PBD Podcast - RFK Jr. Hearing, Trump & Guantánamo Bay, American Airlines Crash w/ Rep. Byron Donalds | PBD Podcast | Ep. 541
Episode Date: January 30, 2025Patrick Bet-David, Tom Ellsworth, Vincent Oshana, and Adam Sosnick are joined by Representative Byron Donalds as they cover RFK Jr.'s nomination hearing, Trump's plan to use Guantanamo Bay for crimina...l migrants, the American Airlines DC crash, and Jim Acosta resigning from CNN! ---- 📺 VOTE ON TRUMP'S FIRST 100 DAYS: https://bit.ly/4gXLioq 👕 GET THE LATEST VT MERCH: https://bit.ly/3BZbD6l 📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/41rtEV4 📰 VTNEWS.AI: https://bit.ly/3OExClZ 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/4g57zR2 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A 📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4ikyEkC 👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/3ZjWhB7 🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: https://bit.ly/3BfA5Qw 📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or 💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Did you ever think you would make it?
I feel I'm so excited to taste sweet victory
Know this life meant for me
Adam, what's your point?
The future looks bright
My handshake is better than anything I ever saw, it's right here
You are a 101?
My son's right here
I don't think I've ever said this before
Way less than that. No, that ain't it.
Okay, so we got a superstar in the house, folks.
We got the great Byron Donalds in the house.
It's great to have you here.
Hey, first of all, it's really cool to be here.
Like my wife, my friends, they're all real jealous
because they're not with me.
It's really cool, man, honestly.
I'm really happy to be here.
And y'all have too much fun already, I can see.
Yeah, I mean, again, letting Tom lose, you're learning.
Tom is the one we have to be careful with
because when we get HR issues it's because of Tom.
Yeah.
But we're working through it.
We're working through it.
We had a meeting yesterday specifically
for coaching these types of moments.
Guys, we got a lot of stories to go through
that we'll cover here today
and we wanna get your reaction on many of these stories.
The one that just came out,
the timing of this story is kind of weird.
Rob, if you got the tweet to pull it up that just kind of shows the data.
Byron Donalds holds massive lead in poll on gubernatorial contenders for the state of
Florida.
And this just happened, I believe yesterday, and the number was what, 32% or something
like that.
31%. Yeah, we'll talk about that here in a minute.
They have them at the top.
That's right.
And there's a percentage on it, Rob.
We'll cover that here in a minute when we get to it.
State of Florida, you know, what things that maybe we need to work on, what will be, you
know, if you do run, if you do choose to go that route, what are some areas that Florida
can improve on?
A lot of us moved here from other states.
We love the states.
I wanna know what you're thinking about that.
Then obviously, Jim Acosta had a rough week.
This guy was given an incredible job at midnight
when no one watches.
So even if you make mistakes, no one will know about it.
And he said no to it.
And he decides to walk.
And he said, always focus on your truth.
Never sway from the truth.
And we're gonna talk Jim Acosta because he likes freedom
of speech so much that he turned off all the comments.
So when he posted the video, he doesn't want anybody
to say anything about it.
So we'll have a reaction to it.
Trump administration gives ICE quota of 1800 arrests
per day across US.
Can you imagine you're working for the guys?
If you're not doing 1800 a day, you're fired.
Like a sales team.
I absolutely love that meeting.
This other story sounds like a spoof,
like a Babylon B or an onion story.
It's actually a true story.
Trump blocks $50 million in condoms for Gaza
and trans operations in Colombia.
Some of these numbers are staggering.
I think one of the representatives actually talked about it.
Google Maps will make Trump's changes to show Gulf of America and Mount McKinney.
This is Google doing it and choosing to do it, which is great.
White House to offer buyouts to federal workers who won't work and return to office.
I think 6% of them only work from the office.
The rest of them don't, based on some numbers.
We've all seen Trump bans taxpayer funding of child sex change operations, chemical and surgical mutilation.
Smugglers transporting vans packed with 26 Chinese migrants detained in Florida. And this is in Coral Gables.
That this happened. I think they found another 40 that you were talking about Rob Rob, for a total of 66, will address that.
Homan demands apology from Illinois governor.
Overlie that ICE targeted Chicago school, slowing fear.
White House to open media access to podcasters and influencers.
Is this Kennedy legacy John F. Kennedy's grandson's slam for mocking John F. Kennedy Jr.'s voice
in a viral video, which you have to see.
It's disturbing when you see this, as well as I think it's his cousin
Caroline Kennedy calls his her cousin RFK jr. a predator and there's even a
story about political Murdoch Empire comes out against RFK anyway there's a
lot of stories that will talk about that and then this other story Anthony
Mackey who's the actor, right?
He's the actor that says America doesn't represent
Captain America, okay?
America doesn't represent Captain America.
We'll address that as well, have some thoughts on that.
Super Bowl 59 tickets are cheaper than they were last year,
by a mile, not by 100 bucks or 200 bucks, by a mile.
And some people are just tired of
Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs winning and the rest of us great job and Taylor Swift and Kelsey and all of that stuff and
Kelsey taking a 20 million dollar check from Pfizer. These are interesting moments that we're going through
Maybe we'll talk about that then he had a passenger jet with 64 abroad aboard
collides with army helicopter while landing at Reagan Airport near DC and
the president sent a truth message on this and he's a little bit confused on
what really happened and how this doesn't make sense so there's a lot of
questions there tragic event here is I by the way we just got the report right
now Vinny you told me not a single survivor so tragic and found will
address that and then Trump moves to prepare Guantanamo
Bay for 30,000 criminal illegal aliens and then signs the Bill Easing Deportation Act.
Former Senator Bob Menendez sentenced to 11 years, the guy with the gold and all the other
stuff for corruption and bribery is now saying Southern New York is the most corrupt and
hey almost like asking the president to bail him out.
And then we have a few things to show with RFK and then a couple business stories with
Starbucks that we'll address and Vinny really, I don't know why, Vinny really, all night
he's been asking, Pat, can we please cover this story.
Plus size rapper who calls herself BBW, sues Lyft over a driver, said she couldn't fit
in the car.
She weighs apparently 500 pounds.
490 pounds and she's suing Lyft.
She looks great.
So maybe we'll address that story as well.
It's 500 this morning Vinny, she had breakfast.
Before we get into the story, she with Byron and all the other things that we have going
on, Gang I want to tell you guys a couple things about, Rob, if you can go to
VTNews.ai and when you go to VTNews.ai, first 100 days, if you can go to first 100 days,
by the way, I think we have 89 days left.
Can we just do this question real quick here together?
I'm going to vote for mine as well because I think I'm up to date in my ranking and
I am way behind with everybody,
but what is today's question Rob, the prediction today?
Will Trump make an in-person appearance at the Super Bowl?
I'll give mine, if Trump's, I'm gonna say
my answer is a in-person insane.
Yes, he's showing up.
I say yes.
Me too.
Is what I'm saying.
Especially the Chiefs and Mahomes.
And that's for 590 points.
Gang, go to vtnews.ai and post your prediction.
Here's what we're going to be doing, just so everybody knows.
We decided to run a contest behind this, and this will go for the first 100 days.
So for the winner at the end, when you win, the end of a PBD podcast, you'll join us
for 10-15 minutes to tell us how you made all these predictions correctly,
okay?
And the competitors in the top 10 cannot be value-tainment or line-holding employees,
okay?
If they are, and a lot of them are participating, they're not going to be able to compete in
this.
It's anybody that's not part of the company that'll compete for this.
So if you win, you're the top Nuestradamus, you'll be invited to come on the show with
us and tell us how you were able to make these predictions.
What do you have access to that we don't have?
What did you use?
Did you use Chad GBT or maybe DeepSeek?
What were you using?
And then the top ten predictors with active subscriptions to VTNews.ai, you will be invited
on your own, find a way to come down here, we'll pick a date, you'll come out with the
launch of our cigar lounge that we're doing in our comedy club, You'll be invited. We'll go to the back of the VIP cigar
lounge. We'll have a cigar together. We'll spend two, three hours together. The whole
crew will be there, conversations, talking, having a good time, having a drink at the
new boardroom cigar lounge that we're launching that will be ready and you will be invited
to be a part of that. So again, go compete. There's still 89 days left on this and there's going to be some accelerator points.
So some of the questions will be 5,000 points, 1,000 points, 2,000 points.
Put it in your calendar.
Every day, 9 a.m. a new prediction is being posted.
So go to vtnews.ai, first 100 days, claim your predictions, subscribe to the membership,
one of the, either one of the subscriptions that we have that's paid, you'll be able
to participate in this contest that we're running. Alright, having said that, Byron
Donalds, you are in the talks with everybody. Everybody talks about you.
Stephen A. Smith was here a couple weeks ago, we talked about you. That's my guy.
Yeah, I mean him and in many others, left, right, center, everybody sees you as a
superstar. When we were in DC, you getting up there,
the applause, the enthusiasm with you is very high.
Even to the point where you see that chart, Rob,
if you can pull up, this literally happened yesterday.
Breaking, Congressman Byron Donalds has surged ahead
as the leading candidate for Florida's 2026
gubernatorial race in a four-way ballot, very
very close obviously with you in second place, 31.3 and Anun as 4.4, Simpson 2.9, Suarez 1.3,
undecided 60.4, head-to-head ballot, Donald's 33.8, Simpson 5%, undecided 61.2. This was brought out,
I think yesterday is when we saw this. How
soon are you planning to announce that you're running for governor for the
state of Florida? Look before we get to that, this cigar lounge that you have, I think America needs to know I am a cigar guy.
Are you really? Well then you're fully invited. You got a membership on the
house anytime you're down here. Boy, you can't do that because ethics will come for me.
So we will figure out a way where I will pay my way
into the cigar lounge, and I appreciate you though,
but I will pay my way in.
But you see, that was a different way
of me offering Ferragamo shoes to the Governor DeSantis,
and he didn't wanna take the shoes.
And I was kindly giving some nice shoes to him.
He didn't wanna take it, which I fully understand. By the way, if you're saying- He didn't take Ferragamo's. He didn't take the shoes. And I was kindly giving some nice shoes to him. He didn't wanna take it, which I fully understand.
By the way, if you're saying.
He didn't take Farragamo's.
He didn't take the shoes I offered him.
By the way, they were, how nice were they, Vinny?
I wanted them.
Then you wanted them afterwards.
We're like, we're not gonna do it.
You stole them, Vinny.
But are you saying from the health standpoint,
like from the health standpoint of smoking cigars,
or no, like you can't.
No, ethics.
Okay, I got it. Ethics committee.
The ethics committee is the place where
nobody ever wants to see
the inside of that room. The members
that get told, that get basically told
they're going to be on ethics because it's not really a thing like
you don't go to the speaker and say
put me on ethics. He's basically like you're going on
ethics. It's just the place you never want
to be. So, you know, you just got to be
respectful of the process. But to the top
question, man,
I'm a kid from Brooklyn, New York. So it's really cool to see that post come out. I think
about the governor's race in 26. I'm committed to making sure we get the president's job
done in Congress. We have so much to do in a little bit of time, we got to get through
all of that before I could definitively say what I'm gonna do one way or the other
But to see that come out yesterday. I was just like it blew me away
Because like Jeanette Wilton
I've served with both of them when I first got to Tallahassee
Eight years ago when I went into the state Capitol State, state legislature, I served with both of them.
Ashley Moody, who's now a senator, I know her.
And so to see those numbers come out,
which I didn't know were coming out.
I was leaving Doral, because we had our retreat.
I was leaving Doral and my phone is blowing up.
And I'm just like, what's going on?
And I'm looking and y'all are getting a thumbs up. Ding, ding, ding, ding, yeah, I'm in.
What we doing, what's the plan, blah, blah, blah?
And I'm like, whoa.
So I called my team and I go,
we didn't release anything, did we?
And they go, no, this came out of left field.
We didn't know it was happening.
So it's really a blessing.
It's humbling more than anything else.
But in terms of announcements and plans,
we're not there yet.
Okay, so then maybe asking a different question. How close are you with Governor, by the way, Governor DeSantis?
We've been better. I mean, look, I never talk about this stuff, but we're here, so we're just gonna talk.
I think that that relationship got frayed when I backed President Trump in the presidential primaries.
And I think from the outside looking in,
people remember back in 2022,
when the governor was running for reelection,
I was at the election night party.
Like I introduced him on stage
and we had that conversation.
They asked me to do it and I said,
of course I'll do it, whatever you need,
because he's been a great governor, best governor in the country. I remember when
I first got to Congress, our new interviews, I was calling him America's governor. And
I still believe that to this day, he's been phenomenal. But when it came to a race between
him and President Trump, I had to go with President Trump, I just felt President Trump
was the right person at the right time. and I think that kind of frayed our relationship because of that but you
know that's politics sometimes but I think we'll find a way to figure that
out and move forward. Got it. So you know when you think about the policies in the
state of Florida, he's done so many things right. He's the reason why we're
here. We love being here and you know a lot of people are still moving here.
There's still some issues the state of Florida has,
but in specific area of him attracting talent,
he's done a phenomenal job.
We feel the same exact way.
But going back to it, if you were to run,
like if you were to say, one, two, three areas
in the state of Florida that we could make better,
what would those two or three things be?
So I look at it slightly different.
We're the best state in the country.
That's to the credit of Ron DeSantis.
It's also to the credit of Rick Scott.
And in modern politics, the next thing I'm going to say, we typically don't like talking
about because how they're viewed in Republican politics, but this whole business of Florida being the best would not be in the position we are today without Jeb Bush's governorship.
So Jeb Bush started the transition from a blue state. He had to take on Lawton Chiles. And so
Jeb, yeah so if you go back to education policy in our state 30 years ago, it was Jeb Bush's A plus plan in education that started the
conservative revolution first in education and public safety, and then through economic
issues going through the financial collapse in 08 when Rick Scott came in, and then now
to making sure that we are the free state of Florida like Ron DeSantis has done.
So you can't tell our story without all three of those men.
Now, and I leave out Charlie Crist on purpose because Charlie Crist is Charlie Crist.
Now, going forward, you got to keep this thing in the middle of the road.
That's how I see it.
Your job going forward is we're the best, now stay the best.
I was talking to some friends of mine and we were having this conversation.
I said, you remember the 91 Bulls?
Michael broke through.
Every, at the time it was Michael's just,
he's just a scorer, but he's not a winner.
They break through in 91.
And then the hardest thing after 91
was not that Michael's the greatest,
cause he is, it is the consistency to stay the best
92 93
96 97 98 and the way you stay the best is you got to be in the gym every morning
You got to make sure you're doing your film study. You got to make sure you got everybody on a practice floor
It's just it's the consistency
So now to your question about what do you do is Florida number one?
