#2219 - Donald Trump AI transcript and summary - episode of podcast The Joe Rogan Experience
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Episode: #2219 - Donald Trump
Author: Joe Rogan
Duration: 03:06:49
Episode Shownotes
Donald Trump is currently the 2024 Presidential Candidate of the Republican Party. He previously served as America’s 45th president, and is also a businessman and media personality.
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Summary
In this episode of 'The Joe Rogan Experience,' Donald Trump discusses his journey from a media personality to the presidency, reflecting on his transition and challenges in entering politics. Trump shares insights into his time in the White House, touching on historical figures like Abraham Lincoln and Robert E. Lee. He discusses his presidency's unique challenges, including media bias, disloyal advisors, and economic strategies primarily regarding tariffs and manufacturing. Trump also critiques current political leadership and highlights issues concerning environmental regulations and energy policies. Additionally, the episode delves into topics like health, election integrity, and international diplomacy.
Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (#2219 - Donald Trump) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.
Full Transcript
00:00:03 Speaker_01
The Joe Rogan Experience.
00:00:06 Speaker_02
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day. All right, we're rolling. Good to see you, sir. Here we go.
00:00:17 Speaker_02
One of the things I wanted to talk to you about, I wanted to play this, but we decided we shouldn't play it because it could get copyright strike and we don't want to get the episode, we don't want anybody to have any sort of a way to get it down.
00:00:30 Speaker_04
Sure.
00:00:30 Speaker_02
But it was the episode of you when you were on The View, and I think it was 2015 or 2006, like when you were running for president.
00:00:39 Speaker_00
Right.
00:00:41 Speaker_02
You got introduced as our friend Donald Trump. Whoopi Goldberg gives you a big hug and a kiss. Joy Behar gives you a big hug. Barbara Walters gives you a big hug. They all loved you. They were all talking about how you might be
00:01:00 Speaker_02
You might be conservative in your financial positions, but you're very liberal socially. They were talking about you as such a favorable light. The audience was cheering.
00:01:13 Speaker_02
And then you actually started winning in the polls, and then the machine started working towards you.
00:01:19 Speaker_02
But there's probably no one in history that I've ever seen that's been attacked the way you've been attacked, and the way they've done it, so coordinated and systematically.
00:01:31 Speaker_02
And when you see those same people in the past, very favorable to you, like Oprah, when you were on Oprah's show, she was encouraging you to be president.
00:01:38 Speaker_04
Last week, I did one of her last shows, I think, maybe Thursday or Friday, that was a big deal, being on Oprah's show, the last one. And I was like one of the last shows in that last, that final week. And I said, boy, we've come a long way since that.
00:01:53 Speaker_04
What was it like? Well, the concept, it was really like two different lives. You know, I had a very wonderful life, but I wanted to do this. The Apprentice was still going very strong. We had 12 seasons. And we had actually 14 seasons, 12 years over.
00:02:10 Speaker_04
They had a couple of them.
00:02:11 Speaker_02
Well, they canceled The Apprentice when you were running for president, correct?
00:02:15 Speaker_04
No, they had Arnold Schwarzenegger do it. I was involved in that. And I had enough of it. And we did great. It was doing great. But they wanted me to stay. They all came to see me. They said, we're going to give you a contract.
00:02:27 Speaker_04
They wanted to extend my contract. Mark Burnett is a great guy. And they wanted to extend the contract. Mark said, you're crazy. Don't run. Don't run. Nobody gives up prime time, they said. You know, it's one of those little things, which is probably true.
00:02:40 Speaker_02
Nobody gives up prime time, though, for being president?
00:02:43 Speaker_04
For running, well, for running against 20 some odd people, you know. Turned out to be 18. 18 professional people, you know, mostly politicians. They said, who would do this? I mean, it's a long shot. Actually, the heads of NBC came over.
00:02:57 Speaker_04
Paul Talegny, all the top people came over to see me, try and talk me out of it, because they wanted to have me extend. The Apprentice was doing well. So it was 14 seasons. It was 12 years.
00:03:08 Speaker_04
We had one, two seasons where we had a double, which rarely happens. It was just a hot show. And I said, you know, I want to do this. What happened is previously, like three years, four years before that, they did a poll. They had Mitt Romney.
00:03:23 Speaker_04
And somehow they put me in a poll. And I blew everybody away. I blew him away, which isn't that hard, frankly. But I blew everybody away. And I said, that's interesting, because I never really gave it that much real thought.
00:03:35 Speaker_04
I thought about it, but never real thought. But I saw these polls were very good. And so I was thinking about doing it then, but I had a contract with The Apprentice.
00:03:42 Speaker_04
Plus, I was building two big buildings at the time, and I wanted to make sure they got finished up properly, and it was one of those things. The kids were just sort of getting involved.
00:03:50 Speaker_04
They're very capable kids, but they were getting involved early on. So I did that. I got them done. I had some very good successes. And I came on and then I thought about it for the next one after the Romney disaster. And I ran and I won against Hillary.
00:04:07 Speaker_04
It was quite an experience. But it was a different life because, you're right, the view. I was in the view many, many times. And they loved me.
00:04:16 Speaker_02
Just the way people would talk. I mean, even if people had criticisms about you, people that didn't like you, there was always feuds and stuff like that.
00:04:21 Speaker_02
But the reality was the thing turned on you when they found out that you were going to be president. It was very coordinated. And some people are catching on to that now.
00:04:31 Speaker_02
There's a lot of people that were longtime Democrats like Elon and Bill Ackman and all these different, very intelligent people.
00:04:38 Speaker_04
And they support me now. Bill Ackman supports me. He's been very supportive too.
00:04:42 Speaker_02
This is what I wanted to ask you. What was it like when you actually got in? Because nobody really can prepare you for that. When you're running for president, you don't really know what it's going to be like when you actually get into office.
00:04:54 Speaker_02
What did you think it was going to be like?
00:04:56 Speaker_04
So do you mean in office or when I decided to run?
00:04:58 Speaker_02
No, when you got in. When I was in.
00:05:00 Speaker_04
So when I was in and won and was in the White House, essentially. Well, first of all, it was very surreal. It's very interesting. When I got shot, it wasn't surreal. That should have been surreal.
00:05:12 Speaker_04
When I was laying on the ground, I knew exactly what was going on. I knew exactly where I was hit. They were saying, you were hit all over the place because there was so much blood from the ear. You would know that better than anyone.
00:05:23 Speaker_04
When they get the ear torn up... Ears bleed a lot, yeah. Anyway, so, and I was thinking the other day, When that happened, I really knew where I was. I knew exactly what happened. I said I wasn't hit anywhere.
00:05:37 Speaker_04
With the presidency, it was a very surreal experience, okay? And what's day one like?
00:05:44 Speaker_02
You win, you get inaugurated, holy shit, I'm the president.
00:05:47 Speaker_04
Yeah, that's what happened. So I'm driving down Pennsylvania Avenue. I just built a building on Pennsylvania, you know, the hotel, the old post office it was. We called it Trump National Hotel. And we sold it to the Waldorf Astoria.
00:06:01 Speaker_04
And it was a wonderful thing. But I'm driving down, I'm passing the hotel. You've never seen so many motorcycles, police, military. You know, it was a major thing. I got off really the first time I used Air Force One, landed.
00:06:17 Speaker_04
And we're coming down, and it was very beautiful. I mean, it was incredible. And we're going down Pennsylvania Avenue in the opposite direction. You know, normally you're used to going one way, and all of a sudden you're going the other way.
00:06:29 Speaker_04
The street was loaded up, and I wanted to go out, and I wanted to wave to everybody, but that wasn't smart. You know, the kids, a little bit dangerous, right? I mean, when you watch, like, Kennedy and some others, right?
00:06:44 Speaker_04
But I really felt I don't know the love was so crazy.
00:06:46 Speaker_04
And so I Did get out of the car for a brief, you know, just for a very short walk I thought it was very important to do and Melania got out with a beautiful dress on that became sort of a staple it was people loved it and Baron and were walking down the street but where it really got
00:07:06 Speaker_04
Amazing. We get to the White House, and now it's a little bit before dark. Beautiful. And we went up to the President's quarters. They call them the Presidential Quarters. And I'm standing in this beautiful hallway. You know, it's funny.
00:07:23 Speaker_04
Nobody ever talks about the White House as being beautiful inside. You know, you think it's going to be — everything is going to be all metal doors and stuff. It's not. It's so beautiful. I made my money largely on luxury.
00:07:35 Speaker_04
The hallway is like 25 feet wide, the ceiling heights are, it's so beautiful. But I was standing there and I said to the guys, I want to see the Lincoln Bedroom. I had never seen the Lincoln Bedroom. I'd heard about the Lincoln Bedroom.
00:07:50 Speaker_04
And I was standing with my wife. I said, do you believe it? This is the Lincoln Bedroom. I mean, it was like,
00:07:59 Speaker_02
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00:12:16 Speaker_04
It was it was amazing because it's like if you love the country, but here you are, the Lincoln Bedroom. And the bed, you know, he was very tall. He was 6'6", which then would be like, like Barron. It would be like Barron Trump. He's 6'9".
00:12:33 Speaker_04
But 6'6", he was very tall. Then on top of that, he wore... There it is. He wore that. Yeah, there it is. It's a long bed, elongated bed.
00:12:40 Speaker_04
And because very, you know, people were shorter than you see some of the chairs are very, very low to the ground, actually. But he had the long bed and they had, you had the Gettysburg Address right on that, right under that.
00:12:55 Speaker_04
You can't see it here, but right there, the original version of the Gettysburg Address. And this is the original, and I'm looking, and I just looked around, I said, do you believe this?
00:13:06 Speaker_04
Because I was never a, first of all, even if you were a politician, but I was never a politician. I sort of just started, right? And all of a sudden, I'm standing in the White House. And it was very, very surreal.
00:13:18 Speaker_04
That room was so beautiful to me, much more beautiful than it actually is. To me, when I looked at the bed, and the bed, you could see it was a little bit longer, had to be a little bit longer. He lost his son and they suffered.
00:13:30 Speaker_04
The two of them suffered from melancholia. They didn't call it depression. They called it melancholia and they suffered from it. He was a very depressed guy and she was a very depressed woman, more so than him.
00:13:45 Speaker_04
And on top of that, they lost their son, whose name was Tad. Tad. And it was just seeing it in the little pictures, a little tiny picture. I mean, you can't see the details there. A little tiny, everything in the way it was, a little tiny picture of Tad.
00:14:02 Speaker_04
who he lost, and it was devastating. And he was, you know, he was, look, he was in a war, and he was having a hard time because he couldn't beat Robert E. Lee.
00:14:14 Speaker_04
Robert E. Lee won like 13 battles in a row, and he was getting like a phobia, like a fighter, you know, a lot about the fight stuff. But, like, I went to a UFC fight, and it was a champion who was 14 and one, about a year ago. You would know the names.
00:14:33 Speaker_04
14 and one, and the only guy he lost to was this one guy, but the guy that he was fighting was like almost just an average fighter, lost numerous times, but he beat this one guy. So I said, okay.
00:14:45 Speaker_02
I really don't know who you're talking about.
00:14:46 Speaker_04
I'm trying to. I will figure it out. Okay. But about a year ago, but the point is that he lost, he wasn't nearly the fighter, but the one who was not nearly the fighter had beaten, he's the only guy that beat the champ, like five years before.
00:15:01 Speaker_04
And I said, I'll take the guy that won the other fight. And that's what happened. He beat him a second time.
00:15:06 Speaker_02
Sometimes psychological advantages.
00:15:08 Speaker_04
It's a crazy thing. Lincoln had a, I don't know, I've never read this. I heard it from people in the White House who really understand what was going on with with the whole life of the White House.
00:15:21 Speaker_04
But Lincoln had the yips about, in a way, as the golfers would say. He had a phobia about Robert E. Lee. He said, I can't beat Robert. Because Robert E. Lee won many battles in a row. He was just beating the hell out of them.
00:15:34 Speaker_04
You know, they tried to get Robert E. Lee to be on the North. But he said, no, I have to be with my state. And the state was his whole thing. And he went to the South.
00:15:44 Speaker_04
And he was, I've had generals tell me, we have some great generals, the real generals, not the ones you see on television, the ones that beat ISIS with me. We defeated ISIS in record time.
00:15:54 Speaker_04
It was supposed to take years, and we did it in a matter of weeks. These are great generals. These are tough guys. These are not woke guys. But their favorite general in terms of genius was Robert E. Lee. In terms of strategy, you mean? Strategically.
00:16:10 Speaker_04
He took a war that should have been over in a few days. And it was, you know, years of hell, a vicious war. And so here I am standing there. And again, I had never really done this before. You know, I ran. I ran a number of months before I won.
00:16:30 Speaker_04
I probably, I guess if you figured max it out, it would be a year, something like that. So I had never run for office. And I did well. I mean, I went into debates with 18 people, including me, and then slowly but surely they started to disappear.
00:16:46 Speaker_04
We had debates, good debates.
00:16:49 Speaker_02
Everyone's aware of all this stuff, but what I want to get to is like, what was the experience once you got inside? What did you think it was going to be like in terms of like your ability to govern?
00:16:58 Speaker_02
Like, this is your first experience governing anything. You've never been a governor. You've never been a mayor.
00:17:04 Speaker_04
Private stuff. Business.
00:17:05 Speaker_02
But now all of a sudden, you're inside the White House.
00:17:07 Speaker_04
The biggest thing was just that first moment of being in this hallowed, it was really a hallowed place to me. It was surreal. It was beyond. To me, that was the experience. It was a surreal experience. And then with time, that wears off.
00:17:22 Speaker_04
With time, it becomes, you know, you're a place where you stay. And I was doing a lot of, I had two things today, really focused on governing the country and survival.
00:17:36 Speaker_04
Because from the moment I won, before I got to office, all of a sudden, I mean, they came down. I mean, nobody has ever been treated that way. And you see that. I mean, you see we're in the Washington Post very early on.
00:17:50 Speaker_04
They said, well, now the impeachment stuff starts. And it did. I mean, it literally started from the beginning. So I had survival and run the nation. I had a combination. Most people don't have the survival. They get in.
00:18:02 Speaker_02
What did you expect, though, in terms of, like, once you got inside, you had to appoint all these people? How many appointments did you have to make in a very short amount of time?
00:18:10 Speaker_04
Well, you have actually 10,000 appointments now. They're different. You have big ones, and then they appoint 100 people and 200 people. But the president really is involved with approximately 10,000 appointments.
00:18:23 Speaker_04
So you'll appoint a secretary of state, and he or she will appoint a lot of people. So it's a lot. But in terms of major ones, you probably have like 100, but they're big ones. Treasury, state. And how did you know who to appoint? Well, I didn't.
00:18:42 Speaker_04
I had no experience. I was there 17 times in Washington, and I never stayed over. According to the press, which I think is probably right, over the years, I was only there 17 times, I never stayed over.
00:18:54 Speaker_04
So now I'm sitting there, I'm saying, this place is gorgeous, but you know, I don't know anybody.
00:19:00 Speaker_04
It's like you, you know, you go to certain areas and other areas, they may be great, Washington was great, Washington's not so great right now, we gotta fix it, we gotta make it better.
00:19:10 Speaker_04
A very dangerous place, very badly maintained place, we're gonna make it great, we're gonna make it better, we're gonna bring it back. But I wasn't a Washington guy, I was a New York guy.
00:19:20 Speaker_04
I was a New York builder and I built buildings in New York and I knew that whole world, but I didn't know the Washington world too well. And all of a sudden you're supposed to be appointing top people.
00:19:30 Speaker_02
So what did you think it was going to be like versus like, did you have any ideas of what it was going to be like and what was different?
00:19:36 Speaker_04
Well, I was always involved in politics, but usually from the standpoint of a donor. I was a donor. I was a big donor. I gave money to politicians. I enjoyed politics.
00:19:45 Speaker_02
Mostly Democrats, right?
00:19:47 Speaker_04
Both, really. Pretty much both. I actually have pictures of Ronald Reagan and me when I was very young.
00:19:52 Speaker_02
You were a Democrat until like what year?
00:19:54 Speaker_04
I was a Democrat. I could get you the exact, but the early 90s, the early 90s, I switched over eventually. Actually, they had a reform party. I was thinking about doing that for a little while, but then fortunately I didn't because it's very hard.
00:20:11 Speaker_04
You know, it's a two-party system. And anytime you hear third party, I know you like RFK Jr. and so do I. He's a fantastic guy. I do, but I thought that being an independent was nonsense. It doesn't work.
00:20:21 Speaker_04
It doesn't work because even if you do great, you're not going to get Congress. In other words, you need now to say, OK, now I'll get half of Congress. They're never going to vote for you. So even if you got there, which is very hard,
00:20:33 Speaker_04
And I know how you feel about Bobby, and I feel the same way, and he's now with us, but it's pure and simple. It's a two-party system.
00:20:43 Speaker_04
And somebody, I won't mention his name, but somebody spent $250 million trying to get the nomination as a Reform Party candidate or whatever, and they got just nowhere. You just get eaten. The system eats you alive.
00:20:57 Speaker_04
So it was really somebody that not only was new to Washington but was new to politics. In the office of the presidency, over the years, all those presidents, you've had 92% were politicians and 8% were generals.
00:21:20 Speaker_04
General Eisenhower, General Washington, right? General George Washington, he had generals. So it's 8% generals, no admirals, 8% generals. And 92% politicians, you know, they're politicians and they go on.
00:21:32 Speaker_04
So they never had a business guy or they never had a guy that wasn't elected to an office. They were all, like Ronald Reagan was really, he was a movie actor, but he became the governor of California for I think two terms, and then he ran.
00:21:46 Speaker_04
So you'd never had a thing like this. But I, you know, in terms of me, and sometimes I'd use it as an excuse, and I don't like having excuses actually, but I'd use it as an excuse.
00:21:58 Speaker_04
I had to rely on people that I respected or liked, but that I didn't know that well, because I didn't know them that well.
00:22:05 Speaker_04
Some of those people I campaigned against because you know when you have 18 people we had mostly politicians running in the election You know running in the primaries and they got knocked out one by one But I got to like some of them some of them.
00:22:17 Speaker_04
I didn't like at all. I don't like them now And I'd rely on them, and I'd rely on other people. So all of a sudden, people would come in, I'd like to recommend so-and-so to be Secretary of State, and I'd have three, four people recommend.
00:22:31 Speaker_04
One thing I can tell you, Joe, everybody wants the position. Of course. No, no, but sometimes I'll hear, a lot of people don't want to work with Trump because Trump is tough to work with, etc. Let me tell you.
00:22:41 Speaker_04
Everybody wants to be any one of these positions. They'd die for it. Of course. Now, they don't want to be known.
00:22:46 Speaker_04
I mean, there's a particular guy in New York, primarily, very big, very big, very successful, very strong, very political, although he's not a politician.
00:23:00 Speaker_04
He'd give anything to be Secretary of State, but if they ask him, no, I don't think I would do it, but in the meantime, begging for it, okay, begging. I believe you. Look, everybody wants it.
00:23:11 Speaker_04
By the way, no matter what you do, but it's very dangerous to pick somebody outside of a politician because a politician's been basically vetted for years. You pick a business guy,
00:23:23 Speaker_04
And they've never been vetted at all and they're the head of a big company or something, but they've never been vetted. You know nothing about his personal life. You know nothing about where he's been.
00:23:32 Speaker_04
When you put them in, it's a little bit dangerous because all of a sudden they get checked up and you hear things that you're saying, wow, this is not going to work out too well. So it's very dangerous.
00:23:42 Speaker_04
Picking people that are outside of politics is somewhat dangerous.
00:23:47 Speaker_02
So you're kind of stuck in a position where you have to pick established people, and then the problem with established people is established people are already indoctrinated into the system.
00:23:55 Speaker_04
And they're stiffs in many cases. Stiffs. They're survivors. I find that, you know— What do you mean by stiffs? When you say stiffs— Stiffs, they don't have—they have nothing. They're smart and survive. One little thing.
00:24:09 Speaker_04
So there was a congressman years before I ran, and I was very close to him. And I needed a license on something, and he was very important in getting the license.
00:24:18 Speaker_04
But it was a little bit controversial, the license, this particular thing that was being licensed. But I was close to this guy. and helped him and everything else. And I went to him, I said, I'd like to have your help.
00:24:30 Speaker_04
And he said, let me take a look at it. I said, ooh, that's not too good. But I really hope you're going to help. Anyway, he tapped me along for a long period of time and ultimately didn't do it. And I said, you are a stiff.
00:24:43 Speaker_04
You could have done this thing so easy, et cetera. But it was controversial. He was in Congress for many years, like 28 years. And you know, there's a reason when somebody's there for 28 years, you got to be sort of smart, right?
00:24:54 Speaker_04
You know, you have all the scandals. And I realized he was a survivor.
00:24:58 Speaker_02
And so they never do anything controversial. They never take any chances or speak their opinion that's outside of it.
00:25:04 Speaker_04
Yeah, yeah, and yet I don't disrespect him for so I actually respected the guy more in a certain way I said, you know what he's been there like for 28 years and He made it through a lot of people don't make it through.
00:25:17 Speaker_02
It's a good way for non-exceptional people to survive it Well, it is.
00:25:20 Speaker_04
Yeah, it certainly is
00:25:22 Speaker_02
So you're in there, you have 10,000 appointments you have to make, so you're getting advice from people, and at one point in time, did you have a moment in time where you realized, like, these are bad choices, like some of these people I shouldn't have had in there?
00:25:36 Speaker_04
Oh yeah, I think, so the one question that you'll ask me, that I think you'll ask me, that people seem to ask, and I always come up with the same answer. The one mistake, because I had a lot of success. Great economy, great everything.
00:25:51 Speaker_04
Everything was great. The military rebuilt it. Biggest tax cuts in history. All this stuff. We did it. We had a great presidency. Three Supreme Court justices. Most people get none. You know, you pick them young. This way they're there for 50 years, right?
00:26:07 Speaker_04
So even if a president is there for eight years, oftentimes they never have a chance. I had three. It was sort of the luck of the draw. But I will say that it always comes back to the same answer. The biggest mistake I made was I picked some people.
00:26:23 Speaker_04
I picked some great people, you know, but you don't think about that. I picked some people that I shouldn't have picked. I picked a few people that I shouldn't have picked. Neocons? Yeah, neocons, or bad people, or disloyal people.
00:26:39 Speaker_02
People that were just bad? You got bad advice.
00:26:43 Speaker_04
Yeah. I mean, look, I mean, you're reading about them a little bit today. A guy like Kelly who was a bully, a bully but a weak person, you know.
00:26:50 Speaker_04
You know more about bullies than anybody probably around because you deal in a certain sport where the bullies are exposed very quickly. But you know, he's bad.
00:27:00 Speaker_04
Bolton was an idiot but he was great for me because I'd go in with a guy like a John Bolton. You know John Bolton. A friend of mine called me up. I was picking Bolton. Very smart guy. His name is Phil Ruffin. He's a very rich guy from Las Vegas.
00:27:15 Speaker_04
He's a great card player. He doesn't play cards, but he's a great player. He's just a natural. He's got poker sense, right? Good old poker sense.
00:27:24 Speaker_04
And Phil Ruffin is a very, very wise kind of a guy and one of the richest people around and has had great success and understands people. So it was in that I was picking Bolton, or I picked Bolton, he called up. He said, don't pick him. He's a bad guy.
