Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 9/9/25: Korea Furious After ICE Hyundai Raid, Trump Epstein Birthday Letter Revealed
Episode Date: September 9, 2025Krystal and Saagar discuss Korea losing it as ICE chains 300 nationals at Hyundai facility, Trump Epstein birthday letter revealed. Jeremy Scahill: https://x.com/jeremyscahill Dave Weigel...: https://x.com/daveweigel To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.comMerch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Good morning, everybody. Happy Tuesday. We have an amazing show for everybody today. What do we have
Crystal? A lot of very interesting topics in the show today, I have to say. So we're going to
cover this immigration raid at a Hyundai plant involving hundreds of Korean nationals. A lot of
interesting stuff going on there. We also have some bombshell revelations to regard to Epstein,
including we actually have released now the full birthday book. It is even more disgusting,
disturbing, and creepy than you could possibly imagine. So we will dig into some of that.
Dave Weigel is going to join us to talk about two conferences. He just attended, one on
national conservatism, the other on abundance. Also comes amid some new, very interesting polling
about the Zoran Mamdani race in New York City. So we'll get him to dive into all of that.
Jeremy Scahill is also going to join us to talk about the latest potential ceasefire proposal
with regard to Israel and Gaza.
We've got some new Gen Z gender divide polling.
That's what I'm trying to say.
That is fascinating to dig into the various priorities of men and women in Gen Z,
depending on who they voted for in the last election.
And we're also taking a look at some Tim Dillon political commentary with regard to various political
figures.
So that should be a fun one.
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the episode to a friend and rate it five stars. It really, really helps the show. So with that,
let's go ahead and start with Hyundai. This is, I'll tell you, I have been infuriated by many things
under the Trump administration.
This is one of those which has hit more than anything for a variety of reasons because
it shows the sheer level of stupidity pervading our government right now.
Let's go ahead and put some of this video up on the screen, which has now caused an international
incident with the state of South Korea.
So you're watching Homeland Security, ICE, basically roll in some military convoy into
a Hyundai plant in Georgia.
And what you're watching is not only, now I'm going to separate my commentary,
some of the people that they allegedly arrested were in the country illegally.
But many of these are highly skilled South Korean nationals who entered the United States
under the visa waiver program because they are highly skilled technicians who were dispatched
by Hyundai from South Korea to the United States, specifically to get a manufacturing plant
up and running. So these are the people who are actually at the vanguard of the Trump administration's
hailed manufacturing plan, where we are basically going around the world, telling Hyundai,
telling Japan, all of these other different countries. We're like, you need to invest hundreds of
billions of dollars in our country. And they're like, hey, okay, no problem. We absolutely will do
so. We'll hire American workers. The only thing is, is that to get the plant up and running, of course,
as, you know, if an American company were to open a factory elsewhere,
well, they're the only people with experience in the technology.
They're the people who are going to set up the plant.
They have no intention of staying.
And they were literally chained up and, you know, mistreated, put it on a bus,
and, you know, summarily humiliated in front of the eyes of the world.
This has, I cannot stress this enough because nobody in the U.S. or Washington actually looks at foreign media.
This is an international incident with one of the most important allies for the United States in East Asia.
Let's go ahead and put the next one up there on the screen, guys, just to show you the entire Korean government, opposition and the ruling party, are united in their outrage.
This is blockbuster news all over South Korean media.
They demanded the return of their workers and said that they will bring them home.
they will not be deported, and they have privately had to dispatch a jet in order to do this.
I think that this reveals, actually, perhaps we can find some bipartisan agreement here.
Crystal, the stupidity of the United States immigration system in some ways.
We hold a gun to Korea's head and say, you need to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in America.
They're like, great, absolutely.
And in fact, because of our work ethic, we want it to happen right now.
And so we're like, cool, that's awesome.
and then what they do is they apply for a business visa and it takes forever it's not happening
it's not getting approved and they're like okay well south korean nationals can enter the united
states under the visa waiver program so we'll just send them over and we'll get this plant up
and running it's better than eating the cost of delays and so while they're sitting in this plant then
somebody in ice or the white house wherever gets the brilliant idea of let's roll on in there
and let's just arrest and chain these guys up, A3, please,
just to explain this a little bit more to everybody.
And look, I'm not letting Hyundai, I guess, off the hook.
They admit that they entered under the visa waiver program.
Their explanation is, yeah, I mean, we enter under the visa waiver program
because the administration was not granting our visas fast enough.
And at the very same time that they're, you know, slowing our visa process,
They're up our ass to get this plant up and running.
So, I mean, I just think that it tells everybody the level of seriousness to which we are committed to, you know, U.S. manufacturing and else.
I just can't think of a better poster child for allegedly what's supposed to be happening.
The point of the trade deals is to increase tariffs to tell countries to come here to invest in America.
