The Megyn Kelly Show - Ghouls Blame Texas Flooding on Trump, Shock Epstein Announcement, and Assassination Attempt Secrets, with Andrew Klavan and Salena Zito | Ep. 1102
Episode Date: July 7, 2025Megyn Kelly begins the show by breaking down the deadly and tragic Texas floods that killed at least 82 people, including young girls at Camp Mystic, heroic stories of rescues, the rush by some to pol...iticize the story and blame Trump and DOGE, and more. Then Andrew Klavan, host of The Daily Wire's "Andrew Klavan Show," joins to discuss the media and leftists trying to politicize the Texas flood tragedy, the truth about the amount of warnings that came before the natural disaster struck, how warning fatigue may have delayed the response, disturbing reactions from some on the left cheering the deaths of the young girls in Texas, what it reveals about moral decay in American culture, the DOJ and FBI's shocking announcement that there is no Epstein client list and no further disclosures will be coming, the past comments from AG Pam Bondi and others in the Trump administration, what this says about powerful people in America and conspiracy theories, and more. ThenSalena Zito, author of "Butler," joins to share her firsthand account of being just feet away from President Trump at the assassination attempt in Pennsylvania, the chilling moment Trump turned his head just before the bullet was fired, the bond Trump has with his supporters, her duty to keep reporting through the chaos, how Trump called her seven times after the assassination attempt to check on her and her family, the powerful message of “fight, fight, fight” and what Trump told her about why he said it, how the moment marked a spiritual shift in how he views his life and presidency, and more. Klavan- https://www.amazon.com/Kingdom-Cain-Finding-Literature-Darkness/dp/0310368340/Zito- https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/salena-zito/butler/9781668649909/ Birch Gold: Text MK to 989898 and get your free info kit on goldIncogni: Visit https://incogni.com/MEGYN for 60% off our annual planDone with Debt: https://www.DoneWithDebt.comJust Thrive: Visit https://justthrivehealth.com/discount/Megyn and use code MEGYN to save 20% sitewideFollow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, live on SiriusXM Channel 111 every weekday at noon East.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, another massive news
day as we begin the week. Wow. We'll get to Texas in one second, but just first, the DOJ and the FBI have reportedly concluded
their investigations now into the death of Jeffrey Epstein and have found, they say,
that there is no evidence Jeffrey Epstein blackmailed powerful figures, kept a so-called
client list, or that he was murdered.
Needless to say, although I guess we shouldn't say that.
It is needful to say that those conclusions have opened up a whole new line of questions.
And I've got to add, it's totally predictable.
And I'm just, so here's my headline, with all due respect, I like her, but I blame Pam
Bondi for this. She has said all sorts of things and created big events at the White House. Like, here it is.
And then blame the FBI. Oh, there's more and I'll get it. And now today we get a joint announcement,
DOJ, FBI, there's nothing. But you're on camera saying you have something.
But you're on camera saying you have something. This is not the fault of the so-called conspiracy theorists.
We've been led down a path, yes, in part due to the armchair information analysts for years
now, but this DOJ told us that we'd be getting a lot more.
Pam Bondi, Alina Habba, went on Piers Morgan, made a bunch, like I, we're gonna get into it.
All right, but we are gonna start with new information
on the awful tragedy unfolding in Texas.
My God, it's a nightmare.
If you listened to our AM Update show,
you know that five young campers were confirmed dead
over the weekend after flooding hit Camp Mystic.
The campsite
hit hard during the storm. At around 9 a.m. this morning, the camp put out a statement
that reads in part, Camp Mystic is grieving the loss of 27 campers and counselors following
the catastrophic flooding on the Guadalupe River. And I feel sad for the counselors too.
You start to read up on them. They were just teenagers themselves. The counselors are just high school girls and the campers were eight,
nine-year-old little girls. I mean, but none of these was even an adult. Twenty-seven
lost with almost no chance, almost no chance to live whatsoever the way this river moved in.
Almost no chance, almost no chance to live whatsoever the way this river moved in. It's unclear exactly what number of the 27 are which, you know, the very young children
and the teenage counselors, but it just doesn't matter.
Thinking of the terror that those sweet souls felt, it happened overnight.
One minute tucked in their beds in their nightgowns at sleepaway camp, completely joyful by all
accounts the girls love this camp. One minute tucked in their beds and their nightgowns at sleepaway camp, completely joyful by all accounts,
the girls love this camp.
And the next a wall of rushing cold water
in the total darkness of night.
This is the aftermath of what happened at Camp Mystic.
Oh, for the listening audience,
you're gonna see the beds inside the cabins.
This is an all girls camp that's been around for nearly 100 years.
Here you see rows of bunk beds thrown about, covered in mud, left behind when the waters
finally receded, pink and purple blankets, stuffed animals, all stuff your little girl
probably has, fans, photos taped to the walls, stuff they packed for what was supposed to be
a normal week of camping with new and old friends
and horseback riding and Bible reading.
These were Christians, it was a Christian camp.
The cabins for the youngest campers
sat less than a football field away
from the Guadalupe River,
which rose several feet in just minutes.
They said normally it was around one foot
and went up to over 34.
Among the girls lost was Renee Sumastrila.
She was nine years old, Sumastrila.
Her uncle wrote on social media,
we are thankful she was with her friends
and having the time of her life as evidenced by this picture from
yesterday, the day before she died. She will forever be lying in her, she will
forever be living her best life at Camp Mystic. Lila Bonner and Eloise Peck were
best friends and campmates too. Here's a picture of the two of them, arm in arm,
arms around each other's shoulders hugging.
Eloise's mother writing on Facebook, quote, Eloise was literally friends with everyone.
She loved spaghetti, but not more than she loved dogs and animals.
She passed away with her cabin mate and best friend, Lila Bonner, who also died.
Eloise had a family who loved her fiercely for the eight years she was with us, especially her mommy.
Oh my god, it's awful. It's just so awful. The loss of life was not just at Camp Mystic. The
death toll continues to rise by the hour. As of noon Eastern on Monday, it stands at 82 people dead,
but it will climb. Sisters Blair and Brooke Harbor also lost their lives. They were just 11 and 13.
They were staying with their grandparents in a cabin along the same river, their grandparents
still unaccounted for. A family member said the bodies of Blair and Brook were later found 15
miles away from the campsite with their hands locked together. If you don't live near a river,
it's sometimes hard to imagine just how quickly they can rise. But this next video shows what people in Kerr
County, Texas and surrounding areas were up against. It was taken by Gavin Walton
near Center Point, Texas and he shared it with us. Gavin tells us he took the
video just after 7 a.m. on July 4th. Remember this happened largely overnight
Thursday to Friday. Look at this, he was standing on a bridge. This is downriver from Camp Mystic. You can see the Guadalupe
Riverbed is almost dry with little water in it. And then a rush of water quickly surges from around
the corner. I've seen so many videos of this online where it's dry, it's a regular road,
and the next minute it's a raging river.
This next video was taken just five minutes later on the very same bridge.
The water's now filled with debris, easily taking down nearby trees.
It's uprooting old trees, root and branch.
This video was taken 17 minutes after the first rush of water.
Now you see the
water has not only risen several feet but has picked up speed too. Speed and
force that would be nearly impossible for a youngster or even an adult to
withstand. This video taken 33 minutes in. The water is now almost as high as the
bridge. Tree branches, garbage, pieces of decks from nearby homes
crashing into the bridge.
And wait until you see what happens next,
as Gavin records an entire home comes into the frame
and eventually slams into the bridge.
My God.
In a matter of just a few hours,
the river rising from one to 34 feet.
President Trump is expected to travel to see the damage himself on Friday saying he would go today if he could but he doesn't want to
get in the way of rescue operations. Some in the media, absolute ghouls all over
the internet trying to blame the president and doge for the tragedy
claiming cuts by doge to the National Weather Service
are to blame that they left the agency unprepared.
There's a long list of disgusting political
ghouls who are doing this.
They're insane.
These are insane people.
They're literally saying that these people deserved it,
that these sweet little eight-year-old girls that the 11 and 13 year old girls
With their arms around each other that they deserved it
Because it's a Republican state and they must have voted for Trump and Elon. So suck it
It's absolutely disgusting
Again, there's a long list we're going to over it, but take a listen to ABC News' George Stephanopoulos.
Fresh off of settling a 16 million defamation lawsuit for lies, he told, over and over and
over.
He's an on-camera paid liar, still finding ways to lie about Donald Trump,
who he says is to blame for everything.
Maria, we're also learning that there were significant staffing shortfalls
of the National Weather Service's offices in the region.
You know, George, as of right now,
the local county officials really didn't want to address that just yet.
Okay. He wants you to address that just yet.
OK, he wants you to know that there there were shortages at the National Weather Service. What is the relevant question?
Were there shortages in the office that was responsible for
this region? Did anybody involved at that office say the
problem was we were understaffed. We needed more bodies. To the contrary, they had extra staff on board
in that office going into this event.
They understood that they were in a very precarious situation.
They brought on more than double the normal expected staff
that night.
And not one of them is saying that this
was the result of Doge cuts.
I missed that in George's toss
to his reporter on the scene.
Great job.
Great job informing your ABC news audience.
Who you also misled by the way,
your colleagues at their presidential debate
between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump
on the subject of Venezuelan gangs out in Aurora,
Colorado. Remember when ABC News tried to tee up Donald Trump on that and Trump took it and said,
this is what's happening with these gang members? Well, now even the left-wing media is admitting
Trump was right about that. But ABC News doesn't get it. If it means Trump was right,
or Trump didn't do something terrible,
they're not interested, you see.
Because our media won't respect the dead,
some of which are still floating in the Guadalupe River.
They're too focused on bringing down orange man bad.
They're sick.
These are sick people we're dealing with.
They're on the left and they're all over the media.
It's just reached the same epic flood proportions
of that very river where it's almost too strong
and overwhelming to really handle,
to really get your arms around all of them.
Joining me now on an important day, Andrew Klavan,
host of the Andrew Klavan Show for The Daily Wire.
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today. Text MK to the number 989898. Andrew, thank you so much for being here today.
I'm horrified by the events, horrible weather events happen in the United States and elsewhere.
horrible weather events happen in the United States and elsewhere. There's not a ton we can do about in all circumstances. We have a better chance of predicting sometimes earthquakes,
sometimes hurricanes in particular. Flash flooding seems to be a problem for us. They can predict
big rains. In this particular circumstance, unfortunately, the big rains met very, very dry ground, which
I initially thought would be better. But no, I've since learned it's worse because I guess
slightly wetter ground can absorb the water better. It's just more absorbent. Whereas
dry, dry land like they were seeing in Texas, they said it's like concrete. So nothing gets
absorbed and the flash floods can quickly turn a
river into what's more like an ocean raging through, you know, campgrounds. But I cannot believe
the ghouls, again, on the left and in the media, who think the most important thing right now is
to make sure Trump gets blamed. Your thoughts? It's a profound, it's a profound evil because
it's a profound tragedy. I have a lot of experience with rivers. It's a profound evil because it's a profound tragedy.
I have a lot of experience with rivers.
