PBD Podcast - Rita Panahi: Iran War, Sharia Law & Soccer Team Asylum | PBD #756
Episode Date: March 10, 2026Patrick Bet-David sits down with Sky News Australia's Rita Panahi to discuss the escalating Iran war, the possible succession of Mojtaba Khamenei as Iran’s next Supreme Leader, and Iranian natio...nal soccer players seeking asylum in Australia amid the country’s growing political crisis.------👍 LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE!Ⓜ️ MINNECT WITH RITA PAHANI: https://bit.ly/4ubZiC2Ⓜ️ CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4kSVkso Ⓜ️ PBD PODCAST CIRCLES: https://bit.ly/4mAWQAP👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/4lzQph2 🥃 BOARDROOM CIGAR LOUNGE: https://bit.ly/4pzLEXj🇰KALSHI: http://kalshi.com/pbd💬 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 close like it takes sweet bit of dirty.
I know this life's meant for me.
Adam, what's your point?
The future looks bright.
My handshake is better than anything I ever signed.
Right here.
You are a 101?
My son's right there.
I don't think I've ever said this before.
Okay, so today we have the great read-up panel here with us.
She runs a top 15 podcast show on YouTube, crushing it,
absolutely getting hundreds of millions of views.
And when she speaks, people listening.
The timing of it is phenomenal with everything that's going on in Iran.
So it's great to have you here with us.
Got two Persians together.
What are the chances?
Yes, we do.
Now, online, I looked at it.
I said, is she born in Arkansas or Iran?
But you're born in Arkansas.
Pine Bluff, Arkansas.
Yeah.
Who would have thought it's a long way from Tehran, isn't it?
Yeah, my dad was in Arkansas studying.
as a lot of Iranians did pre-Islamic revolution
and went back after he finished the degree as expected
and then a couple of years later,
the Islamic Revolution happened
and the whole country, as you know,
went backwards into the Dark Ages.
So, yeah, that's how we eventually ended up in Australia.
We escaped Iran.
It took some time and were granted asylum in Australia.
So, yeah, that's the story.
Yeah, it's interesting.
because we had a lot of relatives
that they would either go to Europe
to get their green card to come to the States
or they'd go to Australia.
There's a lot of Assyrians also in Australia.
Yes, yes, absolutely.
A lot of my family ended up in Europe,
ended up in Sweden.
So they've really set up there.
They've got, well, to their third generation now.
Much smaller number of paneges in Australia, I should say,
still a lot in Iran.
So there's always so much worry about what's happening.
there because we've all got still family there who are trapped there. And I can't go back.
I haven't been back since I left the country when I was eight or nine. And it would be madness
to go back. You would be locked up and killed in record time. So...
Do you have memories? I do. I still remember. I originally lived in a coastal town on the
Caspian Sea. So that was ideally because I'm a beach, like to this day.
You live by Bandar Pallavi?
Shomal.
Shomal, yeah, Shomal, yeah, Shomal, Bandar, Vy, Rash, that's a...
Where my mother's family is from.
Oh, really?
Yeah, it's a beautiful place.
Stunning.
So that's my earliest memories, and then we moved to Tehran,
and I've obviously had memories there, and we started school there.
That was the first time I was forced into the hijab,
because, of course, you have to wear a hijab to go to school.
Even if you're a four or five-year-old girl, you have to be covered.
And that's where we are...
were taught to chant death to America at assembly every morning.
So, yeah, those memories I have, but happier memories in Australia.
It was at 1984.
We moved to Australia.
84, you moved to Australia.
So I was born in Iran, and I'm in U.S. now.
You were born in Arkansas, but you lived in Iran for eight, nine years.
Yeah.
And then you moved to Australia.
What do you see?
What do you see from Iran that maybe the rest of the United?
the world doesn't see. When people say, why should we mind, why should we deal with Iran? Who cares
about them? Australia is 7,000 miles away. U.S. is 7,000 miles away from Iran. We shouldn't worry
about Iran. Why is this issue so important? Look, we should worry about Iran on a number of fronts.
I can understand the America first absolutists to say this isn't this war, this conflict isn't
in our interest. It's not an immediate danger. I get it and I completely sympathize because,
because we have, say we, America,
because I still see myself also as American,
I'm still a US citizen,
we do have been involved in these forever wars
that have cost so much, so much human life,
so much money that could be better spent here.
So I completely get that.
But Iran is different to Iraq and Syria and Libya
and some of the other regimes
that have tried to be, the US has been involved in overturning.
One, Iranians sponsor terrorism, as we know.
So it touches everybody that's had plots to kill our president.
So I would have thought that would be a fairly good reason to take note of what they're doing.
But also, the Iranian people had this thrust upon them.
I think the overwhelming majority of Iranians want to be done with this regime.
Iranians are very different, it's very different to the rest of the Arab world.
And it's something I think Americans have trouble understanding
because they just look at the Middle East as one big region.
And it's not.
Iranians are Persians, they're not Arabs.
They have a history that predates Islam by some distance.
And those traditions and those belief systems have withstood.
so much, including the Islamic Revolution. So I think given the chance, a free Iran would be a
wonderful ally for the West. And I think it serves as an example of what can happen when you allow
forces that are anti-West to take hold. I think we're seeing signs of it in Europe. We're
seeing signs of it right here. And we've got this ugly, unholy alliance between the Islamists and
the leftists, whether you want to call them communist, socialist, or just the left in general,
that share nothing in common with Islamists other than their hate of Republicans,
conservatives, Western civilization. But in Iran, they got together and they overthrew the government
and took hold in 1979. And they've been in power for 47 years. And I think there's just a lot
of lessons to be learned out of Iran, which are particularly noteworthy today in the West.
And the left should realise that though they helped the Islamists gain power in Iran, what
happened as soon as the Islamists took power, they rounded up all the leftists and killed
them?
It's not a happy ending in this union.
One side's going to prevail and it's not going to be the leftists.
So I really makes me crazy to see even now when you've got people out there protesting saying free Iran,
free Iran from what?
The regime has been absolutely brutal in oppressing the people there.
Why weren't you marching a month ago or two weeks ago when they were gunning down people in the streets,
gunning down people in hospitals recovering from injuries they had in the protests?
So I've got very little patience for the left in this country and in Australia
who are consistently on the wrong side of history
and they do it from a position of complete ignorance of what's to come.
So, yeah, that was a very long answer to your question.
But I think there's lessons to be learned out of Iran,
really important lessons that if you know history,
maybe you won't be doomed to repeat it.
It's interesting to see not only the leftists.
I mean, there's even some people on the woke right that are saying, you know,
what are they doing wrong?
What's the big deal with what's taking place there?
It's a very interesting thing taking place on which groups are agreeing with each other in Iran,
especially in the U.S., and I'm sure it's happened in Australia as well.
With leftists losing it, do you think you'll ever run out of content with your show?
No, this is the thing.
I mean, I mock the left because they're very mockworthy,
but there is no shortage of content.
The left are determined to be crazy,
that determined to be crazier than the next person.
And whether it's mainstream left,
like, you know, the Ladies of the View,
or your host on MSNBC,
MSNN, whatever they call themselves,
or the people who are just posting their rants on TikTok
or Instagram,
I could do that show 10 times,
length and I'd still have material left over.
I don't think you're ever running out of content.
You will never, and you know what?
There's so many people who don't touch it because the comics are so almost all of them,
not all of them, but a great majority are so left and so gutless.
They don't want to touch that material.
And it's like, how much more crazy does your side have to be for you to use some of that
material in such rich content?
So, yeah, no, I, that's, and I think mockery.
is a important tool.
I really do.
I think the right needs to use mockery a lot more.
It's a very powerful way to put across a point.
And when the left give you so much to work with,
why wouldn't you do it?
By the way, there's a lot of guys that are doing it now,
and it's working out.
The good ones, yeah.
The good ones.
There's a lot of...
We have a guy, Vincent O'Shanna, who makes clips,
making fun of Newsome, and they always go viral.
He is so good at it.
Mocking Newsom, he does a great job at it.
But going back to this, Australia right now, the soccer, the Iranian women soccer team that's over there, right?
We've seen the clips where they didn't sing the Iranian national anthem that was taking place.
And then all of a sudden, they are about to go back home.
This is the footage that we've all seen.
I'm sure you've seen this many times.
And so you're seeing this.
And then Iranian state TV comes.
out after not performing, you know, not following the song.
Rob, if you can go back to the other one with Iranian State TV, how he reacted to it.
This is how, this is a guy that's for Iranian State TV.
And here's what he had to say right after seeing this.
You should punish traitors harder during war.
Whoever takes one wrong step against the country during war, you have to respond to them harder.
Like the story of our woman and.
national team not singing the anthem.
You have to respond harshly.
You have to respond harshly.
It's not a symbolic act or mere protest.
Not singing is the highest order of treasurery and
Bipatine.
Both people and officials must treat them
So you can pause it right there.
You get the idea what they're saying, right?
And now, while they were leaving,
you know, people were standing protesters in front of the bus,
not allowing them to leave.
you know, not allowed to go back to the country.
The President Trump asked Australia to give them asylum,
which I believe the Prime Minister Albanese gave them.
Well, five, from what I understand, the latest information is five have sought asylum
and been granted asylum, and they already have pictures now with the relevant minister.
And interestingly, in the picture, every single woman had the hijab off.
So it just shows you.
Yes, off straight away, because this is something that's forced upon women.
You know, you see some women in the West wearing the hijab,
and that always kind of gets me curious about why you'd want to be in the West
if you are that devout.
There's many Muslim majority countries,
but all five had the hijabs off.
The fear is that the rest of the women who might be wanting to seek asylum
do not have the opportunity because their handlers have really kept them away from anybody.
And so I think there were people at the bus shouting to them in Persian saying,
here we go, there's the five ladies with ejabs off.
Yeah, so there were people shouting at them in Persian telling them you can seek asylum,
do this, giving them instructions.
But they were bundled off to the airport.
that flight went to Sydney and then in Sydney
they're due to take an international flight back.
So that's where I'm hoping that authorities intervene
and speak to these women one-on-one
without their entourage
who is going to be controlling them
and preventing them from speaking freely.
Because I can't imagine any of them not wanting to seek asylum.
Obviously some might have children at home,
families,
some of their families already being targeted back in Iran.
So maybe they're eager to get back to try to help there and explain themselves.
But I really do fear for these girls going back, what's going to happen to them.
You know the regime.
They're unhinged.
They're brutal.
They're unhinged.
And it doesn't bear thinking about what could happen to these girls.
So I'm hoping that the rest of them get asylum before, yeah.
before they're forced to leave.
Now the fear becomes, you know, they'll come out.
If you know their tactics, what are some things that could happen?
They would target the family.
Family is first, particularly if they have children,
but women this age, they would have parents,
that would have grandparents.
And can you just imagine at any time in Iran being in the crosshairs of the regime?
Because once they've got you in their sides,
it's very difficult to have any sort of normal.
malady in your life if you're deemed some sort of collaborator with the enemy.
So that would be the great fear.
And the fear is if they go back, what will happen to them?
Will they be tortured into confessing to something?
