American Thought Leaders - Devin Nunes on Ending the Politicization of America’s Intelligence Agencies

Episode Date: January 10, 2026

It’s been almost a decade since then-House Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes first launched his investigation with now-FBI director Kash Patel into the scandal that became known as “Russ...iagate.”His watershed memo back in 2018—dubbed the “Nunes memo”—detailed what he describes as grave abuses in how the FBI obtained surveillance warrants under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to surveil Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and later the first Trump administration.It’s “the biggest scandal in U.S. history, by a long way,” he says.In July 2025, the Trump administration released new documents shedding more light on the Russia probe, revealing the creation of an intelligence community assessment (ICA) at President Barack Obama’s behest that alleged Russian President Vladimir Putin had interfered in the presidential election in order to help Trump.Nunes is currently serving as chair of the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board, a body created in 1956 during the Eisenhower era to advise the president on U.S. intelligence activities and provide an external check on the intelligence community.In this episode, we sit down to reflect on the “Russiagate” saga, almost a decade later, and what accountability he’d like to see.We also dive into his work as CEO of Truth Media & Technology Group (TMTG), which owns Truth Social.TMTG recently announced an unexpected merger with the pioneering nuclear fusion company TAE Technologies. Why did they choose to make this move, and why is he convinced nuclear fusion technology will be critical to America’s future?Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 There's just so much lying that occurred. It was the biggest scandal in U.S. history. How did I know about it? Well, because I had all the intelligence by that time. It's been almost a decade since Devin Nunes spearheaded an investigation into the scandal that became known as Russia Gate, with now FBI director Cash Patel. Grand conspiracy that they blamed Trump of doing, they actually were doing.
Starting point is 00:00:22 Now the big question is, was anybody going to be held accountable? From my perspective, as the non-lawyer, what I'd be looking at is is a grand conspiracy case that goes from 2015, 2016, all the way through at least to the rate at Mar-a-Lago. Nunes is now chair of the President's Intelligence Advisory Board and also CEO of Truth Media and Technology Group. They recently announced an unexpected merger with the pioneering nuclear fusion company, T.A.E. Technologies. You can have all the technology you want, all the AI, all the data centers, but there's a problem. There's not enough power. I do believe that nuclear fusion is the answer.
Starting point is 00:01:04 The Chinese have put untold billions into this. We're really racing against the clock. This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Kelleck. Devin Nunes, so good to have you back on American Thought Leaders. It's great to be back. Great to be with you. Well, I was just looking at one of our first interviews back in October of 2019. October of 2019. And we were talking about something we called SpyGate back then. These days, most people know it as Russia Gate. I called you the head of objective Medusa, if you recall
Starting point is 00:01:44 that name. But this is, I'll get you to tell me what that was at a moment, okay? Because I doubt a lot of people will remember. But ultimately, this is what you said. Okay, you said, we need a full accounting of everything that has happened. Okay. And you were kind of at that point, you were looking to special counsel Durham to do that. Where are we at with respect to Russiagate, SpyGate, and objective Medusa for that matter? Well, we're a long ways, but it's been painful to get there from where we began with this Odyssey in essentially late 2016 when this first came up and, you know, had to fight through and exposed major corruption within our government and really have changed the trajectory of history in many ways, you know, not because we ever wanted to do that,
Starting point is 00:02:38 but because you had the Democrats controlling the intelligence agencies that essentially targeted a president and that being at the time, an income, a candidate for president, then the president and then as president. And then I would go even further to say that they continued it, even after he was president all the way to the raid at Mar-a-Lago and all the Jack Smith nonsense. So through all this, there's been a lot that's been exposed recently, you know, in terms of in 2025, a lot was put out of what I would say was kind of the final documents that had been hidden from the American people for so long. A lot of that was work that we had done in 17, 18, 19, and 20.
Starting point is 00:03:22 when I say we, sorry, and putting my old hat on as the leader of the Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee for so many years, you know, we finally were able to get a report declassified and put out to the public thanks to Director Gabber, Director Ratcliffe and the new Trump administration. You know, this information came out. There was really damning. And, you know, at the end of the day, let's, I can just simplify it for the viewers. What it showed is what we suspected all the time. You never even needed any intelligence for this, but that was clearly that Putin, who was kind of at the center of this, was loved Hillary Clinton, loved Obama. Why? Because he could boss him around and really didn't want Trump at all because they figured he was number one, unpredictable. But number two,
Starting point is 00:04:12 didn't think he was going to win because nobody back in 2016 thought that President Trump was going to win, except for President Trump himself and a few people around him, including myself, but even I'll admit, I wasn't sure he could win up until, I think, two or three weeks before the election. And that's when I thought, wow, he is going to, he has a real chance to win here. This is going back to 2016. So the fact that all of this has been exposed now, there, there's reports out there that there's multiple investigations that are now ongoing. So kind of full stop here. We had our investigation, the phony census. investigation. You had the Durham investigation that did expose a lot of things. You had the Horowitz,
Starting point is 00:04:56 who was the inspector general. You had his investigation. And now you have, I think, you know, the new Trump administration truly trying to go through and look and run a thorough investigation, full investigation. And now the big question is that everybody asked, well, is anybody going to be held accountable? The answer is we don't know that because there's a lot of things that play here between corrupt courts, corrupt judges, corrupt states, blue states, jury pools, the statute of limitations. I'm not a lawyer, just have to deal with them all the time, but those are at this point, I mean, from my perspective, as a non-lawyer, what I'd be looking at is is a grand conspiracy case that goes from 2015, 2016, all the way through at least to the rate at Mar-a-Lago.