I'm a lifetime fisherman and rafter,
and you cannot describe the power that a river has,
even at a low level,
the way it can reduce you instantaneously to helplessness,
the way it can carry you off as if you were nothing,
as if you were a twig just being carried away on the tide.
These tragedies are going to happen,
they always have happened,
and they're gonna continue to happen,
and they're really, really hard
for the human heart to encompass, you know,
especially, maybe especially if you have faith
and you wanna trust in God,
these are the moments that try that,
that faith, that try that trust,
because it's hard to understand
why these things happen in the world.
It's just incomprehensible and the human heart can't handle it. There's always an urge to look
for someone to blame or something to blame, something that could have been fixed, something
that could have prevented it. And there's always something that you can find that people did wrong
because people always are imperfect and they always do things wrong and nobody, nobody can come up with
an answer to the power of nature. It's just something that is beyond us. To take advantage of that absence, to take
advantage of that emptiness that we feel, that need to make some kind of sense out of what doesn't
make sense, to find some kind of soft place to land in this tragedy, to sell your particular
political point of view is actually wicked to the point
of evil.
You know, evil is a word I don't like to use, but you can't help.
But when you look at a guy like George Stephanopoulos, who was hired for his place at ABC solely
from his experience of silencing women who said they had been abused by Bill Clinton,
who has remained at that level of morality throughout
his reporting career, as far as I'm concerned, to stoop to that level.
Dana Bash did it too at CNN.
You wonder at the hollowness of them.
You wonder at the fact that they're not thinking about the fact that there are parents out
there who have lost their children, which is the worst thing that can happen to you
in human life.
That is the single worst thing that can happen.
They're going to take advantage of that to sell their petty politics.
At some point, at some point in most human beings' hearts, left and right, at some point
there's a point when you stop and you just say, we just have to bow our heads.
We have to bow our heads.
We have to try to look for faith.
We have to try to look for trust and try to, you know,
encompass these things that happen and have always happened,
and in my opinion, will always happen.
There's only when paradise comes, maybe this will stop.
But for now in human life, this is going to be a part of life.
And to take advantage of that, whether it's a school shooting
or some kind of other act of human evil,
or just this really, which is more comprehensible than these
natural events that take people we love away and as you say
take these the most helpless and most beautiful and most
beloved among us away.
To take advantage of that for your political purposes is just
as basis as possible to be I can understand it exactly except
to say that if you find yourself doing something
like that because of your political philosophy, change your political philosophy. It's time
to really repent and turn your mind around in another direction. This is what tragedy
is like. It really does bring out people's characters. And I think the people who run
these news media outlets should take a look at the characters that have been exposed and
do something about it.
Yeah, I totally agree.
Just look, if there were clear evidence, you know, if it emerged immediately thereafter
that the local National Weather Service guys were understaffed, they only had one guy on
duty where they used to have 10 and that guy couldn't handle it and that's okay, we would
deal with that.
You know, we would deal with that after we had a moment to mourn the loss of these
innocents. However, the information is exactly the opposite. What we know now is that the
National Weather Service, and I'm just going to walk you through it, provided over 12 hours
of advance notice via the flood watch and over three hours of lead time for flash flood
warnings with escalated alerts as the
storm intensified.
The main problem seems to have been it all happened overnight.
And most people were asleep and really not paying that close attention.
And I've heard some locals down there say something which rings very true, which is
there's also flash flood fatigue, warning fatigue.
And you get this in any area that is, you know, tornado alley down in, I think it's
in Oklahoma, that particular area, or places where they have, you know, lots of warnings
when there's big storms in the winter, whatever.
People get used to them and they're like, I'm not leaving.
I'm not evacuating.
I'm sick of these big warnings.
Happens in Florida with the hurricanes.
And there's probably a fair amount of people in this region who get flash flood warnings
a lot and are like, eh, because maybe they're already overused.
I don't know, you know, because that can happen too where you're like, they're just covering
their own butts.
It's not real.
And I'm not evacuating, you know, my family or a whole camp of youngsters for this.
But you do that at your risk and at the risk of the people you love
or are charged with caring for.
So just to keep going, and by the way,
do not have any information that the folks
at Camp Mystic actively ignored warnings.
I don't know what happened there, but I would like to know.
Okay, so there was over 12 hours of advance notice
with a flood watch, three hours of lead time
for flood warnings, which is an escalation.
And then escalated alerts beyond just a warning, like warnings with emergencies attached to them
as they got closer to the actual floods and the storms were intensifying. So this is overnight,
the day before. So July 4th is Friday. On the morning of July 3rd, the National Weather Center
issued a flood hazard outlook identifying
flash flooding potential for Kerrville and surrounding areas, which is the relevant area.
1 18 p.m. on July 3rd, that's Thursday, they issued a flood watch for Kerr County, effective
through Friday.
6 22 p.m. July 3rd, National Weather Center warns of considerable flooding risks north and west of San Antonio, including Kerrville.
1141 p.m. now.
Now it's about to start really happening Thursday night into Friday, July 3rd.
First flash flood warning issued for Bandera County, which is right next to
114 a.m. now around July 4th, the wee hours.
Flash flood warning with considerable tag issued for Bandera and Kerr counties
triggering wireless emergency alerts
and NOAA weather radio notifications.
Now, a lot of the phones didn't have service,
I guess historically in this area,
it's tough to get cell phone service.
So the locals who really do care
will get a NOAA weather radio.
And that stuff works,
but query who was listening to their NOAA weather radio Noah Weather Radio and that stuff works.
But query who was listening to their Noah Weather Radio
that night as they went to bed.
I would argue, look, I don't know what happened
at Camp Mystic, but I would argue they had an obligation
to have that radio, to have somebody awake
and to have somebody listening.
And I'm sorry, I know I've only heard lovely things
about the people who ran the camp,
but those eight-year-old girls should have been removed from that
Obviously endangered cabin when there was the first
Notification and moved to higher ground. I realize hindsight is 2020. I'm not saying it in a nasty way
I'm saying these are things we needed to learn that you got to listen
Even if it's pain in the ass to move the kids and just a couple more for you
403 a.m. July 4th, flash flood warning upgraded to flash flood emergency for Kerr County,
including Hunt.
5 a.m. July 4th, National Weather Center warns
of widespread, considerable, and catastrophic flooding.
And on top of all that, the Associated Press reports
the National Weather Service office in New Braunfels,
which delivers forecasts for this region,
had extra staff on duty during
the storms, according to Jason Runyon, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, where the
office would typically have two forecasters on duty during clear weather.
They had up to five on staff.
There were extra people here that night.
He said, that's typical in every weather service office.
You staff up for an event and you bring in people on overtime and hold them over.
None of that stopped the cretins Andrew
But it sounds like they did what you would expect normal humans to do in advance of this kind of tragedy
That's that is exactly the point going back to what you said before
If you're at the Weather Service and you don't issue a warning then and somebody gets hurt that's on you
So you're going to issue that warning but that means you're gonna issue a lot of warnings that don't pan a warning, and somebody gets hurt, that's on you. So you're going to issue that warning, but that means you're going to issue a lot of
warnings that don't pan out.
And ultimately, people are going to get a new word to the warnings and they're not going
to move every time they hear a warning because it would be insane to do that.
It would be insane to leave your house every time the Weather Service feels compelled to
tell you to be careful.
So there's a built-in human nature, a flaw in human nature, where on the one hand, it's not cover
your ass, it's actually do the right thing. You issue the warnings, but a lot of them are not going
to pan out so that eventually on the other hand, people are not going to move. And as you say,
a lot of this happened late at night. People were sleeping. They had been told that maybe they
wanted to install a siren, and I'm sure they should have, and I'm sure at some point
you're going to find out that somebody could have done something better because nobody
ever does anything perfectly, and that's going to be part of the investigation and part of
what comes out over time.
But the director of the camp died trying to rescue some of these people, some of these
children.
You can't doubt the goodwill or the courage or the love that was on display.
The kids loved this camp because of what it was, because of the love that was on display.
This is just, it's just a tragedy.
That's what tragedy means.
It's when something cannot be helped because it feeds into human nature and it feeds into
nature itself.
And again, I'm not saying that there shouldn't be improvements.
I'm not saying there might not be somebody who did something wrong or was careless or
reckless.
But at least at the beginning, I think it's time to mourn.
It's time to pray.
It's time to hope that some people will still survive who are missing.
And there will be time to do this investigation.
I understand that we live in a minute-by-minute news cycle, but still all the same. I just, I think it is one of my least favorite things
about the American news media is the search to use tragedy
to push forward an agenda when the first thing should be
to take in the scope of the tragedy, support the guys,
the Coast Guard and the police and the first responders
who are out there trying to rescue people.
That's the, seems to be the first order of business.
And then, yes, we have to look into what went wrong
and what can be made better without wrapping people
in so much safety that they can't live.
There's always going to be room for tragedy.
There is always going to be room
for even this kind of unimaginable terror and tragedy.
And I think that that's something that America
just hasn't
seemed to get used to, you know, it hasn't seemed to be able to teach itself that yes, at some point,
sometimes you just bow your head and weep because that's the only thing you can do.
Again, there will be investigations, there may be things they find that can be improved,
but it does not seem to me some kind of act of massive malfeasance by the government or by anybody
else. It just seems the absolute power of nature to carry things away when it decides that that's what
it's going to do. Nature, the earth can, as George Carlin once said, the earth can shrug
us off like a dog shrugs off fleas. That's how powerful it is. And that's what we were
seeing witnessing in this flood. I mean, I can't, I too have heard only lovely stories
about the guy who ran Camp Mystic and that he did,
he died, he gave his life trying to save those kids.
But I do have to wonder, why would you put the most,
the youngest, most vulnerable so close to the river,
when this river has flooded repeatedly in the past,
10 teenagers were killed in 1987, we pulled the news report.
It wasn't exactly at this area, but it was a couple miles away. It wasn't far away. And
it's just, you know, it's 2020 hindsight, but the warnings were coming. I mean, I just,
I'd like to think that a camp I went to or I sent my children to would have somebody
awake and whose responsibility it is on a night where it's heavy downpours to be listening
to that NOAA weather radio and to be taking precautions because it was a known risk. And as you point out, these rivers can quickly
go from one foot and an absolute nothing to a raging ravine that looks more like a, you
know, level five rapid that no one could be expected to survive with RV debris and tree
debris, you know, coming into a girl's cabin.
You know, it's just it's the risk is just so high.
We have to learn more about exactly what went on there. We actually pulled the news report.
It looks just like William Shatner doing this report, tossing to this.
I'm not sure if that could be.
Maybe he did a stint in news for a time or maybe this guy is just a look alike.
But here is SOT2 from 1987.
On Friday morning, July 17th, 1987, news for a time or maybe this guy is just a look-alike but here is SOT 2 from 1987. they were supposed to go home. The more than 300 children at the church camp were awakened early. The river was flooding. If they didn't leave soon,
their buses might not be able to leave at all.
We started going around the corner.
We would go down the hill,
then water started coming in the bus and stuff.
We tried to back up, but then the bus got stuck,
so they made all of us get out of the bus.
And that's whenever the first wave hit us,
and I started scattering people to different trees.
Kids clinging onto the trees like ants
surrounded by rushing water.
Masterman tried repeatedly to rescue 14-year-old Melanie
Finley, but she was ripped away by the river.