Will they be locked up?
Will they be assaulted?
Or almost the best case scenario is they'll be forced to mouth some propaganda
that will let them off the hook.
and that's the best you can hope for.
So this is pretty, pretty grim.
Do you know who the lady was on the sideline
that had a smile on her face with her arms across?
Was she someone's mother?
That I can't tell you.
I don't know if she's a team official
or if she's a, if she's a, yeah, related to the team.
Rob, is there a way to find out who she is?
I'll see.
Yeah, I'm curious to know who she is
because if she's smiling, you know what that look to me is?
That's a look of somebody that's supporting
the girls not singing a national anthem
that she may have been a part of the decision
because why would she be smiling like that?
And why would they go to her?
Is she someone's mother?
Is she a head coach?
Is she a general manager?
Is she a decision maker?
What's going to happen to her?
Did she go back to Iran
because she's got her job on, but not fully?
She's shown some of her hair,
so I'm curious to know who she is.
Because if this is a collective decision
that was made.
Is that the same lady?
I don't think so.
I'm not sure.
Hard to tell from that.
That's the head coach.
Hard to tell from this angle.
Yeah.
It's...
It looks like they were united.
The team certainly looked united.
Those out on the field looked united.
That is her.
She's the head coach.
And there's all sorts of talking.
Australia because we've had it for several weeks now major story be this scandal with our government
bringing back the ISIS brides as they're called so these are women who left Australia often young
women very young women to travel to the caliphate to marry Islamic state fighters and now they've
had children over there so the children are obviously innocent but the majority of Australians do not
want these women back into the country.
Regardless of whether they're citizens or not,
they chose to go and join this brutal, backward, sadistic death cult.
And God knows what sort of atrocities they themselves committed over there
when Islamic State ran the caliphate,
and now that the caliphate's fallen,
they want to come back to Australia.
Well, get stuffed.
We don't want you back.
But the government is bending over backwards,
the Labor government to bring them back.
So when this issue happened and you've got these women taking this brave stand
and they weren't being helped, you know, it's like what,
we want the ISIS brides back, but we don't want to grant asylum to these women.
So, yeah, I think the government felt the heat and has now granted asylum very quickly
to those first five, but yeah, it remains to be safe, more can be saved.
And, of course, President Trump sent that message.
that was very powerful, calling on the Australian government
to take action and saying, if you don't, we will do it.
Yeah, it was impressive to see that taking place.
I thought it was very honorable and great timing
and God willing, all these girls will be fine
and their families will be fine as well as they're going through this.
Now, with Chaminet, when the war happened within 24 hours,
they killed almost everybody, right?
And I believe even they injured Mouhtab,
the son of Chomeney, who was not the...
new prime minister. I heard they injured him as well.
And you had some real nice,
sweet, this is probably the sweetest I've seen you.
Here's what you had to say to Chahmane.
I thought it was very sentimental, Rob, if you want to play this clip.
Go forward.
I'll conclude this editorial with this message to be
light supreme later.
Hedarsag,
Chok besatred,
Bessuz to Jehannanam.
Rowan.
Couldn't I put it better myself, Frit's a giant...
A great. A little bit of gibberish.
I don't have any right on to that, that's it.
Translation, you're amazing.
May you rest in peace?
No, in other words.
Cuddles.
You son of a burn in hell and Hock Vesad.
We said it's what, dirt over your head, right?
Dirt on your head.
But essentially is a message of you should feel deep shame.
But yeah, Persian sayings are like that.
When you do the literal translation, it just seems ridiculous.
But it means, yeah, Khokbakbisarid means dirt on your head.
Peders,
means really your father's a dog.
Not your mom. Yes, it's not exactly
a son of a bitch, but it's
kind of, you know, and burning
hell is universal, so that one is.
So why do you feel that way by Chominee?
Why do you feel that way? Well, because it's destroyed
hundreds of thousands, possibly millions of lives. I mean, it's not just
the people who were slaughtered,
people tortured, people
killed for political
dissent, but the
lives that have been robbed,
the Islamic Revolution
sent the country back.
You know, Iran was relatively modern, secular.
You look at the pictures of my mum,
be the same with your family.
They look like they were in any European or any American city.
You know, my mum's pictures, the last ones of her,
before the Islamic Revolution,
beehive hair and mini skirts and, you know,
and then you have this Islamist takeover.
and women are second-class citizens, they're forced to cover up.
So that's a very visible sign.
But obviously the oppression is far more broad than that.
Just freedom's gone.
You can get stone to death for adultery, for witchcraft,
for leaving the religion, for blasphemy.
I mean, it's just madness to see that happen to a country like Iran,
which means it can.
happen anywhere. And that's why
I think so many people who have fled
those sorts of countries are
super sensitive to signs of it
in the West. Because if you've already
escaped it once, you don't want to be escaping
it again. Yeah.
So
people will see this and they'll say
okay, so then why have they stayed
in power for 47 years? If it's so
evil, why is it still in power for
47 years? When you think about the Shah after
Mossadegh, when
they came in, the MI6 and the
CIA was involved and we've all heard about, I think it was called Operation Ajax, if I'm not mistaken.
And Mossadegh went and lived in a village all by himself and then the Shah came for 26 years and Iran
was great.
Was doing great.
You know, people would go to Iran.
They would travel their vacation.
So he could only hold it together for 26 years, but these guys have held it together for 47 year.
How?
Well, because they are so brutal.
It was just so recently the protests that occurred.
and they just went out and gunned down people.
They killed thousands.
So as fed up as the population is,
it takes a lot to take to the streets knowing you could be shot dead,
you could be locked up, your family targeted.
And people still showed up night after night despite the mass slaughter.
So you're going out there with a real possibility that you're going to die
or you're going to have some catastrophic outcome in your life.
So that takes a lot.
That takes a lot.
I mean, none of us living under those sorts of conditions could say for it, for sure,
whether we'd be out on the streets knowing that threat.
So that's what they do.
We've had major uprisings over that 47 years,
particularly the last couple of decades.
And each time they have just stomped them out with brutal force.
and not just killing protesters as they protesting,
it's what comes after, the arrest, the quick trials,
and then the death sentences.
I mean, all of that has such a psychological impact on the population.
Frankly, I'm surprised there are as many uprisings as there are,
given how brutal the reaction is, yeah.
You're surprised because people are willing to put their life on the line.
You are putting your life on the line.
you've worked for, lived for, your family, everything you've built. You know if you go out
on the street, not only could you be killed then and there, but your entire life could be
destroyed. If you're arrested, the consequences are catastrophic for you and your family. So
it takes a lot, it takes a lot to protest in a country like Iran. It's not like here where you've
got these blue-haired freaks who think they're oppressed and living under fascism, you know,
going out with their professionally made signs every week with some different cause.
That takes zero courage.
What we see in Iran, that's real courage.
And what are absolutely low, they are these bluehead freaks who supposedly care about oppression
and women's rights and all the things they supposedly care about,
all the humanitarian positions they say they take.
Never do they protest for people in Iran.
Never do they protest for the women in Iran.
Even when these uprisings have been female led,
the feminists here are quiet, absolutely cowardly,
gutless, principledess.
I just have no time for it.
I absolutely disgusted by the modern feminist movement
that have abandoned women living under Sharia law.
Why is that, though?
Because you'll see them come out,
and I'm curious what you'll say on this.
You'll see them come out and say free Palestine, right?
You'll see them come out doing that.
But when it comes on to the women and you see the stats of, you know, 30,000 people in Iran,
they killed their own people up to 100,000 people.
But they'll say, how do you know that?
How do you know that?
How do you know that?
But if Hamas reports that 67,000 people were killed, Palestinians killed,
no, that has to be true.
So why do you think they side with free Palestine,
but they don't side with Iranian women right now
that are being killed, raped and destroyed by their own government.
Why do you think that is?
How does that happen?
Because the feminist movement, a long time ago,
seized to be about the rights of women.
Even when you look at local issues,
the feminist movement does not stand with women
who are trying to protect female-only spaces,
female-only sports.
They're on the other side.
It is a leftist movement that is anti-Western civilization.
That's what it is more.
into, sadly.
And so they're comfortable being with Palestine,
but they can't stand with the women living under Shariah law in Iran
because they are on the same side as the mullahs,
as crazy as that sounds.
There is this unholy alliance between the left and Islamists
and the feminist movement is a part of that leftist movement.
So it doesn't make sense because the Islamists and the broad leftist movement share very little in common.
Their values are so different apart from the fact that they've got shared enemies on the right.
Now, whether you look at that as the centre right, the right wing, Republicans, Western civilizations,
those who want to protect Western values.
And I think we are in a civilizational war.
and that's where the sides have come down.
And it happens continuously.
It's not isolated with Iran.
The feminist movement will never side with women who are genuinely oppressed,
even in their own countries.
I never hear members of the feminist movement talking about the sharp rise
in things like female genital mutilation in the West,
because it's a problem in the West,
that sometimes send their girls back to certain countries,
typically in Africa, to undergo that procedure, and they come back.
And we now have even in Melbourne clinics that are devoted to dealing with the problems of FGM
because you have all sorts of issues, childbirth and post-childbirth.
So, you know, we've got that craziness happening in the West,
that absolute depravity in my mind.
And the feminists are reluctant to talk about it,
because they're more worried about Islamophobia.
They're worried if they talk about that,
it will see people being critical of Islam
and being Islamophobic.
I mean, really.
So then who is imposing that level of power and fear
for people to line up that quickly
and be afraid of criticizing Islamophobia?
Who's bringing that fear down?
Is it mainstream?
Is it political groups?
Is it propagandas?
What would it be?
Well, that sort of fear of,
being seen as Islamophobic has been so normalized. And so we just had one in the last few days,
a Islamist attack in New York. And straight away, the talk was about, oh, well, we can't have
Islamophobia and what about the other side who, I think Kathy Hochel came out and condemned both
sides. She actually did the both sides argument. And it's like, really, there's a literal
Islamist attack and your concern is about the rise in Islamophobia. It's, yeah, and this is something
that the great Hitch warned about that they will take away your right to criticize. They will take
away your right to be critical of even the extremes of Islamism. And that's what we're talking
about. We're talking about the extremes that are dangerous, that are, that they are, that they are
not compatible with Western values. They are not. You cannot coexist with Islamism and Western
values. Free speech, equal rights. You can't have that if you're also going to be tolerant of
Islamism. Why are people flirting with that idea that it could possibly happen? Why are they saying,
poor these guys, you know, what's wrong with you? You don't have a heart. Take some asylum,
you know, take some of these political refugees. I don't think they think it can happen to them. I don't
think it they think it will touch their lives. I genuinely don't. That's why you see these
gays for Palestine or LGBT, gaze for Gaza. I mean, they don't understand what the end result of
that is. They don't understand that those people loathe them with a passion. And what was I think
Mollambique in Belgium is a very good example of that, you know, it became so tolerant that
all the gays had to move out, the women didn't feel safe walking in the streets,
because that mindset came in that, yeah, you have to be covered up.
If you're overtly gay, you're probably going to be targeted in the street.