You invest in America.
We will roll out the red carpet for you.
We will make sure that everything is there.
we will allow these, you know, high-skill technicians, again, who are not trying to stay here
or anything. They're literally entering America. They're trying to get the plant up and running,
and eventually is going to create a job. This is in a rural Georgia, by the way. It's, you know,
not like a thriving metropolis. It's a place which, you know, wanted the plant. It was actually
welcomed it to come there. So this, again, I just want to emphasize, this is an international
incident. And if you are a Japanese company or a Korean company or a German company or any of these
others who, again, basically under duress, which fine, the government is telling you you're going
to be slapped with massive tariffs. The European and all these other Asian allies are doing
everything they can to actually penetrate manufacturing to the U.S. to be able to build these things
here. And then to do something like this, it is one of the most chilling effects you can possibly
think of for the alleged plan of moving manufacturing to the United States of America.
Yeah, that's absolutely right. And so it just,
shows you the conflict. Because one of the supposed goals of the mass deportation is to free up jobs
for American workers. These South Korean workers were literally there to create jobs for American
workers. So you are, there is just no doubt that you are harming American workers with this action.
And yet this action is taken. And, you know, on top of everything, right, there are a lot of ways
you can do immigration enforcement. They chose to do the mass show of force, put ed,
everybody in, you know, shackles tied around the waist and to record that and release it publicly.
So to your point about the humiliation, it was an intentional, intentional humiliation of the South Korean nationals.
You know, with regard to their status, basically what happened, this plant was, this was started actually under the Biden administration.
And there was kind of a like, don't ask, don't tell kind of a policy.
Like, look, we don't have a program set up to be able to get you all of the visas in the time period that,
you need in order to have them properly authorized, just get, you know, the normal, like,
tourist visa that allows for business meetings and no one's going to do anything about because
we understand, like, the nature of the system. And so that was the understanding in the Biden
administration. And they thought that was the understanding under the Trump administration as well,
basically like, well, we're not going to pass some new program to actually get you the visas
that you need, even though we do have those relationships with other countries like Australia and
other places where we have a close relationship. We have a close relationship with South Korea.
it would make sense to have the same thing.
We just don't have it.
So there was kind of a tacit understanding of just come in, just do what you need to do.
No one's going to do anything.
And instead, they're intentionally, summarily rounded up and intentionally humiliated in this regard.
It's utter insanity.
I mean, it truly is.
And I do wonder, you know, is this a Stephen Miller special?
Is this the, you know, local ice agent?
Like, where does this come from?
The fact that it's being released from, you know, the sort of the top in terms of the video
release tells me that someone pretty high up the chain must have greenlit this and must
have embraced it.
And it makes absolutely no sense.
And, you know, I do think that Trump increasingly has kind of outsourced various pieces
of his presidency to different AIDS, Stephen Miller being a very important one of them.
So, you know, likely to me, I feel like it was, you know, Stephen Miller putting his xenophobia
over any other sort of goal.
Maybe that's possible.
And, you know, I want to be clear.
I'm not defending visa fraud or any of that.
We just did a segment yesterday.
You did about tourist visas, you know, for the GHF and any of that.
I don't think any of these guys were carrying fully automatic weapons in fairness.
I'm more just saying, in general, like, I don't support visa fraud.
I do think, though, that this demonstrates the lack of seriousness.
South Korea is the sixth or seventh largest trading partner of the United States,
Seventh in goods and services.
It is hands down behind Japan the most important U.S. ally in the East Asia.
It is a government vital.
It is a country vital to U.S. national security interests.
If you believe in the pivot to Asia, or if you believe, basically if you believe in U.S.
power projection and good relations that want to make sure that we are not totally at China's whim,
well, this all fits to me with the Chinese National Parade, you know, the military parade,
that we covered earlier.
And one of the most important parts of that parade was a South Korean delegation,
which actually shook hands with Kim Jong-un at the behest of the Chinese.
And it was done specifically to show a demonstration by the Koreans that, yes, we will be willing
to work with China.
We accept some of the primacy of China in the region on top of our commitment here to the United
States.
Now, of course, you know, it's a vital U.S. ally.
There's thousands of United States troops present in Korea.
we are literally, you know, fought and died together.
So this is a country which is united with us in blood.
And, you know, to treat their nationals like this,
not only in terms of the manufacturing piece,
but also it's just the sheer lack of respect for the country.
I mean, again, you know, Koreans who are present, you know,
the Korean media is like, hey, there's a lot of you guys over here.
What happened if we just started rounding all of you up?
It's like, oh, you think a lot of these wives of service members and others here
or all have perfect visa status, maybe we should all start looking into it.
I mean, that is the level of outrage that we have actually inspired.
