PBD Podcast - Trump $2K Tariff Dividend, 50 Year Mortgage, Jan 6th Pipe Bomber + Shutdown Over? | PBD Podcast 681

Episode Date: November 10, 2025

Patrick Bet-David, Tom Ellsworth, Vincent Oshana, and Adam Sosnick unpack Trump’s proposed $2,000 tariff-dividend payout, the GOP’s looming 2028 presidential pick, the showdown between the New Yor...k Police Department and Zohran Mamdani, and whether the federal government shutdown is finally over.------🇺🇸 GET THE VT VETERANS COLLECTION: https://bit.ly/4oyjKtR📕 REGISTER FOR BPW 2025 - FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12TH 2025: https://bit.ly/3IU2YWxⓂ️ CONNECT ON MINNECT: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4kSVkso⁠⁠⁠⁠ Ⓜ️ PBD PODCAST CIRCLES: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4mAWQAP⁠⁠⁠⁠🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g57zR2⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠🥃 BOARDROOM CIGAR LOUNGE: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4pzLEXj⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠🍋 ZEST IT FORWARD: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4kJ71lc ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/41rtEV4⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4lzQph2 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! ABOUT US:Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Did you ever think you would make it? I feel I'm supposed to take sweet victory. 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 size. Right here. You are a one of one?
Starting point is 00:00:18 My son's drive there. I think I've ever said this before. All right. So, a lot going on, folks. government shut down, apparently eight senators on the Democratic side coming out, agreeing to the same exact thing that Chuck would have agreed to before. And Scott Jennings says, I think this was all about the special elections just to show strength and use this as a story to win a couple those elections.
Starting point is 00:00:49 And now they're going to go back and do the same thing. It was just a bunch of theater. And President Trump was at the Washington Redskins game. And while he's at the Redskins game, and they're just. doing their thing, you know, there was some boom going on. And we're going to show that boom and stuff that took place at the Redskins game. Congrats to the Dolphins. They beat the bills, which was a miracle.
Starting point is 00:01:10 We were there last night. Oh, miracle. That was a fall in a miracle. I don't know what happened, but good for them. Let me go through a couple of the stories for you guys that, hope you guys had a good weekend. By the way, we started, you're late. What are you doing?
Starting point is 00:01:23 Wake up. This entire time we've been here, where have you been? You know what I'm saying? This guy shows up once on time. And we get to go early and Miami Trump proposes radical health care shakeup that would bypass insureds and hand cash directly to who, to you to make a decision on what you want to do with your health insurance. Housing Director confirms. Ready for this one? This is big. Administration working on not a 30-year loan, not a 40-year loan, they want to get a 50-year mortgage after Trump
Starting point is 00:02:00 hint, okay, 50-year mortgage loan. Cornell to pay $60 million to settle Trump's administration probe. Trump dismisses affordability concerns insists prices are going down. Why lower mortgage rates aren't enough to make homes affordable in charts, whopping wealth of Nancy Pelosi under scrutiny as it revealed she has earned $130 million in stock profits while in Congress, 17,000 percent rate of return.
Starting point is 00:02:30 The goat, okay? Of all time. Nancy Pelosi made $130 million. She shared that with America, right? Of course she did. At the, at the... Social Security is just fine, right? At Rolex, at the Potec store, at the Bentley store, yes.
Starting point is 00:02:42 Vance is the frontrunner for 2028. Rubio privately confides. Up to 20% of flights could be canceled in coming weeks if government shut down drags on as airports endure. First day of crippling reductions. NYPD already loses officers with... morale plunging as anti-cops Zohran Mamdani prepares to take reins. Top New York City Realtter fired for comparing Mamdani to Hitler, predicting City Hall will
Starting point is 00:03:11 play Muslim calls to prayer. Yeah, you can only compare Trump to Hitler. That's a law. Yeah, Denmark's government aims to ban access to social media for children under 15 years old. Tech job, flee California as H-1B visa, crime, tax, and automation drive workers out. Catherine Harridge, Inks Deal for investigative video series with L.A. Times.
Starting point is 00:03:36 Kanye West meets with Adam's friends to apologize for their past remarks. Listen. Perridge and Jews. Steps in the right direction. It's a crazy thing. That's that one right there. We got a couple other things here.
Starting point is 00:03:50 Senate breaks, Democratic filibuster, and key vote toward opening the government. Trump says he'll send $2,000 tariff dividend to all, except high-income people. Stimulus, Tom, with that jacket, that means you won't be getting into $2,000. He has to pay $2,000.
Starting point is 00:04:06 Tom's like, Stefano Richie addict. He needs to go to essay meetings, yo, essay. He's itching for like a new time. Stefano anonymous. Stefano. If they have one, I'm joining. Yeah. So, Richie, I'm wearing one as well today, by the way.
Starting point is 00:04:23 We're just with them dispassment. We bought a bunch of guys. Vinny and I are wearing a Zora and H&M. No, no, we're at the store. Vinny takes a jacket, has my son wear it. My son walks up to me. Were you wearing it or was he wearing it? No, I gave it to Tico.
Starting point is 00:04:38 He's walking up to me. He says, how much you think this is? And the lady's panicking in the back. Vinny takes a picture of it. This is why it's for a 0.001%. Sir, don't take that off the man again. The jacket was $134,000. Let me say it again, 134-150.
Starting point is 00:04:58 We got at that $150, but the jacket was insane. Stefano Ritchie, Kay. So next, House Democrats fears that their Senate colleagues are caving on shutdown, unconditional surrender. Our stimulus checks being sent out in 2025. Latest news on claims. Donald Trump's new city destroying nuclear missile is spotted for the first time as plane spotter photographs it on hush, hush, test flight.
Starting point is 00:05:26 The pipe bomber story doesn't add up. Vinny's going to talk about that one. Newsom gives Trump a new nickname after President appears to not off during White House announcement. Did he really? He nodded off during White House announcement? Who did? President Trump? I didn't see it.
Starting point is 00:05:39 Rob, is that true or no, Rob? It looked like his eyes were shut. I don't know if he was asleep. BBC expected apologize after using doctored footage of Trump's January 6th speech in documentary report. They apologize? You think an apology is going to be plenty? And you don't think a lawsuit? Their lead editor, just this just in, their lead editor resigned.
Starting point is 00:06:02 Who's the lead editor? The BBC. They apologize, yeah, we doctored it. As if that's going to stop a lawsuit. Oh, he quit. Yeah. Oh, well. Suddenly.
Starting point is 00:06:11 Okay. All right. So that's what's going on. And we've got a few other stories we'll get into it a couple clips to show you guys. However, you know what tomorrow is? Tomorrow's Veterans Day. And what we want to do for the veterans who are watching this. We have a whole new series of merch for veterans.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Rob, if you can zoom in into some of these guys here, Whether your army, we got an army future looks bright. We got go a little bit lower rob if you could. We got those hats with the Velcro. That right there, the Army Future Looks Bride patch is insane. Go low Rob, you know, Air Force, Navy, keep going, keep going, keep going. We got those green hats. Those green hats, they won't last long.
Starting point is 00:06:47 Every time we have those, they disappear. The one on the right, it's absolutely sick on the front of it. It says future looks bright. U.S. Armed Forces, Marines, keep going. And then you have the USA hat. That's another one. It's one of our most, I think it's the top five most reviewed hats of all time that you have right there, the USA with the, what do you call it? Camouflage on there.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Armed forces in the middle with the dog tack, six shirt. Keep going lower. Rob, keep going lower. And you got the Army Greens, the hats in the middle, and then go to the next one, that angry Patriot shirt to the rights. You got a bunch of stuff here. And here's what it is. Go to v.tmerch.com. Place your order.
Starting point is 00:07:26 Use the code veteran. for a discount, veteran for discount, and 10% of every purchase made will go to charities that are related to folks who are serving, and we have a handful of them that we're working with. Trust me, we're very selective on which one then we go through. 10% of whatever purchase is made
Starting point is 00:07:47 will go to different charities out there, and if you use the code, veteran, you'll get a 10% discount as well. Some of those items are, you know, limit of supply that we ordered, so be sure to go out there and place the order for yourself. And if it's not you, you have a friend that went to the Air Force, the Army, the Marines, the Navy, you know, gift them something from this that watches the podcast. Again, go to VTMurch.com, place your order using the discount veteran.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Having said that, let's get right into it. All right. Rob, what videos do we have on the government shutdown? What videos do you have on the government shutdown? Because there's a bunch of different things going out right now in the government shutdown. We hear the video that comes out. The story says up to 20% of flights can be canceled in coming weeks if the government shutdown drugs on as airports endure first day of crippling reductions.
Starting point is 00:08:39 You hear pilots talking about a bunch of different things. You're a pilot saying, hey, you know, we have folks that are working right now that are not getting paid but they're showing up today, et cetera, et cetera. And there was a rare Saturday Senate session that ends with few signs of shutdown progress. So as of right now, Rob, the latest. thing we know is what? The fact that eight senators have agreed. Is that the clip right there right there we go? Can you go back to it? Yep. So the government shut down October 1st. On November night, the United States advanced a funding measure by 60-40 vote. This is the first major
Starting point is 00:09:10 bipartisan movement towards reopening the government. The measure would extend federal funding through January 30 at 2026 for some agencies, attach three full-year appropriation bill, agriculture, veterans affairs, and legislative branch as part of the broader package. Guarantee a future vote in December on Affordable Care Act, health insurance tax credit issues, which has been a key sticking point. And it's important to know this that with the Obamacare, Trump wants to give you the credit. He wants you to make a decision what you want to do with it because all the promises Obama made that you're not going to be able to keep your doctor.
Starting point is 00:09:45 It's not going to be costing you anything. Taxes will go up. We all know Obama lied on every one of those issues. and that's proven by the left and the right. So many federal functions that have been severely disrupted, the 900,000 federal employees that have been working without pay, SNAP, which is impacting a lot of people's lives, especially immigrants that are here taking advantage of it,
Starting point is 00:10:07 you know, some of them that they're relying on you, the hardworking people to take care of them. But Tom, where are we at with this? Well, the Senate voted. You had to break the filibuster and need to have 60 votes. And what the Senate did, they haven't ended the government shutdown, but they have put together something and they're sending it back to the House and the House is all upset. However, this should be good news. But check this out.
Starting point is 00:10:30 Look at the eight people that voted with the Republicans. Catherine Cortez Mastow of Nevada, Jackie Rosen of Nevada. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Both Nevada senators voted. Very interesting. We know Nevada was razor thin, you know, and Trump got Trump. Traction there. It used to be blue, blue, blue, but the election there. Also, look at this, New Hampshire.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Gene Shaheen and Maggie Hassan, both senators from New Hampshire, went with him. And this guy, I'm really proud of this guy. Dick Durbin of Illinois went with the Republicans to break this. And then Tim Kane of Virginia, Tim Kane was Hillary's VP candidate. And then, of course, the guy we expected for the last three months to be at the Republicans, John Federman. Yeah. So those were the eight that went, and they went with it. What's interesting, if you look at it, I believe the Republicans got about 80% of what they wanted in the Senate bill, whereas the Democrats got about 20%. For instance, Dick Durbin came across when he said that Trump, what they would put in there, and John Thune gets credit for this. Lonely, not very charismatic, just very effective and just a good person, John Thune, apparently... Senate Majority Leader you're talking about. Yep. Got everybody. together, but, you know, John Thune has never been like the Schumer, the Pelosi, the camera guy. He's always just kind of just there working, and he got it done. But here's what he gave back to Durbin. He said, I'll tell you what, this is what we'll put in.
Starting point is 00:12:02 All the federal workers that were fired during the shutdown, not the ones that were fired during Doe's at the beginning when he started thinning things out, but all the ones that were fired during the shutdown will get their jobs back. and there will be a provision to give them some back pay, which shouldn't be huge in American people, because that back pay thing is really just kind of started. You know, it's not, well, some had started before, but it's not cataclysmic. It is to those people, but in terms of dollars to the U.S. taxpayer, you know, it's manageable. So he gave that back, and Durbin said, okay, Thune, I'm in, and they went in.
Starting point is 00:12:40 And so it was very sensible, but was really important. I'll go back, and these are my estimates, Pat. I think the Republicans got about 80% of what they wanted. Specifically, they didn't want the Obamacare subsidies just to roll over as this trillion-dollar wave in the American people. They got that. They got what wave wanted. That's good. Republicans got 80%.
Starting point is 00:13:02 I think the Dems got 20%. And people like Dick Durbin got the unionized federal workers get their jobs back. And so they got their 60. So here's a tweet, no more money. Hundreds of billions of dollars to the Democratic support insurance companies for really bad Obamacare. The money must now go directly to the people talking, taking the fat cat insurance companies out of the corrupt system of health care. The people can buy their own much better policy, much less money, saving for themselves an absolute fortune. President Donald J. Trump.
Starting point is 00:13:31 And while this is going on, and while this is going on, Scott Jennings, Rob, can you pull up the Scott Jennings clip where he's talking to Abby? And on that clip, he, do you know which one I'm talking about? I may have put it in the in the Peabody podcast if you want to if you want to look forward and he's saying look you know I mean the reality of it is you guys got what you want it right you know you were able to you were able to use this as for the election uh yeah I think yeah there you go you're able to use this for the election the special elections that was taking place and watch how she answers this look at this go ahead rob Republicans going to use leverage in their fight with Democrats when the Democrats are actually the ones with the upper hand in the eyes of voters. Well, I'm sure Democrats will be more than happy to open the government now. The election's over. I mean, part of the reason they shut it down was to get through tonight.
Starting point is 00:14:27 I mean, I would suspect they'll be going to open it up by the end of the week. Adam Schiff, he was like, hold the line. There's lots of rumors of people wanting to open it. Look, I don't see what is the incentive for Democrats to back down when voters are basically. saying Trump's not doing enough. It's the Republicans' fault. And then they basically handed the keys in this past election to the Democrats. It's, where's the leverage? Again, these are blue states electing Democrats, not a shock. Democrats clearly wanted this shutdown to get through election day. I do think they are facing pressure from their internal
Starting point is 00:15:00 coalitions. The unions, the air traffic controllers, the government employee unions are desperate to get the government back open. They're feeling a little bit of internal heat. But again, The election's now over. I'm sure tomorrow morning, phones will start ringing, and it'll be open soon enough. This was a political shutdown, and that's what they did, and now we're through the election. So now, by the way, while this is going on, you know, Rob, Adam, I'm going to come to you. I do want to show something, because what he said right there is these were all blue states. These were, not this one, Rob, the other one, the one with the link, not the one that goes to X,
Starting point is 00:15:33 but the one that goes to YouTube that is showing what happens when they lose the special election, yeah. And then if you don't mind, Rob, go fast forward to, keep going, keep going, keep going, go from right there. Go back a little bit. Go back a little. When that starts, play it from right right there. Okay, so watch this. So now, is there any patterns to show what this means to midterms that's going to come up in a year? And watch what Anton says here. And by the way, whether you like Anton or not, he is fair, okay, when he's going through some of these numbers. So you can't just like when the polls are good for you and then hate them what they're not. Watch this one here. Go ahead. Let's do well. I mean, just take a look at the House special elections. Take a look here,
Starting point is 00:16:15 the 2025 House Special Elections. Look at those in which Democrats out ran Kamala Harris. There have been five House Special Elections so far this year in every single one of them across the board. Virginia, Texas 18, that was on Tuesday night. Florida 6, Florida 1, Arizona 7, from blue districts like Arizona 7 to red districts like Florida 1 and 6. What we are seeing or clear shift towards the Democratic candidates in all five of them. And we're talking about shifts on average Cape Baldwin of about or north of 15 percentage points from the 2024 presidential baseline, which is even larger than the shifts that we saw in both Virginia and New Jersey. Watch what happens here. Keep going to throw that coffee.
