The Trish Regan Show - CBS’s New Management FAILS in Network REVAMP! Ratings PLUNGE as Bari Weiss Doubles Down on DISASTER!
Episode Date: January 17, 2026The end of network news is finally here. This is what it looks like, folks. Plus, the DOJ just jailed the ‘Pentagon leaker’ in a move that may help quell the criticism of Pam Bondi amid suggesti...ons that former Fox News host Jeannine Pirro is angling for Bondi's job. Meanwhile, the White House reports that the agent that shot Renee Good, Jonathan Ross, was hospitalized for internal bleeding. Trump is cutting off visa for numerous countries amid concern about Iran, all as he refuses funding for sanctuary cities. And - Ilhan Omar is seemingly in a state of panic: Caught on camera trying to brush-off a reporter. Her angst comes amid a new report from TSA indicates that $700 million in cash left the Minneapolis airport in the last couple of years—99% more than any other major airport. The Treasury Dept is now investigating whether any of the cash came from those with ties to Minnesota fraud rings. Trish has those stories and more in today’s edition of the Trish Regan Show! JOIN US AND DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE! https://dose.co/REGAN https://Oneskin.co/Regan -- use code REGAN for up to 30% off first 3 purchases #oneskin https://balanceofnature.com -- use code REGAN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the big show. Always interesting when we get another network news entity going under,
effectively. I mean, maybe not going under literally in the sense that they still have deep pockets,
right? David Ellison just bought CBS, but we're talking about going under because no one's watching.
I mean, if no one was watching before, whatever they're trying, it ain't working, ladies and gentlemen,
welcome to the program. I am Trish Regan, where we are not mainstream media. We are not legacy media.
We're a cutting edge new. There are no prompters here. You'll see what I mean in just a moment.
We're going to get to the CBS evening news story where ratings are plunging amid the big redo
from one Barry Weiss who thought she could fix it all.
Ha, good luck.
Plus, the Pentagon leaker jailed by Pam Bondi's DOJ.
That has been confirmed that there was an entry into a Washington Post reporter's house,
the FBI doing that entry and investigation coming out with evidence and now putting that
leaker behind bars.
We'll have more on that story.
We have learned that the man that was rammed by,
nearly rammed by the vehicle that Renee Good was in that he then shot back at.
That would be Jonathan Ross.
He has been hospitalized or was hospitalized.
The administration says for internal injuries, we'll have some details on that.
Plus, TSA.
Oh, my gosh.
They're announcing that $700 million in like 23 and 24, I believe, left the Minneapolis airport.
It's nearly a billion.
And that's actually what they declared in cash, in cash, like in suitcases, out of the country,
altogether. What the heck is going on? I mean, Donald Trump, he can't stop those visas and can't
stop the money to the sanctuary cities fast enough. We begin today on CBS News, which is just imploding
in real time. I mean, you thought it was bad as we were going into Christmas in the whole 60
minutes fiasco because, gosh darn it, Barry Weiss, who's the new person in charge there,
brought in by David Ellison to kind of shape the place up. Well, she actually wanted them to get,
like, an extra source or two, like maybe from the administration when they were
reporting out a story on immigration. God forbid they'd be told to do that, right? Anyway,
she's having a hard time. I mean, like a really, really hard time because she's trying stuff.
And it ain't working. It's not working. And you know what? It's not going to work.
I can tell you this because, look, I've worked in mainstream media and I've worked actually at CBS
Evening News. And there's no way any of this is going to change. And there's no way those people
are going to change. They are who they are. And unless you just say, I'm going to fire everyone and
start all over, I don't think you get much to work with. On top of that, you can,
audience that's actually not really into you trying new things. I mean, I hate to break it to you,
Barry, but the CBS Evening News audience is an audience that actually is not going to be watching
the Trish Riegen show over here on YouTube. They're an audience that is not even watching cable.
Like, I mean it. I used to wonder when I worked there, like, who actually watches this?
Really and truly, I think I was recognized once in my life. And they at that time had seven million
viewers. It's now since plummeted to four. Now I'm on YouTube and like, you know, people are
stopping me at the airport and blah, boy. It's not about me, by the way. It's not about me. And you'll
see why I'm going to say that in a second because Barry apparently does think it's all about her.
And the whole team there at CBS, they want to be the news. They're becoming the news in kind of a bad way.
But I make this point only because it's not that accessible to people or maybe only to a certain
clientele. And that clientele, that viewer does not like change.
So good luck, Barry. You can't change this. It's 22 minutes of dribble-drable that's all scripted out.
And by the way, you're learning this. You're learning this because you're part of the scripting process.
I understand. Yeah, we're going to see how that went to not so well last week.
I mean, for goodness sakes, they're even making fun of her on her own awards show at the Golden Globes where they were saying this is C.