Again, in a very friendly nation to the United States of America, which creates and wants
to create jobs here, which is, I mean, it's a good trading partner.
I could go on forever about some of the people who have really ripped us off here,
but this is people creating an extremely high quality product in the United States,
it sells well.
And it also kind of shows you the problem with a lot of our manufacturing,
because all of them basically rely on.
And everything I've heard from, you know, TSM, for example,
is building that giant plant down in Arizona.
And here's the truth that they tell you.
They go, look, you guys don't have the expertise.
So a lot of our guys, they're going to have to come over for at least a year or two,
at the very least to try and train you up because you just don't know what we're doing.
This is one of the most highly specialized types of manufacturing in the world.
I'm not exaggerating.
If a single human hair gets into the facility improperly, it can shut down the entire thing.
That's what chip manufacturing looks like.
There's a high, high, high, high level of expertise that I cannot stress enough,
which they have perfected and which they are genuinely the experts on.
So for them to be not only mistreated, but to also show them that the level of seriousness
and deference that they will not get as people trying to invest in America, what message
is that sending to them, to Japan, to all of these other countries, which are genuinely trying,
again, to do the right thing?
They're terrified.
I can tell you that.
They're terrified of actions like this.
Just imagine if it was, you know, Americans who were at, like, building a Ford plant, you know, in some foreign country and they're rounded up in that way.
I mean, we would be horrified.
Like, we would be justifiably.
Like, what the hell is wrong with you?
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Hi, I'm Janica Lopez
And in the new season of the Overcover podcast
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What would you do if one bad decision forced you to choose between a maximum security prison
or the most brutal boot camp designed to be hell on earth?
Unfortunately for Mark Lombardo, this was the choice.
he faced. He said, you are a number, a New York State number, and we own you.
Shock incarceration, also known as boot camps, are short-term, highly regimented correctional
programs that mimic military basic training. These programs aim to provide a shock of prison life,
emphasizing strict discipline, physical training, hard labor, and rehabilitation programs. Mark had one
chance to complete this program and had no idea of the hell awaiting him the next six months.
The first night was so overwhelming and you don't know who's next to you. And we didn't know
what to expect in the morning. Nobody tells you anything. Listen to shock incarceration on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Even if it's not some super
high tech process, different companies just have different ways of doing things. So if it's a Hyundai factory,
yeah, you're going to need people who are like familiar with that process to help set it up and
establish the procedures and all of, like, this is all very logical. And interestingly, you know,
Trump, when he was asked about it, seemed to understand the sort of basic logic of this,
which makes it all the more perplexing of why the hell this even happened. Let's go ahead and
play A4. It's a battery factory in that case is uptold. And, you know, when they're building
batteries, if you don't have people in this country right now that know about batteries,
Maybe we should help them along and let some people come in and train our people to do, you know, complex things, whether it's battery manufacturing or computer manufacturing or building ships.
So we're going to look at that whole situation.
We have a lot of industries that we don't have anymore, and we're going to have to train people.
And the way you train people is bring people in that know what they're doing and let them stay for a little while in help.
So I'm going to look at that.
It's a very interesting situation that took place.
You've been trading the relationship with Korea at all?
We have a great relationship with South Korea.
It's a really good relationship.
You know, we just made a trade deal.
What do you make of that, Sager?
Yeah, we have a great relationship.
Sure, that's news.
You know, the Koreans never agree on anything.
The only thing they can agree on right now in their own country is screw the United States.
I just, I can't get over this because-
Bring the world together, Sager.
We are certainly.
And, you know, you have to think about in grand strategic terms,
In the last month, literally, you have three high-profile diplomatic failures on the part of the USA.
Number one is Russia, where we have Putin over here, we have the summit, we get nothing out of it.
In fact, they just launched one of the largest attacks in, I think, believe in the history of the war in Ukraine, on the city of Kiev.
And they included, I believe, bombing one of their main government buildings.
They, Putin flies to the Chinese military parade.
and stands in solidarity with Xi.
Modi, you know, we slap India with 50% tariffs.
Modi says, all right, fine, let's go.
Game on.
I've got a lot of options.
He attends the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit.
He stands with Xi Jinping.
He tweets pictures of the limo with Vladimir Putin.
Kim Jong-un, by the way, who at one point had diplomatic relations with the United States,
which I supported it.
I thought it was great.
He included at the Chinese military parade.
South Korea sends a delegation there.
So I am including South Korea, North Korea, Russia, and now China, you know, as well, which
very clearly is sending a major message to America.
We can be a better, to the world, I mean, we can be a better partner to you.
We won't lecture you and abuse you.
You can do whatever you want.
And, you know, that's not a great set of rules necessarily if you want to live by.
But for a lot of those people, all they see from us is hypocrisy, they see stupidity.
with the Chinese, they see, at the very least, there's no hypocrisy, right?
