win free and fair,
and that's at this point, no one can be sure that's going to happen in November, unfortunately,
because of this election interference. Now the courts can mitigate that as we're talking
about. But you know, that as you highlight, the time window is shrinking fast and I'd be
very nervous about July 11th resulting in a in an irreparable disruption of our
election. What would happen if they do, say it's July 11th, debates done, Trump
crushes it, everything on the internet June 27th is going viral even though they
can mute them, there's plenty of clips that are going viral all over the country and we know that's what's gonna happen on
Insta on X on YouTube everywhere. They can't stop that holes move another point and a half. Okay, then fast forward
14 days later 16 days later. Boom. He is
You know prison sentencing he's going to jail. What happens to America then?
I think it's disruptive. I think the left is going to look for ways to engage in violence.
And even objections, honorable objections, First Amendment-based objections to this,
either through protests and such, is going to be met with leftist violence and of course I think they blame the right for it.
But I don't even know if the left, if the right is going to protest. I mean right,
the conservatives generally don't protest about stuff. I mean arguably there
should have been protests you know all through the trial but it was it wasn't
terribly there, it wasn't much there. I wouldn't do physical protesting today.
My protesting would be in a very different way.
My protesting today would be the biggest live worldwide
to show support.
I would bring a lineup of 20, 30 people all to talk
with him being the closing speaker,
and I would raise money money and I would drive everybody
to go retweet a video, drive traffic to it,
to make it the most viral clip in the history of Twitter
or whatever it is to make a record,
to make announcements, reveal stuff, educate people,
have stuff out there for them to know how they can go
and drive the traffic
and intensity online.
Today, a few years ago, I'm Armenian and Assyrian.
My dad's Assyrian, my mom's Armenian.
The Armenian community would tell me, Patrick, how come you don't come and march in Glendale
anymore for the Armenian genocide of what happened April 24, 19?
How come you not come in representing?
I say, I don't think you realize this anymore.
The people you want that can make changes,
they don't protest on streets of Glendale.
They protest on streets of Twitter.
That's what they're protesting.
Why don't you take your protesting online?
That's what's gonna spread like wildfire
and get a lot of attention.
I'm not getting that vibe.
There needs to be a different kind of a strong,
I'm not a campaign manager, I'm not involved,
that's not my job.
I hope the right people hear this, you go take the idea.
It's not even my idea, you go take it.
You go take ownership of this idea,
I don't need credit for it, go do it,
whoever's gonna be doing this.
I think there needs to be a real intentional drive
for something like that. So then then imagine let's just say we
do this biggest live ever ready so invite Dana it's like an RNC don't wait
till the RNC like don't wait till July 15 because the RNC may not happen go do
it pre don't think you have all this time don't wait till like oh we got
plenty of time till the election no bring people like Dana bring people like Bring people like this guy that just gave $300,000. Let
him tell a story. Bring people like Shammat. Bring the most random people, not
the typical everybody that you're gonna get that's already we know they're gonna
be behind it. Bring the weird different types of names that don't make sense who
agreed to speak and say, wait what? DeSantis just spoke? This guy doesn't like
Trump. Shammat who gave Trump a D- and then he flipped a year ago saying I think now that I look
at it's a B+. Wait Elon Musk did this Twitter? What? Wait and then you're like holy there is
actually something going on and by the way the you do it, the more their backs are against the wall.
The later you do it, the more they're going to be able to play their games and you're
kind of playing reactionary counter instead of no, here's how you do it.
Boom, boom, boom, boom, hit, hit, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
you got to get them to go on the offensive.
I think sometimes Republicans right now are just like waiting.
Okay, guess what?
Another month is gone. Another month is gone. Another month is gone, another month is gone,
another month is gone, another month is gone.
What the hell are you doing?
Compete!
Well, and the Republican response to all of that is
we just have to win in November
and let's not get distracted.
Let's keep our eyes on the prize.
Let's talk about the issues that people care about.
Let's not get too distracted by these prosecutions.
People have already factored that in.
They already know it's rigged.
They already know he's being abused.
And all we need to do is just remind other voters
that every time they go to their grocery store,
they're facing ginormous prices because of Joe Biden.
And so that's the political pushback on the hyper focus politically on these trials and
tribulations of Trump.
But you know, it's politics.
So you know, people people couldn't honorably disagree about it.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I think legally, you know, from Judicial Watch's perspective, it's the worst case of government
corruption I've ever seen.
I've been doing working at Judicial Watch for 26 years. I've never thought we'd
be in the position we are in. I think we're in a crisis in terms of
constitutional, Republican form of government and that those in the
responsibility, who have the responsibility or in the positions of
responsibility, need to use every tool available to them under the law and the
Constitution to protect the Republic. Amen
Yeah, and so and by the way
The people I'm talking to and challenging in my messaging isn't the Republican Party. I'm not waiting for those guys. They're not gonna do it because
They're too worried about you know, the people they're working with in DC
Most of them are part of the same,. Many of them half want Trump to lose.