Here she comes!
Oh, it's awful. You see these people floating in the river
when we're seeing those scenes today.
It was William Shatner.
He hosted a show called Rescue 911 at the time.
Okay, so there's a history, and that wasn't the only time.
It's flooded repeatedly, this river.
So there was some level of warning built in.
I don't know that all the parents sending their kids to this camp were considering it,
but certainly if you're running the camp.
I'm not blaming anybody.
I'm just saying these are definitely things that need to be looked into.
But that's different from saying, let's figure out how this happens so that we can build
in protections at other camps where other kids are vulnerable.
Then what's happening with these
just partisan hacks on the left in the media who immediately need to find a way to blame it on Trump or to see one of their other pet court projects or issues of their life confirmed,
like climate change. You mentioned Dana Bash. Here she is.
How much do you think the changing climate is part of what we are seeing go on here?
Just talking about the federal government and even the local government, two Texas
National Weather Service offices involved in forecasting and warning about flooding on the
Guadalupe River are missing some key staff members. A director of the NWS union told CNN that the Austin, San Antonio office is
missing a warning coordination meteorologist due to the Trump administration's buyouts.
Right. And did she get to the part about how, but the area, the office responsible for this area was overstaffed and hasn't made any complaints
about missing key personnel in order to predict
this tragedy, which it did.
There were also reports that the Trump big, beautiful bill
which hasn't even gone into effect had cut down
on satellite reporting, which is also untrue.
There is something in there about the DOD not wanting to use classified satellites for
weather reporting, but had nothing to do with any of this.
It's a sickness.
It really is.
I mean, it obviously, look, it obviously should tell you that your philosophy is wrong, that
something is wrong.
If your politics, if my politics turned me into somebody who would do that, I would change my politics. I would immediately say, what have I become? What have
I done? That is the way you maintain some sort of decency in your life by checking your actions
against some kind of moral measure. But they've convinced themselves that this is morality, that
standing up for climate change is some important thing to do,
even while they build their mansions on the side of other rivers and other coastlines,
saying those coastlines are going to overflow. It really is a sickness. And I really do believe
this. I believe that we have gone into a period of mental illness in this country, of widespread
mental illness, and some of it is being spread by the news media but some of it is also being demonstrated by the news media. How do
you sleep at night when you do a report like that? I don't understand it. I really
don't. I mean I think I understand that people's hearts get twisted. I understand
that people do evil things but you're being paid a lot of money to actually
live up to a certain standard of reporting and I'm not seeing, I don't see this on the right.
Why is she bringing climate change in here?
Was it climate change in 1987 when I was 16
and a junior in high school?
Was it that like, that was 40 years ago?
Well, not quite, but almost like what,
they ignore all this.
That's her pet issue making its way into her coverage.
And then there was just the object
like celebrations of this.
I'm just gonna read you a couple.
Now, worst among them, because this guy
actually has a very popular podcast called
The Midas Touch, it's a left leaning one.
His name's Ron Filipowski.
And he tweeted out, the people in Texas
voted for government services controlled
by Trump and Greg Abbott.
That's exactly what they're getting.
And he went on to say, and one,
I think he deleted this one or the other one.
Also, when you have an entire political movement like MAGA,
who has sneering contempt for experts,
who have spent decades in a profession
like weather forecasters,
and the need for government to use those experts
to save lives, the results of that too often
are that many people died.
Then there's more.
Highly followed leftist ex-account Brooklyn Dad Defiant
says the death count in Texas is now up to 32 people.
Now, of course, it's up above 80 at the moment
from flooding that could have been projected earlier
if not for the devastating Doge cuts to Noah months ago.
Really, where'd you get that, sir?
Because that's not true.
Trump has blood
on his hands and should be held accountable. Here's a couple more from some more prominent
left-wing accounts. Okay, this one guy, I can't read his name, but it's Mike. I can't read it.
But in any event, he writes, good. I'm glad. Did it take Rogan with it too? I can only hope. Texas deserves it.
It's God's will, of course.
That's what God would have wanted, right, Republicans?
Ha ha ha.
My empathy for these red, redneck reject states is zero.
So fuck them.
I hope more come.
Let's start the hurricanes.
I mean, there are little girls dead.
And this is the reaction from this guy.
Here's another one.
It's not awful, it's what Texas deserves.
Cry harder, says another one.
Texas deserves it.
Here's another.
I'm kind of happy the National Weather Service
gave incorrect predictions when it came
to how much rain would fall,
especially since the best and brightest
from that organization were let go
due to Doge, Elon, and Trump,
and on and on and on.
They're celebrating.
They're celebrating that little girls are dead, that that pair of sisters died
holding one another that they can't think about the suffering of those parents.
But the one mom who said that their family will miss her, especially her
mommy, all having to write that having to like write an off the cuff eulogy for your
eight-year-old because you're standing down all the good people and all the good Samaritans who
have been out there for the past four days now searching night and day for the missing.
I mean, of course, in all these stories, Andrew, you find against those awful,
soulless people, you find the great ones, the ones who died trying to save the
little girls or like this guy recently out of the National Guard who said to save over
160 people, like first day on the job and rescued over 160 people.
You're hearing more and more stories like that, but it really is a juxtaposition of
good and evil, a story like this.
Yeah.
I'm a firm believer and maybe I just believe this
to keep myself sane, but I have witnessed it in life.
I'm a firm believer that the people who tweet those things,
that they're glad these children died,
that there's something, there's some kind of justice in life
that you have to live with that inside yourself.
I can't imagine what it would be like to live
with that much hatred, even for the people I oppose.
To down to my
heart and soul. I don't feel that way about them I don't
want to lose their children that people like you disagree
with every word out of their mouth, I still not don't want
tragedy to to befall them. I'm never rooting for that I'm
never ready for death comes to us all. I always believe that
there's something that the worst thing about having those feelings
in your heart is what they do to you,
is what they turn you into, what you're like inside,
what you're walking around with inside yourself.
I consider myself a righteous person.
I don't think anybody's really righteous,
but I would hate to have to live with that inside me.
I would hate to have to live with that kind of anger
and rancor just every day. It would be like having a stomach full of acid all the time.
Yeah, it's like a cancer, a cancer that will keep you alive. Let me just mention this quickly because I mentioned him.
Not National Guard, Coast Guard. This is Marina Medvin posted about him online, as did others.
American hero Scott Ruskin saved 165 people on
his first Coast Guard mission in Texas, sometimes carrying two girls per arm on to rescue helicopters.
Those are the ones you need to focus on. He's a true hero and there are many more like him who
risked their lives. You see some of these rescue videos. There was one, do we have it cut you guys
where there's an elderly woman, we do, it's
V6, an elderly woman, they described her as elderly, I can't totally tell, but she looks
like she has gray hair.
In this water, for the listening audience, you can see the raging waters, you can see
a rescue, where these two men, they're wearing their life jackets around their necks and
they've gotten a life jacket on her.
And then there are men holding a rope on either side trying to like do something to either
pull her out. there are men holding a rope on either side trying to like do something to either pull
her out. It's not exactly clear to me, but they're really struggling given the current.
And if you watch this full video, Andrew, you can see at one point, like she keeps going
under and then the men get, the men get sucked under the strong rescue rescuer men get sucked
under. And at some point during this like four minute video, most of them become in serious danger.
And then there's people steps away on the shore, but there's only so much they can do
because it's just, it's like getting caught in like a riptide and finally they get her
out.
But I mean, every rescue puts many lives at risk for the rescuers.
And you still have guys like Scott Ruskin who did it over and over and over again.
You can be standing in two feet, three feet, four feet of water and be washed away. It
has happened to me. You can be knocked right on your backside. You have no power against
the power of a river and against the power of running water.
One thing this really brings up, and you and I have talked about this before, is the power
of ideology, what ideology does to you.
If you have an ideology that dehumanizes people, that sets standards of good and evil according
to your opinions of things instead of according to the moral law that's in every human heart,
this is what happens to you.
You become dehumanized.
You forget all this stuff. Whereas if you have
an ideology that is based in love, even if you make mistakes, even if you go astray,
you're ultimately going to be called to service when people are in trouble, or when people are
hurt, or when people are suffering through tragedy. I think it's just something that has
happened in this country. I did not grow up in a country that had this kind of ideology throbbing through it like this.
It was always there, obviously.
There's always bad ideology and evil people.
But somehow at the level of the establishment, at the level of the people who went on the newscasts and talked and wore ties and jackets
and were the guys who were supposed to be responsible to us for information.
They were not swept away by the river of ideology and not swept into evil by it.
I just think that it's just something that really needs to be addressed.
Because of the First Amendment and God bless the First Amendment, it's very hard to reform
the media.
But you just think that somewhere, somewhere at the top of these organizations, human hearts would say, you know, we've got to reform a media that is speaking evil into the world.
You know, when you when you see those guys going out there and doing what they do, and you talk about that guy who was on his first day of work at the Coast Guard saving over 100 people, you know, you understand that there is something called decency and heroism. These things really do exist, and not all of us can live up to our heroes, but we can
all live up to some level of decency.
And I think that that is something that has really disappeared from the establishment
in the country.
It hasn't disappeared from America.
You only have to travel in America and meet people and talk to people to see all the decency
in the world you want to.
But it's at our leadership level.
And the guy who was complaining, by the way, about the Republican distrust, the conservative
distrust of experts, might want to consult the experts like Deborah Birx and Anthony
Fauci, who lied and lied to us and undermined the power of expertise and the credibility
of experts.
Because I agree, there are such things as experts, but right now they're in bad odor
because of the fact that they betrayed
the country.
And so, you know, where you place the blame for these things is a question of how far
back in time you're willing to go into the actions of the people who are being blamed.
I see those guys in the water, Andrew, and I think, okay, you know, Scott Ruskin, God
love him.
He's a professional rescuer.
Day one, indeed, but he's a professional rescuer who signed up to rescue. The odds are those guys we just saw in the water trying
to save that older woman, they're probably volunteer firemen. Those are the overwhelming
odds. It's a very rural town. I mean, I spend my summers in a more rural New Jersey beach
town and if there is an emergency of any kind, they sound the fire alarm.
There's not some, there's not a firehouse
where they're all sitting around.
They sound the loud alarm
and all the volunteer firefighters and EMS guys go running
and they put their lives in the line at a moment's notice.
I guarantee you it's a situation not unlike that.
You see these guys in the water.
They're not like the completely fit.
That guy looks like he's straight out of Top Gun.
To his credit, I'm not, I'm
not mocking him. But you know, those guys in the water, they
look like normal guys, they look like maybe a little older, maybe
a few extra pounds. Still, they went into that water. Still,
they risk their lives. They probably have families, they
risk their role as dads, to save somebody else's important
person. And for me, I know this is a weird possible non-secret order, but like I went to mass
on Sunday yesterday, then they do this every year down here and I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
We went, we listened to the mass, we observed mass and it ended this year as it did last
year and the year before that.
Before they sing the last hymn and at the very tail end of that hymn, as soon as it
ends. And at the very tail end of that hymn, as soon as it ends, and by the way, it was Be Not Afraid,
which was just, it's such a great one, so moving. They burst into the whole congregation led by the
cantor, God bless America. And it was just, it just makes you feel something from deep within,
God bless America.