00:27:43 Speaker_04
Now, he wasn't in politics at all. He's in various businesses. He said, he's a bad guy. It always works out bad with that guy. And I said, oh, man, I wish you told me this two weeks ago. I already hired him. You know, he's here. And he was right.
00:28:00 Speaker_04
But he was good in a certain way. He's a nut job. And every time I had to deal with a country, when they saw this whack job standing behind me, they said, oh, man, Trump's going to go to war with us.
00:28:15 Speaker_04
He was with Bush when they went stupidly into the Middle East. They should have never done it. I used to say it as a civilian. So I always got more publicity than other people and it wasn't like I was trying. In fact, I don't know exactly why.
00:28:29 Speaker_04
Maybe you can tell me why.
00:28:31 Speaker_02
Oh, I can definitely tell you.
00:28:32 Speaker_04
You said a lot of wild shit. Maybe.
00:28:36 Speaker_02
It's a lot of wild shit and then CNN in their all their brilliance by highlighting your wild shit made you much more popular Yeah, and they boost you in the polls because people were tired of someone talking in this bullshit pre-prepared politician lingo and even if they didn't agree with you they at least knew Whoever that guy is that's him.
00:28:57 Speaker_02
That's really him When you see certain people talk, certain people in the public eye, you don't know who they are. You have no idea who they are. It's very difficult to know.
00:29:06 Speaker_02
You see them in conversations, they have these pre-planned answers, they say everything, it's very rehearsed, you never get to the meat of it. One of the beautiful things about you is that you free ball.
00:29:17 Speaker_02
You get out and you do these huge events and you're just talking. We've highlighted you on the show many times where you did this Biden impression where he's walking around and he doesn't know what he's doing.
00:29:27 Speaker_00
It's funny. It's stand-up. It's funny stuff.
00:29:30 Speaker_02
But it's like you, and you were making fun of Elon one time, you were doing an Elon impression, it's great. You have like comedic instincts. Like when you said to Hillary, you'd be in jail. Like that's great timing.
00:29:41 Speaker_02
But it's like that kind of stuff was unheard of as a politician. Like no one had done that.
00:29:48 Speaker_04
And I think- You know it's funny, you need at least the attitude of a comedian when you're doing this business. This is a very dangerous business, first of all. It's a very tough business. It's the most dangerous business. For a job?
00:30:01 Speaker_02
Yes. I mean, other than going to war and being a firefighter or being a cop, it's the most dangerous business.
00:30:08 Speaker_04
Being president is the most dangerous.
00:30:10 Speaker_02
Especially you. I mean, you haven't even got to the election. There's been two assassination attempts. brush those out of the news like it was nothing. Yeah, they'd rather not talk about them.
00:30:20 Speaker_02
Imagine if there was assassination attempts on Biden, how hard people would be attacking the right, how they would be trying to get guns taken away from people. They would try to ramp up gun laws. They would try to figure out some way to blame you.
00:30:33 Speaker_02
If there was attacks on, if Biden got shot in the ear, we would have never heard the end of it.
00:30:38 Speaker_04
But I think he's in good shape because it's only consequential presidents. If you take a look at what's happened, look, I'm for having countries pay us billions and billions and trillions even dollars.
00:30:50 Speaker_04
I took in hundreds of billions of dollars from China. Nobody took in 10 cents, not one other president. I do things that make it, I mean, that don't necessarily make me so popular. I just do what's right.
00:31:02 Speaker_04
And when you do that, you know, you're more, look at, look at Iran. We would have never had the attack on Israel at all. Iran was broke. I told China, if you buy, you can't do business in the United States under any circumstances.
00:31:14 Speaker_04
We're going to go cold turkey with China. Some people think that would have been a good idea anyway. But if you buy any oil, one barrel of oil from them, you're not doing business. I said that to many countries. Iran was broke.
00:31:26 Speaker_04
They had no money for Hezbollah. They had no money for Hamas. They had no money. But I make myself, you know, I mean, I understand what I'm doing. You make yourself a target. And it's a very dangerous business.
00:31:39 Speaker_04
But if you just look at statistically, so I said I sort of think, I don't know if it's right, but one-tenth of one percent for a race car driver. Yeah, it's pretty dangerous business, right? Yeah. One-tenth of one percent.
00:31:52 Speaker_04
For a bull rider, I tell you, to me, these guys that ride the bulls is worse than UFC. These guys, you see these big monster bulls and you see it in slow motion where the foot is like, you know, an inch away from the head.
00:32:06 Speaker_04
If it hits him, the guy's gone. But they die. You know, they die. So one tenth of one percent die. Yeah. One tenth of one percent die. Right. And they certainly get hurt badly. Really. I mean, they can't walk after a certain period of time.
00:32:17 Speaker_04
But with a president. if you look at the assassination attempts. And attempts, too. And attempts. No, it's a very dangerous position. I never thought of that, by the way, when I did it.
00:32:28 Speaker_04
You know, you don't tend to... Did you just assume because people loved you on The Apprentice they were going to love you as a president?
00:32:33 Speaker_02
Well, I figured it would be so easy. You know, it's very interesting. Well, it probably would have been if the media didn't attack you the way they did, if they didn't conflate you with Hitler. I mean, even today, like,
00:32:44 Speaker_02
Kamala was talking about you and Hitler. They're going to take what you said about Robert E. Lee. Oh, Donald Trump wishes the South won. He loves Robert E. Lee. That's right. He loves Robert E. Lee.
00:32:51 Speaker_02
They love to take things out of context and distort things.
00:32:55 Speaker_04
But they don't even have to take them out. They make them up entirely. They do that, too. But you know, it was interesting when you mentioned the—I was very popular, and all those people loved me.
00:33:09 Speaker_01
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00:34:09 Speaker_02
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00:34:39 Speaker_04
7 central on Paramount Network and they're so they're so stupid and Joy she would every time she'd see me like I'd be in the theater or something It's just you have to be on the show again. Come on. Come on. Let's go. We have she loved you
00:34:54 Speaker_02
You love me. That episode, people should watch that episode just to see what we're talking about. Like I said, we don't want to get a copyright strike, so we're not going to put it up, but if you watch the episode, it's bananas.
00:35:04 Speaker_02
It's like an alternative universe. And it's only nine years ago.
00:35:09 Speaker_04
Whoopi loved me. Whoopi loved you. Gives you a hug and a kiss. And how about that other one, the new one on there, the one from my administration? She writes me a letter, you're the greatest president. She leaves.
00:35:19 Speaker_04
You know, she worked as an assistant press secretary. I hardly knew her. But she leaves and she writes me this gorgeous letter. What's her name? She was, I don't even know. Anyway, she was in the administration. She's on there currently.
00:35:33 Speaker_04
Sits on the far right-hand side, whatever the hell her name is. And she writes a letter, the most beautiful letter. She's quoted in the paper, he's a consequential, he was the greatest president, blah, blah, blah.
00:35:45 Speaker_04
Then all of a sudden she goes in the view and she starts hitting the hell out of me. Because they won't hire her unless, I've had many people go on CNN and they call and say, I don't know what to do.
00:35:54 Speaker_04
They want to pay me a lot, but I have to be negative on you." I said, be negative, that's okay. There are guys on, like CNN, they won't hire them.
00:36:01 Speaker_04
Sean Duffy is a congressman and he retired, he got a good job with CNN, but he was only positive about Trump. So they kept him, but they would never put him on. I mean, I respect what he did. He could have gone negative. I tell people, go negative.
00:36:18 Speaker_04
Let my friends make the money. It's so crooked. The press is so crooked.
00:36:21 Speaker_02
It's crooked, but it's also, they're diminishing themselves. They're hurting themselves. They're killing all their credibility. And it's opening up the credibility to new media. It's opening up the credibility to independent media.
00:36:32 Speaker_04
The worst I've ever seen though? And I've seen the worst. I mean, I've been a part of it. I've seen the worst. Kamala goes on 60 minutes, gave an answer that a child wouldn't give. It was so bad. And 60 Minutes took the answer out.
00:36:49 Speaker_04
They took the whole, and they put another answer in.
00:36:52 Speaker_02
They edited it deceptively.
00:36:53 Speaker_04
Which didn't make sense either, but it was better. They took the, well, it wasn't editing. It was fraud. This was not editing. Editing is where I'll give an answer, and they'll take a couple of words and change them around.
00:37:04 Speaker_04
Or they might even take a sentence or two off, which is very bad. It's sort of bad. You know, I'd give an answer, which was a very good answer. I always talk about, you know, I like to give long the weave. You know, I like to... Yeah.
00:37:16 Speaker_02
You like to weave things in. Yeah.
00:37:17 Speaker_04
But when you do the weaves, and you have to be very smart to do weaves, when you do the weave, look at this, just in this one thing, we're talking about little pieces over here, but it always ends up... Gotta get it back to home. No, no.
00:37:26 Speaker_04
It comes back home for the right people. For the wrong people, it doesn't come back home, and they end up in the wilderness, right? But they can take my answer, and you know what, they may take a little piece of it out or something.
00:37:38 Speaker_04
And they use the term, yes, we want to save time. Well, it's not, but I've never heard. I think it's the biggest scandal in broadcast history, what happened to CBS. So you have CBS 60 Minutes, that's a news program, it's not an entertainment program.
00:37:53 Speaker_04
It's under their news, it's the head of their news thing. She gives an answer that shows that she's essentially incompetent. And they took the answer. Could you imagine them doing that for me?
00:38:03 Speaker_02
We can show it if you want people to see it. Can we show it? No. We get in trouble. We'll get copyright strike. OK. I'll indemnify you. But it's it's drastic. But what was interesting was the other full version was available initially. It was like a preview.
00:38:20 Speaker_04
Somebody made a big mistake.
00:38:22 Speaker_02
Somebody put that preview out there. Some kid put the preview out. Exactly.
00:38:24 Speaker_04
And then the bosses did this or that.
00:38:26 Speaker_02
And then all of a sudden they said, we got a problem. Exactly. And then they got caught by mistake.
00:38:31 Speaker_04
But don't you think that's a bit, to me, and don't forget, this is election interference and fraud. And it's 60 Minutes, it's their news division. It's a big deal. They give those licenses out, Joe, for free. They should pay a fortune.
00:38:47 Speaker_04
They're worth a fortune. They give them out for free because they're using the public airwaves. With cable, you don't have that. Cable's different. But, you know, it's just a different deal. But with the networks, they give those licenses.
00:39:00 Speaker_04
They're worth billions of dollars. They give them out free. But you have to be honest and all. That was bad. I think that David Muir and that woman that was aside, I never even heard of her, but They kept interrupting me.
00:39:12 Speaker_04
It was like I said, how many people am I debating here? I got this one and I got you two. But he went after me 11 different times. You know, it's interesting. I always thought he was a nice guy, but he's just like the rest of them, you know.
00:39:24 Speaker_02
Well, that's his job, unfortunately, and I'm sure... No, but not when they're wrong. You're right. Well, the problem was they fact-checked you and they didn't fact-check her. Not at all.
00:39:32 Speaker_02
And one of the most egregious examples of that was when she said that there are no troops right now deployed in war zones. There's a very famous viral video that went online of troops in a war zone saying, well, what the fuck are we then?
00:39:47 Speaker_02
Because there's thousands of them. Dan Crenshaw the congressman posted on his Instagram all of the various examples of troops that are deployed, thousands and thousands of troops that are currently deployed.
00:40:02 Speaker_02
But the point is, if this is going to be an actual real debate and not a propaganda exercise, if it's going to be a real debate, you have to fact-check everybody. Like if someone says maybe she thought there was no... which is also a problem.
00:40:14 Speaker_02
So it's one of two things. It's either it was not true, it was a lie on purpose, which is terrible, or it was the opposite. It was ignorance, which is also terrible.
00:40:24 Speaker_04
Well, Joe, when I said crime is soaring, he said, no, no, crime has gone down. I said, where did you hear that one? Crime has gone down. I mean, I'm debating with this guy.
00:40:34 Speaker_02
Well, there was amended FBI statistics that came out after that that showed that crime had gone up substantially.
00:40:40 Speaker_04
And by the way, the statistics were a fraud, because when they put out the statistics, they didn't include some of the worst places. They didn't include some of the worst cities, some of the most deadly places.
00:40:50 Speaker_04
But when the real numbers came out, I turned out to be right.
00:40:53 Speaker_02
You turned out to be right, but then there's another problem. Unreported crime is way up.
00:40:57 Speaker_02
Because people have lost, look, the morale that the police department has in a lot of these cities where they've done this defund the police bullshit, the morale of these poor cops, it's fucking horrible. It's the dumbest idea of all time.
00:41:08 Speaker_02
But what they've done is they've made these cops feel terrible, like good cops. I think cops are just like everybody else. Most of them are great. It's like everybody else.
00:41:17 Speaker_02
But if you run into one carpenter and he does a shitty job in your house, you say, carpenters fucking suck. But they don't suck.
00:41:24 Speaker_02
Most of them are great, and that's the key thing with cops, but the point is they did all of these things in this very foolish way, and these cops are suffering the consequences of it, and so subsequently what happens is a lot of crime is unreported.
00:41:39 Speaker_02
A lot of crime, you call the cops, they're too busy, they can't even get to you, or your house got broken into, sorry, it doesn't even make a report. There's a lot of people that just give up.
00:41:49 Speaker_04
It's so sad what's happened, and I'll tell you what. I go to police funerals, and we went to one in Long Island. I visited the family in Long Island, a very big deal. It's so dangerous. People don't realize. The car, dark windows, pull over.
00:42:08 Speaker_04
He's a gentleman. Police pull over. Door opens. Guy comes out firing. even if they were allowed to pull out their gun, which they're not. They can't, you know, pull out their gun. Do it in time, yeah. They still wouldn't have time.
00:42:18 Speaker_04
It's every cop's first nightmare. They open a door, and he was killed, and his partner was hurt, he was killed, and you don't have, I mean, you don't even have an eighth of a second to think, and it is such a dangerous job.
00:42:33 Speaker_04
That in particular, think of it, you go up to a car, you don't know who's sitting there with a gun, and if they have a gun, you really don't have a chance. You're not allowed to have your gun out, by the way, they have very strict rules.
00:42:42 Speaker_04
So, number one, but even if you could have your gun out, the door opens and bullets start firing out. And especially where they have the dark windows, where they have the darkened windows. It is such a dangerous profession.
00:42:57 Speaker_04
And it's very hard to get cops now because they're not given any backup. And you're right. You know, they have like an eighth of a second to make a decision that's going to change their life.
00:43:08 Speaker_04
If they make the wrong decision, they're going to end up on the front page of every newspaper in the country, and they're going to lose their house, and their pension, and their job, and their wife is going to be gone, and everything's going to be gone.
00:43:19 Speaker_02
Absolutely. And here's another thing that people don't talk about. How many of them have PTSD? Probably most of them.
00:43:24 Speaker_02
Yeah, these guys are seeing people shot all the time, you know I've talked to a ton of cops about it and you know a lot of cops commit suicide a lot of cops are deeply depressed a Lot, but we have to give them back their dignity.
00:43:36 Speaker_04
We have to we can't We just have to give her back. You said it's so good. You never hear so anybody say that you're never gonna have it Perfect. You're gonna have a bad Apple
00:43:46 Speaker_02
In everything, in every profession.
00:43:47 Speaker_04
But every time there's a bad apple, that gets massive publicity, and it taints everybody else.
00:43:52 Speaker_02
But it's also this very irresponsible thing where people say, defund the police, get rid of the police. Even Kamala Harris was a part of that. It's a very stupid way to look at it. What you should do is fund the police. You should have better training.
00:44:04 Speaker_02
You should have cops that feel more appreciated. You should have something that helps mitigate this PTSD that all of them suffer through.
00:44:12 Speaker_04
She was a big part of defund the police. That was a big thing for her, defund the police, always defund the police.
00:44:18 Speaker_02
It's a political idea.
00:44:20 Speaker_04
But anybody with that political thought, I don't think should be running for president. And I think people are getting wise to it. You know, we're doing pretty well.
00:44:28 Speaker_04
Now, I don't know, maybe in a week from now say, sorry about that, I was wrong, but we're leading everything. And I think we're going to have a very good election. But I tell people, because people are starting to get to know her.
00:44:40 Speaker_04
But she was to fund the police. She was to all these transgender operations. You know, if you wanted a sex change and you were in detention and you demanded a sex change,
00:44:49 Speaker_02
They would give you a sex change. Well, the wildest one is this idea of giving free sex change to illegal immigrants. That's right. In detention. That is the wildest thing. Is that the biggest problem you have?
00:45:02 Speaker_02
You just walked here from Guatemala, you need to become a girl?
00:45:05 Speaker_04
But she was in favor of it. So think of it. Now she changed. She changed 15 policies. In fact, I'm going to send her a MAGA cap.
00:45:13 Speaker_02
She stole your idea about no tax for tips.
00:45:17 Speaker_04
I came up with this idea that, honestly, nobody ever heard of. Now, it took her two months, but you know what, all of a sudden... Well, it caught fire. And she just put it into a little speech.
00:45:27 Speaker_02
Yeah. It became popular.
00:45:28 Speaker_04
I think we still have that issue. I think that issue is a good one for us. But, no, we have a lot of good issues. You know, we had the other day, think of how simple some of these things are. We're trying to get cars built in the United States.
00:45:39 Speaker_04
Detroit has been really tough. It's been a disaster. They have a huge factory, a huge car auto plant being built by China in Mexico. Make cars, sell them in the United States, put everybody out of business, right? Here we go again.
00:45:51 Speaker_04
I said, if that plant is there when I'm president, I will put 100% or 200% tariffs on every car. They'll be unsaleable in the United States. And they just announced they're not going to build the plant because they think I'm going to win. Think of it.
00:46:05 Speaker_04
They're not going to build the plant. This was the biggest plant in the world. More than all of Michigan makes. That's how big. You know, this is what we're getting to.
00:46:15 Speaker_04
And I said, if that plan goes up, I want them to understand, if I win, I'm going to tax those cars at the rate of 100% or 200% apiece so that you won't be able to sell them in the United States.
00:46:27 Speaker_04
They just announced they're not going to build the plan.
00:46:29 Speaker_02
Yeah, I read that.
00:46:30 Speaker_04
I did a big favor for our country by doing that. And I'm not even there yet. To me, the most beautiful word, and I've said this for the last couple of weeks, in the dictionary today, is the word tariff. It's more beautiful than love.
00:46:46 Speaker_04
It's more beautiful than anything. It's the most beautiful word. This country can become rich with the use, the proper use of tariffs.
00:46:56 Speaker_02
It'll keep companies- Did you just float out the idea of getting rid of income taxes and replacing it with tariffs?
00:47:02 Speaker_04
Well, okay. Were you serious about that? Yeah, sure. But why not? Because we, ready? Our country was the richest in the, relatively, in the 1880s and 1890s. A president who was assassinated named McKinley. He was the tariff king.
00:47:18 Speaker_04
He spoke beautifully of tariffs. His language was really beautiful. We will not allow the enemy to come in and take our jobs and take our factories and take our workers and take our families unless they pay a big price. And the big price is tariffs.
00:47:36 Speaker_04
And he'd speak like that, but he was right. And then around in the early 1900s, they switched over stupidly to, frankly, an income tax. And you know why? Because countries were putting a lot of pressure on America. We don't want to pay tariffs.
00:47:49 Speaker_04
Please don't. Believe me, they control our politicians. If you look at the kind of numbers that these guys make, then and now. But we had a commission meeting in the, I think it was 1887. Think of this problem. We were so rich. We had so much money.
00:48:11 Speaker_04
We didn't know what to do. So they set up a blue ribbon commission on tariffs. And the sole purpose is what to do with all the money we had. We were so rich because we were taxing other people for coming in and taking our jobs. And China does it.
00:48:28 Speaker_04
That's what China did. If you want to open a factory and sell cars, if you build a factory here or have a factory, they don't take our cars. They wouldn't take our cars. But if you build a plant in China, you can do that. Elon did that.
00:48:42 Speaker_04
By the way, Elon is great. That guy is such a great guy. I think you're a fan of Elon. He is from a different planet. He's the greatest guy. That rocket coming in. I told the story once or twice.
00:48:57 Speaker_04
So you may have heard it, because his speeches have been good. Did you see the one last night? Yeah, I did. 29,000 people. And the one the night before was the same thing. We are rocking and rolling.
00:49:08 Speaker_04
But Elon, and I'm talking to this very important guy, I say, wait a minute, I'm looking at something. The television's unmuted, right? And I see this rocket. It's all brown from the heat. 10,000 degrees pouring down at thousands of miles an hour.
00:49:24 Speaker_04
And I see this thing. You know, it's like a 20-story building. And I say to this guy, he's an important guy. Wait a minute. Let me just put you down. Hold it. I got to see this. And I see this, and it's going to crash.
00:49:36 Speaker_04
I say, it's going to crash into the gantry. They call it a gantry. I said, oh man, that's going to be a disaster, because it's starting to get very close. And then all of a sudden, you see the flames in the bottom. And then you see the two arms grab it.
00:49:49 Speaker_04
Crazy. And I forgot the guy. I had him on the phone. No, I called Elon. I said, was that you? He said, that was me. And I said, who else can do that? He said, nobody. Russia can't do it. The United States, nobody can do it. You know, I set up Space Force.
00:50:05 Speaker_04
That was me. And that's the first time in 82 years that we opened another branch since the Air Force. And that's going to be one of our most important things. But think of what Elon does. And he did one other thing that I never heard of it. It's Starlink.
00:50:21 Speaker_04
I went down to North Carolina, Georgia, the different places. I followed it right down. And they had no communication. The polls were all knocked down. And one of the guys in North Carolina said, could you do me a favor? Do you know Elon Musk? Yes.
00:50:36 Speaker_04
He endorsed me. By the way, he gave me the nicest endorsement, too. He said, the country's going to fail. You should do the same thing, Joe, because you cannot be voting for Kamala. Kamala. You're not a Kamala person. I know you. I've watched you.
00:50:50 Speaker_04
I know him better than he does. You know what? Without speaking to you, I think I know you maybe almost as well as your wife. I have watched you for so many years. You're not a Kamala person. You're a Khabib person, but you're not a Kamala person.
00:51:03 Speaker_04
Nobody's gonna know who Khabib is, but... Oh, they know who Khabib is. He was not bad, right? Oh, he was phenomenal. But that's your kind of person.
00:51:11 Speaker_02
Your weave is getting wide. We're getting wide with this weave. No, no, my weave. But isn't it much better?
00:51:14 Speaker_04
I want to bring it back to tariffs. But wait, one second. Before we finish with tariffs, so they said, they said, could you get him? We need Starlink. And I call Elon. He got it for him so fast, saved so many lives. And I said, how was it?
00:51:26 Speaker_04
They said, better than the wires. You know, they couldn't put them in. They were all gone.
00:51:31 Speaker_02
I used it recently in Utah in the mountains.
00:51:34 Speaker_04
Did you find it good?
00:51:34 Speaker_02
Oh, it's phenomenal. It's the size of an iPad. You just set it down on the ground, you get high-speed internet. It's incredible.
00:51:40 Speaker_04
We're spending, just to show you, we're spending a trillion dollars to get cables all over the country, right? Upstate areas. where you have, like, two farms and they're spending millions of dollars to have a care.
00:51:54 Speaker_02
Elon can do it for nothing. Well, talk about the $42 billion that was wasted on this internet access program. They didn't get anybody access to the internet.