Starting point is 00:05:47 and why they rate at Mara Lago, just to bring this kind of back full circle, they rated Mara Lago to get our document. The House Republican Intelligence Committee document is why they rated Mara Lago. So it's clear it's corruption at the highest level. They had no evidence that that document was at Mara Lago. The fact that they would do something that only happens in third world countries where you essentially, you know, raid a former president. house looking for something that you don't even know whether or not it exists there is high crimes at the highest level. It's just now, you know, how do you get that out to the masses? And how do you hold people accountable? You know, do people go to jail? And that's the big
Starting point is 00:06:34 question. So just very, very quickly, you were a member of the gang of eight. So, you know, you were supposed to be briefed on the, you know, the most sensitive intelligence, you know, around basically, as far as I can tell. And you weren't, especially when it came to, you know, judging that the presidential candidate was apparently Russian asset, which is what was being touted around, right? I mean, I'm still thinking about it. And it's so crazy that so many people bought into this. I mean, yeah, it's beyond crazy. It's the biggest scandal in U.S. history by by a long way just because it involved like the highest levels of everybody in government and the and our intelligence and military apparatus so it's you know i mean we can go back and i think
Starting point is 00:07:28 we did this on earlier interviews um but you know i get the question often you know how did you know that it was you know sorry but how did you know it was bullshit um i can say that now i'm not in congress anymore yon so i can i can say that sorry but there's not a better term for it. What happened in 2016 that you didn't need an intelligence report for was that nobody ever thought Trump was going to win, like I had said earlier. There's no way Putin was going to be supporting Trump. It was preposterous. And in fact, when we were briefed in right after the election, I call it the pre- Thanksgiving and post- Thanksgiving briefings. So after the election before Thanksgiving, we get briefed.
Starting point is 00:08:23 And this isn't even getting, hey, this is the full committee. And they give us this brief, FBI's there and others and say, election was fine, everything was normal. There was nothing abnormal at all that happened. That was in November before Thanksgiving, 2016, President Electron. nothing was brought up. By the way, some of the people in that briefing were some of the worst characters. So they had an opportunity to say that they believed that Putin did something.
Starting point is 00:08:52 They didn't. Then later, a few weeks later, the Senate gets a briefing and they get a different briefing that say, well, Putin might have had something involved. Well, now we know Obama himself, Susan Rice, all these characters, ordered the intelligence report that we had received. a couple weeks before, they basically said, do not put that out, go to the Senate, do not say that. We're going to do a whole new assessment. And so that's where the corruption, where Obama and Team Obama got involved was really there.
Starting point is 00:09:27 We now know that they knew this was a Clinton, D&C, planned hoax with a bunch of other assets that they were running around the world, that they were paying like fusion GPS and phony former British spies, you know, just total joke what they were doing. And that was all, they knew about that in August of 2016. Brennan and all those characters, you know, they came to brief me as gang of eight in, they wanted to brief me in August of 16, came and finally briefed me in September of 16. And, you know, essentially had an opportunity to tell me what Obama and all of them knew that this was a DNC Clinton hoax. Instead, what they came and said is, oh, there might be some things going on in the election. Oh, well, tell me more.
Starting point is 00:10:17 That doesn't tell me anything. That's not classified. There's no intel in it. What's going on that I should know about? You know, nothing. You know, didn't say anything. When Brennan knew, Obama knew they all knew in August. We get briefed after the election.
Starting point is 00:10:30 No problem. Then Obama gets involved, interrupts, intercedes in an intelligence product that now Director Gabbard and others have made this all public. So we know, I mean, that is really a criminal act to manipulate intelligence like that for political purposes. You know, and it's conspiracy. I mean, Clinton conspired with a bunch of bad actors in the FBI. You guys all know that story. They got everybody involved.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Clapper and Brennan and Comey all were actively involved in this, in this phony intelligence product that was put out in January of 17. The Steele dossier. Well, where the Stil dossier was involved in the whole thing, but the fact, there's just so much line that occurred. It was, you know, the biggest scandal in U.S. history. So how did I know about it? Well, because the intelligence, I had all the intelligence. I had been on the Intelligence Committee for a decade or whatever by that time.
Starting point is 00:11:28 Like, I was supposed to be getting briefed. I mean, clearly if Putin was doing something, I would have known of all the people. And this is, you know, classic. You can't even like really script this better. You wouldn't even think about how to script it. But in the spring of 2016, I actually took an very unprecedented step for that time because I very seldom would talk about the work on the Intelligence Committee,
Starting point is 00:11:56 which I think is the right way to go. But I went out on fake news, Jake Tapper, CNN show, and said that the largest intelligence failure since 19, 2011, 2001 was the failure of the intelligence agencies to understand Putin's plans and intentions. That's in the spring of 16. So at the same time, so I was the one, the only one that was actually, I shouldn't say the only, but one of the few that were raising red flags about what Putin was doing in Eastern Europe and around the world, the Obama, administration love Putin. They were giving Putin everything they wanted. Hillary Clinton,
Starting point is 00:12:42 remember, had the the big reset button that they pushed. I mean, you can't make this up. And me as chairman of the Intelligence Committee in August of, I mean, of spring of 16 says, this is the biggest intelligence failure in 15 years. At that same time, and this is why you can't make it up. It's only like for a movie script. At that same time, you have the FBI coordinating with the Democrats. basically framing the opposition candidate, the Republican candidate for president, Donald J. Trump, as a Russian asset. I mean, you can't make this up. So fast forward a few months and you come and tell me that, oh, Putin was behind, you know, this whole thing. Like, you guys don't tell me about Putin because you didn't want to know about Putin for the last decade. You let Putin do
Starting point is 00:13:31 shoot down planes, you know, do things in the country of Georgia, other places around the world where he was messing around. Putin was not scared of you guys. He loved you guys. And so don't blame this on a business guy out of New York that's never been involved in politics as if this was some like the scam. The grand conspiracy that they blamed Trump of doing, they actually were doing and doing in a very big way bigger than we ever could imagine now that you see all this and it goes all the way to the raid at Mara Lago. They did it and they never stopped. And now that. they need to pay a price. So one is exposure. You know, the harder part is prosecution, as we're finding out between the judges and the other corrupt officials and the juries. But, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:21 look, it is what it is. We are where we are. You have to fight the war as it is, not as the way you want it to be. Well, so it seems like, given everything you've just told me, it makes kind of perfect sense that you would be the chair of the president's intelligence advisory board. And I don't, first of all, I don't know if everyone knows this is what you're doing. And the other thing is I don't know if a lot of people actually understand what this body is. And, you know, obviously this is somehow connected with everything you just told me. So could you disambiguate this a bit for me, please? Yeah, I think the simple way to think about the Intelligence Board is it was started by Eisenhower after World War II when he was president.