Like you get to see BS. B.S. as in BS news. I thought that was a good.
one. Apparently that didn't get okayed by management. CBS Evening News, Variety Rights, under the new
anchor, God help me if I can pronounce his name. Tony, DeCopio, we're going to go with that.
I'd never seen him up until like this whole thing, is down 23% in viewership compared to this
same period a year ago. The decline underscores the challenge, the big challenge facing
Barry Weiss, the new editor-in-chief. You can see that the New York Times is getting in on this
too. See, the media loves to pick on other members of the
media, and let's just say the New York Times is like loving this because what's happening?
Well, CBS is leaking like a freaking sieve.
Everybody over at CBS News is annoyed that Barry's in.
They're annoyed that she's making so much money, of course, because she just came in,
what, her 150 million bucks and they bought out her free press and they think that she's the
answer to everything.
And they're like, no, no, no.
You don't understand we're the answer.
Okay, we know how it's done here at 60 minutes.
We've done it the same way since 1950 something and we're not changing.
Okay, we went to color TV. That's about it.
You know, I'm telling you, even Walter Cronkite might have embraced just a little bit more
a change, but no, they don't want any of it, any of it, any of it, any of it.
So as a result of this, yeah, they're down 23%, 23% in counting.
In fact, I think the latest and greatest out of the Wall, forgive me, not the Wall Street Journal,
the New York Times, oh, they're all the same. What can we say, right?
Especially these days, the Wall Street Journal used to be a little bit better now.
turning into the New York Times. Anyway, they're saying like down 28%. So it's not good. It's not
good at all. By the way, if you are tuning into this, make sure you subscribe. I got to tell you,
my own producer who watched this show live in real time out in California. I got a couple of
producers. One in Florida. That's the good place to live. I always tell him, you know,
better tax environment. And my, my producer in California, he actually said to me yesterday,
even though he watches the show every single day live, that he wasn't getting his announcements,
like his alerts saying I was live. And so many of you guys have said that to me in the chat.
So I actually wanted to just flag that. He asked me that I flagged that for you. I may wind up flagging it
for you a couple of times here because it's, uh, it's important that you actually subscribe and that
you hit all notifications. And even if you have subscribed before, I'm going to show you what
happened. I know we're doing a little diversion here away from one CBS evening news, but can I,
can you guys see that? Okay, so this is what he sent me yesterday. He's like, Trish, Trish, Trish,
Trish, look at this. He said, I am subscribed to all of your alerts. And look at that.
The bell was off. So he wasn't alerted. So just heads up, make sure if you haven't subscribe,
go back and subscribe again. It just, it helps. Anyway, back to CBS where nobody's subscribed. Nobody's
watching, we need to be the news. That was Barry Weiss's line. And they're saying, you know,
inside Barry Weiss's very bumpy revamp at CBS. It's not much of a revamp. Apparently,
Nora O'Donnell was pulling a bigger number than this guy. Meanwhile, Barry's like, you know,
tooling with the script right before air, which I just going to say, like, you know what?
Thank goodness I'm over here, because we don't got no scripts over here. You know what? This is all
live. I don't have to follow any rules, any scripts. I don't have to read somebody else's
story. I get to go to whatever story I want to go to whenever I want to go to it. Unlike poor
Tony, Tony, who told us, he went on some big nationwide tour and was like, I'm going to be your
voice. I'm here working for you. No, no, he's working for Barry and the producers. They're calling
the shots. Watch, first night. All right, to other news, as you just heard from Jill,
to other news now, to Governor Walls. No, we're going to do Mark Kelly. First
day, first day, big problems here.
All right, to other news, as you just heard from Jill,
well, to other news now, to Governor Walls, no,
we're gonna do Mark Kelly.
First day, first day, big problems here.
Out.
Are we going to Kelly here,
or are we gonna go to Jonah Kaplan?
Oh.
We're doing Mark Kelly, possibly demoted
from his retired rank of captain in the name.
Now we go to Minnesota, a surprise announcement from the
That's a rough one.
right, your first night out. He's actually quite a pro, quite a pro because, and Cat Crazy Sam,
thank you for the super chat. I just saw that right there. Much appreciated. We have a very
interactive show here on the Shuris Rican show. They can't do that on CBS Evening News either.
But you know what? It's kind of interesting, right? Because it gives you this glimpse.
What we just saw there with Tony is that you, you see that he's actually not in charge.
He's like, what are we doing, guys? What are we doing? Help, help, help. The teleprompter went down.
What am I going to do? Where's Barry when you need her? Why was she futz him with the script?
That was what also came out of the New York Times article.
They said Barry was messing around, and this is what got picked up by the trade publications,
media at one of those trade publications.
Nasty little thing it is.
Anyway, Barry Weiss helped cause Tony DeCopel's viral teleprompter gaffed
by tinkering with the script minutes before the CBS debut.