That's right.
You think Republicans hate being in the majority.
Not as many as you might think.
I don't disagree.
They don't mind just showing up and cutting ribbons.
But guess what?
That's the job of the MAACA community
to take the lead on this.
So let me give you a lineup.
You ready?
Here's a lineup.
Dana White, 50 Cent, Shamat,
the guy that just gave $300,000.
My lineup is not gonna be the usual suspects.
I don't want the usual suspects.
I want the people to be like, wait a minute,
who's this guy?
This is the actor Tim Robbins?
Wait, who?
What?
Clint Eastwood?
This?
Seriously?
Yeah.
That's a kind of weird lineup.
Yeah.
So you're getting NBA players, NFL players, UFC fighters.
You know, Hollywood, you're getting a regular mom who just went and says, look, let me tell
you who I am.
I got six kids.
My husband and I got two jobs.
He drives Uber at night.
In 2019, this was my bill.
Here's how much we spent on bills.
Here's how much we're spending right now.
I'm just a regular person.
I'm not a famous person.
You don't know who I am.
My name is Mary.
This is where I live.
I live in this area.
But I'm here to tell you, I can't afford this.
And for the basic thing, if we were to categorize a group of 20 people to hit different audiences,
5 million live on Twitter spaces, on whatever these platforms played on Twitter spaces,
on YouTube, raise money.
Next speaker, raise money.
Next speaker, raise money.
Next speaker, raise money.
Drive to Twitter, drive to Twitter, drive to Twitter.
You create all that protesting online.
The biggest online protesting of all time,
you can call it, historical protesting,
record breaking, Guinness Book of World Record,
5.2 million people live watching, what?
So I mean, that's a collaboration with Elon.
And Trump could get that on Twitter.
And Trump could get that,
there is no problem he could get that.
So I think that's the part where,
that's what I mean, where I'm not waiting on Republicans to do it.
I'm not waiting for traditional people.
I'm waiting for, you want to disrupt?
Go ahead and do this.
See what happens.
See what happens.
See how the market reacts to it.
I think it would be shocking to the other side and it would scare the shit out of them
to say, if you even think about July 11th announcing this as this, let me tell you,
here's what's going to happen.
If you even, so you're forcing them to sentence him.
You're forcing, go ahead and sentence him.
See what happens.
Go ahead and sentence him. See what happens. Go ahead and sentence him.
You're playing offense the same way they are, because the way they do it is they play offense
to make everybody walk on eggshells.
I think Trump's prepared to go to jail.
I mean, he's said it repeatedly in the last few days, just reading between the lines.
And he doesn't say he's ready to go to jail because he doesn't think he's gonna go to jail. I
Think he thinks he's gonna get sentences. Yeah, I think he thinks he's gonna get sentenced to jail
Remember he was he's seen merchant up close for six weeks. So he knows what he's about
Yeah, let's go to the next one
So story comes out today judge ordered Steve Bannon to report to prison on July 1st for contempt of Congress sentence. The former Trump advisor sentenced
to four months in prison for refusing to comply with January 6th Committee subpoenas, but
it happened put on hold while he appealed. What do you think about this story?
Well, it's a perfect example of the left punishing its enemies while protecting their friends. And it kind of,
right now there's a debate in the House about whether they're going to find
Attorney General Garland, Merrick Garland, in contempt for withholding those
audio tapes. And they found them in contempt at the committee level, but it's
been weeks since there's been no vote.
And I think there's been because I understand it's a close, it's a close, you know, it's
a small majority in the House.
But you don't get a majority in the House by being silent about the issues you want
that close majority, that small majority to vote on.
And it's been silence. And frankly, it was judicial watch, our litigation that forced the Justice Department to admit
that the transcripts of the audio interviews with Joe Biden were messed with.
They didn't reflect what actually he said.
And now they're telling us we can't get them because AI might be used to deep fake them.
So Bannon's going to jail, Trump's going to jail potentially, and so you've got, they
can't manage to impeach Biden, Garland is ignoring brazenly a subpoena and they can't
manage to find him in contempt. And by the way, the House constitutionally
has the ability to detain someone who's in contempt of Congress directly. They don't have to
rely on the Justice Department to prosecute. So, you know, there's no consequence. And
I don't know how much more divergent example could you get the way that Trump has been
treated and Bannon's been treated, Peter Navarro and other Trump aide who's in jail over disputes
about executive privilege and contempt for Congress, rushed to be prosecuted by the Biden
Justice Department.
And the House is nominally controlled by Republicans they haven't figured out a way to impeach Biden and
they
Have the Attorney General
literally coming in under oath saying you want to you want to
You want to find me in contempt go ahead?
And they still can't they still haven't figured out what to do about Tom. How can they do this because
They still haven't figured out what to do about it. Tom, how can they do this?
Because what's the real reason for this?
As Steve Bannon was just ordered to prison
for ignoring a congressional subpoena, right?