You keep it in the middle of road number two areas for growth
We're already transitioning to be it, but
I believe we should be the financial hub of the world in a decade. The digital
assets community in Miami-Dade in particular, but throughout South Florida,
it's all coming here. And we have to, I don't want to say accelerate that, but we have to
focus that. Our economy as a state is far more diverse than what it was when I got
here 20 years ago. We're not just a retirement state now, we're an everything state. People are living here,
growing their businesses here, bringing their businesses here, raising kids here, going to
college here, etc. Our workforce has to be prepared for the next wave of our economy, and I'm talking
AI, quantum, etc. So those are like the two big things I think are in front of us.
Housing costs are going to be a problem in our state and part of housing costs is overspending
at the federal level and we're going to probably get into that.
So we have to find a way to stabilize costs so you can stabilize housing costs so construction
gets better.
I think in a lot of our counties we have to find ways to streamline permitting because
extended permitting only raises the cost of producing homes etc.
So that's stuff we got to address.
Energy.
If we're going to be the hub of digital assets, Florida should be, in my view, the incubator
state for small modular reactors and micro reactors to supplement your energy supply
so you have more baseload power.
So you can do mining if you took my crypto
Bitcoin in particular if you're talking about blockchain technology and really
having to be headquarters here if you talk about data centers and all the
things associated with the next wave of the the global economy last piece and
this is like a mix of federal and state we have forgotten the Monroe doctrine in
America we I think over the
last generation or so, maybe closer to two generations, our eyes have been
fixated on the Middle East, Asia, Europe, and we all understand the historical
significance of why that occurred. But in that process we have forgotten Central
America and South America.
We need to, as a nation, we need to get back to that.
Because you may not be able to bring all manufacturing back to the United States,
but we have to begin that process of bringing that stuff home.
And Florida can definitely be a part of that, especially North Florida.
Between Jacksonville and the Panhandle, that area, area could really do some good heavy manufacturing work up there
But you have to nearshore
There's no reason why Guatemala shouldn't be doing a lot of stuff
Manufacturing a lot of things to the benefit of the United States
As I understand it a bunch of our pharmaceutical industry used to be in Puerto Rico and then because of you know
Stupid government policy throughout the years that all moved to Asia. We got a nearshore
all that stuff back into our hemisphere. It will cut our transportation costs
down, it would cut the costs of Americans trying to do everything on a
day-to-day basis to live. Florida is the epicenter of that because of just where
we are geographically in
the country. So I think that our state, if you tell them about what's next to come,
those are things I think are next. And any other pieces are, you're just fine
tuning. We got the best car on the road. What do you do with the
best car on the road? Keep the maintenance up. So here's a question. The question
becomes, you know how you used a Michael Jordan example, 91, they break through,
they won the first one, the second, third.
I think the analogy to use that would be
no one's ever won since Michael.
To follow Michael, Derek Rhodes tried,
he was the youngest guy to win MVP,
but they never won a championship, right?
So what is the pressures of following a guy in a state
that the people who voted for him are very very
happy with what he's done so there's not really a because you've got to find a
crisis to come up right or else it's gonna be well you have a big shadow of
a guy that crushed it during kovat and post kovat and all that stuff how do you
overcome that with certain people that are gonna say you know what are you what are you going to do better than DeSantis? He's done a very good job.
Honestly, not really concerned about that. And the reason why is because unlike sports or business,
the job of government is to be in the shadows. And I respect everything that that Ron DeSantis
has done and accomplished for our state. But I don't look at it in terms of
how do I now establish myself?
Because if I go through the process
with a great state of trying to establish myself,
now that's when you start getting cute
and you start making or causing political fights
that you really don't need,
or you're doing it too fast just to get your name ID up to make yourself look look look bigger
I would say at this point
Comparing where I am today to where governor de santos was when he was congressman de santos
um
I have a national name ID
And i'm not even trying to brag about it. I have one. No, you do. I was in Miami.
I was in Miami yesterday.
I'm walking down the street to a meeting and this guy,
I forget the name of his business and I'm so sorry, sir,
cause I should remember his business.
He came running out the business
and it was one of those reflexology recovery places
where they have the cryotherapy and everything.
He comes running, I'm just walking down the street.
It's just me down the street, sunglasses on,
and I'm looking at my phone.
He comes running out in his socks.
And it was just like, man, I just wanna say thank you.
And it caught me off guard, but I was like,
of course, you're welcome.
I just do this because I want people to win and succeed.
He came out in his socks.
He came out in his socks.
Was he Armenian, Assyrian, or Persian?
It's gotta be one of those three.
Because I'm in my socks right now.
He was Middle Eastern for sure.
That's no question about it.
He was definitely shades lighter than me.
I don't even know what it was.
Okay.
But to the point of, I don't feel the political pressure
that sometimes politicians feel,
where you have to try to assert yourself
to get into the national conversation.
I think because of the way I've gone about my business, being obviously a surrogate for
the president during one of the most, if not the most consequential, one of the most consequential
elections in the history of our country, I don't feel the pressure to have to try to
create a situation.
The job for me is just run the state.
And I have no problem giving Governor DeSantis all the credit that he deserves, because he
deserves that credit.
And I think that in politics, what we should be doing a lot more is that when somebody
does a great job, you acknowledge that, or you give them their flowers or however you
want to phrase it.
But I don't have to try to find a way to make myself bigger.
If I'm governor of this state,
and all they say about me is, he did a great job,
but he wasn't Ron DeSantis, I could live with that.
Okay, so then my follow-up for you would be the following.
Is, I think the decision you made when you were,
you said 2022, you brought him up at the victory,
hey, would you come out and support, et cetera, et cetera.
Great.
And then that's the one and a half million landslide victory
that he had, right?
That's the one.
And I remember that evening when you were like,
it was historic.
It was an epic night.
It was an epic night, no question about it.
Miami day count, all these other things that we're reading about.
For you to say, no, I'm going with Trump
and I'm not gonna go with you.
Him not being happy, state, all that stuff.
Great, strategically, from the business
and marketing standpoint, one would say,
between the two, whose tweet has more power?
A Trump's tweet or DeSantis' tweet?
DeSantis' tweet.
It's not even close.
Who's endorsement has more power?
Trump.
And I think the part about the governor that,
this is how I process it,
is the sequencing as you're going up, right?
Sometimes you wanna force something to happen too soon and you make move nine on move four
and you stumble.
Right.
Make sense?
And it's kind of like, hey, you know, no, I don't need to make a phone call to him and
tell him that I'm running for office.
Why not?
Why not give him the credit?
Not making a call to Trump when he and I are having a conversation.
I think sequencing wise, did you watch that from a distance and say,
ooh, that's a fumble. Why are you not giving credit to the guy that helped you become governor?
Internally, you seem like a strategist. You seem like a guy that is stable
and you're thinking about it yourself. You seem like a very confident guy.
You think very highly of yourself, but at the same time, super likable, very good communicator.
You can go in any circle and be able to adapt
to that community whether it's highly intellectual,
comedy, culture, you can do that.
You're able to go there
and that's not necessarily something he likes to do, right?
It's not in his comfort zone.
He's a very good exec, he gets things done,
but he doesn't like to go there.
Did you kind of process that yourself and say,
oof, that was a mistake, let me learn
from this to not make this mistake for my political career?
You're not somebody that people are looking at just as a governor.
On a 20-year trajectory, you're on a list of a lot of different lists.
If there's a top 50 names, top 25 names of presidents, candidates on the right, you're
on that list. So people are looking at you as somebody that, you know, right, you're on that list.
So people are looking at you as somebody that, you know, governor, boom, boom, boom, and
what comes next, right?
And that could be 20, 30, 2028, so 2026, so for say 2028, 2032, 2032, 2036 ish, like that
time frame and you know, I'm sure you. I'm getting old now.
That's what happened.
Now I'm getting old.
You're young is the strength.
But did you kind of watch that fumble and say, oh, that was a mistake right there?
Yeah, I did.
And for me, the first thing was, and it wasn't even about politics, it was business.
When I was still in finance, my third stop in my career before politics really took off, it was at Moran Edwards Wealth Management,
now Moran Wealth Management in Naples.
Shout out to Tom Moran, mentor, friend, supporter,
love him, love his wife, love his family.
When he brought me into his company,
it was really just because he had saw me politically.
Is this Morgan Stanley?
No, Moran, M-O-R-A-N, Moran Group.
Let's give him love.
Moran Wealth Management.
That's what it is.
Rob was about to give credit to somebody else.
I wanna get it correct so we know who it is.
But you were saying, when you got into this,
he was a great mentor.
Great mentor.
He brought me in, I think it was 2015.
He brought me in, and he knew I had political aspirations and stuff like that.
He helped me build a book of business.
I knew economics, but he showed me the ropes of when you having to manage somebody else's
wealth.
I'll never forget it.
He took a chance on me. So if I if a client came in
the door and was like Byron, you know what? I really like you. But I don't really want
to mess with Tom. I want to move my money to you. The first call I make is to Tom. Tom
client X came to see me. You need to know this. What do you want to do?
Because you put me on.
That's something I learned as a kid.
You learned that in the streets of New York.
You gave me my opportunity.
So I have to come to you first.
And I think the other thing in politics, and we talked about it when I was sitting in the
green room, because everybody talks about the lists and your trajectory and all that stuff in politics timing matters more than talent
It's this is a timing game
It's not a talent game because there's so many people who come through to who come through the game
Who are super talented in various aspects?
But if you don't get the timing right, it doesn't matter.
And so, you know, look, again, I speak bluntly,
I don't try to hide the ball too much.
In my core, and you can ask anybody on my team,
ask my wife, I always felt that the right time
for the governor to make that run was 28.
That's how I felt, because I felt that at the time with every as terrible as Joe Biden was as president and how
disastrous the
Bureaucracy was because he was not paying attention
So they were really out there doing whatever with no checks from the elected will of the country
You needed somebody who can step in literally day one
and say, yeah, enough, we're not doing any of this.
Turn all this off.
We never had that conversation.
You guys were never in a setting where it's like, hey,
you know, never.
No, we didn't have that conversation.
So could he have ran, but been more diplomatic,
because I remember him getting on Sean Hannity
and the shows and he would say, you know what, I'm willing to debate the president. He should be on that stage. but been more diplomatic because I remember him getting on Sean Hannity and
the shows and he would say you know what I'm willing to debate the president he
should be on that stage and what does he want to come out and sit down and talk
to us sounded a little bit you know out of his element it's almost like maybe
somebody was even telling him to do that could he have ran in 2023 2024 and shine while still edifying and protecting a president?
I think so but I mean he he's in the he was in a different space than let's say
um Vivek because the governor and again to his credit he had established
himself nationally because of how he handled and
led our state during COVID.
And he did the best job.
It wasn't close in guiding our state through COVID-19.
And he had established himself.
So every political campaign is like every boxing match, every UFC fight,
styles make fights, that's just the way it is.
So it would have been really tough for him to play it that way,
because then the next question will be,
well then why are you running?
You see what I'm saying?
And I think with Vivek,
the reason why it was different for Vivek,
just outside looking in is because
Vivek was new to the scene
and people didn't really know.
I remember the early days with Vivek's run,
people was like still trying to figure out
how to pronounce both names.
You know what I'm saying? shot the shout outs of a vague
love him but that's the truth sure so it's different when you are established
but then you'd pay deference the next question is so then why are you here I
tell you quick story this is a story I don't sell publicly much I'll share it
when I was running for Congress in 2020, one of my opponents, I'm not going to say his name,
called me and wanted to have lunch and meet. And I knew what he was going to try to do. He was
going to try to get me out the race to back him. And we're sitting down and we're just talking,
30 minutes later, he goes, listen, Byron, I think you're great. I think you're talented.
You could be a future governor. You could be a future senator
But I'm gonna have more money in the race. So I think you should drop out and back me because I have the resources to win
And I looked at him and I said
With everything you just said my only question is why aren't you getting out and backing me?
Because if you feel I have all these abilities
to do all these things, then why are you running?
Well, let me tell you, that's the beautiful part
of the experience you have with wealth management.
Because that business, if you're able to convince people
and speak to them, you have to do it logically
and persuade them to move 10 million,
to move my 20 million, to move my 100 million.
That's not an easy thing to do.
I've been in the industry for a while
and I started off with Morgan Stanley Dean-Witter,
so this is not an easy gig.
Most don't make it, it's a very difficult business.
Tom, for yourself, you've lived in California,
you've lived in Florida, you lived in Texas,
we've lived in three states together.
Every time we move, we move together, right?
While we're in Florida and we see what's going on
with California with the fires, and they're dealing with the fires. Florida's
got the hurricanes to deal with but regardless we've been in insurance for a
long time I've been in it for 25 years. Insurance is a topic of discussion both
in California and Florida. What's your question for him from somebody that's
looking at it from more insurance standpoint for if Byron decides to run
as a governor? Well first of all I
love what you said and I love what you laid out. You laid out the middle of
the road, the financial hub, housing cost, energy, small nukes, all those things are
good. The engine of tomorrow is like the family of today and one of the things
that's hitting the family today is insurance costs in Florida.
Now I credit what you and the governor did in response to not one, not two, but three
hurricanes in four years in your district.
And what you guys did to get the rock bridge, you know, the bridge was just pile of rocks
and got the bridge cover, you see you get water and supplies.
It was a clinic on just responding to the people.
Right now I feel like there's a hurricane in insurance from an industry that we know
pretty well.
What do you do to have a similar, because it was such an operational response, it wasn't
a political response, there was no grandstanding in speeches, it was get squat done.
What do you do on insurance that's such an impact on the family and then when we're done with that
I like to talk about education sometime today
But right now the cost to the families they're flocking here to the magnet of Florida because they see the best state in the nation
Everything you said true, right?
What can we do?
From Washington from the governor's chair whatever path you take whether you go Senate or you come back
And you go governor. What do we do to help families because insurance is huge
First thing I think we have to be honest
Insurance costs in part are higher because the cost to replace housing is higher
in part are higher because the cost to replace housing is higher. So before you even get into the premiums that people pay, the first thing we got to understand
is because of the acceleration of building, the massive inflation in the last four years,
scarcity of material, the regulatory environment around getting said material, it is much more
expensive to build a home today than it was five years ago, 10 years ago, 20 years ago.
And the core part of insurance is the replacement cost of the property.
So if the house, you know, if the house I own right now to rebuild it, probably what
costs me 10 to 15% more than what I paid for it.
Well then I can't have an insurance policy written at 300,000 because to replace it cost
me X.
You know what I'm saying?
That's the first part.
Nobody wants to say that directly to people because housing values are up and building
costs are up.
It just dovetails that insurance costs are up.
Now how do we stabilize premiums and try to get them to come down? I think the first thing is you have to deal with the cap the capital the capital
the capital basis of the balance sheet of these companies. Are we gonna have to
make them continue to carry as much capital on their balance sheet like we
do? We might need to look at talk. Talk about loss reserve and reinsurance.
Because if you mess with that a little bit,
not too crazy because actuarially it still has to be sound,
but you gotta try to find some way
where you can stabilize the cost side of their reserves
in order to actually issue payments in any event of loss.
The second big thing that I think people are more frustrated about is the speed upon which
they get paid.