Starting point is 00:16:59 And a million things can happen in the year until the midterms. With that caveat, what are you seeing? A year is a very, long period of time, but you know we've spoken about this. I like going through history. What do these? Watch what magnesium does to your bow. Is this a joke? Is this a joke? Magnesium, bro. Stop it. Your elections usually forecast for the year ahead for the midterm elections. Well, I mean, we take a look at the House special elections, right? If a party outperforms in House special elections, five out of five times, what do we see? They've gone on to win the U.S. House the following midterm every single time since the 2005, 2005, 2000.
Starting point is 00:17:37 2006 cycle. So when you see, of course, that the Democrats are outperforming in all of them, historically speaking, that means they go on to win the U.S. House of Representatives in the following midterm. And then, yes, New York, New Jersey, Virginia, yes, these are blue city in New York City. Yes, the blue states in Virginia and New Jersey. But historically speaking, when you sweep all three, you go back since the FDR administration. Tom, do you agree with them? Well, yeah, history is, history is absolutely, he is accurately recounting history. And what happened, is the special elections here usually are not about the candidates. If you go deeper into it, and I know exactly what he's talking about, and he is faithfully showing it without spin,
Starting point is 00:18:17 so hats off to Mr. Enton. The issue is there's usually an overriding issue that goes beyond the candidates, because all those candidates are different, yet five out of five races move. Make sense? So, wow, is this a candidate? So it also shows that the down ballot effect by Kamala Harris, was actually negative, not positive. She had a negative impact on the down-ballot race. She didn't help it at all. It's like, stay out of my state. I'm running for myself.
Starting point is 00:18:45 I don't need your help. I don't want you here. Well, guess what? The issue right now, the number one issue, when you talk to all the core voters, and Enten has talked about it, I've seen polls on it, is affordability. That's the word.
Starting point is 00:18:58 It's James Carvel all over again. The core Americans is on affordability, and the mainstream media really did a, It's terrible, it's capricious, but they did a pretty good job of pushing economic down, economic down, economic down, out there on it, on the American people, an American voter, and, and, and, and, and, you've got these angry women under 40. Adams talked about it. I've talked about it.
Starting point is 00:19:25 The polls have talked about it. So those are the three things. Affordability is the top issue. The movement of basically angry women under 40, and then you've got the mainstream media that wouldn't get off economic topics. Got it. Adam thoughts. The ghost of James Carville comes back. It's the economy, stupid.
Starting point is 00:19:43 So this whole government shutdown thing, to me, as I said, James Carville, the economy, stupid. To me, I don't even call it a government shutdown. I call it a government showdown. Because I feel like we've seen this, it's that Groundhog Day
Starting point is 00:19:56 with our tax dollars. Every year, it's every time they do these government showdowns. It's the same thing. It's theater. It's politics. They waited until Tuesday, elections, we're done. And all it ends up being is a short-term fix. I'm so sick of these short-term fixes every year. It's the same movie. It's showdown time. Showdown time. Continuing resolution time. What are we going to do, filibuster time? And it's actually just getting annoying at this point.
Starting point is 00:20:23 Can we get a long-term solution? So we stop doing this every single year. We know this movie. We've seen it every single time. We know what the government's not going to shut down forever. and how many lives are affected when it shut down for 40 days. It only started moving the needle after the election was over, one, and all of a sudden, everyday people are getting affected
Starting point is 00:20:44 because their flights are getting canceled. So unless it affects people, the politicians have no problem basically playing chicken with your tax dollars. Once you start saying, dude, I just got my flight canceled. Hey, buddy, I'm going to miss a meeting. Can we get this thing figured out? That's when they'll start moving.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Until then, they don't really give a crap. Because they're getting paid. Of course they are. Politicians are getting paid. But the everyday workers isn't getting paid. The old bill compared to the new bill is nothing. And the fact that I want Democrat voters to understand
Starting point is 00:21:16 that your mispaychecks, your flights, your snap, and all that. It's because the left was using it as leverage so they look good during their runs with Virginia and all that nonsense. And even the Hill did a piece that said Democrat senators fear getting hammered after no kings for ending government shots. They have nothing.
Starting point is 00:21:35 You know, you know, just like remember with the border bill, Tom, they were like, no, we're not going to give you what you want unless you give, you know, billions of dollars to Ukraine, billions of dollars here, billions of dollars to like Israel and all these places. And it's like, bro, like, what? I don't like this hostage stuff. Adam, I agree with you 100%. It's actually hostage negotiation. But Tom, right now, the Republicans have the House and the Senate.
Starting point is 00:21:57 I don't feel like they're doing enough to not only go after everybody that has been screwing Trump and screwing us for the past, you know, it. years. They're not doing enough to put stuff in place time that's going to last. You know what I mean? He makes a great point. Every year this is going to change. Every year they're going to keep doing the same thing. Well, this is our government, but I think you have to remember the fog of what happened in the election is fogging over all the winds. Look at the winds that have been happening on international trade deals. Look at the winds have been happening on rare earth minerals. Look at the winds that have been happening on energy, drill baby drill,
Starting point is 00:22:25 and the cost of oil and heating oil. When the northeast Democrat voters have lower cost heating oil this winter, I hope they remember who made that happen. I hope they remember that that was President Trump, keeping his promise to drill baby drill, which translates to your fuel tank, to your airline ticket cost, and to your heating oil. I think all these winds are getting covered by the fog, and I think the administration needs to do a PR tour reminding us all of all the good things that happen. While at the same time, they offer some concrete, you know, dates behind all this $1.5 trillion coming in to build more jobs in America. when are those jobs coming?
Starting point is 00:23:04 And to get after affordability. And I think if the president should go on the offense about this, he's got a lot of good stuff talk about. I do think the affordability is something that needs to be focused on. Every time we have Brandon on, when he talks about it from the younger standpoint, these are guys that want to have families that want to get through the next phase. But one of the topics that was brought up is, you know, who gets a lot of the snap benefits?
Starting point is 00:23:28 And here's CNN, this fellow show stats on what's, going on with who is getting the benefits the most? This is, Vinnie, watch this video here. Go ahead, Rob. Illegal immigrants are not the reason why our health care system is broken. Yeah, it's not deflection at all. In fact, I brought receipts. So here's the CMS, the Center for Medicaid and Medicare services right here with their press release earlier this year saying they were having to increase their oversight on states like California who were abusing Medicaid and classifying it as an EUSA, an emergency system, when it wasn't.
Starting point is 00:23:59 You've got the average state spends 5% of its Medicaid, right? on emergency services. California, 35 to 40%. Why would that be? Because California passed a state law that says we will fund Medicaid for illegals. And then, oh, by the way, we'll raise our provider taxes. And then, oh, by the way, we use that as a match to draw down federal funds. And they're using this whole cavitation process. An accounting trick to put it on the tax claim. Money is fungible and California's loophole is abusing. All right, back from CNN. Ooh, that was a lively one. And they hate it when you bring receipts. But let's talk about that Medicaid thing for a minute because what you have right now is a thing called the California
Starting point is 00:24:35 loophole. Liberals hate it when you bring receipts, but the California loophole is real. And the reason why the left wants to get this whole spending package revised right now is because they want to be able to fund Medicaid for illegals like California is doing. So you see, this is the thing about receipts when you bring it up in front of them and then they don't have an answer for it, right? Tom, what do you think? on what he just said right there he's exactly right and we've talked about it on this podcast you and i are from california we speak of what we could actually see and you had things like that the hospitals that were downtown south central or close to usc that were actually providing services to students
Starting point is 00:25:18 local residents and yes south central los angeles there's emergency rooms that close why did they close because california created medical let's do the math and go through the steps that he's talking about medical says okay you do it and when he talks about emergency services He's talking about a bleeding, unconscious, shot, stabbed, car accident. They're not asking for an insurance card in those hospitals. They're taking care of you because you're critical patients that paramedics are bringing in. Paramedics are there to preserve your status and stabilize you to get you to emergency room. Emergency room does it, and then they find out, you know, this person is whoever they are,
Starting point is 00:25:55 but they have no insurance, no means of paying, no nothing. But the services were provided. That's Medi-Cal doing that. Then they used the loophole. He said the loophole to get the matching funds from the federal government. Did you hear him say that? That's how Newsom knows that the American people are paying the Medicaid Cal gap to provide Medicaid services in the state of California. And then they put a tax on the hospitals.
Starting point is 00:26:23 Remember we covered this, Pat? They threw a tax on the hospital that said, you can't charge more than $0.8 for an aspirin or whatever it was. And guess what happened? emergency rooms closed so thank you Gavin Newsom your trick and what you did in California not only is a loophole and the tax on the people of America
Starting point is 00:26:40 you lost emergency rooms that went bankrupt in the communities that could use that loss the least that's what I think of that he brought those receipts so while that's going on the president goes to the Redskins game right Washington Redskins
Starting point is 00:26:55 just back in the days when they won the Super Bowl with Mark Rippen when they with the Redskins, he goes there. And this is what happens, the reaction to the audience at the Redskins game that he's at. I just want you to watch this year what happens. Listen to the booing because this is all they're playing everywhere right now. This is a very viral, exciting clip for the people on the left. Go ahead, Rob.
Starting point is 00:27:30 of the United States. That was President Trump at halftime of the Commander's Lions NFL game, receiving significant and sustained booze as he was featured on the stadium's Jumbotrons, swearing in members of the U.S. military to honor Veterans Day. Trump is attending this game in Maryland on the 40th day of the government shutdown, affecting so many people in this region. And it comes after ESPN reported that the White House has had back channel communications with the Washington commanders, where the president has expressed in the government.
Starting point is 00:28:00 interest in having the team's new stadium here in D.C. named after himself. White House Press Secretary, Caroline, let us saying in a state that it would surely be... Pause. It's so unlike Trump to put his name on a building. That's crazy. Yeah, but also think about it. That's D.C.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Of course. D.C. is the number one city where they have the biggest percentage of people making the highest salary on average, and they have the biggest percentage of people making the biggest percentage of people making the least amount of salary, the poorest people.
Starting point is 00:28:33 It's the biggest difference on those two demos that you're looking at. So, of course, they're not going to like that. It's filled with liberals. It's filled with government employees. They're not happy about what's going on there. Rob, which one is this? What is this? So this is during the game yesterday when the lion scored a touchdown,
Starting point is 00:28:49 the entire team did the Trump dance. Stop. It points at Trump. He points at Trump. Yeah. Good. Right? Everybody in Washington.
Starting point is 00:29:00 face you can pause it right that's hilarious i don't know if you guys saw the flyover but the flyover it was epic by way it was lower than they gasoline aluminum oxide all over everybody's face look at this it's apparently ESPN reported that the people the operations at the stadium felt that that was lower than they thought it was going to be yeah because when you look here take a look look how low they're right over the stadium good gangster high above northwest stadium His butt was over all of them They could boo all they want His butt was over their head
Starting point is 00:29:33 Yeah So now that Full flaps out Just floating that bad boy Adam Now that let you say The shutdown's about to be done Now what they're gonna
Starting point is 00:29:42 What are gonna say You know Is it gonna be Is it really Who can tell the story better Is it all marketing Or is it really about You know
Starting point is 00:29:54 People gonna find out That no This wasn't on Republicans It was on Democrats What do you think is going to happen, Adam? As far as Trump and the RMK Stadium? Yeah, no, no. What I'm saying is now because they're booing because they're booing because the shutdown, right?
Starting point is 00:30:07 They're booing because some of these guys don't have jobs and, you know, they're seeing what's going on. Is that why you think they were booing? I don't know. Why else you think? I mean, I just think they don't like Trump. Let's just say half of them are boom because they don't like him. The other half are booing because the shutdown. But what do you think is going to happen when the shutdown's over with?
Starting point is 00:30:22 I think people don't care. So of all the topics we discuss, how interested are we? in the shutdown? I'm pretty interested. We're somewhat interested. It doesn't affect us. I think in D.C., they're so insulated in this bubble that they think that everyone's thinking about the shutdown. I don't think that most people thought about the shutdown
Starting point is 00:30:41 until last week when a flight was canceled. Like I said, they see this movie the same time before. It's like the little boy who cried shutdown. Oh, we have a shutdown. Oh, really? Has it affected your life at all? Unless you're a government employee, unless you're actually collecting, you're only government diamond or the government dole? Has the government affected your life?
Starting point is 00:31:01 The government shut down affected your life at all? Or not a diamond doll, an honest paycheck like thinnies. Yeah, like my sister, who's still calling me and messaging me and saying, what's happening? Space Force. Yeah. Space force. Yep. So as far as D.C., you can't trust what's coming out of there.
Starting point is 00:31:16 Well, maybe let me ask this question. Did you think when he went to this game, did you think he knew that he was going to get booed like this? I just don't think Trump gives a shit at this point. I think so. I think if Trump gets booed. Probably a number of government. He knows he's going to get booed. He knows he's going to get booed in D.C.
Starting point is 00:31:30 D.C. is the most liberal city in the control. There's a lot of unionized government. Rob, pull up the most liberal cities. Who votes the most blue? So he went in thinking he's going to get booed like this, Vinny? I don't know. I don't think he likes, you know him. Like, you think he likes that.
Starting point is 00:31:45 People booing him while while he's reading, while he's a teflon dog, while he's reading that stuff to freaking soldiers, like, and veterans' days coming up, this was like, have some respect. I don't care if you hate him. He's reading this thing for the freaking, for the,
Starting point is 00:31:57 soldiers like what are you what are you doing like how to show some decency but you can't ask you can't expect that from people in dc as it doesn't matter what he's saying it's who's saying it rob do you have the most liberal cities in america yeah it's pulling it up right okay is dc number one or something no new york city was number one new york city mom dany city get out of here yeah where's dc rank uh it just says uh dc ranks among the most strongly blue jurisdictions in the u.s based on presidential elections yeah i thought elections it was hawaii and To your point. 90% normally vote Democratic.
Starting point is 00:32:30 90% in Washington. God. 90%. In 2020, in 2020, look at that, Vinny. The Democratic nominee got roughly 92% of the vote in D.C. And the Republican got 5.4%. They hate Trump. PDD.
Starting point is 00:32:48 What is the definition of a monopoly percentage-wise? 55%, 65%. 55%. Yeah. And I'm 90. 70 is like, dude, call antitrust, call the lawyer, 92%. Wow. So if you're operating in D.C., by the way, you have any friends in D.C. who says,
Starting point is 00:33:05 I don't have any friends in D.C. You don't have many friends? I have multiple friends in D.C. They say, D.C. is different. You got a very important friend in D.C. He works at the White House. That's a very good friend of yours. It's a very good friend of ours.
Starting point is 00:33:17 And he likes you. He likes Benny. He likes Benny. Okay, let's go to the next story. Next stories, guys, if you are, if you got big plans for 2026, with your investments, look no other than Nancy Pelosi, the goat. I mean, listen, she is like, folks, can you do me favor? I'll give you guys five seconds.
Starting point is 00:33:35 Get your pen and paper out and take notes. The legend's resume is about to be shown. And you know, you know all of these investments she made was all due to research and intuition. It's all about her gut. She's got that gut, the instinct, the intuition of a warm, On steroids. By the way, you're about to find out what their net worth was before they started investing to where they are today.
Starting point is 00:34:02 Rob, please play this clip, The Legend. Reportedly raking in more than $130 million in office from trading stocks during their 37 years in Congress. That's according to a new report by the New York Post, the former House Speaker, saw a whopping return of nearly 17,000 percent while in office... We're taking office in 1980s out of 188.
Starting point is 00:34:25 A financial form showed California Democrat and her husband reporting up to... Their network was $785,000 to $133. ...the stock's in their portfolio. The report comes days after the 85-year-old announced she won't be seeking re-election. This is the kind of stop that makes people just hate government, eight politicians. Is that compost? She's the best. There's nothing happening to her.
Starting point is 00:34:53 That's clearly inside information. There's no way she's that's right. Clearly. Very, very profitable business to be in politics. You know, can you pause it. What I don't like is every once in a while when you get a legend that comes through, people don't want to give a credit. You have to tip your hat off. Listen, are you kidding?