But play this clip, Rob.
Do you remember this?
Go ahead and play this clip the way you had it.
So this is Hunter Biden, just gets up and walks out.
Go ahead.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Excuse me, Hunter.
Apparently you're afraid of my words. Whoa! Lower the audio, Mr. Chairman. Excuse me, Hunter. Apparently you're afraid of my words.
Lower the audio, Ron.
I'd like to reclaim my time, Mr. Chairman.
What's the difference?
There isn't any difference. They gave Hunter another chance to respond and they let that and he finally caved after a few weeks but
they could have found him in contempt immediately and they didn't. They didn't.
So what's the difference between what Hunter did versus what Bannon did?
Well Bannon was relying on the advice of his lawyer. The courts wouldn't give him any
benefit of the doubt there. He was raising issues about executive privilege.
Typically that is a significant issue.
All of that was just run over by the Biden Justice Department.
All the privileges and protections
that presidents and their close advisors typically get
are denied Trump.
Even when he was president, he wasn't
allowed to do things that presidents are supposed
to be able to do, fire people, negotiate with foreign leaders, exercise control over our military.
All of that was denied for Trump.
Every time Trump tried to assert his constitutional authorities as president, they thought it
a reason to attack him and or impeach him.
And in the case of Steve Bannon, there's arguments about whether he told what his communications with the
president were, whether that was protected or not under the Constitution.
And you know, so to me that's like a good faith reason not to throw someone in
jail for months. Yeah, I mean I'm watching this and you say four months, what a
perfect amount of time. What's so special say four months. What a perfect amount of time.
What's so special about four months? What's in four months? You got July, August, September, October. Great timing guys.
Keep one of the most effective voices, one of those outside voices who aren't Republican. Keep them off the table for the election season. And please note that he's given 30 days to report.
So he's not being taken straight to prison.
He's got 30 days to report.
And that is the way it works on white color criminals, regardless of whether the rest
of the banning case is a sham.
And it is.
And what you have here in Hunter Biden, I read a legal analysis that said that the reason
the Republicans have next to no balls on Hunter Biden case, Pat, is if they went all the way
to the wall, they need a couple dems to kind of go with them.
And if they go all the way to the wall, you're just going to put the president in a position that he pardons him.
Because that's it. Do you think Hunter Biden's going to do time? If he was actually convicted, Pat, and he's getting ready to be sentenced,
what do you think Biden does? He picks up his pen and he pardons him. That's it.
You know, he's not going to let Hunter go to prison. And
there's this gilding weak response on the Republican side to push this.
Now we're finally in court with a gun charge.
But that was contempt of Congress.
You're subpoenaed to come before Congress in a hearing and you and your lawyers have
said, okay, we showed up, we were here, but we've had enough of this crap, we're just
leaving. That's ridiculous. You're in contempt at that moment and and it highlights the way these issues are usually resolved through negotiations and hunter eventually showed up
It's amazing that Democrats can figure out a way to resolve through negotiations
Bannon's testimony obviously they could have figured out a way to get him to testify.
And you know, he could have asserted certain privileges and there would have been fights
about it.
But it was a setup.
It was a setup.
This was a political prosecution.
I tell you something, there's not a darn thing this Justice Department does in terms of prosecuting
any politically sensitive case that should be trusted. It's my position every
January 6th defendant, every single one, should be pardoned or commuted, have
their sentences commuted. Every prosecution of every politician by the
Justice Department, we should presume, is political in a way you can't trust it. Senator Menendez, I have sympathy for.
Even Hunter, I have sympathy for. I mean you could run an argument that Hunter's being thrown under
bus by the Biden Justice Department. They're doing these de minimis investigations, prosecutions,
he could result in jail time maybe, maybe not, all to protect Joe.
And so there's nothing honest this Justice Department leadership does.
And it's been compromised and they don't deserve the benefit of the doubt.
I agree with you.
And Menendez, you bring up something very, very interesting.
I have always felt that Menendez, what they wanted to get him to is resign so that they
could get somebody
else appointed to his seat.
That was my gut.
And I never thought that they actually wanted to put him on trial and create the precedent.
Because if, think about it, if you prosecute successfully Menendez for all the things that
he's been accused of, Do you know what happens? You now have case law precedent that's going to apply to 537 other people in Washington that do the same
thing before lunch every day. Well, and this is not accepting gifts and doing all of that.
It's the same thing. I'm putting the gifts in the name of your kids or in the wife's
trust or, or, you know or then trading on the information.
The same thing happens before lunch every day with everybody else there.
And Menendez was particularly flamboyant on it, and had a little bit of a big mouth, and
was a bit of an ass with his staff.
And so enough people percolated up that this ended up in plain sight, and they did something
with it.
But overall, the same thing.
I don't think they wanted, I didn't think
they wanted the precedent of this, Tom, because that precedent will kind of hang like a sword
of Damocles over the heads of everybody else. But here we are.