I think people will make the premium payments, but when something happens, they want the
company to step in and do it.
Part of that is adjusters situation.
We got to figure out, and we tried to do this a couple of years ago with public adjusters
and it's kind of been in the weeds and not really thought through too much and figured
out. Well, we got to address that
What the governor and the legislature did in special session two years ago now, I want to say around
around
Litigation was the right step and so that the reforms they did
People won't really see the impact of that for I think another two years because at the Department of Insurance
There's a five-year look back on costs in order to set what the new premiums are going to be going forward.
So I think in about another year or two they're going to have to go back and do another look
back of the last five years to say, okay, now here's what we're going to do.
That's like the basis of it.
Litigation, loss reserves of the carriers, the other piece is how do we get more carriers
into the state?
And that's the toughest issue overall,
which is why you have to start looking at
what are the capital requirements
we're gonna put on these carriers,
because you need more carriers
in order to spread that risk out.
If you only have a handful of carriers,
your premium costs are gonna go up,
and that's the driver.
But if you start to push down on the loan laws,
on the reserve costs and something happens
and the carrier goes bankrupt, well now people who had that carrier are now really out.
This is not an easy situation to deal with.
I think the number one way we the first thing we got to do is make sure that when disaster
strikes we make it as quick as possible for the carriers to step in and try to make people
whole.
Because then as long as you're being made whole, then you're getting what you pay for.
Yeah, that's going to be interesting because in California, a lot of insurance companies
you're hearing about leaving the Fair Act is forcing them to do a certain fee and they're
like, wait a minute, I don't want to insure that community,
that's a risky community, how do I stay in,
so the way you spread it is by having a lot of guys,
because some guys, even in life insurance,
there was companies that their main specialty
was cancer, like wait, you guys underwrite cancer clients?
Yes we do.
Or ex-smokers.
Or ex-smokers, you really target that audience?
We do.
But they charge for it.
But they charge for it, right? Wait, to that point, to California,
what they did in California to deal with what we're seeing here,
where they said, we're just going to cap rates,
we now see that does not work, because the carriers will just leave.
They'll just be like, I'm not writing it.
And you can't force them to write insurance.
At that point, it's not insurance.
At that point, it's basically a public subsidy.
That's right. And our state in particular...
State FEMA at that point. Yeah.
You just invented state FEMA on the taxpayer.
And to be clear, the state of Florida kind of already has that. It's called Citizens.
Citizens Insurance, the Citizens Insurance Company is a state-run insurance company. The one issue with citizens is the way it's run,
you're supposed to be able to be moved
out of the citizens' population
if you can find a comparable insurance rate,
but it has to be dollar for dollar,
which just doesn't exist.
So the citizens' population,
which is the insurer of last resort,
just continues to rise.
I think when Governor Scott was governor, I think we got the population and citizens down to I mean don't quote
me around 600,000. It's rising again. I don't know if it's over a million now
but that's because you had a couple storms come through, premiums are going
up, carriers are leaving, etc. This is the most complex problem we have by far.
Well it'll be it'll be big, I think the 2026 race
for the gubernatorial race, I think this will be one
of the things that will come up.
And I think if and when you announce,
I would have my team feed me, I would get so deep into this
because those coming,
you want them to stay, and if guys can't buy a house because premium is so high, so then they're not gonna buy
as real estate agents gonna take a hit.
Economy takes a hit and you don't have more inflow
of people coming in.
And then maybe something happens like California
where a lot of guys from LA were moving to Valencia,
to Kenyan country, to Palmdale going up.
So maybe people will be moving up or out like for Lauderdale going to let you know
Some of that could be happening even all over the place some of the other people your Naples your different part of Florida
But I think this will be one of the main issues
Coming up in the race. Anyways, let's go into some issues. Thank you for that. So let's go into current events
Let's talk about some stuff. Okay, number one Rob yesterday RFK juniors
So let's talk about some stuff. Okay, number one Rob yesterday RFK juniors
Hearing is taking place and there are so many clips Rob that we can go from okay. I have a few of them here I don't know which ones you have ready
to go through you heard his
You know the one with
Mercury what he said in the past the worst mayor McDonald's which which which clips do you have Rob just to so I have
Are you want to start off with Elizabeth Warren? Yeah, we have that one. Let's start off with that one
Start off with that one doing her Lou Pennella impersonation. So watch this
I'll comply with all the ethical guide. That's not the question you and I you have
That's not the question. You and I, you have said... You're asking me, Senator, you're asking me not to serve vaccine companies.
No, I am not. My question is not in the region.
Look, no one should be fooled here.
As Secretary of HHS, Robert Kennedy will have the power to undercut vaccines and vaccine manufacturing across our country.
And for all of his talk about follow the science and his promise that he won't interfere with
those of us who want to vaccinate his kids, the bottom line is the same.
Kennedy can kill off access to vaccines and make millions of dollars while he does it.
Kids might die, but Robert Kennedy can keep cashing in.
Oh, God.
Senator, I support vaccines.
I support the childhood schedule.
Wow.
Rob, can you do me a favor, Rob, and pull up what you and Vinnie were talking about,
the amount of money that she took in.
If you can pull that up, right? The story on
So top industrial federal election data for Elizabeth Warren 2020 cycle. So the page contributions from the industries pay committee
Plus any super PACs and hybrid PACs working on his or her behalf. So this is Elizabeth Warren health professionals What do you see two point three six six million dollars?
Correct and there's more actually if you give me a second.
And don't forget the legal industry that goes hand in hand with that, Pat. Those are PIs.
Hospital nurses, $1.6 million. Miscellaneous Health, $600 million.
Pharmaceutical health products, $625 million. Vinny, what do you have?
Yeah, because Anna Mattson did a really, really good piece on X yesterday where she said she's
getting, for her lobbyist payments, $125,000 from pharmaceuticals 491,000 from health professionals 108,000 from hospitals all together 871,000 from the
healthcare industry and then a Carla Jevin's super PAC gave 14.6 million dollars to support
her she's a physician she's big pharma and then Elizabeth Warren tweeted this and I quote
say goodbye to your smile and say hello to polio.
That's what's on the horizon if Robert F. Kennedy
becomes the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
She also said that she's terrified
of losing fluoride in her water.
It's obvious.
She didn't say that.
She said that.
And this is what.
She says she's terrified of losing fluoride in her water.
Why would you say that?
What does that mean exactly?
What do you mean?
I don't know what that means,
but you know what the main premise
of what she was trying to ask him to do?
He said, I'll agree to all this stuff,
but she's trying to say that you will not be able
to sue pharmaceutical companies in the future.
Like, what do you mean I'm not gonna be doing that
in the future?
Like, I'm not gonna be able to do my job?
Or make money from suing the. Yeah, but it's a.
It was a sort of a two step process.
It is, but at the same time,
I know what she's trying to get.
Byron, when you're seeing this yesterday happen with RFK,
and I'm sure you've spent time with him as well,
and I'm sure you've been around Warren as well,
what are your thoughts when you saw this?
I mean, the first thing is that,
I mean, obviously RFKJ is not a Democrat anymore, but I just
personally like watching Dem on Dem crime.
I'm just going to be honest with you.
I personally enjoy it, especially when you got, you know, Massachusetts going at each
other.
What I really see in that clip was I hadn't seen this until just now.
The Democrats are in a bad, bad place.
They don't really know what to do.
And so for RFKJ, it's not really about his views,
it's the fact that he left their team.
And she's more mad about that than anything else.
Because his views have been this way the entire time.
He has not changed, he's just now coming in
for President Trump, and so that's why she's acting
the way she's acting.
And that's one of the biggest problems on the Hill, And so that's why she's acting the way she's acting.
And that's one of the biggest problems on the Hill is that it's not so much about the
policy, it's about who which team brings it.
And that sets the vitriol, if you will.
But she's she's lost it again.
But Elizabeth Warren, and is she smart?
Yes.
But she's also diabolical.
She has been wrong on so many things in
this country, specifically financial policy in this country. She has been wrong
and I'm glad that her vote is not going to decide the fate of Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. because I think he's gonna do a good job at HHS. He's gonna do a good job
getting to the core health issues that we need to get to in this country. I mean
this is what the American people voted for.
Rob, which one is this here Rob?
This is RFK finishing the confirmation hearing his final message and then I also have the
reaction from inside the confirmation.
Before you go to this, because I want to finish with this, can you go to the clip where he's
being asked about, you know, I'm not going to do anything.
Go back to the grandson by the way of John F. Kennedy.
This is John F.K.'s grandson if I'm not gonna do anything go back to the grandson by the way of John F Kennedy This is John FK John FK's grandson if I'm not mistaken, right?
Jack Schlosschenberg, right if you can play this clip go for it
I'm trying to figure out of the right present to get Donald
Trump for the inauguration. So I found a really rare animal and killed it. And I'm gonna give it to him.
Not just just not
somehow.
First of all, you know, my family, they're not all Republicans. Some of them were like, we don't
know what you do when I first started. Now they're like, okay, this is Byron is who he is. Right?
But you on a family level, man, you're not supposed to do that.
You're just not supposed to do that.
That's disrespectful to your family.
And I know, like, I guess the sister came out against him,
has been coming out against him.
Man, if you're my family, you could be doing,
unless you're breaking the law,
I'm not gonna be going out doing stuff like that to you,
even if I don't agree with you because you're family.
We can have the political discussion all day long, but that's just disrespectful.
Yeah, and you would think from a family that has, he's had two people in his family murdered,
right? Murdered. His other family went up, Byron, their rep, their-
His father, not just anybody. His father.
His father, his uncle, yeah. And then they had the whole crew,
the whole Kennedy crew went up there and they were supporting Biden
What what gives you that motivation to go against your blood which I agree with you 100%
I'm even more worried like bro. This guy he's not going up against no just something small like, you know a city
This guy's going up against big
Pharma and for somebody Byron that's already lost two major family members, this is, he's going
to dangerous waters.
Can I tell you what I think it is?
Because Byron touched on it.
Remember the video we saw of Snoop a week ago when we were in DC in 2016 when he basically
called out the black community and says, oh, you're going to be one of them now, right?
An Uncle Tom type thing.
I can't even imagine how many comments you've received like this.
The point with this is it's zero policy. It's all personality. Yes
They're just attacking his character and attacking the person. She called him a predator. This was his first cousin JFK's
Daughter, right? That's Caroline Kennedy. It's never a policy debate. I've realized this about Trump
Oh, everyone of my friends that hate Trump. I say tell me a policy you don't've realized this about Trump. Everyone of my friends that hate Trump,
I say, tell me a policy you don't agree with. They're like, well, he's a jerk. Right? He's
a this. He's a, well, tell me a policy. That's what they're doing with him. It's when you
don't have an argument to stand on, they use the straw man argument and just basically
say he's mean, he's a jerk, he's an an asshole he's the orange man bad the mean tweets whatever it is but JFK RF Bobby Kennedy
jr. the way that they smeared him and the way they vilified him and all they do
is just try to attack him his personality it's pretty ugly this is
cousin Rob yes Caroline Kennedy and if you want to play this clip go for it but
now that Bobby has been nominated by President Trump
to be Secretary of Health and Human Services,
a position that would put him in charge of the health
of the American people, I feel an obligation to speak out.
Overseeing the FDA, the NIH, the CDC, and Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, agencies that are charged with protecting the most vulnerable among us
is an enormous responsibility and one that Bobby is unqualified to fill.
He lacks any relevant government, financial, management, or medical experience.
His views on vaccines are dangerous and willfully misinformed.
Who's paying her?
These facts alone should be disqualifying.
Damn.
But he has personal problems related to this job, which for me pose even greater concern.
I've known Bobby my whole life.
We grew up together.
It's no surprise that he keeps birds of prey as pets because Bobby himself is a predator.
Okay, you hear that, right? You hear that. Yeah, that's right. You hear that while they're saying, you know, what they're saying about this.
And then to be fair with the previous grandson of John F. Kennedy, if we're going to show one clip, we have to show other clip, not this one, the clip. Go to the right, exactly where you went, Rob.
No, no, Rob.
The tweet by the guy.
Okay, I'm sorry.
And just go to the video.
If we show one video, I feel we have to show both videos because this is the same guy,
John Levine, that was making fun of Bobby.
This is another video.
Let's just allow him to present himself.
Okay, let him shine.
Go for it.
She's got a ticket to ride. She's got a ticket to ride.
You can stop her right there, that's enough.
But you see, like, so we have...
He's a man's man, I get it.
But the point is, you know, and then they're sitting here talking about Bobby has the job, like, oh, he is not qualified to do this.
Are we quick to forget who Biden put on his administration with the guy and the feet and all these?
I'm a lady. Do you remember all these folks that were getting jobs like here's one of them?
What was his job he was what he was director of health our secretary of health and human services exactly
For for the cousin to say Bobby's not qualified for the job, he is?
He, no, wait a minute, he is.
It's a biological matter.
Don't forget the luggage, Steve.
Yeah, and the other guy with the luggage, Steve.
But the point being this,
so the part where Byron makes a point to say,
they don't know what to do, right?
They're kind of trying, they've lost the,
look at the hair on the armpit hairs,
to the left right there.
Is he in prison? Is he in prison yet? What was his job? Stealing shit?
What they can't do is, the argument can't be he's not qualified. The argument has to
be a different argument because you look like clowns making the argument that this guy's
not qualified yet, the other
guy's qualified and then here's, is this the clip where he talks about my boss likes a-
So I have two. This is him talking about how he prays every single day for the last 20 years to
be able to be in a position to do something about the health pandemic, which is a good juxtapose
to him being a predator from his sister and then, or Caroline Kennedy, and then I also have-
Go for it. Go for it.
...problems in this country that we must face, honestly.
And the first thing I've done every morning
for the past 20 years is to get on my knees
and pray to God that he would put me in a position
to end the chronic disease epidemic
and to help America's children.
That's why I'm so grateful to President Trump
the opportunity to sit before you today
and seek your support and partnership in this endeavor.
God, I love that.
I love that.
Do you believe him?
I believe him.
Absolutely.
I believe him.
Behind the scenes, I've had experiences with this guy
on midnight giving my wife a call
because we were concerned
about something with our kids,
and I don't know what part of the world he's in.
This guy's a true believer where he's at.
Rob, which clip is this?
This is the McDonald's clip.
Go for it.
Just understand it and make sure that Americans are aware.
But I don't wanna take food away from anybody.
If you like a McDonald's cheeseburger, diet coke,
which my boss loves,
you should be able to get them. McDonald's cheeseburger, Diet Coke, which my boss loves.
You should be able to get them.
If you want to eat Hostess Twinkies, you should be able to do that, but you should know what
the impacts are on your family and on your health.
And then Rob, if you want to play the final confirmation, the hearing and out time, I'll
come to you.
Play this clip here.
So it's two separate clips, but they're both very short.
Go for it.
Should I be so privileged as to be confirmed, we will make sure our tax dollars support
healthy foods.
We will scrutinize the chemical additives in our food supply.