So Mollambique, I think, is known as the terror capital of Europe,
and it's a good lesson on what not to do.
in how you don't appease the worst of the worst,
you actually stand with your values.
And that's something I've always been big on
and something that people always get triggered about,
but all cultures are not equal.
And I think we should be free to say that
without fear of people having little meltdowns.
All cultures aren't equal.
And anyone who pretends otherwise is either dumb or lying.
There are no other options.
Yeah, Molenbeck is an experience.
Jihadist capital of Europe.
That's wild.
And how did this happen?
How did it become the Jihadist Capital Civil War?
I think because there was a culture of appeasement.
They just went out of their way to appease a certain population.
And appeasement just emboldens the extremists.
You don't appease.
You welcome people, but you expect from them assimilation.
If you come into the West, that you assimilate with Western values.
If you don't want to assimilate with the Western values,
then there are a number of Muslim countries you can move to.
There's a lot of countries you can move to that share your values,
but you can bring your elements of your culture that are compatible.
You can bring all the wonderful foods and music and dance.
But when we're talking about values,
if you don't believe that women are equal to men,
don't come to the West.
If you don't think people have the right to free speech
and say things that may offend you,
don't come to the West.
I think these are fairly simple concepts.
Yeah, I agree.
The question becomes, is it too late?
The question is,
will the leaders have a backbone to fight this out?
Because propaganda is going to be able to confuse people so much
to the point of it's not fair,
leave them alone, Islamophobia,
what's wrong with Mamdani?
The people voted for him for New York City.
That's what the people want.
Why are you getting you, you said it's free election,
you said freedom of religion and then that same system produces a Mamdani.
So this is some people are going to learn the hard way.
That's the problem.
Some people know.
New York City though.
New York City.
Good luck to you.
Good luck to you.
What do you think about Mamdani?
I think he's a very savvy Islamist.
I could be wrong.
Maybe he's not that extreme.
But to me, he has got that.
permanent smile fixed on his face.
It looks all very friendly and safe and someone he could be at a dinner party with.
But then you look at some of the things he has said,
some of the opinions he tolerates.
Look at who he shares his bed with, what she was liking about post-October 7.
Some of the tweets she was liking.
I mean, what is the mindset there?
What are they actually thinking?
I mean, to like something like that to me is deeply disturbing.
And for him to be fairly comfortable with it, he obviously is, he's married to her.
But even some of the things he has said over the years,
I know he tried to moderate his position on law enforcement
and a few other things during the election campaign.
But, yeah, good luck.
Good luck, New York.
You wanted it, you got it.
What do they say?
You f around and you find out.
They're going to be in the find-out component of that equation.
Well, I think they're going through it right now because they're finding out what's happening with taxes,
all the free promises that he made.
But going back to Iran.
Why would you like tweets like this?
Why?
That's his wife.
That's his wife.
This is what I'm saying.
It's not some staffer that he's never met that, you know, he's part of a big team.
This is a woman who shares his bed every night.
And that's how she thinks.
That's one of them.
If you go to the other one, there's a few of them.
This is the next one.
Yeah, great.
Intentionally kept in part.
poverty blockade occupation, often heavy military attack over half of the population of Gaza,
our children.
She likes that post, free Palestine.
And there's a couple of them.
If you go lower, this next one, resist apartheid, occupation, oppression.
She liked this one.
So some people may say the previous one, what's wrong with defending for kids, but then she's
making a very clear what her positions are.
This is a mayor of the most powerful city in America, New York City.
That's his wife.
Yep.
Good luck. Good luck. And also, he's completely economically illiterate. I mean, you saw what he was
suggesting. So never mind the ideological belief system, his commie ways, I mean, you're a savvy investor.
Would you be investing in real estate in New York right now or anything else?
Absolutely not. Nowhere near where he's at. And people are leaving as well. I mean, they're living in the droves.
this happened into California. California during COVID lost a trillion dollars of wealth where people
left. But they just recently, a number came out in the last 90 days. California's lost another
trillion dollars of wealth when they announced a wealth tax that they're leaving there. And soon,
the same thing's going to be happening to New York and they'll be going to different markets.
But the concern is this is getting to a point where the good thing about what's going on with Iran right
not everything is front and center.
So you have to ask yourself,
you either believe that the Iranian regime killed its people or you don't.
If you do, what do you think about that country?
Do they stay in power?
Do they stay the way they are?
I want to ask you this question.
Your parents, what do your mom and dad say right now?
I mean, I'm assuming your parents lived in Iran, right?
Well, yeah, they were born there that grew up there.
They were away for a few short years whilst my dad was studying.
but then they went back and then the Islamic Revolution happened.
Were they pro-Shah?
Were they pro-Komeni?
They were pro-Shah.
So that was one of the reasons why they were terrified
because my mum was the head midwife at a hospital
and she was a bit of a glamour in her day.
So when the royal family visited,
she was responsible for showing them around.
So there was a lot of footage of her and pictures of her
with the queen
and that's trouble.
And that's trouble.
I remember them burning and the photos.
Your parents burning the food.
Yeah, the ones we had in our own possession,
but the photos out there.
So that's what they were fearful of.
And then I remember there were just so many nights
where we thought that the police were coming to question
because that questioned family members,
that arrested family members, that's her at the front, yeah.
So they would then, they would not go home.
I remember, like, parking up the road
and just, like, looking at the house,
seeing if there's people in there,
people going there, people wanting to approach it.
So it was, yeah, that was,
there's some of the memories I have there,
but obviously I don't remember everything
because I was quite young,
but, yeah, they were definitely,
I'm definitely pro the Shah,
and that was one of the big fears of what would happen to them.
What did they see today?
Look, they're hopeful, but they're also not counting on the regime being defeated,
because it's on its knees.
It's as weak as it's been in 47 years.
But let's just say the campaign finishes and the year,
and the US-Israel operation is concluded,
it's then up to the Iranian people
to get rid of the last remnants of this regime.
And what if they just come out
and just crack down on them as they have
and they hold on to power for having more years?
So I don't know, I still have that fear as well,
but I think it's now more likely that the regime will go,
which is the first time in my life I've thought.
I just never thought it would happen in my lifetime.
genuinely, I thought I'll never, I'll never be able to go back. I'll never be able to take my son
there. So to do that would be a dream. Yeah, I think you and I both, I got four kids that I want to take
him and show him. You know, the streets I was raised in, the park I used to go to in Iran,
Parkishahy and Banerpaalavishamal, which is where my mother's family is from and how beautiful it was.
All the historic sites do, Iran has got such a lot of.
incredible history and architecture.
And I've been to Israel a couple of times,
and it's probably the most impressive sites that I've seen anywhere in the world.
But Iran actually has sites that rival it,
and the history there is just so rich.
And, yeah, it would be an absolute dream to take my son there and showing that.
So yesterday I was watching a clip by Newt Gingrich,
and he said there's three things that.
that Trump has to be worried about.
And he just straight one to it.
And he said, number one, you can't keep straight of Hormuz closed.
It has to be opened, right?
If you keep it closed, other people feel the pain,
it's going to be a problem for you.
They're all going to side against you.
So you have to find a way to keep straight of Hormuz open.
Number two, he said, what are you going to do with the 200,000 IRGC members
in the military that are loyalists to the IRC,
that no, there is no life after the fall.
So if Iran falls, what do they do next?
You're not going to give them a job, so what are you going to kill all of them?
And then number three is, how do you give power to the 85 million, 90 million Iranians that don't have weapons, they don't have Second Amendment, they don't have a way to protect themselves?
So they're worried about coming out because what if they kill my son?
What if they'll kill my daughter?
That's a real fear.
So how do you deal with that?
What do you actually think is going to end up happening?
This is the problem.
I think the 200,000 you mentioned, there's going to be a reckoning.
I know President Trump has said put down your own.
arms, stop killing your people and you'll be essentially given amnesty.
What does that even mean?
It's not going to be that simple.
The Iranian people who've seen their kids slaughtered and tortured and their girls raped
by these animals aren't going to just be saying, okay, clean slate.
We're all friends and let's just move on with a liberated Iran.
There's going to be, yeah, I think there's going to be some unrest to put it lightly for some
time to come and I think we just have to have an appetite for that because it's just going to
happen. You can't have 47 years of oppression and all the killing and torture that's happened
and not have some sort of a reckoning. So that's, yeah, ideally, well, not ideally, but
in a simple world, you would just have those, those goons,
look at the numbers, see that things have changed and lay down their arms,
and the country can then decide what they want to be.
Does that want them to be a monarchy?
Does it want to be a republic?
What sort of democracy wants to have?
But I think there's going to be a bit of pain before that.
By the way, you obviously have a very big fan base.
You know, when video when are they, you're going to be on,
everybody's like, oh, my God, I love Rita.
I love Reeve.
She's amazing.
I wish I was more high energy for you.
You know what?
I've been sick.
That's why I'm a little bit.
I need some caffeine.
I'm going to perk up.
You want some coffee?
Yeah, let's get me some coffee.
Can you guys get her some coffee?
Yeah, but for some of you that are watching it, that are fans, she's officially on Meneck.
So if you want to Meneck there and ask her questions, you can.
I think her QR code is going to be somewhere below here.
But let me ask you, when it comes on to political parties in Iran, who are you, are they reaching out to you?
Are they saying, hey, support us here.
if he falls, here's who we'd like.
I'm sure you'll hear Reza Pallavi's names being dropped.
And then you heard the Kurd saying,
we won't support Reza Pallavi.
Then, you know, you'll hear saying, well, what about the M.E.K?
You'll hear all these guys.
And then when you go to the State Department and he talked to people in the State
Department, some Iranians that work directly with Marco Rubio,
and you'll say, look, it has to be somebody from the inside.
It can't be somebody from the outside.
Somebody from the outside can play a role,
but it can't be somebody from the outside.
What do you like with who's going to be the replacement if IRGC goes?
Look, I think there is a big movement to have Pallavi back,
to have Reza Pallavi and have him as an interim measure
until they have elections.
But I actually don't have a firm dog in this race.
People always accuse me of being on this side or that side.
I just talk to everybody.
So I've interviewed everyone pretty much that you've talked.
about representatives from each camp.
I'd be comfortable with the Crown Prince going back
and having perhaps a six to 12-month period
where it's determined how these elections are going to be held,
what's the preferred model, and then go on from that.
So I think even in Iran from what you hear
and just from talking to people,
they seem to be open to that.
That seems to be something that there is a real,
I don't know, it could just be sentimentality.
It's the last rule they knew that was not a hideous.
So, yeah, I'm very comfortable with that.
And I know some people say, you know,
you can't go in there and install a prince.
That's just another form of oppression,
but it will be for a short period of time
until the people have their say.
And if they want more of that,
They can have more of that.
So, yeah, I'm comfortable with that model.
I just want to get rid of this Islamist regime.
I mean, Iran has gone through this, the Persian Empire.
What was it, the 7th century?
That was the first time Islam took hold.
And 1979, 47 years, that's a long time.
It's a long time to be oppressed.
So I think the people are ready.
I'm comfortable with that.
What about you? Are you comfortable with six to 12 months?