And I'm not saying Menendez is an innocent man. I'm just saying the Justice Department
can't be trusted to fairly prosecute him. I just don't trust the Justice Department.
I agree with that as well. If I were the president coming in, I'd have a clean
team look at all these political prosecutions in the least, especially for
folks like Menendez, where there might be some evident guilt or criminality, but you
know, who knows? Maybe they've denied him access to all the information he deserved
as a defendant in the case. This Justice Department, as a matter of course, engages in unethical conduct time and time
again.
I mean, just look how Trump's been treated.
Just look how Trump's been treated.
Why would we presume they're treating people with less power any better?
No, by the way, I think Menendez has some guilt.
But my point is, I don't think what he's doing is any different from what the vast majority of the rest members of Congress are doing.
If he did what they say he did, I pray that not everyone's putting gold bars in their closet or wherever the heck they are.
Well, I'll use the gold bar as a metaphor, but are there gifts from foreign lobbyists
that aren't gold bars, but are
Basically of the same value. Yeah, come on
well, certainly Joe Biden is
Senator Menendez and he's a version of Menendez sitting there in the Oval Office given all the evidence we have
As to what he and his family was up to through 11 LLCs and sequential family gifts So let me ask you. You've sued Clintons a few times, right?
Hillary Clinton, Judicial Watch, you guys have.
How come with them nothing happens?
They're around, there's no trouble,
there is no scrutiny with the levels of pressures
or anything that happened, they just keep going on.
Everybody says, oh my gosh, you know, all this stuff.
But there's so many rumors about what they did
and this and this and that.
But what happened?
They're innocent.
They're innocent.
They're innocent.
How come even with all the laws and the lawyers and everything
that we have, nothing's happened to the Clintons?
It's a challenge because I think the Justice Department, look,
the Justice Department is
not run by a disinterested civil service that's there just to enforce the law and apply the
law.
Are there people who believe that at the Justice Department?
Of course, they're good Lord.
Yeah, that goes without saying.
But in terms of the general direction of the Justice Department, it is run by Democrat liberals who place
partisanship and ideology above the rule of law. And so it results in their
friends being protected, in most cases it's not a perfect analysis, and their
enemies being targeted. It's the Obama way. I don't say there's a double
standard of justice, I kind of jokingly say there's not a double standard of justice. I said there's one standard of
justice. Go after your enemies and protect your friends. They're being
perfectly consistent when they target Trump while protecting Hillary. Heck, the
Hillary and the FBI, at the time they were targeting, you know, at the time
Hillary was supposedly under investigation for the emails
and materials that Judicial Watch uncovered, they were collaborating on ways to destroy
Trump, literally partnering. Her campaign was paying Chris Steele. At the same time,
Chris Steele was getting paid by the FBI. It was a joint effort. And we're supposed
to believe that the investigation into Hillary was legit. I don't even
believe, you know, people talk about retribution. I just want the government
to work the way it's supposed to work. Does it mean that all these politicians
that I think are corrupt get thrown away in jail? No, but it does mean that there's
a serious criminal investigation of what they did. And we don't even, we can't even get to that, we can't even get to that
relatively low benchmark in the way that Justice Department has done. And this is
what, Pat, he should do if he gets elected Trump. He should appoint a special counsel,
not allow the Justice Department to appoint a special counsel, because the Justice
Department's got to be the target of a special counsel.
Situate the person down here in Florida.
Give them all the resources that a special counsel needs
through other agencies.
And investigate the deprivation of his civil rights
and the civil rights of other Americans under color law
by this collusive conspiracy involving the Biden
administration, the Justice Department, the FBI, you know,
Fannie Willis and all the rest up in New York.
He should have special counsels that report to him doing these investigations, targeting
the Justice Department to figure out their abuses and their collusion.
The FBI find out who approved of and targeted him.
Make sure they're not in the position of public trust anymore, whether they be in the FBI
or Justice Department.
They need to radically rethink the existence of the FBI, the power and reach of the Justice
Department.
I remember talking to a senior official at the White House during the Trump administration.
And the person isn't who you might think he is.
It's in the terms of where he is politically with Trump.
He's now known as an anti-Trump-er.
And he said to me, Tom, he goes, after this is all over,
we've got to think of a way to bring the Justice Department back
into our government.
Because they were seeing that the Justice Department thought
they didn't really report to the president.
Even his own appointees over there didn't think they reported to him, in the sense they
would withhold information, refuse to do what they wanted them to do, even though it was
lawful.
And so we've got this kind of this rule of law crisis that's pretty grave that goes
beyond just the president, you president, Trump being abused.
We've got this bureaucracy that thinks it answers to nobody,
other than their Democratic friends and left-wing
ideological allies.
How long has it been like this?
Well, if you asked Richard Nixon,
he'd say since World War II.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, one of my favorite guys,
Stan Evans, a conservative activist, he's long passed away.
His standard joke was he didn't like Nixon until Watergate.