00:52:02 Speaker_04
They haven't hooked up one person yet.
00:52:03 Speaker_02
Not one person. They spent $42 billion. They could have gotten Starlinks to everybody with that kind of money.
00:52:09 Speaker_04
For almost nothing. Yeah. For a monthly charge.
00:52:11 Speaker_02
And it would have been incredible. And it's high-speed internet everywhere you want to go.
00:52:15 Speaker_04
And he wanted to do that. And he wanted to do it. How about this? They built the charger stations, right, in the Midwest. They built eight of them. They cost $9 billion. That's like a gas pump, right? They built nine gas pumps, except electricity comes out.
00:52:32 Speaker_04
They spent nine billion dollars, three of them don't work. The whole thing, there's so much waste. I could sit here and tell you about things that there's so much waste, abuse, and fraud.
00:52:45 Speaker_02
Oh, there's, yeah, I'm sure. I mean, I think everybody's aware of that.
00:52:49 Speaker_04
Let's get back to tariffs.
00:52:50 Speaker_02
When you're talking about, one of the criticisms of your administration was with tax cuts and with tariffs, you increase the deficit. So, what was the strategy behind that?
00:53:02 Speaker_02
And did you think it was going to increase the deficit by a substantial amount?
00:53:07 Speaker_04
We were ready to rock. I had a bad system. We had horrible tax policy. I made it great. with a much lower tax rate. So I took it from almost 40% down to 21%.
00:53:22 Speaker_04
Now I'm bringing it from 21 down to 15, but only if you make your product in the United States, which is great. People call me, they said, what a great idea. Nobody ever heard of that before. I don't care if they make the product in Japan.
00:53:34 Speaker_04
Why should I give up? So it's a 21. At 21, In the first year, we took in much more revenue than we did at almost 40. Think of that. It inspired. Now, we had other things, too. We were able to get people to bring back their money.
00:53:51 Speaker_04
You couldn't bring back your money. If you had money in Europe, like Apple, Apple had many billions of dollars outside. They couldn't bring it. There was no way to bring it back in. the bureaucracy, the documents, the whole thing.
00:54:05 Speaker_04
And also the tax was too high. You know, they wanted like half of it or something. Nobody's going to do that. So they leave their money in Japan and they spend their money there. That was part of what I did. The money came pouring back in.
00:54:17 Speaker_04
Apple took in hundreds of billions of dollars. They brought it back from overseas. They brought it in.
00:54:21 Speaker_02
So how does the deficit increase because of that?
00:54:23 Speaker_04
So what happened is this. We were ready to rock and roll. And then we had the COVID thing and we had to focus on that. And if we didn't give some businesses a hand, they would have all, you would have had a depression like in 1929.
00:54:38 Speaker_04
But we were ready to start. We would have very shortly been paying off debt. You know, we have $35 trillion in debt. And I'll never forget it. It was talking about from the standpoint of being in office.
00:54:53 Speaker_04
I'm in the Oval Office, and I have John McLaughlin and Fabrizio, the two very good pollsters, probably, I don't know, I would say the two best, who knows, but very good pollsters. And we're starting to think about running for a second term.
00:55:07 Speaker_04
And we had the greatest economy in history. Never has there been an economy like this.
00:55:13 Speaker_02
And you attribute that to lowering taxes and tariffs.
00:55:15 Speaker_04
Yeah, a lot of it. Two things. And also, I cut regulations more than anybody else.
00:55:20 Speaker_04
And I asked many of the businessmen from the big companies, the guys running the big companies, I'd say, so if you had your choice, you've had it now for a long time, what's more important to you, the tax cuts, you paid less tax, or the regulation cuts?
00:55:35 Speaker_04
Every one of them said the regulation cuts meant more. Who would think that, right? Because you don't equate it to dollars, but it actually is more dollars. We had it going, and then we just had to focus on something else.
00:55:49 Speaker_04
But they were sitting there, these two pollsters were sitting there, and they said, sir, if George Washington came back, And Abraham Lincoln was his VP, as opposed to Waltz. How bad is he, by the way?
00:56:04 Speaker_04
But if Abraham Lincoln was his VP, they couldn't beat you. And I'll never forget it. The following day, they said, something's happening in China, sir. Could we meet? I said, what's happening? People are dying.
00:56:21 Speaker_04
And it was all around the Wuhan lab, by the way. There are pictures with little lines, their body bags, all around the Wuhan lab.
00:56:31 Speaker_04
And I always said that from the beginning, Joe, was, you know, they tried to say first they said it was France and they blamed everybody. But then they say it was bats from a cave 2000 miles away. So we got hit with that.
00:56:43 Speaker_04
And despite that, we had the best economy. And when I gave it over, the stock market was higher than it was pre-COVID. I mean, nobody could even believe it. But we saved it. And we were helping businesses. They were dying.
00:56:59 Speaker_02
So it's your belief that if you had a second term, given the policies in place, the way the economy was booming, that you would have been able to pay off a lot of the debt. And that was the strategy.
00:57:10 Speaker_04
If we didn't have COVID, we would have been paying off debt, and we would have had... And don't forget, by growth, the word growth is actually more important in a way, because you could have the same debt, but if you doubled your growth, all of a sudden you're under-levered.
00:57:23 Speaker_04
But still, we should pay off debt. You know, if you viewed this $35 trillion right now, it's a lot. But if you look at the asset value, if you looked at it purely as an asset value, we have oil underground, we have water, we have mountains.
00:57:40 Speaker_04
I mean, the assets are so enormous. But regardless of that, we've got $35 trillion in debt, we should pay it off. And we would have started paying off debt and probably even giving further tax reductions. I want to get it down to 15%.
00:57:57 Speaker_04
We're going to do more business. But when you get hit with a COVID, everything stops and you have to keep these businesses alive. The businesses were dying. I mean, they were just dying. This whole place, this country was going to die.
00:58:09 Speaker_02
Are there influences outside of environmental that keep people from wanting to drill for oil and frack and do those sort of things? Outside of the environmental concerns, which are legitimate, of course.
00:58:21 Speaker_02
But are there other influences that maybe over-accentuate or over-exaggerate these environmental effects? Are people being influenced in a way where they're trying to keep us from producing American oil?
00:58:35 Speaker_04
Yeah. So, the environmental is the biggest tool for stopping growth, the biggest tool. The other is regulation.
00:58:44 Speaker_04
And if you speak to Elon, he said the regulation now to send a rocket up to anywhere, even if you do everything, it's almost, it's becoming impossible. but they use environmental in order to get people not to do anything.
00:59:01 Speaker_04
And sometimes I say, you know, I look at some of the, I know the environmental stuff better, because I had to build buildings in New York. I had to build, I had to do environmental impact studies.
00:59:11 Speaker_04
And I would see some of these guys that I'd hire for a lot of money, environmentalists that would get you through the process, and they'd be up in Albany, that's the capital of New York, and they're up there trying to make it tougher for guys like me.
00:59:23 Speaker_04
that were builders because they'd get paid more money. In other words, I had one guy, highly recommended, you know, I was good at getting permits. I was one of the kings of, I was always very good. But the environmental stuff was always horrible.
00:59:40 Speaker_04
They could slow a project down 10 years, 15 years. I had a project in Louisiana built, big LNG plant. It was for 14 years, it was gonna cost $18 billion, one of the biggest, like the Empire State Building, laying down on its side times four.
00:59:57 Speaker_04
massive on the coast, on the Gulf Coast. And they said, sir, they're going to give it up. I said, they shouldn't give it up. What's the problem? They can't get their environmental.
01:00:06 Speaker_04
They had environmental permits that would fill this whole room up to the ceiling. And they said there was one mistake on one little line. They wanted to do it all over again. I said, it's not going to happen. And I got them their permit instantly.
01:00:21 Speaker_04
And they built the plant. It's massive.
01:00:23 Speaker_02
So when you're saying that there's people that are making money by making it difficult, are you talking about lawyers?
01:00:30 Speaker_04
No, I'm talking about environmental consultants and lawyers.
01:00:33 Speaker_02
Environmental consultants profit off of dragging out the process. Absolutely. And how do they profit?
01:00:39 Speaker_04
And I'd probably do the same thing with them, to be honest with you.
01:00:44 Speaker_02
How do they do that? How do they make it?
01:00:47 Speaker_04
Let's say New York, they go to Albany. and they convince people that if you have a certain type of plant on the ground that's this big. in theory, valueless, that it's a rare plant and you cannot even touch it.
01:01:00 Speaker_04
You can't go near it, you can't put a building on it, you can't do anything. Or there's a little puddle, and they call it a lake. And you have to go by the standards of a lake. I said, no, no, that's a puddle. Oh, you have no idea.
01:01:14 Speaker_04
Guys are filling a little puddle, you have no idea what they do. And they use it as a way to stop you.
01:01:20 Speaker_02
They use it as a way to stop you and also as a way to generate money. It's a weapon. I'm curious, how are they generating money that way, though? Well, they get fees. They get fees. Massive fees.
01:01:29 Speaker_02
And people rely on them as experts because they're the people that they go to when they have to run these studies in the first place.
01:01:36 Speaker_04
But some of them are just bad guys, and they're trying to make it more and more difficult.
01:01:40 Speaker_02
And they have a lot of power.
01:01:42 Speaker_04
Yeah, I think they maybe had more. They didn't have as much with me because I would get through them, and I understood it. Look, I've done so many, they call it environmental impact study. I did so much to build a building.
01:01:55 Speaker_04
To build a building in New York is very tough. You gotta deal with, think of it, financing, unions, all the municipal stuff, environmental. Of all of it, to me, the toughest thing was the environmental.
01:02:10 Speaker_04
Because they could stop you cold with the environmental impact study stuff. And you hire a so-called expert. They say, sir, he's the one guy who can get you through the morass. It's a morass. It's horrible. They use it as a weapon.
01:02:23 Speaker_04
They use it all over the country.
01:02:24 Speaker_02
Right, but there are legitimate concerns about environmental impact. correct? Like look about the BP oil spill. There's a lot of things that do happen that are environmentally devastating. And you want to mitigate that as much as possible.
01:02:36 Speaker_04
You do. Look, I had, during our four years, we had the cleanest air and the cleanest water. I view it differently. I say air, and water. Remember this, it costs much more to do things environmentally clean. China doesn't do anything.
01:02:52 Speaker_04
When Kerry goes to see President Xi at China, which he probably doesn't even get to see him, but they look at him, oh yes, yes, we will do, oh yes, yes, we're going to do that, no more coal, no more coal, just, and then they approve 58 coal plants for the next, you know, every, they build a coal plant a week.
01:03:09 Speaker_02
They build a lot of coal plants. We've covered that.
01:03:11 Speaker_04
But let me just tell you though, so here we are cleaning and scrubbing everything and everything's got to, and the air's got to be pure. But in 3.8 days, that stuff floating over China is right over the top of us.
01:03:24 Speaker_03
Right.
01:03:24 Speaker_04
Same thing with the oceans. They dump their garbage into the Pacific Ocean. If you take a little cork and put it there, in about a week and a half, it'll be in front of Los Angeles. We're picking up their garbage. So nobody ever talks about that.
01:03:42 Speaker_04
But in a way, the bigger one is even the air. It's the currents. It's an amazing thing. It's been flowing that way for a million years, long before we were there.
01:03:51 Speaker_02
We share air with the whole world.
01:03:53 Speaker_04
Yeah.
01:03:54 Speaker_02
We get the Sahara dust clouds over here. Absolutely. We get dust clouds in Austin from the Sahara Desert.
01:04:00 Speaker_04
But we get the China, you know, they call it the China curse. We get the China curse that they're better and their air is dirty. You know, when I went there, I had a great relationship with President Xi. We got along very well.
01:04:13 Speaker_04
And they treated me better than anybody has ever been treated. Same thing with Saudi Arabia. A number of them. But they laid it out. And I said, this air is good. Do you know, they closed every factory one week before I got there from within 200 miles.
01:04:29 Speaker_02
That's like what Gavin Newsom did when Xi Jinping came to San Francisco. He cleaned it up. He cleaned it up. He got rid of all the homeless people.
01:04:35 Speaker_04
Isn't that terrible in a way? To think, you know, he cleaned it up and then it became a pigsty.
01:04:40 Speaker_02
Well, the dumbest thing is he said, when your friends come by, when you have visitors, you clean up your house. Like, how about just keep your fucking house clean? Can you imagine?
01:04:48 Speaker_02
That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard anybody say ever, as a governor, as to excuse to why you finally cleaned up your homeless problem.
01:04:55 Speaker_04
And the day he left, it went right back. But in a way, that was a bad thing that he did, because he showed what a disgrace that was. What a disgrace.
01:05:06 Speaker_02
Well, this is the thing that shows you how foolish a lot of these people that are running these cities think, a lot of these people that are running these states think. It's foolish.
01:05:15 Speaker_02
You're insulting the intelligence of the people that live in that city that are impacted by these people just camping and needles and human feces. There's an app that you can buy.
01:05:26 Speaker_02
There's an app that you can get, rather, that will show you where the human feces has been documented in San Francisco. It's a poo app. And it's just everywhere. It's just bum crap everywhere.
01:05:37 Speaker_04
But let me give you one that you may not know, which I think you know everything, actually.
01:05:43 Speaker_02
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01:06:53 Speaker_02
That's 40% off your first year at lifelock.com Slash JRE terms apply as a student as a student of yours but but water, you know in Los Angeles you can't get proper amounts of water and
01:07:11 Speaker_04
And it's unbelievably expensive. And you might have a house in Beverly Hills, and they're actually thinking about rationing water. Could you believe it?
01:07:19 Speaker_02
I could believe it. I used to live there.
01:07:20 Speaker_04
And I was in the farm court country with some of the congressmen. We're driving up a highway. And I say, how come all this land is so barren? It's farmland, and it looked terrible. It was just brown and bad.
01:07:34 Speaker_04
I said, but there's always that little corner that's so green and beautiful. They said, we have no water. I said, do you have a drought? No, we don't have a drought. I said, why don't you have no water? Because the water isn't allowed to flow down.
01:07:49 Speaker_04
It's got a natural flow from Canada all the way up north, more water than they could ever use. And in order to protect a tiny little fish, the water up north gets routed into the Pacific Ocean. Millions and millions of gallons of water gets poured.
01:08:06 Speaker_04
You got to see this. We're driving up and I had never seen it before. It's the most, it's like Iowa. It's the most fertile land. Iowa's blessed with great land. Idaho for a potato, right?
01:08:17 Speaker_04
But these, they're just, by the way, you know, some land is good for a potato, some land is good for corn. It's the craziest thing. I love the farmers. They're great. They're the greatest. And by the way, they're getting killed right now. They are.
01:08:28 Speaker_04
They're getting killed because of this stupid administration. So I see this, and I said, you've got to be kidding. I said, you mean you have water? And I looked at it. It's like a valve in your sink, except it's massive.
01:08:40 Speaker_04
The thing's five times taller than your ceiling.
01:08:42 Speaker_02
Did you know the center of California was a giant lake?
01:08:46 Speaker_04
They have so much water.
01:08:47 Speaker_02
You ever see what it looked like before they rerouted it? No, I never saw that, no. The center of California, like, what is it, 200 years ago? How long ago did they do that, Jamie?
01:08:55 Speaker_02
The center of California had a fucking enormous lake in the middle of California.
01:08:59 Speaker_04
So they dumped it into the Pacific.
01:09:01 Speaker_02
Who knows what they did, but whatever foolishness that they did led to the situation that they're in now.
01:09:07 Speaker_04
Think of those dry forests that burned down all over the place. You know, the head of Austria said, you know— There is.
01:09:13 Speaker_02
Tulare Lake or Tachi Lake. It's a freshwater lake in the southern San Joaquin Valley, United States. Historically, Tulare Lake was one of the largest freshwater lakes west of Mississippi. Show a photo of what it looked like back then.
01:09:28 Speaker_02
It's a great system. So that's what it looked like. Look at that image. Go to the one on the third from the right. Yeah. Yeah. That was an enormous lake in the middle of California. Imagine that.
01:09:37 Speaker_04
That'd be much more valuable property.
01:09:38 Speaker_02
How crazy is that? How crazy is that? That's what it used to look like. And human beings screwed that up.
01:09:43 Speaker_04
No, they let it go into the Pacific and then they... I don't know what they did.
01:09:46 Speaker_02
What did they do? How did it go missing? Yeah, they drained it. Nineteen? 1983, oh my God. It went dry a handful of times. Oh, went dry a handful of times. Well, you know, lakes do go dry, but that's a big one. It's a big one to go dry.
01:10:03 Speaker_04
But think of it, you could have all of the water you need, all of that land would have more water, the whole thing could be like that little patch.
01:10:12 Speaker_04
Literally, I'd say, I was with Devin Noon as a congressman, and other congressmen, we were going up, I was visiting that because they asked me to go up and visit their territory, and I did. But I kept saying, look at this land.
01:10:23 Speaker_04
It's beautiful, but it's so dry. And I thought they were going through like a desert, like a drought. They said, no, we have water, but it gets real. So I looked into it. What is the fish? And I got it done. I got it done.
01:10:34 Speaker_04
I could have water for all of that land, water for your forests. You know, your forests are dry as a bone. Yeah. OK?
01:10:41 Speaker_02
Dangerous.
01:10:41 Speaker_04
That water could be routed. You know, you could have everything. Not only dangerous, billions of dollars a year they spend on Forest fires. And you know there's a case with the environment.
01:10:51 Speaker_04
They're not allowed to rake their forests because you're not allowed to touch it. When a tree falls down after 18 months it becomes very dry. It's like you know like real firewood. It's bad. You know a tree that's up. These are all things I
01:11:05 Speaker_04
Learned the hard way, the easy way. But when a tree is up, it sucks water, it's wet. I went to that, they had a couple of horrible forest fires in California, and I went, I said, you know, you had a lot of trees standing.
01:11:17 Speaker_04
Yes, they were healthy trees, sir. I said, with this intense heat, you could see they were charred a little bit on the bottom, but they were gonna be all right, because they're soaking wet, because they suck up the water, right?
01:11:27 Speaker_04
But when they fall, they're like, you know, it's like lighting a match. And you've got to be able to clean. They call it maintain your forest. So I was with the head of Austria. He said, you know, it's a shame. I see all those forest fires in California.
01:11:41 Speaker_04
And all they have to do is clean their forest, meaning rake it up, get rid of the leaves, get rid of, you know, leaves that are sitting there for five years.
01:11:49 Speaker_02
We'll certainly get rid of the dead fall.
01:11:51 Speaker_04
And get rid of the trees that have fallen, you know, or like. So many things this country, by the way, I had it all done.
01:11:59 Speaker_02
Could you rake the whole forest, though? I don't think you could rake the whole forest. I think you can get rid of the deadfall, but raking all the leaves?
01:12:04 Speaker_04
You could certainly get rid of the dead, okay? Yeah, I think that's the real issue, is the deadfall. You know, environmentally, they don't want to do that. They said, you know, it's got to be nature and all this stuff.
01:12:12 Speaker_04
But in the meantime, this is exactly right. But you could have... It was the Department of Commerce that needed the approvals, but Gavin Newsom had to sign them. I got it all done. Nobody could believe it. It was all done. I said, I got it.
01:12:28 Speaker_04
You got so much water. All you have to do is sign. And that guy didn't want to sign.
01:12:35 Speaker_02
Did he not want to sign because that would be a political victory for you?
01:12:38 Speaker_04
I think no, he didn't. No, I don't think so. You know, he used to say he's a great president and we got along. We did. We actually got along at that point. But I think somebody said you just can't continue to call him a great president.
01:12:51 Speaker_04
You know, they do say that. But we had it all done. He didn't sign. And then we got on to other things. And every time I go to California, you have so much water. They don't know it.
01:13:04 Speaker_04
I'm telling you, people living in Beverly Hills, they turn off the water. Same thing with the electric. They want to go to all electric cars, but they have brownouts every weekend.
01:13:12 Speaker_02
Well, right after they made the announcement that as of 2035, you're not going to be able to buy an internal combustion engine in California. Within a month, they had some announcement asking people to not charge their Teslas.
01:13:25 Speaker_02
Because the grid couldn't handle it. Well, how are you going to handle it?
01:13:27 Speaker_04
I will terminate the mandate immediately. Good, thank you. That will be done, I would say, in my first day, maybe two days, because, you know.
01:13:34 Speaker_02
Let me ask you about nuclear. One of the things that, when I've talked to people that have a real understanding of nuclear power, what their position is, it's probably the cleanest, safest form of electricity that we could generate.
01:13:48 Speaker_02
and that the fears of nuclear power are really about a few disasters, the Fukushima, Three Mile Island. These are old systems, and they're much more capable now, and they're capable of making even better systems.
01:14:05 Speaker_02
But it's a difficult political issue, because you think nuclear power, you think Chernobyl. That's what everybody does. They have this connection, they're headed to the potential disaster.
01:14:14 Speaker_04
Or Fukushima, where you're not supposed to enter the land for 3,000 years or something.
01:14:19 Speaker_02
I think it's worse than that. I think that area is going to be radioactive for probably longer than you could imagine. But the point is, they're better at it now.
01:14:28 Speaker_02
and that they could do it now and you can generate power in a way that you don't have to worry about these. One of the most ridiculous things is electric cars being powered by coal-fired plants. It's a ridiculous thing.
01:14:40 Speaker_04
So it's happening.
01:14:41 Speaker_02
Yeah, it is what's happening. And people want to think they're being green, you know, but it's... Well, if you look at the way the batteries are made.
01:14:47 Speaker_04
But here's the other thing. We don't have Well, we do, actually. It's being held. You know, we have certain areas where we have great raw earth material, and we're not allowed to use it because of the environment.
01:14:58 Speaker_04
And we have areas in California that have incredible raw earth, and they're not allowing, and I'm going to open it up. I'm going to let them use it.
01:15:05 Speaker_02
But how do you do that? How do you do that and protect the environment?
01:15:09 Speaker_04
Because the environment is going to be protected. You can do it. You can make a lake out of it. OK, we'll put back a lake. I mean, something nice about lakes, you can do things magnificently. You just have to do it carefully and responsibly. Absolutely.
01:15:21 Speaker_04
You have to do it carefully. But the problem, you know, China has all of those areas, most of those areas. And yet, when they say go electric with the cars, China is going to be the one that gives us the cars.
01:15:34 Speaker_04
All of those guys in Detroit are going to be out of business. You're going to make your electric cars over there. We have a thing called gasoline, and we have more oil and gas under our feet than any other nation.
01:15:44 Speaker_04
You know, I had in Alaska, there's a find, it's called ANWR. I got it approved. Reagan couldn't get it. Nobody could get it. I got it all done. It was amazing. They were getting ready to start drilling. The equivalent, they think, of Saudi Arabia.
01:16:00 Speaker_04
One of the biggest finds in the world. It was all set to go. And Biden comes in. One of his first orders were, we're not going to use it. It would have been so good for the — we could have supplied all of Asia. with oil and gas.
01:16:13 Speaker_02
What was the negative of it?
01:16:14 Speaker_04
And you talk about money. Right. The negative was politically, they didn't think it was good for them. That's all.
01:16:19 Speaker_02
That's all it was. So you don't think that it's environmentally dangerous? No.
01:16:22 Speaker_04
Taking it from way down deep in the earth, environmentally, it would have been fine.