They're not going to lecture them on human rights or war or anything.
They don't care.
They're like, how can we do business?
And, you know, so there's, we've lost not only the, not only the, you know, the sheen of America.
And look, I think there's often a talking point like, oh, we're losing the world, like people's citizens are against us.
That's kind of been true for a long time, but obviously millions of, billions of people still want to come here.
This is about our government's relations with other governments and what it means for the future.
Each of these moves has been designed basically to antagonize critical U.S. allies, which if you just look from a picture of the globe, you would want to have on your side as 50% of global GDP arises in Asia.
And then who are the countries that are getting the red carpet? Israel. And apparently Ukraine, too, by the way.
So what are we doing here?
I mean, this is the literal opposite of the vision that was allegedly sold, you know,
under the 2024 campaign.
And I know it's in direct contravention, not only of the things that they said, but of the
genuine beliefs of so many of the people who work in the Trump administration, the India
fallout might be the most single and consequential.
But the Korean one, you cannot just walk away from this.
Like, this is a major incident in Korea.
Go and use Google Translate.
It's not hard, all right?
You can go and look at it for yourself or how they're reporting all this.
It is, it's big.
It's big in the country.
They're not going to forget.
And I do think that this will have a big impact on our relations over the next decade.
Well, and this is the perfect story to encapsulate the way that those foreign relationships matter here.
Because to your point, you know, the whole idea, one of the things.
that was sold with the Trump administration as well as, oh, we're going to have this manufacturing
renaissance, and that's what the tariffs are about, blah, blah, blah.
First of all, that's failing anyway.
We've had 78,000 manufacturing jobs lost since the beginning of the year.
You know, in the last month, we just got the jobs report on Friday, which was really poor,
and in which we lost another 12,000 manufacturing jobs.
So we're already going in the wrong direction where all of that is concerned.
And then, yeah, if, you know, companies feel like they're not going to be able to build plants,
if they feel like their workers are going to be humiliated, they're not going to be able to operate.
Not exactly a big encourager of investing in America, creating jobs here, rebuilding the manufacturing base.
So, you know, these relationships that can sound very sort of squishy when you're talking about them in an abstract can have real, tangible impacts on people's lives, on jobs, on employment.
And that's why I think this story encapsulates, you know, that sort of intersection between what we're doing abroad,
our relationships with these countries and what it means for people here at home.
Really quick, just as a mention, because we've actually got Weigel standing by, and I
want to bring him in to talk about Zoron and abundance and national conservatism and all
the rest. But there was a significant SCOTUS. I don't even know if you called this
a decision. It was a shadow docket decision. You can put this up on the screen. A5. They lifted
the restrictions on L.A. immigration stops that have been imposed by a lower court. So,
Effectively, the lower court said, what you're doing is tantamount to racial profiling and you can't do it.
You can't just detain people or stop and frisk them effectively based on what they look like or whether they're, you know, around a job area that you think is high in immigrants.
And the Supreme Court, without giving any sort of window into their thinking and their logic, lifted that restriction.
And, Saga, this is very consistent with a pattern we have seen with this Supreme Court under Trump 2.0.
where kind of quietly, I don't know if this has gotten as much attention as it should,
the Supreme Court has sided with the Trump administration on the shadow docket,
something like 16, 17 separate times.
They've mostly been, I mean, just racking up victories.
And the reason it's called the shadow docket is because, as in this instance,
it's not a ruling on the merits.
So it's not like you get this long brief, oh, here's our thinking and here's what it means,
blah, blah, blah.
It's not a final decision on it.
But in the meantime, they're lifting the injunction, and so the Trump administration can do what they want.
We've seen similar things with regard to, like, the ability to fire whoever they want, without giving cause at these agencies that are supposed to be independent.
We've seen similar things with regard to, you know, they basically dismantled the Department of Education.
Previously, you would have assumed that seems like something that Congress has to do, not the executive.
Well, the court has allowed that to go forward.
And so it truly has allowed the Trump administration to consolidate a massive amount of power.
without us getting any real logic or reasoning from the Supreme Court about how they're thinking through these things or whether even they would rule ultimately on the merits in this direction.
So this is just the latest in what has been an extraordinary series of victories for the Trump administration with the Supreme Court.
Yeah, you're right to explain on the shadow docket.
It's a bit complicated, like you said, because they did not rule on the merits.
It was Justice Kavanaugh writing, I believe, for the majority, it was 6'3 to come through on the shadow docket to allow
the injunction to be lifted without ruling on eventually.
It is also a consequence of a lot of the, like, extraordinary, like, legal action and
extraordinary behavior that's been taken on the part of the Trump administration, but it's
certainly something to watch.
I had this, like, overwhelming sensation that I had to call it right then.
And I just hit call, said, you know, hey, I'm Jacob Schick.