And to me, if you're Richard Nixon, you know, he saw what Democrats
were up to in the 60s with Lyndon Johnson and in the Kennedy administration and the
casual corruption, and he ends up getting impeached and removed and forced to resign
from office.
I don't know, he wasn't technically impeached, but he was about to be impeached, I guess.
But you know, it's been a problem for a while. It's metastasized under Obama.
It really did.
Because they got these real hardcore leftists
in positions of power in the Justice Department.
And I think Obama rigged the election in 2012 against Romney
by getting the IRS to suppress the Tea Party.
You can steal elections in plain sight
other than through ballot stuffing.
You can do it by suppressing stories like the Hunter Biden case
or suppressing an entire political movement.
The most important political movement of the recent decades
is the Tea Party movement.
People say, what happened to the Tea Party movement in 2012?
Because it had been merged in 2010 to help the Republicans take over Congress and
it disappeared in 2012.
People said, well, what happened to it?
Well, it was suppressed by Obama's IRS.
Jack Smith and his gang were thinking of ways to prosecute those Tea Party groups.
Same old, same old in terms of the groups who are in these positions of power.
And it's no surprise Jack Smith is back.
That's wild.
This is what?
This is the Michelle Bachman days, right?
Herman Cain, the 999, that's the era.
I remember that.
Let me go to the next story here.
So as a person leading Judicial Watch since 98, one of the challenges that happened the
last few years is with China. Who files a lawsuit?
Is it the international criminal court to sue China to hold them accountable with COVID? You're
not hearing neither side talk too much about it. The only person that does is really RFK.
This isn't something that neither Trump nor Biden are speaking too much about.
Is it because maybe we could be held accountable for the way Fauci handled things?
So maybe it may be a bad look for America because when you're going through discovery,
the world may see that US Fauci was actually directly involved with the help or gain of function, but what
do you think is going to happen with us getting to the bottom of what the hell happened with
COVID, which caused 200,000 businesses in America to shut down, which cost $13 trillion
of wealth to be lost during that time in America?
What do you think is going to happen with that?
I think it's going to be found that our intelligence operations were very much aware of what the
Chinese were doing with biological weapons research.
And rather than shut it down, they thought one way to figure out what they were up to
and manage it was to fund it and have a hand in what they were doing almost financially
and literally.
People don't understand, you know, Fauci had a person representing him in China.
I mean, the NIAID had a woman, I think it was Dr. Ping Chen, who went around, visited the Wuhan lab.
I mean, she was doing all this work. They all generally knew.
And she was acting as a spy, it looked like, based on the documents we've uncovered. So there's little doubt that we should have known what the Chinese were up to. I mean
Fauci, one of these documents we just uncovered last year, I couldn't believe
it. So the initial grand eco health had for their China work, we want to create
mutant coronaviruses. Mutant. It never occurred to
me to call gain-of-function virus as mutant, but they did. They put it in the
darn grant application materials. And so, you know, the consequence of
that is that it was Fauci's agency that either maybe had provided money that
directly resulted in the creation of coronavirus through this
gain of function research, or gave them the expertise, which is gain of function research
to create other viruses.
And I, you know, and this is just rabbit speculation.
I think it was, I don't think there's anything natural about COVID.
I got it.
There's nothing.
I know if you ever had COVID, no one's had anything like it before. There's nothing natural about it. There's nothing I know if you ever had COVID. No one's had anything like it before.
There's nothing natural about it. And I think it got out in China. And the Chinese, you know, the
Intel people, their military people thought it was a happy accident. Let's see what happens. Let's see
what happens. And the Chinese had an end with Fauci. We had documents. WHO, we're going to praise everyone for responding to COVID.
Please take note of the special praise for China.
Fauci says, okay.
China, we send people over.
We only did it contingent on agreeing to their confidentiality terms.
That's a document we uncovered at Judicial Watch.
So we're sending our people over and the Chinese are dictating the US government
officials what they can tell us as citizens. Is this public info that Fauci said okay? Yeah,
he said you know the WHO said let's take it we're going to praise China specifically and Fauci said
okay. Praise P-R-A-I-S-E. Yes. Wow. Okay.
So again, going back to it, where's the level of accountability?
What do you think will happen?
Trump's in.
Let's say Trump is in.
Okay.
Is there going to be anything that you think will be followed up on this case on what happened
in 2020 with China?
I don't, I think because of the Intel side of it, I think there'll be some hesitancy
on the people who would be doing it to actually ask those tough questions.
I mean, because we presume it's just Wuhan.
I mean, they have all these other, you know, one of the craziest things we got was the
head of the Wuhan, top official Wuhan, sending an email asking for help on how to disinfect
tabletops. They didn't on how to disinfect tabletops.
They didn't know how to disinfect the lab.
And it wasn't like biosafety.
It was like, what disinfectants do you use to clean the floor?
I'm exaggerating slightly, but not by much.
We knew that what was going on over there, and we have those types of labs in operation
here in the United States.
Just because the government is in funding gain of function, as we've learned recently,
doesn't mean it's not happening.