Starting point is 00:35:10 She is possibly the greatest insider trader in a history of politics. Who do you put ahead of her, Tom? She's a legend. Why don't we recognize legends like her? No, no. She's, you know, she's right up there on Mount Trademore. You know, she is number one up there. And, you know, I'm upset.
Starting point is 00:35:31 She's retiring. Why can't they just have her move her office across the street to the SSA, Social Security Administration, and manage the Social Security Administration trust fund? Why can't they do that? I know. You know, she'd be doing a service to people on Social Security like her. She's about to receive a Social Security check. Lord knows she needs it. You know, that's what I think.
Starting point is 00:35:51 But you know what? every now and then there's an old saying estimated network 240 to 280 I'll tell you I don't know who said it we can look it up and find out who said it but it was the following quote and I love it every now and then an innocent man is sent to the legislature every once in a while an innocent man is sent to the legislature and what I when we hear all the jokes that we make led by me I do think it's really pathetic that we don't have conflict of interest or insider rules for our elected officials and we make jokes about it comedians make jokes about everybody's jokes about it because it's this joke in plain sight
Starting point is 00:36:31 so Martha Stewart over a less than $200,000 gain that's a lot of money, that's two, three years salary for people but think about it. Martha did time for less than 200 grand yep this person made
Starting point is 00:36:46 $133 million for the time she did in Congress it just it's we got to give greater voice to the people that have been trying to put those bills and there's there's been a couple of them this year right pat that people have been trying to put traitor bills out there on them a couple times this year and i think the congress just needs to get serious they'll never vote for line item veto they'll never vote balanced budget amendment but can you at least vote that there's no insider trading in congress you think she's stepping away because of being age and done and healthy you think she's stepping away because
Starting point is 00:37:21 this Congress not being able to invest is getting so close that on both sides they want to pass it that she just wants that to be gone and doesn't happen under her watch. I think there's a little of that. There has to be a little of that. But Nancy is frail. You see her everywhere you see her now. She's holding the elbow of somebody who's like escorting her. It looks like the security person. Exactly. By the way, we're 40 years away from that. Yeah. I mean, to be fair, by the way, I'm just being, I'm just being observant, right? You observe where you see fancy, the security people are people next to her. She's holding the elbow. Just same way I do with my mom. And so number one, health-wise, it's time for her. Number two, you listen to the way
Starting point is 00:38:01 she's reasoning and you know what I'm saying? She's not as sharp as she wants was. She's not saying wild-ass crap the way Biden was. And she's not shaking hands with ghosts the way Biden was. But you can see the human frailty, good grief. She's 85 years old. But Pat, I also believe that's the last thing she wants on her legacy is to have one of those things passed and to have her accounts be the first one at the top of the list for a congressional hearing. She don't want that.
Starting point is 00:38:28 I have a different take on why, but it'll be a later story that I'll bring her back up. Adam. So, PBD, can you do some math with me real quick? So she's been in office 38 years. She's made, what, 170,000 percent? 17,000 percent? 17,000 percent.
Starting point is 00:38:47 Okay, $133 million in profits. So maybe I'm doing the math wrong. 17,000 divided by 38 years, right? That would give you an average rate of return each year. Is that how you would do it? Comes out to 447% a year. How would you do that math? If that's a straight return, yes, but you have to use compound interest.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Yeah, you have to compound it back. So to ask, if I started with $785,000, in an account in 1987, and now I have $133 million in that account. What's my Kager? What has been my... Cummilar annual growth rate, Kager. Okay. So I think it's still a big number, by the way.
Starting point is 00:39:42 What's the number? It should be a big number because you're dealing with compound. interest is what you're dealing with. But 15% per year. That's it. That's it. 15% per year. From 785.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Rob, what is it telling you? I have the numbers wrong. 785 and the net, the total is $130 million. So she is 167xed. But what I'm trying to find out is what is the annual average? rate of return. Yes. Because the average annual return of the S&B 500, you know, see, it says if you want, I can do the annual
Starting point is 00:40:21 I can give you the K-G grant and say yes. Because Tom, the average annual rate of return is 8 to 10% from the S&B 500, right? Depending on inflation, depending on 14.46% is what's just So it doesn't seem like an absurd number to average 15% a year, does it?
Starting point is 00:40:38 15% a year, no, but the part that sounds absurd, you have to also realize that's how much is the portfolio. They're guesstimating their net worth is around $250 million. You're assuming the $7.85, they never took money out to buy a house
Starting point is 00:40:55 or by weddings and all this other stuff. Or buy an election. I would say they're probably at 30 to 40% rate of return with some of the activities that they had that's been a little bit suspicious. Specifically, I know we kind of clown on Paul Pelosi after that rendezvous with the hammer.
Starting point is 00:41:12 What does he actually do for work? Hammer's $22. What does he actually do for work? Because everyone piles on Nancy. But what does her husband do? Because I assume he's the moneymaker and the family. He just invest and does that type of stuff. What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:41:25 He just invest. That's what he does. He doesn't have a job job. He doesn't have a job. She keeps him off and he invest. So he's a venture capitalist and he's an investment firm? He's a listener of Nancy Pelosi. He just listens to what she gets from the insiders and that's what she does.
Starting point is 00:41:37 I mean, it's her husband. Yeah. She's in Congress for how long? Why is nobody? If she is doing something, illegal? Do you think she's done something actually illegal and broken the laws? Or are our Stock Act laws so gray that politicians can just maneuver within this with no accountability and you can just yell at them and call them frauds, but nothing actually happens? Which one do you think
Starting point is 00:42:00 it is? So has she actually broken the law? I can't say yes or no, but I can say this. You know, you know what I've been doing with autopilot since July 1st. I went in and looked at those list of things and the things that were bought, and, you know, Palantir showed up and came and went, you know, before the announcement on Congress. And remember, they're reading off all of the forms that have to get filed. And so the interesting thing about all this is that you can see the trades happening there, and CNN and others, and Fox, have pointed out trades that were made by our elected officials. And then three weeks later, there's a bill that says, oh, you, you and you.
Starting point is 00:42:40 get the government contract? I guess this is the main thing, Tom. So I can't say, yes, she broke the law. It's a very basic question for you. The basic question for you is the following. Do you think people who are in office, who have access to information that you don't have, they should be able to invest in a market
Starting point is 00:43:01 based on information that they have? No. Should they be able to invest in the market? Yes. Should they be able to actively trade based on information? How do you manage that? tell the difference. So you put it in the index fund and that's it.
Starting point is 00:43:12 I feel like there should be a rule that you cannot do active trading, right? Because there's passive investing. That's what she's doing. I agree. Yeah. But I assume that who's the Republican version of Nancy? Oh, there's plenty of them. That's my point.
Starting point is 00:43:24 No, no, this is not a left thing. She's the poster child of this. Yeah, but she's the highest ranking person to do what she's done at the levels that she's done. She's the poster child for this. But there's Republicans guilty of this as well. Who is it? Romney is well Romney was a successful guy before before yeah correct with Bain Capital I believe but you could have a few other guys see that could be like Mitch McConnell is a good one
Starting point is 00:43:47 perfect okay but look at Mitch McConnell's profit how much was that six mil okay look at hers yeah come on they're not in the same league 24.1 million what I'd be most interested in hearing is what politicians from the left and the right are saying about this who was it who was our buddy that was here that's the um representative in Rokana. Rokana. Isn't he actively talking about something like this? He wants to stop the stock.
Starting point is 00:44:11 Yes. Yes. It's not only handled. AOCS. A few, few different people are on both sides. Even Anna Paulina Luna that was here the other day
Starting point is 00:44:19 when we spoke to her. Tom. Senator Mark Kelly set up an ethics committee approved blind trust and demonstrated that he had moved all of his assets into the blind trust. And the blind trust purpose is for the independent financial advisors
Starting point is 00:44:35 to trade. limited, limited transactions, and he is not part of the decision-making process. Mostly were related to reits and indexes. Bingo. So I love that you highlighted one word. Limited. You said limited. What?
Starting point is 00:44:53 Yeah, they limit the trades. They limited the trade flow. Because you know in an index fund or a passive fund, you're not in and out of the market. You're not trading based on information or new stock that might come up. the active tradings, I think, of where people get in trouble. Oh, yeah, I've really heard about this. I feel like they should put a law or some sort of guideline. You cannot trade in and out of stocks.
Starting point is 00:45:16 That's where you take advantage of this. Yeah, so here it is. So you're the politicians on trying to ban or restrict lawmakers from trading individual stocks because of concerns about access to non-public information. John Alsoff, Senator George, he's a Democrat, sponsored to Senate ban Congressional Stock Trading Act. Then you have Mark Kelly, Arizona. who is also a Democrat,
Starting point is 00:45:37 work with all stuff on the same thing. Then you have Josh Hawley as well, Republican, at a Missouri who has joined it as well. You got Dean Phillips that I think he wanted to run for president. Minnesota, yeah. Minnesota, co-sponsored it, and then Rokana, who we talked about earlier. I disagree with Rokana, but he would know in his district.
Starting point is 00:45:56 The individual stocks is where you get into hot water. Because I think a politician, if they have a 401K, listen, a politician, this is how they're supposed to have retirement. retirement money, right? In their 401k or 4.3B or whatever it's called in Congress. Like anybody else? Yeah, they should be in an index fund. They should be in an ETF.
Starting point is 00:46:13 They should not be able to trade individual stocks. And then there's no conflict of interest. If you're trading in out of stocks, that's where it kind of comes into all this. And then they should have a target. There's a longest pause in your life. Like there was a brain. I felt like the brain. stop. And I went like this. I went,
Starting point is 00:46:37 Yeah. Because here's all the thing. Get this man some coffee, folks. Those people pray for weeks. Holy shit. You know how, when you invest in the market, PBD? This is brought to you by your fed drain. Exactly. Hello, wake up. Adam, just has a coffee. Ripped fuel. You know, so, Warren Buffen says, listen, put your money in S&P 500 and just invest
Starting point is 00:46:53 in America. But that's not your only component of an asset allocation. Let's get past the story. Let me just ask you one question. Go ahead, Rob. What percent of of your asset allocation is in an American funds, American companies, versus international.
Starting point is 00:47:07 I am pro-America. I am very little international. I just traded. Yeah. So I have my money with fidelity. Apparently, if you want to do a world index, like a world conglomerate, what do you call it, they mandate that you do two-thirds of your portfolio into America
Starting point is 00:47:25 and one-third into international. I'm speaking to my guys. I said, let me ask you guys a question. Over the last 10 years, what has been the rate of return for the S&P 500? versus whatever you're calling the world index that has emerging markets and everything and basically was double the rate of return
Starting point is 00:47:43 America versus the international. I go, so why am I invested international at all? They go, well, we want to diversify. I go, if your diversification, put everything 100% into America. Damn. Everything. So what's my point?
Starting point is 00:47:57 Every single one of these politicians should be in an ETF, S&B 500, all in America. I don't need you investing in emerging markets in India. I don't want you talking about a new company in Bangladesh. 100% of their stock allocation should be in America and you should not be able to actively trade in and out of it. Let's go to the next one. Good, good point. So next one to get into.
Starting point is 00:48:17 Here's the next one. So housing director confirms administration working on a 50-year mortgage after Trump hint. Oh, my God. 50-year mortgage? Yes. 50-year mortgage. What would it look like? Go ahead, Rob.
Starting point is 00:48:33 trying to find an answer on affordability for housing, which right now we're seeing one of the worst housing markets that we've seen in recent times. And so the 50-year mortgage is a play to lower people's monthly mortgage payments. But the downside is, especially early on, all of that payment will be going to interest. And of course, since you're paying over 50 years and not over 30 years, you're going to be paying off that mortgage for a lot longer. So the details are still to be worked out But it looks to be like the president's looking for a quick fix To a market that is fundamentally broken right now
Starting point is 00:49:07 Okay, so this guy's a Democrat, right? Because you see the back in the back, if you zoom in the books You'll see the new deal. Go back a little bit, right? Do you see it to the left? He's got the new deal. You can always sell what books they're reading. Okay.
Starting point is 00:49:18 Crash. Do you know while this guy's saying this, it's so funny, do you know who came up with the 30-year mortgage? Cool. Do you know who came up with the 30-year mortgage? I want you to think about But can you tie right there, Rob. Can you pull that up?
Starting point is 00:49:31 Here's who came out with the 30-year mortgage. FTR? Yeah, FDR came up with the 30-year mortgage. So did you say the same thing back in a day, Svello? I don't know what your name is, but, you know, well-spoken guy a minute ago. Crashed. So he did 30 years. Trump's going to 50 years.
Starting point is 00:49:46 By the way, Tom, the question is, if you're a bank, if you're a bank, would you get into the 50-year business game? Would we do that knowing you're collecting the interests up front? would you entertain the 30 versus 50 because how do you set it up? You still have to find a way to make it profitable for the banks, right? Right. So the bank has to get their money or else there's no incentive for them to want to sell this loan. Okay? What would be the incentive for banks to sell 50-year loans?
Starting point is 00:50:13 Well, as long as they felt that the underlying asset wasn't going to drop. Now, so here's what the bank has to do. Your house is a collateral. You stop paying, Vinnie. I'm going to take your house. I'm going to sell it to the next guy. That's what a bank will do. We'll auction it.
Starting point is 00:50:26 he'll low auction it off. Now then, what it means, Pat, is the first 10 years of that 50-year loan, the bank has to underwrite it and be comfortable that that house won't decline in value. You follow that? Because not much will be paid off in 10 years, Pat. Not much at all. So if you and I, Tom and Pat's bank, and we do a 50-year mortgage, our underwriting has to say, are we sure that house is not going to go down in these first 10 years? Because if we have to, if we have to seize the house and auction it, we've got to make sure that house is worth more than the loan's worth. So it makes the front end underwriting has to be more certain for the banks. But I just did a little analysis.
Starting point is 00:51:09 30-year, $400,000, $6.5, $2,462 is the payment. 50-year, six-and-a-quarter, $400,000, $2179. So about a $300,000 difference on a $400,000 mortgage. However, next-to-no principles paid off in those first 10 years, very little, and then it accelerates. So for the banks, more people will qualify using standard ratios and measurements, but the bank better be sure that those houses don't drop in those first 10 years. Rob, go back to where you were at right there, a minute ago, watch this. So this is 30-year payment, 30-year loan, 360 payments.
Starting point is 00:51:51 Your payment will be 2684. Total interest paid for was 466. 40, $2,400. So you save maybe $150, $130. No, $100, no, you save $270. And eventually you end up paying $650,000, $200,000 more. And then 50 years is $22.72, which is $142 less of the 40 year. And you end up paying $8.63 long term.
Starting point is 00:52:20 So what's the price of the house? Yeah. Is that a base on a half a million? What is this? I think that's a half a million dollar loan It's a half a million dollar loan That's what you're looking at So it's a half a million dollar house
Starting point is 00:52:29 So you're essentially You put on this Rob 6% 5% fix Yeah Okay but it's not even 5% right now Gotcha What would it be on 15% What would it be in 15%
Starting point is 00:52:39 Okay PPD I mean you already know where I stand on this I just know What you're doing I know you're running your numbers What are you thinking on this right now? Well here's the thing
Starting point is 00:52:49 Adam I've never lost money buying a house Because the math on buying a house is the following. Here's the math on buying a house. Okay, let's just kind of do, you know, if you just do the flat interest, you're not making a lot of money. If I buy a $600,000 auto house, how much down payment am I putting on a $600,000 house, Tom? If I got a $750 credit score. Oh, a $600,000, you'll have to put down about $120,000. 20%? Okay. 20% of the put down? Okay, let's just say, let's just, let's you, type in Rob, if I have a $600,000
Starting point is 00:53:23 I don't know how $750 credit score. How much down payment would I need to put down? Can I do 10%? My boy, Vinny's going to be a... Yeah, like there are some states who give you a first-time home buyer for 10%. First time, let's just say 10%. Yeah. So if I do first time, I'm putting $60K down.