And I look at those guys, that's what I think, those Texans risking their lives, probably
volunteer fight.
Like, God bless America.
God bless them.
God bless the helpers.
I have almost no use for these, sorry, fucking cretins online who don't understand us or
what we're here for or what we're really about or the goodness of this country at its heart
and soul, irrespective of partisan politics.
Oh, wait, and I'll give you one more.
This is an emotional journey of a comment because you've got these wonderful people
and you've got these terrible people, but I've got to get this person in.
Her name is Sadie Perkins.
She is a fellow.
She's a non-resident fellow at Princeton University, previously one of our most respected institutions.
It means that they've given her a big grant.
I think it's a $1 million grant she got a couple years ago
post George Floyd, 2022,
to research how black religious leaders and communities
responded to COVID, climate and environmental crises,
or struggles for racial justice.
Any one of those three will do.
They give grants from this project.
So that makes her a fellow at Princeton University.
And here is what Sadie Perkins, non-resident fellow at Princeton, was concerned about as
she watched children die.
I know I'm probably going to get canceled for this, but Camp Mystic is a whites only girls Christian camp.
And I think that context needs to be said in this matter.
It's not to say that we don't want the girls to be found with whatever girls that are missing
or whatever right now.
But you best believe, especially in today's political climate. If this were a group of Hispanic girls, especially
with them being in East Texas, it should be most likely Hispanic. If this were a group
of Hispanic girls out there, this would not be getting this type of coverage that they're
getting.
No one would give a fuck. And all these white people, the parents of these little girls
would be saying things like they need to be deported. They want you to get out of your
bed and to come out of your home and to go find these people
and to donate your money to go find these people. Meanwhile, they're deporting your
family members. Meanwhile, they're setting up concentration camps and prisons for your
family members. And I need you all to keep that in mind before you all get out there
and put on your rain boots and go find these little girls.
Oh God.
Just people with no shut up button in their hearts.
It's unbelievable.
It's unbelievable.
She's truly depraved.
There's something depraved.
Princeton University must do something.
I don't know if she's still on her million dollar grant,
what it is, but whatever it is must be pulled.
It absolutely must be severed.
Princeton University must make a statement.
She's calling the parents of the dead children racists
based on absolutely nothing but a figment of her imagination
and the pictures she's seen that they're white
and the information she heard that they're Christian and discouraging
while she does the cover her ass. Oh, it's not to say we don't want them to be found.
She finishes it up with you better think about this before you get out there and you put
on your raincoats to try to go find these girls. You think about how they're racists
and how they'd be letting your people die if you're Hispanic. Holy shit.
Yeah. I like the word that I'll probably be canceled for this, you know, cancel culture,
which conservatives complain so much about was really a culture in which if you disagreed
politically you were deemed to be immoral. But it's not wrong to cancel people when they're
actually immoral to tell people that before you go out and try to rescue children, you
have to take some kind of bizarre, you know, critical
race idea into your head.
You know, even if there was some kind of truth or legitimacy to critical race theory, which
there isn't, but even if there were, there would be nothing that should stop you from
putting on boots and going out and helping people if you can do it.
So this idea that you're being canceled if you do something that's actually immoral,
that if you do something that is actually cruel and stupid and evil, that's not being canceled.
That's simply just human decency in society basically regurgitating something that it shouldn't have swallowed in the first place.
And you're absolutely right. Princeton is responsible for addressing this. You know, I think that in some ways, whoever these people are who are saying these things
that you're reading that are legitimately shocking,
they're legitimately mind blowing that people could do this,
whoever is in charge of those people,
whoever is giving them money,
whoever is giving them support
should really take a look at what they're doing
and giving them a platform
because I don't understand why we have to,
I understand that people are free to say evil things,
but I don't think that we are,
I think we are equally free to react to those evil things
and turn them off and withdraw our support from them.
I don't believe this should be censored at all.
I actually don't believe they should be censored.
I want those people to expose themselves.
I want them to say what they have to say.
But we as an audience,
and we as the people who pay people to say things,
I think we can shut people down when they say things like this.
There's another woman who bears mention. She's a pediatrician.
Unbelievable. A pediatrician in Texas who suggested that these Texas flood victims got what they deserved.
She posted as follows. Her name is Dr. Christina B. Probst.
P-R-O-P-S-T.
She drew widespread scorn, quoting here
from the New York Post, following her disparaging,
since deleted Facebook post under her old name,
which was Christina, that was her username.
"'May all visitors, children, non-MAGA voters,
"'and pets be safe and dry,' she wrote."
And she goes on, "'Kerr County MAGA voted and pets be safe and dry," she wrote. She goes on, Kerr County MAGA voted
to gut FEMA. They deny climate change. May they get what they voted for. Bless their
hearts. At first, her employer, Bluefish Pediatrics, said she'd been suspended and then announced
she's no longer employed there, saying there's no room for politicization of a tragedy like this.
No word on what's going to happen with the Texas Medical Board. She's in charge of taking care of children.
Do the parents who bring their children to her as their pediatrician know this is how she feels if you voted for Trump?
She thinks your child deserves any death that she can blame on climate change or a Trump
Doge or big beautiful bill initiative because that appears to be how she sees the world
They're lurking. We saw this after 10-7. Andrew, you know, we're like people weren't just saying
I've got real problems with israel. I don't condone the the death that you know this terrorism
We saw in 10-7, but you know
These people can't live under blockade, right? That which would which would have been a reasonable way to react if you're pro-Palestinian.
No, they loved it. They loved the hostages. They tore down their pictures, wanting them to remain
in captivity and to suffer. Like, I know maybe I'm beating a dead horse, but there's something dead
inside people. I talk about politics all day for a living.
You do too.
I've been doing this for 20 plus years, immersed in the most vicious political battles for
that time.
It hasn't hardened my heart.
I recognize insane people.
I try not to generalize too much about the left as being awful because I love people
on the left.
My mom's still a registered Democrat.
Some of my best friends are liberals. There's a hardness happening here and there's something else happening on the left. You know, my mom's still a registered Democrat. Some of my best friends are liberals.
There's a hardness happening here.
And there's something else happening on the left
that was in the news this weekend,
Gallup showing for the first time ever
that Democrats don't love America.
They're not patriotic.
They're not proud to be Americans.
Republicans have remained steady at 92, 93%
for 20 plus years.
Democrats have gone off a cliff. More people now say they hate America on
the left than say they're proud to be American. It's all part of the same sickness.
It is, and it is an ideological sickness. It is something you can blame on ideology when ideology
trumps morality. Look, we are built to know right from wrong. We do know right from wrong.
The struggle we have is not knowing it, it's doing it.
Sometimes doing the right thing interferes with our personal interests, and so you're
tempted to follow your personal interests instead of doing the right thing.
But ideology is the single force, and Alexander Sulzhenitsyn wrote about this, ideology is
the single force that can wipe that knowledge out of our minds and out of our hearts.
And that is the problem that the left has.
Yes, there are people on the right, but on the far right,
people on the fringe who have this problem.
But the center of the Democrat Party, the center of the left,
has now basically let ideology wipe morality out of their hearts.
And this is the result.
It's just so awful.
There's much more to cover, and we will do that.
We're going to take a quick quick break more with Andrew right after this
We'll get into Jeffrey Epstein and the FBI plus Selena
Zito is coming up on her new book about Butler, Pennsylvania as we approach the one-year mark
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Andrew, this FBI thing has got tongues wagging all over the country today.
It's FBI and DOJ coming out with a shocking announcement
for many.
Well, I've talked to others who are closer to the case
who say they're not shocked
and they've been saying that there's really,
this is just the stuff of conspiracy theories all along
that he had some blackmail lists,
some long client lists that was gonna wow everybody
that there wouldn't be videos that would incriminate
necessarily Epstein or those around him,
but, and that he was, the non-conspiracy theorists say,
obviously he killed himself.
Okay, so here's the story.
DOJ FBI have concluded they have no evidence
that Epstein blackmailed powerful figures,
that he kept a client list, or that
he was murdered, according to a memo detailing the findings that was leaked to Axios.
So clearly our friends, who we love, Bongino and or Patel, leaked it to Axios, which is
interesting.
I mean, why Axios?
That's not really a Republican friendly site.
They probably aren't steeped that deeply
in all things Epstein.
I don't know, but it was leaked to Axios.
Maybe I'm wrong.
No further charges are expected
in connection with the probes into Epstein
as investigators, quote,
did not uncover evidence that could predicate
an investigation against uncharged third parties.
The DOJ and FBI say in the memo, no further disclosure of Epstein related material
would be appropriate or warranted.
So we are done getting any Epstein material.
The memo says much of the material relates
to child sexual abuse and details of Epstein's victims,
as opposed to like other third parties
who were swept up into his awfulness.
The files related to Epstein include a large volume
of images of Epstein, images and videos of victims
who are either minors or appear to be,
and over 10,000 downloaded videos and images
of illegal child sex abuse material and other pornography.
Through this review, we found no basis to revisit
the disclosure of those materials,
will not permit the release
of the child pornography, obviously. Consistent with our prior disclosures,
this review confirmed Epstein harmed over 1,000 victims,
but they're not expanding those conclusions
to anything beyond Epstein.
They've also released video,
what they say is 10 hours of raw
and also enhanced videos,
meaning enhanced just so we can see it a little better
and the colors better, that they say indicates no one entered the area of the Manhattan prison
where Epstein was held the night he died.
Many are pouring over this video footage right now, which goes from between 10.40 p.m. on
August 9th, 2019, when he was locked in his cell, to around 6.30 a.m. the next day when
he was found unresponsive.
They say that it shows no one entering the area
or leaving the area, but already loose on online
or suggesting there are cuts or jump cuts.
We have not independently examined it,
so we're not in a position to comment on that.
Here's why it's causing such a problem,
including amongst many people who love Bongino and Patel. Maybe not so much Bondi.
Because we've been told over and over and over again that they did have materials.
And I'll take you through some of those. Here's Pam Bondi in February of this year
talking about Epstein's client list that they now tell us does not exist, SOT7.
talking about Epstein's client list that they now tell us does not exist. Sat 7.
DOJ may be releasing the list of Jeffrey Epstein's clients?
Will that really happen?
It's sitting on my desk right now to review.
That's been a directive by President Trump.
I'm reviewing that.
I'm reviewing JFK files, MLK files.
That's all in the process of being reviewed because that was done at the directive of
the president from all of these agencies.
So, so have you seen anything there?
You said, oh my gosh.
Not yet.
But she explicitly said the Epstein client list was sitting on her desk.
And now they explicitly say they have no evidence that he kept a client list.
Okay. So that's one.
Then she brought a bunch of conservative influencers
to the White House,
and I'm told this was a Pam Bondi operation
that didn't have like the blessing of the FBI
or necessarily the White House staff either.
She brought them to the White House,
gave them binders that said it was like the Epstein files,
and they all were embarrassed
because it turned out that there was no more than, I think, 200 documents
of materials that were already public,
which in these influencers' defense, they did not know.
They were trusting the attorney general
of the United States who for some reason
thought it would be a good idea to humiliate
some of President Trump's most ardent supporters
and people who helped get him elected,
for which she hasn't been forgiven by a lot of these folks.