So you see what's going on?
I don't know if she did or she didn't.
I don't know if somebody there kind of wanted to tinker with the prompter, him or herself, right?
because somebody else is running that.
And did somebody, did somebody, I mean, I'm not suggesting it was sabotage, but, you know,
like this is, I'll tell you, if you're, if you're, if you get a prompter, you kind of want
to own that prompter yourself.
You want to run the prompter yourself.
Or what I learned in my career, and I learned this early on because in the very beginning
of my career, there was this, um, woman who was kind of disagreeable and she used to run the
prompter.
And she was another anchor.
Oh, you definitely.
know on that, right? Another anchor running your prompter. And I learned very early in my tenure there,
this was at Bloomberg, that I really needed to know my stuff because chances were she just didn't
care enough to actually stay with me on the prompter. Or, by the way, like, and in her defense,
she shouldn't have to do that. Or, you know, maybe she just didn't feel like it. Maybe she kind of
wanted to stick it to me on one day or another. I said, I'm not going to take this chance. I'm going to
know my script inside and out. I'm going to know everything I'm talking about because I just don't want to be
there with that kind of risk. Unfortunately for him, he didn't know where he was going. He was waiting
for the producers to call the shots. And you never want to be in that position, right? Because you want
to know, even at Fox, I'll tell you, I wouldn't have been in that position because I would have been
saying, we go here, we go here, we go here. It is, at least my show at Fox was very producer
supportive in talent, as they call you if you're on camera, the talent, in talent led. So when the
talents leading the show, they're telling the producers what to do as opposed to the producers
telling the talent what to do. Do you understand the distinction? And so the distinction is also really
important when you come over to hear, you know, and you're over on YouTube land and we're streaming
and anything can happen. And by the way, let me just say, if you've been watching this show,
anything does happen. Leslie can tell you this. I'm looking to see if she's in the chat today.
Leslie can tell you this because, I mean, occasionally the mic's gone to, I mean,
heck, I've even had the camera go down. And people keep saying to me, well, why do you?
do it live still and I'm like, I just like it. I like the energy of live and I like seeing all you
guys here and apologies for being late. We had a ton of elements to get in and we underestimated
the amounts of time it would take to get all these things in. We as in me. So this is what you see
is what you get. And, you know, if there's a teleprompter gaff, well, there'll never be a teleprompter
gap, but there could be some other kind of gaff. And you guys are great and you're super forgiving.
but apparently the CBS News is not so forgiving an audience and certainly not so forgiving a newsroom.
So what happened was that in the rush before airtime, she allegedly was in there tinkering with
the script. And according to the New York Times, Tony, I'm going to skip the last name because,
you know, I don't want to mutilate it, was flummoxed when he encountered the same words twice.
Yeah, you know, wait a second, didn't I just read that?
And he asked his producers out loud, which said,
he was supposed to turn to next, right? Are we going to Kelly? Are we doing this? What are we doing? What are we doing? What are we doing? And it just
it wasn't a good look. So the Daily Signal has an interesting report out today. This is their headline. And they're saying if
the old guard destroys Barry Weiss legacy media may finally die. Woo-hoo. Okay. So, and believe me, they will. They will destroy her.
Look what's going on at 60 minutes. By the way, I like Sharon. She's, she's someone who would benefit tremendously from being on a different
kind of platform where you're not like wrapped up in a bunch of, you know, tightly wound,
uh, turnicates, which is what it's like, I mean, just the way they speak, right?
In tonight's evening news broadcast, we, I mean, it's like, come on guys, get it out,
get it out, get it out. But they want you to speak slowly. Maybe, maybe for the audience so that
they can, you know, hang on to every word. I don't know, but, uh, gosh, you only have 22 minutes
in the evening news anyway.
You ought to speed it up so you get some more content in there, right?
You get like a minute 30.
I've told you this story before, maybe a 10 second tag.
God help you if you went 12 seconds.
This was always my problem.
Trish, Trish, state of time.
I have a lot to say.
What can I say?
I'm trying to speak as quickly as I can.
Okay, all right, all right.
But it's very tightly wound.
And look, it's just the product of what it is, right?
They've got 22 minutes of news.
They get eight minutes of commercials.
They get a sandwich into a 30-minute long show.
So where is the market for that anymore?
I guess they still have a market.
They still have like 4 million people watching,
but it's nothing compared to NBC and ABC who have like 7 million and 8 million.
I was kind of shocked by that.
But back in my day, we had like 7 million on CBS Evening News,
and we had, I want to say, 11 million on our competitors.
So what are they doing at CBS?
You know, David Ellison is trying to reinvigorate this,
trying to reimagine this.
But you're running into a resistance, both within the newsroom, right?