Starting point is 00:53:37 And you have to pay P&I. So I'm financing $540 is what I'm financing. Okay. So now, what is the rate of return on real estate the last decade? 5%. Okay. But what I'm saying is fine. Sure.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Go 5%. If we do 5% on that 600K, 5% on 600K over 10 years, 6% to 7% average, let's take 6%. Okay. So what is the price of the $600,000 house come 10 years from now? What's the price of the $600,000 house come 10 years from now at 6%. So say if I bought a $600,000 house and it grows at 6% every year, what is the property value 10 years from now. 7% will be 1.2 million. So I'm probably going to say 6% is going to be 980. Let's just say it's under a million. 980 is what it should be 1,074,000. Okay.
Starting point is 00:54:35 So a million 74, you just made $574,000 on that money. Okay, $574,000. On the 600K, you put 60,000 down. What's your monthly payment on that, Rob? just say what is your payment on a $640,000 loan at 6% 30-year fix? Let's just not even say 30-year fixed. Tom, let's say we do a 10-year-adjustable. Yep, I'm doing it. Do a 10-year arm, okay? 10-year arm.
Starting point is 00:55:07 So 540. Vinnie, an arm is an adjustable rate mortgage. It's not a working-out-bysep, gotcha. So what is the payment on that? Everything 32, 30-year. So let's actually do the math right now. So I'm and then Rob, can you do me a favor? I just ask what is the rent, what is the average rent nationwide?
Starting point is 00:55:28 Okay, what is a $600,000 house average get in the country today? We're going to actually do the math very deep right now. I love it. So go, what is a $600,000 budget gets you? How big of a house does a $600,000 budget get you in America on average? We're not saying Toledo. we're not saying Beverly Hills. I'm saying Toledo.
Starting point is 00:55:51 How big of a house? Yeah, like I'm getting married. I got a wife and kids. I want to have a family. How many bedrooms is that? 2576. Okay. 2576.
Starting point is 00:56:01 Three bedrooms. I think that's four three. I think that's four three. Okay. Rob, can you then ask the following question? What is the average rent for a 2,576 square foot home in America? We're getting very deep if you notice what I'm doing right now. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:56:19 Because I know where you're going. And I'm going to do the math as deep as you want to go with this year right now. So the average rent is what? 1754. Okay? So now notice, 1754 for, oh, 908. So what is the average rent for?
Starting point is 00:56:35 What does that say? 5900. What is that? 5,900 rent. Holy shit, that's a lot. Extrapolate. 2,500 square foot home, though. Okay.
Starting point is 00:56:44 That's a lot of rent, Rob. Holy moment. So why don't we, Damn. So I don't think it's going to be $59.00. No, I want to do rent. Okay. What is the average rent for a 2,570 square foot home in America?
Starting point is 00:57:04 Give me average. Not high or low, but average. Okay. I don't know if you're getting this number or not. We're getting to the bottom of it, this number. That number should be, go to $2,100, still saying the same number, right? It's telling me the same number as well.
Starting point is 00:57:21 What number do you guys want to pick? Let's pick a rent. I wrote 1900 before I came out because that's the stuff I've been reading. Okay, can we just say it's $2,000 a month? Let's just say the average rent rate, there's $2,100 a month. Let's go with $2,100 a month, okay?
Starting point is 00:57:35 So what's $2,300? What's $3,238 minus $2,300? $3,000,000,000 is $1,138. now take 1138 times 120 because you know what I'm doing Adam are you tracking or no 1138 times 120 Vinnie is By the way
Starting point is 00:57:57 Matt do you guys cut you guys cut you guys just stop Are you guys still I'm gonna come back down But do you know what we're doing Vinnie this is very important So watch this So here's what I'm at now Here's where I'm at now I'm at 100 I'm just showing you this We're at 136,000
Starting point is 00:58:14 560. Okay. So if we take that 6% concept, if we take that 6% concept, the value of real estate makes an average return of 6% every year. Over 10 years, your $600,000 house you bought will be $1,074,000, $1,0704,000 minus, I can't believe we're getting this steep in a loan, but let's do it Anyways, minus $600,000. You've made $474,000 in return. If I take $474,000, minus, Vinnie, $136,540 that you would have paid at a $2,100, $2,100 rent, 10 years later, owning a home would have gotten you 337, let's add the $60,000 down payment to it as well. I mean, you're making 397,460 buying a house
Starting point is 00:59:17 versus renting house over 10 years. But let's go deeper. Extrapolated Adam, go ahead. Your argument, or not your argument, the argument is you're not going to lose money by buying a real estate. It's almost like buying a bond. There's a lot of caveats, buddy.
Starting point is 00:59:36 So, but I want to hear you. Go ahead. Make your argument. So. What's a better rate? That's another three-second process. You're on-Widenville, bro. Get this guy some brain.
Starting point is 00:59:47 To be honest, you're going to start shaking hands with a camera. It was Rory's 13th birthday. I went all yesterday. Go ahead. Shut up. You know that. The argument is not,
Starting point is 00:59:56 is buying a house a good investment. It is a okay investment. I'm not shitting on the investment. I don't think it's a bad investment. I'm not recommending that you don't do the investment. I'm saying if you're solving for a rate of return. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop. Based on this argument, we did it as technical as possible.
Starting point is 01:00:20 I'm willing to bet we lost viewership right now. Let me just see where people are probably like, I'm talking about this. I don't want to talk about this. I'm telling you right now, Adam, okay, this is my advice to people. If you're in the area where you're working for company advantage, like if I'm working for Marriott, say I'm working for Marriott and my goal is to be a general manager running a hotel one day. Guess what I'm not doing for 10
Starting point is 01:00:45 years? I'm not buying a house. Correct. Because you could be moving around. I'm going to be moving. We're opening up a new Marriott in London. Do you want to go? No. I'm not going to get a stat, but I'll go to Dubai, right? Do you want to go to a new Marriott that's coming? Yes, if your job requires potential promotions to move. For me,
Starting point is 01:01:01 when I was Ph.P., I know I'm moving. As crazy it is, I bought a house eventually in that community that we lived in Tramble State. You've never been to it. Tom has been to it. I bought the cul-de-sac. And I bought a right next to Barry Bonds agent. So we love this community. There's 21 homes. I rented a house in a community. I bought the house in the corner.
Starting point is 01:01:18 Two years later, I'm leaving. Do you remember that time? Two years, I'm like, shit, I'm going to Texas. I still made $200,000. I still made $200,000 when I bought that. Because it was prime property, cul-de-sac in a gated community with only 21 homes. Then we go to the house in Dallas. You've been to our house in Dallas. Did you go to both of them or just one of them?
Starting point is 01:01:39 Did you go to the other house? In Dallas? The four-story, 15,000. square foot home. You didn't go to that one. I didn't go to that one. Okay. So the one, but the other one you went to. With the pool table. Yes, yes. The other one you went to. We made money on that one. The house we bought here. We made money on this one. If a person's buying long term, you have, like if this is what I did for living financial, but you're sitting on doing the math with them. When you get to the bottom of it, the question is simple. Are you planning on living in this place
Starting point is 01:02:06 for 10 years? Yes. Then I would lean more towards buying than rent. and think. If you tell me no, then I would say pump the brakes. That's really how simple it is. We are fully on the same page. I have zero disagreements. So my contention is never, don't buy
Starting point is 01:02:25 real estate. I've never said that. This is as as thorough as a breakdown we could have done for the people that are watching. Can I ask you a very specific question? Of course. If you can put these three, PBD's money. We know 150 million. Ain't one used to be. PBD's money. If you could put the following three things where you
Starting point is 01:02:41 You've made the most money. No, it's not close. Working on a business, your stock portfolio, or your housing portfolio, what rank those three for you? I'm not everybody, though. I'm saying for you, I want to know you. I know. A guy asked me, if you could define yourself with one word, what would it be? And it can't be politics or family, non-family.
Starting point is 01:03:05 I said, operator. I love the day-to-day grind. I agree. You know since what time I've been at the office today? You don't even know what time I've been at the office today. Yesterday I was at Naples. Dylan had a game. I went to the championship coming back and I've been dealing with a bunch of chaos this weekend.
Starting point is 01:03:20 Ph.P. was here the day before Saturday. 7.45 I'm at the office. You know what day, what time I Saturday ended? You know what time I Saturday ended? 2 o'clock in the morning. My day started Saturday, 7.45 in the morning. It ended Sunday, 2 o'clock in the morning. I come home Sunday, 2 o'clock in the morning.
Starting point is 01:03:35 Then I got to get the, you know, doing stuff with the kids to go to the... So I'm back and forth, but I freaking love being an operator, right? But that's not everybody. If somebody's watching this right now who has a job making $82,000, your wife makes $59,000, they're trying to make a decision, do we listen to the people that are saying it or not? And you know there's not going to be a massive amount of changes in your life the next 10 years. Massive. If there is, then you have to adjust accordingly.
Starting point is 01:04:04 But if you know it's going to be, I'm going to be with this company. Long term, I love it here. This is what I'm going to be doing. This is the industry I'm going to be on. This is the city I'm going to live in, probably within a 5-10-mile radius. Then guess what? Lock it up and get something if you can afford it. And by the way, guess what else you have to be thinking about?
Starting point is 01:04:23 Never has there been more important time, Tom, to buy a house in a community in an area based on politics than today. Do you know what just happened right now with California and Texas? Folks, let me tell you what happened with California and Texas. This whole thing with the elections and all the things. this up that they're saying going into midterms, do you know what California and Texas just did with redistrictings? You know Prop 50 and what Texas did? Do you know what they did? Guess what's going to happen. Texas protected themselves. We're going to stay Republican for many, many decades. Come do something about it. And you know what California did? We're going to stay Democrat
Starting point is 01:04:55 for many, many decades. Come do something about it. Arod's being interviewed and he's being asked, what areas do you buy properties in? And he says, red states. Why red states? Because people are moving to red states. What are red states? Pick them. Pick them. Tennessee. Florida used to be purple. Now it's red. Texas. Where are you investing in? So, you know, these are the types of decisions you got to make with your family and say,
Starting point is 01:05:22 where are we going to go buy a home long term? But if it's 10 years, I'm banking on buying a home instead of renting a home. Because 10 years later, that family is going to have an additional $400,000 of net worth added to their name that they wouldn't have had. All right. story. Um, next story. Next story. Boom, boom. Where's that one story? Vinny you wanted to get to. Okay. Okay. I'm going to go to. You don't go to that? You want to go to the Newsom one. Which one? Yeah, let's go Newsom. Newsom gives Trump a new nickname after President appears to not off during White House announcement. So what happened here? Is this a real nodding off,
Starting point is 01:05:57 Vinny, or no? I honestly didn't even see this one. Rob, do you have a clip or no of this? I don't have a clip of that. I do have a clip of Newsom talking about Snap benefits where he recites Bible verses. Oh, this is. That's really bothered me. No, this is Gavin Newsom. They called him the Nodfather. The Nodfather. The Nodfather, the Noddorf, 6th,
Starting point is 01:06:14 nodding off at various occasions above the words, not father, and a golden. Some movies saw this, had to share its social media post. 79-year-old president struggled to keep his eyes open Friday during the televised event at the White House where several administration officials announced lower prices for weight-lost drugs. People can sleep again because they can breathe when they go to bed. Dr. Oz said this.
Starting point is 01:06:34 And the prescription. So what is he talking about here? Is this actual story with the not father? It's all BS. This is the same guy, Pat, that said Joe Biden was the best and he's doubled down a thousand times. For the first time in nine years, Donald Trump kind of closed his eyes. Kind of.
Starting point is 01:06:55 Okay. Kind of did that. I'm, I don't, I've never had this type of feeling towards any politician. And I keep, I'm going to keep doing it because as these years, the way, it's happening. It's happening. We're one year past. It's going to be 2008. Tom, look. Look at him. That's it. Oh, my goodness. An 80 year old guy
Starting point is 01:07:16 got one time, got a little oh, maybe, yeah, oh my, oh my, it's over, guys. It's over. What is Newsom trying to say here? What do you think, the Nodfather? Let me explain something to you. This guy is, is, I've already called it. I said he's going to be the frontrunner. I mean, it's no secret. What he's doing, he just went overseas. Now he's in Texas. He has the freaking audacity to put the American flag behind him. He's the most un-American
Starting point is 01:07:46 person out there. I love that you're saying, Pat. Who's going to California? And it still boggles my mind. People like Bill Maher and I get it. You're in California. Your shows in California. You love Gavin Newsom. His words exactly. I love the guy. I love the guy because you have the money and you can afford it. But the rest of the freaking people in California are bleeding out. There's a clip, is this the one, Rob, about... God's Will Scripture. No, this one right here, Robbie. Is this the one where he says we have to democratize the economy?
Starting point is 01:08:14 Is that one it? This one right here. But listen to this. Look at what he has to do. Listen to this. We've got to deal with the issue of our time that we have to democratize this economy if we're going to save democracy.
Starting point is 01:08:24 You can't have 10% of people owning two-thirds of wealth in this country. You can't have that 30-year-old that's doing worse than his parents' generation for the first time in U.S. history. And so those are fundamental issues. that were obviously present in this election on Tuesday. And Donald Trump...
Starting point is 01:08:41 He's saying that Trump has done nothing to cater to his billionaire friends. And the result, folks are working on Amazon are paying 12% more, target, blah, blah, blah, blah. Here's a problem. The majority of California pays over 11% in sales tax, no matter how poor they are, thanks to Gavin Newsom, has the highest gas prices in the nation, and electricity crisis, sky high insurance costs. And if people even get coverage anymore, that's thanks to him, okay? And he turned one of the most beautiful states in America that you lived in, that he lived in,
Starting point is 01:09:12 that I lived in, into a nightmare for the middle class. Okay, he's chokeworking families with endless taxes, regulations, failed policies. Let's forget about COVID. Let's forget about the response for the Palisades. And there's over 190,000 homeless people in California, guys. They look like freaking third world zones, these cities in California and San Francisco. Instead of making California healthier and wealthier, he's made them poor, sicker, and hopeless.
Starting point is 01:09:39 And now, Tom, I've been dying last night I thought about you about this clip. Rob, can you go to the clip with him talking about, besides him having the flag behind him, which I think is a disgrace, him, this serpent, trying to talk about God and scripture. No, Adam, this drove me through the roof. You think he's a Christian?
Starting point is 01:09:56 You think Gavin Newsom is going to church? You think he's professing his faith to people? The fact that he was trying to use snap and food stamps with the Bible. Bible drove me nuts. Go ahead, Rob, play this. States. But think about the state of mind of the Vice President. How do they honestly, how do you square the circle
Starting point is 01:10:11 when you go to a prayer breakfast? How do you square the circle? I mean, Old Testament, New Testament. What's the fundamental thing that connects every, I mean, from John to Matthew to Proverbs? It's this notion of hunger, feeding the poor, the sick, the tired, it's not an option.
Starting point is 01:10:28 It's central to advancing God's world. God's word. Fundamental point that we'd be using. Look at them. This is what it's about. And the federal government said it in the lawsuit, that they want to use it as a bargaining chip, a bargaining chip to end this shutdown. That's shameful.