Meaning what? Transitional of what he does?
To have him in there as a figure until the details are determined?
Because you can't have an election, you know, overnight.
Well, there's two things, you know, what I think is irrelevant.
Because one is the Iranian people. They want him. That's one.
Two, you know, the U.S., if they're going to go in and do what they did to Venezuela,
you know, you have to be able to make sure you win him over, Trump over.
So if you don't win him over, what is he going to be doing?
He said the other day that he says he keeps repeating himself,
that Reza-Palab is a nice guy, but, you know, we need somebody from the inside.
I don't want somebody from the outside.
I don't know if you saw him say this or not.
He said this two weeks ago.
The problem is if you're on the inside and you're not part of the regime or controlled opposition,
you're probably in jail.
that's my problem with someone in the inside.
I know someone in the inside is smoother initially,
but I just want to be comfortable with anyone from this regime,
even on the outskirts of it being the next leader.
Yeah, I think he definitely has a place, a role to play.
I've been very critical of him many, many times,
because he's had 47 years to do it.
And this is the first time I've seen him play offense
to where he finally is, which is good.
and I think a big part of it is one, Iranian people are rising up
and two, Trumpian in power.
If it wasn't Trump, he wouldn't be able to do what he's doing.
Oh, hell no.
If it wasn't Trump in power, none of this would be happening.
Let's be honest.
None of this would be happening.
I mean, this is a leader unlike any we have seen, and perhaps we'll see.
I mean, what he has been able to achieve in almost all corners of the world,
his foreign policy achievements.
He does not get credit for that,
which I know probably bothers him,
but really this is huge achievements.
We're talking about the fall of the Berlin Wall levels of change here.
This is monumental.
And it would not be happening if it wasn't for President Trump.
There's zero doubt about that.
I mean, it's not a day I don't think about that incident.
and Butler and that turning of the head in the last millisecond.
And how different, not just America, but how different the world would be if that didn't
happen, if that miracle, he didn't just turn his head that last millisecond.
It's, it blows my mind.
It blows my mind, is the wrong expression.
Every day, every day I think about what would the world look like with Kamala or some other
imposter?
in the White House.
Yeah.
You wouldn't have Venezuela.
You wouldn't have Iran.
You wouldn't have all the peace deals that have happened.
You wouldn't have now Cuba.
The Cubans are crying out to be next.
And I think they will be.
I think that's going to be an easier one, though.
I don't think that's going to be a tough one.
They're already on their knees.
They don't need to be bombed.
They used to have protection from Soviet Union, from USSR.
But who protects Cuba today?
I don't even know who protected.
Cuba should be a knock on a door.
It should be, hey,
Hey guys, Europe's the new Puerto Rico.
Out. Let's build some hotels.
Let's get tourism going.
Communism is out.
What do you think is a bigger thing that they fought against?
Because back in the days, my mother, my mother's side, many of the members, they were part
of the two-day party.
I don't know if you remember the two-day party or not in Iran.
It was a communist party in Iran.
That's where a lot of, if you ask your mother, she'll tell you about it.
Two-day party was, these are guys that were the communists, you know, they loved what,
Stalin, Lenin, you know, Karl Marx, this was their Bible,
two-day party of Iran.
And there was a fear of communism getting bigger
to spread around the world and possibly making it to the countries,
you know, to the states, to U.S., to other places,
and in schools, they got into universities.
They did such a great job going and brainwash
in American kids in schools.
No, it is the most noble thing.
Professors all started giving the kids.
you should read Communist Manifesto, you should read Communist Manifesto.
And then fast forward today, Rob, how big is the, how many members of the Communist Party
are there in America right now?
If you do Communist Party membership in U.S., 70,000 members, no, that's 1930s, they were peaking.
If you go to charts, 20,000, right there, 20,000 membership 2024.
Okay, can you ask when was the peak?
And 1941.
Go back to that right there, Rob, where you were at?
1941, fervently supporting the war effort, the popular front era of CPUSA,
lasted until 1945, where Earl Browder was ousted from the party and replaced by a new guy.
Yeah, at one point, these guys were getting a lot of momentum.
The question I got for you is, what do you think is,
you think what's happening with Islamist and it's spreading around the world,
you think that's more dangerous than communist party or equivalent less?
What do you think about?
Because it seems like what President Trump is doing,
and he's been saying since 2015 when he said,
I would bomb the shit out of Iran.
Those are his words on what he said.
Rubio has been saying this since 2015.
Do you think this is a bigger threat than communism was back in the days?
Islamism.
That's a big call to make.
I think Islamism's,
spread through the West is more certain than communism ever was
because it's a demographic thing ultimately.
And once it starts, it's very hard to pull back.
You see that example in France where they've got, you know,
certain demographic issues and they've got so many people now
on their terror watch list that they can't actually watch them.
So once you get over a certain percentage, then you've got issues.
and just a so but to me they're two sides of the same coin that what they share in common
is a hatred of Western values and a determination to undo the West they think we are all
illegitimate countries on stolen land all that sort of rhetoric is designed to demoralize
the population and I think the leftists maybe not the communist
but it's all one movement to me,
have been the most successful in advancing their ideology.
The march through the institutions, as they called it,
and it started with academia, but it's everywhere now.
This leftist mindset, it's in the corporate world.
I mean, we saw that during the BLM riots, the Summer of Love,
where every corporate, big corporate was coming out
with some pro-BLM,
stance and you know you saw the the influence the normalization of what was a new and he's a neo-marxist
group vehemently anti-Western values so to me there's the two sides of the same coin they share
a common goal and that's why they work together even though they really don't share too many
other values um but it's everywhere it's no longer just schools it's in the corporate
The HR departments have been taken over by this sort of ideology.
And people are self-censoring.
In Australia, there are so many people who come up to me and say,
you know, I want to say what I think, but I'm too scared.
They're even too scared to post it on their own Facebook page
because, you know, their green-haired niece might, you know,
abuse them or not show up to Christmas dinner.
So we had...
How nasty is it over there?
How is it walking on actual?
It is. It is a little bit because our calibre of our politicians is different. So we've had what you would call rhinos or in the UK, the Tories who governed like they were in the Labour Party. We've had that sort of conservative for a long time. So just in the last few months in Australia, we've had the really the mainstreaming of a group called One Nation who've been a political party for decades, but always a very
small vote, sort of under 10%, around 5, 6, 7%.
Now, in some of our polls, they're winning the polling.
They're coming in ahead of Labor and the coalition, which is the liberal and nationals,
who are supposed to be the right side of the political spectrum.
And that's because people are just so sick of these, you know, conservative in name only,
who don't actually stand for anything who make a few noises and then when they get into power,
they let the bureaucracy run rampant and the swamp, as you call it,
and just implement leftist policies.
So that's why one nation has had this enormous surge.
It's a really fascinating time in Australia for politics
to see if that's just going to fracture the right vote
and keep the left in power
or whether those forces come together and actually win government.
We've got preferential voting in Australia,
also fairly unique. It's not something, so you don't just vote one for your choice, you number
them. So if you've got eight candidates in your seat, you'll number one from eight.
Oh, you gotta be kidding me. Can I just put one or I have? No, you have to number them. It's actually
a fairly idiotic system when I think of it. I used to think you had its benefits, but it actually
is not a great system. You much rather have a first-past-the-post system like the UK does. So, yeah, so, you
you have to number them so if i vote for an independent as my first vote and they don't get up
then my second preference my vote goes into my to that into their bundle and and so on so
it's it's a complicated system but who else uses that system i can't even tell you who else
uses it could be a uniquely australian flavor i'm sure someone else would you have a preferential
system no interesting not only do we have a preferential system get this
We have compulsory voting.
You will be fined if you don't vote.
So you have to participate in elections,
whether they're at the federal level,
state or local government.
So we've got three levels of government,
and you are obliged by law to participate in it.
You will be fined if you do.
You will be fined, yes.
I've had fines.
I've had to write in and say,
I wasn't in the country.
Give me a break.
How much are you?
What kind of fines is it?
Oh, it's not criminal.
fines, but it'll be like around $100, I think.
Do you find you if you don't vote?
Yeah.
What percentage?
Three elections we have to voting, too.
It's not just the one election.
We've got state, federal, and local governments.
Each of the elections you don't vote for, you get fined.
Yep.
And the elections are at different times.
So the federal election obviously is the whole country,
and then we will have state elections and local elections, which are the local government.
And again, there was a period where I thought, oh, that's not so bad because it gets people involved
and you have greater participation rates and perhaps the government is more reflective of the population
because everyone's voting so you get a more representative.
No, that's actually not the case because you've got people voting only because of the fear of the fine.
So they're not actually, you know, they have no knowledge.
And we have something called the donkey vote where people,
will just go 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 on their ballot.
So it's, you know, very advantageous to be the number one on the first name
because you get the benefit of the donkey vote.
You get the people who go 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, yeah.
Just to do it quickly, just so I'm going to be...
That's a donkey vote.
What percentage do to do the donkey vote?
I don't know.
It wouldn't be that much.
Probably be 5, 10%, but that would be enough for some elections, I would imagine.
So you have to vote for three elections per year?
Not per year. Federal elections, Victoria where I'm from, we have state elections every four years,
and then federal elections are normally around every three years, and then you've got the local ones as well.
The local ones, I think, are the worst to participate in because at least with your federal and state elections,
you've got some knowledge of who you're voting for and the policies to advocate.
the local government elections, even I'm pretty politically engaged.
Half the time I don't know the names on the ballot for the local government
or who they are, what they stand for.
So it's completely a absurd thing to require me to vote, but it is what it is.
So yeah, we have freedom in Australia, but not freedom to refuse to vote.
You have to vote.
That's interesting.
Is it a, do you require IDs when you go to?
to vote? How easy is it to vote? Is there voter fraud in Australia? How does that work?
I think it's pretty good. You could commit voter fraud if you went to multiple polling boots
and gave the same name because they cross off your name. But, you know, there should be checks
and balances to see if the same name's been crossed off. But I do wonder how thorough those checks
and balances is. So it could happen, but it's, I think, unlikely. Yeah, we don't have, it's a much
simpler system and the Australian Electoral Commission is pretty sound in policing it.
There has been some accusations of them becoming politicized with a couple of different things over
the years, but overall they're pretty sound and there's high confidence that the elections
are free and fair, that we're not having the sort of issues you have here.
Is this true, right?
It says in federal elections in Australia, voters generally do not need to show photo-
You need to give your name and they've got to vote a role with the names of people who are in that electorate.
But not an ID needed.
No.
And if you're voting in a, if you're an absentee voter, I guess it's called when you're voting in a polling booth, that's not your electorate, then you go to a different section and it's a little bit more involved.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, they're trying to do voter ID here.
I think you need it here because you've got all sorts of issues here, particularly post-COVID.
where you have the mass mail in voting that isn't so much of an issue in many other countries.
Did you see the voter ID CNN did it, Paul? Do you have that, Rob?
CNN did a video, Harry Anton, talking about how Americans feel.
I send it to my notes if you want to go to it, right?
I've seen that. And you know what? It is overwhelming.