All the sort of old cronies that have been there forever and kind of like the way things are.
I mentioned Sharon before.
She's one of the, you know, she's young.
I mean, because if she's in her 50s, you know, the other woman on the show is in her 80s.
So, hey, you're like the kid.
You feel really good when you're walking around at CBS because you're like,
damn, I'm young.
Like this feels really, really good.
everybody else is almost twice my age. So there's that, but like she's a great example of somebody
who's got a ton of personality, but you don't necessarily see that on camera. I would say that when I
was reporting there, and even when I was reporting in other venues, you didn't always get to
see my personality because you are sort of pigeonholed into this, okay, here's the prompter,
here's the script, this is what we're doing. And so I think in my last gig, you probably saw a little
bit more of that personality come out, but, you know, personality can get you in trouble now and
then as I've learned, because I just call it like I see it. So this is very freeing and this is very
different. But how do you take what we're doing here, right? And you put it into an institution like
CBS. I don't think she can't. I don't think she can do it. I've said this for a while. I think
she's just writing up more than she can chew. Nicky Glazer making fun of her at the Golden
Globes the other night, which apparently according to the New York Post, that that particular
joke never got approved by management, I'm sure, because I think David Ellison was in the audience.
Remember, Ellison, his dad is a big deal. He's Larry Ellison. And Allison had Skydance and he went out and bought Paramount. Paramount being the parent company of CBS. And everybody's mad because Barry has a reputation for maybe being a little bit more centrist, right? She's not like a looney tune lib. And so they brought in somebody who has worked in print. By the way, that's hard too. She hasn't worked in TV. So she doesn't know the massive egos she's dealing with in TV, even on the
producer front. I mean, you get talent, and they're like a whole special little breed onto themselves,
and then you get the producers, and none of them are like print. Like print are the nicest people in
general, except for some lately, it's gotten kind of nasty, but, you know, for the most part,
they're very, like, humble. And that's not the case, dare I say, in television. And so she's
coming from print, and she's managed print journalists, granted opinion editorial type people,
so there's a little bit more ego there, but it's just not the same as the ego that you're running
into when you get into the CBS Newsland and television land. So she's got a lot on her plate.
Naked Glazer again, taking a stab at CBS, calling it CBS News. And that's what it feels like, right?
It's a bunch of BS, ladies and gentlemen. Gosh, I spent a lot of time on this story. You know,
I just know a lot about it. I guess that's the bottom line. And I think to myself, back in those
days when, you know, we as correspondents in the Northeast Bureau, and I think Jim Acosta was there
when I was there, and Sharon was there as well. And everybody was a little more normal back then,
I guess. That was pre-Trump. And we would, you know, sit around and some of them would have
these things called YouTube videos. And I'd be like, huh? What? Like, what is that? And like,
they'd be watching the cat memes or something, and they thought it was this. And I'm like,
what is like so to me YouTube was sort of synonymous with something else entirely which was like
you were somebody broadcasting from your parents basement um on like public access TV or you were like
producing cat memes I had no idea what it was if somebody had told me I wish I knew way back when
what this was about to become and sort of how and my husband used to actually tell me and say content
content content Trish you're always going to be fine because you understand content you love content
you're all about content.
The mechanism by which this content will be delivered will always change.
But as long as you understand the value of the content itself, you know, you should be fine.
And this industry will keep changing.
And I never quite fully appreciated that.
Wise man, he is my husband, never fully appreciated that until I was then out on my own.
And it's really, really true because look at what we've been able to build.
I look at my little channel here and I'll go and,
check the numbers actually in real time because I can see these things on something called vid IQ,
which is an app that allows you to track things like your competitors. And what I see over and over
again is that we are doing mountains more in terms of viewership than our competitors at these
mainstream media broadcasts. I mean, just little me, Trish Regan, which is kind of incredible,
right, when you think about that guys. And I say that not to tout my whole.
own horn, but to just sort of inform you of all these changes that are going on within the industry.
And I'm trying to walk and chew gum at the same time because I am doing this live as we speak.
But let me just look at this. If I look at the competitors and I say, okay, we're up again,
say, oh gosh, I don't know, my own former employer, Fox business.
This feels good.
All right, they get 3.3 million subs. They did 51.6 million views in the last 28 days.
Trish Regan, we got 1.2 million subs. We did 96.8 million views. How do you like that in the last
28 days? Let's go to CBS News. CBS News with their $150 million lady and their giant staff,
48.6 million views. Trish Regan, 96.8 million views. And that's CBS News having 7 million
subs. Okay, so they get seven times the amount of subs, basically, that I have right here.
I mean, it's really remarkable.
CNBC, which I used to work for, and that's kind of a niche.
They've got 13.1 million views despite a 4.1 million sub-base.
So what does it tell you?