Starting point is 00:15:06 and Eisenhower had a concern about the growing size of the military intelligence with no oversight from the outside. So you had to have some oversight people that had skills and background, but that were not reporting directly to the intelligence or military agencies. So he established the president's intelligence boards, went through different iterations over the years. There's limited history on this because a lot of what they do is, you know, is clandestine or classified. But if you look at the history and during the Eisenhower years, I think it was very effective. Ronald Reagan, I think, used it very effectively. President Trump asked me to do this based on my background. And we have, you know, really revolutionized the Intelligence Board. I think
Starting point is 00:16:03 making it what president and former general or general Eisenhower wanted, which is to hold everybody accountable. It's kind of twofold what we do. One is that we handle quick issues that almost has a quick reaction for us, things that pop up that where you need to put fires out quickly, it's easy for us with the talented board and team that we have to decipher right from wrong or at least give the president or the different secretaries the best advice that we can. So that's kind of the first line of order of business. The second order is more long term. So, you know, I make it a point to our board and our team is that, look, we're not operational.
Starting point is 00:16:52 We're not big enough to be operational. Let Secretary Hegseth and all the others and Director Ratcliffe, let them be operational. let them be operational. We don't want to be in the operational front. We want to look out beyond the horizon and try to see problems before they arise and try to solve those problems or also solve some short to medium term problems. And when I say solve, meaning that we're trying to look, analyze, assess, and then give solid recommendations to either to the president or anyone else or all the above for that matter. So, you know, look, we're not trying to be in the news.
Starting point is 00:17:34 We're not trying to be in the press. We're just trying to do our job and do it really well. And I think we have a great board, a great team of professionals that have a wealth of experience. And I think we've done, you know, someday I'm not going to tell you on this show, but maybe someday after, you know, President Trump is, out of office and our board is long gone, you know, maybe someday you'll find out of all the great things that we're doing. So the one thing I wanted to ask is, does it have anything to do with Russia Gate what
Starting point is 00:18:11 you're doing? Yeah. I mean, what we've said, you know, we've been tasked by the president initially when he asked me to do this role. He wants the politicization out of military intelligence, which of course, I have a long wearing my former hat. I tried to do that myself. So the way you do that is through transparency.
Starting point is 00:18:38 So we have been very vocal, very public about needing to get all documents as it relates to the Russia hoax out for the public to see. And as I said earlier, I believe that we've accomplished that this past year. The credit belongs to Director Gabbard. Ratcliffe and others and Cash, our good friend Cash Patel, who by the way, knows where a lot of these bodies are buried since he was, you know, our lead investigator on this through the House Intelligence Committee. So we have, we've moved a lot. We've moved fast, not fast enough for me or the president, but we're moving as fast as we possibly can. And now it's in the hands of, of, you know, the American public. And, you know, we'll see what happens with it.
Starting point is 00:19:24 One final comment here. You know, we, one of the things that, we did with you back in the, you know, probably about five years ago is we did this little mini doc called the Man Behind the Memo. And the memo was the Nunez memo, which, you know, of course, I'm sure Cash had a big role in creating not just you and the team and everything. But the newness memo has really withstood the test of time. It was just a very simple set of statements that, I mean, were like a nuclear bomb at the time. If I, if I, it was a, you know, it was a very if I recall. The reason I'm mentioning this is that we really did really know quite a number of the dimensions
Starting point is 00:20:08 of this a long time ago. And what was remained classified for years, I mean, you knew so much and somehow it never leaked. And I don't even know how that is even possible, given the level of leaking that we've seen, you know. Yeah, well, look, it's number one, I would say is, I'd have to go back and look at that, have to watch that, that, that interview again. But, you know, it was the one, it was the one where we went out, we visited you in, and, and Vassalia.
Starting point is 00:20:42 Oh, yeah, out in California. Yeah, I remember that. Yeah, fond, fond memories of that. So I would say this, that one, you know, I'm a rule follower. And, you know, to some degree. maybe that, you know, is, you know, something that maybe, you know, others wouldn't have done. But, you know, look, follow the rules. I believe in the rule of law. And I'm going to follow the law. And, you know, it's, and remember what we did with that memo was unprecedented. And we had to use the full extent authority of the United States Congress to release that publicly.
Starting point is 00:21:22 We only put out the very basics. I mean, we knew so much more at the time. Most of what now has just come out. You know, we knew a lot of that at the time, but, you know, part of that process was, is we didn't have all the supporting documentation that we needed at that time when we put that memo out because we were still fighting the DOJ, the FBI, the CIA, et cetera, for this information. And now, you know, we continued to do that. Obviously, Horowitz helped. Durham helped. all of that was really important. And now the memo would look much different than it does than it did at the time. But look, the basics were out there when that memo was released.