Starting point is 01:10:44 It's never happened in U.S. history. I never thought the day would come that this unholy surpac. The fact that he's trying to go to scripture, like to justify the government's decency to me is sick. And guess what? Because he's talking about these people deserve this money, right? In the Bible, and I know what you're going to say,
Starting point is 01:11:01 this is what it says in regards to work, responsibility and self-reliance. In two Thessalonians, chapter 3, verse 10, if anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat. Paul said this to his believers who stop working. That's willing. Not crippled, but if it's not willing. That willing, meaning you don't want to work, where he incentivizes
Starting point is 01:11:16 illegally to come because there are votes, Tom. And then in Genesis 2, verse 15, the Lord took the man and put him in the garden to work and to keep it. You have to work. First thing he did with Adam after he created it, he gave a job. Before sin, even enter the
Starting point is 01:11:33 world. God was like, hey Adam, nice. You're like the bushes. Get over them work. And the last one was Proverbs. Lazy hands make for poverty, but diligent hands bring wealth. God honors the worker, not the idol. This guy, his entire party, I want everybody to understand is bring
Starting point is 01:11:48 illegals, give them money, and they vote for you, and that's it. Period. So part of Gavin Newsom, he's running for president, and you expect him to say certain things. Yes. But when he tries to cross over and do this, he's going to get called receipts. And the receipts have never been greater than on the pages of Scripture. And he is
Starting point is 01:12:08 attempting to use Scripture to make his point. Well, I'll tell you, there was a time when Jesus was tempted. Satan came to Jesus and attempted to use Scripture with him. He said, took him to the desert for 40 days. And he said, you know, you can make these stones turn into bread. You know, why don't you do that? And he says, look, scripture says, man does not live by bread alone. He took him to the highest point in the temple. And he said, throw yourself down. Won't legions of angels come and rescue you? And he said, the scripture says, do not put the Lord your God to the test. And so when you start using scripture and you try to make political points, you need to be very, very careful because you're dealing with a consequential result here that is much bigger than any pundit that any person
Starting point is 01:12:52 can bring to you is you're attempting to use the word of God and to morph it to make your argument and you're morphing it in a wrong way. He's got a serious issue. But what we need to do, we need to bring the receipts to the American people. We need to find the reasonable Californians and the reasonable liberals that want to look at facts. Because I'll tell you what's going on. What's going on is he's an effective campaigner. What's going on is he's effective to the media. What's going on is he may turn your stomach on one side, but he is turning voters on his side.
Starting point is 01:13:21 Take a look at this. You see that in the lower left corner, Pat? Damn. $27.5 million has been wagered. and it's currently right now at a 37, 36% chance. This is not polling. So it's not, he doesn't have 36% of the polls. The wagering public on Kalshi believes that there is a 36% chance that Gavin Newsom will be the nominee.
Starting point is 01:13:51 And the key to that are right in every time is AOC and Kamala Harris, AOC at 10% Kamala Harris at 6. And then the field. So this will change. J.B. Pritzker wants to run and he's going to put money into it and he's going to weigh in and the DNC wants him because frankly the DNC allegedly believes that all the stuff that Gavin is doing right now, he's making a bunch of negative campaign ads for himself, Pat. There are people in the DNC that think that all of this activity, all the things he did, getting called out in the mini debate a year and a half ago with DeSantis on the,
Starting point is 01:14:26 hey, let me show you the map of San Francisco. This is from your own people. there's a lot of people that are frustrated by that and think that he's just filled the canon with a lot of negative ads are going to come back the other way. But right now you got $27 million that's been wagered that he's going to go.
Starting point is 01:14:44 You know what I think Republicans have to be aware of is the following. This is what I wanted to hear. What I think Republicans have to be aware of is, you know, there's nothing more what's the word the blind spots that come from being super cocky
Starting point is 01:15:07 just because you have Trump right now and he's the most formidable guy they've had going against the establishment at least in our generation that we've had that he stood up to these guys that doesn't guarantee the next guy is going to be as tough as him that doesn't guarantee
Starting point is 01:15:25 how American and people are going to react to Vance or Rubio or all these other guys. Newsom's going to be formidable. AOC is going to be formidable. Kamala Harris, the worst candidate in the history of my lifetime. I've never met a candidate more annoying
Starting point is 01:15:44 and unattractive than Kamala. Kamala's like the girl you went on a date with and you're sitting when she walks up, it's a blind date. And you're sitting down, you're like, oh my God, she is hot until she opens her mouth. And you look at the waiter and you're trying to give all the signals
Starting point is 01:16:03 to say, you know how, please save me. Please. Poor hot tea on my lap. Save me. Tell me there's a phone call at the front. Say there's an emergency. I'm needed. Please have a fight accidentally break out
Starting point is 01:16:18 so I can jump in it and get arrested so I can leave. But whatever you do, get me the hell away from this candidate here. That was Kamala. If I saw Kamala on TV, it was painful, right? But if Democrats think
Starting point is 01:16:30 Gavin Newsom is not going to, he doesn't have a high likelihood to becoming the president, it's very, very high, very high. Did you see Kamala this weekend declared that she was the single most qualified person for president ever? I think the more she does that, the more Newsom wins.
Starting point is 01:16:45 That was about, that's exactly what I was saying. And she was on there really, not really challenged by who's she on there with? Is this the one? Yep. Go ahead. Oh, Kara Swisher. Go ahead. That is a decent resume, but go ahead.
Starting point is 01:17:02 Well, some people have actually said I was the most qualified candidate ever to run for president. Oh, my God. Is that vodka? I like the some people say. Very nice, but go ahead. People are saying. Speaking of fact. But you know what?
Starting point is 01:17:19 But you know what? I hope she's the candidate. Me too. By the way, listen to me, guys, Republicans. and conservatives and libertarians. Just watch, please. Just let's speak. Let's all get behind her.
Starting point is 01:17:35 Let's all get behind her. No, no, I'm telling you, let's all get behind her and just build her up to get past the primaries and then let her do her thing all over again. Because, you know, you thank God upstairs
Starting point is 01:17:55 if Hillary or Kamala run. You hope they run. Hope. You ask AOC a question. She can give you a nice answer. Of course. It's gotten better over the years. I mean, she was a rookie congresswoman coming in,
Starting point is 01:18:09 but guess what? She can really put something together, okay? You ask her a question. Oh, man. You ask Hillary Clinton a question. You know, you need like 20 security guards around you to make sure if you're, you know. You don't want a suicide.
Starting point is 01:18:23 Yeah, no. It's a very different thing. think. But I think in 2028, as we're going through this next process, I don't think Republicans have 20-20 guaranteed in lockdown. I have an idea. I can be her campaign manager. I have an idea. How about this? Kamala, 0.28. So funny. But I honestly think, let me ask you guys a question. What? Because you want to get behind Kamala, right? Yeah. If you had to pick the president, the next president of the United States, it's not a Republican,
Starting point is 01:18:51 it's not Trump, it's not J.D. Vance. It's not Mark of Rubio. Had to be one of these three people. people. Had to be. You know how you play Mary? Go. Mary F. And I'm going to give you my name. Hang on, don't say it yet. Go. AOC. Hillary Clinton. You know how to play Mary F.K. You know that game? I would choose Hillary. Hillary. You would choose Hillary. Out of those three? Correct. Hillary. Cool. Got it. Tom, do you have a different pick? No, no. If you're going to play FKM, it's got to be Hillary. This guy. So we're on the same page, Hillary. Cool. Boom, but I don't think she's running. Now, between Kamala and AOC, who do you pick?
Starting point is 01:19:31 Costa Rica. Kamala and AOC. Well, you know if you pick Kamala? To be the president of the United States in 2028. Yeah. You have to vote for one. It's a bad game. It's a horrible game.
Starting point is 01:19:45 It's a horrible game. Who do you pick? I am. Who do you pick? I am refusing to play the same. No, PBD. Between those two, I'm sitting it out. Are you ready for this?
Starting point is 01:19:54 You ready? But I tell you. But I tell you, honestly, it would probably be AOC. Oh, no, really? It would probably be AOC. Over Kamala Harris, because you know what's going to happen? The same people that were telling Joe Biden, the real presidents, the Obamas, they're behind them, they're running the show.
Starting point is 01:20:10 And again, you know why it's AOC? You know me to tell you why AOC? I'd love to hear it, yes. Because if Kamala becomes president, Kamala's not president. She's not smart. Thank you. She ain't running the show. She's not. She's not smart.
Starting point is 01:20:23 if AOC becomes president, she's at least going to clean up some of the, what do you call it? Like, I truly believe she's a true believer when it comes on to the Nancy Pelosi stuff. I do believe she has, you know, true belief in certain areas. I don't know what Kamala Harris believes in. So, you know, that's a really good point. It's like, what do you believe they will actually do
Starting point is 01:20:47 and have the coalition and a juice to do it? Or a socialist. great processing point. Even if you don't like the candidate, what do you believe they can actually get accomplished and have the coalition and the juice to do it? AOC, I agree with Pat. I think she'll get some of these things. Who do you think can be bullied more? Kamala or AOC? Who do you think can be owned? Kamala or AOC? Kamala. What I'm trying to say, what I'm trying to say is that. Bullied, bludgeoned and banged. You're kidding. No way. Listen, that's why you have conversations.
Starting point is 01:21:23 Both of them have the most annoying voices ever. So let's not discount the AOC's voice is more annoying. Okay. That's my opinion. Have you seen her in the last year? The way she's speaking, the way she's moderating. AOC is different. Let's just state facts here.
Starting point is 01:21:35 Formedable candidate. She's been a senator. She's been a vice president. She's been a drunk borders are. So great. There you go. What the hell has AOC ever done in her career other than hang out in the Bronx? And those are just titles.
Starting point is 01:21:48 Adam. Communism. How did Comole? What has AOC ever done? How did Kamala get the Congress? It didn't look like a Latina 6. Would we even pretend to even know what she wants? They managed to get the Green New Deal in there and get certain things screwed with the energy industry.
Starting point is 01:22:02 Hold on. Hold on. I want you to stay like this. By the way, I want you to stay in this mode for three years. So Kamala becomes a candidate. Yes. I want you to defend her like this.
Starting point is 01:22:11 Kamala is the most accomplished president. There you go. Adam, you name three. You named three. You were one of those people. How did she get into Congress? Let's talk about her mayor. Brian, hold on. How did she become the vice president?
Starting point is 01:22:26 What did she do? All those things that you said. Hold on. AOC didn't know people that were mayors and no. AOC hasn't done anything. She's a representative. Let me get to this next story. I'm not spending this much time on this story. I'm going to go to the next one. Vance is the frontrunner for 2028. Rubio privately confides, Rob, if you want to play this clip, in regards to who is the presidential candidate for front runner for 2020 for the Republican Party.
Starting point is 01:22:51 Go ahead, Rob. this great Politico article that came out today where it talks about Secretary Rubio privately talking about and expecting Vice President Vance to be the 2028 GOP nominee and obviously there's been a lot of talks already on who would it be maybe the frontrunner, would it be bands, would it be Rubio, you know, the figure would be that they would both try to run for. But let's now talk to Politico right here, one of the reporters on the story. Great article, Diana Nerozzi, with Politico, always great to have you on. And, yeah, I thought this was a fascinating look at how President Trump,
Starting point is 01:23:32 not even a year into this second administration. Okay, Scott's talking too much, right, Rob, just pause it, Rob. I can't do that anymore. So, Mariko has been very clear on that. J.D. is going to be the Republican nominee if he wants to be, said the person close to the secretary, noting that Rubia has expressed sentiment, privately and publicly, he will do anything he can just to support the vice president
Starting point is 01:23:52 in that effort, said the person close to Rubio who was granted anonymity to share the Secretary of State's private conversations, and no one expects Marco to resign from the cabinet and start taking pot shots at the vice president. So that's kind of where you're at with this.
Starting point is 01:24:07 Are you at a point, Tom? Like, is there an outsider for you as well outside of J.D. or Rubio? So anybody else has an outsider for a Republican for 28? I think there will be outsiders that try to run because you elevate your presence for other considerations. Many people think Pete Buttigieg did exactly that, elevated himself so that he would be drawn into the mix and then he was Secretary of Transportation. So I believe there will be outsiders trying to run, but I don't think they will be serious campaigns and they will, I think
Starting point is 01:24:48 they'll be there to elevate their presence, get a little forward. Now, do I think that people like MTV are serious and it's going to be a distraction and it's going to take well past South Carolina to figure out how we make a coalition? Yeah, I think that's going to be a problem. But I also believe that the Republicans are smart enough right now, and what you're hearing from Rubio, I believe, is this is, hey, Marco, you have really stepped it up. Foreign policy, you just check the box.
Starting point is 01:25:18 You look far more mature. Check the box. You've got the support of the big guy. Check the box. You've got wins in foreign policy. Check the box. Do you want to go? We were behind you all for these Senate years. We're there. You have to remember, he's got a coalition that got into Senate in the state of Florida, and he would probably carry,
Starting point is 01:25:34 he would definitely carry Florida. And so it's Rubio probably saying, you know what? The machine is really thinking Vance. I'm not sure I want to throw my fingers into the gears of the machine. But I think there might be outsiders, Pat, but it'll be very temporary. You know, there's always 20 people that show up in New Hampshire. And everybody in New Hampshire gets free coffee for five weeks because the candidates are buying your coffee to come to Starbucks and hear what they say.
Starting point is 01:25:59 I think they'll be outsiders there. But I think they'll come and go quick, and the Republicans will call order. I guess everything that you've been saying with Gavin and all these guys and all the kind of fighting with the Republicans and stuff I honestly if an election happened right now I honestly don't think any of these guys would be able to be Gavin and I'm not saying that happily I'm just saying because these the left just votes on feeling
Starting point is 01:26:27 these are the Hitler's and this whole Gestapo's Nazis going to keep going they take children away from their families illegal thing see how they feel in a couple of years. I get it, but Tom, that's, I understand 100%, but that's how they're going to vote. People, the fact that you can cheer for Gavin Newsom
Starting point is 01:26:43 with the resume that this guy has, Tom, if he was in charge of like the tour bus guy and his tour buses crashed and killed people and everything, they'd still vote for that guy because it's not the Trump. He's a candidate, not a business guy. If he ran a funeral paler, no one would die. Exactly. So, you know, that's the reality you've got there.
Starting point is 01:27:01 But is he running a campaign? Does he know who he's doing? Yes, he does. Yes, and it's scary. It's scary because I know what's going to happen with the border. But when it comes to like, I don't, whoever Donald Trump is going to back and endorse to become the next president, it's going to be, it might be him or might be Rubio. The question is, will Trump in three years still have that fire and that MAGA push bat to put them over the edge? Or is the Democrats, Gavin Newsom going to be like, no, they're negative.
Starting point is 01:27:32 You guys still haven't given any outsider names. Tulsi Gabbard. Okay, Tulsi Gabbard. I would vote for it. Why is why you're shaking your head? We have to define outsider. What do you mean outside? Okay.
Starting point is 01:27:40 So to me, think Tucker, Massey, think, uh, uh, Jamie Diamond, think, you know, Iger, think, you know, on, on, on the Republican side. Because I think most of those names, you just, or most of those names. Tucker? No, no. Tucker, Tucker, Tucker is an insider. Well, Tucker would be an outsider. Do you think Jamie runs as a Republican or Democratic? If Jamie ever did it, I think honestly, he could only run as Ross Proe.
Starting point is 01:28:12 Honestly. I think he's that smart. You think there's anybody? You think there's anybody that's on the outside? Besides a Tucker? No. Our draft pick has been assassinated. You think Tucker will?
Starting point is 01:28:23 No question about it. Do you think Tucker will? No way. No. You said no way? I mean, listen. His dad was part of the machine, man. You know, he understands this stuff.
Starting point is 01:28:33 I think we, didn't you ask him once? So that's why he wouldn't? No, I think that's why he may understand what it takes to do it. Like, meaning a call to action? Like he has to do it? No, I mean, he, through his dad, he knows about the machine. He knows about what went on. Go take a look at all the things he was exposed to.
Starting point is 01:28:49 And he sees it on Fox. He would know exactly what would take. And so if he makes a decision, he's knowledgeable. He's not making an emotional decision. He knows who he's getting into. Who do you think? Who do you think? I don't know
Starting point is 01:29:03 I gave you guys a bunch of names No fantastic I imagine when I say Tulsi Pat I see like poised Soldier Ted Cruz God no I don't think
Starting point is 01:29:14 So when you say inside outside What do you mean He's running Cruz So Does he still have the desire? Yeah What is this? I think he's an insider
Starting point is 01:29:22 I have a very close friend That's friends with Tucker And they were talking about a presidential run In 2028 If the guys of the back Could not show this I'd appreciate that But for you guys, I wanted to show you.