It tells you that people want a little personality and a little opinion and a little pizzazz
and they don't have any of it at these networks.
And so they are done.
Done, done, done.
Finito, we are watching the end of network news.
As you know it, my friends.
Good times, good times.
Hey, quick shout out to my company. We've got a new estimate that's come out of Atlanta Fed,
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the day, let me show this to you because he makes a really great point on how the mainstream media
is sort of characterizing the economy right now versus how the economy actually is.
And this is very important because I want you to see CNN saying U.S. inflation is still high,
but it's falling.
Last month's consumer index measured 6% down from January 6.4%.
Those are massive numbers, okay?
That was in March, 2023.
He's talking about Joe Biden's economy.
We've gone all the way up to nine and change on consumer prices.
And they're like, oh, it's great, but it's still high.
It's down from 6.4%, down to 6%.
So we love that.
Whereas look at this one.
This is what they sent out just yesterday.
US inflation remained at 2.6 in December,
underscoring persistent cost of living challenges.
Come on.
All right.
So like it's so blatant.
The bias is really,
really blatant and really kind of gross.
But that's to be expected.
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Check out if you can the portfolios because those are really where it's at.
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Pam Bondi.
Wow.
She's pulling a fast one.
What do you know?
Maybe she's feeling the pressure.
I think she is.
I mean, after the Wall Street Journal article saying that Trump's turning on her,
after all saying repeatedly, for goodness sakes, come on, Pam, you know, we need a little something, a little something.
Anyway, she just managed to jail the Pentagon leaker.
This week, at the request of the Department of War, she said, this on Twitter,
the Department of Justice, and FBI executed a search warrant at the home of the
journalist. So this is very interesting. This is a Washington Post journalist that apparently was
getting the scoop from some contractor and getting the scoop on all this Venezuela stuff. I'm going to tell
you, I am really well sourced on Venezuela, guys. I did not have the information that the Washington
Post was getting. But then again, I wasn't getting it from people who were transmitting information
illegally. Okay. So this this person was illegally leaking information to the Washington Post. The
leaker now is currently behind bars. She's working proudly.
she said alongside Hegeseth and working to make sure that these leaks stop because they're not
going to tolerate illegal leaks of classified information. And when reported, they pose a grave
risk to our nation's national security and the brave men and women who are serving this
country. She is absolutely positively right. So I'm really happy to see that Pam Bondi pulled
on for the team. I mean, better late than never, right? Because we needed that. I'm going to be
just really, really frank with you. We really did need that because it's not okay. It's never
okay to be leaking information that would then put our troops in danger. And that's what this
had come down to. I told you, I mean, again, I'm really well-sourced on Venezuela. I've been
around this story for many, many years. And I was aware that, you know, Trump was interested,
of course, in pursuing something there. But I didn't have any indication whatsoever. And
And I mean, unless my sources were lying to me, they seemed pretty surprised by a lot of what was going on too.
So the fact that this information was coming out from this leaker was pretty darn disturbing.
And I think that, you know, anytime something like that is going on, you've got to nip that stuff in the butt.
And that's part of being a good chief executive in terms of Donald Trump.
He's got to be able to go on that.
Unacceptable.
I want to bring you some sound actually from the president that just,
came out a short time ago to just get you up to speed on this. Again, Bondi's saying that this
leaker has been put in jail. Well, before I go to the president, see, see here, but I'm deciding,
unlike the CBS anchor, right, who doesn't decide. The producers are deciding where he's going next.
I'm going to decide where we're going next because it's my show. Thank you very much. Here we are.
Look at the Washington Post. So Hannah Natinson was the one who had been covering the Trump administration's
efforts to fire federal workers and redirect much of the workforce towards enforcing his agenda.
Many of the employees shared with her, their anger, their frustration, their fear, the administration's
changes.
But this one went further, right?
Because this one went further in that this guy was not just communicating that.
He was communicating what we were potentially doing in the places people we were going after
in Venezuela.
His name was Mr. Perez Logones, first name Arrello.
a systems administrator in Maryland.
I mean, it's crazy to think there's just a systems administrator in Maryland, right,
has access to this stuff.
Top secret security clearance and has been accused now of gaining access to
and taking home classified intelligence reports that were found in his lunchbox
and in the basement.
So he's putting in his lunchbox, take it into the basement,
getting these classified reports out.
I mean, it's really bad.
Arellio, Perez, Lugones, like, what the heck?
Is he on Maduro's side?
I mean, you kind of wonder, or is it because you just hate Trump that much?
I'll say I'd be such a bad reporter to leak it to because I'd probably tell them.
You'd never want to do that with me because I'd get so upset at the idea that somebody was doing something illegally like that.
Let's go to Donald Trump speaking about the issue today.
Another piece of information that I think is very important is the leaker has been
found and is in jail right now. And that's the leaker on Venezuela.