And of course, it's not banned as a matter of law.
All this controversy about anthrax. We found that we're still supporting
Investigations into anthrax in Ukraine now we were told
Well, we just wanted to secure those facilities in the breakup of the Soviet Union
Why on earth do we allow anthrax to be present in Ukraine at all?
Shouldn't we be spending money?
Ukraine at all. Shouldn't we be spending money eliminating anthrax in those labs in Ukraine as opposed to allowing them to continue to study them? Now you point
that out your Russian plant as opposed to an American who's concerned about you
know dangerous bio weapons being funded by the US government. Yeah, my position with this is I just want to know. I just want to know.
In an ideal world, if Trump wins and he, you know, gives this responsibility to
special counsel, I don't know, RFK, and lead this to find out what you're gonna do
with it, because he's the guy that's gonna be the true believer, and maybe that could be the way to bring him in.
And I don't know.
I don't even know if Trump wants this.
You saw yesterday, or two days ago, when he was asked,
Mr. President, if you become president,
what are you gonna do with John F. Kennedy?
Are you gonna release the JFK file?
I did, I don't know if you saw, I did a lot of it.
But I will, yes.
How about 9-11?
Yes. How about Epstein?
Yes. Right. I mean, I don't know if you saw that or not.
I didn't. Yeah. This would go ahead and play this clip. This is it.
Would you declassify the 9-11 files? Yeah.
Would you declassify JFK files? Yeah. I did. I did a lot of it.
Would you declassify the Epstein files? Yeah, yeah, I would all right. I guess I would I think that less so because you know
You don't know it you don't want to affect people's lives if it's phony stuff in there because it's a lot of phony stuff with
that whole world
But I think I would
Yeah, so to me well, you know, he's been president so he knows the objections that are raised when these file classification issues come up privacy
There's national security issues still with the JFK files. We've done some litigation on that
What's the national security on that? Is it just the fact that we did it like as if we don't know sources and methods
You know, it's who cares if we know we already know
Sources and methods, you know. Who cares if we know?
We already know.
It's a long ball game for foreign intelligence services.
If a person was a source in 1960 and their family is still around in the country which
we're targeting, they don't see a distinction just because the person passed away.
The source.
Got it.
So the fear is that if we have, wait, let me understand what you just
said. Are you saying if we have informants that gave us the information that their family
is still around, you're worried about the world's going to find out about that family
and that family may be at risk?
In countries that are not friendly.
And plus, we have current informants who rely on protection as well,
and you don't want to diminish their confidence
that they'll be protected and names won't be disclosed.
So that's the arguments.
I'm not saying it's necessarily persuasive,
but it's one that has to be taken seriously.
Yeah, I would add one more to it.
I would add actually two more to it.
One of them would be China if you become president. Are you committing to creating a you know?
Similar to a warning Commission to go and find out what the hell happened with China
Well, he classified for instance the end of his term
I mean he can classify declassify stuff
But the problem was during his term is that they they would just derail his declassification efforts
He was trying to declassify the targeting information,
the abusing of him on Russia.
He did it at the end of his administration.
They derailed it at the end.
And there was a dispute about where those records were.
I mean, we've been asking for them
because he declassified them, but they weren't released.
And many people, I think, including Cash Patel,
I don't know if he's been on the show, he's
talking about it.
I've always thought the raid of his home wasn't about what Trump had.
They wanted to know what Trump had on them and the cleanup and vacuum documents that
they were concerned he might have had that would expose their criminality against him.
Yeah, I mean, listen, we'll find out. All I'm saying is that's something that I'm interested in.
Last story before we wrap up here. The story comes out about DOJ can't release Biden's, you know,
communication with her, the audio, because they're worried about deep fake.
How much you know about this story and what's your position on it?
Well, that came up in our legal case. You know, we've got the FOIA lawsuit for
those actual audio files. Now, I'm not a lawyer. I've been doing FOIA for 30 years
at Judicial Watch or 26 years. I've never seen an argument like that. I mean, the
idea that you can't get a government document
or an audio or a video because a third party
somewhere down the line might mess with it
would end for you.
It would mean that no document in theory could be released
because it could be manipulated further down the line.
Ever. Right.
You can use that as a...
And it's such an absurd legal theory.
I was thinking, I've been trying to kind of think,
why would they push it? Why would they even say this?
Because it's just so absurd and there's no lawful basis for it.
And I think they're kind of running these arguments
because they really are obsessed with controlling AI, the left is,
and censoring it.
And to me, this is kind is some sort of ideological throwaway
where they're throwing it into this case
because they want to regulate AI and control AI outputs.
There's a whole story in the Washington Post today
complaining about how the federal government may not
move fast enough to restrict speech related to,
you know, to restrict AI related speech on the campaign. They don't want AI torelated speech on the campaign.
They don't want AI to be used on the campaigns
without disclosures and regulation.
They're desperate to regulate AI.
And I think this argument is part of it.