Starting point is 00:22:07 The bottom line is that it should have blowing this Russia gate totally apart. People should have been immediately prosecuted. And I don't mean Trump and the Trump administration. That memo should have went and should have immediately started an investigation into Mueller, Comey, you know, you name it. Rosenstein, they should have all been prosecuted at that time. What did we find out? No, they actually just doubled and tripled down and ended up spying on us. I mean, you know, now that's all come out now that we were investigating these phony investigators on this witch hunt, and they turned around
Starting point is 00:22:42 and spied on us, the United States Congress at the time. And now thankful because, you know, that happened back in 2017 and 18 that a lot of people don't know about. Now the Congress is finally waking up to this that maybe this is a problem having these rogue DOJ and FBI and CIA that can actually now go spy on senators and congressmen. Now they're all ticked off about it. You know, they didn't seem to, it wasn't that they ignored it at the time, but because it was, well, it was newness and he was, you know, really out there. You know, we didn't know at the time what if Trump had anything to do with Russia. So we kind of, you know, they kind of left me out there to the, you know, by myself, which is, you know, I'm a big boy. I can, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:22 can't handle it and did handle it. But now, because so many of them, you know, they got away with spying on myself and I would say Senator Grassley staff back in those days. But now they've done it to so many using the Jack Smith once again, kind of the Mara Lago, Jack Smith investigation. They went in spite on a bunch of senators in Congress. We don't even know how many. It could be even more than what they even say today.
Starting point is 00:23:48 And then, you know, kind of the follow-on point. that, you know, that you would, when you look at this would be that they also went after Trump media's bank records. Okay. And this was all at that point, you know, they claimed it was because of January 6th. Well, as you know, Jan, we didn't exist in January 6th of, you know, 20, 21. So why would you come? after Trump Media and Technology Group's bank records. So, you know, look, there's more to say about that.
Starting point is 00:24:28 You know, J.P. Morgan should have never allowed it. They did. The phone company should have never allowed this. You know, hopefully, I mean, I know there's a DOJ investigation into all of this. The Florida AG, Attorney General Utmire has opened up an investigation into J.P. Morgan. So, look, there's more to that. We're going to continue to follow that down. But, you know, Look, it's horrible to spy on congressmen and senators, I know as one who got spied on. But to spy on a business that did not exist at the time of your supposed investigation on January 6th is preposterous, corrupt. Just that alone, people ought to go to jail. Just for that alone.
Starting point is 00:25:12 Forget all the other stuff. So the fact that that happened is just wild and crazy. But no, look, now the senators are ticked off the Congress. or ticked up, that's great. I'm all for it. And welcome, welcome to the party, boys and girls. You know, one thing that I do remember from the very beginning, because this was something that really bothered you. You're always very measured, okay? And then except when you started talking about the media. And I just remember you saying, because the media were in on it, Jan. They were in on it, right? And this was, I mean, this is part of what led you, I think, to Truth Social. You wrote a small
Starting point is 00:25:50 monograph or basically it was I remember a small book really excellent on this kind of topic of problems with the media and and then you ended up early you left you know I don't even know if you me I don't think you think you got your congressional pension I can't remember how it all played out but you just said okay the truth social needs me I'm jumping in I'm jumping in early but it was because of this and just so as we finish this part here just like the media role how central was it to to all of this Well, the media, the fake news legacy media is and has been in on it for a long time. I think the profitability of these companies now has really, really added to that where, you know,
Starting point is 00:26:37 it's really tough for any media company to make a profit. I mean, used to be a monopoly with just the three, you know, kind of the three big news, couple cable news, the major papers. It was before the advent of these phones and even the internet. So things have drastically changed and that's added to the corruption. And so when I wrote that pamphlet called it was called Countdown to Socialism, it's much like the Nunes memo. It was way worse than what I even imagined. And I imagine it could be really bad at the time.
Starting point is 00:27:13 So that was really, it predicted that the fake news was going to get worse and that the social media company specifically were going to start banning and shadow banning people. And I never knew it was going to be millions and millions. And the president of the United States, sitting president of the United States, members of Congress, it got really bad. So if you remember, in those dark days when I was being shadow banned and banned, it became very hard to get. the message out i think if if you didn't have the fake news and the legs of media um or the manipulation by the social media companies on uh you know on on on things that they don't want to appear
Starting point is 00:27:54 with the algorithms and everything we'd have a much different country today but i was the first to join rumble rumble rumble was a you know was a company doing back in videos for companies they wanted to try to challenge youtube at the time um they had a little niche with funny animal videos that they were that they were building their their technology out with and i joined rumble and it was me and funny animal videos but for me i didn't care because it was the only way i get my message out and i had 8 000 followers on youtube which i didn't know if that was a lot or not a or not that many but now we know it was not that many and we know i was being shadow banned by youtube because in a short amount of time uh in 2020 you know within four months
Starting point is 00:28:43 I had 400,000 followers on Rumble, a platform that only people looking for funny animal videos and me would know about. So that's what led me to this in 2020 was this fight for free speech. I also was one of the first to join Parlor, along with a guy named Dan Bonjino, who you know or know of. And then Parlor, I think, still one of the worst things that happened in this country was when 30, roughly 30 U.S. companies refused to work with Parlor, which was just an upstart early stage technology. It was a Twitter knockoff where I had already amassed, you know, a million followers or something on it in 2020.