We will remove financial conflicts of interest from our agencies.
We will create an honest, unbiased, gold-standard science at HHS, accountable to the president,
to Congress, and to the American people.
We will reverse the chronic disease epidemic and put the nation back on the road to good
health.
Thank you.
And here is the reaction as he finishes.
This is awesome.
Did you see this?
Mr. Kennedy, I look forward to working with you.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
We're adjourned.
Look at this.
We got people applauding.
Gangsta.
Yeah, you don't see that every day on the Hill.
You don't see that, right, Byron?
That does not happen every day on the Hill, I'll tell you that.
It's a standing o.
You mean, you don't see that after a speaker leaves a standing ovation, a round of applause
that is very uncommon, Byron?
Yeah.
I mean, you don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that.
You don't see that. You don't see that. You don't see that. You don't see that. You don't see that after a speaker leaves a standing ovation around applause
that is very uncommon?
Very uncommon.
Really?
That is rare.
Look, I was in a meeting with RFKJ three months ago, four months ago, I can't remember.
And it was him and his team.
And it was the entire thing was talking about Maha and all the various
things that they wanted to do.
I've seen cabinet secretaries come in.
He's like overqualified to run HHS because it's not just about the technical pieces of
the agency, which is what the Democrats like to talk about.
This is how, why they got wrapped around the axle with Pete Hegseth because they're thinking
about, well, how are you going to manage this
department and this department and this department? It's not that it is vision casting, really
the president's vision through the head of these agencies to make sure that the changes
voters want to see actually occur as opposed to making sure you're micromanaging the bureaucracy,
which is what the Democrats want to do. because if you take the long view of the Democrat
Party even from Woodrow Wilson to today, what they have always wanted is a
technocratic federal government that runs automatically 24-7 regardless of the
will of the voters, regardless of the members of Congress, regardless of the
president, quite frankly. That's the government that they've always wanted. Woodrow Wilson wanted it,
and every Democrat since has wanted it. They actually achieved it under Joe Biden
because he was just not mentally capable of being the chief executive.
So they finally have their technocratic government that Liz Warren and all of them want,
and now Donald Trump's in, and they're bringing in people like RFKJ who's like no we're changing the vision of this agency and every
bureaucrat within it is gonna be brought to heel. Well I mean listen people are
people seem to be excited about it and if he gets in I will tell you I tweeted
something yesterday and I said that Rob if he can just go to to me the biggest
fear isn't it's all intertwined and it's all connected because it starts off
with one thing.
He's feared by many, but none of them than Big Pharma.
Any institution, politician, lobbyist, mainstream media funded by Big Pharma will fight to prevent
it from being confirmed.
That's how simple it is.
These guys are throwing money.
Do you realize, so imagine a person that's, let's just say Rachel Maddow, let's say Anderson Cooper, let's say somebody's working at CNN or MSNBC.
Where is the funding coming from?
So if this person makes $6 million a year, and God knows how much money they got the
previous year from Big Pharma, that goes away.
Your $6 million could become $3 million.
If CNN's top line revenue dropped $400 million in the last couple years, how much more will
it drop if Big Pharma can no longer advertise with mainstream?
I mean the effect of it is so scary for these guys that it scares the hell out of the establishment
to see this taking place.
Tom, your thoughts on this.
Tom Hanks Your point you just made, Congressman, is
my point. When you are
too qualified or too informed, there is massive risk to the establishment and they will find
ways to scream that you are not qualified. So that's point one. The screams at RFK should
ratify for everyone that he's the guy for this job. The second is there have been things exposed where we have been like a frog boiled in the
pot on HHS for a while.
Just to give you one example, food dyes.
Everywhere else in the world, food dyes and certain red dyes are not allowed in foods.
We still use them.
If you look at Fruit Loops in Canada and Fruit Loops If you look at Froot Loops in Canada and Froot Loops
in the United States, Froot Loops in the United States
is like high definition television color.
You look at Froot Loops everywhere else,
well, we use different dyes.
And they use different dyes for a reason,
including things that relate to hyperactivity in kids.
Gee, is that a problem?
Oh, no problem.
We'll just fill them full of Ritalin.
That's the color, Jay.
Look at that.
There you go.
Oh, yeah, they're beautiful.
Beautiful. See that? Those are food dyes that are only allowed in the United States because lobbyists ensured they could get them there
Because they want to be able to market brightly colored fruit fruit loops
So and this is just one of the things that RFK has brought up. So he's not out there with these weird Vax position
He's out there saying why is the rest of the world doing this with
the studies that are here? And then the third thing I get to, whenever you see people in
Congress screaming, find out who screamed at them before they walked in that room.
Oh, that's very true.
It's like the people that were screaming at Elizabeth Warren were on her phone. You better
knock this MF off. You better get this down. And it's all the money that you pointed out especially the 14.3 million impact money because when they
scream and they look a little theatrical find out who screamed at them an hour
ago I agree okay all right so let's go to what RFK said about the red dye
yesterday though this is probably the most poignant part of the entire episode
when they basically said
straight up RFK. Are you a conspiracy theorist? They just asked him point blank and he's like,
well, what do you mean by that? Do you mean by the fact that you guys told everybody that
if they took the vaccine that we couldn't get it and we wouldn't spread? Well, that
turned out not to be true. Do you mean the fact that I've been telling you for years
that the red dye causes all sorts of health issues?
Is this a clip?
Yes.
So it was just like the hypocrisy was ridiculous.
Play this clip.
Yeah, this guy walked into a fist.
Yeah.
Conspiracy thirst.
That is a pejorative, Senator, that's applied to me,
mainly to keep me from asking difficult
questions of powerful interests. I was told that I was a conspiracy theorist. That label was applied
to me because I said that the vaccines, the COVID vaccine, didn't prevent transmission and it wouldn't
prevent infection.
When the government was telling people, Americans,
that it would, I was saying that because I was looking
at the monkey studies in May of 2020.
I was called a, now everybody admits it.
I was called a conspiracy theorist because I said
red dye caused cancer and now FDA has acknowledged that
and banned it. I was called a
conspiracy theorist because I said fluoride lowered IQ. Last week JAMA
published a meta review of 87 studies saying that there's a direct inverse
correlation between IQ loss. Alright so I'm gonna assume... I could go on for a week.
You're making me look bad. Oh yeah yeah. Let me get this is the most important
thing I think with him because you know, Pat, I'm so glad that you pointed out that the previous
Joe Biden Jim put in place as the Secretary of Health and Human Services was that transgender
person. We're wondering what the health is going on in this country. Right. They just came out very
quietly. I don't know if you guys heard, but they basically said, hey guys, listen, yeah, that whole COVID
thing turns out it actually did come from a lab.
Don't tell anybody though.
What do you mean?
It wasn't from a wet market with the pangolin?
No, it was the lab.
So it's interesting that they came out yesterday in the skiff.
I read the Intel report and I'm not going gonna get into it because it was a classified report
It was clear reading the report that everybody knew it was a lab leak. It was clear reading the Intel report
That was two years ago
It was clear reading the intelligence report from the various parts of the intelligence community that it was a lab leak
from the various parts of the intelligence community that it was a lab leak.
Yeah, I mean, and Rob, Rob talked about this just today
on our podcast on the unusuals,
and it's like, there's still Radcliffe,
who I respect the hell out of, John Radcliffe,
he's the head of the CIA, he was like,
they're still saying though, Byron,
it's most likely to have come,
can we just definitively say we know it came from Wuhan,
but the question is, who leaked it and why did they leak?
So that's the question to that point how it typically when you when the intelligence community
Report something. Yeah, it's each agency within the the IC how we refer to it
They have their own findings and so then they'll compile all the findings into a report. And that's when you get the it's most likely, most likely, okay, because every agency has their own interpretation
of what they're seeing and what they're receiving and how they want to communicate that. And
then I don't get too technical because some of that stuff is, you know, classified stuff.
But basically, that's what Rob, you want to go back to the is that Radcliffe talking about
it? She's asking her? Yes. Go for it, play the clip.
And you right out of the gate come out with this new intelligence that the CIA has concluded
the deadly COVID-19 pandemic arose likely from the leak out of a laboratory in Wuhan
as our audience expected.
Tell me the significance of the CIA now confirming this, sir.
Well, it's one of the things President Trump and I talked about.
Part of what we have to do is we have to restore Americans' trust in our own institutions,
like the intelligence community and law enforcement, and that includes the CIA.
One of the things the president stressed, you know, the purpose of the CIA
is to protect Americans, to keep us safe from foreign threats and foreign adversaries.
But we also need to be truthful with Americans.
And he has stressed to me and others that, you know, these aren't mutually exclusive
missions.
We can do both.
And so in the case of the CIA, which is the best foreign intelligence service in the world,
after five years to not have a public assessment, to be honest with the American people about
where the likely source of a pandemic that killed millions around the world, including
a million Americans and really impacted all 345 million Americans in some way.
People lost jobs. they lost houses.
It makes you question the level of competency.
If it takes you five years to identify.
When you're trying to, like,
what is it gonna take for you to find it?
You are the CIA.
And how weird is it that you announce it
a week after the president is, you know, sworn in?
How is the timing of it?
Oh, now you wanna tell us?
You couldn't tell us before?
Again, credibility in these institutions will go up under Trump's administration. You know sworn in how is the timing of it? Oh now you want to tell us you couldn't tell her before again
Credibility in these institutions will go up under Trump's administration. I want to go to the next story
Whitehouse to offer buyouts to federal workers who won't return to office
So the White House offer bias to federal workers who refuse to return to office under
President Trump's order aiming to reduce the federal workforce and eliminate remote work policies implemented during COVID-19. Katie Miller, an advisor to the Department of Government Efficiencies, confirmed the
email is being sent to more than 2 million federal employees.
A senior administration official justified the move, stating where five years past COVID and just 6% of federal employees work full
time in the office, that is unacceptable.
The buyout will cover approximately eight months of pay and benefits according to NBC
News with White House aides estimating that between 5 to 10% of federal employees will
take the deal.
Axios reported that the plan could save taxpayers a hundred billion dollars
annually. The buyouts follow Trump's recent freeze on federal aid in an
attempt to pass grant disbursement which a federal judge temporarily blocked. Rob,
which clip do you have for this one? Because it's a... I have a few. I have the
tweet that you put out last night if you'd like that video where Trump talks
about people being fired if they don't return to the office by February 6th.
Put that one. Go for it.
As everyone knows, most of the time they're not working. They're not very productive.
And it's unfair to the millions of people in the United States who are in fact working hard from job sites and not from their home. As federal employees, they must meet a high
standard. They're representing our government. They're representing our country. If they
don't agree by February 6 to show up back to work in their office, they will be terminated
and we will therefore be downscaling our government, which is something that the last 10 presidents
have tried very hard to do but failed.
Byron, thoughts on this?
It needs to happen. Like, period. Full stop. The biggest issue we have is you have a federal
bureaucracy that seeks its own interests. During the first Trump presidency, they would literally
look at the orders and slow walk them or ignore them altogether. Doing this now puts everybody on notice. You're not going to be able to sit at
home and say you're working. We had the, I think it was the Office of
Presidential Personnel, I think that's who it was, that came into oversight a year
ago and testified in front of the Oversight Committee and we kept asking
her what percentage of the federal committee and we kept asking her what percentage
of the federal workforce is actually in the office
at a minimum 30 hours a week.
She couldn't answer.
She did not have the information
and it's your job to know who's where.
The policies around remote work are that you sign up for it.
Not that they check that you actually log into it.
Not that you're logged in for an extended session
which is very easy to do. They don't check that you actually log into it. Not that you're logged in for an extended session, which is very easy to do.
They don't check that.
It's just that you have the ability to do it.
So yeah, I'm all for it.
If the workers won't come back into the office,
because by the way, we're paying the light bill
on these buildings still.
We're paying the heat bill on a lot of these buildings
because they're in DC and other parts of the country.
We're paying the insurance.
We're paying the cost, the rent.
Because a lot of these we rent.
We don't own these buildings, we rent them. So as far as I'm concerned,
if you're not back, we need to downsize the office space of the federal government and
you can actually move that property for other purposes. We talked about housing in other
parts of the country. Of course, Florida, you can reset some of these buildings if you
have a really creative developer. But you also get the number of employees down who are entrenched,
who quite frankly are the employees who fight us when we're trying to do the real reforms
that this country desperately needs.
The fight comes from their bureaucracy, because they come in and say, oh, well, you can't
do that.
Well, why can't I?
I'm a member of Congress.
I got elected.
You didn't.
Why are you telling me I can't?
Oh, because this is how we do things. There was book when I was in at FSU College of Business. They made us read is called who moved my cheese
Great book love great book same time same year FSU that is that's right 2002
That is essentially the issue we have enough in a federal bureaucracy. You have two million plus
individuals
who have their own political vision and typically
it is a very left-leaning political vision and anything you do to upset the way they
want to move is met with recalcitrance, just straight obstruction, quite frankly leaking.
That happens all the time in the federal bureaucracy.
If something comes down they don't like they start leaking to the press. So yeah, if
you ain't gonna come into work, he's the chief executive, you're not gonna show up.
Bye bye. At least they're getting a payout. By the way, you know what's wild
when you're thinking about this, Tom? Do you remember four years ago everybody
was selling the idea of work from home is a great idea and this is the fact
that people don't accept it,
and Jack Dorsey coming out and saying,
permanently for the history of Twitter,
you can work from home,
you never have to come into the office.
Oh my God, what a noble CEO Jack Dorsey is,
and then Elon Musk comes in,
and half the company gets fired, 3,750 employees.
And by the way, in this story that we're reading,
Tom, and I'm coming to you here,
this story that we're reading about White House workers getting this offer, an insider
story, a business insider story, which we know business insider, which they lean as
well, they said Trump's government worker buyouts are feeling a lot like Musk's Twitter
in 2022.
All the stuff that they're doing, which means, hey, coming in, here's an offer, you know,
hey, move out the way, but one thing we are realizing very quickly that common sense making a comeback
Nobody works better from home than they do at an office
Nobody does there's way too many distractions at home now this doesn't mean some of you guys when I say this some entrepreneurs
Well, let me tell you something as a solopreneur
I'm a laptop entrepreneur, and I do all this other stuff
Listen, I didn't tell you you don't have the right to go do it
I'm telling you there's more efficiency when you're around your crew working together and it's becoming very clear that
Maybe 10% of people are more efficient out of home
But 90% of them are abusing the privileges and they're being exposed Tom your thoughts on this
well, guess what what everybody has found out after kov, going back to work now is coming the federal government. And congressman made a
comment here that I want to amplify. There are buildings that your taxpayer dollars are paying
for that need maintenance and are practically empty, but the leasing, the landscaping, the basic
maintenance and the power keeping it warm and cool for nobody,
you know, to work there is there.
So when all of that comes back on the market, the cost for commercial building space in
that market is going to come down a little bit.
And maybe a business that is expanding that needs to use the space would appreciate a
lease that comes down because if the supply comes up, the price will come down.