And also, they're also desperate to keep these audios away.
Why, Bill?
Why?
Because they will demonstrate the transcript, been they admitted in our filing was manipulated
they've dropped words like I I I or
Or stutters or things like that and and or something like that or us or a's
The sort of thing if you heard in an audio would suggest
falsehoods
memory lapses
anxiety mental incompetence.
All of that is lost in the transcript when you edit it that way, but would obviously
come through in the audio.
And they've got this political challenge with people's concerns about his cognitive issues.
And we had a special counsel who used his cognitive issues that were present during these interviews
as an excuse not to prosecute him.
And it's going to be proven right
with the release of these audios.
I mean, that's the conclusion I draw,
because they're just making up new, just crazy reasons
to withhold the information.
They're not legal reasons.
It sounds like some crazy politico said, you say whatever it is you need to say to delay
the release of these records. So I think we're eventually going to get the
audios. Do you think we are? But not at the time frame people want. By the time we
get it, it's gonna be too late. It's not like you can do anything about it. Tom? And I
think there's a proxy out there. First of all, the first part I thought was
ridiculous. We're not releasing the first part I thought was ridiculous.
We're not releasing the audios
because someone could tamper with them
or use them as source material to create deep fakes.
Well, that's like saying we've decided
against issuing paper money
because someone might counterfeit it.
Right, it's ludicrous.
Then you flip it over the other way and you say,
okay, what's really going on here?
Because you get past ludicrous point one and say that's ludicrous
So what's really going one and PBD?
I was thinking about the tick-tock bill remember the tick-tock bill the band tick-tock bill
I had nothing to do with tick-tock had my everything to do with giving
New powers to the government over all social media and websites that might otherwise be objectionable
And I think that there's a second underlying part here
that they are worried about and using it as an opportunity.
You know, and it occurs to me,
I have a little different view on TikTok,
but it occurs to me one way to undermine the real audio
is to suggest there's a lot of deep fakes
and you can't even trust the real audio when it comes out.
So maybe they're just planning ahead.
Let me tell you, that is a strategy you're gonna hear
used by everybody for decades to come, okay?
Was that you on the phone, babe?
No, no, that's a deep fake audio.
That wasn't me, that was somebody else.
Was that you on the, no, no, that's not me.
Somebody else did that, right? wait no no as I wouldn't that's not me somebody else did that right?
It's not even my recording calling that is you can't believe your own eyes
You can't believe your own you ever seen a movie primal fear with Edward Norton. Yeah with Richard Gere. Yeah, it's like yeah, you know
There's two guys. There's whatever the one brother and the other brother. What was the brother's name turns to me wait a minute
Yeah, the kid. How did you know?
He starts clapping the beloved Archbishop Rushman
with the video of him and the girl and all this stuff.
Yeah, he didn't do it.
The brother did it.
But to me is that can be used so many times,
they're gonna be using this as well.
Last but not least, did you see the story
about Wall Street Journal, how Biden's seen now the exposure on his health and all the reaction and all that, and the left being
upset saying, this is a MAGA writer writing this, where at the same time the lady goes
on CNN and says, no, this was actually bad when we're seeing how he's behaving, how
is he acting.
How much of an impact does that have at this point of the game?
I think there's probably some internal democratic pressure to remove him from the ticket and it kind of reflected in stories like
that. Time magazine had similar conclusions about his their big
interview. They wasn't as direct as Washington Wall Street Journal. It was
just based on their interaction. If I were running the House I'd be holding
hearings on the 25th Amendment. I think there are significant cognitive issues
for him and I think it's a national security issue. It places us all at risk.
Our friends or enemies make calculations based on the perceived strength of the
United States and his cognitive challenges make us look weak and I think
would encourage our friends and enemies to take steps they might otherwise
not take in a way... places are interested risk
do you think there's also
i think that's
tom i think that is the mature
forward-thinking assessment
in terms of uh... global position
of the united states
uh... and i i agree with that i also think there's this other
myopic more internal lock
and i think there's a group of republicans that don't want to touch the 25th because
what they don't want is Kamala Harris, number one.
But number two, what they don't want is Gavin Newsom to emerge at the convention because
he's a more formidable opponent.
I think they want Biden as the opponent, that they're the ones that are with the more traditionalist Democrats that want to keep Biden, the allies that he does have, because there's certainly the squad
and a group in the Democrat party that are maintaining, they're being sort of muted,
but absolutely want it. Last week, the story was, everyone calm down, you know, we're not going to
replace him. Remember that? It was Dems talking to Dems. So I tend to think that there is a group of Republicans in there that don't want
the dominoes to fall in such a way that Gavin Newsom, it shows up at the
convention. And by the way, that's just my thinking, but I'm impressed with you. So
do you think I'm wrong? That's a fair analysis. I think that there are probably a lot of
Republicans who want Trump, who want Biden on the ticket
because they think he's the most easily beatable.
You know, I don't know if that's persuasive.