Very bad leaker. So there could be some others and we'll let you know about that.
We're out on their trail. But the leaker has been found and the leakers in jail.
And we'll probably be in jail for a long time. Let's see what happens. So we'll let you know.
will keep you apprised as to what's going to happen with that.
And I want to thank all of the...
So he's, you know, he's going to be in jail for a long time.
It's unusual in that they did break into a reporter's house.
I mean, that's unnerving, right?
And it's unnerving for the press because the press, again, these situations are tricky.
And I guess I look at it like this.
I mean, if someone's giving me classified information from the Pentagon,
I don't know. Maybe I'm just too, by the book and too much of a square. I really wouldn't like that.
Okay. Like, I don't want the class of, I don't want to do anything that would be against my country or against our troops.
Like, at some point, I'm going to say, hang on, you know, this is sensitive, sensitive classified information.
Apparently, Hannah over at the Washington Post didn't feel the same sort of conviction, shall we say.
But they broke into her house. They demanded, I mean, they had a warrant and everything.
but they were concerned because she contributed several articles about the American pressure campaign on Venezuela,
including the recent capture of Nicholas Maduro, the country's leader.
One article cited government documents describing a diplomatic meeting at the Vatican.
And in a statement then on social media, as you know, Pam Bondi's like, this guy's going down,
this person was leaking classified information.
So that's not okay.
and that's why they, at the request of the Pentagon,
went to this reporter's home to look for this evidence.
Now, the Washington Post wants you to know,
the Washington Post is not in trouble,
and the reporter's not in trouble.
Like, don't forget, we do have freedom of speech, right?
So it's absolutely fine to, you know, again,
not everybody's me and, like, so obsessed with morality, I guess.
So, you know, you're fine to report that stuff.
The problem comes from the leaker,
and that's why the leaker is in jail right now.
So this is a big win, shall we save for Pam.
And let me just say this.
Gosh darn it.
Pam needed it, right?
Because she's got Janine Piro chomping at her heels,
chomping at the bit.
I mean, like,
Janine is like a dog with a bone right now.
Just look at what she's doing.
Poor Jerome Powell.
And let's face it.
I mean, so she's going a little rogue on Jerome Powell,
but let's face it.
I think that Pam Bondi is possible.
possibly up for grabs in terms of the job itself.
And maybe that's what Janine Puro is looking at.
And a lot of you guys have said to me, gee,
Janine would be great at it.
I don't know.
I mean, I think that Janine would have the kind of tenacity that you want
and almost recklessness, right, that you want,
if you want to go after everybody in a really dogmatic, aggressive way.
So I think it should be very good at that.
My one concern, it's the same concern.
I have with Pam. It's that none of these people have actually run big shops and big operations.
Look, I mean, when you're, for example, running a show even, and Janine, she did, to her credit,
she ran a small show right, on the weekend. But if you run a show, right, you might be overseeing
15 producers and, you know, you're not technically overseeing the tech, et cetera, but you have
a hand in things. And so I know, like, it's a lot, right? When I had a large staff and a large team,
it's a lot of people to oversee. I know what that's like. It's actually one of the reasons
I prefer the intimacy, shall we say, of this environment, because it's a little less headache
in terms of managing everything. But has Pam done that, right? Like, has she really had a large,
large team of hundreds of attorneys that you want to be working with to make sure that they're
realizing your goals? And that's the tricky part. Historically, we've seen too often, I think,
Republican administrations, a lack of sort of the corporate lawyer. And the corporate lawyer is
something the Democrats are all about, right? You know, just think of the American Bar Association,
all the lobbying money, et cetera. They are all in deep with the corporate lawyers. And so consequently,
you have people that are coming in and out of law firms that are well trained in how to not
just execute cases, but manage them as well. And I don't think we have the same on the right. So
we have Pam Bondi, who's a politician and an occasional TV person, right? She's a TV commentator
and a politician. And then you have Janine Piro, who did host a show once a week, a small team,
who does have a phenomenal background. By the way, she was an excellent, excellent prosecutor.
And like I said, she's rabid, right? So maybe she would get the job done. But I would love to see
somebody else in there that really has the blocking tackling. I'm talking executive functioning skills,
as, you know, they say nowadays. The ability.
to kind of be Pam or Jean Piro's executive producer, right?
Like if they're calling the shots, who's getting the stuff done?
That's my concern.
Apparently, Pam, she, you know, she's calling for sanctuary.
We talked about this yesterday.
I mean, he's kind of done and over with her.
He's, you know, the big article in the Wall Street Journal saying he's pretty much finished.
He doesn't understand why she's not doing anything.