I know many of them.
Then she came out a little later in February
and said on Hannity the following, Sat 8.
You're looking at these documents going,
these aren't all the Epstein files.
They were flight logs, they were names and victims' names.
And we're going, where's the rest of the stuff?
And that's what the FBI had turned over to us.
And so a source said, whoa,
all this evidence is sitting
in the Southern District of New York.
So based on that, I gave them the deadline.
Friday at eight, a truckload of evidence arrived.
It's now in the possession of the FBI.
Cash is going to get me and himself
really a detailed report as to why all these documents and evidence had been withheld.
And, you know, we're going to go through it, go through it as fast as we can, but go through
it very cautiously to protect all the victims of Epstein. So that's her blaming the FBI.
There were additional files. I didn't mean to embarrass the influencers.
It's the FBI's fault, but I'm going to get them.
Then you have Pam Bondi caught on tape by James O'Keefe.
And as soon as it came out, like that he had this and was about to hit, it was about to
hit, he went to her for comment, obviously.
She got on camera and affirmatively said it as though she meant to say it all along.
It was like, it seemed to me to be a CYA.
Like I said nothing special to James O'Keefe.
I'll say it right now on camera.
And I happen to know that this caused a lot
of consternation inside some of these national security
socials where they didn't know what she was doing.
Here is SOT 10.
There are tens of thousands of videos of Epstein
with children or child porn, and there are hundreds of victims and no one victim will
ever get released. It's just the volume and that's what they're going through right now.
The FBI is diligently going through that.
Okay. So that piece of it is somewhat consistent
with what they said in this statement,
which is there's a lot of child sexual assault material
online, but she left it open.
Like hundreds of victims of Epstein's
or of others that Epstein has.
Like this is the kind of thing you need
to be really specific about.
And we were left with yet another question mark. Now here's Alina Habba,
who's we're also now working at DOJ on Piers Morgan.
But in this case, in Epstein's case, it is incredibly disturbing. We have flight logs,
we have information, names that will come out. Is it going to be shocking?
I don't see how it's not shocking that there were so many individuals that were hidden
and kept secret and not been held accountable. Let's talk about the reverse. I believe in
accountability. So you have to now go through your process. Now, I won't say they're guilty until they go through their
time in court. But again, now it's time for accountability. We have seen for so many years,
Pierce in this country, many investigations, subpoenas, testimonies in Congress, et cetera,
et cetera. But there's a general frustration with accountability. We take it halfway, we don't take it home.
And I really believe that now with Cash and Pam,
there will be accountability.
That was February.
So now she says they have information
and the names too will come out.
So many individuals who have been hidden,
kept secret, haven't been held accountable.
She won't yet say that they're guilty
until they've had their time in court,
but there's been a frustration with accountability.
Okay, now we get there's no client list,
there's no evidence that he blackmailed anybody,
and there's nobody else who's gonna be charged
and no additional information that will be released.
I'm sorry, but I fully understand
why people are extremely doubtful and frustrated
with what's being released right now by the administration
and what's being told to them.
This is extremely upsetting.
I mean, I'm a big Dan Bongino fan.
I judge him to be a man of integrity
who really is committed to doing the right thing.
I've met Cash Patel, but I don't know Cash Patel,
but I've always been favorably impressed by him.
So there's so much to talk about here.
Let's just go back to what you talked about
of the leak to Axios, nevermind their political leanings.
It was released at the end of a holiday weekend,
which is when you dump information
you're hoping no one will pay attention to.
That's the first thing.
There is Pam Bondi and this list,
there's Cash Patel two years ago
calling for this list to be brought forward.
I am willing because of my respect for Dan
and my respect for Cash Patel,
I am willing to stipulate that Jeff Reepstein
did not commit suicide.
If I can include the idea
that it was some kind of Godfather II situation
where suddenly
all the cameras went off, suddenly all the guards disappeared, suddenly all the cellmates
were removed from his cell, so he was allowed to commit suicide and maybe protect some other
interests that he had beyond his own life and avoid going to prison for the rest of
his life.
So all right, I'll buy that he didn't commit suicide and the evidence says that he didn't
commit suicide.
But when you tell me that there's no list, my questions just get broader and bigger.
They don't get less.
If there's no list of people who did things, are there no witnesses?
Are the people, the children and the young people who were abused, have they made no
accusations?
Can they not be questioned?
Can they not be asked who was it who raped you?
Who was it who used you again and again? Some of these women have come forward and said, you know,
I was raped again and again. Well, by whom? You know, did you recognize the person? Can you identify
him in a photo array? Galeen Maxwell is in prison for 20 years. Is there no deal that she would
expect that she would accept to get less prison time and come on and say, yeah, let
me tell you who I brought into this island.
This is something that is so widespread in America and maybe throughout the world, this
abuse of young people, this use of young people for your own personal pleasure, that I think
it really has to be addressed at the highest level and has to be addressed in the harshest possible way.
So I'm not satisfied with you saying, oh, I, you know, Pam Bondi misspoke or whatever
the hell she did when she said, yes, this list is on my desk.
All right.
So there's no list.
Is there no way of attaining names and information from the people who were victimized?
Are there no accusations that are going to be made?
Is nobody willing to make these accusations?
I mean, this thing has been covered up so completely,
including at ABC News, where we were talking before
about George Stephanopoulos and why he was hired,
being hired because he silenced women for Bill Clinton.
Then we know from Amy Robach,
the tape that was released of Amy Robach, that that was
spiked during Hillary Clinton's run.
And they say, well, dress up and do it.
She said, we had it all.
We had it all.
Clinton, she mentioned him.
That's right.
So I'm sorry, this is not holding together.
And I think a guy of the quality of Dan Bongino should be coming forward with it.
I know people who know him inside the administration.
I know he's working like a dog. He's trying hard to rejigger the FBI from the corrupt state it fell into under
Biden and under Obama as well. I think they are working hard to clean out the FBI. But
something about this case, there is a stumbling block here. And by the way, I don't believe
that it's Donald Trump. I actually believe that Donald Trump was not part of this situation because he doesn't
have to be-
If Donald Trump were in the Epstein files in any meaningful way, Joe Biden would have
told us.
You betcha.
And also he threw the guy out of Mar-a-Lago.
He made jokes about the fact that he likes him young.
Those are not the words of somebody who's participating in this abuse.
This goes on in Hollywood.
It goes on in Hollywood, it goes on in churches,
it went on in England when Muslims were collecting
these little girls for their own personal use
and the government covered it up.
This is something that is endemic right now.
They're still doing that.
They're still doing that.
There's a story just today about Taliban,
some Taliban leader wanted to marry a six year old
and they said, oh, you gotta wait till she's nine.
She's nine like Mohammed. You know, I think that this is something that is somehow so interlaced in our society that
maybe there's no way that it maybe would just take a superhero to say, I don't care who
I bring down.
I don't care what threats I'm given.
You know, every now and again, they arrest some poor schmuck who's got, you know,
child porn on his computer.
And yes, that's evil, that's wicked,
you should be arrested for it.
But why is it that the guys who actually do this stuff
who are powerful people, who are people of substance
and people of money and who are using innocent girls
who don't have that kind of influence
and don't have that kind of money,
why isn't that they are never arrested and never named?
This is a moment for Cash and Dan to really stand up.
It's not enough to leak this at the end of the Fourth of July weekend.
You've got to come forward and tell me why you cannot get the names of people from the
people who were abused.
Do you recognize this guy?
Do you recognize anybody in this photo array?
Was this the person who raped you?
I don't understand.
I don't understand why Ghislaine Maxwell
was not offered some kind of deal
to get the names out of her,
so maybe she doesn't have to serve 20 years.
Well, Ghislaine went to prison for helping Jeffrey Epstein,
you know, in his sex trafficking
and his behavior toward these young women.
But the trial evidence against her was about procuring young women for Jeffrey.
It wasn't for others.
It wasn't like she was the main sort of-
Yeah, but she was there.
She was on the-
No, I know.
I'm just saying, like, just people online are like, what'd she get convicted of?
She got convicted of funneling girls to Jeffrey.
And I'll play devil's advocate for a minute
and we should explore this, okay?
Let's explore the possibility that you have
to put Pam Bondi's statements to the side
in order to go down this lane with me
because I don't know what she's doing.
I gotta be honest.
But I really do trust Dan.
Dan, Tan is a wonderful guy
and he's a very straight shooter.
He's all heart, he's totally earnest.
I don't believe Dan is lying to us.
I just, I don't.
I don't know Cash as well.
I don't mean to indict him at all.
I'm just saying, I don't know him the way I know Dan,
who's been coming on the show for years.
We've had long, many long hours and hours and hours.
This is like you, I know him like I know you.
Like I just, no one's gonna convince me
he would go out there and just blatantly lie.
I don't believe it.
So let's go down the line of he's telling the truth and cashes.
Again, we're checking Pam Bondi's weird statements for now.
I know somebody very close to the Epstein case.
I've never said who this is, but this is a very, very well-informed person.
And this person from the beginning has told me that Epstein was into young girls.
I don't know what he looked at online.
I believe he probably did look at what now
they just call child sexual assault material.
We used to call it child pornography.
I believe he was probably into that.
But this person was saying in terms of what Jeffrey wanted
brought to him at his mansions and his island,
it was the barely legal type.
It was like the 17-year-old girl or the 16.
I'm not justifying any of this.
I'm just telling you what's been told to me by a very reliable person, that that's what
he was into.
In many states, that's not unlawful.
The 17-year-old sex partner for a grown man is actually not illegal.
Now in some it is, and he got in trouble in Florida.
So that's, it is a possibility that that was his thing when it came to actual sexual interactions.
Forget what he was looking at online.
And it is a thing that, you know, he had some of those girls who weren't committing crimes
with powerful men.
And that while he had a very interesting black book that had names,
including Donald Trump's in it, that doesn't amount to a client list.
And there aren't young girls who can point the fingers.
There is Virginia Dufray, who recently died,
who was the girl pictured with Prince Andrew in those infamous
Daily Mail photos that we've all seen, where she was, I think, 17.
And with Prince Andrew.
This is why he got excommunicated from his family.
She says the girls were being funneled out
to third parties, to other men,
and that she was one of them.
But I'm sorry, Virginia Dufray is a proven was,
God rest her, I'm sorry, liar, a proven liar.
And not only do I firmly believe she lied
about Alan Dershowitz and she admitted
she might've been confused about him,
but there's a lot of stuff she said turned out
to be just totally false.
It's complicated because these victims,
these predators choose them for a reason.
They'll choose a girl like that because they know
maybe she's gonna have credibility problems and so on. So I'm trying not to be disrespectful to her, but there's no question
that Virginia, Virginia Vare did tell a lot of lies. And then there's a lot of other people
who, when Jeffrey Upstein went down, saw dollar signs in their eyeballs because he was not
forgetting, he was very rich and said, I know something, I want to pay out or I was a victim
and I want to pay out. And it wasn't always true.
All of these are complicated factors,
complicating factors in like the lure around him.
And it is possible this guy did not want to spend
the rest of his life in prison.
He was used to all the trappings of wealth.
You know, Arthur Idallah has talked about this.