01:16:26 Speaker_02
So it can be done responsibly? Absolutely. Oh, otherwise, let's not say environment.
01:16:30 Speaker_04
Well, I think windmills. OK, so they talk about windmills. I think windmills are really disruptive. When you talk about the environment, they kill the birds. You want to see a bird cemetery? Go under a windmill someday.
01:16:42 Speaker_04
that hasn't been cleaned out with all the bird carcasses. It's like massive amounts of birds.
01:16:49 Speaker_02
Well, they're also a massive eyesore. I went to a ranch in South Texas. We had a drive past this enormous windmill farm, and it's gross. It's dystopian.
01:16:58 Speaker_02
You're looking in the left and the right, and all you see is these big spinning machines that aren't even that effective at generating electricity. Correct.
01:17:05 Speaker_04
Most expensive form of electricity is a windmill. And then they start to rust and rot. And you have to replace them. And then they get abandoned by the people that built them.
01:17:13 Speaker_02
Well, you have to get rid of all that material, too. When you replace those blades, now you have a problem because you have to dispose. You have to dispose these enormous windmills. And how do you dispose of them?
01:17:23 Speaker_04
By the way, they say you can't bury them. So I even questioned that, but I'm not going to get into it. But they say you can't bury them. So you have the blades. And you can't bury the blades. You can bury the blades. It's not going to matter.
01:17:34 Speaker_04
You'll find areas you can bury. But they come up, this is what I mean, they come up with this, but the environmentalist dream is windmills. You know what happens to them? After five years, they start to rot. After 10 years, you have to replace them.
01:17:47 Speaker_04
Did you ever look at certain parts of California where they have heavy windmills and they've been abandoned? And they're all different manufacturers and all different companies. I haven't seen that. It is the ugliest thing.
01:17:58 Speaker_04
It looks like a graveyard almost, a graveyard of windmills. It's pollution. It's so bad.
01:18:04 Speaker_02
And in the oceans. It's no different than leaving garbage on the ground.
01:18:07 Speaker_04
How about in New Jersey, off the coast of New Jersey, they want to build. The people are going crazy not to build them. But when you have them, the whales are washing up on shore. So in 50 years, they had one whale come ashore.
01:18:20 Speaker_04
Now they had like 18 come in the last year.
01:18:23 Speaker_02
What is happening with the whales? I've read about this.
01:18:26 Speaker_04
Well, they say that the wind drives them crazy. You know, it's a vibration because you have those. You know, those things are 50-story buildings, some of them.
01:18:33 Speaker_02
Right, and they're super sensitive to vibrations and sounds.
01:18:37 Speaker_04
You know, the wind is rushing, the things are blowing, it's a vibration, and it makes noise. You know what it is? I want to be a whale psychiatrist. It drives the whales frickin' crazy.
01:18:48 Speaker_02
Yes.
01:18:48 Speaker_04
And something happens with them. But for whatever reason, they're getting washed up on shore, and you know, and yet the environmentalists... Conveniently ignored by the environmental people. Yeah, but the environmentalists, they don't talk about it.
01:18:58 Speaker_04
Right. I think there's nothing uglier. I see it in Scotland, I see it all over the world. You have this beautiful valley. It's been there for, you know, in civilization, thousands of years, but millions of years.
01:19:10 Speaker_04
And all of a sudden you have these ugly windmills up.
01:19:13 Speaker_02
Would your plan to replace that with nuclear? What would you do?
01:19:16 Speaker_04
Well, nuclear is better. I mean, I think there's a little danger of nuclear, but, you know, we had some really bad nuclear. They did one in Alabama. They did one in, I think, South Carolina. They do them wrong. They build these massive things.
01:19:30 Speaker_04
Then the environmentalists get in. It's a little — I don't want to go into a long story because it's too long for this show. This show is too valuable to talk about concrete. But they have hardened concrete. It's number 12 concrete.
01:19:41 Speaker_04
It's the hardest — it's harder than steel. It's incredible. They put up a wall, and an inspector comes along and goes, like, nope, nope, you're a quarter of an inch too — the wall might be eight feet wide, and you're a quarter of an inch too short.
01:19:53 Speaker_04
I'm sorry, you got to rip down the wall. You got to — because it's got to be poured contiguously, right? You're one quarter of an inch, I'm sorry, ripped down, you can't rip it down.
01:20:01 Speaker_04
This stuff you can't put a hammer through it, you can't, it's incredible. Concrete technology is unbelievable what's happened. You think of concrete.
01:20:09 Speaker_02
So you think that's an example of over-regulation, pointless over-regulation.
01:20:12 Speaker_04
Well, you have an inspector that comes along and he says, take down a 25 zillion dollar wall. These things ended up costing 25 billion dollars. And one of them never got opened. But here's the story. France does it.
01:20:26 Speaker_04
France is largely nuclear and they build small little compact plants. And if they need more they build the same thing and they hook it up and they hook it up because they get too big and too complex and too expensive. And it is very clean.
01:20:43 Speaker_04
They say it's it's absolute. You know my uncle I had a great uncle who was a great genius just like other members of my family. But he was a professor at MIT for, I think, 41 years. He was the longest serving.
01:20:58 Speaker_04
When I was in the White House, the head of MIT, Princeton, and Harvard came down to meet me. And the MIT person said, I have a book on your uncle, Dr. John Trump. He was our longest serving professor. He was a great genius, sir. Do you know how?
01:21:12 Speaker_04
And he knew everything about nuclear. From math to chemistry to nuclear, he knew it. And he said, someday it's going to be the way to go, but the problem is it's so dangerous in terms of war.
01:21:25 Speaker_04
He said, Donald, someday, and this was a long time, Uncle John, Dr. John Trump, he said, someday you'll have a little satchel at your side and you'll go into a building and you'll be able to blow up New York City.
01:21:40 Speaker_04
I said, Uncle John, that'll never happen. He's right. He's right. The power is so crazy.
01:21:44 Speaker_02
Well, that was part of the problem with giving nuclear power to other countries, right? That was the problem that happened with India and Pakistan. They got nuclear power, and then they were able to weaponize it.
01:21:55 Speaker_04
The biggest problem in the world today is not global warming. It's nuclear warming. And we have idiots that are negotiating for us We have a guy that doesn't make it past four o'clock, and it's not because of age.
01:22:09 Speaker_04
I know so many guys in their late 80s, and they're better than, I said to one guy, I think you're smarter than you were 25 years ago. I've known him a long time. He's 89 years old. He's sharp. I mean, he's great.
01:22:21 Speaker_04
Biden gives people a bad name because that's not an old, that's not an age. I think they say it because I'm three or four years younger, you know, I think that's why they say it. They say his age, it's not his age. He's got a problem.
01:22:32 Speaker_04
He's had two major brain surgeries.
01:22:34 Speaker_02
He did, he did. Those are not good operations. And do you see what he did today? He went running towards the camera and made some apology to Native Americans, and he said that's why he's headed out west.
01:22:46 Speaker_02
Like, he's off the reservation, so to speak, for lack of a better term.
01:22:51 Speaker_04
You know, it's interesting, because during the debate, I was looking over, I'm saying, hmm, this is strange. It's just sort of like strange things were happening.
01:23:00 Speaker_02
Yeah. Well, he couldn't keep it together, but do you think they knew he couldn't keep it together? I think so. Do you think that they wanted – is that why, like, historically that debate was earlier than they've been in the past, right?
01:23:12 Speaker_04
I think they wanted to get, well, there's a lot of theories. A lot of people said, do the debate now and we'll get him out.
01:23:17 Speaker_02
Right.
01:23:18 Speaker_04
I think that maybe could be.
01:23:19 Speaker_02
Well, that is what happened.
01:23:21 Speaker_04
I think they also said, do the debate now and get it over with. Right. I don't think anybody thought he was going to get out, really. That didn't make any sense. The debate got him out, but I think it's very unfair. Look, you have a bad debate.
01:23:35 Speaker_04
His numbers went down. But I think she's not doing very well right now. And I think she looks,
01:23:41 Speaker_02
I want to get to that, too, because it's hard to know. Like, the whole poll thing is very bizarre for most people, because most people don't answer polls. So they read the polls, and they're like, who's getting polled? I've never been polled.
01:23:51 Speaker_02
If I did, I'd hang up.
01:23:52 Speaker_04
I was never called by a poll system.
01:23:53 Speaker_02
If I did, I wouldn't answer. I'm busy.
01:23:55 Speaker_04
You know how polls are done. Oh, I'm going to get myself in trouble. So I really don't believe too much in them.
01:24:02 Speaker_02
Well, 2016 taught a lot of people about the ineffective use of polls.
01:24:05 Speaker_04
Well, they were very ineffective, because I thought I was doing well. I'd go to a place and I'd have 30,000, 40,000 people. Hillary would go, they'd have 500 people, and they'd tell me, I'm going to lose. I said, why am I going to lose?
01:24:15 Speaker_04
I had 40,000 people. She had 200 people. But, you know, I have a theory. These polls, they charge you a lot of money, too. You know, they charge you half a million bucks to do some stupid poll, and they interview like 251 people.
01:24:27 Speaker_04
I don't think they interview him, in many cases. I don't want to get myself in too much trouble. You think it's bullshit? No, I think they sit there, they make a deal, they get a half a million bucks and they say, Trump's leading 51 to 49.
01:24:37 Speaker_04
They announce it and everybody says, oh. Do you understand?
01:24:41 Speaker_00
Yeah.
01:24:41 Speaker_04
I don't think they, I think in a lot, look, I'm a very common sense person. I think that they probably don't always poll. Some of them probably never, Paul. What's the difference between 49 to 51 and 47 and a half?
01:24:59 Speaker_02
Well, it's also a tiny percentage of the population. I don't think it's representative of the overall population. I just don't think it is.
01:25:06 Speaker_04
I don't know of one person in my whole life that ever got called by a pollster.
01:25:10 Speaker_02
Exactly. That's my point. Here's my question.
01:25:15 Speaker_04
But I shouldn't say that because I'm doing very, you know, really well in the polls. But I think that's... So this week I happen to believe in a very... I only believe if they're good. No, I like them this month.
01:25:25 Speaker_04
But no, I honestly believe that there's probably a lot of fraud. I had a poll, Washington Post, ABC, in the Hillary thing on Wisconsin. They had me down 17 points the day before the election.
01:25:37 Speaker_04
I knew it was wrong because I had a rally, I had 29,000 people at a racetrack, and it was like zero degrees, Wisconsin. And they had me down 17 points. In other words, you had no chance. And I won.
01:25:49 Speaker_04
And I called up my pollsters, good guy, good guy, and I believe he's legitimate. And some of them are, some of them aren't. I said, tell me, why did they have me down so much? I mean, nobody's gonna believe them the next time. They said they don't care.
01:26:04 Speaker_04
When you're down 17 points, people are going to stay home. They're not going to vote. Because they're going to say, I love Trump, but I'm not going to waste my time. It's cold out. I said, but what do they make it four or five?
01:26:14 Speaker_04
He said, at four or five, they're going to go and vote. At 17, they're not going to go and vote.
01:26:19 Speaker_02
So think of it. I was seven.
01:26:20 Speaker_04
This is a Washington Post, ABC, Paul. I was down 17 points in Wisconsin, and I won. It's crooked stuff.
01:26:29 Speaker_02
There's a lot of crooked stuff, and I wanted to talk about that, too, because one of the things that people talk about with you is the denial of the results. I think J.D.
01:26:39 Speaker_02
Vance did a brilliant job the other day when he was being interviewed, and they asked him, did Trump lose the 2020 election?
01:26:45 Speaker_02
And he turned it around and said, was there legitimate election interference in suppressing the Hunter Biden laptop story on social media? And was that a concerted effort?
01:26:58 Speaker_04
Well, they say a ten point difference and I lost by one, one tenth of a point. They say it was 22,000 votes. But look, it was much more than that. And I appreciate J.D. Vance saying that. And by the way, I think he was a great pick. Do you like J.D.
01:27:13 Speaker_04
as a person?
01:27:14 Speaker_02
I like him a lot.
01:27:15 Speaker_04
You're allowed to say that.
01:27:16 Speaker_02
No, I do. I like him a lot. I think he's a brilliant guy. And I think his ability to talk like a normal human being. You did my friend Theo Vaughn's podcast, and he just did it.
01:27:25 Speaker_04
How did he do?
01:27:26 Speaker_02
He did great. He just talks like a normal human being.
01:27:29 Speaker_04
Is that why you called me to do this?
01:27:31 Speaker_02
No, no. Once they shot you, I was like, he's got to come in here. It's all about timing. It's all about the timing. Timing's perfect. Do you even have a scar on your ear? You got anything on there? I do. Let me see.
01:27:44 Speaker_04
So, right over here. It zicked right there It healed up pretty fucking good. Yeah, it's pretty good. Yeah, it's little it's not like some of the wrestlers some of the UFC fighters No, no, no, it got me was sort of like a top shot.
01:28:03 Speaker_00
Mm-hmm
01:28:03 Speaker_04
The point of the bullet was over the ass, but you see the things take it off a little bit. But it makes me a tougher guy. You know, the fighters, you know, the fighters love their, you know, Bo Nickel. He's a great fighter. How's he going to do?
01:28:17 Speaker_04
I think he's great.
01:28:18 Speaker_02
He's a fantastic.
01:28:19 Speaker_04
He was almost like undefeated in college.
01:28:21 Speaker_02
Yeah, he's a fantastic wrestler and one of the one of the best mix.
01:28:24 Speaker_04
When is he fighting again?
01:28:25 Speaker_02
He's fighting in Madison Square Garden in November.
01:28:28 Speaker_04
Oh, that's going to be after the election? Yep. So I'll either go as president or I'll be depressed and I won't bother going. I think they're having a fight right now.
01:28:38 Speaker_02
One of the things that was fascinating also was the denial of the election results is a pretty common thing. Hillary Clinton famously denied that. She called you an illegitimate president and she said that Russia put you in place.
01:28:50 Speaker_04
Even though she conceded.
01:28:51 Speaker_02
Yes.
01:28:52 Speaker_04
You know, she conceded the night of the election because she was beaten.
01:28:55 Speaker_02
Yes, and it was a thing that was pretty common for people, especially Democrats, to deny the elections. There's been many of them. The Bush administration, the, you know, the dangling chads, all that stuff.
01:29:08 Speaker_04
Well, look at these guys in Congress, all these sleazebags in Congress that are Democrats. They're still denying 2016. But now they don't so much because, you know, they try and pin it on me. You don't hear them say it.
01:29:19 Speaker_04
But they denied it right up until the end.
01:29:21 Speaker_02
My point is, this idea of election fraud is a forbidden topic. And you get labeled an election denier. It's like being labeled an anti-vaxxer if you question some of the health consequences that people have from the COVID-19 shots.
01:29:35 Speaker_02
Oh my God, you're an anti-vaxxer. If you say, and what I say publicly, and I've said this a lot, It's not 0%. So if you ask me, what is the amount of election fraud in this country? Is it 0%? No one thinks it's 0%.
01:29:50 Speaker_02
I've never met one person, not a super liberal, progressive, far left person or a right wing conservative. Not one person thinks it's 0%.
01:30:01 Speaker_02
They think when you have human beings and also you have a lot of weirdness that was going on during the 2020 elections, particularly with mail-in ballots.
01:30:10 Speaker_04
And you had legislatures that had to approve, and they didn't approve, and they went out and did it anyway. And you had ballot, you had old-fashioned ballot screwing. I mean, you had, you know, you have people going up and dropping in phony votes.
01:30:25 Speaker_04
You had unsigned ballots, etc., etc.
01:30:27 Speaker_02
There's certain people that think that they have, and the rhetoric is also that you're Hitler, and that in order to stop Hitler, you have to do whatever it takes. That was okay, yeah. Yeah, and this is, I mean, you're hearing this now.
01:30:38 Speaker_02
Kamala compared you to, said your love of Hitler yesterday.
01:30:42 Speaker_04
You know, Kamala's a very low IQ person. She's a very low IQ. You know, I'm for taking tests, too. I think anybody that runs for president should take, they should give them tests.
01:30:52 Speaker_04
And it's not an age thing, it's not based, if you look back on history, 70s and 80s, your greatest, some of your greatest leaders in the world, world history, longtime world history, They were in their 70s and their 80s.
01:31:05 Speaker_04
But I think you should take cognitive tests. I think everybody—they say it's unconstitutional, but I think— That's ridiculous. I think Kamala should have a test, because there's something missing. There's something wrong with her.
01:31:15 Speaker_02
Well, I think it's pressure. I think the pressure and the scrutiny—you've been a celebrity for a long time, and you understand what this is like.
01:31:21 Speaker_02
But for someone who's in her late 40s, who becomes the vice president, who runs for president, becomes the vice president, And then all of a sudden, the weight of the world is on your shoulders, and there's all these people paying attention.
01:31:32 Speaker_02
A lot of people clam up.
01:31:33 Speaker_04
But you either have it or you don't. Correct. Look, this is an interview. We've covered a lot of territory, right? And, you know, it's fine. I don't care. I want to. I think it's much more interesting. To do an interview with Anderson Cooper,
01:31:51 Speaker_04
A softball, crazy softball interview. She took two days off and she studied and studied all day long, and then she comes out with a result that was a real embarrassment. That was a really bad interview. She couldn't answer a question.
01:32:03 Speaker_04
And every question is not answered. I mean, like, what would you do your first day in office? Okay, I'll build a wall. I won't build a wall. There's a hundred things you can say. Just say anything, right? There's something off with her.
01:32:16 Speaker_04
We're dealing with the smartest people. They hate when I say, you know, when the press, when I call President Xi, they said, he called President Xi brilliant. Well, he's a brilliant guy. He controls 1.4 billion people with an iron fist.
01:32:28 Speaker_04
I mean, he's a brilliant guy, whether you like it or not. And they go crazy.
01:32:33 Speaker_02
Right. It doesn't mean he's not evil, or it doesn't mean he's not dangerous.
01:32:36 Speaker_04
Yeah, of course not. We have evil people in our country. Yes. If you have a smart president, he can deal with Russia, he can deal with all of it. Russia would have never gone into Ukraine if I were president.
01:32:49 Speaker_02
How would you have stopped it?
01:32:51 Speaker_04
Automatic, two things, I told him. I said, Vladimir, you're not going in. I used to talk to him all the time. You're not going in. I can't tell you what I told him because I think it would be inappropriate, but someday he'll tell you.
01:33:04 Speaker_04
But he would have never gone in. But you know why else he wouldn't have gone in? Oil prices at $40 a barrel wouldn't have allowed him, wouldn't have given him the money to prosecute that war, wouldn't have given him the money.
01:33:15 Speaker_04
I said it with President — I was with President Xi. I said — it was almost the same conversation. With Vladimir, it was Moscow. With President Xi, it was Beijing. It was almost the exact same conversation. I said, don't do it. He would have never done it.
01:33:33 Speaker_04
The day I left, they flew 28 bombers over the middle of Taiwan. Twenty-eight bombers. And it's the apple of his eye, and the same thing with Russia. It's the apple. Ukraine is the apple of his eye. I used to talk to him.
01:33:46 Speaker_04
I had a very good relationship with him. He wouldn't have done it. He would have never done it.
01:33:51 Speaker_04
But he also wouldn't have done it because of the... You know, one of the reasons that what happened is, number one, he doesn't respect Biden at all, not even a little bit. And who the hell would? But he doesn't respect him.
01:34:03 Speaker_04
But when he saw what happened in Afghanistan, how horribly that was handled, Number one, you take the soldiers out last, not first. OK? That was their big mistake. And we had that thing charted out. And they weren't obeying us. They weren't.
01:34:16 Speaker_04
Abdul is the head of the Taliban. Boom, boom. He had to do all these things. Some he didn't do. I said, nope. You got to do them all. This guy, he immediately took all. He left the equipment behind. 13 soldiers dead, but he took everybody out.
01:34:32 Speaker_04
He took his soldiers out before. A child would know. That's why Milley was so stupid. He was such a stupid guy, Milley. Okay, those generals should have all been fired.
01:34:43 Speaker_04
The Afghan, the people that were involved with Afghanistan should have all been fired. Then they'd be writing books about him, how stupid he was and bad he was. But you take your soldiers out last.
01:34:56 Speaker_04
I had a big rally, and I saw a child in the front row about a year and a half ago. And I called the child up. I said, do you mind if I borrow your child? Oh, yes, please. And they came up, kids five years. I gave them quick details, you know.
01:35:10 Speaker_04
I said, we want to get out of this place. And we have this, and we have this, and we have the equipment. I gave them a little thing. I said, do you take your soldiers out first or last, after everything is done?
01:35:21 Speaker_04
You take them out last, sir, a child would know that. We took our soldiers out first.
01:35:27 Speaker_02
What was your plan?
01:35:28 Speaker_04
And we left Bagram.
01:35:30 Speaker_02
Well, not only that, we left billions of dollars worth of equipment and military vehicles that they use for parades now.
01:35:37 Speaker_04
The best equipment, yet to embarrass us, the best equipment in the world.
01:35:40 Speaker_02
The Taliban parade, where they've got tanks rolling down the streets and Blackhawks flying, is the craziest thing I've ever seen. The fact that we left all that stuff there.
01:35:48 Speaker_04
We left the best equipment in the world behind.
01:35:51 Speaker_02
What would you have done differently?
01:35:53 Speaker_04
Well, number one, we would have taken it out. Just so you go back a little bit further, I had a couple of conversations with Abdul.
01:36:01 Speaker_04
And from the time I had those conversations, because they were shooting our soldiers, you know, with the sniper stuff, they were shooting, they were shooting a lot of them.
01:36:08 Speaker_04
They were shooting a lot with Obama, much less with me, but they were shooting them. And I said, get this guy on the phone. The press went nuts when they heard this. I had a great conversation with him. It was a tough conversation.
01:36:21 Speaker_04
Eighteen months later, there wasn't one soldier that was ever shot at. And even Biden admitted it in a moment of stupidity because he shouldn't admit it. His people went nuts. He said, yeah, well, I will admit no soldier.
01:36:32 Speaker_04
We didn't have a soldier killed in 18 months in Afghanistan. Not one soldier was killed because he understood what was going to happen if that happened. I didn't have one soldier. Then when I left,
01:36:47 Speaker_04
after having gotten more votes than any sitting President in the history of the country, and much more votes than he got in 2016. When I left, they started shooting our soldiers.
01:36:58 Speaker_04
But more importantly, what they did is they did that whole thing with, you know, leaving. He shouldn't have left. Number one, should have left from Bagram, because Bagram is this massive base. It's got tremendous acreage around it. Tremendous.
01:37:12 Speaker_04
It's a very big — it was built many years ago. And part of the reason you wouldn't have taken that is because it goes to China. One hour from where China makes its nuclear missiles, you should have never left Bagram.
01:37:25 Speaker_04
Number one, they should have left from Bagram. They should have left last. They should have gotten, you know, we have Americans that are still there. They should have taken all their equipment out.
01:37:35 Speaker_04
Everything, every plane, every screw should have been taken out, every tent. And I said that, that's when I realized that Milley was a dummy. I said, We're leaving, but I want to get everything out. Sir, it's cheaper to leave it."
01:37:48 Speaker_04
I said, what do you mean?
01:37:49 Speaker_00
It's cheaper to leave it?
01:37:50 Speaker_04
Yeah, he said it's cheaper to leave it.