It's not going to crash, but it's going to come down a little bit and it's gonna come out of the taxpayer
Pocket and that resource would be available for business people and businesses are expanding or whoever needs that like maybe
schools in the inner city that needs space
Point one point two is studies came out and there was you know, I like to talk about it
There is an organization that failed but it was at Verizon it was Verizon media called
oath and Tim Armstrong came out almost immediately and said we have a lot of
younger people that are early in their careers working here and guess what
they're not getting promoted as fast they're not developing as fast they're
not mentoring their people as well that's right they're not coaching their
people as well because they're not coaching their people as well
because they're not effing here. And he got out there and because remember Verizon was leaning
with the FCC, leaning hard liberal and they were really annoyed that oath and it was Tim Armstrong
that came out of AOL I believe sometime prior to that but he put his butt on his neck on the line
and said look this isn't working because people aren't getting mentored so that didn't happen then they started looking at
Transactional work how many calls per hour how many policies processed per hour and guess what the facts weren't there
So all this comment about oh, I was more effective from home effective right be careful
I'm so excited that this has been exposed.
Words like effectiveness were used.
Feeling words were used.
It wasn't numbers.
That's right.
By the way, I'm telling you,
when we were talking about this on the podcast,
I'm still upset about it.
When we were talking about it on the podcast four years ago,
70% of America was convinced these guys were right.
We took heat in our own comments.
You guys have no idea you're so selfish
you're so this Adam your thoughts on this. Well here's the issue and you know you have a few words
that you've coined for 2025 but your number one word was what? 25 or 24? 2025. You're of surprises.
No you said product speed signal. You said speed. Yes. And that's all I'm thinking about right now
because as Byron is basically explaining,
he says they slow walk things down the aisle here.
The last story we just did in the segment here was in 2022, I believe John Stewart went
onto the Colbert Show and he goes, you want me to believe that the Wuhan virus, the COVID
came from a bat on a pendulum and And when they're down the street was
the Wuhan lab and he basically called out legacy media and called out the big pharma. And Stephen
Colbert looked at like, Oh my God, he said, try to shut him up. Three years later, when everybody
already knew what we already knew, we're not stupid. They're like, yeah, by the way, it did
come from a lab. Okay. So what's the point here? Congress moves so slow. They're not using speed. These people,
is anyone still using the work from home COVID excuse? So four years after COVID, what is
happening right now? And Pat, here's what I'll say to you. There's a because you probably
get some pushback about working from home or not working from home. If you're an entrepreneur, or you're working commissions, and you actually have to eat what you kill, that's a big difference.
You talked about they work, do you work 30 hours a week from your house? It's a totally different
vibe out there. So you know, where, where in in the federal government, where the workers have to
show up for work every day, Capitol
Hill, if you're a staff member for a member of Congress or House or Senate, you're in
the office, especially when we're in town.
If we're not in town, you might be at home because I'm not there, I can't see you.
But when we fly in, the staff is there.
There is not a member, Republican or Democrat, that I'm aware of that lets the staff work
remotely.
You know why?
Because on Capitol Hill, the staff members for the Senate and for the House are at-will
employees.
I think there was a move, I think AOC and a couple of them tried to let their staffs
unionize.
And I remember I walked in, this was like a couple years ago, I think Pelosi was starting
to float it or something.
And I walked in and I loved like a couple years ago, I think Pelosi was starting to float it or something.
And I walked in and I loved my staff, they're great.
I walked in, I looked at them and I said,
let's be very clear about something.
If you try to unionize, you're all gonna be fired.
There's no union here.
It is my way.
It's my name on the door and my name was put on this door
by the people back home in the district.
So I'm showing up and you're showing up.
They didn't even question it.
I just made sure everybody fully understood the situation.
I wouldn't expect anybody from that community
wanna try to unionize,
especially somebody that's wanting to work for you.
Philosophically, they're gonna be on your page.
You know what's the only time I agree with working from home?
If you're getting paid commission, go for it.
Yeah, if you can do it, you're gonna get it.
If you're 1099, work from home if you wanna do it.
Go ahead, see if you can pull up the results or not.
If you don't sell, you don't make money,
no, you wanna stay home.
Stay there.
I'm okay with that.
That part makes sense.
W2, zero.
Zero.
Do you know how many times we've had W2 employees
working from home that's been successful?
Zero.
I don't wanna get into it right now,
because we just had a moment a couple weeks ago.
I'm not going to be telling stories,
but the answer, Tom, look at Tom's face, everybody.
Just look at his face.
I read his face, God, real quick.
Yeah, not because it's Tom,
because we just had, we asked somebody a question,
and it was- Although it might be Tom.
Yeah, you know, but the point is that I am so glad all these things that people were
trying to convince you that was good.
Leave your job and go ask who cares, but threaten them that if you don't do this and you're
going to say, listen, we had a guy that we hired him for $55,000.
Sixty days after working with us, a recruiter calls him and says, I have another job for
$75,000.
So my CO at the time fears losing him because he doesn't want to go back and do the job
of finding another person, says we have to give this guy a $75,000 offer.
I said, you just started working with me three months.
This is how you gain credibility or lose credibility with me.
I'll let you make the decision.
What do you want to do?
Let's give him the raise.
Go ahead.
Let's see how you handle this.
90 days later
The guy comes back and says if you don't give me a hundred twenty thousand dollar race
I got an offer to work for my company 120 so then he doesn't the guy goes back
Do you know those people that did that?
Well when you go and do an interview and somebody says so tell me about the last four years where you worked and you hear
The employees saying the following story. Well, I stayed home taking care of my dad because he was not doing well.
No it's called you had eight jobs, you don't want to tell us you had eight jobs.
I ran a consulting firm for the last two years.
No you didn't, it's called you had a bad experience at a job, you don't want to put them as a
reference because I'm going to ask you, can I call your boss at the previous job?
You can't put that out there.
These are red flags you learn of people that abused companies when there's a big break
in someone's resume,
ask specifically what happened during that time.
And if the story goes to, I was taking care of an aging elderly parent and they have a
wife and three kids, then how did you fund your expenses to do that?
I ran a consultant from, can I talk to three of your clients that you did consulting job
for?
While it was private because we signed an MD and oh, okay, I got it.
You hear these scripts and you're like, you know what guys, too many red flags, I'm not
interested in this guy, let's move on to the next person.
That's what happened during that time and employers are now getting smarter asking questions
to not be abused of the abuse that we took four years ago because it was real.
So the guys that stick around, take care of them.
The guys that stay loyal, take care of their families.
The guys that were playing those games, that reputation is going to follow you for many,
many years to come.
Let's go to the next story.
Next story I want to go to, Rob, is Florida.
Where's the one with, there it is.
So smugglers transporting because Trump's administration gave ICE a quota of 1,800 arrests
per day across the
US.
And Rob, I don't know if you have the clip on that one.
Is this the clip on that one?
Rob Stewart No, I have that.
Hang on one second.
That's Stephen Miller right there.
Yohan Benjyar Yeah, if you can play that clip with the
... So these guys are sitting there giving quotas.
Just like anybody that's working a job, a sales job with a certain expectation, they're
coming out saying, look, 1,800 a day, okay, set the quota, per migration and custom, this
is ICE, require a minimum of 75 arrests per day for each of these agencies' offices, 25
offices, so 75 arrests per day for the 25 offices.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller right here, Rob, if you want to play
the clip about the quota.
Rob Lerner, Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of
Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy
Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White
House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of
Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy
Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, White Sources say that ICE has been directed to ramp up arrests to at least 75 per field office per day.
If every field office hits that quota or that number, that goal, that would be 1,875 undocumented immigrants arrested every day.
Now, the Washington Post reports that President Trump has been disappointed with the numbers so far.
I don't know if that's true. You will tell me if it is. What is the priority though when it comes to these deportations?
Is the initial goal, as we had been told by Trump allies after the election, to go after
those first as a priority, to go after those who have committed violent crimes and are
part of violent gangs? Or is it we're just going to go after anybody who is in this country
illegally, we're just going to go after anybody who is in this country illegally?
We're not going to prioritize.
Well yes, we are going to prioritize.
So first of all, the numbers you cited are a floor, not a ceiling, very importantly.
They're a floor.
The goal is to arrest at least that many, but hopefully many more.
Yeah, so that's that part.
And by the way, so far, according to this report, they they're at 4500 arrests since Trump's returned to office
Okay, and that's why they're saying the numbers are now going to be where Trump wants it
I actually could believe the fact that Trump's not happy. He always wants more. That's what a driver is gonna do
But then this goes with the story right next to it with smugglers
transporting van packed with
26 Chinese immigrants
Detained in Florida. Rob, if you
have the clip on this one, is this the one Rob? So there's two instances. One
happened yesterday where they caught 40 migrants and then nine days prior in the
same town they found 26 Chinese migrants. This is the overhead helicopter news
coverage of them busting the 40 in the van yesterday. Go for it. Go ahead. Very
heavy police presence in Coral Gables
Specifically we are looking at old Cutler Road and Kendall Drive
Let's get right to you seven Stephen J. Gray above and seven sky force, but what we know so far Stephen
Good morning tomorrow. Good morning, Olivia. Yeah, we've got a report of up to 40 migrants in two separate vans here
This is old Cutler Road northbound here near Kendall Drive.
We've got Carl Gables police on scene
and we're getting word that possibly 40 Chinese migrants
have pretty much been pulled over in these vans.
You can see through the trees here
that the migrants are sitting down.
Everything's pretty much under control. Everybody's being good.
But once again, the 40 folks in two separate vans, those vans must have been jam-packed right here in Coral Gables.
I'm sure they're going to wait for a bigger vehicle to transport the migrants to wherever they've got to take them.
So here it says, it says, similar to what Chandy said, it was found on a Toyota, on a U-Haul truck,
after an abduction report, Coral Gables police chief, Edward James Hudak revealed that the vehicles contained 16 Chinese females,
15 Chinese males, one male from Cuba, one female from Ecuador.
Yeah, so that's these two instances that they had. Rob, is this a different clip of a different instance?
So this is the very first instance,
which happened about 12 days ago,
and this is in Coral Gables.
This is the story that you just read, the 26th.
Go for it.
Wild scene in Coral Gables.
More than 20 migrants, mostly from China,
part of a suspected smuggling operation,
treated inside a city trolley after arriving by boat.
We're hearing that this a
by snapper Creek with a p
and Gables police came ru
say it all unfolded when
by a vessel friday morning
Creek canal and put into
resident calls police. A
security professional, ho observed an abduction in calls police a very alert for you. Security professional good for your homeowners associations observed
an abduction in progress.
She notified one of our patrolling
officers about what she had observed.
And these are the moments an
officer drives up on them.
Most migrants crammed in this U haul van
three inside the small Toyota in front of it. The officers removed the rope in the back of the truck,
which revealed 21 predominantly.
Byron, thoughts on this?
First thought is, this is why in Congress
we have to get President Trump's agenda
through as quickly as we can.
And I know part of the national conversation
about what we're doing is been around one big beautiful bill or two bills. And I think
the president at this point is like, it could be one bill, it could be two bill,
I don't care, let's get it done. The number one thing that Tom Homan and
Kristi Noem need are dollars from Congress to provide bed space And other officers and additional resources so that this process can actually function
What Stephen Miller is talking about about the floor? Yeah, that's correct
But the logjam is gonna be they don't have the resources right now under
under under federal appropriations
To meet the floor
We have sheriff departments in Florida and around the country,
their local jails are now filling up, in part because of the 287G program that helps the
repatriation process. So on Capitol Hill, we just left our retreat. And my comment to
the speaker and to the other members is is we have to do two reconciliation bills.
We cannot do one big bill because it's going to take us too much time to get that done.
And Tom Holman and those guys need the resources ASAP in order to have this be an orderly and
smooth process that doesn't get log jammed or doesn't get backlogged, which will just
backspill into
sheriff departments, etc. So what was happening here about how so many migrants are coming in
jammed into trucks, vans, and etc. That's been going on for four years. This has been the quiet
secret that the Biden administration hid from the American people. I don't know if you guys
remember, this is probably the last time Joe Biden spoke at a press conference, this was like four years ago.
And he, and I'm serious, and he said something like,
give us some time so we can clean up the mess
and then once we get it cleaned up,
we'll let you come in and see it.
They never let the press come in to see it.
And the part of the reason was because
when you come across the border illegally,
what happens is you have traffickers
in our side of the border who are moving people through vans, tractor
trailers, whatever.
There was a story a few years ago about 40 to 60 people died in the back of a tractor
trailer from heat exhaustion down in the Houston area because Houston has become the human
trafficking capital of the United States because they come through the border, they get to
Houston which is the closest major city and then from Houston they're
basically dispersed all over the country. The Biden administration was doing all
that so that's why I'm saying our business on Capitol Hill we have to get
Tom Homan the money he needs. It's about a hundred billion dollars to them ASAP because if we don't it's gonna slow down
this whole process and we're not gonna be delivering on what President Trump
has said and I believe what he says because I've seen it on the ground the
number one issue in the country that the voters want changed they want the border
secured they want people sent back to their home to their countries where they came from and it's not just people
It's just not abuela
It's a hundred and eighty four countries from around the world
I was with a Haitian group on Saturday and they were concerned about Haiti in particular and I said if we're gonna be honest
What's going on with Haiti is a different situation than?
China because Haiti is run by a guy named barbecue their government has completely fallen apart
That's what asylum is supposed to be about but Joe Biden and Kamala Harris blew up blew open illegal immigration
So bad that the country has no ability to even take in
Haitian migrants who are fleeing legitimate persecution because their government fell apart in Haiti. So to bring it back to center, we have to deliver in Congress.
And my view to the speaker and to the leadership is you got to do two bills because you got
to deliver the money quickly to President Trump and to Tom Homan and Kristi Noem so
they can get the job done that the American people want to see done.
And we can still do tax policy.
Nothing's going to stop us from doing that.
We can get tax see done. And we can still do tax policy, nothing's gonna stop us from doing that. We can get tax policy done, we can get energy policy changed,
but we got to deliver the border money immediately. And legitimately what I
think we can do is you do border, you raise the debt ceiling, and you do
defense money. And the reason why you raise the debt ceiling is because
there's only really two ways to raise it. You can do it in budget reconciliation, where you don't need Democrat Senate votes to do it,
or you do it with Democrat senators. And if you do that deal with Democrat senators,
they're gonna demand a price for raising the debt ceiling from us, which is actually setting us back
from the agenda that the American people voted for in November.
So to my colleagues on Capitol Hill, they're going to hear me now. Do two bills, do border
debt ceiling and defense money in the first bill. Let's get that to the president's desk.
We can get that to his desk probably by president's day. I think the really cool thing is, is if
the president signed the bill at the state of the union on March 4th. Now you talk about
imagery, shoot, we're making America safe right now. Boom.
Just like you signed the executive order.
Just like you signed the executive order. Boom.