Starting point is 00:29:34 And you realize that by being on Rumble and Parlor so early, it showed like how many followers would I have had on Twitter, Facebook, et cetera, had I not been banned like that. You know, I mean, it's just hard to imagine. So that's me, my world, but then it started happening to everybody up to the president, sitting president of the United States. So in 2021, if things could get any darker, they did because of the ability of the algorithms with these social media companies, working with the dark legacy media to,
Starting point is 00:30:12 essentially destroy the lives of so many people and the inability of to get the messaging out so that the masses actually know what's going on. I mean, we still deal with it today. So the only final point I would make on it is this, that, you know, I started this topic out with the legacy and fake news and their inability. to make money, make a profit. What's happened is, is you take the fusion GPSs of the world. Those have become the norm. So Oppo research type.
Starting point is 00:30:58 Opposition research firms, but not only that. So you have corporate clients, political clients, paying these so-called journalists that are really just on the payroll of the, these companies of, you know, of whoever's trying to manipulate the news. So there's not too many. So even if, even if you take a fake news company, what would be fascinating to know, and it's not easy to find out very hard is how many of those, you know, so you're making, you know, 50, 60, 70,000 dollars a year as a journalist. As you know, in places like New York City, Washington, D.C., that's not a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:31:44 It used to be that you could make, you know, you could be upper middle class, middle class, if you're a journalist. So just the law of economics shows that, well, at some point people are going to have to make money a different way. And I think what's actually happening here is that a lot of these journalists have second and third jobs, maybe multiple, where they're on the payroll of,
Starting point is 00:32:10 of someone who has an agenda. And whether it's through direct payments that are 1099 or through cash or through other perks, we have seen some of these perks that have come out in the open. But, you know, journalism is dead. You know, outside, I think actually the irony in all this is the so-called right-wing media is actually the only media that has any ethics left. So if you want to put, and I'm not saying, you know, Epic Times is the right wing, but you guys have truly been for the truth and for accuracy in journalism. You look at the, you know, I don't want to start naming names, but the, you know, just the news with John Solomon and the, the other great reporters that were out there that covered the Russia hoax, you know, the federalist, American greatness.
Starting point is 00:33:06 There's, you know, Bright Bart. you know, they're the ones that actually have the highest ethical standards and they're very small operations that that run as nonprofits. But I just, I mean, I just know that the problem is the legacy media is hopefully, hopelessly corrupt because of ideology and they're essentially for hire. And you blend that together. It's a dangerous concoction when they control. If you remember what I wrote about in countdown of social, socialism was about this funnel. And so you have all this information coming into the funnel. It's like a disinformation funnel. And at the bottom, by the time it gets to the person down below here into their
Starting point is 00:33:49 brain, it's unlikely that they're going to see what the Epic Times and this interview and things of that nature. So, you know, it's a, it's very tough in these days to make something go viral like what just happened recently with the Somali issue where you had a citizen journalist. I mean, it's hard to make that happen. To have a former vice presidential candidate running for re-election as governor of Minnesota to drop out, it's pretty spectacular. We haven't seen that in a long time. And my guess is it's a lot worse.
Starting point is 00:34:26 But there's so many of these stories that are out there that, you know, from California water to all the problems in California. that, you know, where you essentially have a population, and I'll just close with this, that you have a population that has elected left-wing neo-Marxist over and over and over and over again. There's pockets, as you know, that I used to represent that still have some bastion of what I'd just say, normalcy. And in California, just for the viewers that might not know you're talking about here, yes. Yeah, yeah. So normalcy where you have people that, you know, think that having water for people is a good idea. That having, using supporting farmers and growing food and to have cheap energy prices.
Starting point is 00:35:15 Like, these are probably good things for people, right? Not shouldn't be that, shouldn't really be that controversial. But it's become in California where, you know, you just had a year ago, you had parts of Los Angeles literally burnt the ground. They're running out of water. They're running out of electricity. Their highest gas prices by far in the United States by a long, long way. And what's the net result? You have what seems like common sense. Well, why would people keep voting for these people that keep doing this? Like, why would I want to, you know, San Francisco is being hollowed out where you're seeing the tech sectors moving to places like Florida and Texas?
Starting point is 00:36:02 And yet what do you see, John, you say, not only do we like it, we like it so much, we're going to vote for more of these people. They're voting for death and destruction. So to some degree, I do blame the neo-Marxists with the fake and phony legacy media, but it's really the power hungry left controlling back to that funnel. They're poisoning and have poison the minds because I can't imagine. There's not too many people you go up there on the street in California and say, Yeah, you got your power bill last month.
Starting point is 00:36:33 And this happened. This is real, real money. And medium households in my former congressional district now, it's not uncommon to have a thousand to $1,500 bill in a 1,500 square foot house for a month. That's real money. What? It's not uncommon. This is true.
Starting point is 00:36:51 It's not uncommon to see, you know, that you pay five to $6 a gallon for gas. I just did it. I just did it last week. It's not uncommon. in common to see literally neighborhoods burned down. It just happened a year ago, catastrophic forest fires. I mean, this is, people have been poisoned in California. So, yeah, what brought me to true social free speech, it's all of these things. But we're in a California is in a very, very dark place. And so is New York City.
Starting point is 00:37:23 And look, I'm just happy to be at a place, true social. Thank God, the president, want to go out and build this because we built something globally. our own technology, nobody can cancel us. We can now, not only do we have the true social and we have the streaming component that we have that you can actually watch some of the Epic Times-related videos on and channels on,
Starting point is 00:37:44 it's absolutely astonishing what's happened here. Well, okay, so let me mention a few things before I continue. One is the funnel is highly memorable. It's a very evocative graphic. We're going to put it up here. The second thing is there is one bias rating company called AllSides, which I kind of trust. What they do is they take the content and they strip away all the branding and they show it to people, right?