01:37:52 Speaker_00
Cheaper?
01:37:52 Speaker_04
Cheaper. He said it's cheaper. Not more dangerous? He just said cheaper. I said, I want every plane. I want every tank. I want the goggles. They have night goggles. They have all this stuff that these guys now have.
01:38:05 Speaker_04
He said, sir, it's cheaper to get out and leave it. I said, so you think it's cheaper to leave $150 million brand new airplane in there than it is to fly it out with a tank of jet fuel and put it in Pakistan or just fly it directly back?
01:38:20 Speaker_04
It's cheaper to live. I said, this guy's nuts. I'm telling you, he was so stupid. He was so unwise. He was like an unwise man. And there were a number of them. But I defeated ISIS with the greatest generals. I had a guy who was so great.
01:38:37 Speaker_04
I flew to Iraq and I met the real generals, not these idiots that we deal with. And we knocked out, you know, I defeated 100% of the ISIS caliphate. They said it would take five years. I did it in a matter of a few, literally a few weeks.
01:38:55 Speaker_04
And we hit them hard. And he said, sir, we're going to hit him here. We're going to hit him there. We're going to hit him here, there. And I said, this guy's great. I like this guy. I was told it would take five years. That's why I went.
01:39:07 Speaker_04
I said, how could it take five years? We have brand-new fighters. We have the best planes, the best weapons, the best guns, the best bombs. How could it possibly take that long? And I flew to — I flew and left at 3 o'clock in the morning.
01:39:22 Speaker_04
Nobody knew I was going. I got on Air Force One, and we started flying.
01:39:27 Speaker_04
And when we reached about half an hour away from Iraq, that was where the airport was, big airport, about a half an hour away, they said, sir, I'm sorry, you'll have to turn off all your lights. Why? We're getting close to our site, our land.
01:39:41 Speaker_04
I said, you mean we spent eight trillion dollars and we can't leave the lights? Think of this. 20 years, $8 trillion that we can't leave the lights on in a plane. I said, that's OK. Turn the lights on. I'm not going to fight them. That's what they are.
01:39:55 Speaker_02
This is because it's too dangerous?
01:39:56 Speaker_04
Yeah, too dangerous, because they see the light up in the air.
01:39:58 Speaker_02
They'll shoot at it.
01:39:58 Speaker_04
They'll shoot at it, you know? So I said, turn the lights off. Then they said, sir, we're going to also pull your shades, if that's OK. I said, that's OK. The plane was pitch black. All the lights outside, you know, the blinking.
01:40:10 Speaker_04
They call them the blinking reds. They were all turned off. And I like to sit with pilots a lot of times, and these guys are specimens. I always say they're better looking than Tom Cruise, okay? And they're even taller. Like perfect specimens.
01:40:26 Speaker_04
These guys, like for a fighter, you know, you have some guys that are perfect specimens. And, you know, they pick the best pilots in the Air Force, United States Air Force, to fly Air Force One.
01:40:37 Speaker_04
And I get up there, and I'm sitting, and I'm feeling my way up. You know, it's up like a 747 as you go through the stairs, but I sort of knew my way up. There wasn't a light in the plan. I'm saying, can you imagine?
01:40:50 Speaker_04
We spent trillions of dollars, and we're trying to fly in blind.
01:40:56 Speaker_04
But I got into the plane, the cockpit was dark black, little tiny light, you could see the pilot, a perfect looking human being, his co-pilot, everybody was perfect, they were all like movie stars, you know, it's like I could have cast a movie with these guys and nobody would believe it because they were too good looking.
01:41:12 Speaker_04
So I said, how are we doing camp sure we'll be landing in 10 minutes and I look outside There's not a light and I'm saying, you know, I've landed a lot of planes.
01:41:20 Speaker_04
I and you see like little lights at least There's nothing it's just pure desert and I said, okay captain good, but I'm looking now. We're did you you've been in many plans where it has the computer? So I'm saying 1,000 feet 9 goes 1,000 900. 800. It's a computer voice, but it sounds like it, but it's an incredible voice.
01:41:42 Speaker_04
I say, Captain, are we okay? I'm looking. Are we okay, Captain? There's no lights. And I'm looking, you know, normally when you land a plane, because I sit with Paul a lot.
01:41:55 Speaker_04
I think it's great. I think it's a great profession, everything. They're incredible. These machines are incredible. He said, sir, we're fine. No problem, sir. I said, you know, I don't see the lights up there, Captain. Sure, we're OK.
01:42:10 Speaker_04
So, I mean, I'm exaggerating a little bit. You know, a problem with exaggerating, it'll tell the story. They'll say, Trump was a coward. So I'm sitting with him, he goes, 500 foot. And I'm telling you, there wasn't a light on the runway, nothing.
01:42:25 Speaker_04
And we're going in. You okay, Captain? Everything good? Yes, sir. No problem. We'll be down in about one minute, sir. And I'm telling you, Joe, You know, there's always a light. There's not a little pin.
01:42:39 Speaker_04
And all of a sudden, and you hear, wow, wow, perfect landing like glass. That's how good I mean, these guys between the equipment and it's genius. It's pure. It was so dark. You couldn't see a thing. There was no runway.
01:42:54 Speaker_04
You wouldn't know where the hell you are. You're in the middle of a desert. And then I got out of the plane. I said, thank you, Captain. It's a great job.
01:43:05 Speaker_04
a general, and another general, and I see a staff sergeant, a drill sergeant, and various guys, all central casting. Central casting. They said, sir, would you like to rest? I said, I don't want to rest.
01:43:19 Speaker_04
I want to figure out what the hell are we doing with ISIS. I'm hearing it's going to take years. No, sir, we can do it very quickly, sir. Anyway, we go into the room. We go in.
01:43:30 Speaker_04
I mean, Biden would have taken a nap for four days and then left without a meeting. So we go into the room, and they have these guys. I say, how long can you do it? How long? We can do it in a couple of weeks, sir.
01:43:41 Speaker_04
I said, wait a minute, they told me five years. We can do it in, I don't know, he gave me a number, like whoa, like just, like in no time. I said, why haven't you done it? Because the orders,
01:43:54 Speaker_04
came in from Washington, sir, and they would come here and tell us what to do. Don't you challenge us? We're not allowed to do that, sir. That's not the military way. They tell us what to do, and we have to respect them.
01:44:04 Speaker_02
So do you think that it was incompetence? Why they didn't go after ISIS?
01:44:09 Speaker_04
I think it's a bad system. You know, when Mattis goes there, or when Millie goes there, who's stupid, and they tell these guys that are actually smart what to do,
01:44:17 Speaker_04
And the guys that are smart are saying, we don't like what they're doing, but they're not allowed to sort of counteract. Plus, the guys that went there are arrogant. You know, they're arrogant fools. They're like stupid fools.
01:44:28 Speaker_04
The way they pulled out of, you know, the way they, as an example, the way they pulled out of Afghanistan with the people falling off the planes. It was so, it was worse than Vietnam with the helicopters falling. It was so bad.
01:44:42 Speaker_04
There was no reason for it. Anyway, so we knocked them out. I mean, we have great military, we have great people, but not the television guys. And I rebuilt the military, and then they gave a chunk of it.
01:44:55 Speaker_04
I have to tell you, as much as it is, it's a tiny little piece, believe it or not. We have an unbelievable, I rebuilt the military, I rebuilt our nuclear, and in a way I hated to redo it, but I got to realize how powerful that nuclear is, Joe.
01:45:12 Speaker_04
One bomb – Israel is gone, but forget – one bomb could take out the entire East Coast. It's so bad. And I watch these poor fools talking about our oceans will rise one-eighth of an inch over the next 500 years.
01:45:29 Speaker_04
We have people, we have countries, right now you have five countries. And don't underestimate North, if you take a look at North Korea, I was there. I mean, I was with Kim Jong, I had a great, I got along great with him.
01:45:43 Speaker_04
You know, the president, he got along good. That's a good thing. It's not a bad thing. It's a great thing. Obama thought we were going to go to war with North Korea.
01:45:50 Speaker_04
When I met with Obama just prior to the takeover, you know, you meet, you have sort of a ceremonial meeting. But it lasted a long time, a lot longer than it was supposed to last. I said, what's the biggest problem? He said, North Korea.
01:46:02 Speaker_04
By the time I finished, we had no problem with North Korea. It was a little tough at the beginning, remember? He said, I have a red button on my desk. I said, I have a red button also, but mine's bigger than yours and mine works.
01:46:18 Speaker_02
I liked how you called him Little Rocket Man.
01:46:21 Speaker_04
I said, Little Rocket Man, you're going to burn in hell. And it was so rough that people were worried. This is crazy. And then one day, I got a call. Sort of like a fight. I got a call. You know, you ever see that pounding?
01:46:34 Speaker_04
Then all of a sudden, but I got a call. And it was from him, meaning his people. They wanted to meet. They wouldn't meet Obama. He tried to meet. They wouldn't even talk to him about it. And I think he expected to go to war. I actually do.
01:46:49 Speaker_04
I believe he expected to go. And we checked their nuclear stockpile. It is substantial. I mean, I said, do you do anything? I got to know him very well. I got to know him better than anybody, anybody. And I said, do you ever do anything else?
01:47:03 Speaker_04
Why don't you go take it easy and relax? Go to the beach. You have a beautiful beach, nice beachfront property. You know, kiddingly. I said, you're always building nuclear. Just relax. You don't have to do it. Let's build some condos on your shoreline.
01:47:16 Speaker_04
They actually have gorgeous stuff. And he said, I just have to do it because I need it for my safety, et cetera. I got to know him very well. We had no problem with him.
01:47:26 Speaker_04
If you have a smart problem, if you have a smart, really the right president, a smart president, you're not going to have a problem. And I say it to people, we have a bigger problem, in my opinion, with the enemy from within.
01:47:39 Speaker_04
And it drives him crazy when I use that term. But we have an enemy from within. We have people that are really bad people. that I really think want to make this country unsuccessful.
01:47:50 Speaker_04
When you look at what's happening at our border, Joe, when you have people coming in that, when other countries are allowed to empty their prisons into our country with murderers, we had 13,099 murderers dropped in our country over the last three years.
01:48:06 Speaker_02
And then 15,000 rapists convicted.
01:48:09 Speaker_04
Rapists?
01:48:10 Speaker_02
Yeah.
01:48:10 Speaker_04
Drug dealers? Drug lords?
01:48:12 Speaker_02
And that's just the ones that have been accounted for. Terrorists?
01:48:14 Speaker_04
Correct. People from mental institutions? What do you think this strategy is? Hundreds to hundreds of thousands of major criminals, tougher and worse than anybody we have.
01:48:26 Speaker_02
We're seeing the consequences of it in San Antonio. They've taken over apartment buildings. In Aurora, Colorado, they've taken over apartment buildings. These Venezuelan gangs.
01:48:33 Speaker_04
Just the beginning.
01:48:34 Speaker_02
What do you think the strategy is? You know, one of the things that they've said is that you stopped a bill from being passed. But didn't that bill also include amnesty for the people that are already here?
01:48:48 Speaker_04
Yeah, this is years after the fact. The damage was already done.
01:48:53 Speaker_02
But what was the bill? And what was the problems with the bill? Well, the bill was nothing.
01:48:55 Speaker_04
It allowed two million people in. They were going to get amnesty. It was a horrible bill. It didn't protect us at all.
01:49:02 Speaker_02
But we should just tell people what the strategy is. So one of the things that's been very clear is that they've moved a large percentage of these migrants that are coming across the border illegally, they've moved them to swing states.
01:49:18 Speaker_02
Like, this is what's going on with Springfield, Ohio, right?
01:49:20 Speaker_04
They're in swing states. Well, that's not a swing state. I'm going to win Ohio by a lot. So that's not a swing. But it's called Springfield, Ohio, to be exact.
01:49:27 Speaker_04
And Springfield, Ohio is this very nice community of 52,000 people that just had 32,000 migrants that don't speak the language dropped into their community. You can't get into a hospital. You can't get into a school.
01:49:46 Speaker_04
It's gone from a beautiful little place to a horror show. And the mayor is a nice guy. And the mayor says, we're looking for interpreters. I said, no, you've got to remove them and bring them back to their country. Mostly Haitians in this case.
01:50:01 Speaker_04
But they speak no language. They speak no English. In fact, even the language they do speak, I mean, they can't get interpreters. They can't do anything. And the mayor's trying to be politically correct. They're all trying to be.
01:50:13 Speaker_04
In Aurora, Colorado, you have the worst, probably the worst gang. MS-13 might even be, you know, those two are the worst gangs. These are Venezuela gangs. They have taken over apartment complexes, and they're going to want to take over the whole thing.
01:50:29 Speaker_04
And you have a weak governor, a pathetic governor, who's a radical left Democrat. He doesn't know what the hell to do.
01:50:36 Speaker_04
But you have it in many other communities, but they don't like to talk about it because it's, you know, it's bad for the community to talk about it. These people have been let in here by this imbecile. I mean it. She's a low IQ person. Low IQ.
01:50:52 Speaker_02
Right, but it's also, it's obviously not just her. There's a strategy that's involved in letting these people in. Well, she was in charge of the border. Well, she's in charge of the border, but they also, they utilize that app.
01:51:03 Speaker_02
the app that used to be used. It used to be used, I think, essentially, wasn't it for shipping? Wasn't it when people were in this country?
01:51:09 Speaker_04
It was used for shipping, and now it's used to deal with the cartels. The cartel, heads of the cartel, rich people, by the way, these are loaded. These people have so much money.
01:51:19 Speaker_04
They would call up, think of this, they call up the app, and the app tells them where they should take their load of illegal migrants from the Congo. You know, we have a lot from the Congo. Prisons in the Congo. I made a little bit of a sarcastic joke.
01:51:37 Speaker_04
A man named Dana White, who you love, who I love. I assume you love him.
01:51:41 Speaker_02
Love that dude.
01:51:42 Speaker_04
I think he's in a class by him.
01:51:44 Speaker_02
He's probably the reason why you're here. I don't know, maybe. He's one of the big ones.
01:51:50 Speaker_04
He is the greatest guy. You know, I always say, nobody's indispensable. You know, everybody can be replaced. Maybe you can't be. You might not be. But Dana truly, I don't think, you know, he sold it for $4 billion.
01:52:03 Speaker_04
I said, who the hell is going to pay $4 billion? And they made, like, a great deal.
01:52:10 Speaker_02
Because of him. Take him out. I think it's a whole different movie. No, he's the best fight promoter of all time.
01:52:15 Speaker_04
And he's also the greatest guy. He spoke at the whole thing with, you know, I had just been shot, and he got up and he spoke so better than anybody. I mean, who would be better to introduce you?
01:52:26 Speaker_04
I asked of all the people, and I know there's biggest people in the world, and they all would have loved to have done it. I said, Dana, would you do it? You know, it was interesting. He was away.
01:52:35 Speaker_04
He said to the people that he you know, one of my guys called said I won't be able to do it I'm she I just left with my wife and family.
01:52:42 Speaker_04
I won't I said we said no Yeah, I was a little surprised even though I knew he was very far away He was in some place some, you know, and he deserved it with his family, you know the whole thing and then I said, all right That's a let's enter.
01:52:54 Speaker_04
So we'll look at who we're gonna get and all of a sudden she comes in and Sir Dana White just said he's going to do it, and he's coming back in tonight.
01:53:02 Speaker_04
He's taking it, but you know, the guy is just an incredible guy, and he's like a tough champion, but loyal. Yeah, he's got to be one of your favorite people.
01:53:11 Speaker_02
He's one of my favorite people. I love him to death. I've been friends with him for 23 years. I love him to death.
01:53:16 Speaker_04
So would you have, because what you're doing here is incredible. I mean, everybody tells me. All I know is today I'm going... You know, you're on Joe Rogan today. People are telling me, like I said, I say, how the hell do you know that?
01:53:28 Speaker_04
But it's sort of what you've done here is amazing. Where would you be if you didn't do the UFC stuff? Would you have this show, do you think?
01:53:36 Speaker_02
Yeah, I would still be doing it for sure. Yeah.
01:53:38 Speaker_04
Would it be at the same level? I don't know. But you would have.
01:53:41 Speaker_02
It's hard to know. I think, you know, one of the things that works for this show, I guess, is that I'm involved in so many different things, you know, stand up comedy, UFC and all the interests that I have that lead to the podcast.
01:53:53 Speaker_04
Will you always want to do UFC? First of all, you love UFC.
01:53:56 Speaker_02
I love it. Yeah.
01:53:57 Speaker_04
You love the fights. I mean, I watch you. You are loving it.
01:54:00 Speaker_02
They could pay you nothing. They didn't pay me anything for the first, like, 13 shows. I did it for free because they were hemorrhaging money. And I became friends with Dana. And my position was, you're going to give me the best seat in the house.
01:54:12 Speaker_02
I get to sit cage side for the fights. I'll do it. And I wanted to help. I was like, I think these are the guys that we had always hoped for.
01:54:19 Speaker_02
In the early days of the sport, I started working for the company in 1997, before the UFC was purchased by Zufo, which Dana worked for. So I was a part of the previous owners, and I only did it for a couple of years.
01:54:31 Speaker_02
It was just too much, and I was losing money, and it was banned from cable because of Budweiser and John McCain, and you could only get it on DirecTV.
01:54:39 Speaker_04
And then I came along, and I gave him the site.
01:54:41 Speaker_02
You did, and he loves you for that. And he never forgot it. He loves you for that.
01:54:44 Speaker_04
He talks about it all the time. Just to interrupt you for one second. They couldn't get a site because it was too dangerous and everybody was against it and they couldn't get license and I gave him The first two or three sides.
01:54:55 Speaker_04
Yep, and they were great. And by the way, I went to the first fight I Said I never saw anything like this. It was crazy. It was so good. Take the best fight you've ever it was like that fight, right?
01:55:06 Speaker_04
It was so good that it gave it to me again again and all of a sudden it caught on but you know When I wasn't in Vogue, you know, I've had time, you probably never had a time, but I had times when I wasn't exactly in Vogue.
01:55:19 Speaker_04
Dana, they called him, he said, he's the greatest guy, there's nobody like him. He said, I'll never say anything bad about that guy because when I needed, because they were having a hard time at the beginning.
01:55:29 Speaker_04
They almost pulled the plug a couple of times, right? He said, he stood up and he gave us stuff that nobody else gave us and nobody wanted anything to do. And he said,
01:55:40 Speaker_04
I will never, and there was a time where it would have been very popular for him to say bad stuff about me. He said the greatest stuff about me. He said, you're going to try and get me to say bad stuff about Trump? I'm never doing it.
01:55:52 Speaker_02
No, he's a very, very, very loyal guy. Very unusual guy.
01:55:55 Speaker_04
He's a fantastic guy.
01:55:56 Speaker_02
A perfect guy to be at the helm of something so controversial as the UFC.
01:56:00 Speaker_04
Less controversial now.
01:56:01 Speaker_02
Well, now it's huge. Yeah. Well, this was always the thing that I would hope that it would be. I always knew that it was unbelievably entertaining, but I just didn't know if maybe I was crazy.
01:56:10 Speaker_02
Maybe I loved it because I've had this long history of being involved in martial arts and maybe like other people who just think it's too violent. But can boxing make it? Yeah. Boxing still a great sport.
01:56:20 Speaker_04
I love boxing. But it seems to be.
01:56:23 Speaker_02
So unimportant now by comparison to UFC don't you think I think well, you know Dana is working with the kingdom of Saudi Arabia They're gonna start promoting boxing now and with Dana at the helm of it I think boxing give return because the thing is they want to make fights and
01:56:39 Speaker_02
that other people, maybe, you know, promoters don't want to make because they want to protect their fighter. Controversial fights where, you know, it's dangerous, like you don't know this guy could lose. And so the Saudis, they're smart.
01:56:49 Speaker_02
They just offer a tremendous amount of money, and they're putting together fights that no one else can put together. They're doing that in boxing.
01:56:56 Speaker_04
If Dana's involved, he'll probably make it good. You know the amazing thing, though, in fighting? No UFC fighter, they say, has ever died. And it looks to me much more violent than boxing. Many boxers have died. Isn't it interesting?
01:57:10 Speaker_04
And Dana tells me because they take so many shots to the face.
01:57:13 Speaker_02
Yes. And there's also no other options to preserve yourself, to protect yourself. So if you get hit in a UFC fight, you can clinch. You can try to take the fight to the ground. You have options.
01:57:22 Speaker_02
You don't get allowed to get knocked down and then get back up. When you get knocked down, you're concussed. And generally, if a guy's really hurt, they can be finished on the ground and the fight's over. If it's boxing, you have 10 seconds to get up.
01:57:35 Speaker_02
You get up, your head kind of clears, but you're still in real bad trouble, and you can kind of run away and survive until the bell rings. They're only three-minute rounds, and then you start again. So you're getting repeated punishment to the head.
01:57:48 Speaker_02
And then there's also the issue of guys weight cutting, which is a problem with the UFC as well. But weight cutting and boxing has led to, if you look at deaths in boxing, there's very few of them in the heavyweight division.
01:57:59 Speaker_02
Most of the deaths in boxing are the lighter weight divisions, because when guys dehydrate themselves to lose weight, to make weight, their brain is the last thing that gets rehydrated.
01:58:09 Speaker_02
Like, it's very difficult to completely rehydrate your brain quickly. And you only have 24 hours between the weigh-in and the fight. And it used to be the weigh-ins were the day of the fight.
01:58:19 Speaker_02
Like when Boom Boom Mancini had a fight with Dukku Kim and killed him in the ring, which is one of the last ones on television that we've seen. That's right. That was a crazy event for people and heartbreaking.
01:58:30 Speaker_02
And it led to a bunch of different changes. And one of them is day before weigh-ins to allow people to rehydrate better. And the other one is they dropped it from 15 rounds down to 12.
01:58:38 Speaker_04
Which, look, they should do that again. You know, I'm not, I'm not the fighter. So, but those 15 round fights were unbelievable.
01:58:45 Speaker_02
They were unbelievable. Unbelievable. Yeah. You go back to the golden age.
01:58:48 Speaker_04
Yeah. In terms of entertainment.
01:58:50 Speaker_02
Oh yeah.
01:58:51 Speaker_04
Those were the championship rounds. Those were the greatest fights.
01:58:54 Speaker_02
Those last three rounds were crazy. That was brutal. I mean, it's such a war of attrition. You know, a lot of people think even, like, a five-round UFC fight. UFC is five-minute rounds. It's so much energy you're burning out.
01:59:06 Speaker_02
And those last couple of rounds, those five-round fights, the fourth and the fifth round, unbelievably brutal.
01:59:11 Speaker_04
Who's the greatest UFC fighter, are you allowed to say? In your opinion, it's tough for you to say because you do this, but who do you think is the greatest of the fighters?
01:59:19 Speaker_02
There's a lot of arguments for who's the greatest of all time. John Jones, most people would say, is the greatest of all time, never lost. There's certainly a really good argument for that. There's another argument for Georges Saint-Pierre.
01:59:34 Speaker_02
I always leave in BJ Penn in his prime, Anderson Silva in his prime, you know, Mighty Mouse. People forget about Mighty Mouse because unfortunately he's a smaller guy, he's 125 pounds, flyweight champion.
01:59:46 Speaker_02
He's one of the greatest expressions of mixed martial arts I've ever seen. I think to this day. And Khabib? Khabib's fantastic.