He represented Ghislaine Maxwell,
that it's a terrible place where he was being held.
You know, he spent a couple hours in there
and felt dark and depressed and, you know, sad.
And he wasn't getting sentenced, he was there as a lawyer.
It is very possible he was extremely depressed,
realized that he was gonna go to jail forever,
and decided to take his own life.
So all of that really is possible.
And you know, conspiracy theories do spring
when we're not being told to straight skinny,
as we weren't for years after Jeffrey died and so on.
So I'm leaving room for the possibility that it really is less nefarious, not not nefarious,
but less nefarious than we were told.
And maybe we've just been so spun up by so many spinners that now when you have people
you can trust telling you what's real, it's hard to believe.
But you know, my problem with that explanation, and again, I'm putting the suicide aside because
I agree with you about this. I do think it's possible that he killed himself, although I do
think it's kind of interesting that every camera went off, every guard was gone, every cellmate had
been removed. I think maybe it was convenient for him to kill himself. But still, I'm perfectly willing to believe that. Let's just say that everything you said was true.
You're Cash Patel. And again, I really like these guys. I like both of them. And I know more about
Dan than I know about Cash Patel. But still, they both have favorably impressed me. And I trusted
them. And I trust them still. But a couple of years ago,
Cash Patel is on the air saying, this is a conspiracy, there's a list, we got to get this
out. And now he's the head of the FBI. And he finds out, oh, all of these things that I said to
the public are untrue. You leak that to Axios at the end of the 4th of July weekend? Or do you come
out and you face the cameras and say, you know I'm no one could be more surprised than I am you know I put this stuff forward I put
these ideas forward I was wrong and this is why I was wrong and this is why I
can't show you everything and and just really lay it out for you and and take
responsibility for the things that he said because he's one of the people who
made you think like gee something is going on behind the scenes. And you're also right, by the way,
that you have to leave Pam Bondi out of this
because I don't understand what the hell
she's been talking about.
And that's something that she should be
really held responsible for.
She did go on and say, you played that clip,
but she went on and said at other places as well
that she had a list that she was just going to check out.
We were on the verge of finding out.
And it's just been strange, Megan.
And I mean, yeah, it's possible.
It is possible that all of those bricks fall into place,
but it's still true that, you know,
it's still true that even if he didn't break the law,
even if he just skirted the law
by finding girls who were just within legal limits.
No, he broke the law.
Why aren't they talking?
Why aren't they coming forward and saying things?
Why is it that it was all-
Well, many have sued him.
I mean, he actually had, he's dead now,
but he was facing civil suits from some,
and Virginia Joufray, she had to civil suit,
and Ghislaine has gotten sued.
So there are some who have come forward.
It's not like two dozen.
And most, I think a lot of women want nothing to do.
They don't want their names associated
with this case whatsoever.
But we don't have some full list of victims.
And presumably the FBI knows more than we do.
But so far, what they seem to be saying is,
it was Jeffrey, it was Jeffrey, it was Jeffrey.
And Prince Andrew.
I don't know what the truth is, Andrew. I wish I did.
Let them come out and talk to people. Let them come out and take hard questions from people.
This leak to Axios at the end of the July 4th weekend, let them come out and face the music
and say, look, this is what we found. I was surprised. Aren't they motivated? I would think
they are motivated to prove that the things that they had been saying
to the public before they got into office, they should be motivated to prove those things
are true.
And if they're not true, they should come out and say, yeah, you know, like I misled
you, I didn't mean to, but I said the wrong things.
I just don't like the way this is unfolding.
And again, like you, I am big fan, I'm a big fan of's, and I'm a fan of Cash Patel's.
I have nothing to say negative about him,
but this doesn't sit right.
It doesn't taste right.
And I think that- They're gonna do it.
They are gonna come out.
I just don't believe those two guys will.
They're not afraid.
These are not like cowardly men.
They're gonna be out there probably this week,
I would imagine.
And I believe there will be a full fledged vetting.
I mean, I was talking to Dan not long ago
about coming on with us, maybe both of them, soon.
I don't think we anticipated July,
but I'll definitely ask both of them about it,
and I think they'll answer me.
I don't think they're afraid.
I do think it's possible, however,
that they've learned more
since becoming government administrators,
that they can't reveal.
I mean, some information would be classified. There are many who believe Jeffrey Epstein
and or Ghislaine Maxwell had connections, to example, the Mossad out of Israel and that
it's possible. Now, that's also been debunked. Well, not debunked, but like they've thrown
cold water on that saying it's not true. I haven't seen any evidence of that.
But I mean, there are possible reasons why they might have to mislead and that we do
need to look for.
I mean, cash was on Joe Rogan in June.
It was June 6th.
And he definitely sounded to me like he knew more than he was revealing.
And I thought, okay, it's harder when you're actually
in charge and you're responsible for maintaining
classified briefings and so on.
But here he is in South 13 in June.
But what about the video from the island?
Again, we're gonna give you everything we can
and people have to remember,
we're not gonna re-victimize women.
We're not gonna put that shit back out there.
It's not happening, cause then he wins.
Not doing it.
You wanna hate me for it, fine.
Again, logical play out.
If there was a video of some guy or gal
committing felonies on an island and I'm in charge,
don't you think you'd say it?
If you have access to it.
If I have it, period.
If I have it.
If I have it.
So where else would it be?
Right.
If you have it.
Right.
But you can't say that you have it.
No, we're giving you everything we have.
So far.
Everything we have so far is-
Have you guys gone over all the video that's available? Yeah, that's what I'm telling you
That's what takes so much damn time. All right, and and is there video from the island?
Not of what you want the people out there have
Filled the void with can't wait to see x y or z right speculation now. I understand that you would never
to see X, Y, or Z. Right, speculation.
Now, I understand that you would never
re-victimize these women and show this footage,
but is there footage?
Outside of,
the only thing I can say right now is
if there was footage of anyone doing anything else,
we would have opened a case.
So he just doesn't sound like himself. You can hear him being careful. He's not like a lot of
those are not fully direct answers. He's not volunteering information. And you are, you can
see Joe Rogan really trying to like kind of like pulling teeth, trying to get like full answers.
So it's clear to me, it's just different when you're in charge.
Yeah, no, I completely understand that. I'm willing to be understanding right down the
line, but not where we're standing right now. I mean, I'm willing to hear what they have
to say. And again, like I said, you know, three times, I am fans of these guys, I trust
them, but I do not think that they are handling this the right way as it stands. I do not think that this is the way this information should get out there.
And because the abuse of young people by the powerful is so endemic and because the stories
never get to the surface somehow.
When I was working in Hollywood, these stories would bubble up, they percolate up, and you'd
start to see little paragraphs of them in variety, the Hollywood trade paper, and then
they disappear again.
They just vanish because Hollywood variety depends
on advertising from the Hollywood studios.
And then you think like, all right,
so that just got covered up.
And it would happen again and again, and it happens,
we still don't know all the things that happened
in the Catholic church.
We still don't know all the things that are happening
in Britain with the Muslim rape gangs.
All of these things just seem to get killed somewhere along the line. And I guess I would like these two people who I
trust and who I believe in to come forward and explain to me bit by bit how exactly they got from,
yeah, we're going to release this list to there is no list. How exactly they got to, you know,
yeah, we're going to put this woman in prison for 20 years, but we're not gonna offer her a deal if she'll name some names.
How do we get to those places?
Fair, all fair questions.
Andrew Clavin, what a pleasure.
Thank you so much.
I missed talking to you.
I'm glad you came on.
Thank you.
Great to see you, Megan.
Thanks a lot.
Okay.
Coming up next, Selena Zito is here.
We're gonna talk to her about the news, we're also going to get into her new book on
being with Trump the day of the Butler rally. We're coming up in the one-year mark. Remember that? Do you remember where you were when you heard Trump was shot last July? She certainly does. It was
within steps of the then candidate and she's got some incredible stories from the day which you
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It was almost one year ago that President Trump survived an assassination attempt at
a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
It was on July 13th, 2024, which would be this Sunday.
It'll be one year.
Do you remember where you were?
I do.
I remember I was down here at the beach and my then 10-year-old was walking by my phone
and saw my phone lighting up like a Christmas tree
with messages from my team and saying, Mom, Trump got shot.
And that feeling of just your stomach dropping, you know, like, no.
And then he said in his ear, and I didn't know what to make of that, right?
In his ear is bad, like on his earlobe,
far less troubling.
And the news would come rapid fire after that.
I'm sure you remember it too.
Well, today we're joined by a reporter
who remembers it in especially a cute way.
She was literally a couple of feet away
from the president that fateful day.
She saw and heard the shots fired,
the immediate aftermath, the resilience of President Trump,
and of the crowd, how they behaved in this time of panic and violence.
And it was unlike what you might expect of a typical crowd and unlike what you might
expect of a Trump crowd if you read the New York Times exclusively.
Selena Zito's new book uncovers how President Trump's messaging changed following that attempt
on his life and more.
It's called Butler, the untold story of the near assassination of Donald Trump and the
fight for America's heartland.
And it's out tomorrow.
Go preorder it right now.
Trump is endorsing the book, urging everyone to read it.
He doesn't talk
that much about the assassination attempt. He said he was only going to talk about it
that one night at the RNC. I think he did it one other time, but he doesn't like talking
about it. He did to Selena, who lived it with him. Selena, welcome back. Great to see you.
Great to see you. Thanks so much for having me.
Oh yeah. Congrats on the book and just what a scoop.
I feel like the reason Selena Zito got this story and was with the president that day
and spoke to him for over an hour within 24 hours of it happening is because Selena Zito
has made a lifetime out of reporting on events and places and people that few others will.
The mainstream doesn't.
You were in Butler because you knew Butler mattered.
You were in Pennsylvania because you knew
the back areas of Pennsylvania would determine
the next president of the United States in a way.
Yes, the mainstream media knew Pennsylvania was important,
but you knew the state, you knew the towns,
you knew the flavor, you knew the feeling,
your family's from there.
But that's been your MO, your entire reporting career.
And I just think like there was,
in the same way there was divine intervention
to save Trump that day, there was something divine
about you being steps away and having that front row seat
to history, Selena.
You're the perfect person to write this book.
Congrats on the pub.
And you tell me, when you think back on it,
almost a year later, how do you see it?
How do you feel it mattered?
Well, first of all, thanks for having me on.
I feel very honored to be able to tell this story in a way that I think is very authentic
to the people and honors the people of Pennsylvania who were part, you know, they're part of this story,
not only that day, but in the days leading up to it
and the days after.
And, you know, when you're a reporter,
you don't always expect what you're supposed to do that day
to be exactly what happens.
I wasn't supposed to be standing in the buffer
four feet away from the president.
I wasn't supposed to be standing in the buffer four feet away from the president. I wasn't supposed to see the president
before he went out there.
But through a series of like,
we're gonna do this, Selena, we're not gonna do that.
People will really enjoy having a front row seat
to that back and forth about how I ended up there.
But I was there for a reason.
And I think I was there because I'm supposed
to tell this story in a way that is meaningful
and nuanced and understands not only Trump,
but more importantly, a constituency of people,
people that are very rarely seen
who placed him into office.
As a reporter, I often feel like I straddle
two completely different worlds.