Can I say why you're saying it's so important and why I think the American people are behind
it? But I'm going to give it not so much a political diplomatic twist. I'm going to give
a guy who's born and raised in Miami twist. Okay. 30 Chinese migrants
just roaming around Miami. That literally doesn't happen. Yeah, we don't have Chinese people here
in Miami. Like, I have literally hundreds if not thousands of Cuban Haitian, Mexican, Puerto Rican,
Dominican, Argentinian, Brazilian friends, the list goes on Bolivian Uruguay, Paraguay. Dude, I have like two Asian friends straight up. We don't
have Asians here, much less Chinese migrants. So you know how quickly these guys were cited?
What are 30 random Chinese people doing on the street? Like, yeah, they sick like, are
they bringing anything here? I mean, just don't you just don't see it
Do you know how much I mean you see it in I see it in?
California of course or you see it in Houston, of course, you don't see it here
So it's the most obvious thing. So so what am I saying here?
So, okay
So they're just people are just showing up left and right in this country this open border policy
And I fully agree with you what you're talking about in Haiti and Cuba and the political persecution but the worst thing is gonna happen is okay
so these are Chinese migrants whatever what happens if they were from whatever terrorist
country that wants to do very bad things to America they're already here that's my point
that they're already here those people because this is. We found these Chinese migrants, you know, whatever
they're doing, they're doing. How are we going to find those people?
And that's why we got to speed this whole process up.
I'm a dovetail quickly because it's happening in the state right now.
It's like most people don't know what's happening, but it's happening.
The legislature and the governor are having a fight right now over the Florida
immigration bill. My hope is, is that they resolve this quickly.
Florida immigration bill. My hope is that they resolve this quickly.
The one aspect of the bill, and this is where the governor is, in my view, correct, is that
the police powers around the immigration czar, if you will, have to reside with the governor.
Because the governor has police powers, not just in Florida, but in every state.
So to change that, to me, is not the appropriate use.
But that being said, the reason they need to resolve
their dispute quickly is because they
have to be working seamlessly with the federal government
in order to make this process work.
Because we know New York, they're trying to fight it.
Illinois is trying to fight it.
Massachusetts is trying to fight it.
California is trying to fight it. Their people don't want that. It's their
crazy politicians and their state capitals that want it. So we got to get the business
done in DC immediately. Because the longer this thing goes, if we don't get it resolved,
you're going to start seeing more and more stories of we're running out of space. Look
at all these people in these tight quarters, etc.
And that's what the liberal crazy media is just waiting for.
So we got to be disciplined, we got to get be about business, get that done, get the
president what he needs.
He'll get a huge victory, the American people will see they didn't just campaign on it.
They were serious about it and they got it done.
And that's what the country needs well overnight
there was a story about gitmo and
potentially being used because it'll hold up the 30,000 of the criminal element the absolute bonafide
Criminal element among the illegal aliens with the president overnight saying I kind of like to use gitmo that'll take some stress off the
Tonimo Bay just for people that are the acronym you go ahead
some stress on the because these people are criminals and they should be in a jail and I guess the president
said and last time I checked it most hard to get out of so maybe that's a good place
for the criminal element that are illegal aliens and to save the space while we're moving
the rest of the folks.
But even a get mode is what 30,000 beds. Joe Biden let in 10 to 15 million people.
So this is what I'm saying. You have a logistical system that Tom Homan is having to stand up
overnight because the Biden team was not helping us do anything until they were officially out the door.
So the logistics of this at scale to deal with 10 to 15 million illegals over the last
four years, not to mention the people who were here illegally before that time.
And then that doesn't take into account the gotaways.
And by the way, you talked about China, the Chinese migrants, the reason why they show
up here is because they'll pay the coyotes
and the cartels anywhere from, the last number I heard was 10 to 60,000.
Yeah, they're willing to pay.
Ahead to come into the United States.
10,000 to $60,000 per person to come into the United States.
This is big business for the cartels and for the
coyotes. And that is why what Joe Biden did was complicit. They were complicit in allowing
this. They empowered the cartels. They empowered the coyotes. And it has been the great humanitarian
disaster of our time. And if a Republican allowed that, the big media would have crucified
them.
I'm just wondering if Selena Gomez is going to cry when they start exporting Chinese migrants
out of their own.
By the way, just to give you some numbers here, do you know the number of, they call
it the unaccompanied alien children.
There's two names, unaccompanied minor children and unaccompanied alien children.
Both of them are pretty much the same thing, but let's just go with the UAC.
Do you know in 2008 where President Bush was, it was his last year, do you know that entire year
how many came through? Roughly 8,041 the entire year. That's it. That's it. Do you know what it was
in 2022? 149,000 unaccompanied, just walking, let me say it one more time guys, unaccompanied, unaccompanied children,
do you know what the average age is?
11 years old, the median age is 13 years old.
So the system that they have is broken through ICE
because ICE is, you hear the stories that they talk about
that one, they don't have the bandwidth,
so we don't have the bandwidth, we don't have the system,
so 32,000 of these, they don't have the system to report to each other.
So you know like how in insurance we build a software that the agent can see what is
the status of a policy, the carrier can see and report it, the employees can see, everybody
can see what's going on with this one client, so the more eyes are on it, the more we can
help the policy get approved.
So imagine they don't have a system to say, where's this kid at?
Oh, he didn't even show up.
The kid didn't show up to the court.
Who's following up with what's going on with the, who's, Majorca's being asked a question.
So what do you guys do?
Do you guys go back and investigate to see what's going on with the kids?
You know, the lady from ORR, do you know this lady, Marcus, I think her name is, Brandon,
if you can send a clip, she's being interviewed and she says, the leader of ORR, type in ORR.
That's the one.
The Office of Refugee Resettlement.
So they're asking her, hey, so what do you do, Brandon, can you send that clip to Rob
please that we were looking at yesterday.
How often after, so Vinny, you're about to lose your mind when you hear this data.
So do you know what percentage of these 300,000 kids are assigned to family, less than a third?
Of 300,000 kids.
Less than a third are given to family.
So the other two thirds are given to somebody and then there is no follow-up to see what's
going on with the kids, schooling, food, all this stuff.
So they don't know if it's human trafficking, labor trafficking, sex trafficking.
There is no follow-up.
And so they said, well, why is that?
Because he mentioned this, which is a very good point.
While this whole thing was taking place, you remember we were in communication with Tom
Holman, Bernard Kerik, we were trying to go to the border to do that stuff, and every
time there was something coming up, we were planning on doing a podcast on the border,
right?
Guys are sending me proposals.
Listen, Pat, to be able to get 10 million out, you're going to need this many trucks,
you're going to need security, you're going to need people to go chase them.
He says, this is not an easy job.
It's a hundred billion dollar job.
You know how hard that is to find that?
This is a catastrophic situation.
So when you're hearing these stories being talked about here's the lady Rob
Did you find a clip where she's being asked about?
So I found a bunch of different clips
I'm waiting for Brandon to send me the right but it's that one right there the one you're on
It's with Josh Hawley asking her question. That's it. Yep. Miss Marcus
Can I just start with you you testified a moment ago to Senator Butler that every child gets a know your rights
Presentation is that correct?
That is correct.
Is that before or after you release them to labor traffickers?
Senator, every child that comes into our care gets a know your rights presentation as well as...
Have you read these New York Times reports, these stories, the series of stories the New York Times has done on the children who are in your care.
Have you read them?
Yes.
Have you read that children are scrubbing dishes, they are operating heavy machinery,
they are delivering meals, they are harvesting coffee, they are working construction, they
are working as housekeepers, they are working overnight shifts at plants where they are
not paid, they are not going to school, they are not cared for, they are not giving meals,
almost all of it illegally.
Are you aware of that?
That's a yes or no.
Yes.
Are you kidding me?
So she's not even denying it that they know about this, right?
Then you look at the report to say, okay, so let's see how many calls of trafficking
abuse of migrant children are coming in.
Go back to that one that you had Rob.
Look at this here guys.
Zoom in.
So that's 2018 to 2021, 2022 under Biden.
Blue is reports of abuse or neglect.
Look at the number of calls daily.
Daily calls, monthly calls.
Look at that.
250 is the top.
You were getting none of that.
Look at the yellow, reports of trafficking.
See what's going on with the blue
and what's going on with the yellow?
People are calling saying, please help me,
please help me, please help me.
This is what they're going through.
So for us to sit there and say,
let's send more money to Ukraine,
so Ukraine's more important than,
I mean, let's send more money.
It's almost as if we were talking with Brandon and it almost feels like someone is benefiting
from looking away.
Now I don't know if that's the case or not, but these are not complicated things that
we're looking at.
It's pure data. If a stock goes from $8,000 to $149,000 in 14 years, what
do you say? Wow. $8,000 to $149,000. It's pretty solid. You tell me what goes from $8,000
in 2008 to $149,000. Oh, you know what that's? The number of unaccompanied alien children
to 2008 to today. You don't want to go figure that part out?
Where are these people?
Where are these kids?
What are they doing?
It's a travesty of what's going on.
So the fact that Tom Homan's out there, him and Kristi Noem were out there, right, being
questioned about some of these things.
Rob, if you have that, and one of our old friends I think is in the back, if you can
play this clip, go forward. Mr. Homan and Secretary Noem, could we ask you a few questions here, please? Would you guys gaggle with reporters for a few moments?
You are both the top immigration advisors to President Trump in addition to Stephen
Miller.
He just announced that he's signing an executive order to put 30,000 detention beds at Guantanamo
Bay.
I know, Mr. Homan, you've talked about needing more beds, but how exactly would that work
and when do you expect it to open?
You know, that is something that the White House
is working on to use resources
that we currently have there at Guantanamo Bay.
So, we'll go through the process.
The worst of the worst is where that could be utilized.
So that potential is there.
We know we need the infrastructure.
We're going after these guys.
But who would run that? DHS?
Who would run the facility like that?
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
What you probably don't know, there's already a migrant center there,
it's been there for decades, so we're just going to expand upon the existing
migrant center. How would logistics work for that? How would you get migrants down to Guantanamo Bay?
We climb to Guantanamo Bay. Coast guard, they encounter people in maritime, they can take them straight to
Guantanamo Bay. The worst of the worst. What are you talking about? We've been doing it for a while.
We just haven't been doing it in the last four years. We're doing it. We're already doing it.
We're building it out and using more resources. What is the worst? Mr. Holman, what kind of,
Secretary Noem, what kind of civilian oversight would there be? Civilian oversight? Yeah. The
current civilian oversight that we have in our federal government today. We had an election in
November that clearly said the American people don't want these
criminals and dangerous individuals on our streets anymore. We're taking care of it.
What's your message for Polish Americans who voted for President Trump and may have neighbors
or family members who are undocumented who are illegally here? Listen, the law applies
to everybody.
It applies to American citizens.
It applies to people who come into this country illegally.
You will be held accountable for breaking our laws.
Jesus, it's so annoying.
So, Byron, here's where I'm coming from.
Rob, just pause it, Rob.
So, Byron, this is where I'm coming from.
So when we talk about Biden, I honestly genuinely do not think he had any decision-making the
entire time. Speaker Johnson just did that podcast, I forgot, do not think he had any decision making the entire time.
Speaker Johnson just did that podcast, I forgot,
Barry Weiss, where he was saying basically,
he gets ambushed by Kamala, the Schummers,
he doesn't make any decisions, he didn't even know
what the hell he was signing.
When it comes to that blatant invasion, Byron,
because that's exactly what we've had
for the past four years, brother.
It's been an invasion. They have terrorists.
They have the kids.
They have the drugs.
They have Chinese.
It's on all different fronts.
Byron, A, how did they get away with it?
I understand he's the president, but who's really behind it?
And what was their actual objective?
Was it for all this turnstile stuff?
Was it because they're like, all right, listen,
we're going to have all these kids.
We can do whatever we want with them.
Labor, sex trafficking, whatever.
We could have terrorists just in case we want anybody
to ever do whatever and we have all the drugs.
Who's really making the decision?
I know Alejandro Mayorkas is the,
he was the head of Homeland Security,
but what's the main goal of saying guys,
open the border, let everybody in, what?
The Democrat party is one that opened borders for decades.
And what's the main goal of all that?
Because there's a flip back up.
The Democrats are largely a faction, a factional party.
They are party of factions.
Abortion, open borders, et cetera.
All of their different planks.
So how they kind of operate as a party is,
you may not really, this might not be your issue,
but since this is a party,
we support all the issues.
The staff, and that's why personnel is policy.
So what Donald Trump's doing with federal workers
and how they just came in with their team ASAP
is because personnel is policy.
When you have staffers in the White House
who are committed, who work with La Raza,
who work with these other groups that are totally fine with illegal immigration and open borders to expand our
welfare state here in the United States.
All they have to do is write the order on day one.
They just stuck the thing in front of Joe Biden.
When Joe Biden became the nominee of the Democrats in South Carolina back in I think it was 2020,
the deal had been cut that they thought Bernie
Sanders would lose.
So they all came together, cut the deal and said, okay, we're going to do Joe Biden.
So the deal part of the deal that basically everybody knows now is Joe Biden had to agree
to had to basically sign off on all the crazy policies.
So that was the deal.
The staff that went in, it was their vision to do this.
That's why overnight they ended remain in Mexico. They stopped border wall construction
They did all these things the reason why unaccompanied minors were the first big tranche was because of kovat 19 and title 42
Because title 42 would not allow
Adults into the country that was under title 42 because of kovat 19
They wouldn't let adults in but we our policy was but but if a child comes in, we will let that child in.
So the cartels knew this, and what they did is they would send tranches, 50
kids, 75 kids, 100 kids. I've seen it where they would walk right up to our border
agents and say, we're here and we need you to process us.
And they were, the kids are given a script to say, I was on the border, there was a girl
in this group that got stopped and we were talking to the girl and she's like, yeah,
this is my fourth time coming across.
This is business.
The Biden administration knew that it was business.
The staffers at Homeland and at the White House knew
this was going on. They wanted it to go on. They knew young girls were being
raped on the journey to our southern border. They knew this. They didn't care.
And any other people who are part of this complicit in this are the
NGOs. The NGOs operate on both sides of the border in order for this
entire process to happen.
And they use kids as the first wave of it because we as a country would say if
kids come to our border we will accept them in but because of COVID rules in
Title 42 we're not gonna accept in adults and that's what happened. It is a
staffing issue, it is an ideological issue in the Democrat Party. Even today
they argue against Tom Homan and what
he's trying to do because for them they have always wanted open borders and this
is where people who have studied and read about the cloward-piven strategy
of you overwhelm the system in order to rebuild the system, that their strategy
some Democrats, not all, some are, you overwhelm each aspect
of the federal system and so that when it breaks down, then you get to point the finger
and then you get to design the new.
And that's really at the core of what's going on.
But that's why Donald Trump was elected to stop all this.
Who are the NGOs that you're referencing?