I'm the CEO of One Tribe Foundation.
And I just wanted to call on and let her know, there's a lot of people battling some of the
very same things you're battling.
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What would you do if one bad decision forced you to choose
between a maximum security prison or the most brutal boot camp
designed to be hell on earth?
Unfortunately for Mark Lombardo, this was
the choice he faced. He said, you are a number, a New York State number, and we own you.
Shock incarceration, also known as boot camps, are short-term, highly regimented correctional programs
that mimic military basic training. These programs aimed to provide a shock of prison life,
emphasizing strict discipline, physical training, hard labor, and rehabilitation programs. Mark had one
chance to complete this program and had no idea of the hell awaiting him the next six months.
The first night was so overwhelming and you don't know who's next to you. And we didn't know
what to expect in the morning. Nobody tells you anything. Listen to shock incarceration on the IHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. A foot washed up a shoe with some bones in
it. They had no idea who it was. Most everything was burned up pretty good from the fire that not a whole lot
was salvageable. These are the coldest of cold cases, but everything is about to change.
Every case that is a cold case that has DNA right now in a backlog will be identified in our
lifetime. A small lab in Texas is cracking the code on DNA. Using new scientific tools,
they're finding clues in evidence so tiny you might just miss it. He never thought he was going
to get caught, and I just looked at my computer screen. I was just like, ah, gotcha.
On America's Crime Lab, we'll learn about victims and survivors,
and you'll meet the team behind the scenes at Othrum,
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Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, turning now to Epstein, some extraordinary new information being released by the House Oversight Committee.
you'll all remember the story about the so-called birthday book for Jeffrey Epstein, which included a letter, allegedly, from Donald Trump.
The White House claimed that it was a forgery, that it was a fake, that it didn't exist.
The Wall Street Journal was actually sued, Rupert Murdoch, and others by Donald Trump personally for defamation, claiming that no such letter ever existed.
They said that they never even showed them the letter.
Well, the letter has now been released to the House Oversight Committee.
it is part of several pages now released by the Oversight Committee from the so-called birthday book directly from the estate of Jeffrey Epstein. So let's make that very clear. This was from the estate of Jeffrey Epstein, this so-called birthday book that was compiled by Galane Maxwell, has a lot of other luminaries and other interesting people. But the allegation from the White House now is that it's a fake letter which was actually planted in the Epstein estate, I guess, from the year 2003. And since that time has bubbled up,
that forgery, uh, to where we are right now. So just presenting that. We'll get to some of the
White House denials in a second, but let's take a look at the letter, uh, which was described for us
only by the Wall Street Journal. Let's go and put B4, please, up on the screen. Uh, so you can all see it
now, uh, for yourself. There it is. And, uh, I'll remind you kind of the weird,
cryptic poem, uh, that was written there in typeface, voiceover. There must be more to life than having
everything. Donald, yes, there is, but I won't tell you what it is.
Jeffrey, nor will I since I know what it is. Donald, we have certain things in common, Jeffrey. Jeffrey, yes, we do come to think of it. Donald, enigma's never aged. Have you noticed that?
Jeffrey, as a matter of fact, it was clear to me since the last time I saw you. Donald, a pal is a wonderful thing. Happy birthday. May every day be another wonderful secret. Donald J. Trump with a signature there listed.
So B5, please, just to go and show everybody. The initial understanding and statement from the White House is, quote, time to News Corp.
to open that checkbook. It's not his signature defamation in all caps. That is from Taylor
Budowich. He is the deputy White House chief of staff and a cabaret secretary there over at the
White House. A little bit of an issue, though, because in the New York Times story in the
Wall Street Journal, they've actually released other side-by-side photos of Trump's signature
from that time period. And they do appear to look very similar. So not a signature expert,
obviously, or any of that.
You can judge it all for yourselves,
but certainly some of the story
about how allegedly this is a fake
doesn't pass some of the smell test,
considering that it does come
from the Epstein estate itself.
By the way, in terms of who leaked this,
it's very interesting originally
because Crystal, some of the things
that have now come out from the Epstein estate
that were released by the House Oversight Committee
appear to actually have been
a part of some exhibits
in the Galane Maxwell trial,
So that birthday book has probably had access both by U.S. prosecutors in the FBI, some since 2019, but also obviously available to the Galane Maxwell legal team. So still lots of speculation as to who originally leaked it. But we can all go read it for ourselves. I was reading some of it this morning. It's unbelievably creepy.
It's disgusting. And this is like, I'm taking Trump out of this. Trump was one of many included with lewd and creepy.
disgusting messages from literally some of the world's richest, most powerful people.
They're all writing in some sort of secret code.
We have little children cartoon drawings.
I mean, I'm not exaggerating.
Emily and I will fully go through some of the stuff tomorrow.