Even amongst the population that we're told is going to be disadvantaged.
I think it was over 70% of African Americans or blacks who wanted voter ID.
And it's a massive percentage of Democrats wanted, I think overall it's over 80% of the population wants it.
I mean, my God, how much more?
Oh, we go, 71% of Democrats, 95% of Republicans.
Pleaded a clip-wrote.
The racial breakdown on this, right?
Because I think a lot of people make the argument that people of color,
non-white Americans have a harder time procuring a photo ID to vote. But even here, take a look here,
favor photo ID to vote. Seventy-five percent of white people's favorite. 82 percent of Latino,
76 percent of black Americans favorite. So the bottom line is this. Voter ID is not controversial
in this country. A photo ID to vote is not controversial in this country. It is not controversial
by party and it is not controversial by race. The vast majority of Americans agree with Nikki Minaj
that in fact you should have a photo ID to be able to vote.
A vast majority.
I love how Nikki is now, Chief Political Analyst, no, she is.
And you know what?
I don't know if you've seen this video.
It's got a lot of views.
Army Horowitz, excuse me, he's a regular on my show.
He went to some, where was he?
He was in California and New York,
and he was, you know, talking to some fairly affluent looking,
in affluent areas,
It's talking to white folk about voter ID and almost all of them.
Oh, it's racist.
It's this.
And the bigotry of low expectations with these people,
they are so racist that the woke elite are the most openly racist people,
I think, in this country.
They really are.
And they're almost blind to, you know, just this suggestion that blacks are too dumb
or too impoverished, too just out of touch to be able to get ideas.
and then Army went into a black neighborhood and asked them the same question and they just looked at him like he was absolutely retarded.
They're like, what do you mean we don't have ID?
Like what?
They were insulted by the mere suggestion that it was hard to get ID.
So, yeah, that was a clip I paid recently because, yeah, it's always timely.
And I think he filmed this actually a few years ago, but yeah, as relevant now as ever.
Yesterday, I don't know what it was, Rob.
I don't know if you can find this or not.
Elon retweeted something about a guy going after Chuck Schumer
because Chuck Schumer said something like, you know, it's unfair.
You're making it difficult for people to vote.
You're making difficult for people to do this.
And he went after him.
I don't know if you have that clip.
You can play this clip as well briefly.
Go for it.
It is the same thing that was done in the South for decades
to prevent people of color from voting.
See, this is what my righteous anger
pop up because I know what he's saying is a lie.
I live in the South.
I've been living in the South my whole life on the Gulf Coast.
I go to vote every single time there's an election.
And guess what?
I show my ID.
I write my signature.
They check to make sure who I am.
I go vote.
No problems.
Nobody asking me any questions.
Nobody making me count the jelly beans in the jaw.
And quit lumping us in the people of color category.
We're black Americans and we are citizens.
And nobody is taking away our right to vote.
What they're doing is they're using black people, going back in the past,
provoking emotional manipulation because they know if they say Jim Crow or slavery,
black people are going to be like, oh, my God, he's right.
They're coming against us.
This has nothing to do with you, black people.
Wake up.
People of color he's talking about is illegal migrants.
They don't have IDs.
That's their new voting base.
Letting these people use you.
I've been having an ID since I was 15 years old.
You can stop it right there.
Common sense.
just makes it out, right, to the market,
and then they have to try to defend it.
I mean, can you imagine any issue,
other than, I guess, the trans issue
with the excesses of the trans movement,
any issue where you've got over 80% of the population on one side,
and yet you've got the Democrats willing to die on this heel,
saying no, we're going to stand against this.
So why would they do that?
Why would they stand against a policy
where more than 70% of their vote,
are pro-voter ID, where over 80% of the general populate,
you would only do it if there's some benefit in not having voter ID,
which is you're cheating.
Why else would you take a position that is so unpopular?
They're not dumb.
They're liars.
There's a difference.
And I think you've just got to call it out.
I don't know if it's going to be remedied, though,
because it's so difficult to fix this once it's...
They get this.
It's so massive in America,
if they pull this off.
If they pull off the voter ID,
it is so massive for America moving forward.
And they will be panicking because they will be
losing the control.
The business model of bringing illegal immigrants in
and opening up the borders will not work anymore.
What do you do with them now?
Yeah.
And you know what?
A lot of the migrants that they've counted on,
the ones who came here legally,
and they just thought we've got voters for life.
They're Hispanic.
they're going to be voting for us.
Well, no, as with a lot of other migrant groups,
including Asian Americans,
they're socially conservative,
they're aspirational.
They are not natural Democrat voters.
And I think Trump has been just so enormously successful
in winning them over.
I don't know, future Republican presidential candidates
will have the same success he's had,
but he's shown that they're not lifelong Democrat voters.
That's such, again, another huge achievement for President Trump
because I think that's completely changed the thinking of a lot of political analysts
who just thought, oh, yeah, look at the demographics of this area.
This seat goes no, no longer.
And it's something I think in Australia and in the UK,
the Conservative side needs to appreciate a lot more
that you need to reach out to these migrant communities
because they are your voters.
if you just pay a little bit of attention.
They are socially conservative.
They don't want their kids indoctrinated
with this crazy bullshit at school.
They don't want to be crippled with taxes.
They want to build wealth.
They want to have financial security
and they want to have traditional family values.
And no parties on the left represent those things.
By the way, this is Chuck Schumer.
This is one of the clips.
How long has this idiot been in power?
Oh, longer than you and I have been alive.
I know.
This is, I mean, there's this thing.
to be said about term limits, isn't there?
Yeah. Rob, you have this? Go for it.
Let's admit the truth.
Everywhere people go, they're asked for a Social Security card.
In fact, one way to prove you're a bona fide person who can have a job
is to ask for a driver's license and a Social Security card.
This is an anti-fraud amendment.
All over where we go, people say, well, why can't you stop illegal immigrants or others
from coming here?
number one answer we give our constituencies. When they come here, they can get jobs, get benefits
against the law because of fraud. What they are proposing in this so-called Save Act is like Jim Crow 2.0.
Let's admit the truth. Everywhere. It's politics, right? They're playing politics and...
But they're playing politics. He is taking a position he knows three in four Democrat voters are
against because he knows they're getting a benefit from those illegal votes.
Otherwise, you wouldn't.
Why would you do it?
Why would you take, I mean, it normally takes a real bravery to take a position that a minority
supports.
And you would only do it if you're getting a benefit.
And so they know they're getting a benefit.
I don't know how big that benefit is, but it must be significant for them to die on
this hill.
By the way, what do you think about what happened with Australia,
the 4.7 million social media, the kids under age of 16 that can't have social media.
The UK is doing this now.
UK's doing it as well.
What do you think about that?
Oh, look, we've got something called the East Safety Commissioner.
She is an American.
And she is anti-Trump, anti-conservative.
To me, she is a massive political,
activist who is using that position to push her belief system.
So Julie Inman Grant is the name of the East Safety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant.
She's said some very troubling things over the years about free speech.
And she's in charge of that.
So anything she touches automatically dubious about.
The Office of the East Safety Commissioner, and she's the East Safety Commissioner,
was designed to protect children from online predators,
from what's happening online that can target them.
It's morphed into something entirely different.
It's now, she tried to, for example, get the video of a bishop in Australia
being stabbed in a alleged Islamist terror attack.
She tried to get that removed from the entire internet,
not just from Australia, but from around the world.
So Elon Musk actually took her to court and ended up winning on that one.
She has taken down tweets from breastfeeding advocates saying men can't breastfeed.
Stop it.
No, she's, I mean, when I say she's a political activist,
there's no doubt in my mind she is a political activist.
That's her.
And I think.
people see, particularly in Europe, that can affect America's First Amendment rights by putting
controls on X via European laws and laws perhaps in Australia, because if these social media
companies don't play ball, they can get hit with crippling fines. We're talking hundreds
of thousands of dollars a day, I think. So that's, yeah, that's one of the
the things to consider.
So again, this under 16 social media ban,
a lot of well-meaning people were in support of it thinking,
you know, kids can be free of their devices,
the online bullying, all the perils that come with
being on social media 24-7.
Oh, she was the one that said,
remove the Marmari Emmanuel stabbing.
Yeah.
The Syrian past.
Yeah.
Well, do you know the story behind it?
What happened?
He was on this podcast, came here from Australia, did the podcast.
He made a couple comments about my Jesus and your prophet, Muhammad.
And he criticized that the next week he goes back to preach.
And a 19-year-old who saw the podcast went and stabbed him in the eye.
And while he got stabbed in the eye, he prayed for the kid that stabbed the guy in the eye.
This is Bishop Marmari Manuel.
That was a miracle, the fact that he didn't die, that I think the night.
was a flick knife and it didn't come out properly or there was something so he was injured certainly but
but he lost one of his eyes and they yeah that was um so this was her doing so she yeah she wanted
and it did come down and it was something that Elon Musk actually um but if you don't have someone
like an Elon Musk then you know that the power to just strike down what you don't like is
and everything she has struck down seems to be from one side.
And so, yeah, so though some well-meaning people were supportive, that under 16,
I think it's very sinister.
I think it's got all sorts of unintended or perhaps intended consequences that come with it
that are no good.
I mean, to have kids not be available on YouTube.
I mean, are you kidding me?
They can access porn sites, but they can't access X or YouTube or Instagram.
I think that's a parental decision, not something the government should be enforcing.
Our guy in the back right now is probably doing backflips, Humberto, is fully on the same page with you on that.
By the way, this Julie lady that you're talking about, when she graduated from college, she got a job to work at CIA.
And she turned it down.
And then she went to work at Microsoft from 1990 as their government affairs manager and then moved to Australia to work still.
for Microsoft and then she went into government and then you know the rest of the system.
And she was appointed by a terrible, terrible liberal government.
So in Australia when we say liberal, we actually mean the right wing.
So it's the opposite to here.
So we've got the liberal national coalition who's supposed to be the center right.
But often, like I said, they have been liberal in name only
and they will make decisions like appointing this activist.
and I think it's been absolutely disastrous.
She's now lost, there was another woman who took her to court recently,
just this mum, a single mum who's had two years of her life
really taken over by these sort of legal issues
because she posted something about this pro-trans activism,
this radical gender theory that was being taught to primary school kids
and she made a post about this shouldn't be taught to primary school kids
and the safety commissioner struck it down said no
this post needs to be removed this lady fought her won
the safety commissioner Julian McGrath then appealed it using taxpayer funds
and so this woman then had to go to I think the next step was the federal court
and she won there again so but I mean tax guts to do that
No one wants to be in legal fights, the costs, the stress, the whole.
But, yeah, this is what we're dealing with in Australia.
So you've got the First Amendment here.
We don't have it.
Do you ever get in trouble?
First of because you're pretty vocal.
So do they ever come after you?
Yeah, they'll come after me with, they try to silence you through different measures
using lawfare and codes.
And the most recent one that was actually chucked out.
That was someone tried to take me to the Australian Human Rights Commission
was saying something that they deemed to be, I think, Islamophobic,
which was ridiculous.
It was post-October 7, so, yeah, good luck to them.