Starting point is 01:29:32 That was Tucker's response to him when he said, what about running in 2028? Tucker's message is the bottom one. Basically, no chance in hell. Yeah, I agree. I think Tucker knows his position. But you never. He's never expressed any interest in running for president.
Starting point is 01:29:48 He's kind of like the Michelle Obama of the left. Oh, he could. He'd never run. Can I ask you one question before you say anything? Well, he's a man. Let's say we're getting closer to a 2012 election. He knows that the splintered Republican Party, it's going to be this guy.
Starting point is 01:30:01 this guy. They're all different friends. Tucker cannot win a general election. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on what I said. Tucker can to barely get through a Republican primary, much less a general election. You don't think he could. Let me tell you something. This is, PBD, I would assume, agree. Because PBD has done this thing. There's levels to things. You can be the best high school basketball player that you're at the end of the bench in college. You're the best player on your college team, and then you're at the end of the bench the NBA. You could be one of the best players in the NBA. You're, you know,
Starting point is 01:30:25 you could barely be a six man. There's different levels to this. The Republican Party has a Trump. There's nobody. Nobody who can light a hold a candle to Trump. Nobody. J.D. Vance can't hold a camp on a Trump. Marker Rubio, Tulsi, Gabbard, Tucker. None of these people are Trump. They're all going to have a Trump problem. On the left, completely wide open. This is probably going to be the most wide open election in 2020. That's why I'm saying. We're going to have two primaries with 50 people on stage. It's anybody's game. I'm personally making a few phone calls for some outsider to get in. I think this is a very unique year,
Starting point is 01:31:00 2028. Okay. I'm personally calling on a few people. Okay. And as we get closer, I'll be more public about it, but I'm personally going to call on a few people for 2028. Post midterms. Let's let midterms be done,
Starting point is 01:31:13 and then we'll be nominating some people and doing some, you know, reaching out. If I have to go, I have to go, I have to do it. Anybody with a representative in front of their name, representative, fill in the blank, has approximately zero chance of doing anything in any type of election. Can I ask you a question?
Starting point is 01:31:31 General election. That is a challenge, folks. If you're listening, do not let Adam talk to like this. Do not let Adam talk to you like this? Do you not let Adam talk to you like? Massey. Do you think a Tucker is the type of guy
Starting point is 01:31:40 that once he sees the writing on the wall, it's like, oh my God, somebody like Gavin Newsom is going to be the president. He wouldn't say, I have to do this. Tucker ain't that dude, bro. Tucker ain't Superman. No, I didn't say Superman. I didn't say Superman.
Starting point is 01:31:52 I didn't say Superman. I said he had a man. I either want to hear Pat processes or let's just make it Israel's fault and fight for real, right? This was one of the two things here. That who would do what? Let's either, I either want to hear Pat process it or let's just bring Israel into this and go nuts and fight for five minutes for real. So let's say what you want to do. Let's go to this.
Starting point is 01:32:13 All right. So, I hear them last. Mira. Listen. Denmark, folks, here's what Denmark is doing. Denmark's government aims to ban access to social media for children. under 15. I freaking love that. Go ahead, Rob. With 14 points about how to protect minors better online.
Starting point is 01:32:38 We're standing in a situation in Denmark where far too many young people, far too many children are having a profile on a big social media platform. We have agreed on an age limit on 15 years of age, but with the opportunity for parents to consent from the age of 13 if they want their children and young people to be on the social media platform. Guys, be quiet in the back. To the parents is, please don't have your children
Starting point is 01:33:10 on these social media platforms before the age of 15. Well, we're not regulating based on specific companies. In Denmark, do they not know when somebody else is speaking? Like, I'd be like, yo, I like that. What do you think of my positive work, wait? Do you like that tiger shirt at him? I actually like the tiger thing, or what is that?
Starting point is 01:33:29 Leopard. Women like wearing cheetah colors. I love that. Women like wearing this type of outfit. Speaking to Societa Press, Caroline's stage, Denmark's Minister for Digital Affairs said 94% of Danish children under the age of 13 have profiles on at least one social media platform,
Starting point is 01:33:47 more than half of those under 10 do so. So, Rob, run a poll. Run a poll. I don't know if it's run a poll. Okay, so put one, should kids be able to have social media? One option at any age. Another option at 13. Another 15, then put the last one at 18.
Starting point is 01:34:10 Let's see what our audience votes. I'm actually really curious. Tom, what do you think about this? I think it's common sense coming forward because there's, look, you can argue about social media all day long. You can argue about governments. got it right. Remember during COVID? Actually, New Zealand raised its hand and said,
Starting point is 01:34:25 hey, we want to put limits on social media for kids. There are two, actually three avenues that you can look at very, very clearly and you can be fact-based. And that is exactly what, at least in this case, Karlin's stage, or Stage
Starting point is 01:34:41 from Denmark, I think it's Staget. I believe it's pronounced that way there. That kids being approached by pedophiles, kids being approached, for relation to number one, number two, the girls and depression and girls and responses to you need the likes and you need all this to be validated, and through that lack of validation brings depression and bad behavior in girls. The studies are out. The studies are clear.
Starting point is 01:35:11 And Facebook meta admitted it to Congress that they had done those things to hook the girls and to cause this. So you have Facebook admitting it. And then the last thing that you have also that you can look to is test scores and education of kids in middle school who have access to social media. So now Denmark is saying, hey, parents, if you want to go through an assessment and the parents have to fill out an assessment, which my understanding is basically, are you married? Are you involved in your kids? and then you could say my kid could have a profile at 13 if I sign the assessment
Starting point is 01:35:49 or they can't have it until 15 because they're just looking at the facts they're just looking at those three simple facts so I think it's common sense Pat I think it's absolute common sense finally the people are looking at it you can see in theaters did you these theaters we go to the things
Starting point is 01:36:05 do you see the dove soap commercial where the moms and the young women are talking about you know about you know Dove soap is pure, and it says you need to have pure friends and pure truth. You don't need to have all the social media. You are validated and who you are and all of that. Why is that all happening?
Starting point is 01:36:27 And Denmark, I think, is doing the right thing here, and they're following New Zealand. And I think when you take a look in the U.S., why hasn't anybody from Congress brought this up? After all the things that happen in Congress, and I'm not out here to bash social media companies or tech bros. you admitted certain things in Congress. So why isn't the U.S. put similar, you know, restrictions in place, especially when we have the data on pedophilia. We have the data on girls under 16 and depression. And we have the data on test scores.
Starting point is 01:36:58 We have data. So with all these data, it's not one data point. And then you try to make, you know, I'm not running for Congress. And I throw up one stat out there. And I try to make a story out of it. You've got a list of stats here. So hats off to Denmark.
Starting point is 01:37:11 Hats off to Caroline Staget or Stage. I think it's pronounced Staget, Denmark Minister for Dedity. Maybe that. What do you think, though? What do you think? Rob, the poll has shown what? Almost 4,000 people voted.
Starting point is 01:37:24 Look at the poll. Very interesting. At 18 years old, 52%. Yeah. I agree with our audience on this way, by the way. By the way, 3% of our audience is an absolute psychopath. Absolute psychopath. Any age, yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:37 Go for it, four-year-old. Take this phone. Let me tell you something. PBD, I love what you said. Did we tell him we cookie that poll? When you were being interviewed by Brett Baer at the American Business Forum, which was an amazing event. Shout out to Mayor Francis Suarez for helping put that on.
Starting point is 01:37:50 But you talked about the anxious generation. You have four kids, Tico, Dilley, two girls. You know, you're very, very in this world. You know, me, Rory, my nephew, just turned 13 yesterday. I said, what do you want for your birthday? He's like, well, I'm thinking about maybe getting a new phone. I said, I'm going to talk to your dad, my brother-in-law, my sister's husband. I said, guys, do we want Rory?
Starting point is 01:38:12 He's like the sweetest, nicest kid, tall as hell. Massive. Happy birthday to him. Happy birthday yesterday. Giant, giant hands. Good hand shape. Him and Tico shuck hands. I go, let's see who's stronger.
Starting point is 01:38:22 Tico goes, he's got him, bro. Tico's a strong kid. I said, what do we want to do with this guy, man? He's the sweetest kid. Do we want him having a cell phone with social media? We all said, hell no. Hell no. There's a difference between Instagram, Snapchat,
Starting point is 01:38:36 TikTok versus, hey, I want to watch something on YouTube. YouTube is just like a world encyclopedia. So there's a difference to this. If you can go back to that poll, Rob, I think there's steps to where you do. Whoever's saying any kid could just watch whatever they want. 3%. They might just be being funny.
Starting point is 01:38:51 At 13, you should be able to go on to YouTube, do some research, see what's out there. I have a phone just to call your parents and stuff like that. Between 15 and 18 is where these conversations, in my opinion, when do you want to do this? This thing is the most dangerous and also the most amazing thing that any man has any human. And you're going to put that in a hand of a 10-year-old, a 12-year-old.
Starting point is 01:39:13 Let me give you a counter argument. I have a good friend. I'm not going to say his name. He has two kids. One of his kids is maybe nine years old. This kid does not come up for oxygen if he has a phone. He is knee-deep in this. He has a YouTube channel.
Starting point is 01:39:31 He's concerned about likes, clicks, videos. It's genuinely sad. I said, hey, buddy, you're at the dinner table. I did your rule. You're at their dinner table. Put it down. He goes, you're not my dad. I go, dad, tell him.
Starting point is 01:39:44 He goes, put the phone down. He goes, no. The kid is so obsessed with his phone. And my concern is how many millions of other kids are just like that? We talk about anxious generation. Yeah. We talk about anxious generation. What about a generation of kids who this is all they know?
Starting point is 01:40:02 They can't do this. Yeah. That's concerning to me. Yeah, in a big way. In a big way. So the poll. Again, I'm surprised. Rob, the poll is like 5,000 people voted.
Starting point is 01:40:15 53% said at 18. I agree with our audience. They're smart people. They've never done us wrong. 53% at age 18. That's some, uh, that are you on? There's hope. Do you think that you're pretty close to that?
Starting point is 01:40:29 You're there. I'm not. You're at least at 15 to 18. No, no. No, I'm at 18. I'm at 18, say here's your phone. Is your count? No, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I, I'm, I'm, I'm, I, I'm, I'm, I'm,
Starting point is 01:40:38 I've been managed in all their accounts since the day they were born. I've been managing their accounts. It's all me. If you ever see anything with their accounts, I manage all of it. I see all the DMs. I do all of it. So if you DM my kids, you're DM and me, okay? So don't DM my kid.
Starting point is 01:40:55 Well, now you're going to get business propositions. Hey, Patrick PPD on Brooklyn. Hey, Vinnie, can I close this out with a question for you? Do you think five years ago before congressional testimony, COVID, and everything we saw and what we realized about social media and what New Zealand did? Do you think that's 54% five years ago? Absolutely not. No, it's less.
Starting point is 01:41:14 I agree with you. What has happened? Data and facts. What this tells me, when I see things like this on a lightning rod issue, it tells me there's hope for the California voter. All right, let's go to this one. Guess what? President wants to send you $2,000.
Starting point is 01:41:27 He says it'll issue $2,000 tariff dividends to all except high income earning people. Rob, has that been announced or no that he's going to be doing that? Is that a... He announced it yesterday. He announced it yesterday. So let me read this to you for some of you guys, if you haven't received it yet, on what 800 number to call. President Donald Trump on Sunday gave his cell phone number to call for the $2,000
Starting point is 01:41:49 dollar tariffs payments that at any point you can text them. That's a joke, folks. I'm not giving you his phone number. Claim the dividend check of at least $2,000 will be paid to Americans except for high-income earners saying the country is now wealthy as a result of his tariff policies. People that are against tariffs are fools. We are now the richest most respected country in the world with almost no inflation and a record stock market
Starting point is 01:42:12 4.1Ks are higher than ever. We are taking in trillions of dollars and soon will be beginning paying down our enormous $37 trillion dollar debt. Record investment in the U.S. plants and factories are going all over the place. A dividend of at least $2,000 a person not including high-income people
Starting point is 01:42:31 will be paid to everyone. I wonder when. Can I give a guess on when I think the payment will be made? One has the midterms? October of 2026. Yeah, right before the midterm. Yeah, exactly. Smart.
Starting point is 01:42:44 In an ABC interview this week on Sunday, Treasurer's, Scott Besson said that he has not spoken to the president about the proposing dividends. The $2,000 dividend could come in a lot of forms, in a lot of ways. Besson told Anchor, Stepanapolis, you know, could be just the tax decreases that are, we're going to seeing the president's agenda,
Starting point is 01:43:03 you know, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on Social Security, deductibility of auto loans. Tom, how important is this, Tom? I think it's very important. And I think, you know, people that want to call that number, 1-886 Nancy, to put their name on the list, you know, I think it's stepping back a minute. I think it's important because he said there's going to be a benefit for all Americans. And I don't think this is George McGovern's $100, you know, a trick that didn't work. I don't think this is the stimulus package that Biden put out where he basically printed money and don't throw the comments out. I know we don't print anymore, but issuing digital currency. I think this is real, and I think he's trying to help people, and I think he's throwing in that little bit.
Starting point is 01:43:53 But not the people that are over wealthy. You don't need that. This is for the people. Let's see what Mr. Besson has to see. Go ahead, Ron. His main argument, though, seems to be that it's about taking him the real. And he also promised this morning a dividend, a dividend of at least $2,000 a person, not including high income people. How is he going to pay that dividend of $2,000 a person? It's not about taking
Starting point is 01:44:13 in the revenue. It's about rebalancing. And the revenue occurs early on. And then as we rebalance and the jobs come home, then it becomes domestic tax revenue. Are you worried that the president's focus on revenue, though, which is what he's been focusing on in his public statements, is going to hurt your argument at the Supreme Court? Not at all. It's completely consistent that the revenues come in at the beginning, then as we rebalance, which is the goal of this, bring back high-paid manufacturing jobs to the U.S., then it will then morph into domestic tax revenues. You know, President Trump has consistently fought for the American worker, and we are seeing trillions of investments in the U.S. that would not have occurred without the tariffs. The other thing, too, is the authority that he uses is called Aipa. It is an emergency authority, and he used that emergency authority.
Starting point is 01:45:09 He got the Chinese to the table to negotiate on stopping the precursors for fentanyl drugs. If fentanyl, hundreds of thousands of Americans dying every year is not an emergency, what is? On October 8th, Chinese threatened to put export controls. So do you think good idea, bad ideas? It's sent $2,000. I think it's a good idea. Tell me why it's a good idea. I think it's a good idea because...
Starting point is 01:45:34 It's not buying votes, though? I think lowering taxes is buying votes. You almost beat Adam on the pause. No, I think... Yeah, I think... Anything a politician does can be said to be buying votes. But there's fair ways to do it, and there's not fair ways to do it. Because that's what they're going to criticize it for.
Starting point is 01:45:54 They're going to say, like, sure. You know, he's just... And all these years, they made fun of what Democrats do that all they do is buys... buys votes, and at the end of the day, that's what Republicans did. Look, you go on TV with George Suckin'Optopus, and, you know, you're going to get that response. You're going to get that response from... You're really going low today. No, it doesn't matter what you do.
Starting point is 01:46:14 It's going to be, you're going to get hit either way, you know? You do it and you're buying votes. You don't do it, and you're, you don't care about the little guy. That's the way it's going to be spun. It's going to be spun. Little guy. What do you think? How does Stephanopoulos even have a job?
Starting point is 01:46:30 Like, if you were sued for however many million dollars. Well, there's an expiration date on his career. Oh, trust me. Because I would have been like, yo, bro, you're not going to be in from the chamber. You keep watching. You keep watching. It's not going to be tomorrow. It's not going to be this year. He's going to go by-bye.
Starting point is 01:46:42 But he's another one of these guys with the big contracts that are getting truncated. And the contracts are going to be lower or he's not going to be in the chair. Mark my words. You know what? Tag this. And let's go 1231 of next year and go see what has happened. Okay. And I'm going to show you what's happened in the media.