He came out and said, I'm going to get rid of all.
sanctuary funding, this is just yesterday, right? No more sanctuary funding, funding for sanctuary
cities. And I'm like, wait a second, didn't Pam promise she was doing this back in February of last
year? Whatever happened to that? Again, I remember, like, we're not crazy. I mean, she was going after
Kathy Hokel and she was going after Letitia James in New York and the head of the DMV and I don't know where
went. We're here today because we have filed charges against the state of New York. We have filed
charges against Kathy Hockel. We have filed charges against Latisha James and Mark Schroeder,
who is with DMV. This is a new DOJ and we are taking steps to protect Americans, American citizens,
and angel moms like the mom standing right behind me who you're going to hear from in a moment.
But then like what happened? Again, you know, is so he's
he's kind of souring on her, understandably. I mean, like the rest of us. I think we all kind of
feel a bit burnt. And the thought is, gosh, you know, you look at what Jean Piro is able to do.
And she's just going guns, blazing straight after Jerome Powell, who she knows the president
doesn't like. And she doesn't care what feathers she's going to ruffle. So maybe that's the
answer, right? I mean, because Pam, like nothing's happened. And the president,
has started criticizing her.
She has failed to come forward with any of the basics on Comey, Letitia James.
It's just a freaking mess, honestly.
And I still can't believe that we've expired the clock on the statute of limitations.
And I know some of you in the chat don't believe what we have, but I've run this one down.
And I know you run Donne, 11 legal channels, whatever.
I've talked to some of the top, and I'm telling you the top litigators in the country.
And unless he perjures himself again, unless you bring him back in and he perjures himself again,
your clock is up because Pam Frickin Bondi did not turn in the homework on time.
Okay?
Like that's the end of story.
I'm not going to get too mad about it right now.
But I'm just saying, like, enough is enough.
So maybe we need Gene in there.
I mean, she's not going to mess around.
She's not going to mess around.
Just look at what she did going totally rogue because she wanted to go after Powell.
Yeah.
I mean, this.
is unbelievable. I don't know, as there's much of a case there between you and me, okay?
Just between, between us folks. Powell apparently ran like a billion dollars over budget
when he did the renovations, but like that's not really him, dare we say. Like that's not entirely
him. Paul's like, he's a Fed chief. He's not running a construction project. So to sort of like leave
All of that on him, I find a little bit too much.
She's actually saying something different.
I want to share with you what she has sent.
So Janine Piro, United States Attorney for the District of Columbia,
said that she actually sent Paul a letter three times asking him to explain the billion
dollars in renovation, and he just ignored her.
So that's not cool either, right?
Like, she is actually asking you, you owe her a little bit of lip service.
And if you're not going to explain it, then she kind of is more justified in going
after you. So she finally was like, that's it. He's mine. So she went in there, just completely
he was a backlash, goes totally rogue, doesn't ask her boss, Pam, hey, can I do this, doesn't call up
treasury to say, what do you think? I'm going after the Fed chief. And she's out there to try and take
him down. Scott Besson, not too happy about it. He's calling the president and saying, this is a mess.
He was really worried, of course, about what it meant for interest rates, which actually have gone down
a little bit amazingly. Gold's up, gold's up, silver's up, because, you know, when you go after
a Fed chief like that, people worry that you're going to turn into some kind of banana republic.
So that's his concern. And then the other concerns coming from Jamie Diamond, who's like,
whoa, you know, what is she doing? And by the way, let's just point out the obvious, which is now
Jerome Powell's not going anywhere. Like, he's hanging on until the end of his term, and he'll go
eventually because his term is up and Trump doesn't like him. But I think Trump's been kind of measured
and careful on this. If you listen to his speech, which was all about raw-rah economy,
and by the way, lots to cheer on this economy right now in Detroit. He did say some rather
pointed things about Powell. He has no use for the guy. Watch.
And I've also announced that the U.S. government is purchasing $200 billion of mortgage bonds
to bring down mortgage rates, and it's had a huge impact. It's already started.
And just last week, the average 30-year mortgage drop below 6 percent for the first time in many
years. It's coming down very rapidly, and that's not with the help of the Fed. If I had the help of
the Fed, it would be easier, but that jerk will be gone soon. Oh! Did you hear that? He really doesn't
like him. And I mean, this goes back away. I remember the first time he made headlines in Powell
was actually, when I was hosting my show on Fox, and I went down to the White House, I interviewed
him, and he just went off on Powell. He's like, he needs to lower rates. He needs to lower rates. He
use the lower rates, this is an 18. And Trump likes lower rates. He's a real estate guy, right? He likes
the liquidity of those lower rates. Right now, I'd say he's actually somewhat justified. I do
think that you could lower rates right now and do so comfortably, given that inflation has been
coming down. That gives you a little bit more room. If inflation was going up, we'd have a different
scenario. But simultaneously, listen, you almost don't have to do anything. You know, you just let
that engine go, because things are great. 5.4 percent.