But it is, it is, the lawfare is an issue.
The law fair is an issue.
Why do you live there instead of here?
Because you're dual citizenship, so.
I should be, oh, I don't know.
I don't know.
I think ultimately I'll be here.
I just always thought that from when I was a little girl.
I always thought I'll eventually live in America.
So that's still in the back of my mind.
So yeah, we'll see.
Yeah.
Half the problem is where do you live?
There's so many good places you could go.
I mean, I love Florida.
There's quite a few places.
I love in Florida.
I love Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas.
I mean, how do you pick?
It's hard.
It's a good thing, though.
You got choices.
You got choices.
But when you've got a free choice where you don't have like
family or some, you know, job that's keeping you in a particular location, it can be overwhelming
the choice. Well, if you're an Islamist communist, New York City could be a great choice.
Well, yeah, maybe I'll just go back to my Iranian roots and move to Manhattan.
Just going to go. That's it. I'm going to go to New York. No, but, you know, for us, I mean,
I lived, I lived in L.A. for 24 years and then I lived in Dallas for five years.
Nice. Love Dallas. I love Fort Worth more than Dallas. Dallas, I don't know. Seems a be
We lived in Plano. We lived in Plano.
Oh, okay. So Plano, it's Dallas, but it's, you know, 10 miles north, 20 miles north.
I love McKinney and...
McKinney's great.
And what's that? Great Vine and Brambrie.
There's a lot of places around Dallas.
Do you go to Dallas a lot?
I go to Texas a bit. I love Texas. I love Texas Road Tree.
But like, I love the little towns. They're my favorite.
The ones, the little towns next to the big towns, I find the best parts of America.
We fell in love with Plano.
Yeah.
If it wasn't for the love for the love for...
for water, we would have probably stayed in plain.
The same Texas lacks is good beach.
I've got, yeah, that beach ain't good.
You're not going to go to Galveston.
You're not going to go to Houston, Galveston Beach,
and seeing stuff that I shouldn't even say right now on the podcast.
But, no, Florida, the good thing about here, he's have to know.
When the president is done, being a president,
he's going to be coming back and living in Palm Beach.
So what's happening right now to Miami, Fort Lauderdale Palm Beach,
It's insane.
It's a beautiful.
And I love the Florida panhandle.
That's my favorite little part of Florida.
Really?
Have you been up there much?
Which city?
I love seaside, watercolor,
rosemary beach, sea grove.
That's all like all together.
And they are just so beautiful.
The beaches are so spectacular.
Click on the map.
Click on the map.
And the homes are,
there's just a uniformity with the homes.
Oh yeah, Panama City.
I love.
love it there. Which is glorious. I think seaside is actually where they filmed the Truman show,
perhaps. Yeah, it is. And so they've got, you know what, I normally don't like mad bureaucracy,
but there, they must have rules around what you can build, but everything is beautiful.
And, and, you know, so Rosemary Beach is sort of a bit more European feel,
whilst water color is just all white and white house. So who knows, maybe we'll have you in Florida.
everywhere. Maybe we'll have you in Florida.
Panhandle. I could be very happy there, but it is
stupidly expensive even for Australian.
Because, you know, Australian house prices are crazy.
How crazy?
Are crazy.
Like, you look at, Australians look at Miami even and go
just salivate at what you can get for your money.
It's, like if you want to buy a one-bedroom apart
in a good part of Sydney, you will spend over a million dollars.
Like you have to.
For a one bedroom.
For a one bedroom apartment, probably no parking, yeah.
You want to be in Volclus, Stubble Bay, Point Piper.
Like if you want to be one of the nice suburbs of Sydney
and you're going to get into the cheapest property in that suburb,
you're still going to pay over a million dollars.
Where's that?
I don't even know what Warnbro is.
That would be out in a country.
Well, that's Rob's area.
Rob likes Warrenboro.
Oh, is this in Australia or here?
Yes, Australia.
I've never even heard of it.
There must be some country town.
I don't know what.
I don't know where you found it.
Sort of maps and type in Walbro, Australia.
But even if you buy property in the country,
you are spending a lot of money.
Warmbro is in, oh yeah, look at you, middle of nowhere.
Rob, what are you doing, Rob?
You're like, what, over an hour from Perth?
He's trying to be a realtor in Australia.
Oh, my God.
If you want to look, have a little bit.
look at the cheapest property, say, in Vaucluse or Point Piper or Double Bay.
Look at the cheapest property in Double Bay. Double Bay you might find an apartment for like
$7,000,000, if you're lucky. If you're super lucky, a studio.
Is it allow you to say double bay? Rob, just type in double bay into filters.
It's gorgeous part of the world, but yeah, it's crazy, expensive.
So the median house price in Sydney is over a million.
That includes all the outer suburbs.
So, like, you know, so that's the median.
Okay, so if we find, okay, they're all houses.
We're not going to be able to afford those.
Let's just find there's an apartment.
We can, yeah, that's not going to be affordable.
We're going to be homeless at this stage.
It's not working for us.
We're going to be homeless.
So, yeah, something like that would be at least $10 million.
Oh, really?
Yeah, at least.
Elizabeth Bay, similar.
Interesting.
So a lot of wealth is there for people to be able to afford that, right?
Well, a lot of wealth, but there's a lot of massive mortgages.
So Australia, people are comfortable taking out insanely massive mortgages.
That will take them 30 years to pay off because that's how you have to.
into the housing market.
But even if you buy properties in the outer suburbs, it's still, yeah.
So when it says about $690,000 for a new home loan nationally, that's nationally.
So that's the cheap areas.
That's a warm bro where he likes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So average mortgage in New South Wales in here is $8,000.
That's a lot.
Holy moly.
Yeah.
828. That's insane to have that type of prices.
So when...
So Australians work to pay off mortgages.
If you're buying a property,
it's, yeah, it's an...
And in Victoria, where I am,
so Victoria used to always be second most expensive
after New South Wales or Sydney.
And it used to be very close, Sydney, Melbourne.
But we've had a very hard left government in Victoria.
and it's done some bad things to our property prices.
The rest of the country has been going up.
We've been stagnating, even going backwards sometimes.
You're not really selling people to move to Australia.
Are people leaving Australia or no?
No, because it is a peaceful country.
It's a prosperous country relatively.
So it's a great place to leave.
But this current federal government we have is very left.
They're making as a living standards have dropped.
In fact, I think in the OECD, we have had the biggest drop in living standards in recent years
because of some of the policies that have been implemented there.
We went insane with COVID, particularly the state I live in Victoria.
Melbourne had six lockdowns, the most anywhere in the world.
And, you know, that's crippling.
That's crippling for your economy.
You can print as much money as you like, but you're going to feel the effects.
So, yeah, as Australia is experiencing significant.
record breaking decline in living standards.
So yeah, that's not ideal.
No, that's not.
Yeah, I'm not selling it well, am I?
But no, still come.
Come, come spend your money, all of it.
By the way, is it true that Pierce used to be with Sky News and then you came?
Yes.
Did you see Pierce and Dave Rubin are having a massive fire online?
I saw that overnight.
I was surprised.
I was surprised by how personally got.
Right.
Yeah.
because Pierce was on Rubin's show, and I know Dave Cobbwell,
and Dave told him why he doesn't like to do the show
and what it's kind of devolved into.
And Pierce didn't say anything back.
He was kind of understanding,
and then it's got all ugly online.
I'm like, just duke it out whilst just sitting opposite each other.
Well, Dave said something back.
He says pretty sure Megan got some of the Botox.
Well, yeah, that was not going to help this.
His mother to a jihadist for a claim.
Everything else.
Okay.
All right.
That's pretty bad.
So that comment.
And then from there, Pierce got into it.
Four months ago, I drove out to Rubin's podcast at his home in Miami, personal favor because he's done my show many times.
I thought we were friends.
How wrong could I be?
What a treacherous little weasel.
Treacherous.
Yeah.
Yeah, they've gone.
They've gone.
So what do you think about this whole Israel thing?
Because that last sentence, right, being Netanyahu's useful, idiot, has sent him and Shapiro nuts.
every time this Israel Netanyahu comes,
people on both sides lose their mind.
Why do you think that is?
Look, we're talking about this in Melbourne recently.
I was with a group of members of the Jewish community.
It was a function.
And we talked about this,
and I've talked to Jewish friends about this a lot recently,
because there is this fracture on the right
where an increasing number,
are anti-Israel, you would say,
or at least very cynical about Israel,
I would say, rather than anti-Israel,
cynical about Israel.
And it's something I think the Jewish community,
certainly in Australia is very much aware of
and something that some of them understand what's behind it.
I think there's a lot of factors,
but yeah, I think it's a real concern for them
because they know where the left stands on this issue.
The left have made it very clear,
particularly post-October 7 where they stand.
And to maintain support on the right,
I think they have to change the tactics a little bit.
And again, I'm generalising here when I say they,
I'm talking about the lobby in general,
but this cancellation, if anybody,
says something that is a little bit different to what you want or is a little bit critical of
whether it's Netanyahu or Israel's stated position to, I think there's been an eagerness by
some, not by all, by some, to immediately attack that position as anti-Semitic.
And I think that's really counterproductive.
And I think that's behind some of the sentiment we've seen where people are, um,
not happy with people being cancelled or attempting to cancel people
because they have taken a position that the lobby may not agree with.
I think it's just unhelpful.
And I think I don't like the principle of it.
I think people should be able to say what they want,
unless you're threatening or saying something that breaches the law,
then counter it with arguments.
don't counter it with trying to get their advertisers cancelled
or try to de-platform them as some sort of, you know,
undesirable who cannot be reasoned with.
I think there's just been a little bit of that
from certain segments of the community
that has been really counterproductive.
I've seen it here in particular, but also in Australia.
so. But yeah, there is this growing wing of the right that is becoming more and more hostile
towards Benjamin Netanyahu in particular. It is interesting and I think it's something that
Republicans have got to be aware of. You can't ignore it. You ignore it at your peril. I still
think it's a small minority though, because there's so much talk about MAGA's fractured and it's
disintegrating and there was another poll recently against CNN.
98% of MAGA stands with Trump.
So if that's a fracture, then that's pretty well.
That's a pretty well handled.
July 2025 when they showed that.
That clip is from July 2020.
I've seen that clip when they showed it.
It'll be, you know, the one thing with him is,
he is a guy that gets ahead of it.
He watches all the numbers.
He watches all the polls.
I mean, I just don't understand some on the right who say, I'm not voting for Republicans,
or even before the election they were saying, not voting for Trump.
What are you then backing?
I mean, he may not be as pure ideologically as you want,
but look at what he's done.
What other Republican would have achieved half of that?
And what would have Kamala done?
I mean, that mindset, I do not understand.
I can fully understand if you've got some rhino that you don't want to vote for, go for it.
But if Trump is not strong enough for you, then I don't know what he is.
I mean, there's things he says or does that I don't agree with,
but you're never going to have 100% in agreement with anybody.
Did you ever do Pierce's show?
Did he ever do your show or you guys have a...
Well, Pierce, I must have.
have done his show at some point. I mean, I took over his time slot at Sky News, so he was with us.