But obviously, the headline here is specifically about Trump and his denial.
And as part of the reason why, you know, immediately they started saying that all the Epstein
files themselves were a hoax.
But you can see here, the story's not going away.
and it's becoming more inconvenient for the White House and for everybody else who has touched
to this man over the years.
That was an interesting choice of language there at the end.
I used it correctly.
Well, with regard to who leaked it, I mean, it is worth noting that since Galane Maxwell
got her little cushy move to her low security club fed and she had her nice little conversation
with the deputy AG, we haven't gotten any more leaks now halfway.
So that is an interesting thing to note.
Can we put the B4 back up on the screen?
Because many people are noting, this did not look the way that we expected it to look.
It is even more disturbing to see in person.
And, you know, I thought that there's sort of an assumption when you think of like a grown man drawing a female shape.
You expect giant boobs.
That's what I'm trying to say.
Now, listen, I appreciate the inclusivity of the small-breasted woman community.
Okay.
However, many are also pointing out this actually looks like a prepubescent girl.
So when you have some, the president of the United States, writing in this creepy-ass code about the secrets they have in common and enigmas, et cetera, may every day be another wonderful secret on this image.
it is very hard to come up with what an innocent explanation of what he is referring to is.
Especially, Sager, to your point, when you put it in context of the rest of the book,
which is fucking disgusting, can put B8 up on the screen to give you a little taste of what we're talking about in this book.
You can see here a cartoon drawing of Jeffrey Epstein handing balloons to little girls in the year they say 1983.
And then in 2003, the present day, him receiving massage from, you know, girls who are unclothed or barely clothed.
And it says, what a great country.
So seemingly a cartoon depiction of his grooming.
Literally.
I mean, it's a literal cartoon version of grooming, including one of the girls with a J.E.
tattoo on her butt.
I didn't even notice that one on her ass.
Yeah.
And, I mean, if you look at all of these.
Many of them are indecipherable because they are all speaking in this weird, like, eyes wide shut code.
So the impression you come away with is a whole friend group of extremely powerful and wealthy individuals.
Les Waxner has his contribution in here, many others besides, who all know what's going on and are at the very least aware, if not directly, participating.
That is very much the impression you come away from if you spend five minutes looking at this disgusting book.
Yeah, look, it's all public. You can all go read it for yourselves. I encourage you to do. I mean, we'll just pick the craziest image. Tomorrow, I'll actually collate some others. By the way, some other interesting information that we can connect. We also have the Trump one that you mentioned. Be7, please, we can put on the screen. Just goes to show, you know, the kind of the crass nature that all these guys were talking to each other. So here, it appeared to be some check, like one of those large novelty checks for 22,000.
$1,500, signed by somebody who signs a DJ Trump for to Jeffrey Epstein.
And the letter that was written is Jeffrey, showing early talents with many women,
sells, quote, fully depreciated blank to Donald Trump for $22,500, showed early people skills, too.
Presumably, in both of these cases, Michael Wolfe has pointed to the fact that Epstein and Trump
shared a girlfriend, which may be their wonderful secret.
and or their enigma slash the depreciation,
but this is the tone that they're using.
Yeah, and that's kind of what I want to highlight
is that every person in his orbit
just very obviously was in on the quote secret.
And look, I mean, many of these girls, like, I don't know.
I mean, in some cases, they're pointing to like 18 to 22-year-olds,
which is creepy, legal.
But, you know, there is a children's section, actually, of the book,
with handwritten notes literally from,
children, including one of what appears to be a teenage girl of literally just photos of her
like playing the piano.
I mean, very, very disgusting to be included in the birthday book.
I don't know if it was submitted by a parent.
I don't know what it is, but like handwritten stuff also written to them in crayon and
other types of drawings.
So, I mean, I don't even have words for all of this.
It is really, really gross.
It's disturbing.
It connects to the political story as well as the Republicans kind of scramble on how exactly to respond to this.
My personal favorite was a new claim by Speaker of the House of Mike Johnson that Trump was actually an FBI informant on Jeffrey Epstein.
Let's play B-1, guys. Take a listen.
He's not saying that what Epstein did is a hoax.
It's a terrible, unspeakable evil.
He believes that himself.
When he first heard the rumor, he kicked him out of Marilago.
He was an FBI informant.
to try to take this stuff down.
The president knows and has great sympathy for the women who have suffered these unspeakable
harm.
It's detestable to him.
He and I have spoken about this as recently as 24 hours ago.
That's an extraordinary claim that Trump was an FBI informant.
We have not yet ever seen a single document or a release from the White House about that.
By the way, remember Trump himself said that he was mad at Jeffrey for stealing somebody
from the massage, what do you say from the spa, which we believe is Virginia Gufrey,
who is one of the individuals.
who said that she was...