01:59:53 Speaker_02
But if you looked at the accomplishments in terms of championship fights, Khabib retired 29-0, but he didn't have as many world championship fights. And probably never lost a round. He might have lost to Gleason Tebow. He might have lost to him.
02:00:05 Speaker_02
He might have lost a round. And that was a controversial fight where people think that Gleason Tebow could have even gotten the decision in that fight. I'd have to go back and watch it again to make a decision. They're great athletes.
02:00:16 Speaker_02
Oh, the best athletes in the world. And the most dangerous sport in terms of, I always call it high-level problem-solving with dire physical consequences. That's what fighting is.
02:00:27 Speaker_04
You know, I never forget. So there was a fighter named James Toney.
02:00:32 Speaker_02
Oh yeah, I love James Toney.
02:00:33 Speaker_04
He fought as a very light fighter and he ended up as a heavyweight. This guy went through everything.
02:00:38 Speaker_02
He was almost like a lightweight. He went from middleweight all the way up to heavyweight. And beat Evander Holyfield as a heavyweight.
02:00:44 Speaker_04
And he was a real fighter.
02:00:45 Speaker_02
Oh yeah.
02:00:45 Speaker_04
So James Toney, and I think it was St.
02:00:49 Speaker_02
George... George St. Pierre?
02:00:51 Speaker_04
St. Pierre. I think it was him. Who did he fight? James Toney.
02:00:55 Speaker_02
No, James Tony didn't fight George Seymour.
02:00:57 Speaker_04
He fought a UFC fighter?
02:00:59 Speaker_02
Yeah, Randy Couture fought James Tony. Was it Randy Couture or Randy? That was a very easy fight. Randy Couture just took him down and strangled him.
02:01:06 Speaker_04
And he's half the size. Once he got to the ankles, in fact, the announcer said, it's over.
02:01:12 Speaker_02
Yeah, he ankle picked him, took him down, mounted him, strangled him.
02:01:15 Speaker_04
It was pretty quick. But he was talking big, because he was much bigger. He was a pretty big guy.
02:01:19 Speaker_02
I think James just wanted to make some money in that fight. You think so? Yeah.
02:01:22 Speaker_04
But I never forgot it. I don't think he knew what he was doing. It was over very quickly, and he was lying sleeping on the mat. And he was talking. He was doing the Muhammad Ali stuff, but it didn't work out. But I remember.
02:01:31 Speaker_02
He sold the fight.
02:01:32 Speaker_04
Yeah, that was Couture probably.
02:01:33 Speaker_02
Yeah, it was Couture. George never fought a boxer in an MMA fight. If he did, he would kill them.
02:01:39 Speaker_04
Was he one of the greatest?
02:01:40 Speaker_02
Yes, unquestionably. There's a handful of guys you can make the argument is the greatest of all time. People forget about Anderson Silva. In his prime, he was unstoppable. Anderson Silva? And then there's Fedor Emelianenko, who fought in pride.
02:01:53 Speaker_02
In his prime, he was unstoppable.
02:01:55 Speaker_04
And you have a couple now that are pretty good.
02:01:58 Speaker_02
Oh, we've got so many now. Alex Pereira, there's an argument that he's the top pound-for-pound fighter in the world right now.
02:02:03 Speaker_04
He's looking very good, yeah.
02:02:04 Speaker_02
It's unbelievable. But it's like, fighters can only compete at that level for so many years. And so my opinion, you have to judge them at their very peak. You can't judge them when they're hanging on and still fighting.
02:02:15 Speaker_02
You can't judge them when they're coming up. You've got to judge them in that championship peak. And that championship peak, there's a handful of guys that you would consider at the very top.
02:02:24 Speaker_04
If they stopped a little bit sooner, some of them would have had, you know, I mean, there are a couple of that you just mentioned without mentioning names. If they stopped, they had the perfect, they were unbelievable.
02:02:34 Speaker_04
And then at a certain age, they start getting knocked out, right?
02:02:38 Speaker_02
Yes, it's unfortunate, but the thing is that same belief in themselves that lets them become a champion makes them think that they can do it long past the time that they actually can.
02:02:46 Speaker_04
Well, Anderson Silva was essentially unbeatable, and then he lost to Klaus Schwinn, and then all of a sudden he had to... No, he got knocked out.
02:02:52 Speaker_02
He got knocked out by Chris Weidman. He was kind of clowning in that fight, famously, and Chris Weidman had a vicious left hook, knocked him out, and then they fought a second time and he broke his leg on Chris Weidman.
02:03:03 Speaker_02
And after that fight, he was kind of never the same, because that leg break injury, which Conor McGregor had, there's quite a few fighters that Weidman actually wound up having the same injury, ironically. There's only been like four of those.
02:03:16 Speaker_04
You're never the same, because you can't kick.
02:03:18 Speaker_02
Well, you can, Weidman is still kicking with that leg, you can, but psychologically, when you throw a kick and your leg snaps in half, and you're in agony for a year, right?
02:03:27 Speaker_02
You have to get surgery, you have to get bolts and plates to keep your leg together, and then it takes forever for it to heal.
02:03:33 Speaker_04
It always amazes me how the kicker, I mean, you have those cases, but the kicker will do tremendous damage to somebody's leg, but their leg doesn't seem to get damaged. Isn't it sort of amazing?
02:03:43 Speaker_02
It does get damaged. It hurts. More than you think. Yeah, but your shin gets very numb after a while.
02:03:49 Speaker_02
And guys that are really good kickers, they're kicking the thigh, and they're kicking the calf, they're kicking soft areas, and they're slamming this hard, numb shin. Their shin gets all these like micro fractures all over the shin and it calcifies.
02:04:04 Speaker_02
Like these guys can kick baseball bats. You ever seen them break baseball bats with their shins? It's crazy. Some guys can do two baseball bats. Someone will hold the baseball bat and they'll just kick right through them.
02:04:13 Speaker_04
I watch your enthusiasm now, right?
02:04:15 Speaker_02
Yeah.
02:04:16 Speaker_04
And it's like, that's why you're good at it. Nobody does this better. Without the enthusiasm, Forget it.
02:04:23 Speaker_02
Well, it has to be authentic. I mean, the only reason why I do MMA commentary is because I'm very interested in it, for real. I don't have to manufacture it. I'm very interested.
02:04:33 Speaker_04
And you love going in there after the fight, and they're sweating all over you, they're slopping all over you, you're beautiful.
02:04:39 Speaker_02
They bleed on me.
02:04:39 Speaker_04
They're bleeding on you.
02:04:40 Speaker_02
Does that bother you a little bit?
02:04:42 Speaker_04
Yeah, like two weeks ago with the guy, I never saw him.
02:04:45 Speaker_02
Khalil Roundstreet, yeah.
02:04:47 Speaker_04
More stuff came out of his nose?
02:04:49 Speaker_02
Yes, it was pretty nasty, but no, I'm very used to it. I just wanted him to be able to express himself.
02:04:54 Speaker_04
You've done a great job.
02:04:55 Speaker_02
Thank you, thank you. So, back to you, and back to what are you, and first of all, I love this idea of you teaming up with Robert Kennedy.
02:05:05 Speaker_02
And I love this Make America Healthy Again idea, because there are chemicals and ingredients that are in our food that are illegal in other countries, because they've been shown to be toxic.
02:05:16 Speaker_02
There's pesticides and herbicides, and there's a lot of shit that's been sprayed on our food that really is unnecessary, and there's a lot of health consequences that people are suffering from a lot of these things.
02:05:29 Speaker_04
And to- I brought this chart for you. Beautiful. Because I had a feeling you'd be asking me. Thank you. Look at this chart. These are healthier countries. Look where the United States is. I'm going to send this to RFK Jr.
02:05:40 Speaker_02
So this is, well, something along the lines, I was actually talking to RFK today, and he told me that more than 70% of young men are ineligible for the military because of their health.
02:05:53 Speaker_04
I could see it.
02:05:53 Speaker_02
That's crazy.
02:05:54 Speaker_04
A lot of it's obesity.
02:05:55 Speaker_02
So here's the life expectancy versus health expenditure.
02:05:59 Speaker_04
Same chart.
02:06:00 Speaker_02
Yeah.
02:06:00 Speaker_04
Did you see that?
02:06:01 Speaker_02
USA. That's pretty good. Jamie's the best.
02:06:04 Speaker_04
He's very good.
02:06:05 Speaker_02
He's the best.
02:06:06 Speaker_04
But look at that.
02:06:07 Speaker_02
Look at the USA. Not good. And that's our food. That's our diet. That's sedentary lifestyle. That's our diet. That's the chemicals we ingest. That's what that is.
02:06:16 Speaker_04
But RFK is gonna be very, you know, I think he's a great guy.
02:06:20 Speaker_02
I love the fact that you guys teamed up. Yeah. And are you guys, are you completely committed to have him a part of your administration?
02:06:26 Speaker_04
Oh, I am, but the only thing I want to be a little careful about with him is the environmental. Because, you know, he doesn't like oil. I love oil and gas. I think, you know, I think... Just keep him out of that.
02:06:36 Speaker_04
So I'm going to sort of keep him out of a little bit. I said, focus on health. You can do whatever you want. But I got to be a little bit careful with the liquid gold, you know.
02:06:45 Speaker_02
I understand. But listen, there's plenty of good work that could be done if you focus on health. Here's the one that's my all-time favorite, though.
02:06:53 Speaker_04
What is that? See the arrow right here? That's the one I left.
02:06:55 Speaker_02
Do you have anyone that is pressuring you to not work with him? To not work with who? RFK Jr. Yes. Yes, I would imagine. Because financially, he could put a dent.
02:07:11 Speaker_04
I think, in many ways, they've done a good job. In many ways, they've done a bad job. But I would say that the big pharma wasn't thrilled when they heard that, you know, I have a related — I've actually always gotten along very well with him.
02:07:24 Speaker_04
I've known him a long time. He's a different kind of a guy. He's a very smart, great guy. And he's very sincere about this.
02:07:31 Speaker_04
I mean, he really is — you know, he thinks we spend a fortune on pesticides and all this stuff, and then you end up — that chart is a terrible chart, the one previous.
02:07:40 Speaker_04
It's such a bad chart when you look at where we are compared to other countries that don't spend 10 cents.
02:07:45 Speaker_02
Right.
02:07:46 Speaker_04
So, you know, and you save a lot of money. But yeah, we I've had some people that aren't exactly thrilled. You can imagine, right? Sure. It's a good question.
02:07:54 Speaker_02
Well, certainly, if it doesn't affect me. some pharmaceutical drugs that have been prescribed that have negative consequences that these people have been profiting off of, and then you have a guy like RFK Jr.
02:08:06 Speaker_02
who spends an enormous amount of time highlighting those things. You could say how they'd be very reluctant to have you support him.
02:08:13 Speaker_04
I would say that's an understatement.
02:08:14 Speaker_02
Yeah. So what do you do to stop that from getting in the way?
02:08:18 Speaker_04
Well, look, they've come up with some amazing things. I mean, I don't know how you feel. I know you're against certain vaccines, but like the polio vaccine, people had polio. It was like a disaster.
02:08:32 Speaker_04
And they came up, Dr. Salk, and he came up with a vaccine, and there's no polio. Now, very interesting, there hasn't been polio, but now in the Gaza Strip, can you believe that? Have you heard that?
02:08:42 Speaker_04
There's been a big strain of polio coming out in the Gaza Strip.
02:08:46 Speaker_02
Is it vaccine-derived polio? Because, you know, there's a strain of polio that comes directly from the vaccine, because unfortunately sometimes when you vaccinate people for polio, you actually give them polio.
02:08:57 Speaker_04
I mean, all I can do is I sit down and I listen to him, and I'll give it a total. I would love him to be right, because if he's right, it's a lot less expensive, generally speaking.
02:09:07 Speaker_02
There's two things that people point to when they point to the dangers of the pharmaceutical drug industry. One thing is when pharmaceutical drugs were allowed to advertise on television.
02:09:19 Speaker_02
We're only one of two countries in the world that allow pharmaceutical drugs to advertise on TV. The other one's New Zealand, but they're more restrictive than we are. People are worried.
02:09:28 Speaker_04
But those ads, those ads, when you hear like, you know, take a certain drug. And then you hear all the consequences. And then you say, it causes cancer, and baldness, we don't like baldness.
02:09:35 Speaker_02
Suicidal ideation.
02:09:36 Speaker_04
And they said that, and eyesight, and you can lose your vision. Yeah.
02:09:39 Speaker_04
And you know, I just, I actually asked one of these guys, I would never take, I mean, it causes things that are so bad, they go through a whole list, I guess they save some liability, but man, I said, does that affect the purchase?
02:09:51 Speaker_04
And they say, it really does. When there's something you have and you read, and then they go through the list of side effects, the potential side effects. I mean, a lot of people are just—I ask that question. People hear that.
02:10:08 Speaker_04
When I hear it, I'm going to take a pass. It says, may affect your vision, may cause blindness, may this—
02:10:15 Speaker_02
Well, I know you're aware of Cal and KC Means, right? Yes.
02:10:18 Speaker_02
Well, one of the things that they pointed out, and this is a very important thing for people to understand, is what a lot of these drugs do is they act to somehow or another mitigate the effects of poor metabolic health.
02:10:33 Speaker_02
But most of these problems that these people are suffering from wouldn't exist if we put an emphasis on metabolic health.
02:10:39 Speaker_02
If people got healthier, they started eating nutritious food and taking vitamins, a whole host of these problems that people are having would go away.
02:10:48 Speaker_02
And the problem with that from the pharmaceutical drug standpoint is they wouldn't be able to sell drugs to these people. And this is a fear that a lot of people have.
02:10:55 Speaker_04
And the pesticides and things like that on the plants, what do you think of that?
02:10:59 Speaker_02
Terrible. Well, I think regenerative agriculture, unfortunately, is very difficult to scale to a point where you've got a jack-in-the-box on every corner.
02:11:06 Speaker_02
If everybody wants food, and we have food deserts, and we have places like Los Angeles where no one's growing anything, and everything has to be shipped in, it's very difficult to feed that many people.
02:11:17 Speaker_02
We've created this incredible society where we have these enormous cities, but it's very difficult to get food to these people. For a lot of these people in low-income areas, the only food that's available is cheap, unhealthy food.
02:11:30 Speaker_02
And we could fix that. If we could send $175 billion to Ukraine, we could do something to fix a lot of the health problems that the United States has. And I think it would help us as a nation overall.
02:11:44 Speaker_02
If you just put it out there that, hey, as a nation, we're going to make a concerted effort to get people healthier. Just put it out there, and people start making better choices.
02:11:53 Speaker_04
Well, when you look at that chart, I was crazy. I just they just gave me that job because they said you may want to discuss this topic, which I know is a big topic for you.
02:12:01 Speaker_04
And when I looked at that chart and I looked at how unhealthy we are as a nation, that's a that's a pretty big. How are you so healthy? Is it golf? No, it's genetics, I believe. You know, I'm a big believer.
02:12:12 Speaker_02
Genetics is a big factor.
02:12:13 Speaker_04
I really am. I mean, my father was... Unfortunately, it is a big factor for health.
02:12:19 Speaker_02
Some people are just way more robust. But you do play golf a lot, and that is exercise.
02:12:23 Speaker_04
Both of my parents. For me, it's good. Fresh air, exercise. Even mentally, you're focused on that three-footer, and for a couple of hours you're not. And I go quick, I play fast, real fast, and I'm in, I'm out.
02:12:39 Speaker_04
I was never one that could run on a treadmill, and I can do it. When passing a physical, they ask me to run on a treadmill, and then they make it steeper and steeper and steeper.
02:12:51 Speaker_04
And the doctors said, it was at Walter Reed, they said, it's unbelievable. I'm telling you, I felt I could have gone all day. But I said, Doc, I can do this all day long. I have no problem. But it's boring to me. Do you understand?
02:13:06 Speaker_02
It's just boring. Golf's exciting.
02:13:07 Speaker_04
But I did it for so long, they couldn't believe it that I did it. And I never, you know, I don't do it. I don't really, you know, I have friends that are running this stuff all day long, but I had no problem doing it. But it's really boring.
02:13:19 Speaker_04
So with golf or something, you know, or tennis or whatever. Golf, as you get older, there's something really good about it. And you have competition with your friends.
02:13:28 Speaker_02
Competition, concentration, focus.
02:13:30 Speaker_04
And it's a great handicap sport.
02:13:31 Speaker_02
And it's also a thing, I think, that's a, it cleans your mind because when you're looking at a shot, that's all you can think of when you're executing.
02:13:39 Speaker_04
It gives you a couple of hours. You know, it's interesting, like with tennis, if you're much better than somebody, you can't really play with somebody. You know, it doesn't work. You can give them sort of the equivalent of strokes, right?
02:13:50 Speaker_04
But it's not the same. With golf, you can play with a lousy guy and give him a stroke a hole or two strokes a hole or something. You know, it's a good handicapping. Right. But it gives me a little exercise. But I haven't played in a long time. I won a lot.
02:14:02 Speaker_04
I won 32 club championships.
02:14:03 Speaker_02
Didn't you play right after you got shot?
02:14:06 Speaker_04
No. What I did is I played with Bryson DeChambeau. Do you know Bryson? Yes. The pro. He's a great player. And we played. It was a certain thing that we played I guess called breaking 50 or something. 50 we play from a certain tee and if you can break 50.
02:14:25 Speaker_04
And it got tremendous ratings, sort of like a crazy thing. He's a great guy.
02:14:30 Speaker_02
But wasn't that like a couple of days after you got shot? I don't know. That was one of the funniest things. You were on the golf course.
02:14:36 Speaker_04
I think I did. Yeah, maybe I did. But I, you know, I view it very interestingly. I'm running. for President of the United States. To me, it's such a big deal. It's so important.
02:14:48 Speaker_02
So I've got now- What's the biggest deal in the free world?
02:14:51 Speaker_04
It's a hundred times bigger than the Super Bowl, and it's one person.
02:14:54 Speaker_02
Yeah.
02:14:55 Speaker_04
So you're down to two people, and we start off at nine billion, because you have nine billion, they say, in the world. Who knows what that number is? But you get down to 350 million.
02:15:08 Speaker_04
Sadly, we have no idea what we have in this country, but let's assume it's 325, 350. And you're down to two people. It's the biggest thing in the world.
02:15:17 Speaker_04
And when I heard she took off yesterday and she took off the day before and she's going to take off tomorrow or the next day, I haven't taken a day off in 56 days. That's a long time. I haven't taken one day off. I don't want to play golf.
02:15:32 Speaker_04
This is too exciting. Golf is great, but this is too exciting. This is more exciting than anything you can do.
02:15:39 Speaker_02
Also, it's the home stretch.
02:15:41 Speaker_04
It's the home stretch. Who would take a day off? So we have 11 days left now. And think of it. So I think I've gone 54, 55 days in a row. No days off. And I make speeches oftentimes. Sometimes not, but I make speeches. And when you make a speech,
02:15:59 Speaker_04
And my speeches last a long time because of the weave. I weave stories into it. If you just read a teleprompter, nobody's going to be very excited. You've got to weave it out. But as you say, you always have to get right back to it.
02:16:12 Speaker_04
Otherwise, it's no good. But the weave is very, very important. Very few weavers around. It's a big strain on your, you know, it's a big, it's a lot of work, it's a lot of work.
02:16:24 Speaker_04
You gotta be careful with the voice, you can lose that voice, the voice wasn't designed. I said today, so, I made a big one last night, I was in Las Vegas. Yeah, big one the night before in Arizona Big one.
02:16:38 Speaker_04
I mean, they're all big We have that there's never been anything like it in terms of crowd never been close Never been close. They say he talks about crowd says, you know, it's very interesting So we get crowds that are really big.
02:16:54 Speaker_04
And I say, you know, I've never had a story because I don't get good press. I don't think I've had a good story in years. I really don't. I don't I swear. I don't think you were talking about it a little bit with Oprah. Everybody loved me.
02:17:06 Speaker_04
I don't think I became president of the United States. I did great the second time. I did much better. I don't want to get you in any disputes, but I won that second election so easy, and not just because of you.
02:17:19 Speaker_02
But let me get to that. I want to talk to you about that. But here's the thing.
02:17:22 Speaker_04
I did that, and now I've gotten the nomination again. And don't forget, to get these nominations, you go against very smart people. Ron DeSantis was hot. Got to go through him. Nikki Haley was hot. Got to go through her.
02:17:35 Speaker_04
Went through everybody record time right record time.
02:17:38 Speaker_04
I got three nominations a row Won the first time did much better the second time, but you know I get millions of votes more the second time and now I'm doing it a third time and And it's an incredible thing. I never get a good story.
02:17:54 Speaker_04
I only get bad press now I will say this it's a lot easier if you're a Democrat if I were a Democrat I
02:18:00 Speaker_02
You'd get a lot of positive press.
02:18:01 Speaker_04
I would get a lot of positive press.
02:18:03 Speaker_02
Yeah. No, it's a creepy, corrupt business. And the media, to a large extent, acts as a propaganda arm for the Democratic Party.
02:18:10 Speaker_04
It's not even believable.
02:18:11 Speaker_02
Yeah, it's bizarre to watch. And most young people, I think, are aware of it. I think most boomers still, unfortunately, read the newspapers and believe in CNN.
02:18:22 Speaker_04
But it's getting younger.
02:18:23 Speaker_02
Yes.
02:18:23 Speaker_04
Let me tell you, it's getting for us, for a conservative.
02:18:27 Speaker_02
Yes.
02:18:27 Speaker_04
But you know why that is?
02:18:29 Speaker_02
It's the internet. It's because the internet's giving people information that they're not getting from anywhere else.
02:18:34 Speaker_02
And the very fine people hoax, the Russiagate hoax, all these different things that they've done, they tried to pin on you, it's a clear distortion of what you actually said.
02:18:44 Speaker_04
The bloodbath hoax. I was talking about the auto industry. It's a bloodbath, because Japan and China are taking our order. And I said, it's a bloodbath. They said, oh, he used the word bloodbath.
02:18:58 Speaker_02
He said, if you don't win, it's going to be a bloodbath, because they're going to take over. That's exactly what he said. It's a terrible thing they do. But that's the problem with propagandists, because they take things out of context.
02:19:07 Speaker_02
And ultimately, what they do is they diminish their own credibility, because people don't want to listen to them anymore. Because they see that they've done that, and they recognize what's going on, and they feel insulted.
02:19:16 Speaker_02
Their intelligence is getting insulted.
02:19:17 Speaker_04
Well, look at the ratings. You know, shows like yours. So I have a son who's very smart and tall, barren, right? And he knows all about you. He knows about guys I never heard of. He said, Dad, you don't know how big they are. They're big.
02:19:32 Speaker_04
You know, he told me how big. I said, who the hell is he? Like Ross. He said, Dad, he's a great guy. I mean, guys that are doing... It's a whole new world out there.
02:19:42 Speaker_02
It's a different world.
02:19:43 Speaker_04
You know, I'm on TikTok now.
02:19:45 Speaker_02
Congratulations.
02:19:46 Speaker_04
And I've done really well. No, but you know the crazy, have you seen the numbers? Billions, like billions of hits. It's crazy.
02:19:54 Speaker_02
I'm sure. TikTok's a wild application.
02:19:55 Speaker_04
And I've gone up 30 points. A Republican is always down 30 with young people. I'm plus 30. And I'm on TikTok. It's had a huge impact.