The biggest ones are Catholic charities Catholic charities is an MGO. Okay, they get money from the federal government for
Nonprofit goodwill work we have NGOs operating all over the world
I would argue we have too many NGOs that are not operating in the interest of the United States
But the deep state has been funding them for decades. Catholic Charities is one of
them. So Catholic Charities is one of the larger NGOs. They operate, I believe, yes
on both sides of the border and they'll do things like bring clothes, bring
water, bring food, stuff like that. Because when these kids or even adults,
when they're coming up to the border, they might get a liter of water in their journey.
That's it.
So they come up starving.
They're starving, they're hungry, they're malnourished, etc.
Catholic Charity steps in and provides aid.
And the way the Catholic Church views it is we're providing aid to people who are truly in need and that's their mission.
They are given federal funds through the NGO process in order to do that.
The problem is, is that we fund this, but it's against our national interest to do this.
And that's why you have all these funding fights in Washington.
Because when you start turning these spigots off, it goes to a lot of groups, or a lot of contractors who've
been had their hand in the kitty for a long time. And then when you start dialing that
stuff down, that's when you get these reactions of you're cutting off poor people, you're
doing this, you're doing that. No, we are right sizing the federal government once we
can actually be efficient for a change and it can actually do
The things that are in the interest of the United States and its people if I can just kind of summarize exactly what I heard from you
Yeah, and Rob if you can show that stat again
It seems like there's two types of people on that left side of the aisle
There's sort of like the strategic villainous people who are here for open borders
And they just want to flood the system and And then there's the deeply empathetic,
but uninformed people that basically know like the Selena
Gomez's of the world. Oh my god, they're crying. They're
emotional. But okay, we have to let them in. We have to help
them. But guys, there's a flip side to it. What's the flip
side? Well, look at this, Pat pointed this out. Yeah. So when
we do let them in, you know, you say don't take my kindness for weakness
All that empathy that you're ingratiating to this side of the border. Look what happens to the kids that you're letting in
What does it say? It's this is reports of abuses abuse and neglect and trafficking. Look how much that's skyrocketed
That's the report. That's the report. Those are the kids that could get to a phone. Those are the kids that even speak English?
So for Selena Gomez and anybody who, you know, I understand that they have in their heart,
they feel the most empathetic thing is to just do whatever you can to help people who
are impoverished. But when you allow what occurred under the Biden administration, you
create a manmademade humanitarian crisis.
Because those young kids in particular, the girls and young boys who were sold
into sex slavery by the cartels, who never make it to our border, they're down
the rabbit hole. That's not even the unintended
consequences, those are the real consequences of what occurred. So the
most empathetic thing is to secure the nation and not allow illegal
immigration because you're not selling adults and frankly yes young kids down a life that is
unspeakable. And by the way didn't Rambo Stallone do a movie on human trafficking that came out a
couple years ago? Yes. Didn't he do that? If you haven't seen it I think it's worth watching.
Didn't do, I don't know if it was haven't seen it, I think it's worth watching.
Didn't do, I don't know if it was like something everybody talked about, but it's worth watching.
It's about him going to Mexico trying to rescue a young girl that's trapped in a sex trafficking
ring.
I highly, highly recommend watching this flick.
And when you talk about Francis Fox Piven, you know what I love about the debate with her
and Thomas Sowell.
Remember that one from back in the 50's?
That was a great debate.
It was on Free to Choose, wasn't it?
Yeah, absolutely.
It was unbelievable when you see the exchange between the two and she's trying to say, well,
you don't understand what you're going through.
Thomas Sowell, man, he is a...
I just finished a book that your son Tico told me to read. Did you finish it?
Tell me it's...
I feel dumber and dumber every page I read.
He is brilliant.
Thomas Sowell is in the league of his own.
Thomas Sowell is a freak.
If you haven't read The Reader, read it.
He's in the league of his own.
Wait, wait, real quick.
For the American people, the Free to Choose episodes were phenomenal because it wasn't
just Milton Friedman pushing his
economic view and his political view. He brought on left right and they would
have real intellectual debates about some of the same stuff we're dealing
with today. That's right. Everybody should go back. Oh you just listen if you can
consume 40 hours of content of Milton Friedman and Thomas Sowell, you'll
never be the same ever again.
If you can go through 40 hours of content of these guys, you'll never look at the world
the same way ever again.
Let's go to the next story.
Rob, passenger jet with 64 broad collided with Army helicopter while landing at Reagan
Airport near DC.
This tragic event, we've
seen these clips, if you want to play this clip Rob, there's multiple different
angles. This is one of them. It's the one at the bottom, right Rob? Can you?
Yeah, that's gonna close up on it. That's the helicopter coming in from the left.
It's coming. There's the explosion.
Okay.
So you're seeing this.
United Airlines, sorry, American Airlines flight 5342 carrying 60 passengers and four
crew collided with a UH-60 Blackhawk Army helicopter on a training flight near Ronald
Reagan Airport right before 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
The FAA confirmed that the crash occurred just over three miles south
of the White House in the Capitol in some of the most controlled airspace in the world.
Video footage captured two sets of lights, consistent with aircraft, appearing to join
in a fireball.
The air traffic controller constructed a P-8025 pass behind the CRJ moments before the impact
but the plane lost altitude rapidly
and its transponders stopped transmitting about 2,400 feet short of the runway.
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser announced, we are going to recover all fellow citizens, but
declined to confirm fatalities.
I think they just announced it, not one survivor from them.
And Rob, which one is this?
Do you have the traffic air controller talking to each other? this the one or is that a this is one go for
it play the clip fire command the accident happened in the river both the
helicopter and the plane crashed in the river
the approach into runway 33 yes the airfield is closed the airfield closed? Yes, the airfield is closed. The airfield is closed.
Runways as well? Yes, all runways are closed. Nobody's landing. No one's moving at all.
It was probably out in the middle of the river. I just saw a fireball and then it was just gone.
So I haven't seen anything since they hit the river, but it was a CRJ and a helicopter that hit, I would say maybe a half mile off the approaching of 3-3.
Wow.
Rob, do you have the other one where the air traffic controllers appear to try to stop collision?
Yes, I haven't been able to hear that or listen to that, but yes.
This is from BBC Story, if you have it, I just sent it to you.
from BBC story if you have it I just send it to you let me see if we have the recording of it where yeah if you can see what they're saying here after the
commercial let's see what it is let me see this one here Trump even tweets the The crash has not happened yet or it has happened already?
I'm not sure.
I need you to land.
I need you to land immediately.
Can you go to Dallas for a few minutes?
Mazda 17, CC westbound, contact Dallas tower 120. Oh, this is, they're trying to prevent it. This is before the crash.
Mazda 13, can you go to Baltimore?
Wow. Obviously, a lot more is going to come out.
And can you go to the president's reaction to this?
He tweeted something the airplane was on a perfect and routine line approach to the airport
The helicopter was going straight to the airport for an extended period of time
It is a clear night the lights on the plane were blazing. Why didn't the helicopter go up or down or turn?
Why didn't the control tower tell the helicopter what to do instead of just asking if they saw the plane?
This is a bad situation that looks like it should have been prevented, not good.
Tom, your thoughts on this story here.
Yeah, it appears, you know, I'm not the NTSB,
but I was reading everything this morning, everybody else,
said that the airport was operating normally,
no rain, no snow, you know, clear night,
and just comings and goings and landings
and the CRJ from Wichita
just coming in normally and there's a routine training mission and where the helicopters
cross over airfield and over flight lines which and it just appears that the helicopter
for whatever reason didn't pass behind it obviously obviously. And so the CRJ was just on a normal land.
So this is the military helicopter and its operations
or what it was doing on training just ran right into
the civilian traffic.
That's what I saw this morning in reading all this.
Myron, your thoughts?
It's horrible.
The airspace at DCA is probably the busiest in the country. Like if you sit
out on on at on a top level in the building, you can see there's always
military craft moving around. Man, it's just a tragedy. And I think the
bigger thing for me is the families of not just the our military personnel
that were in a helicopter,
but of course everybody that was on the plane
that was coming in from Wichita.
I don't even know.
How does the helicopter not see a passenger jet
and then maneuver?
And so then if that, knowing that,
was it mechanical failure?
What else was going on?
Like I think there's gonna be a lot of investigation
with the three members of the crew that were on that chopper.
We're gonna have to like kind of dig in
to what was going on with them.
Because when an airliner is coming in,
everybody knows this at this point,
when an airliner is coming in on approach,
it is clearly visible.
If you've ridden in a helicopter,
the biggest thing when you're riding a helicopter
is you're trying to watch out for birds,
because you don't want birds
to get caught into the propeller system.
So you're kind of always watching for birds,
but like an airliner is massive.
Like a commuter jet is still a massive plane.
You know, it's not a 747, but it's a massive plane.
So what was going on in the chopper that you couldn't go up down
Take evasive action whatever the case might be. How do you even get that close? I got real concerns
I want to stop there. I don't want to comment anymore. No to the but to the families
My prayers go out to you because you lost
So many people and think about how sad this is
This is the number one story on every single outlet Fox, CNN, MSNBC, Wall Street Journal you name it but it's also the
number one story on ESPN why because apparently the flight was made up of a
whole team of the US gymnast I'm sorry US figure skating community okay so this
look whatever you are on this plane, you're just getting on a
flight. Horrible. But now on top of it, it's a whole team. It's athletes. We all saw the movie or
the story that was based around the Marshall pride. So this is horrible. This is tragic. I mean,
I don't know if it's if it's me. I mean, we see what's going on with Boeing. These plane crashes every single week, every month, there's something new.
And the number one thing that they say in sports is, okay, if the other team is better
and they beat you, cool, but no unforced errors.
This was a nice night out.
It wasn't snowing.
It wasn't raining.
This was a complete screw up.
I don't know if this is the one on the plane up. I don't know if this is the one on the plane though.
I don't know if this is the one.
I mean obviously we're gonna find that
as the investigation gets done.
The chopper, like he's saying,
your job is to be looking for things.
You fly a chopper in a different way
than you fly a plane, right?
Because it's a very different lens to have that,
especially in a place like three miles away
from the White
House, like from your right at Reagan National Airport.
Like you can't miss it.
You cannot miss Reagan National.
People who've never flown in, it is the Potomac and then the strip.
Like you can't miss it.
Very weird to me.
And it's weird because all these are commercial commercial flights they all have TCAS, traffic collision
avoidance system. It tells the pilot how to avoid smaller aircraft and that's
the reason it was put in because you know to avoid hitting commercial you
know airliners, helicopters, stuff like that. It tells the pilot when there's
track that's climb, climb, descend, descend. You ever hear that on an airplane? That's
what that system does. So there's a lot of freaking holes in this.
And again, like Byron, you said it,
prepares to these freaking families,
because Tom, you mentioned it too.
That water got, it's freezing and it's only what,
seven and a half feet deep?
Yeah, and just to show you what it was,
they say the aircraft is traveling 140 miles an hour.
That's two miles a minute, right?
Yeah.
And they're saying was
2400 feet off runway and a mile is 5280. So it is a half mile off. So it's 15 seconds off runway
She's so this is this is not you know, I'm saying that's that's like you've seen it where you see the yeah
You see the lights going underneath you and you were about to land just about to land. That's the point
That's what he's saying. They were literally about to land and this happens.
Well, again, prayers goes out to the entire family
and I am sure we're gonna learn more
about what happened with this tragic event.
Let's go to the Jim Acosta story.
Jim Acosta is at CNN.
He gets credit for helping President Trump
coin the phrase fake news, right?
He is the originator when he got up there
and did what he did.
Tom, he's trying to get a, you know,
CNN is firing 200 people, their top line revenue
dropped 400 million dollars, they're really taking a hit.
And then while all this stuff is happening,
they offer him a job at midnight, right Tom?
It's a show at midnight that they're offering
Yep, and this is the kind of a way of saying look if you want to walk walk
But we're not trying to give you a job
What do you want to do and he decides to walk and I think this is the last clip of his Rob?
They can put this is this the video or is this the tweet that he posted the video on?
This is the farewell to CNN viewers and then the second one I have that as well.
This is the tweet that he put out about his substance.
All nine of them.
So I want to watch both of them but go ahead, play the first one first, go for it.
I wanted to end today's show by thanking all of the wonderful people who work behind the
scenes at this network.
You may have seen some reports about me and the show and after giving all of this some
careful consideration
and weighing an alternative time slot CNN offered me,
I've decided to move on.
I am grateful to CNN for the nearly 18 years
I've spent here doing the news.
People often ask me if the highlight of my career at CNN
was at the White House covering Donald Trump.
Actually, no.
That moment came here when I covered former President Barack Obama's trip to
Cuba in 2016 and had the chance to question the dictator there, Raul Castro, about the island's
political prisoners. As the son of a Cuban refugee, I took home this lesson. It is never a good time
to bow down to a tyrant. I have always believed it's the job of the press to hold power to account. I've always tried to do that
here at CNN, and I plan on going doing all of that in the future. One final
message. Don't give into the lies. Don't give into the fear. Hold on to the
truth and to hope. Even if you have to get out your phone, record that message.
I will not give in to the lies.
I will not give in to the fear.
Post it on your social media.
Right.
So people can hear from you too.
Fantastic.
My brother's gonna tweet.
My gosh.
Saint demonic.
Go to this one here.
Big time, that's the word.
Hey guys, it's Jim.
And let me just say this, I've had quite the day but as you could see
earlier today this was my last day at CNN and I did want to jump on Substack Live here
for a moment and say welcome to my new venture.
I'm going independent at least for now.
This is just the beginning but I wanted to invite you to join me here on this platform.
Is this on Twitter? This was yes, this was the tweet that he put out.
Can you go to his Twitter account?
Because this is the one world he's about to enter that I don't know if he's going to like
or not.
If you can go to his account, Jim Acosta, zoom in a little bit if you could.
So this is the latest one, right, to go to Substack.
So go a little bit lower, go a little bit lower, go a little bit lower.
And then there's another clip
of him with the main video, the last farewell message
that I'm sure you have.
Go up a little bit, is that the one?
Okay, zoom in a little bit if you could,
zoom in a little bit, I wanna show something
to the audience.
He's got 3.4 million views on the bottom right,
116,000 likes, 23,000 retweets,
oh but he's turned off comments.
Oh, wait, why would you?
Jim, when you're in the social media world,
you are no longer protected by CNN.
You have to allow people to tell you
what they think about you,
and some of it is very painful.
And I don't know if you're gonna like that, buddy.
I mean, it's a different story
when you're reading a teleprompter
and you're getting out there.
That's easy, you got good writers, you're doing great things.
This is why a guy like Tony Hinchcliffe and some of these comedians that are getting up
there and just doing their thing with trying to come up with stuff on the cuff, it's not
easy to do.
When I watch Vinny do some of his work, I'm blown away by it.
I will never look at animals the same way because of Vinny and the stuff that he does
with Animal Voices, right?
It's tough to be a comedian.
It's tough to be a content creator, but you're about to be told by audience that don't agree
with you, and dude, I just don't know how you're going to handle it.
I don't.
As an independent content creator yourself, now maybe you're going to be having to make
certain adjustments.