And I think he had a fairly long-term contract. I think it was like five years from memory.
And then after a year or so, he went off and did his own thing. And so, yeah, I took over his
time lot, sought in Australia. But it was a show he did that also ran in the UK. So I don't
know who took it over in the UK. But I've never done this current,
version of his program, which is very shouty.
Very shouty, yes.
Very shouty, which is what I think Dave Rubin was objecting to.
I don't mind the shoutiness.
I mean, I see clips every now and then, and I find it amusing.
Some of it's quite funny.
I think someone's going to do it.
Someone's got to do it.
And I think Pierce is the right guy to do it because Pierce is not afraid to get out there and
wrestle with the pigs and then go talk to a guy that's running for all.
office and then go talk to a president, go talk to
Ronaldo. I think he's talented.
He's made for TV. So whatever people want to say,
the guy was made for TV, period.
But I think this product
is ideally suited
for him, because like you said, he can moderate
it, but he can also moderate it
with also
stating his own opinion. So he's not
just, yeah. He's fearless. But
you know, Ben Shapiro made the video
about him. I think Ben said
something about him, and then, you know, Ben and Dave Rubin
are part of the same camp. And there
on the same page. And Pierce, I don't know if Pierce is part of any camp. I think Pierce is a stand-alone guy.
You know what, Pierce to me is not a conservative. To me, he's a genuine centrist because there are
some things. He's very conservative. I agree. And other issues where he's very much on the left.
So to me, he is a genuine centrist where his political belief sort of spread over the whole
spectrum. I mean, during COVID, Pierce and I would have been very much on opposite sides of the
arguments. We would have had some shouting matches if he had the program back then.
He was pro-vaccine. Look, he was very pro-everything. He was pro-lockdown. He was bloody
getting upset with people who were breaching these irrational laws that existed in Australia and the UK.
I mean, the stuff we had in Australia was so insanely idiotic.
It beggars belief that people accepted it and people did accept it.
That really changed my view of Australia, I think, forever because I never saw us like that.
I never saw us as so compliant and so scared because there was the scare campaign.
It was across the media.
across all levels of government and people fell into line.
So in Victoria, you couldn't go fishing.
You couldn't play golf.
They banned playgrounds for a period.
So kids couldn't go and play in playgrounds.
They had a five-kilometer radius around your property that you could go to.
So there was only for a period?
Five kilometres.
So, I don't know, three and a half miles that you could.
If you went outside of that,
you'd get a fine.
That's not amazing.
Big fine.
We had curfews.
We had to be home by a certain hour,
I think it was like 9pm.
It was something quite early.
And we also had only an hour
you could be outside exercising per day.
And the safest place was outside.
The safest place was to be outside.
And all these crazy rules
that I'm sure you had some states here in California, New York,
where you could be in restaurants,
but you could only take your mask off at the table.
If you got up to walk, you had to put your mask on.
Or, you know, like just so many irrational, insane laws
that no thinking person could look at and go,
this makes sense to reduce the spread of the disease,
but people accepted it.
We had border closures between states.
So we had people trapped between state lines,
not able to go home for months.
People living in caravan parks.
We have people who
whose family member was dying
and they couldn't go across a state border
to say goodbye, see them one last time
because they weren't allowed.
The state borders were closed.
So if you went from,
if you want to go from Victoria to New South Wales,
you either were not allowed
or you'd have to go into quarantine.
I mean, the laws we had in Australia
were Chinese Communist Party level crazy.
and particularly in Victoria,
that was the epicenter of the COVID scare in Australia.
Who does Australians look at their enemies or competitors?
You know, because we have our own.
Every country has one.
Who does Australia look at it as their enemy?
Enemy, like we have a rivalry,
a friendly rivalry with New Zealand being next door.
We have the whole Anzac history, Australian, New Zealand.
China, I guess, is seen as.
a threat because they're in our region they would be looking at us they've bought huge amounts
of land there so yeah there's obviously a concern about China and its global ambitions and
how aggressive it can be so there's always an effort to with the smaller countries in the
South Pacific to have them on our side as opposed to have them being brought off by China
so China is obviously seen as a bit of a threat
but also it's such a, you know, huge economic power that we use.
I mean, a lot of our exports go there.
That would probably be the main one, really.
There's really nothing else in our region.
Indonesia is very close to us, but I think we see Indonesia as pretty friendly.
Australians go to Bali, probably more so than any other country
that's in our area for holidays.
maybe New Zealand would be more.
But yeah, so I think China is the only one
that immediately comes to mind there.
Interesting.
And there's a real love-hate relationship with America
because our media is so hideous
when it comes to reporting on America.
It's just imagine MSNBC, CNN, Guardian,
regurgitated across the board.
That's the media coverage of US politics.
So you've got Australians genuinely,
worried about some of them coming for a holiday to America because they think, you know,
it's living under fascism.
You've got some of that sort of misinformation that's been spread.
But, yeah, there's a real affinity with America as well.
I mean, we share so much.
Very cool.
I saw you made some comments about James Tellerico.
What do you think about it?
James.
James.
Tellerico. Oh, yes. The liberal Obama
looking guy that's Christian and he's going to do amazing things. He gives me a creeps.
Really? Really? The left loves him. I don't know. He just kind of, you know,
some people just, you immediately kind of
on edge about them. That could be unfair because I am judging a book by its cover there,
but everything that comes out of his mouth is disturbing to my mind.
I don't know how the Democrats think Texans are going to embrace someone who says God is non-binary
and that what he loves most apart from his own family are trans children.
Like what a weird thing to say.
To me he's just a weirdo.
And this is the thing amongst the left.
You know what?
They have so much going for them when it comes to the culture.
They've got the whole culture.
They've got Hollywood.
They've got the mainstream media.
They've got pretty much every sort of.
of, you know, social media platform other than X.
They should be in power perpetually,
but they just cannot help themselves being bat-shit crazy.
They get crazy and then they get crazier.
Right.
And if it wasn't for that, if they could just at least pretend to be normal,
they would probably be in power uninterrupted.
Does they have everything going for them as far as the media is concerned?
And by the way, this is like, you ever see those clips, Rob, of how,
these Miss America or Miss Universe
Ask her,
What do you think about World P?
You know,
you know,
and they say the dumbest things.
This was his moment.
Remember the MAPS question for,
I think it was Teen Miss USA.
That was great.
What is that?
Well,
a girl was asked about,
something about MAPS
that she gave the most convoluted,
crazy answer.
Maps?
It was about MAPS, wasn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
That one.
This one?
Oh, this girl.
Oh, South Carolina. Yeah, I've seen this. This is the best one. Go ahead, Rob.
Some Americans can't locate the U.S. on a world map. Why do you think this is?
I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because some people out there in our nation don't have that.
And I believe that our education, like such as South Africa and the Iraq, everywhere like such as.
Why is she mentioning South Africa?
Should our education over here in the U.S. should help the U.S.
or should help South Africa and should help Iraq in the Asian country.
I mean, it's like, stop, babe.
Can you imagine parents are like, honey, I'm begging you.
She's just saying words at this point.
Is that Mario Lopez?
Yes.
I love to look at this face.
Look at that.
By the way, this was her moment.
Now watch James Tilarica.
moment with his answer.
It's a similar answer, but watch.
Something that you love that's not family or friends.
I love, I'm just saying this because it's on my mind,
the trans children who showed up yesterday at the state capital
to advocate for their humanity.
They shouldn't have to, but it was an inspiration to watch.
Oh.
Great, yeah.
So what I mean about creepy, that's Exhibit A right there.
I mean, a lot of people are getting behind them.
They're like, hey, you know, this is.
They got behind Beto, Beta.
What the hell was his name?
Beto Oro O.
Yeah, Texas.
I think he's that 2.0.
Okay.
Well, actually, we already had a 2.0, maybe 3.0.
I just think he's going to be a media sensation.
They're going to pump him up.
I just can't see him getting elected.
If he gets elected, then, wow, there's some real problems.
Did you think Mom Dani would get elected?
I did, because New York is.
are crazy. So, like, you keep electing crazy. You get crazy. And I have very little sympathy for them.
I really do. Because, like you said, it was a democratic process. It wasn't foisted upon them.
It's not Iran. They chose that. Good luck. But I do worry about states like Texas and even Florida,
though the last election showed it's not such an issue here yet. That you got this influx of
New Yorkers and Californians.
And sadly, many of them will keep voting the same way,
backing the same sort of politicians who are ruined their home state.
And it's going to be an issue.
And I think it's going to be an issue as far as New Yorkers are concerned
because a lot of them are leaving.
Have you got Zuckerberg's just moved to Florida too?
In April, I think he's going to move down here.
He bought a small place for $174 million.
Wow.
Yeah, just a small tiny place.
I'll never forgive him for what he did in 2020.
You know what?
I know.
He's pretending now to be all sort of, you know, I'm a centrist.
Oh, please.
He's baptized and converted.
Nonsense.
He donated, what, $450, $500 million of his own money.
Yes, he did.
To fortify the election, as they called it.
No, you don't do that.
And then three years later, suddenly have some conversion, some moment.
defense he had when the when the when the when the president got shot uh he was being interviewed on a
podcast and i think it was like 24 hours later or something like that and he said did he say is that
the most badass moment i've ever seen in my life that's the one right there yeah i don't know if
you've seen this um no look i mean there's obviously a lot of crazy stuff going on in the world i mean
historic events over the last like over the weekend and i mean on a personal note it's you know
I mean, seeing Donald Trump get up after getting shot in the face
and pump his fist in the air with the American flag
is one of the most badass things I've ever seen in my life.
But, and I think, look, at some level as an American,
it's like hard to not get out.
Now, she's a liberal.
Emotional about that.
Okay, can I respond for that?
Go for it.
I reckon he's smart enough, he's savvy enough to know after that moment
Trump had the election.
Oh, you think that's what it is?
And that's why he said that.
he knew, like particularly, he's saying that it happened last weekend, so it's days afterwards,
and days afterwards, that was the rhetoric, that he can't like, you know, this is going to give
him such an incredible boost, his reaction, the fact that he was targeted, it's going to galvanise
the supporter base, and they're going to come out and vote. So I think that's a reaction to that.
I just don't believe a grown man who spends close to half a billion dollars of his own money,
He could have even been more than half a billion in the end
because there was multiple lump sums that he devoted to that cause.
Then three years later goes,
oh, no, the guy that I spent half a billion dollars
making sure didn't get reelected,
I'm now standing next to or I'm indifferent to it.
I don't mind who wins.
Don't believe it for one second.
And if you look at Instagram and Facebook, the meta sites,
and their algorithm, what they censor,
they're still censoring,
conservative voices. So no, he can get stuffed. So yeah, that's going to be your neighbor in Florida.
Yeah, he'll be in Miami. But that's the thing. They'll all move. Once the taxes bite,
they'll move to a red state. But yeah, I can't believe that his belief systems change that
dramatically. You know what we'll know that? We'll know that in the next election if a liberal wins.
Because, you know, there's, AOC is making some momentum. You know, she's being on Cal She if you look at it.
she's all over the place.