02:20:06 Speaker_02
I think young people are rejecting a lot of this woke bullshit. Young people are tired of being yelled at and scolded. They're tired of these people that they think are mentally ill telling them what the moral standards of society should be today.
02:20:19 Speaker_02
And people are upset.
02:20:20 Speaker_04
There's a big difference now. But even in just a couple of years, I was shaking hands with people. They're young people. The rebels are Republicans now.
02:20:29 Speaker_02
They're like, you want to be a rebel? You want to be punk rock? You want to buck the system? You're a conservative now. That's how crazy. And then the liberals are now pro- pro-silencing criticism. They're pro-censorship online.
02:20:45 Speaker_02
They're talking about regulating free speech and regulating the First Amendment. It's bananas to watch.
02:20:52 Speaker_04
Sure, they come after their political opponent. I got more guys. I always say, you're not a kid, but I'm not kidding. I've been investigated more than Alphonse Capone. He was the meanest of them all.
02:21:04 Speaker_04
He'd kill you in two seconds if he didn't like you, right? I've been under investigation more than Alphonse Capone, only because it's political opponent stuff. And I've won. I won the big case in Florida. I'm winning the other stuff. You win.
02:21:18 Speaker_04
But you know what they did? They did something that's only done in third world countries. They came after their political opponent. I could have put Crooked Hillary in jail.
02:21:26 Speaker_02
Well, not only that, but they're now weaponizing it by saying that that's what you're going to do once you get in office, ignoring what they're doing right now.
02:21:34 Speaker_04
It's crazy. I heard it. Somebody was defending me today. They said, no, that's what you're doing to him. They're going, he's going to put us in jail. He's going to invest. They said, that's what you're doing to him. A lot of people say, will you do that?
02:21:50 Speaker_04
Will you do that to him, to them, if you win? The presidency has tremendous power. I could have put Crooked Hillary in jail.
02:21:57 Speaker_02
I respected that you didn't, because what you said was it would be bad for the country.
02:22:01 Speaker_04
No, I couldn't even imagine you have, first of all, Secretary of State, but more importantly, the wife of the President of the United States of America. going into jail.
02:22:11 Speaker_04
And if you ever saw when I'd say something about her, they'd all say, I didn't say it. I never said it. They say, lock her up, lock her. And I'd always go, take it easy. Just relax. We're going to win this thing. Take it easy. Take it easy.
02:22:23 Speaker_04
And I'm telling you, I kept it down just the opposite. Now they say, oh, Trump wanted to put her in jail. No. I saved her from going to jail. They had more stuff on her.
02:22:32 Speaker_04
And Comey had it, because when Comey got up, and he stupidly, because he's a stupid guy too, he's a stupid son of a bitch. He got up, Joe, he got up, and instead of saying she's innocent of all charges, he went over each charge
02:22:48 Speaker_04
And each charge was a killer. And you go, and as far as her doing this, she's innocent. And this, and then she's only an unfair prosecutor. But every time you heard these charges, they sounded so bad.
02:23:04 Speaker_00
They were bad.
02:23:05 Speaker_04
And all it was is he wanted more airtime. If he would have gone up and said, I've thoroughly investigated Hillary Clinton and she's done nothing that we feel is wrong, it would have ended. Instead, he wanted to be up there because he's a PR hound.
02:23:21 Speaker_04
He's a hog. And you know what he had? They had a huge problem because FBI is great. The people there, not the top people, the people, the real people, the people that work there.
02:23:35 Speaker_04
It's like the real generals that I told you about that defeated ISIS in record time. The FBI guys are great. I'll bet you I'd be at 95% in the FBI.
02:23:45 Speaker_02
I bet that's right.
02:23:46 Speaker_04
Underneath. Yeah. And so here's the thing. So he goes with Hillary, and instead of just saying, he goes through each charge. Right. And even I was saying, man, those are bad charges.
02:23:57 Speaker_02
Sounds terrible, because it's associating her with those charges.
02:23:59 Speaker_04
Don't forget, this is before I got there.
02:24:01 Speaker_02
Right.
02:24:01 Speaker_04
Now, he was trying to protect her, but he did her a great disservice.
02:24:05 Speaker_02
Because he wanted attention.
02:24:07 Speaker_04
He was stupid.
02:24:07 Speaker_02
So I want to talk about 2020, because you said over and over again that you were robbed in 2020.
02:24:13 Speaker_04
Yeah, totally.
02:24:14 Speaker_02
How do you think you were robbed? Everybody always cuts you off.
02:24:18 Speaker_04
Well, they not only cut you off. Well, what I'd rather do is we'll do it another time. And I would bring in papers that you would not believe, so many different papers. That election was so crooked. It was the most crooked election.
02:24:32 Speaker_02
Okay, but give me some examples of how.
02:24:34 Speaker_04
Well, let's start, let's start at the top and the easy ones. Okay. They were supposed to get legislative approval to do the things they did and they didn't get it. In many cases, they didn't get it.
02:24:44 Speaker_02
What things?
02:24:46 Speaker_04
Anything legislative approval like for extensions of the voting for for voting earlier for this all different things By law they had to get legislative approvals. You don't have to go any further than that if you take a look at Wisconsin
02:25:02 Speaker_04
They virtually admitted that the election was rigged, robbed, and stolen. They wouldn't give access in certain areas to the ballots because the ballots weren't signed. They weren't originals. We could go into this stuff.
02:25:19 Speaker_04
We could go into the ballots or we could go into the overall. I'll give you another one.
02:25:22 Speaker_02
Are you going to present this ever? Like what do you do you think let me just give you one before?
02:25:31 Speaker_04
51 intelligence agents come up that the laptop Was from Russia it turned out to be totally false 51 former intelligence agents, right? They say that made I don't believe it's this much but it doesn't matter I won by like I lost by like a
02:25:49 Speaker_04
I didn't lose, but they say I lost, Joe, they say I lost by 22,000 votes. That's like one tenth of one percent less than that. It's a tiny little thing. 22,000 votes spread over, that's spread over this period. So, 51 intelligence agents lied.
02:26:09 Speaker_04
They lied, they lied, they knew it was. It was Hunter's, it was from his bed. It was Hunter's laptop. They said it was created by Russia. Russia, Russia, Russia. It was the Russia hoax. The Russia hoax was a big hoax. It was all a big hoax.
02:26:23 Speaker_04
Well, that's clear. That's one example.
02:26:25 Speaker_02
That is a good example. But that's a big example.
02:26:27 Speaker_04
They say it made a 17 point difference. That's a big example. But that's only one. And you could go into the ballots where they wouldn't give you access to the ballots. You could go into the ballot harvesting.
02:26:40 Speaker_04
You could go into 500 million dollars for the lock boxes.
02:26:44 Speaker_02
But just in terms of narrative. So there's two things, right? There's the Russia hoax. There's the collusion with Russia that was never proven, right? That's one.
02:26:51 Speaker_04
No, it was proven it didn't happen. Right, right.
02:26:53 Speaker_02
But they talked about it on television.
02:26:56 Speaker_04
But it took two and a half years to prove.
02:26:58 Speaker_02
Not only that, but it was a constant narrative on television. That's a constant narrative that gets into people's minds, especially low information people that just watch the news, that you're in collusion with Russia. So that's one.
02:27:08 Speaker_02
So that changes the narrative. And then you have the 51 former intelligence agents that work with the original Twitter and get them to remove links. You can't share it on DMs. You cannot share that story.
02:27:21 Speaker_02
They swept that story because they said it was Russian disinformation, even though they knew it was not. So that's two examples that are real examples.
02:27:30 Speaker_02
Now, anyone who considers himself a legitimate, objective observer of American politics, if you really want the best person to win, you would want people to not lie.
02:27:42 Speaker_02
And the only reason why they got away with this lie was because they continually labeled you as this horrible threat to democracy and Hitler.
02:27:51 Speaker_02
They kept saying you were going to be a dictator, ignoring the fact that you weren't a dictator for the four years where you were actually the president.
02:27:58 Speaker_04
I was actually the opposite of a dictator. I was a very straight guy. But look, those three things, you take those three things, each one of them by themselves causes the result to be different.
02:28:08 Speaker_02
It does.
02:28:08 Speaker_04
And then you can go into a hundred other things. There's so many. We can't have corrupt elections and we can't have open borders. You need to have a country. You need borders. You need fair elections.
02:28:21 Speaker_04
And I'll tell you the other thing you need is you need a free and fair press. One of the things I like about doing a show like this, can you imagine Kamala doing this show?
02:28:30 Speaker_02
I could imagine her doing the show. She'd be laying on the floor. She was supposed to do it, and she might still do it, and I hope she does. She's not going to do it. I will talk to her like a human being. I would try to have a conversation with her.
02:28:40 Speaker_04
If she did this kind of an interview with you, I hope she does, because it would be a mess. She'd be laying on the floor, comatose. She'd be saying, call in the medics.
02:28:49 Speaker_02
I think we'd have a fine conversation. I think I'd be able to talk to her. I wouldn't try to interview her, I'd just try to have a conversation with her and hopefully get to know her as a human being.
02:28:57 Speaker_02
That was my goal, having her on, trying to get her to express herself just as a human being. I don't know if these – I don't think these formats are good.
02:29:05 Speaker_02
I don't think that two people – first of all, I hate the idea of the presidential debates because I hate the idea of a time limitation on complex ideas.
02:29:13 Speaker_04
Also, you have to break... I think you have to have the debates.
02:29:15 Speaker_02
Right. But the way they do the debates, I think, is the wrong way to do it. I think they should have a conversation. I think you and Kamala, you sit across the table with no one in the room but the two of you.
02:29:27 Speaker_02
Of course you're not going to shout each other. Of course you're not going to insult each other.
02:29:30 Speaker_04
I mean, it may get...
02:29:32 Speaker_02
They used to do it that way. Hopefully it wouldn't, but that would be the way to do it. They used to do it that way in the old days.
02:29:36 Speaker_02
And just to put cameras on you with no one interfering with checking whether or not it's factual, especially when it's biased, because they checked you all those times and they didn't check her, with clearly things that were inaccurate, right?
02:29:50 Speaker_02
So have two people just have a conversation with you without a time constraint. And also this idea, they cut off the microphone.
02:29:59 Speaker_04
And no crowd.
02:30:00 Speaker_02
No crowd. Crazy, too, because you're good at working in a crowd.
02:30:02 Speaker_04
I would rather have a crowd.
02:30:03 Speaker_02
Of course you would.
02:30:04 Speaker_04
You're good at crowds. But I had no... So they gave me an alternative. I don't think he won the debate. Why did they want no crowd?
02:30:11 Speaker_02
What was the argument?
02:30:11 Speaker_04
Because I think they thought I wasn't going to accept it. So I believe what they wanted to do is have me not accept. So they gave me a deal I couldn't refuse, and I said, I'll do it, okay? It's like the mob.
02:30:23 Speaker_02
Right.
02:30:23 Speaker_04
I'll take it. So they came to me, they said, We'll debate Joe Biden. You know, that thing got tremendous ratings, too. That was crazy. But we'll debate Joe Biden. But you can't have a crowd. They also wanted sitting down. I said, that's the only thing.
02:30:38 Speaker_04
I said, look, you got to you got to stand up. You can't really sit down. You know, in the old days, they did sit down a little bit. But he gets tired. You got to stand up. And they agreed to it. It was a very tough thing. It almost killed it.
02:30:50 Speaker_04
They wanted to have desks where we sit. I said, I think we should stand up. And that was the only thing I asked for. I said, we've got to stand up. I thought it looked bad for the public. But they said, no crowd, and cut off the mic.
02:31:06 Speaker_04
And I said, I can live with it. I mean, I can live with it. And they thought I was going to reject it. And then they would say he didn't want to debate Sleepy Joe.
02:31:14 Speaker_02
Right. That's what they thought. Well, they tried to say that with you and Kamala as well. They tried to say that you didn't want to debate her as well.
02:31:19 Speaker_04
No, by the way, with her. Number one, I'm leading. Number two, you know, I didn't. They also said it with the primary. So I had like 10, 12 guys, right, in the primary. No stupid guys. I mean, they're governors and they're senators.
02:31:33 Speaker_04
They're not stupid people. Some are stupid, but not all of them. And all my guys said, you have to be in the debate. I said, why? I'm leading by 74 points. The closest guy to me, I'm like 60 points, 70 points higher.
02:31:48 Speaker_04
Why would I stand there like an idiot for two hours and let every one of them scream at me? I'm going to be the focus. And I said, I'm not debating. And it was a very smart thing because they just killed themselves.
02:32:00 Speaker_02
The Republican primaries.
02:32:01 Speaker_04
Yeah, the Republican primaries. I like debating. I think you have to debate. But it has to be fair. I like debating like the Rosie O'Donnell debate. I like debating when you have a great, remember the Rosie O'Donnell?
02:32:15 Speaker_00
Yeah, yeah, it was very funny, Megan Shelley.
02:32:16 Speaker_04
It was a crazy thing, Megan. That was a hell of a question, man. If I didn't come up with that answer, I understand. It was a great line. Well, what it was is, you know, that was, we had 28,000 people.
02:32:26 Speaker_04
That was the Cleveland Arena where the Cavaliers played. Right. LeBron James. I'm not a big fan of LeBron James, but he is a good basketball player. But you know, that was the, and when I said that, the place went crazy. And she kept talking.
02:32:39 Speaker_04
Because it's funny. No, she had like 10 other names.
02:32:41 Speaker_02
Yeah, well, Megan said, you said it to other people and you admitted you did. But it was funny. It was a comedic timing moment.
02:32:47 Speaker_04
It was fine.
02:32:48 Speaker_02
That's what they wanted to avoid.
02:32:49 Speaker_04
It was lucky I did it because she was, oh, she wasn't finished. That question, but she kept talking, but you couldn't hear her. To this day, they don't know what she said, but it wasn't buzzing. So anyway, but we had a good time.
02:33:00 Speaker_02
Well, it's comedic timing, and that's the reason why to have a debate in front of a large audience. And then they probably thought you had stacked the deck. Well, how did I do with the Al Smith dinner? I got very good reviews on that. That was great.
02:33:09 Speaker_02
That was great. Very funny. Very funny stuff. The Tim Walz stuff was very funny. Tim Walz, yeah. It's funny.
02:33:14 Speaker_04
That's a real beauty.
02:33:15 Speaker_02
That's a crazy one. She said that she had picked him, and this is one of the questions I want to ask her, when she was sleep deprived. She said she was suffering from sleep deprivation when she picked him, which is just like...
02:33:26 Speaker_04
Hey, maybe take a nap. Okay, look, let's see how it all turns out. I think we're going to win. I think we're way ahead now. I think we're way ahead. Can I bring you back to 2020? I think they're going to look at two things.
02:33:40 Speaker_04
They're going to say they should have had a primary, even if it was a short primary. They shouldn't have picked her. And then she's going to say, I shouldn't have picked this guy.
02:33:46 Speaker_02
She shouldn't have picked that guy. That guy's a disaster. The lying about Tiananmen Square. Everything. Yeah, the military record, assistant coach versus head coach.
02:33:55 Speaker_04
Little things. So I did McDonald's last week. I saw that. And I actually got a call from your friends at Google, from Sundar. That's pretty good, right? He said, this is the biggest thing we've had in years. You had McDonald's? I had McDonald's.
02:34:09 Speaker_04
Did you know that?
02:34:10 Speaker_02
It was one of the... It was funny.
02:34:12 Speaker_04
Who's a great guy, by the way. But he said, This McDonald's thing, I want to tell you, it's one of the biggest things we've ever had on Google. It just hit.
02:34:20 Speaker_04
But the reason I did it, and I actually, you know, you never know about this stuff, I thought it was a throwaway.
02:34:25 Speaker_04
I didn't think our conversation was a throwaway, but I thought that was, I thought I'd walk in, and that was only to highlight the fact, and I have a friend, he owns like 56 of these McDonald's, and he said, do you want to use one?
02:34:36 Speaker_04
I said, yeah, I love it. So we went there and the crowd was crazy. You know, they had 28,000 people around the whole thing. Did you see the outside? It was crazy. The guards couldn't get through. Secret Service was not exactly thrilled.
02:34:48 Speaker_04
We had no idea what the hell. But I went into the place and I did the french fry thing. And it just hit. But that's like in life. Sometimes you do. I thought it was like a quick throwaway. We're going to be there for 15 minutes.
02:35:00 Speaker_04
Then I said, I've worked here for 15 minutes, which is 15 minutes more than she worked here. She lied about McDonald's.
02:35:08 Speaker_02
And, you know, that's proven that she never.
02:35:12 Speaker_04
Well, McDonald's has no information. She has no information. The manager said she never worked there. You know, it was a certain place and he said they never – no, she lied. She's a liar. You know what they do?
02:35:24 Speaker_04
They'll say like on any one of their questions, they'll say it's the exact opposite of what I say.
02:35:32 Speaker_04
IVF he's against IVF fertilization right he's and and it's the exact opposite I was I came out immediately strongly in favor and they do ads I'm against it it's wrong on every single topic and you know she changed policies on 15 I've never seen a guy change anybody change on more than one
02:35:54 Speaker_04
You know, you can maybe get away with one. Her whole life fracking, every single thing that she was for the confiscation of guns. She wants to confiscate. Now she's saying everybody should have a gun. In fact, we're going to get her a MAGA cap.
02:36:07 Speaker_04
I'm going to send her a MAGA cap. But she's changed. And I don't think people are buying it. I don't think people are buying it.
02:36:14 Speaker_02
Well, some people are buying it because they want to buy it, because it's blue no matter who. There's a certain percentage of our population that's going to vote Democrat no matter what. That's true. They're pressured.
02:36:23 Speaker_02
Their community, their ideology, it's left is good, right is evil.
02:36:28 Speaker_04
You know what I don't understand? I don't understand why. OK, you have a wall. You know, I built 570 miles of wall. I built a lot of wall. Exactly the stuff. but you have a border.
02:36:41 Speaker_04
What I don't understand is, who would want people to come into our country from places unknown, like sometimes they'll say about a fighter, from parts unknown, right? Remember Haystack Skellon, from parts, he says from parts unknown.
02:36:55 Speaker_04
The oldest, those are the oldest, that's even before you. But who would want people to come in, pouring into our country. We don't know anything about it.
02:37:06 Speaker_02
But that's, I want to ask you this. Why do you think they're doing that? I think because... Do you think they're trying to buy votes? Do you think they just want cheap labor? Like, what is, what's the idea?
02:37:14 Speaker_04
Okay, there's a couple of theories. They hate our country. They're stupid. Or they want to buy votes. It's one of those three things. Now, they are trying to get people registered who don't even know what the country is.
02:37:26 Speaker_02
And they're trying to give people amnesty. People that live here, they're trying to give them citizenship.
02:37:29 Speaker_04
They want to give them citizenship.
02:37:31 Speaker_02
And if you think about the amount of money that they've given them when they've come here, the food stamps, the benefits that even our poor people aren't getting.
02:37:39 Speaker_04
$200 billion. And that's a way low number. That's a way low. You know, it's interesting. New York has always been like, You know, sort of like always looking for money. They've spent a hundred billion dollars on this stuff.
02:37:53 Speaker_04
I don't know where they, and they're not getting the money from the federal government. It's crazy. And because the mayor came out and said, we can't live like this.
02:38:03 Speaker_02
They investigated him.
02:38:05 Speaker_04
By the way, I called it. I said, he just got himself indicted. This group is stupid, but they're vicious. They're stupid people, but they're vicious people.
02:38:15 Speaker_02
The 2020 elections, you say you have all this evidence that it was rigged. Why haven't you put this evidence in a consumable form?
02:38:24 Speaker_04
Oh, I did. I have books on it. And by the way, books have been written on it. We have an author named Hemingway who is a great writer. She wrote a book on it. But many books have been written on it.
02:38:38 Speaker_04
There are books that are... What's happened is judges don't want to touch it. They would say you don't have standing. They didn't rule on the merits. The merits never got there. The judges didn't have what it took to turn over an election.
02:38:56 Speaker_02
Let's talk about the potential vulnerabilities for elections and election fraud. One of them is mail-in ballots. The other one is if someone can break into voting machines, if someone can hack voting machines. Those are two huge ones.
02:39:11 Speaker_04
So Elon Musk, I think he said it publicly, I hope he did because I wouldn't want to be the winner, but he's a really smart guy. And he's a very good guy with computers, right? You'd say he's one of the smartest people alive.
02:39:25 Speaker_04
Anybody that can land that 20-story building and perfect and boom.
02:39:29 Speaker_02
While he's doing Starlink, while he's doing Tesla, while he owns Twitter.
02:39:33 Speaker_04
And then he agrees to Starlink. And he tweets 100 times a day. He's an amazing guy. He said to me that unless you have paper ballots, it can never be an honest election. That's a big statement. It's a big statement. We should go to paper ballots.
02:39:48 Speaker_04
You know, France did. They went to mail-in voting, and it was all messed up. You know the amazing thing with the machines? So we have the machines. They cost 10 times more. Paper ballot would cost 8%. And they make paper ballots.
02:40:01 Speaker_04
They're all watermarked and everything else. They're very sophisticated. But if you take a look, paper ballots, 8% the cost. and you're done by nine o'clock in the evening, right?
02:40:13 Speaker_04
Now we have this sophisticated machine that goes up to heaven, it goes all over the place and down and around. And they say, we'll need two weeks to figure out who the hell won the election.
02:40:22 Speaker_02
Do you think that's by design?
02:40:23 Speaker_04
Yeah, I do. I think it's very crooked. That's my opinion.
02:40:27 Speaker_02
You're allowed to have an opinion. Let's say you win in November. What can be done to mitigate these problems? What could be done at the level that the president has power?
02:40:39 Speaker_04
Well, if I win, this will be my last election. But I think I owe it to the country. But I think I owe it to the country. We have to have fair elections. So how can you fix that?
02:40:50 Speaker_04
You know, Jimmy Carter was in charge of a commission, you know, that many years ago. And they put him and Scoop Jackson and various senators, you know, distinguished people that were retired.
02:41:01 Speaker_04
And they came up with a report, and the report's primary finding was, you cannot have mail-in ballots, because if it's a mail-in ballot... You know, I went to the voting booth the last time, whatever it was, and I walked in, in Palm Beach, and I walk in, and they know me.
02:41:18 Speaker_04
They say, Mr. President, could I see your identification? Boom, here's this, here's that, everything. And then you sit and they watch you sign. There's not a lot you can do. I mean, if you wanted to be dishonest, it's sort of beautiful.
02:41:32 Speaker_04
If instead of that, I'm going to send them a ballot, it has to go through the postal services. It has to go through a lot of people. They mail you houses that, you know, the house was demolished and the people have left. It's so bad.
02:41:47 Speaker_04
The one thing with Jimmy Carter, he had a very strong Commission, who's no mail-in ballots. And we're the only one that does elections this way anymore. They've gotten away from it.
02:41:59 Speaker_02
And this has ticked up in a big way after COVID. It used to be like soldiers serving overseas. They used COVID to cheat. Yeah. Well, they used COVID to certainly push this mail-in ballot.
02:42:10 Speaker_04
But they used COVID to cheat. And the last election was a little bit of a You couldn't even get security guys, big, strong guys to watch. You know what? You'd call them. They'd call them in this issue. They were afraid to go out.