If I go on social media and I watch other
or read other journalists and how they were talking
about the race that last year,
and then I'm on the ground in Pennsylvania
and watching something completely different
You know, I think that's part of why I was there and why I ended up being so close
When I'll just start like later in the book just for this first question you
Point out that as you rode into Butler as you were looking around Butler, Pennsylvania,
you actually tried to call attention
by to what people were seeing,
what's happening in the town with the other reporters,
the so-called mainstream reporters
who refused to look up from their phones.
They had zero interest in understanding Butler, Trump supporters, the rally crowd.
Really, those people, when I read that piece of the book, I'm like, they were too busy writing
orange band bad, Trump, Hitler, fascist, right? That's the only narrative they understand,
the same as they're doing today with respect to what's happening down in Texas.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay.
So that point you're talking about, it was in Erie, Pennsylvania.
I have long argued that Erie, Pennsylvania is the most important county, not just in
Pennsylvania, but also in the entire country.
As Erie goes, so goes the country in a presidential election.
It has been that way for a couple hundred years, right?
And we're in Erie.
JD Vance had been there that day.
It was his first visit to Pennsylvania
after being named the nominee by President Trump.
And he's at this event in this sort of old industrial area.
And he gets this massive crowd, right?
And there are people lining the streets
to see his motorcade. and i'm thinking, you know
This matters. This is huge
This traditionally was a democrat county if they're coming to see this guy who's even calling, you know
Something about cat ladies and I don't know there was all kind of weird. He's weird, right?
and and and i'm pointing out to these journalists,
because I'm, you know, as a blue collar kid from Western PA, Lake Erie was our beach.
Okay. That's where we went on vacation. So I know Erie really well. I'm pointing out
the old GE plan and all these industrial institutions that are gone and trying to show them like that matters, like place matters
in this election. And I'm like, they're not paying attention to me at all. And it's not about me.
I was trying to like be instructive and they didn't care. They all had their heads down in
their phones. And I was, I was so frustrated.
They probably weren't writing another childless cat lady article right at that moment.
It couldn't be interrupted.
Yes. It was about, he said something that day. Oh, I know what JD Vance said that day. That was the day he said that Harris, he was really angry about Harris saying that she would do nothing different than Joe Biden did
when it came to Afghanistan, right?
And JD said something about that in strong words,
and that's all they wrote about,
and how terrible he was for framing it that way.
And I'm like, y'all are missing this race
that's going on right in front of you.
There are people that are holding up signs
and saying, I'm weird too.
Nobody else wrote that.
And I'm thinking you're not getting what's happening.
So Trump, a week prior to that,
goes to Butler, Pennsylvania, you're there too.
And you write about how there, you know,
it was a joyful crowd.
Like we always saw the Trump rallies, you know,
not at all what the media would portray, but like truly joyful,
celebratory. They did not know that Trump was going to win. We did not know that. It
was what we were told by everybody, including me. It looked like a very tight, tight race.
All the polls suggested tight, tight, tight, but still they were joyful just to be around
him, his messaging, they felt seen, they felt heard. And then Trump gives the speech,
and we've heard this before,
but I want you to tell it about how the turning of the head
and like how unusual it was for him to do that.
Yeah.
So he goes out, if you look at the cover of the book,
my daughter actually took that cover.
And I think that cover is very, very powerful. It's symbolic because it shows Trump facing the crowd and the crowd
facing back at him. That is the transactional relationship that he has with rallygoers.
And Megan, you were in Pittsburgh on the night before you see that, right? And he never turns his neck away.
Now he might turn his body away
to face a different side of the rally,
different part of the stands,
but he never turns his head away.
Two things happen simultaneously.
A chart goes down and I remember turning to my daughter
and says, what does he think he's Ross Perot?
Because he never has a chart, right?
And then like a split second later, he turns his neck away again. says, what does he think he's Ross Perot? Because he never has a chart, right? True.
And then like a split second later, he turns his neck away.
Again, something he never does.
Pop, pop, pop, pop went right over my head.
I knew exactly what it was.
I'm a gun owner.
And I knew exactly what was happening.
I saw the blood streak across his face.
I saw him, most importantly,
the thing that almost gave me immediate release, relief, was that I saw him get down on his own.
And I'm making this mental checklist. And I never get down. I'm eventually taken down
by a campaign spokesperson because I'm just reporting, right?
I have my recorder on.
He was trying to protect you.
Yeah, he was trying to protect me.
He's a brave young man.
I will always love him.
But he does not get, he's not falling down.
There are a sea of blue that surround him
when the next four shots go off.
And I just remembered saying, oh dear God God, that podium is not going to protect him.
That there's more shots. Please let him be OK.
Please let everyone in the stands be OK.
And I never it never occurred to me to think about myself in that moment.
And I'm not saying that like I'm selfless, but there's there's this thing
that happens when you're a reporter that you just continue, you have to do your job.
And that's what I continue doing.
And so, he passes me, they eventually take him past me.
I'm like four feet away, four or five feet away.
They eventually take him past me.
And there's some really interesting moments after that in the book.
But the one thing I thought was so powerful
and I'm going to get in so much trouble with my parents for this one.
Yes, even at 65, I worry about getting in trouble with my parents.
But the next morning, the president calls me.
I don't know, it was early.
And he said, so he said, he said, Selena, this is
President Donald Trump, like I didn't know it was him, right? And he says, are you okay? Is your
daughter okay? Is your son in law okay? Says them by name, like I can't even believe he remembers
that. He's by himself, there's no one with him. So it's not like he has like a little crib sheet, right?
And I said, are you bleeping kidding me?
You just been shot and you're asking about me.
And then I'm like, oh my God, I just swore at the president
and I got myself really upset.
He ended up calling me seven times that day.
We had a very in-depth conversations
and people can read it.
But I wanna go back to the cover of that book
and why this moment's important.
Because I asked him,
and I asked him, I said,
why did you say fight, fight, fight?
And I'll never forget this.
He goes, well, Selena,
I wasn't Donald Trump in that moment.
I was representing the presidency and I have an obligate.
Yeah, I want to get chills every time I say I just got the chills, too.
Yeah, I have an obligation as a former president and maybe
potentially president again to show strength, to show people that we are resolved
and nothing will hurt us or
take us down and we continue on. And I have- That's amazing. That moment, I mean, we have it. Here it
is. I mean, we've talked about the assassination moment. Let's look at the fight, fight, fight moment in Saat 32.
Saying fight surrounded by the Secret Service agents.
It's, it's his incredible combination of like, yes, he has hubris.
Of course every president does, but, but, but also understanding how to lead, how to be strong and how to lead what people need in a leader.
Yeah.
We revisited that question two weeks ago.
It'll be out in my Washington Post story on Friday.
Very emotional interview between him and Helen Compettori, the widow of Corey Compettori and myself.
And I asked him again, I said, you know, you told me that.
He goes, yeah, I did.
I said, well, he goes, well, I mean, that's why
I'm doing what I'm doing now.
That's why I'm going full steam ahead because I have purpose.
God's hand was in that moment.
And I have an obligation to be the best that I
can be for this country.
And again, I get goosebumps because people
have all these different thoughts about who they think
President Trump is.
And as a reporter, and trust me, he's gotten mad at me,
too, along the way.
But as a reporter, there is a humanity and empathy in him.
Always remembers your name.
Always asks about your children and your grandchildren.
Was obsessed with your hair, which is fantastic.
By the way, something funny about Trump,
occasionally I do hear from the president
in one way, shape or form.
And if he calls me, he says the same thing.
It's your favorite president by far, by far.
He's funny, you know, that to me is actually not exactly hubris.
It's just funny. It's almost self-deprecating
because he's just sort of like, yes, I am.
Period.
Yes, yes. He's very, very funny.
There's a part in the book where he chases me
around the green room with hairspray.
Oh yeah, he really wants you to try hairspray
because he loves your hair.
He can't believe you don't need hairspray.
Mr. President, my hair is big enough.
I do not need hairspray.
And last week or two weeks ago when I was,
I rode on Air Force One. Now let me tell you,
as a kid that grew up on the wrong side of the tracks, who went to, who has been a waitress and
worked in a sewage treatment plant and had been a cafeteria lady, right? Like I've not exactly had
this life of privilege. And to be on Air Force One is like, oh my God, who am I? But as we're going from Air Force One into the Beast,
which is the vehicle that the president uses,
he asked me if I wanna die a coke,
and I scrunched my face.
I do not have a poker face.
Obviously, if anybody's watching this, they can see that.
And he goes, wait, you don't like coke?
I'm like, no, I don't like pop.
He goes, pop? And so he couldn't believe I don't like pop. He goes, pop?
And so he couldn't believe I didn't like it.
He goes, you try it, you like it,
it's the best Coke ever.
It's amazing.
It's amazing he's as healthy as he is at his age
subsisting on McDonald's Diet Coke
and Hershey chocolate bars.
Keep going.
Yeah, and so I tried it, no poker face.
I made a face and he goes,
I can't believe you don't like coke.
So, but you know, I think it's so interesting
you talk to him seven days, sorry, seven times
the day after the shooting
and for at least 10 minutes a time.
To me, that tells me he needed to talk to you.
Like he must've needed to talk to people who were there,
who are rational, who saw it, who had a perspective on it.
And you write something in the book to the effect of,
I gave him the time and space to figure it out for himself.
Like what the sort of the wisdom that would come
from what had happened to him,
because I'm sure it wasn't instantaneous.
I'm sure it did take a while.
We saw that a little at the RNC, which happened a week later.
He still had the bandage on his ear where, you know, he was a little meandering in the
speech, but you could see he was openly grappling with like, was I saved?
You know, like maybe something extraordinary is happening with me.
Maybe I actually am.
I believe Trump
believes in God. I don't think he's particularly religious, but I do think that that experience
started to reframe his own purpose here for him. And you were part of that in their early, early day.
Yeah. And that's why I decided, I know other journalists would push him to talk and push him to say things,
but I didn't think that was right.
I knew he was going through something
and I thought it was important for him to be able
to figure that out while we had that conversation.
And this has been very humbling for him.
The death of Corey has had a huge impact on him.
And you'll find that throughout the book. But also purpose and God have really had a spiritual impact on
him in a way that I don't think people truly understand, but they can see in the way he
is leading his presidency currency currently.
The book is called Butler, the untold story of the near assassination of Donald Trump
and the fight for America's heartland.
Please go out and order it now.
Support Selena.
As you well know, she will not be featured all over CNN or MSNBC who do not want to pay
any attention to this story.
She stays with me.
Go ahead and buy the book, Butler by Selena Zito.
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I'm not supposed to be here tonight. Not supposed to be here. Thank you.
But I'm not.
Hmm.
I was there that night.
My family was there.
It was very moving.
You could see a man still trying to,
still reeling. He was still, I mean, Trump is a human, you know, he has emotions, he has friilties just like the rest of us, even though he doesn't acknowledge them. There was a picture
that made national news the other day on the Daily Mail catching him with reading glasses on. And
they pointed out, you never see Trump with reading glasses on. He likes to project strength and robustness, which he has.
He does.
I'm already using reading glasses and I'm much younger than Donald Trump, but that's
just how he's built.