Starting point is 00:38:11 And then people decide just based on what the content is, not based on what they're supposed to think the content is. Okay. And so we land typically sort of center to Leans Right, which I think is a fair. I mean, truth and tradition is our maxim, right? So, you know, I'll take it. And finally, my thought here is this. I mean, basically at Truth Social, we have NTD, our sister media, is on Truth Plus. It's actually extremely helpful because I'll watch something and it's usually not, the volume is enough, but I want to catch it later.
Starting point is 00:38:48 And Truth Social allows that. Truth Plus allows that. I can go back to the episode very quickly and get it. So I'm actually a regular user. of the service. I appreciate that. It's a, no, thank you. It is amazing technology. And, you know, look, we're still building this out. But the truth plus, for those of you who haven't used it, it is amazing technology. I think it's really the best out there. I mean, the only thing that would be comparable would be YouTube TV. But for, you know, we've given a home to channels that didn't have a home that can't
Starting point is 00:39:18 get on to YouTube TV or anywhere else. But it also happens to be the best technology, especially as fast as it is, you have seven-day playback. So if you miss an interview on one of the news shows, that you can go back a week and bring it up. You don't have to save it. You can just go back. It's really simple. I mean, it's really good on your phone or your iPad,
Starting point is 00:39:41 but also very, very good on your television. It works amazing. I'm not, I mean, look, the folks that we've put together here, the team that we have at Trump Media and Technology Group, is, you know, I think nobody, you know, they first made fun of us, said that we could never do it, said that we'd have to use all the big tech. Now one thing they can't do is say that we, you know, knock on wood, you know, we're open globally to do to be a home for free speech for not just social media, but also for channels that can't get a home. But no, it's amazing what we've
Starting point is 00:40:17 accomplished in really a short amount of time having to do this all ourselves with our own, our own patented proprietary technology. And obviously having President Trump, it's his home. And that made a big difference because it allowed us to test the technology. So we were building as we go. We're still building as we go. But now thank you for bringing up that technology because a lot of people know true social.
Starting point is 00:40:44 They don't know truth plus. But when you have true social, there's just a toggle that you can push on true social and it'll take you to our sister app. And the apps kind of work together, but it's amazing technology. Well, I can tell you I know what an extraordinary achievement it is, having, you know, we've had to build, you know, the bulk of our own tech stack for a whole bunch of reasons we decided to do that and to get it good and to get it optimized and to get it, you know, at the scale you guys are operating.
Starting point is 00:41:14 I mean, it's quite the huge achievement to have done that, you know, end to end. Yeah. So, you know, you guys are clearly looking at some massive data center growth or you're predicting it or something like this because you've gone out and merged with a fusion generation company. It's one of the most promising, I think, in America. And, I mean, are you, what are you doing here? You're just betting you're going to be, you know, using a ton of energy or you're actually looking to, you know, build fusion reactors. all over the place. What is the plan here?
Starting point is 00:41:53 I mean, people were surprised, I think, when they saw this. Although it's not necessarily that unusual, given the expectations of these massive data centers that everyone's apparently gonna have. Yeah, I think that's right. So let's just go into the company. So everybody knows us for free speech, and we save free speech on this planet.
Starting point is 00:42:15 And we give credit where credits do. Elon also helped by buying, buying Twitter and turning it into X. But what's happened is that now AI is really growing quickly. And it's now, like if you think of us as the tip of the spear, we're the tip of the spear on fighting for freedom of speech. Now once again, we're at the tip of the spear because the most important issue, you can have all the technology you want, all the AI,
Starting point is 00:42:50 all the data centers, but there's a problem. There's not enough power. Right. So there's not enough power to power these data centers so much so you have really stupid naive elected officials, I think actually not naive. They know what they're doing who are saying, well, don't, we shouldn't have data centers. Put them somewhere else because, you know, they know their anti-energy policies are going to end this need for power is going to raise the price of energy. So it lets a Newsom and the guys in California say, oh, this is not us. It's not us. It's not. these data centers don't look at us. So they shift, they shift lane.
Starting point is 00:43:24 Devin, if I can jump in just for one sec, you know, I was at a round, I was invited to a round table around energy, okay? And we just, you know, all sorts of different people. Green, not green, it was quite a diverse group, okay? And everyone's talking and it just dawns on me at one point. All they're talking about is precisely what you just said. They're talking about we're not gonna have enough energy,
Starting point is 00:43:43 we're not gonna have enough energy to run all these data centers. Literally everybody was saying this, okay? And I, I, one, and I asked this, I go, hey, is net zero dead? Like, is, have we just forgot? Like, because, you know, before we were talking about how to reduce energy consumption massively. I mean, this was the topic, right?
Starting point is 00:44:06 And all of a sudden, literally everybody, wall to wall, is talking, how do we get enough power? There's not enough power. It's unbelievable. And then a couple of days later, you know, we have Bill Gates saying, well, maybe the, you know, global warming whole thing. maybe that's a little bit extreme the way it's been portrayed. Right. So anyway, it's just, it's fascinating, right? It's just like this narrative shift at the drop of a hat.
Starting point is 00:44:27 Did you, did you notice this? Oh, yeah. Oh, absolutely. I mean, so a lot of people ask, you know, how did you get involved in energy issues, well, and especially nuclear power? So I was early on in my career, I spent a lot of time on these energy issues, especially nuclear. So I had actually introduced legislation that would have allowed for the construction of additional 200 reactors of the traditional nuclear fission.