He was asked about it
and he said, yeah, I believe so.
He said that's what I'm talking about.
Okay, so, you know, he said it.
All right, I'm just taking that way.
He's never mentioned being an FBI informant.
Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson now...
He was a white hat pedophile, actually.
It's like, what?
Like, what?
B2, please, because Mike Johnson is now saying,
guys, I misspoke, actually, about that.
Let's take a listen.
What did you mean by the...
What I was referring to in that long conversation
was what the...
victim's attorney said.
More than a decade ago, President Trump kicked Epstein out of Merlago, and he was one of the only people, one of the only prominent people, as everyone has reported, not President Trump, but everybody about him, that he was willing to help law enforcement go after this guy who was a disgusting child abuser, sex trafficker, all the allegations, that's what they heard.
So the president was helpful in that.
I don't know if I use the right terminology, but that's a common knowledge, and everybody knows that.
So this is much ado about nothing.
Did the president tell you this specifically about his role?
No, I was recounting what others have said.
The president and I have talked about the Epstein Ingalls many times.
He's disgusted by it as everybody else.
He has long had a history of acknowledging that.
And he has said repeatedly he wants everything to come out, all credible information,
everything for the American public to decide it.
Was he ever asked to wear a wire or anything like that?
I have no idea. No, I'm not saying it.
I have no information about that whatsoever.
I was repeating what has been common knowledge for a long time.
The president was helpful in trying to get Epstein for the law enforcement.
That's always been my understanding.
That's common knowledge.
It's the public's understanding.
I was not breaking news there.
Common knowledge.
Not to me.
And I follow this thing pretty damn closely, don't I?
And it literally.
So look, apparently this all stems from the attorney Brad Edwards, who, quote,
confirmed that Trump had offered helpful information
during the investigation.
But that is a basically side quote
from the Epstein victim lawyer.
I don't even know what he's referring to.
There's no detail or any of that.
And Mike Johnson spinned it into some sort of like grand gesture.
But look, broadly, I mean,
I think what this needs to fit into
is every time that you think you know,
because everyone knows to a certain extent,
Oh, of course, everybody knew around him new.
But to see it in the cartoon,
in the way that these guys all talk to him,
it's really sickening.
And especially when I parrot, look, I mean,
the pedophile stuff and all the other,
and the creepy grooming behavior, et cetera,
that Epstein was up to.
That's the most salacious part,
and that's kind of what everybody focuses on.
But the part that I focus on is his connections to power,
which enabled potentially, you know,
the sweetheart deal of 2007.
And the heart of it,
it is all in the money and potentially in intelligence connections, which remain, you know,
totally unexplored by the vast majority of the mainstream media, to their credit, they did actually
publish a new investigation here. Can we put B3 up there? I highly recommend everybody go and read this,
because this is really what I've been talking about now for several months about the Epstein case.
This is the heart of all of it, the New York Times expose, B3, please, to put it up there on the
screen. And what we learn from it is just the, and look, a lot of this was already public. So, you know,
I knew not much of this was new information to me, but they kind of put it all together.
And it's, quote, how J.P. Morgan enabled the crimes at Jeffrey Epstein.
It details, people have heard me reference before the Department of Financial Services
Fine of Deutsche Bank previously and their relationship to Epstein.
But, you know, the central character is this guy, Jess Staley, former CEO of Barclays,
at J.P. Morgan, executive previously, who worked hand and glove with Epstein over the years.
I mean, Epstein was just enormously influential at this bank.
He got away with stuff that nobody, not even high net worth individual people,
are getting away with hundreds of millions of dollars.
They processed nearly a billion dollars in transactions in and out of his account.
He's withdrawing hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash.
He's wiring money all over the globe for human trafficking purposes,
according to their own internal review.
J.P. Morgan, executives and others who work on a human trafficking squad are like,
we need to shut this down.
And they're like, no.
And the reason why is, you know, at certain points, Epstein is enormously influential to introducing them to the highest and most powerful people in the world, including B.B. Netanyahu. I've released that email before. And for reference, but, you know, they reference it here. At one point, you know, that Jess Daly is like, hey, we were able to secure a meeting with Netanyahu. This is, by the way, after Epstein has been convicted or has had the 2007 non-prosecution agreement that he, you know, plays guilty to. And Epstein,
is like surprise, surprise, you know, basically saying that he brokered the meeting, obviously
that also includes his previous relationship with the Israeli Prime Minister Ayud Barak, which is well
known and which we have explored here on this show. But this is the heart of everything. And I want
to give a shout out to Senator Ron Wyden, who has been at the forefront of this and talking
about the suspicious activity reports and other documents that are held right now by the Treasury
Department. This is the heart of the real Epstein story. Where did the money come from? Who
is he sending it to for what purposes why did leon black pay him 170 million dollars why nobody can
answer that question seriously and it's the it's the unexplored nature that potentially holds the key
to this entire thing yeah uh wexner had an entry in the birthday book he said i wanted to give you
you know what you wanted for the birth for your birthday i need drew a picture of some some boobs so
that's that was his contribution um it could go deeper with just daily too who there were many
people at JP Morgan, who ultimately protected Epstein. I don't want to say it was just this one dude,
but this one dude was one of the, if not the most influential. And we've also talked about this
on the show previously. These emails between them were revealed. Let me read you the relevant section
from the New York Times. They say Staley emailed Epstein while sipping white wine in the hot tub
on the island. Quote, next time we're here together, he wrote, I owe you much. Other messages
were littered with apparent sexual references. That was fun. Say hi.