So you can see it was an interesting moment, Selena, to watch him starting to come to terms
with it.
Like I literally almost lost my life like seven days ago.
And then you point out, then he did come to terms with it.
And here he is sounding more sure
at the actual inauguration post the victory.
That's SOT 37.
Just a few months ago in a beautiful Pennsylvania field,
an assassin's bullet ripped through my ear.
But I felt then and believe even more so now
that my life was saved for a reason.
I was saved by God to make America great again.
Screaming ovation inside the Capitol of everyone except for the Democrats. How do you think it's affected him as president?
What do you see in him that you think is related to this event?
He's just going, so this is technically a lame duck presidency at this point, right?
You would never think that. He is so full charge and he is so determined to fix and sort of undo not only what Biden has done,
but what has been done before by past presidents, Republicans and Democrats alike.
And he is not putting the brake pedals on.
And it's very unlike 2017.
2017 was like, oh God, now I'm here.
And these people are all telling me what to do.
And he's like, I'm doing what in my gut I know is right.
Watching his face, Megan, then,
in that clip you just showed,
I remember looking at his face that night and saying,
oh, yeah, I know that face.
I have that face in the morning right now
because I don't know what just happened
and I don't know what I'm supposed to do,
but I feel as though I'm called to do something bigger,
bigger than self, right?
And not that I do anything big, but it ended up being this
book. And I was reluctant initially due to this book. But, you know, I realized it was
an important book. And it's not just about what happened that day. It's what happened
before we find out that President Trump isn't the only president to be shot at in Butler.
And it makes us very reflective as to how different
the country would be had George Washington died that day.
And it has to make us think about how reflective
we should be about President Trump had died that day.
There would be steelworkers
that wouldn't have a job anymore.
There will be a flood of people because Harris and Biden were both against that deal.
There would be people still flooding across our border.
There would be people in Western North Carolina that never saw any help or hope
after those devastating floods that hit that area in September of 2024, right?
And the continual help from FEMA.
There would have been no annihilation of Iran's nuclear capabilities.
There would be no Israel and Iran deal.
The world would look very different in just the same way that the world would look very,
very different had George Washington died in Butler in 1754.
When we have to think about this thing.
That's the way Trump governs now.
So not only you point out, yes,
this time around he wanted competent but loyal.
First time around, I think he just went
for what looked like competent.
He didn't factor in loyalty and he paid a price for it.
This time around, I think, yes, he learned from term one,
but also I think when you've almost been killed,
you probably do have a greater appreciation
for people who are loyal to you, who you can trust,
who are gonna have your best interests,
your family's best interests,
and who are gonna be totally aligned with your mission.
Like now you're determined
and you can't have anybody getting in your way.
And then there's a certain grandiosity
about what Trump does, but it's been magnificent.
You know, I mean, Gaziera, like what?
Maragaza, what do you wanna, what?
Now that's probably not going to happen, let's get real.
But what other American president would even think to say,
I'll take it on. I actually think I might be able to fix it. Like it's incredible. And, or even like, you know, Greenland says no, but I say yes. Like it actually might happen or result
in some sort of a compromise. You know, peace in the middle East, I'm going to try to settle the
Russia thing in a day. He realized he couldn't do that, but he's just taken on everything, things that are politically toxic, that most normal
politicians wouldn't want to touch with a 10-foot pole because they don't have to. It's like
somebody else's problem. I don't have to solve it. I've got my own problems. Trump is like,
I think I can fix it. I think I have that solution. I think we can be friends with the new Al-Qaeda
linked runners of Syria. I think I can renew hope and optimism think we can be friends with the new al-Qaeda-linked runners of Syria.
I think I can renew hope and optimism and great relations with the Saudis.
There's nothing he says, yeah, I can't.
You're exactly right.
I think there would have been 70% of that after surviving all the lawfare.
There would have been an element of him that would be, I go into China shop and yes,
I'm breaking all the China
and we're gonna get new China, right?
But you add on the assassination attempt,
you add on questioning purpose and aspiration, right?
Part of something bigger than self.
And all of a sudden you get the Trump 2025.
And he is going to be the most consequential president
in not just my lifetime since FDR.
Just think about this.
He's going to own a space and time
that stretches out at least 15 years, where he was the dominant
figure in American politics. That is unprecedented. And I don't know that we'll ever see anything
like this again in our lifetimes, right? It was my parents who were children when FDR
was president. But, you know, that was what, 70, 80 years ago. It took that long for another
president to be that dominant in our culture. And strong. Yes. He was built for this moment.
You're right. And it was a good refresher about some of the things that we learned this time last
year about how he went down and then the Secret Service was all over him and they hit him so hard,
I mean, in trying to protect him,
that they knocked him right out of his shoes.
I had forgotten that.
And you write about how you heard him.
And even in that moment, it's really kind of the explanation,
I think, for why he went back up
and was able to do the fight fight.
Because remember, we're all like,
why is it, what's he doing back up?
Get down, like, I know why he did it, is it, what's he doing back up? Get down.
Like I know why he did it, but like,
you are also thinking, no, get down.
You don't know if the threat has been neutralized.
But initially he was like, get my damn shoes back.
Like that's another thing.
Like Trump, he didn't want to be seen without his shoes.
He's conscious of what the American people need.
They need to see a strong leader,
not somebody walking around in his sock feet,
not somebody with the reading glasses all the time,
somebody who says fight, even when he might get shot.
He doesn't know for sure it's been neutralized.
You saw that all unfold in a second.
Yeah, and it's not even just about personal image,
which is, I think, is such an important nuance, right?
Yes, it is about him.
But also he has this really
granular understanding of the presidency needs to look strong, feel strong, feel
robust, feel resolute, that he believes that is his obligation in this position.
And that is what he did in that moment.
And that's what he does every day.
Yeah. It's like all of the seams come together. I'm going to show you a video on that in just
one second. When you read the book, again, it's called Butler, The Untold Story by Selena
Zito, Z-I-T-O. A couple of other things I want to hit on that are very interesting. Thomas Crooks.
Why don't we know more?
Where are the in-depth pieces about him?
We know more about Lee Harvey Oswald than we do about this guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Part of that is, and trust me, it wasn't for a lack of trying on my part.
Part of it is unlike most young people, he didn't really leave a social media
footprint. There wasn't anything there. He didn't tweet. He didn't have a blog. He didn't
have MySpace, right? He didn't have anything. He's a very introverted young man and seemed
to be fine until about six months before and then had a complete mental breakdown,
but we don't know the details of it.
I don't know that he was particularly a political,
I don't know if this was because he wanted to get Trump,
I think he wanted this attention.
He craved being this historical figure,
not a good historical figure, but a historical, so people would never forget his name again.
And-
Well, they will.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, I mean, his life was so lonely
that when I went over the,
from the Claret and Sportsman Club,
when I went over the log of when he went to the gun club, it was every day, but it
was also Thanksgiving and Christmas and Valentine's Day, days you're supposed to be with your
family or friends or loved ones.
So why do you think we don't know more?
Is it, you know, because a lot of people think it's because he was being paid by Ukraine
or he was Iranian backed, you know, that there's an international conspiracy and it's been
hushed up. I mean, I would suggest your book tells a different story and it's something much more
practical about why we don't know more. Yeah. Well, his family lawyered up. We don't have
any access to get any information about him, at least not now. I don't know don't have any access um to get any information about him at least not now
I don't know whenever we will get it. I'm still waiting to hear about the las vegas shooter
um, and and so I don't you know, I I pushed as hard as I could until I knew
I'm hitting a brick wall and i've got a rest of a book to write
And maybe someone much better at investigative journalism can get in that.
I couldn't get past the brick wall.
I also think it's the point you raise about local news is going away.
You know, for all of our ripping on how biased the news media is,
nine times out of 10, we're talking about the national media.
Yes. The local news, they're not all focused on politics.
They're mostly not focused on politics.
They're mostly focused on crime and education
and more local stories.
And they're really important.
They're important, they're far more important in many ways
to the ways we actually live.
And they're drying up.
This is something I'm against.
They're drying up from coast to coast.
And this is exactly the kind of story
that they would normally have had, you know,
every single news organization in town on. But, you know, Pennsylvania and Butler are not immune
to these national trends either. Yeah, there's news deserts everywhere and they don't have the
facility. They don't have the reporters that can do this. And so that is the challenge.
Reporters that can do this and so that that is the challenge
Speaking of reporters and and the national level anyway, and their cozy relationship with the Democrats
You have very interesting information in this book butler the untold story by Selena Zito about
What a bomb the Harris Walls campaign was when they did come to Pennsylvania, which they knew full well was
the most important state in the union. They're all important, but the swing states are most
important and Pennsylvania the biggest, most swingy of all. And it was just a very good window into
how inept they were, notwithstanding the boatloads of money that were being thrown at them. Could you explain?
They just made, I mean, she spent an unbelievable amount of time in Pittsburgh and nobody ever saw her. If they did see her, she had an event where all the events were closed. It was only people
that they wanted to come to their events. It wasn't people that, you know, they didn't open
up for people to be curious, for people to... Those SEIU members, you're right.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. They were all, you know, yeah. And it wasn't like labor unions. It was a
social justice union. And so it was so cautious. It was so poorly run. There were opportunities
for her to be able to, you know, grow a coalition and none of that was done.
On the other hand, you have Trump out there glad handing with the people nonstop, talking
their talk.
It does remind me of the story that we kicked off our show today, whether you weren't here
yet, but we just touched on it briefly.
What happened with the Venezuelan gang members out in Aurora, Colorado?
You know, Trump was touting this story because they're trend to Aragua members and they were
committing crime in taking over apartment complexes in Aurora.
And the mainstream media dumped on this story just as fast as humanly possible.
It's not happening.
It's a lie.
Over and over, the New York Times, it's not happening. It's a lie over and over. The New York Times, it's a lie.
It's a lie.
And even now, the New York Times has been forced to admit
it's true.
They are taking over buildings.
They are killing and committing violent felonies
against Americans out there.
But there'll be no apology.
There'll be no mea culpa.
All these politifact fact checks we saw of Trump
after that debate on ABC News where he raised this,
they tried to say it's not happening.
They're not gonna go back and apologize to him, Selena,
but that's the way the news operates these days.
It's so frustrating.
As a reporter, it really is very frustrating
to see how these things are run, to see the bias in them, and to see no
accountability when you get the story wrong. If I get a story wrong, I'll be like, I got this wrong.
I missed this. Mostly you miss things. If you can't admit that, then you're not good at your job.
admit that, then you're not good at your job. Well I think that's fair to say about the New York Times.
On any story in which bias can affect them, it does and they're not reliable.
Okay, the book again is called Butler, the Untold Story of the Near Assassination of
Donald Trump and the Fight for America's Heartland.
It is by the one and only Selena Zito,
who you can trust, unlike all those mainstreamers.
Go and get it now, support her.
Let's show the New York Times that they will have to put
Selena on the best sellers list,
whether they wanna do it or not.
Great to see you, my friend, great reporting.
Thanks, Megan, thank you, bye bye.
All the best, wow, what a story.
Can't believe it's been almost a year. Thanks to all of you for listening and we will see you again tomorrow.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show.
No BS, no agenda, and no fear.