Starting point is 01:46:59 You wait and see. Allen conference is coming. We can't wait. Yeah. You said, what do you think? That's another pause. You're about to go
Starting point is 01:47:08 with Biden's going to go. Sorry. There's like a malfunctioning. You're going to start shaking hands. I'm telling you're going like functioning normally today. I'm going.
Starting point is 01:47:16 You're going to be unburdened by what could have been. Do I think that they should send $2,000 stimulus checks to people? Hell no. You know how much money they spend to people? Zero.
Starting point is 01:47:26 Absolutely zero. Stop giving people money. Stop printing more money. It doesn't work. It's never worked. These stimmy checks where you're sending people 500 bucks, 1,400 bucks, 3,000 bucks. You're making the country broke, and you're making broke people feel somewhat wealthy for about five seconds. And then they go spend that money, and it circulates back to the economy, and that broke person who doesn't know how to spend their money stays broke.
Starting point is 01:47:54 And the money flows where? Up or down, PPD, flows to the top. stop printing money zero the COVID stuff five trillion dollars the CARES Act the tarp the American rescue plan enough with giving people money
Starting point is 01:48:08 it's not about buying votes it's about worth 37 freaking trillion dollars in debt and you want to give every American $2,000 bucks save that money idiots we're not giving you any more money so here's a challenge the challenge with that is as great of a
Starting point is 01:48:22 you know a common sense message it is I get it This is the challenge right now. Challenge is you've already brainwashed everybody into where we are today with the debt system. Right after we got off the gold, it's where we are today. This is America, right? This is the new America with debt.
Starting point is 01:48:50 For somebody to come in to want to pay off the $37 trillion of debt, you almost have to be a five-term president. You need 20 years. Trump 40, 20, 45, everybody. You need, you need 20 years to be able to put that together. So let's just say you save the money. Next guys come in, they spend the money, and then they win. We're going to give you free.
Starting point is 01:49:16 We're going to, you know, lower 10, we're going to give you free. We're going to give you free. And it's like the back and forth. And you know what happens every single time? That increases whether it's a Republican or Democrat. It's not like, now the difference here is, this tariff thing is so sexy to me. Let me tell you, it's so exciting and sexy to me because I think it's a real way for us to pay off some of that debt. That that excites guys like me.
Starting point is 01:49:42 But unfortunately, you know, if we were to get, Tom, if we were to get a land, okay, real nice mountains on the water, Both sides, and you were giving us 10 million people, you know what we would do, Tom? We wouldn't allow everybody to vote. We wouldn't. We would treat it like a company. Shareholders get to vote. Everybody else, you don't get to vote. Decisions are going to be made by people that contribute to society.
Starting point is 01:50:16 For sure. That is the biggest problem we have in America because common sense policies won't permanently win because the way you get to vote in America. I hope this doesn't upset you, but we should put the link to something you did, I think it's now seven years ago, which was in the analysis of who gets to vote and how many votes you get.
Starting point is 01:50:39 It was a lightning rod at the time, but maybe put the link in the comments here. People go back and look at that because it talked about, hey, stakeholders and contributors, you vote. That's such an old video time. It was, well, let me tell you, if I put that up there,
Starting point is 01:50:52 But it made your point. Rob, we may put the unlisted version of it. Here's what we'll do. If for those of you guys that are on the PBD podcast circle, if you're in it, that video I don't think is... Is that it? No, that's not. It's a different one. That's not it.
Starting point is 01:51:11 It's a different one. Rob, if you can't just text it to me. Text it to me if you can. That's a conversation that we had. But I'm going to find an old, old one where... You laid out the logic. I did, but it's going to piss off so many people. Good.
Starting point is 01:51:26 We'll get the people that read the logic. And remember, I shot this video April 15th of 2014. Oh, wow. This is how many years ago? 11 and a half years ago. And guess what jersey I'm wearing? How weird is this? Look at the jersey I'm wearing.
Starting point is 01:51:39 This is like a, you know what jersey I'm wearing, Vinny? Sabotis? No, I'm wearing a... Arvita Subonis? I'm wearing a Yankees jersey. I love it. Okay. Forecasting.
Starting point is 01:51:50 Look at this. I love it. You know what? I'm going to post it, Rob. I'm going to post this in... It was April 15th, right? April 15th, yeah. And it was 4 in the afternoon after you've written a check, so you're in kind of a bad mood.
Starting point is 01:52:03 Neiman's just like, he's wrong. You better go earn the right, the damn vote. If you want to see it, Rob, give him the link to the circle. And I'm going to put that link. I just want to make sure we made it unlisted and not private. So I don't want it to be... I think it's an unlisted video. If Humberto's listed, Humberto, if you can make it unlisted.
Starting point is 01:52:22 it, that will be great. And then just text me back to video. I'll text it to Omberto, so he has a little small. Hey, Pat, just really fast about the tariffs, Tom. Like, you know how, like, again, every single thing that the president has been trying to do, they have to oppose it. Every single thing, right? Even the tariffs, didn't it go to the Supreme Court that they're trying to fight to
Starting point is 01:52:42 reverse what he's doing and bringing in billions of dollars every single month? But you morons are out there like, no, we don't, this is unconstitutional. And they're literally, I think November 5th, they heard oral arguments about it. They're trying to reverse the tariffs where this freaking guy is trying to make us money. What the hell is wrong with the, what's wrong with the Democrats? So let me see. The Democrats want the Supreme Court to say you didn't have the authority to do that. So the tariffs get pulled back.
Starting point is 01:53:09 So the economy becomes really worse. And it goes from almost crap to complete crap in time for the elections next year. So tell me what you don't understand. Oh, now that you clarify it like that, I'm good. And by the way, to 350 million of you, to hell with you guys, we're going to get power. Yeah, exactly. So good for you. It's not a Rubik's Cube.
Starting point is 01:53:30 I'm going to go to this next story. Vinny, what do you know about this pipe bomber story that doesn't add up? Can you tell us about the story? Are you ready for this? And again, you're not going to see it mainstream media. It's not going to be all over the place because you know who runs the mainstream media. So it's going to be people like us on the PPD podcast. Rob, I sent you two, there's two tweets, one by Thomas Massey.
Starting point is 01:53:50 And one of the tweets, he says, America is waking up today to learn that Capitol Police turned CIA, orchestrated the pipe bombs on January 6th, and the FBI has covered it up for over four years. I questioned FBI director Ray, ATF director Daedelbach, and FBI assistant director over D.C., the Antenol under oath, all played dumb. And there's one more, he posted, Robbie, and says, you might not, I mean, you might be able to find it. He goes, this is the biggest scandal of my lifetime. Steve Baker did what an $11 billion agency, the FBI could not do or worse yet covered it up. He identified the January 6 bomber and she, she wasn't working alone, ready for this. Cash Patel needs to make a statement tomorrow when this break. So Steve Baker, who works for the blaze, he did reports of a forensics gate analysis, G-A-I-T,
Starting point is 01:54:42 which is technology used to compare a person's walking pattern. It produced a 94% match between the unidentified January 6 pipe bomb bomber. Former Capitol Police Officer Shawnee Ray Kirkoff, who served with the department until 2022, according to the report. This analysis came from internal video footage reviewed by investigative searches. So Adam, somebody reviewed for God knows how long the way this person was walking. There was moments where she allegedly was messing with her bra and stuff. The FBI has been searching for this person that put two live pipe bombs the night before the Capitol riot. Think about the timing, guys.
Starting point is 01:55:20 One outside the RNC headquarters and one outside the DNC headquarters in Washington. Each device was actually real, equipped with a one-hour kitchen timer, placed around 8 p.m. on January 5th. They were found just before and during the attack of the Capitol the following day. Now, think about this. The authorities believe the goal was planting these bombs at them to distract and divide law enforcement. Because think about it. They know the attack was coming. They're like, how do we divert cops to make sure the shit?
Starting point is 01:55:49 shit burns. Okay? That's what they did. Okay. So as of now, today, the FBI has the investigation remains open. There's a $500,000 reward for information leading to the arrest. But who's the person they showed? So the person on the left, they're alleging the place. No, no, you had faces on the screen a second ago. Who are those people? What do you mean? Oh, this tweet right here. Oh, that's, that's allegedly her.
Starting point is 01:56:11 That person that you think, her. No, no, no, no. Adam, you're not paying attention. They're, right now, they're saying that that on the outside, that's her. That's her. It took this long for an investigative journalist. Where is that person located today? She works for the CIA. Well, allegedly she worked for the CIA now. She was a capital police member.
Starting point is 01:56:29 Are they brought her in for questioning? No, Adam. No, no, no, nothing yet. What's her name? This just broke. Her name, Pat, is I'm sorry, Shawnee, S-H-A-U-N-I, and then K-E-R-K-H-O-F-F. I believe she is a and they're alleging that. It's all alleged. This is all blaze.
Starting point is 01:56:49 has come out of multiple news much, right? This is a blaze media report. Did any of these pipe bombs go off? No, Adam, and that's the whole thing. It was just, the actual bomb was real, but you know what they did, Adam? They wanted to distract, listen to me. They wanted to distract and get
Starting point is 01:57:05 agents and cops and capital police away from January 6th. Okay? So now here's the thing. Yeah, from the capital. I'm sorry. So think about it. Now really break it down. Is it that far-fetched that they had informants everywhere in the crowd, Pelosi is on camera, guys, on camera, saying,
Starting point is 01:57:22 no, National Guard, I should have brought them and I should have done this. And you mean to tell me all these years later, with all the people they arrested, all the grandmothers, you can't find this person with all the geo-tracking and fencing and all that nonsense. So, again. So, Vinny, what's your point with this? My point is, Adam, this thing that we've just let go. January 6th, January 6th was a setup from the beginning to the end
Starting point is 01:57:46 to not only arrest all these, January 6 people, it was to make sure, this was one ploy, Adam, never to let Trump get back into office. And if we go back from Russia collusion to the freaking impeachments, to shooting him in his head, to having another dude at the golf course that wanted to assassinate him, when I say that these FBI, and just an FYI, guys, John Brennan, Peter Strach, Lisa Page,
Starting point is 01:58:14 they all just got another subpoena for their role. By the visit the FBI, Adam. That's why you know when you talk about trusting all these people that are in the FBI. This agency from Comey and all these people have been so freaking corrupt and so weaponized. It's unbelievable. And I think going back to Nancy Pelosi, I think one of the reasons she is stepping back, because obviously she's made all the money, she's implicated in all this. She's the one, she's one of the main ones that was like, nope, not National Guard, do all this.
Starting point is 01:58:42 I believe Adam, they all knew, okay? That's why they were arresting grandmothers. They arrested people that weren't even. even at January 6th because this was going to be there, I got you. He orchestrated a insurrection and he'll never be able to run for the President of the United States.
Starting point is 01:58:58 Because in the Constitution, Tom, is that the Constitution that says if you have an insurrection towards the government, you can have become the president. That's why the media is told they used the word insurrection, because that's the word that was in the Constitution. By the way, Vincent, yes. Did you see this other story about BBC? I love that. Do you mind if I roll this story
Starting point is 01:59:14 right into it, guys? So let me just read the title for you. Read the title. The BBC, is expected to apologize after using doctored footage of Trump's January 6th speech in documentary. They're expected to apologize after using a doctored footage. The Mayacolpa clip comes after Michael Prescott, the British Network's former editorial guidelines and standards advisor released a damning 19-page report
Starting point is 01:59:41 alleging widespread bias within the organization highlighting warnings he issued in May about the doctored speech according to the outlet. Do we have the difference of what they did? I think they spliced it. And just for a quick, well, cut it,
Starting point is 01:59:51 flipped it, ripped it upside down. A whistleblower inside the network revealed that the edit came for a peaceful, Trump was saying be peaceful and patriotic, but they made it look like he was trying to incite violence. Go ahead.
Starting point is 02:00:03 Play the clip, Ron. We're going to walk down to the Capitol, and I'll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell. We're going to walk down. Hold on pause.
Starting point is 02:00:15 That was the BBC, doctored. doesn't make it sound like. He's saying, guys, we're going to go down there, we're going to fight, and we're going to cause problems. So play the original. This is the original. Walk down to the Capitol.
Starting point is 02:00:29 And we're going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women. Now, and guys, doesn't this, mind you, they added the fight like hell part from a different section. Yeah. Edited it. Yep. Sounds like somebody got some explaining to do. So, by the way, didn't.
Starting point is 02:00:48 Trump, Sue, I believe, 60 minutes for the combo thing and win. This is comic. $17 million, whatever it was. The Trump Library is basically funded by media organizations. Let me understand something. Go ahead. Are you saying that the mainstream media has been lying and doctoring and editing and been against Trump this entire time?
Starting point is 02:01:08 Is that your claim? Have been tools of the FBI and insiders? And mind you, yes, Adam, this is BBC. This is another country's. mainstream media. What are you getting off? What are you doing? Okay? And by the, this is the same media. They twisted the Charlottesville thing when he tried to do the, they praised, it made it seem like he was praising the white supremacist, even though he was condemning them. By the way, let's not forget, okay, who BBC is. They're the same network that protected,
Starting point is 02:01:35 we talked about this, Jimmy Seville, for decades. He was sexually abusing hundreds of victims, including children. Internal investigation showed that the producers and executives ignored and buried complaints just to protect the brand. That's the BBC. And Rob, you're going to love this one. BBC is like the MSNBC or left with CNN. Rob will know exactly who this is that, this is the same BBC that on 9-11... And the MI6 megaphone, by the way.
Starting point is 02:02:00 On 9-11, BBC... Can I finish what I'm saying? Please? What's happening? I'm trying to finish what I'm saying. The same BBC that on 9-11 went live and announced that building number 7 collapsed all the time, it was still standing behind them the reporter was Jane Stanley.
Starting point is 02:02:18 I don't, I hope, I don't hope, I know it's going to happen that Trump goes after them because, mind you, this is connected to January 6th. They wanted, they pulled support away from the Capitol because they wanted it at them. They wanted pandemonium. They took peaceful people. They shot them with tear gas. They shot them with bullets. You had people like Ray Epps who got a slap on the wrist misdemeanor saying, we're going into
Starting point is 02:02:41 the Capitol, we're going into the Capitol, and it failed. And it failed. And I hope they all get accountable. And whoever that Shawnee Ray Kirkoff is, I hope they're doing an investigation right now to find. Rob just pulled this up. Good fine. Rob, BBC, to apologize deceptively editing President Trump's January 6th speech in an effort to make it look like he encouraged violence.
Starting point is 02:03:01 The apology later is purported to coming next week. Samir Shaw, BBC Chairman, will write to the Culture Media on Sports Committee on Monday to express regret for the way the speech made on the day January 6, 2021 Capitol Ride was spliced together. the Telegraph report, the BBC's Director General, Tim Davy, and Schell were both allegedly warned about the doctorate footage in May but decided to keep quiet. Wow. Wow. So they knew about it.
Starting point is 02:03:26 Can you pull up who these guys are wrong? Who resigned last night? Somebody resigned. Yeah, I'll tell you who resigned. Davey. Tim, yesterday, BBC's Director General Tim Davey and new CEO, Deborah Ternis resigned after controversy after the speech. This guy's bye-bye. Right.
Starting point is 02:03:42 And so Davey resists. signs, and now they're going after the Shah. The Shah. Won't be the first time they went after the next. They're issuing an apology as if they think it's going to end there? No, it's definitely not. Trump's going to sue them, yes? Yeah.
Starting point is 02:04:00 I mean, you would assume. He sued all these amendments. That Trump library getting prettier and currier. And by the way, he's probably going to win. Probably. This is proof. This is another couple million dollars. Look, all these outlets that have been lying and gaslighting the public, they're going to, they're going to
Starting point is 02:04:18 receive their accountability in the form of a picture. That's what I'm saying. We have the House, we have the Senate. I think we need to go harder. And you impact that another country's elections publicly. And you manipulated where everybody said this guy was rooting for violence. So yes, there needs to be a certain level of accountability being held there. Bro, I remember watching that speech and being like, this motherfucker. He wants, he wants, he was. Of course. You got it got duped. I don't blame you. I'm not going to bring this up again.