Starting point is 00:44:57 And we'll get to that reactors. Those, of course, never got built. Fukushima happened. That really took the wind out of the sails of nuclear. But now you're exactly right. All these tech gurus that are all global warming freaks have now switched over and said, well, wait a second, are billions of billions of billions. of dollars that we want to make, now rely on energy. They didn't care when it was the farmer out there with the tractor or the manufacturing
Starting point is 00:45:22 plant somewhere in the Midwest. You're out in California. Oh, yeah, global warming, buy our solar panels and our windmills. And, you know, we're all a new economy. We're going to make billions. And we're going to show you how to save, make things more efficient. Yeah, you're right, Jan, it's a narrative shift. That all went out the window because now, like agriculture and other industries that
Starting point is 00:45:45 actually make things that matter in this world, now all the yuppies and the tech freaks are all of a sudden all this stuff that they were nonsense. They were telling all of us for they've invented something now with these new massive needs of this AI power. And so they now have to jump in and say, oh, we've always been for nuclear. Yeah, we really wanted to do nuclear. So anyway, that's, you're 100% right. But what we told the market was when we, you know, we, you know, we, Obviously, the mission of our company was, say, free speech, but we're a technology company, and we've proven that we can build very complicated technology. We started looking around it, well, what's still at the tip of the spear? What does this country need to compete globally?
Starting point is 00:46:30 Every company, especially every technology company, is in the energy sector one way or another. In fact, irony of this, you might, one of the larger investors in TAE, that they have been around privately funded for nearly 30 years, looking at nuclear fusion, not fission. But Google is one of their, one of their larger investors, other energy companies like Chevron, major investors like Stanley, Drunken Miller. They've all invested privately into TAE. So when we started looking at the energy sector, knowing that this is the most important issue now at the highest level, where can we, as Trump meeting technology group get involved, we analyze that sector. We put together a huge war chest, as you know, of Bitcoin assets. And so we've been kind of cutting edge there trying to figure out
Starting point is 00:47:24 how to use crypto on true social and truth plus. But we wanted to, we looked at, you know, where do we best make these investments? And we looked hard at the energy sector and then kind of drawing upon my my, you know, former experience being a big supporter of nuclear power, I always thought that fusion was maybe just too far out. But now I believe once looking at, there's not very many fusion companies, but then looking at TAE where they've built five, you know, five generations now of reactors, they're now ready to build a six and will be the first in the world to be actually where you put in, where you get more energy,
Starting point is 00:48:11 out of than what you put in. So we have, we just released plans that we're, you know, merging with, with TAE. We're looking for a site. We put up the site criteria this week that the first reactor, commercial reactor, be about 50 megawatt. But with the second reactor that we hoped would be on the same site would be somewhere in that 350 to 500 megawatt range. What does this mean to the common viewer out there that's watching this?
Starting point is 00:48:40 If you think of the big nuclear fusion reactors are around 1,000, most of the coal or gas plants are in that 2 to 500 range. So, you know, TAE working with us, building these reactors, obviously this has never been done before. So it's got to, you know, there's a lot to be done. But I call it Manhattan Project 2.0, building off of what was done in the first Manhattan project that led to atomic power. This is, there's nothing more important than making this work. It's essentially clean, cheap power that everybody prospers by having clean, cheap power. We're going the opposite direction. So, you know, you can have all the AI, all the technology you want, but if you don't have the power, it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:49:33 And so we've got to get the cost of power down for all Americans, for people all over the world. you're going to need a breakthrough in the energy sector. And we're going to need all the above, by the way. I'm not saying this is, you know, even if we're successful to our fullest extent possible, it's still going to be a long time before you can build enough of these. So you're going to need oil, gas, everything, you know, the existing nuclear fission plants. All of that is going to be absolutely necessary over the next 20. 20 years, but I do believe that nuclear fusion is the answer. It long has been the answer.
Starting point is 00:50:16 It's just that, you know, there hasn't been a solution yet. It's not like this is, this is not new science. This was known by people, you know, back during the World War II timeframe. But it's just being able to contain the plasma in order to produce the electricity. That's been the, that that's been the problem. So we're, you know, very optimistic about this technology. And I, and this is, this will bring it home for you and, and folks at Epic Times, because I know you follow China closely. People ask me, well, who are your competitors? Is it Bill Gates? Is it, you know, Elon Musk who wants to put solar panels? That's right. Up in space, right? Solar panels in space, but data centers in space, which by the way, we're probably going to need to do that too.
Starting point is 00:51:02 But the people talk about having the smaller modular reactors like the ones like the ones that we have in the naval vessels. All of that is going to be necessary. But the true breakthrough would be, you know, having these 350 to 500 megawatt plants. So who's the competition? The only competition in my mind for this company for our future company is China. That's it. The Chinese have put untold billions into this, and they know that it's now going to be possible to create, to have a nuclear fusion reactor that works. And that's what we're up against.
Starting point is 00:51:46 We're really racing against the clock against China. So, you know, look, I know it. We solved the free speech problem, and now we're moving on to solve the energy problem and make sure that our. country maintains global dominance by being completely, not only being energy independent, but driving prices of energy down for the people in the United States. That's which I think is a, you know, it's a goal that I've had, ironically, like I said, for a long time. And now we're in a position to make it happen. You know, a couple of questions. First one, you know, one thing that the Chinese Communist
Starting point is 00:52:28 Party is particularly good at. is hacking and stealing sensitive technologies and intelligence. So how are you dealing with this particular reality, given that you're asserting here that they're your only competitor? I would say that there's a high risk margin here on this one. Yeah, I mean, look, up to this point, a lot of this has been science projects, large ones, and a lot of this information has been shared globally
Starting point is 00:52:57 so that it's out there. the difference with with tae a lot of this is patented the technology it's a it's a different way of going about the fusion process i believe just from what i read now it's fake news legacy media so you never know i actually saw some that were not fake news that talks about it but you know the chinese know that this you know containing the plasma using lasers is really the you know would be the amazing a discovery. You know, we believe that we can use boron, which is a readily available. So if we can use boron in these reactors, you're talking about abundant.