02:42:23 Speaker_04
You know, we were in the middle of COVID. We were in the middle of COVID, right smack in the middle. And they didn't want to die. You know, they didn't want to catch it. It was like, in a way, it was like a ghost town.
02:42:37 Speaker_04
And the whole thing, but mail-in ballots are a bad thing.
02:42:42 Speaker_02
That certainly is a problem. Mail-in ballots are a problem.
02:42:45 Speaker_04
Another problem is voter ID.
02:42:48 Speaker_02
Voter ID is the most bizarre argument that I've never seen anybody articulate in a way that's convincing. Because they want to cheat. Well, it doesn't make sense any other way. I've tried to strawman it, or I've tried to steelman it, rather.
02:43:01 Speaker_02
I've tried to, like, look at it from a position like, why would you not want people to have ID? And a lot of the ideas are just ridiculous. You need an ID to get a driver's license.
02:43:12 Speaker_04
But here's now the next step. Gavin Newscombe, one of the worst governors in the world, and I used to, frankly, I used to get along, but I don't get along with him because he's just too, you know, it's just a hokan job. But Gavin Newscombe,
02:43:26 Speaker_04
the other day signed a bill that you are not allowed to ask a person, even ask them whether or not they have voter ID.
02:43:34 Speaker_02
Now what could be a charitable reason why anybody would want that? Because they want to cheat. But that would be the only thing that makes sense.
02:43:39 Speaker_04
But that's taken it to the next level.
02:43:41 Speaker_02
Right.
02:43:42 Speaker_04
Now, you know, you have ID. The Democrat National Convention, when they had it the last time I saw, They had a sign, like a billboard, or the name of the person, where they live, how they live, who the hell their boyfriends are.
02:43:56 Speaker_04
Every single... And a big picture. That's for their... They have an ID, a big ID. It was hanging like you were a prisoner. They had these massive cards, everything.
02:44:08 Speaker_04
And yet when it comes to the vote, in theory, the most important thing we do, okay, when you go to a grocery store, you give ID. But for a vote, it's supposed to be a sacred thing. And it should be a sacred thing.
02:44:20 Speaker_04
No voter ID because they want to cheat.
02:44:22 Speaker_02
Well, it doesn't make sense in any other way. I've tried to look at it.
02:44:26 Speaker_04
There's no other way.
02:44:27 Speaker_02
There's no argument that anybody's presented that makes any sense. Why?
02:44:31 Speaker_04
You know, the funny thing, Joe, the Democrats, the people, They all think you should have it. In other words, you should have it. If you go to the people, Mrs. Schwartz, Mrs. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Jones, they say, of course, yeah.
02:44:44 Speaker_04
Democrats, they say, yes. It's the politicians that don't want it. Like Schumer and these guys, they don't want it. Because they want to be able to cheat. Because you know what? If they didn't have it, OK.
02:44:54 Speaker_04
Who is going to vote for somebody that wants open borders? Who's going to vote for somebody that wants to have men playing in women's sports?
02:45:02 Speaker_04
You know, I have never had one person come up to me and say, President, you've got to do something to allow men to play in women's sports. Have you ever just like I've never been called by a pollster.
02:45:14 Speaker_04
I told you my little theory on posters Okay, I'm getting myself in trouble with some of these things, but I don't really care Nobody's ever come up to me and said we want to have men playing women's sports and you know, I Had a funny thing at a property owner.
02:45:32 Speaker_04
I own in California I have a woman who's a very good athlete and she works there as a manager and And Brian Urlacher, the big Chicago Bears, great player, you know, 10-time All-Star, I guess, Hall of Famer, great guy, big strong guy.
02:45:47 Speaker_04
And she said, oh, he's one of my favorite athletes. Can I have a picture? And I took a picture and I sent it. And I noticed she was the size of his leg. His leg was bigger than she was. And I put it out, should men play in women's football?
02:46:01 Speaker_04
It was just so ridiculous.
02:46:03 Speaker_02
What's one of the most bizarre and polarizing ideas that's promoted by the left?
02:46:07 Speaker_04
But who wants it? Now, unless you're going to cheat in elections, you're never going to get it. Nobody wants it. I don't think anybody wants it. I've been told everything. Some people want this. I don't know of anybody that wants open borders.
02:46:21 Speaker_04
Nobody's ever come up to me and say, President, you've got to let the world come into our country. Now, if they won, so they have 21 million. I think it's much higher than that because you have gotaways. You know, gotaways where they just walk in.
02:46:33 Speaker_04
And the other thing you have is human traffickers. You have traffickers, and they're trafficking women. And they're going wild now. You know where you have to look? The trunk of cars. Can you believe it? They put women in trunks.
02:46:45 Speaker_04
They'll put three women in a trunk. These people are savages. They're horrible. The worst people. And they're making the kind of money they make on drugs they're almost making on trafficking now. And the thing that's made it hot is the Internet.
02:46:58 Speaker_04
That's what, you know, you think of it almost as an ancient thing, but it's the Internet. But who would want to have these things? Who would want to have? There's so many. The transgender operations, where they're allowed to take your child.
02:47:12 Speaker_04
when he goes to school and turn him into a male, to a female, without parental consent. Who wants this? Does anybody want this? I've never heard of anyone. And I can go into 10 different things. The only way they get him is by no voter ID.
02:47:29 Speaker_04
You can't have voter ID. They don't want any. They want to cheat. There's only one reason, because the voter ID is so basic. It's the most basic thing there is.
02:47:38 Speaker_02
It's very basic.
02:47:40 Speaker_04
Who would want this? They want it so they can cheat, because their policies are no good. I'll tell you, they're very smart when it comes to that.
02:47:48 Speaker_04
They're very smart, although they're not smart in terms of politics in a way because what do they have that people want? They really don't have. They give away a lot of health care, a lot of stuff. But for the most part, their policies are terrible.
02:48:02 Speaker_04
Their policy on military. She's running on a tax hike. She's going to raise your taxes. You've got to hear this. We are going to raise your taxes and the people clap. But who is going to win with all my life I grew up with politicians lower taxes.
02:48:19 Speaker_04
She's politic in that we are going to raise your taxes.
02:48:23 Speaker_02
Well, the idea is you want to raise the taxes to the highest earners. I know, but it really doesn't work that way. They think that millionaires and billionaires are not paying their fair share. But it doesn't work that way. Well, it's a narrative, right?
02:48:33 Speaker_02
And it's a narrative that appeals to people that are not doing well. And they're like, yeah, our problems are that these rich people are not paying taxes.
02:48:39 Speaker_04
Well, the problems are the rich people are going to leave and they're going to close up their companies and then the other people aren't going to have jobs. You know, that's what happens.
02:48:46 Speaker_02
It does happen in other countries.
02:48:47 Speaker_04
But the whole because you brought it up. I'll tell you what we just. He's doing a very good job in Virginia. Glenn Youngkin, I don't know if you like him, not like him. I don't know him. Oh, you don't know him, the governor of Virginia?
02:49:00 Speaker_04
So we have a case where they found thousands of illegal ballots. A judge just ruled that they have to be able to vote. Just happened today, just before I walked in here I heard. A judge just ruled that you have to keep those people in.
02:49:17 Speaker_04
They're illegal, they're illegal votes. Now, I think they'll be overturned at the next court. One thing I found, because I had a couple of things that they got overturned a little bit, you know, the system.
02:49:26 Speaker_04
Because the system, you have to hope that the appellate judges are honest. Otherwise, we don't have a country anymore. It's very important. But the whole thing with the legal ballots, it's got to be looked at.
02:49:39 Speaker_04
You got to have, you have to have voter ID and you have to have additional ID. You have to have an ID that shows that you're a citizen of the country.
02:49:46 Speaker_02
I agree.
02:49:47 Speaker_04
They don't want that either.
02:49:48 Speaker_02
I agree. One of the things that I want to talk to you about is the JFK files. And one of the things that you said was that if they showed you what they showed me, this is your quote, you wouldn't want people to know it either.
02:50:03 Speaker_04
So I opened them up partially. I was met with, from good people, I mean, you know, look, I mean, good people. People that were well-meaning. Mike Pompeo was one of them. He's a good person. They called me, they said, sir, would rather have you not.
02:50:25 Speaker_04
After, and I did open them, but I was asked by some people not to open them. There's a Martin Luther King file too, by the way, that they'd like to see. I don't know if you know, but there is that. But JFK in particular.
02:50:39 Speaker_04
So they called me, a lot of good people called me. People that I, you know, that you would find reasonable people. And they asked me not to do it. So I said, well, we'll close it for another time. But if I win, I'm going to open them up.
02:50:52 Speaker_04
I'm just going to open enough.
02:50:53 Speaker_02
Why didn't you open it up the first time?
02:50:54 Speaker_04
Because a lot of times the hesitation addresses people that are still living. There are people that are affected. And it could be some national security reason that, you know, that I don't have to necessarily know about.
02:51:08 Speaker_04
But some very good, talented people asked me not to do it. I opened it up and then they said, Would it be possible for us to do that a different day? How much of it did you read into? I think it's going to be just fine to open it.
02:51:25 Speaker_04
Let me put it that way. I think it's fine. It's going to be time. It's a cleansing. You know, it's really a cleansing. So I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it immediately, almost immediately upon entering office.
02:51:34 Speaker_02
Well, the thing, when people look at it from the outside and you sort of imagine what could be a reason why they would not release those files, it would be there's people that were implicated in the assassination.
02:51:49 Speaker_04
Well, when there are living people, you generally tend not to want to do it. When people are still living.
02:51:55 Speaker_02
Living people that formerly worked for the government.
02:51:58 Speaker_04
for the government and living people that were somehow involved in it. And you tend not to do that. But it's time to open them. I can't tell you whether or not they're going to find anything of interest. And I did partially open. I think I've opened 50%.
02:52:12 Speaker_04
But I was asked not to do it. And I thought that was a reasonable ask. But now I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it very soon. There's a lot of interest in it. There's a lot of interest in the people coming from space, you know.
02:52:27 Speaker_04
And I know you're interested in that, too.
02:52:28 Speaker_02
Oh, I'm very interested in that. How much do they tell you about that? A lot. Really? What do they tell you? How much can you tell? How does that work? Is it like super top secret? I think I can tell, you know. Tell me.
02:52:38 Speaker_04
Well, based on Hunter Biden, I can say whatever the hell I want, right? But I interviewed a few people. It's never been my thing, I have to be honest. I have never been a believer.
02:52:48 Speaker_04
I have people that Area 51 or whatever it is, I think it's the number one tourist attraction in the whole country or something. Area 51 in Las Vegas. Do you know that, right? Sure, I know what it is. So anyway, but it's a big tourist thing.
02:53:00 Speaker_04
So I interviewed jet pilots. that say they saw something. If you saw them, you'd love to have them.
02:53:09 Speaker_02
I've had a couple in here. Commander David Fravor. I had him in, who had that sighting in 2004. Very, very compelling with visual, video evidence, radar evidence. Brian Graves.
02:53:21 Speaker_04
I don't believe his name, but I interviewed jet pilots that were solid people. Perfect. I mean, great pilots, great everything. And they said, we saw things, sir, that were very strange. Like a round ball, but it wasn't a comet or a meteor.
02:53:41 Speaker_04
It was something. And it was going four times faster than an F-22, which is a very fast plane, you know.
02:53:48 Speaker_02
And it was round, which is, in theory, a great shape. So when you were talking to these people, was this something that you were compelled to have conversations about? Was this your personal interest?
02:54:01 Speaker_04
A little bit. It's not a great interest for me, but it's a little interest. I get that question as much as almost any question. Do you think that we have aliens coming, flying around or whatever? What do you think? There's no reason not to.
02:54:16 Speaker_04
I mean, there's no reason not to think that Mars and all these planets don't have life.
02:54:21 Speaker_02
Well, Mars, we've had probes there and rovers, and I don't think there's any life there.
02:54:25 Speaker_04
Well, maybe it's life that we don't know.
02:54:27 Speaker_02
Well, maybe there was life there at one point in time. This is a speculation about Mars. Mars had an atmosphere at one point in time a long time ago that could support life. It also had large bodies of water.
02:54:38 Speaker_02
But we've had no evidence of even bacterial life that exists on Mars. The universe is pretty vast.
02:54:43 Speaker_04
It's not been a big thing for me. I mean, when I looked at what China did to this, they would have never done it with me, where they put the balloon up. And a lot of people thought for a little while that that was one of these things.
02:54:55 Speaker_02
Well, that's a lot of the speculation, too, that some of these drones that hover over battleships, that these are Chinese drones, and that they're not UFOs. They could be also. They're some super sophisticated.
02:55:03 Speaker_04
But I did interview, let's say, three or four guys. And without tremendous interest, if you had them, As I said, you'd love to have me as your children. Solid, beautiful people. They said, sir, there's something there.
02:55:21 Speaker_04
You know, they've... There's something there. Yeah.
02:55:24 Speaker_02
Yeah, I've talked to quite a few of them.
02:55:25 Speaker_04
They're not conspiracy guys.
02:55:26 Speaker_02
Well, I mean, just the Commander David Fravor thing in 2004 off the coast of San Diego, they clocked that thing going from 50,000 feet above sea level to 50 in a second. They don't know what it is.
02:55:37 Speaker_04
That's tough to beat.
02:55:38 Speaker_02
Yeah, they saw something in the water. It was hovering over that something that was making a disturbance in the water. They got video evidence of this thing. Two different fighter jets with pilots in them saw it.
02:55:50 Speaker_02
There's visual evidence, photographic evidence, video evidence, radar evidence. Whatever the hell it is, it moves in a way that would turn a human being into Jell-O if they're inside of it. The G-Force, no one would survive.
02:56:01 Speaker_00
So what is that?
02:56:03 Speaker_02
And it doesn't have a heat signature. They don't know what their propulsion system was. But when you fly in some of these jets,
02:56:11 Speaker_04
These pilots have to be in great shape.
02:56:13 Speaker_02
Oh, yeah.
02:56:14 Speaker_04
I flew with the Blue Angels once. Yeah, as an example.
02:56:16 Speaker_02
Yeah, I got to fly. I guess it's an F-18.
02:56:18 Speaker_04
And those are older machines. And they're crazy. When you fly in some of these things, it's amazing. Oh, my god.
02:56:23 Speaker_02
Yeah, I can imagine.
02:56:24 Speaker_04
You got to be special.
02:56:25 Speaker_02
But these things that these people are encountering are far superior to what we know of.
02:56:30 Speaker_00
Yeah.
02:56:30 Speaker_02
Is it possible that there's some military or government program that they didn't tell you about?
02:56:39 Speaker_04
I think I had a great relationship with the military, basically, but I didn't like certain people. I would have gotten them out if I thought. If the election was different, I would have fired all of them quickly. Most of them I did fire.
02:56:54 Speaker_04
Biden should have fired every military person involved with Afghanistan. He should have had a lot of firings. You know, if you look at him, he told Israel not to do anything. At least Israel is not going to look at a bomb the way they would have been.
02:57:07 Speaker_04
Think if they listened to Biden, they'd be waiting for a bomb to drop on their head right now. He's been wrong about so much. I guess you'd have to say that she's been wrong, too, because, you know, they she always said they made the decision together.
02:57:20 Speaker_04
But. Israel didn't follow his advice. And I think it was a very, you know, it's a very, the Middle East is rapidly changing. You know, there are prophets that say the world will come to an end in the Middle East. You know that, right?
02:57:37 Speaker_04
And we have weapons today that are so scary. When you look, I rebuilt them all. And when you look at the weapons we have today, the biggest threat we have in the world today is nuclear weapons. And we have other weapons too that are devastating.
02:57:52 Speaker_04
the nuclear weapons, the biggest threat we have in the world today. I was talking about de-escalation with both China and Russia. I'm telling you, we were gonna de-escalate, they were gonna de-escalate.
02:58:07 Speaker_04
You gotta be careful, it's a little tricky playing with them. Because they say we're gonna do it and they don't do it, maybe. But they understood the curse too, it's a curse. China's way behind us, but they'll catch us within five years.
02:58:19 Speaker_02
So let's imagine, let's say you win in November. What do you do differently and how do you change this course that it seems we are on for World War III? How do you get us out of Ukraine? How do you stop what's going on in the Middle East?
02:58:34 Speaker_02
How do you put a stop to this?
02:58:35 Speaker_04
Well, it's a very, to me it's an easy question because I think I can do it easily, but it's a complex question in the sense that the times change, everyday changes. Who's winning, who's not winning? I mean, Russia's a war machine.
02:58:52 Speaker_04
Whether you like it or not, it just grinds along, grinds along. You speak to people like Viktor Orban. He'll tell you it's a just a big fat war machine and that's what's happening.
02:59:03 Speaker_04
You look at what's happened to Ukraine If I were there, it would have never happened. But what you what could you do now if you get into office right now? Right now you would get both of them.
02:59:15 Speaker_04
I know both very well and and again, I I cannot I do not want to tell you what you know for the purpose of looking smart to five people that you know that say oh he was great because If I told you exactly what I do, I could never make the deal.
02:59:31 Speaker_04
All I can tell you is that I would meet with Putin, and I would meet with him, and I know exactly what I'd say to each one of them. And I believe that as president-elect, I would get that war stopped and stopped fast.
02:59:43 Speaker_04
You know, we have tremendous power in the United States, if you know how to use the power. I stopped other wars just by the use of tariffs. I got Macron of France. Good guys, like a friend of mine, but he's a wise guy.
02:59:57 Speaker_04
And he's a person that likes France, and he was going to tax our companies. And I sent all the smartest guys. I sent Mnuchin. They all failed me. And I said, I'll do it myself. And I called him. I said, Emmanuel, you're taxing American companies.
03:00:12 Speaker_04
We're not going to allow you to do that. Oh, Donald, I cannot do it. Nothing I could do. It's already been passed. I said, Emmanuel, if you do that, I'm going to put 100 percent tariff on your wines and champagnes that come into the United States.
03:00:26 Speaker_04
And you're going to regret that you ever did it." He said, Donald, please, that's not fair. Anyway, within about two minutes, he dropped the whole thing. And it was massive amounts of money against American companies.
03:00:36 Speaker_04
I have to protect American companies. So why doesn't the Biden administration do this? Because they're incompetent. They don't know how to talk. Look, they met in Alaska with the Chinese and the Chinese lectured them about how badly we treat people.
03:00:53 Speaker_04
Right. OK. I mean, think of it. You remember that day? They didn't talk to me that way. They respected me. They respected our country. They don't respect our country. They don't respect Biden. They don't respect her.
03:01:08 Speaker_04
They're dreaming about her because she's incompetent. She's not a smart person. Look, she can't put two sentences together. She talks. I watched her last night, too. It was the same thing. She's not a smart person.
03:01:23 Speaker_04
These guys are very smart, and they're very streetwise, and they're very tricky and evil and dangerous. And if she becomes the President of the United States, which I can't believe can happen, I don't think this country is going to make it.
03:01:39 Speaker_04
I don't think we'll ever be. I think bad — just really bad things will happen to our country. And you know what? I look at the outside forces, and I say they can all be handled. because we have a pot of gold.
03:01:51 Speaker_04
But we're not going to have that pot of gold to play with anymore. You know, it's a great negotiating thing. I told you, I knocked out this massive car company going to take all of our car business from Detroit. I knocked it out just by my rhetoric.
03:02:05 Speaker_04
Rhetorically, I said, They'll never sell a car in here. I'll put tariffs. I don't care. They're 2,000%. They're never going to build that plant in Noggin.
03:02:14 Speaker_02
Is it possible to apply that same thing to the electronics that we use? One of the things that disturbs me greatly is that all of our phones are made overseas. And then some of our phones are made in places like- And the chips. Yes, and the chips.
03:02:25 Speaker_02
And some of our phones are made in places like Foxconn, where they have nets around the building to keep people from jumping off the roof, because they have so many suicides.
03:02:32 Speaker_02
Like, wouldn't it be better to have an American-made iPhone, where you know people are paid good wages, they have health insurance, they're taken care of, they can live a good life, where you're not buying a piece of electronics that's cheaper, because someone has to suffer in a horrible way that's not even legal in the United States.
03:02:49 Speaker_02
It's not even legal to have them work that way in the United States, so they get these people to build them overseas.
03:02:54 Speaker_04
You do it, but let me just say, that chip deal is so bad. We put up billions of dollars for rich companies to come in and borrow the money and build chip companies here. And they're not going to give us the good companies anyway.
03:03:08 Speaker_04
All you had to do is charge them tariffs. If you would have put a tariff on the chips coming in, you would have been able to, just like the auto companies, no different. More sophisticated, but no different.
03:03:20 Speaker_04
You know, Taiwan, they stole our chip business. OK? They want us to protect, and they want protection. They don't pay us money for the protection, you know? The mob makes you pay money, right?
03:03:31 Speaker_04
But with these countries that we protect, I got hundreds of billions of dollars from NATO countries that were never paying us. And my biggest fan is Stoltenberg, who just left as the, you know, Director General, as the Secretary General. Good guy.
03:03:48 Speaker_04
He said Bush came, he made a speech. Obama came, he made a speech. Trump came, he said, you guys aren't paying, you gotta pay. And they said, will you protect us from Russia if we don't? I said, no, you gotta pay if you don't pay.
03:04:00 Speaker_04
Billions of dollars came in to NATO. When I see us paying a lot of money to have people build the chip, that's not the way. You didn't have to put up 10 cents. You could have done it with a series of tariffs. In other words, you tariff it so
03:04:15 Speaker_04
that they will come and build their chip companies for nothing. In other words, Joe, you put a big tariff on the chips coming in. I say, you don't have to pay the tariff. All you have to do is build your plant in the United States.
03:04:28 Speaker_04
We didn't have to give them the money to build a plant. Besides that, they're very rich companies, these chip companies. They stole 95% of our business. It's in Taiwan right now. They do a great job. But that's only because we have stupid politicians.
03:04:43 Speaker_04
We lost the chip business. And now we think we're going to pay. You can't build it that way. You have to make them spend their money in the United States. And those plants would open up all over and they'll fund them. We don't have to put up 10 cents.
03:04:56 Speaker_04
And I am in the process of making a huge speech in about a little while. And you and I, how long have we been talking? A long time.
03:05:03 Speaker_02
Let's go like three hours.
03:05:05 Speaker_04
I got to make a speech. But we'll do it again. I want to do it again with you. You are something. I said, how long will this last? Anywhere from an hour to three or four hours?
03:05:15 Speaker_02
How long we do, Jamie? Three hours.
03:05:17 Speaker_04
Good. Well, we'll do it again. I thought it was great.
03:05:19 Speaker_02
I think it's I think it's great.
03:05:21 Speaker_04
You are a fascinating guy and I've done a great job Thank you very much, man. And thank you very much. It's been an honor It's been an honor to make a great speech and I'm gonna say and if I'm a little off tonight I'm gonna blame you.
03:05:35 Speaker_04
I spoke to this guy for three hours Anyway, it's a great honor to be. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Good luck to you. Thank you very much.
03:05:58 Speaker_02
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03:07:06 Speaker_02
This episode of the Joe Rogan Experience is brought to you by Call of Duty. You know, when a new Call of Duty drops, everyone's trying to find a way to squeeze in those extra hours of gameplay. I get it. Life is busy. But sometimes, you just need it.
03:07:24 Speaker_03
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03:07:35 Speaker_03
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03:07:51 Speaker_03
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03:08:06 Speaker_02
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