I always go back, I'm not, I'm a Republican nominally, but I'm not a Republican in my
approach on policy.
My view is what is the right thing to do?
And we have a crisis with Biden behaving and acting as he is. And that's got to be addressed
in some way. And now some might say, to be fair, well, the one way to address that is through the
election process. And this would be too disruptive. If you're worried about the way America looks now,
you don't want to get into a fight about the 25th Amendment. It will make us look even weaker. So
just wait for the election. So look, these are tactical issues,
I understand, but I think we need to acknowledge it's a crisis. I won't show you this video and
wrap up. Watch this video here. I agree. This is the lady from Wall Street Journal, okay,
after the claims about Biden's mental fitness on CNN. Go for it, Rob. Is one of the two reporters
on the byline of the story, and she's with us now. Siobhan, thank you so much for being with us. This story
obviously is making a lot of waves as you know. The headline, Behind Closed Doors, Biden Showing
Signs of Slipping. What does slipping mean and is the picture that is painted here different from
what voters are seeing in public? The picture that's being painted here is one of a president
who behind closed doors is very much the same as what you see in public.
Somebody who has good days, good moments, but also bad days and bad moments.
And the reason that's significant is the White House position has been
that if only you could see the president behind closed doors,
if only you could see what we see. He's absolutely sharp as a tack.
And so this aims to find out, well, what is the president like behind closed doors?
It's what's happening there, different from what the public sees.
And the answer is not very much.
Now, Siobhan, you write that most of those who said that Biden for a quarter of a year
were Republicans, but you noted that some democrats said that he showed his age
in several exchanges
not to repeat reynolds question but i'm i'm wondering what showed his age and
tales because
it there are several instances in the piece were different counters
can be read different ways and and people came away from meetings with
different questions
of what happened so i'm wondering how you navigated
that any report he said it's it's fair that is very very tricky terrain but we for meetings with different impressions of what happened. So I'm wondering how you navigated that in your reporting.
So it's fair.
That is very, very tricky, Toreen.
But we focused on three meetings in particular all over the course of the past year.
And there were things like mumbling, speaking in such a low voice that people could only
hear every other word or couldn't understand what he was saying.
This over-reliance on note cards, using note cards to make what were very obvious points
and using them in ways that affected the spontaneity of the conversation.
Having a loose command of the details.
Things like in the Ukraine meeting we talked about in January of this year, using note
cards to make the point that Ukraine aid needed to be on the table when everybody in that room, by and large, agreed that Ukraine aid needed to pass.
That wasn't the question.
The question is, how do we do this quickly?
And so it is the preponderance of the detail that we gathered that led to that headline.
Wow.
Doesn't get worse than that, by the way.
That's CNN right there for you.
That's a pretty wicked answer.
Yeah.
Not wicked. I mean, that's wicked. And and by the way she seems very reasonable and straight up so we also
fact we all saw Fauci testify this mm-hmm
Fauci's two years older than Biden compare and contrast Fauci's cognitive
competence yeah with Biden it's not about age he's facing age-related
cognitive decline that's readily apparent.
He's at the D-Day ceremonies this week, further embarrassing the country.
And I keep on saying there's a national security interest in ensuring that the president is
up to speed and is capable.
And Trump's of a similar age.
He's not that much younger, but it's know, it's clear Trump's with it.
And by the way, this happened earlier today.
I don't know if you saw this with the president and Jill, and he was with Macron and his husband.
I'm sorry, his wife.
And they're going through the whole thing.
You know, watch what happens here, Rob, if you can play this clip.
He's telling something.
Distinguished guests, please welcome the honorable Lloyd J. Austin.
No, but do you have the clip of him walking away, Rob?
That's the one.
Is he trying to sit down?
Oh, you have to see what happens right here.
So he leaves, then Macron is like, what am I supposed to do?
And Macron is the one, because today's D-day, right? it's macron is going and shaking hands with those who served and
Joe and Jill have walked away from the whole thing watch this
Watch my chrome macrons like what do you want me to do?
He runs up.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for your service.
That's supposed to be Joe Biden doing that.
Yeah, those are the Americans.
Not Macron.
Macron's not our president.
Those are Americans.
Look at this.
They want that from the president.
Yeah, this is the last of the D-Day invaders wearing their medals, wearing their hat, certifying
their area of service.
They were supposed to have their hands shook by the President of the United States, the
Commander in Chief, who walked away.
And the President of France is doing his best with very official music playing to go along and honor them.
You could do an entire show of videos like that.
It's not even a controversial point.
That's just today though.
That's today.
I'm just giving you the latest.
Anyways, appreciate you for coming out, gang.
We're going to put the link below for Judicial Watch.
If you want to go learn more about what Tom does, you'll find all the material on the
website or it'll be in the chat, the description, all of it for you to learn more.
Tom, once again, thanks for coming.
I appreciate your work.
Tom Hicks Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Good meeting you.
Yvonne Perret Likewise.
Bye-bye.