Starting point is 00:53:40 You wouldn't use much of it. You know, essentially no radioactive material whatsoever. And these, another way to think about it with these fusion reactors is they're more like, and permitted as such, like an MRI machine, like what you use. in healthcare. And that's why, you know, when we say, look, we, you know, we only need 20 acres to build the first three reactors on when we, when we released our site criteria. So, you know, I know that doesn't really answer your kind of question on China. But, you know, I would just say that, you know, having myself and our team that we've assembled here, we know how to keep secrets.
Starting point is 00:54:23 I think we will be a big benefit to TAE and making sure that that security is in place. But look, they've done a pretty good job. They have a lot of proprietary technology that so far nobody else has that we are obviously very fond of and obviously want to keep it out of everybody's hands, not just the Chinese. We need to get this, make this work and start producing cheap, abundant, clean, safe power. Well, you know, and I think we've come full circle here because you indeed were very good at making sure that none of that classified information got out until it could be gotten out via the official channels, you know. So I'm hearing you when you say you know how to keep secrets. I just hope you have the, you know, the next level tech expertise to defend against these obvious cyber attacks. I mean, you know, we, we experience them ourselves constantly, right?
Starting point is 00:55:26 They just don't like, I mean, in our case, they just want to take us down, right? They're not looking to, I don't think they're looking to steal the secrets necessarily, but. Well, look, yeah, you're exactly right, but I like, if anybody, I like our odds. If anybody can do it, it's going to be, you know, it's going to be us. I mean, look, there's always going to be cyber attacks, you know, we get them too. but at the end of the day, you know, we've managed to keep true social and truth plus, you know, up and going, despite, you know, all the, all the bad actors that want to take us down for one reason or another. But, you know, our beautiful company here has done a lot for America,
Starting point is 00:56:09 a lot for the world, and we're going to continue to make that happen. And this is, like I said, This has been a dream of mine and many people for a long, long time to do something that's at the heart. You know, you can say freedom of speech is at the heart of everything, but, you know, power is also. Cheap abundant power is so important to mankind. And just one little thing here. How does it actually generate the, is it a similar situation to fission where you're actually heating something using the nuclear reaction? and then that drives a turbine and creates the electricity? Is it the same method?
Starting point is 00:56:49 Yeah, I mean, look, at the end of the day, you've got to produce for all these, whether it's gas or oil, what you're doing is you're creating heat. And then you have to harness that heat. I mean, look, this is so advanced technology that, I mean, that there's, I mean, you could use it. I think the plan now is, and obviously this is all subject to change as you start to,
Starting point is 00:57:12 to build the first commercial reactor. And once you build the first one, you'll, you'll likely innovate and the second one will be different. But, you know, the current trajectory is to use, you know, a typical, you know, typical, you know, make heat, turn a turbine. You know, that's for now. That's the plan. But look, there's, and you can watch it, tae.com.
Starting point is 00:57:35 I mean, they actually talk about this on some of the videos that they have there. You know, they do believe there's some other opportunities where you could almost do direct power. So it's it's quite, I mean, go to TAe.com. You'll see all about it. And, you know, obviously we're Trump Media Technology Group, DJT is the ticker symbol. But we are a, you know, we haven't been standing still of, you know, doing nothing. We've been working on some really big projects. And I know that, you know, Epic Times has been behind us 110%. And we, we appreciate that and all your viewers, John. It just struck me that in a way we've kind of taken sort of the inverse path because, so, you know, since we were founded in 2000 to expose the true narrative around communist China, not this Kissinger doctrine thing where we were supposed to pump in the cash and they were going to liberalize, right? That was never going to happen. We knew that, but it was hard to convince people, okay? But the point was they were trying to destroy us all along. So when, you know, American media started attacking us, you know, I think it's really started with NBC, like 29, 2018, 2018, 20,
Starting point is 00:58:41 You know, we were horrified, right, that this was happening. At the same time, we had a lot of experience dealing with it in various ways because we had to deal with the CCP. You guys are kind of the opposite, right? You know, you've been having to deal with kind of, well, let's say, you know, people, Americans that don't like you. But now you've graduated to the CCP being very interested in you. So congratulations. Well, thank you. And we'll, look, we'll continue to fight the good fight here. And I appreciate everything that Epic Times has done to try to just be a source of real news and information.
Starting point is 00:59:25 So, you know, this has been an incredible conversation. A final quick thought as we finish? Look, I think that, you know, like I said, this is a, to do things like this, take a lot of people. You know, we have a great company with a great shareholder base. You have people committed people at not only at Trump Media Technology that have solved this free speech issue, but we've got a, you know, the team at TAE is some of the most awarded scientists and engineers in the world. And this is American technology. And, you know, it's going to take that type of ingenuity to get something like this done. It's to solve a big problem that I think was, you know, the first Manhattan project, like we talked about, led to that atomic power for good or bad. Like there are, obviously
Starting point is 01:00:21 there are challenges with nuclear fission. But, you know, we put the pause button as a country, United States on on those types of fission reactors the Chinese did not the Chinese continued to build coal plants they continued to build atomic large atomic generation and vision plants and now we're playing catch up and so you know join us and be involved and help America stay on top that's that's what our company's about well as I think you know I'm a huge American exceptionalist despite being Canadian. It's unfortunately a bit rare, especially these days. I wish you Godspeed, and it's such a pleasure to have had you on. Thanks a lot, Jan. Great to be with you as always.
Starting point is 01:01:12 Thank you all for joining Devin Nunes and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders. I'm your host, Yanya Kellick.

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