Starting point is 02:04:49 This is why you say I'm the biggest Trump guy. I fell for all the lies. I don't blame you because if you're watching that network, Adam, you're good. What am I going to think? He's probably edited it. Adam, it's not your fault. Adam. No, no, Vinnie, it's got to understand.
Starting point is 02:04:59 Adam. What, Vinnie? It's not your fault. Don't. Thank you. Vinnie. I'd like to add something quick. Vinny, you're not crazy.
Starting point is 02:05:07 During the drug wars between the Crips and Bloods and that were in L.A., I'm telling you. This really happened. I had a family member that was part of the paramedics, and I also spoke to other people who were paramedics. And at that time, the paramedics would be coming down to a shooting, and they would hear additional shots. It was supposedly FBI later figured out who wanted to reroute them to nothing. Who wanted to keep the wars going between trips and bloods.
Starting point is 02:05:33 And they would fire additional shots. Well, guess what? The paramedics would stop at a perimeter before they're going in to get the victims of the shooting, and they would hear the extra shots, and they're waiting for LAPD. crash units and all the things there. They're waiting for all them to get in there and for the to stop. Meanwhile, the guys that were shot are bleeding
Starting point is 02:05:52 out and the violence was suppressed and they say that it was actually our government that wanted, and if you read the history of the drug wars and crips and bloods, they were bad and they had stuff going on, but there was also government manipulation that was going in there and also the country of
Starting point is 02:06:08 Mexico and a group that was called the South, which was the gangs that were from Mexico in L.A. were known is the South. And so it's not the first time the government has thrown a distraction over here to keep it going on over there. Wow. Yeah. I love that story Tom. By the way, I thought you were going to completely different
Starting point is 02:06:24 direction. I thought you were going to be like, listen, when I was gangbanging with the curbs in the blood. Let me tell you. Adam, it's about how the government wants something to happen over here, and they're actually part of it behind the curtain. Guys, let's go to another story here for those guys that are cops. NYPD, already losing officers with morale,
Starting point is 02:06:41 plunging as anti-cop, Zoran Mamdani prepares to take reins. Rob, I don't know if we have a video. I don't think we have a video on this. Maybe just pull up the story that you have. Okay, so let's see what's going on over here, okay? What is this, cops? Why are you, you mean to tell me like cops
Starting point is 02:06:59 don't want to work for Mamdani? What? Doesn't seem like a nice... No, he defunding them? He admires you. He admires what you're doing, folks. As NYPDX, it is already underway with a surge of officers quitting
Starting point is 02:07:11 in a month leading up to anti-cop socialist Mamdani's win and more might go of police commissioner Jessica takes as exits according to data. The NYPD saw 35% hiking cops of all ranks leaving in October. 245 officers compared to 181 same year. According to the pension fund, morale is down because everyone is concerned about the police. Mamdani wants to put in place, said Detectives Endowment Association President Scott Munro. You have a person who is supposed to be running New York City that does not believe in law enforcement. What's coming out of everyone's mouth, we're in trouble.
Starting point is 02:07:49 Whether more cops leave in the coming months will depend on the Tish Factor, police union said, if she leaves, it may result in an uptake. The sources said, if she stays, maybe not. So it will certainly get worse if our city leaders don't work with us to fix unsustainable workload, our expired contract and the constant second-guessing that is driving good cops away from the job. Can you pull up who this lady is, Rob? Can you pull up who she is?
Starting point is 02:08:18 What's her name? Tish is the last name. Jessica Tish. Jessica Tish. Can we see who Jessica Tish is? Tom, what do you know about her? Jessica Tish. Can we go to Wikipedia, please?
Starting point is 02:08:29 Go to see what her background is. Like from the famous Tish family? Tish, Tish. Okay, is an American public... Previously served as commission of New York City. And Tish, so she's apparently respected. Tish was born. Meryl Tish
Starting point is 02:08:42 C.A.O. Lowe's Corporation. She received a Bachelor of Arts in 2003, Harvard University, which of J.B.M. And Tish began her career with Counterterrorism Bureau of New York City Department of Facility by Commissioner Raymond Kelly. She went to hold office positions within the agency. In 2014,
Starting point is 02:08:58 February, she was appointed Deputy Commission on Formation of Technology. What is her background politically? Tish was appointed by Mayor Adams. After being appointed by de Blasio. So then why are they saying that if she is Jewish, married to Daniel Zachary.
Starting point is 02:09:20 This is a billion of her. Rabbi Philip Hyatt at Senegal, go a little bit lower. Okay. De Blasio, Democratic Party, Tish, New York, Harvard. So why are they saying if she leaves, more will leave? Why are they saying that, Rob? Do we know? I don't.
Starting point is 02:09:37 Let me take a look. Is she kind of a law and order liberal? They do exist with her family. Tish, T-I-S-C-H? Is that what it is? Well, her dad was the... Lowe's. Yeah, Lowe's hardware.
Starting point is 02:09:56 So maybe unrest means, you know, you sell more stuff at Lowe's to rebuild it. Many hours and we're all is down to the N-Y-P-D report. The U.S. Concernsern among the... Tish is viewed as by many. as a stable force, a leader-day trust, especially during the time of proposed reforms to policing and large changes in public safety priorities,
Starting point is 02:10:15 her potential departure is seen as leaving them vulnerable or signaling instability. The income is mayor's blight from significant restriction, for example. Some insiders argue that if Tish will leave, it would be a flashpoint, a signal to officers, that leadership is unstable. Yeah, wow. Okay, interesting.
Starting point is 02:10:33 Interesting. So she's an influencer. People trust her. Tom. How bad do you think this is going to be with cops leaving? I think it's going to be very bad, and I am sending a link to Rob right now. Hopefully you got this, Rob, because it's being noticed across the United States. What do you think of New York cops?
Starting point is 02:10:52 Pretty good, pretty tough? I think so. They are together. When you see funerals that are there with the cops, they are together. They operate, you know, very well. People say, well, you don't know all the New York cops. No, no, no, no. 98% of these New York cops are tough.
Starting point is 02:11:07 they love their city. I've had nothing about great experiences with that. Me too. And I think it's a shame what's happening to them. The brotherhood of the New York Police Department has always been tremendous. We saw what they went through on 9-11. We saw it the New York Fire Department. These are some of the toughest, most dedicated men serving. And we meet them. I have met more than one. As a matter of fact, this year, Kim and I played golf with the retired New York cop and his wife. He retired down here. And he had a little bit of a limp. And I said, what's going on? I've got to have my hip replacement. I was, you know, I was beat cop for many, many, many years, and Medicare is going to get me my hip replacement. Because you could see he had a little bit of favoring it. But he was just a great guy, and you talk to him about stuff. And he was not a Trumper guy. He was a pure independent guy.
Starting point is 02:11:56 And I think he was just a perfect example of what these New York cops are. They are great. They're well trained. And, yeah, there's some percent of them that are what they are. and, you know, gave it to corruption, which I imagine, you're always going to have that. But what's interesting, there are many cities that know how good New York cops are, Pat. You know what? One of them is? Houston. They know how good New York cops are. And the Houston Police Union, they're unionized in Houston, invites the NYPD officers to work for Houston.
Starting point is 02:12:27 Come to a state with no income tax, come to a little bit better weather, come from the first largest city of United States to the fourth largest city in the United States to the fourth largest city in United States, come on down. And you got, that's what I think. So I think that if her bio shows up to be true and then somehow she's moved out and the comments that they feel insecure about that and feel that that would be destabilizing, then they're going to lose cops. But you know what? This case study is played out, Pat. You know where? Portland. And the people of Portland are begging for people to come be cops there. And remember we saw the signing bonuses.
Starting point is 02:13:08 There are significant signing bonuses in Portland. I don't know if we could search for that. What's a signing bonus right now in Portland? It's very real. You know? And so Portland's a case study. You want New York to become Portland? Chase the cops out and see what happened.
Starting point is 02:13:23 Hey, can you imagine your mayor? Can you imagine your mayor on record saying, I want to defund your police department. I want to my PD, they're racist, they're bigoted, all the, all the stuff that he said to them, he's pro-LGB, whatever the hell, like, why would you want that to be your, at the end of the day
Starting point is 02:13:40 your boss? Like, are you freaking kidding? Unless you have no backing. Unless you need the unrest to guarantee there will never be enough conservatives in town to ever unlike you. Exactly. Exactly. And then God forbid, you actually have to use your service weapon. You have to get involved. You think he's, you think the mayor's
Starting point is 02:13:56 going to have your back? You think the mayor's going to look out for you because, and you guys nailed it. Hold on real. The, the, the, the, the job of a New York like NYPD guys besides Chicago's rough as hell too to be a freaking cop
Starting point is 02:14:08 in the south side there's neighborhoods that they don't even drive down like the fact that that's happening and remember during Eric Adams Mr. Now all of a sudden he's turned the opposite way do you remember when the Venezuelan guys
Starting point is 02:14:19 were beating the crap on the- Don't criticize him for getting it right no no no no you can criticize him for his history but don't criticize Eric Adams for getting it right and saying this is where I stand because you know what kind of balls
Starting point is 02:14:28 that took in the face of all the people that on the Democratic side? What I'm saying is when he was in as the mayor still and they were beating the hell out of the freaking cops, the Venezuelans, and the next day they got to jail. And they were walking like this, flipping the bird. Who's in charge? Let me say what the prom is going to be. Let me tell what the prom is going to be in New York. So, Rob, if you can do me favor, pull up this clip I just gave you because reality is sinking in in New York City on what Hockel remembers.
Starting point is 02:14:55 Let me tell you what Hockel remembers with these two. So she was asked about free buses. Okay? And watch what she does. She was asked about free buses. Go ahead, Rob. I'm from Buffalo. We don't put up a lot of crap. So I just want to set the stage that, you know, you look at the history of people who've run multi-billion-dollar ad campaigns that try and get me to change my
Starting point is 02:15:18 position. I don't change my position. So I just want to put it out there. I respect people's opinions. I respect the proper place to convey them. And so I've said that I hear you. And that was important, but also there is a time in place. And so that's all on that. No, I've had conversations on this trip, but many conversations, I'd say over the summer and the fall, that were important, that led to an understanding of what's in the realm of possibility, shared ambitions, but what is doable is the question. And so, no, we're aligned on some of these issues.
Starting point is 02:15:57 You know, I've made it clear where I have strong disagreements with issues that really do not pertain to, you know, the governance of New York City. Make your point. I said, you need to get a police commissioner that people trust who has a record of accomplishment to... She says free buses is a no-go. Crime is going down. Crime is going down significantly. You don't say mission accomplished, but then is a great trend. So him agreeing with that assessment, that recommendation to keep just...
Starting point is 02:16:27 You can stop that, right? Now, she's saying shuts down the idea of free buses and taxing the rich. She's saying that. What she didn't forget is this. Go ahead, Rob. Play this clip. Show of hands. Who supports Kathy Hockel for re-election?
Starting point is 02:16:44 It's a decision that should be made after this general election. So no decision. The show of hands. Who supports? None of them. So, no, but specifically, he said after this election. So is Hockel sitting there? saying, oh, really? Oh, really? Okay. No problem. You need me, buddy. Yeah, I don't need you.
Starting point is 02:17:03 So you need me and some of the stuff. So you don't want to support me. So why am I going to support you when you come? So I don't know what's going to happen to New York City. My biggest thing is as much as we have fun with this and we talk a lot about New York City, we have a lot of friends and family that live in New York and we want the best for them. And ideally, I would like all of this to be figured out and keep New York City as a special city. But unfortunately, you guys voted for this. And if you say, I didn't vote for this, if you're you didn't vote for it, you voted for this. If you didn't publicly rally other people to go vote against this, you voted for this. But either way, you voted for this. This is kind of what
Starting point is 02:17:39 happens, eventually, right? This is kind of what happens. Whether it's, you know, what happened during COVID, the decisions that were made, the people that left more and more of the people that probably view the world the way you do have left your great state and your great city, okay? And they've gone to a different place. What happens there? Who knows? Go ahead, Adam. Well, look, as you always say, elections have consequences. You know, if you want to just quote Isaac Newton, for every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. So Mamdani is a reaction to what
Starting point is 02:18:05 happened with capitalism, and now the socialism is in vogue, and we all know where this sort of story ends. You know, I'm receiving calls, Rob, and I put this number on my phone. If you get a call from this number, just put that guy, that face right there. And that's going to show up right there.
Starting point is 02:18:21 Because it's likely a scam. Because he's likely lying to your face. It's likely a Trojan horse. It's likely a wolf and sheep's clothing. And none of what he's basically standing for is what is actually going to happen. So New York, you know, here's one example. Do you see where Mamdani was this week? Puerto Rico. He was in Puerto Rico. So this is the same guy that says, would you go visit Israel? I would not. I only focus on New York. Oh, but you're going to go to Puerto Rico? So what's going to happen is in the day of social media, all the BS lies. Those are
Starting point is 02:18:52 two different things. Puerto Rico is America. Israel is not America. So for him to go visit Puerto Rico. But it's the same guy who condemns Andrew Cuomo for not visiting a mosque. Why does he have to visit a mosque? You don't have to visit anything. You can go find where the electorate is. You can go campaign where you want a campaign. That's the part of the politics
Starting point is 02:19:12 stuff. That is just, you know, that to me it's like, you know, it's unnecessary questions that they ask, that people are requests them to ask. But the reality being on what you're saying with them, I get it. I get the fact that New York City got scammed with this guy, but let's see what he does. Maybe the controls don't allow him to do all the stuff that he wants to do.
Starting point is 02:19:34 Maybe Hulk is going to be his number one enemy. Maybe this is going to be a civil war in New York. We don't know yet. Let's see what happens. What we do know is this guy's not good for New York City. That's what we do know. These policies I've been trying to pass before. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:19:49 No, that's for sure. Everyone's going to stay, and I think more people are going to come. The boomer ring is going to come. It's going to come. It's going to be. Of course. By the way, I was just sent this by a listener, I won't say the name, and sent me that on the inside, that said that the Portland Police Bureau is now offering 100 to 120K pay package, and the list of benefits, including health care, are 95% covered. So you only have to take 5% out of your paycheck to cover the full list of benefits. So almost it's like 100 to 100. They're begging now. That's what it's taking to get people to come to Portland to be great cops.
Starting point is 02:20:29 Well, I actually wish that New Yorkers will stay in New York. Cops specifically, your city needs you more than ever. Now's not the time to cut and run. Police officers are not built that way. I know it's veterans day tomorrow. Our military servicemen and women are not built that way. Stay in New York and make it great. Look, I mean, you never know.
Starting point is 02:20:49 You may be looking at a panel with three different mayors here. You got mayor of Fort Lauderdale, Tom, soon. You got mayor of Pompano, Mayor Oshana, and you got mayor of Miami Beach. Yes, sir. One day who got, he got involved in the Miami Beach election. It wasn't good news. Stephen Minor, congratulations.
Starting point is 02:21:06 Some people are not happy with them. Hopefully, we can get you to electes. Not happy with them. Folks, we're not messing around on this. Stay tuned in the future. You'll hear a Pat talk about. Well, we're not messing around about standing up and going
Starting point is 02:21:15 and serving in our communities and serving as elected officials and getting into the fight. You get in the fight, too. It starts with registering to vote, getting people around your registering to vote and having reasonable conversation with family members and getting people to hear the facts, bring the receipts, move a person, move a family, move a street, move a county, move the world.
Starting point is 02:21:36 I'm Vincent Loshan and I approve this message. We love you, buddy. Go to vtimers.com. Veterans, we love you. We respect you. Take everybody. God bless. Bye bye, bye, bye, bye.

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