You're going to realize how the field really feels about you.
And I'm sure deep down inside,
this guy cannot wait to get another job offer
to go to traditional mainstream media.
Traditional where you're at least protected
by a bigger brand.
Because in the free market of content creators,
people will tell you when they can't stand you.
And I wonder if you can handle that.
Byron, your thoughts.
I'm sure you're devastated when this was announced. I was so sad. Yeah
Oh, you're crying when you walked in here. Yeah, do you have the clip when Trump basically told him to sit down?
Please cuz I think that's the proper way to end
Find the clip look my thoughts on him are he was awful to go and deal with
He was pompous and swore he'd know everything.
And then when you give him the facts,
because he can't admit that he's wrong,
and it's just the smugness he always had.
So it made sense when they were like,
look dude, we ain't giving you a good slot.
Take midnight or go by.
And whatever, I think you're right.
He's gonna try to find his way back into network life,
because out there where you guys have to operate,
where it's kill or be killed, it's tough business.
And by the way, that's where all media,
all news media is going anyway, is going independent.
That's the future.
He won't be able to hack it.
How thick is his skin?
I mean, he might be on, Didn't they just end CNN plus?
Yeah, that was a couple years ago.
But they're trying to do it again. They're actually trying to do another subscription.
That's when he'll end up. He'll end up there.
And just to be honest, think about it from everybody that...
Let's see this and it comes to you. Go for it, Rob.
Your campaign had an ad showing migrants climbing over walls and so on.
Well, that's true.
But they weren't actors. They're not going to be doing that.
They weren't actors. Well, no, it's true. Do you think's true. But they weren't actors. They're not going to be doing that. They weren't actors.
Well, no, it's true.
Do you think they were actors?
They weren't actors.
They didn't come from Hollywood.
These were people.
This was an actual — you know, it happened a few days ago.
They're hundreds of miles away, though.
They're hundreds and hundreds of miles away.
You know what?
That's not an invasion.
Honestly, I think you should let me run the country, you run CNN.
And if you did it well, your
ratings may not be good.
If I may ask one other question, Mr. President, if I may ask one other question, are you
worried?
That's enough.
That's enough.
Mr. President, I was going to ask one of the other folks that-
That's enough.
Pardon me, ma'am.
Mr. President, I had one other question that I may ask on the Russia investigation.
Are you concerned that you may have indictments?
I'm not concerned about anything with the Russian investigation because it's a hoax.
That's enough.
Put down the mic.
Mr. President, are you worried about indictments coming down in this investigation?
Here it comes.
Mr. President.
I tell you what, CNN should be ashamed of itself having you working for them.
You are a rude, terrible person.
You shouldn't be working for CNN.
And the other guy, watch, watch, watch, watch. I think that's untariffable.
You're a very rude person. The way you treat Sarah Huckabee is horrible. And the way you
treat other people are horrible. Oh, and I love the other guy opens his mouth.
You didn't say fake news though. No, no, this wasn't a fake news one. This
is the, this is the, but the funniest was is the other guy that is about to speak right now,
who is it still a White House correspondent. He says you know what I've traveled with Jim. He's cool
He's like I'm not a big fan of you either
This dude came in reporting fake news
He's on his way out even his last message is fake news
And you just saw two two instances and one stupid speech that he's saying the car caravan migrant caravan, of course it was an
invasion.
We're living through the invasion right now.
And the Russian hoax, they've did that.
People are still convinced to this day that Trump is a Russian asset.
And when Trump said that these guys are the enemy of the people, I believe it in my bones
that if you're spitting out that fake stuff about COVID, about Russia, and you're making
us divide each other and people die because of your stupid rhetoric.
You are the enemy to people,
and I'm so happy that he's gone.
Go on Substack, go start a show with Don Lemon.
Go on the street and see how fun that is
in the freaking cold asking dumb ass questions.
I'll tell you what I find the most interesting,
because obviously what Jim Acosta is best known for
is the you are fake news.
He started it. That's what it is.
Yep.
And so people probably say,
all right, this was your monumental moment.
And then he said, No, that actually wasn't my most proud
moment. My most proud moment Castro was in Cuba, when
questioning when Obama went to Cuba, questioning the brother of
Fidel Castro, the dictator of Cuba, Raul Castro, and this is
how you stand up to tyrants, obviously trying to equivocate
to basically that Trump is a tyrant
But here's what he's failing to really understand and you're gonna know this when you
Announce whatever you plan on announcing for
Congressman Donald's
The people of Cuba the people of Miami the people who live in Miami that came from Cuba are deeply
Deeply Republican.
Yes, they are.
Shout out to Reagan.
Deeply conservative.
So anytime they think of Cuba, Fidel, what, what, you bring up socialism, communism, they
go crazy.
So it's so crazy to me that everyone who's came from Cuba, escaped socialism, persecuted,
made it to Miami.
What is it?
One foot, drive foot, everything. And then this guy, this intellectual, holier than thou, smarter than thou,
doesn't understand what every other Cuban immigrant that makes it to Miami,
makes it to Florida, understands. Is that socialism in no good.
I'm just glad he's gone. Bye bye Jim. Bye Jim.
Yeah, it's, and I'm gonna wrap up on this story Vinny, because you keep texting me.
So I'm gonna...
Well I can't wait, because I'm glad that he knows this story Vinny because you keep texting me so I'm gonna
Well, I can't wait because I know I'm glad that he knows about it now because I wanted to surprise him plus size rapper
Who calls herself bbw?
Okay sues lift after driver said she couldn't fit in the car
Okay. So first this is the lift driver denying her and she's recording Kim and she posts this, right?
So, you know Rob, if you want to play this clip here, go for it.
My best friend has a biz that's newer than this that I can figure is. That's the same time.
So you really telling me I'm so busy in your car
So I gotta order another she's out of breath just speaking like
She's out of breath talking
What I got to do with your tires
Tires we have we have an actual image. Yeah, you'll see
Because what he goes over He goes, over, over, lift, over, exhale.
You can pause that rap so plus size rapper Dank Demos, also known as Dejua Blanding,
is soon lift after Detroit driver allegedly refused her drive telling her she was too
big.
This happened on January 29th.
She posted a video and she has publicly shared that she weighs 489 pounds.
That's her.
And told the driver, I can't fit in the car.
The driver identifying himself as Ibrahim,
responded, believe me, you can't.
Adding that there was no room in the back
and that his tires wouldn't be able to handle the weight.
He later told her she should request Excel.
The Masu describes himself as BBW.
Wait.
Look at the dog! Pay that queen. I'm not gonna count it. Excel, the mouse who describes themselves as BBW, pay that lawsuit sharing that she once
weighed 554, so she's lost 60 pounds. Speaking to Fox 2, I've been in cars some of the... Anyways,
so her viral TikTok video of exchange has been viewed more than 340,000 times as of Tuesday.
Vinny, why are you so deeply concerned about the store? There's so, there's so much, because I actually want to hear, Byron,
because we're both from New York.
Besides the funny part, we're gonna be busting chops.
Rob, can you go back to that?
Listen to me, guys.
She's doing a rap video.
What vehicle, she can't even be in the,
because if you're in a rap video, Byron,
you're in the driver's seat chilling.
She's in the back.
Look at how folding, the car,
the muffler's about to hit the ground.
Look at the dog, Pat. The dog is like,lers about to hit the ground look at the dog Pat the dog is like what's what's happening in there look at the
dog that's this is disgusting and here's the thing you're almost 500 pounds
Baron I'm not trying to show off guys and I know a lot of people like to show
off I have a Toyota Corolla 2019 shout out Toyota my tires are this big if I
add I might be joking just on bear to a couple guys go to lunch, the car drops.
She weighs 500, do you know what the average weight of a female polar bear is?
300 to 500 pounds.
She weighs the weight of a female polar bear, Google it Rob.
That's my car, that's my baby.
Byron, that's my baby girl right there.
She can't fit in that.
No, you can't. You can't.
And here's the thing.
By the way, can you pull up the lawsuit,
like what the lawyer said?
I'll tell you what the lawyer said
while I was looking at the video.
Here we come.
This is a fat shaming discrimination.
You know what he said?
He goes, him not letting her in the vehicle
is like not letting a black man or a gay person in the car.
Stop, see.
It's discriminating.
No, no, it's a tire thing.
It's my tires, it's my transmission.
And she can't get in.
No, she's like, yes I can.
And brother, that guy, I don't really sure.
What's he gonna do, cut the roof off?
Yeah.
I mean, she climbs in the top?
It's not the roof.
It's not a roof issue, because she's not tall.
No, no, no, my point is, you open the door
and she cannot fit through the door to get in.
Because knowing Tom, Tom's trying to find a way to fit her in the car.
He's doing the logistic part.
Because Tom's a problem solver.
Yeah, 100%.
Tom, that's not what the point Tom, Adam, Vinny's trying to make.
Can you go back to the arguments the lawyers are making?
Is this it Rob?
You can find it.
There you go.
At least a news story.
Let me keep looking.
Yeah Rob, you can find the one with the lawyer.
Oh here it is.
Oh yeah, listen to these guys.
Does he come up Rob? Keep going.
Keep going. There's no audio. Oh because he you'll find that where he is going to interview her
but and here's the thing Byron if you're I'm not we're not fat shaming we're not being those people.
Shame on your friends. Shame on your family. shame on everybody that's like you girl, you're
big and you're beautiful.
No, no, no.
This is morbidly beyond morbid.
Is that it?
Yeah, that's it right there.
Two.
I knew it was illegal and I knew that it was wrong.
Her attorneys, John Marco and Zach Runyon, say weight is a protected characteristic in
Michigan by law.
It would be no different than a driver pulling up and saying, you know, I don't want to have
black people in my car. I don't want to have black people in my car.
I don't want to have Christians in my car or Muslims. It's the same under the law.
It's the same.
The lawsuit is filed since she posted the encounter on social media.
Other full figured folks have reached out saying the same thing happened to
them.
And guess what Lyft admitted? Lyft was like, we can't believe this happened.
Why were we like
And guess what Lyft admitted? Lyft was like, we can't believe this happened. But why?
2025. Actually, I said this, but this is when reality actually comes back. You're too big to get in the door. When I was in college, I used to move stuff and use whatever you can, somebody's
car, whatever. You remember the big tube TVs? Now we got all flashcards, right? The tube TVs and anything over 32 inch TV,
you could not get into a sedan
because the back of the tube was too big.
Sis, you shooting the music videos,
sitting in the trunk of a SUV,
and it is clear that you cannot get in the door of a sedan.
I don't care if it's a BMW, a Corolla, a Camry,
and a cord, you know, it could be an old school
Acura Legend, you too big to get in the door.
Period, full stop.
And listen, I know I'm a politician,
I'm not supposed to say this, but we gotta be honest
with people, just get the SUV.
Get the minivan.
Let the minivan pull up.
Let the Toyota Sienna pull up with the automatic doors
and things slide out.
Hop in and you're good.
To me, I think what's really happening is
she knew this was possible.
And you get publicity.
Because you're a rapper I never heard of before. So maybe you get you get in publicity? Thank you because you're a rapper your rapper. I never heard of before
So maybe you can publicity so you get you you shout out to your CMO or her. Oh, thank Moss
They should add like forklift like forklift live if I could just see a picture of this girl again
Cuz I have a couple of things written down here cuz you know not that's not that's miss Alabama. We know we all know
Yeah, good. We'll pull up Alabama in a second
But if you would just go back to the beautiful lady that we're talking about miss Alabama, okay
So as I said before, you know, shout out to sir mix a lot baby got back baby got front
Yeah, we know what's going on here. But the listen there was a rapper that I grew up with
It was one of my favorite rappers. His name was Big Pun. I love it. Yeah, big pun. I know a great
Okay, I got a great... I'll never forget he had a lyric where he goes, I just lost 100 pounds. I'm trying to live. He died the next week straight up. So this dude,
and then his homeboy was Fat Joe. If you take a look at Fat Joe these days in the Terror Squad,
he's like, you know, slightly overweight Joe at this point. He's lost a lot of weight because he got the memo. He was just at 11 last night.
They were doing their thing. Terror squad. So this woman out here, she's trying to say
that she's, you know, full figured or she's big boned chick. You are obese. Okay. Remember
the member, um, uh, biggie, biggie could fit in the car and drive. Of course he could.
He didn't have to do the
video with Diddy, whatever happened with that, when he was driving backwards. Yeah. Okay.
He fit in the car. This woman is not fitting in the car. No, it's absolutely. I think this
question is the following. Big was not that big. No, Big wasn't that big. Biggie Smalls.
She's making Lizzo look like a Victoria's secrets model. But the reason that I think that you're right about the marketing,
I take Lyft and Uber every single day.
Never once!
And they cancel all the time by Irwin, Pat, Vinnie, Tom.
They cancel all the time.
Never once in 10 years do I have a conversation with them when they cancel.
Not once.
They cancel and leave.
They're not like hey look
I wanted to tell you something, but what I gotta do is go see my kid. No, they just cancel
Yeah, they're never like hey, you're fat. You're this they just leave
So this leads me to believe there's some some marketing going on here
He's gonna working together something's happening here where I can see it
I can see just gonna sit there and be filmed, he canceled already, just drive away.
They're on the clock.
They gotta get to the next ride.
There's no reason for him to have to continue
this conversation with this BBW.
I'm just curious to know if Lyft's gonna pay,
because if Lyft pays,
and by the way, if the driver has to pay anything,
oh, I mean, you're gonna be like,
looking from afar, which one's the one that's coming?
Oh, shoot, boom, I'm you're gonna be like looking from afar which one's the one that's coming? Oh shoot
You're gonna be looking closely to see you're picking up I don't even want to have the conversation
Yeah, you're gonna come in you're gonna say I what's your name?
He's just gonna say Mary and let you say Mary's you're I'm looking for Joe. Thank you
That's what you that's what you're gonna do. I'm sorry. I was looking for Joe. Where is Joe, you see Joe?
No Joe here, I'm Mary.
Okay, great, thank you, I got the wrong person.
This is gonna set the tone
for these guys to be thinking about it.
Anyways, gang, great podcast today
with possibly the future governor
of the great state of Florida.
Byron, it was a pleasure having you on.
This was a blast.
Looking forward to seeing you do some big things. You're doing big things blast. Looking forward to seeing you do some big things.
You're doing big things,
but looking forward to seeing you do even bigger things.
And I think we're gonna have many, many more conversations
for many more years to come.
All the best to you, buddy.
Thank you, man.
It was great to be here.
And if you could become president,
I'm just gonna throw that out there.
I'd like to just come to the White House
and hang out as a New Yorker.
As a New Yorker, if it comes to that, Mike.
Trump's the president right now.
You already heard.
The future looks bright because of people like him.
Timing over talent, and let's focus on Florida first winning.
Adam, the future looks bright because of people like him.
Thank you for being here, Congress, for Donald.
Have a great weekend, everybody. God bless. Bye bye, bye bye.