to Snow White, Staley emailed in 2010. Epstein responded by asking which character he would like
next. Beauty and the Beast, Staley answered. So it could be that, you know, certainly part of how
Epstein is allowed to remain a J.P. Morgan customer, even after, you know, that all of his
transactions are being flagged and even after the non-prosecution agreement where he serves time in prison,
or whatever, is because of the money that he's bringing in, you know, he's introducing them
to Netanyi, he's introducing them to Elon Musk, all of these big business deals, Bill Gates,
et cetera. That's certainly part of it. But part of it could also be, you know, what did Epstein
know about Staley? What activities was he involved in? And that could have been part of the
modus operandi. And certainly, Epstein's collecting of these powerful people, that was another thing
is they would say to each other internally within the bank, well, if all these rich and powerful
people trust him, then, like, who are we to throw him out on the street? So he, that actively was
used as a protection mechanism. Lastly, just to go back to the Republican Party, the Mike Johnson thing,
which is wild, you know, it strikes me as just, they're so desperate to get out from under
this, to somehow jihitsu this into like, Trump is actually the good guy here somehow, even though
he's longtime friends with Epstein and we've got this birthday book thing and he won't release the
files. And we know his names in the files, all of this stuff. They're just throwing stuff at the wall
and seeing what sticks. So Mike Johnson put this thing out here. People were like, what are you
talking about? That's ridiculous. And then he had to be like, oh, I misspoke. I didn't mean it
that way. Okay, Mr. Speaker of the House, you don't know what it means to be an FBI informant.
Sure. But we also need to recall the way J.D. Vance originally responded to the birthday book
revelations. He was not the only one, but he went particularly hard in the paint. Can put B6 up on the
screen. This is when the first Wall Street Journal story came out that just described the
birthday book. And he says, forgive my language. This story is complete and utter bullshit. The
Wall Street Journal should be ashamed for publishing it. Where is this letter? Would you be
shocked to learn? They never showed it to us before publishing it. Does anyone honestly believe
this sounds like Donald Trump? They went hard on this story, Sager, as you'll recall, at the time,
adamant that this was fake, that it was a forgery, that the letter doesn't exist, et cetera. And now we have
it, we can all see it with our eyes, and they're desperately trying to go with this,
oh, well, that's not his real signature. It's just unbelievable the way they will lie to people
and think that you are so dumb that you will actually believe that, you know, this was all invented
and, you know, it's a plant and it was Hillary or Comey or whatever. And it's just, it's just wild
to me, the brazen nature of the way they will lie and spin and obfuscate and grasp at straws
in order to make, not just this story, but any story that's uncomfortable for them go away.
There's only one defense, and it's not a good one, is that they shared a 22-year-old legal but creepy
girlfriend, and that's what all the things were about, and he was aware of it, and he was connected
to him for many years, and then they fell out over a stolen spa employee, and who he then groomed,
and, you know, according to Virginia Goufrey, you know, obviously was abused for many years.
Not exactly a tale of White Knight, exactly.
And so, you know, they have to resort.
Their highest and best defense is just to release everything because then you're just one of many people kind of caught up in the web.
And we can look for all sorts of connections that may or may not just include Donald Trump, but include everybody.
But, you know, that's the tack that they've chosen.
A lot of people can see through it.
A lot of people who are interested in this story are extremely fed up with the Trump administration's handling it.
And they should be.
They absolutely should be.
Hi, it's Honey German, and I'm back with season two of my podcast.
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We got you when it comes to the latest in music and entertainment with interviews with some of your favorite Latin artists and celebrities.
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No, I didn't audition.
I haven't auditioned in like over 25 years.
Oh, wow.
That's a real G-talk right there.
Oh, yeah.
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No, no, no, no, no, we're not doing that this season.
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Each episode will feature a special bestie, and you're not going to want to miss it.
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Listen to the super secret bestie club on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hi, I'm Jenna Lopez, and in the new season of the Overcomfit Podcast, I'm even more honest, more vulnerable, and more real than ever.
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