Newsom right now is at the top of the list.
You're seeing some different names that are popping up.
Josh Shapiro, Pritzker, all these guys.
If the Democrat wins, we'll see how Zuckerberg reacts.
Particularly if it's a Newsom, if he's fled Gavin Newsom's California.
I still think he'll stand with Newsom if Newsom wins.
I think Newsom's the frontrunner.
Oh, yeah, that poll shows he is the frontrunner.
I mean, if you look at the polls, Kamala,
as the frontrunner, isn't she? Isn't that the one that the polls show, but the betting agencies think
CNN showed something that had Newsom, this is the first time in God knows how many years, 50 years,
that a leading Democratic candidate at this time hasn't been above 25%. This doesn't happen at this time.
And he was at, it was a CNN poll that came out, CNN poll that they did. That's the one right there.
Yeah, this is the first sentence 92 cycle.
Almost 40 years.
No, 30, 35, 34 years.
Go ahead, Rob.
I'm right clown car at this point on the Democratic side.
I mean, just take a look here.
Top choices for the 28 Dempres nominee.
You have a leader, but it's not really a clear leader.
It's within the margin area.
You have Newsom at 19%.
Then you have former Vice President Kamala Harris at 18%.
Quite a weak number for her,
given that, of course, she was the nominee last time around.
Pete Buttigieg, who of course has run before at 13%.
Alexander Acacio-Cortez at 12%.
This is just a total clown car.
It is a total mess.
There is no clear front-runner at this particular point
on the Democratic side.
Who the heck knows who the nominee is going to be
in three, two years?
It's been a long time since we've had a democratic race like this.
Yeah, it has been a long time.
This is very unusual for the Democratic side
to not have a clear front-runner at this point.
National Early Poll Leader at at least 25%.
Look at this.
This year, we get the giant question mark.
No one, no one, no one, no one.
In 2021, there was no incumbent.
It was Joe Biden who was there,
Hillary Clinton in both 08 and 16,
and Al Gore in both 2000 and 2004 at this point
where at least at 25% in the early person.
You have to go all the way back,
all the way back from when I wasn't even in elementary school yet,
not even in pre-day yet, to 1929.
That was the last cycle.
in which there was no clear frontrunner
Probably not, but he looks Persian,
he does look. He has the beard of a Persian.
We love theatrics.
He says it's a clown show because of the numbers.
On CNN.
He works for CNN.
But it's a clown show because of the shallow talent pool.
You look at that.
They've got nothing.
Newsom is their most likely,
and you look at what he did in San Francisco,
what he did in California,
man is a bloody pathological liar.
Did you see the lie about I don't read?
And then there's clips of him talking about speed reading,
a novel, like a book, 200 odd pages and a couple of hours.
I mean, this guy is not even good at lying.
And he's still going to get the most golden run from the media,
from the celebrity class, from just every, you know,
element of the culture is going to back him.
which is the Democrat advantage.
They always get this.
If there's ever been a time
where a Democrat is sitting on the sidelines
as an outsider wanted to get in,
right now is the time.
The last story I want to show you
and then we'll wrap up.
This story I saw over the weekend
and I couldn't believe it.
This is about an Iranian girl
who, let me read it, Rob, if you could.
It's a Muslim man
kidnaps a 13-year-old Christian girl, Maria,
and held her captive for six months.
He raped her, forced her to convert
to Islam and married her.
When her father reported the abduction,
the Sharia court ruled in favor
of granting custody to the kidnapper.
By the way, you can go to the bottom
and read Grock, Rob.
Go to the bottom in the comment section
and the question where it's,
is this true?
Okay, yes, reports from Morningstar News,
Christian Daily, another confirmed
13-year-old Christian Maria Shabazz
was abducted July 29,
2025, and Lahore by 30-year-old Muslim neighbor
Shahirar Ahmad, family says she was held six months,
forcibly converted and married,
certificate ruled fake by law courts.
February 3rd, 2026, federal constitutional court granted him custody,
accepting her statement, family claims coercion over her birth records.
No mainstream debunking found.
Rob, go a little bit higher, play the clip.
This is Iran for you, by the way, for the people that are watching,
who are feminist and watch this.
This is Pakistan.
It is.
This is Pakistan, yes.
So that's when they took her.
That's when they took her.
And they recorded it.
At least a family fought it.
Sometimes the family is in on this.
And by the way, you'll see clips like this in Iran.
You'll see clips like this in Pakistan.
You'll see clips like this all over the place.
Anywhere there's Sharia law.
Anywhere where there's Sharia law.
So to the average person who sees the saying, there's no way, you know,
there's no way this is real.
This is fake.
This can't be real.
This happens in Pakistan.
Pakistan is some of the human rights abuses there,
the persecution of Christians,
the forced conversion of Christians like this,
and the fact that you can rape a child
and then be given custody of her,
even when her parents are fighting for her
and sometimes the parents don't fight.
it's just so disgusting and heartbreaking,
but this is the fate of girls in these countries.
And again, when I said at the start,
where is the feminist movement?
Where are the marches for this?
When Donald Trump got elected,
we saw these pussy-hat marches around the world.
They were in Melbourne and Sydney.
They were all across the US or across Europe.
Where are the marches for this girl?
And so many others like her.
It's just heartbreaking.
And you'll see what has happened in Afghanistan.
As soon as the Islamists take over, they go back to instituting these sorts of restrictions
and allowing girls go to school there, forced marriages.
And forced marriage is rape.
That's what it is.
You mean, forced marriage is almost giving it a clean title.
It's rape.
You're raping girls and women.
and that's what's happening here.
It's just sickening.
I wasn't aware of this particular case,
but the Christian population in Pakistan have it terribly hard,
and all they need is to have some accusations,
so you could have some disgruntled neighbour,
work colleague, make an accusation that they've blasphemed
or they've done so,
and the police will arrest them.
They could face a death sentence for blasphemy,
But even worse than that, if the mob get to them before the police, they will slaughter them.
And that's happened so many times.
So that's, yeah, that's why the Christian population there has been decimated.
By the way, you know, it's interesting.
If Iran decided to go get eventually a nucleus, say they stick around and the son makes it,
I know he's injured, he's wounded, they're claiming a bunch of different things.
things with pelvis, all these other things that he's injured with elbow, shoulder, all these
things when they made the attacks, but he made it, survived it. Even when they were doing the
introduction of the new Supreme Leader, he wasn't even at the event. He wasn't at the event.
But if let's just say they retain power and they don't lose, and they sit there and they say,
you killed my dad, you killed my wife, you killed my son, you killed my sister, you killed my nephews
and nieces, I'm going to seek vengeance on Israel and Iran.
Israel and U.S., you know where they're going to get their nuclear weapon from,
from these guys, Pakistan.
Yeah.
I mean, that's a frightening thing that Pakistan has nuclear weapons.
And not just one of them or two of them.
Yeah.
We've got a few hundred of them.
The mullahs in Iran would use them.
I fully believe that would use them.
They've said they would.
I mean, you look at what their philosophy is, what their stated goals are.
They would.
And even how they're behaving now, this is sort of almost in discreet.
It just, you know, they don't mind that they're targeting their Arab neighbors and the Arab neighbors are going to be, you know, not very happy with them.
They don't care.
They are just having hopefully one last outburst before it's all over, but, yeah, I'm still not 100% confident.
I'm still not 100% confident the regime's done and dusted.
You got to get rid of 200,000 of them.
It's going to take a lot of work.
It's going to take a lot of work for them to surrender.
And they've got all the arms.
Yes, they do.
They got all the arms.
And if they try to go attack from straight-of-hor moves and Trump said something today, he said, hey, these leaders with these ships, you've got to start having some courage to go through, stop being so afraid.
I don't know if you call them chicken or something, but he said something about stop being afraid, go through it.
We have to show strength.
If they do anything, I'm going to attack them 20 times worse than what.
Is this it, Ron?
Yes. He sent it to Brian Kilmead. Brian Kilmead recounts it right now. Go forward.
So, Brian, you did a phone interview with the president of the United States. What is his read on this?
So I asked him, how do you get that, how do you get the prices down? I know how much you care about oil and gas. And he says, tell these tankers to get themselves, get to it.
We've wiped out most of their launchers. Here's exactly what he said. These ships should go through the Strait of Ramos and show some guts. There's nothing to be afraid of. They have no Navy. We sunk all their ships. He went on to.
say, he said, look, yeah, there's risk
in the region, the region's volatile, they're
launchers, there's just about 150
left, that's just about 20% of
totals, they can't regenerate, they can't make
anymore, and we are in the region
ready to act quickly on all
these types of attacks. Now, I think they're going to
get some additional naval assets
in there to do some escorting, but
there was a tanker that came through last,
yesterday. Successfully? Yeah, successfully.
No problem. And he's saying, come on, guys,
get to it. So, Brian, you did
a phone interview with the service. It's a big ask,
though, but yeah, if you've got them being escorted by Navy ships, I'm sure they will open it up.
But it's a big ask to ask them to go through when they're under the threat.
I understand the Navy has been pretty much destroyed, yeah.
It's not an easy decision.
It's not an easy decision.
It's not easy.
But he is saying he wants to make sure China gets the oil they want.
So we'll see.
I mean, listen, stories are so fluid right now.
He wants China to get the oil they want.
He said he wants China.
He wants to help China get the oil they need.
Some very astute analyst would argue that everything Trump has done has been primarily motivated by the thought of starving China of energy.
You look at Venezuela, you look at Iran, Iran 90% of its oil was going to China.
So it's so clever because China is the greatest threat long term.
And Trump is thinking like the Chinese think, which is thinking medium to low.
long term 20, 30, 40, 50 years.
And he's seeing the China threat and he's tackling it in a very smart way.
Starving them of energy is genius.
And yeah, that seems to be a happy consequence or perhaps it was a big part of it
plan.
Hegelian dialectic, I think it's called where create the problem, blame somebody else
and then come out and be the person that's going to help save him.
and be the solution.
And hey, China, I'm going to get you the oil you need.
I'm your friend.
I'll help you out.
So if he's doing that, listen, good for him for doing that.
But anyways, Rita, great having you on.
It's been a great conversation.
I'm glad I finally had a chance to meet you.
For the audience that's watching this, go subscribe to a leftist losing its show.
You can find it all over the place.
She's a rock star, subscribe to her Instagram, Twitter, X, everything you got.
And then anybody that's got questions, you can also ask her question on Menect.
Rita, amazing.
looking forward to seeing you move to Florida soon.
Hopefully, God willing, we'll see.
Maybe Panama City in that area is going to get you.
Panama City, that is.
It's a nice area.
God's own country there.
It is.
It's beautiful.
You know, you're going to have a place there, maybe Fort Worth.
I like the Cowboys there.
Fort Worth?
Yeah.
You feel safe at Fort Worth?
I like, yeah.
The beach is not a nice beach.
I know you like beaches because Australia's got a beach Fort Worth.
But then you've got the Florida Panhandle best beaches in the country.
I agree.
I agree.
Best of both worlds.
Well, see.
Anyways, great having you on.
Take you everybody.
Bye bye, bye, bye.