GDP growth expected, that's fantastic, okay?
Like, Mr. President, it's good.
Like, don't listen to CNN.
It's good out there.
You don't need to tinker with things the way, you know, Elizabeth Warren wants you to.
You don't need to fuss with it because actually, I think, like, I know nobody has patience,
but we're in a pretty good scenario right now.
We just are.
And so, you know, even with a little bit of volatility in the markets today, I'm still very, very high on
things very, very positive. You know what else I'm positive on? Taking care of yourself in the new
year. And, you know, I want to tell you briefly about a new sponsor that we've brought in, which
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Oh, so this is some interesting news just coming to us at this moment.
We have learned from the administration that the ICE agent that had been hit by Renee Good,
and then later shot Renee Good, he has been, was hospitalized with internal injuries.
I want to go to the report coming to,
us from Fox News. And Department of Homeland Security
sources telling Fox News the ICE agent
who was hit by Renee Nicole Goods
car suffered internal bleeding in his torso.
That is the same immigration and customs
enforcement agent who was seriously wounded
last June when he was dragged by a car
during attempted arrest. Yeah, a car
rammed him and then dragged him. And by the way, there
was street camera footage of some of that. The C.B.
local station, WCCO, covered that story last June extensively.
We'll keep you posted on the situation as we get new information.
Okay.
So that's pretty heinous.
And, you know, our heart goes out to him and his family.
And the whole thing was super, super tragic.
And I just go back to, you know, why did this have to happen to begin with?
And why is it that we have women, moms that are so all of a sudden taken up with this idea of let me go fight ice?
let me take the day off.
I adopt the kids at school and then I'm going to go and agitate against ICE.
And it's interesting the way that they're agitating.
I think this is an important thing to think about a liberal anchor that I know that you do not like.
So I apologize in advance for showing her.
But I think this is some interesting insight that she's providing us on why it is that you're seeing the so-called soccer mom, right?
And by the way, New York Post had an article on this too.
soccer moms taking up this dangerous new hobby, becoming ice saboteurs. Joy Reid, the fired ex-MSNBC
anchor, basically admitting that they're out there trying to radicalize effectively these women to try
to get them to take on ice. Watch. This woman was part of a group of people who they trained
to try to be ice interrupters. And what they try to do is observe what ICE is doing, film them,
and try to use their white privilege, to be honest. They're mainly white people. They're mainly white people.
Which is what we ask.
Which is what we ask them to do, right?
Because black people, like, we can't get on, we can't put our bodies on the line because cops will shoot us.
And so the presumption had been, particularly a white woman.
Because remember, part of the rationale for doing this with ICE is to save white women.
Pristine white women from being ravaged by, you know, criminal brown men.
So they, white women, have been taking the lead in being the ones to step.
Please, please, please.
Again, this is the tape.
I appreciate it on this team's part.
but this is the, you know, notorious tape.
And, you know, you see her, and she's sort of a picture of innocence there, right?
Just happy, smiley, go lucky.
I think that, you know, Joy's not wrong.
Joy's not wrong, and that they're presenting this sort of, okay, this is just mom blocking traffic.
And they can't get in the way of mom, but here's the problem.
If mom actually speeds up and looks like she's going to run over the guy after,
given his trauma that he's already been through, and by the way, it's not,
insignificant, again, learning of the fact that he was hospitalized from the administration with
internal bleeding after this incident, it's concerning, all right? So you're not going to get the get-out-of-jail-free
card just because you got blonde hair and white skin. And maybe that's the lesson being learned here.
I mean, the police have to take this job very, very seriously. And so women that are thinking
that they can go and harass them, I think, are now in for this rude awakening. And we've seen this
harassment. I mean, here's another example
of this crazy harassment just yesterday.
I don't care what they told you. You guys get in my
way, I will arrest you.
Sir, we're just observing. Please come down. You're going to
deserve all you want. I am observing.
Do you see me in the way? I am at
back. You had anger issues
as a kid, didn't you? We're your parents
present? You should be ashamed
of yourself, man.
He is.
You love my job, thank you.
You love your job?
They go on to just harassing me
Like picking at them, picking at them, picking at them.
I think because they're trying to actually raise the temperature.
And they're trying to get these guys angry.
And they want to see some kind of force because then they're able to turn around and say,
see, we want them out of our city.
So it's pretty twisted, pretty messed up stuff.
But again, our heart goes out to the gentleman who is now hospitalized with internal injuries.
Again, according to the administration and to do.
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All right.
Trump is ending visas.
Da-da-da.
Seventy-five countries.
Guess what?
You're not coming here anymore.
Nope, no, no.
We got a lot going on in terms of, well,
has anybody seen Iran lately?
Yeah, so Iran's on that list and Russia's on that list.
Here's the article from Daily Mail that we're looking at,
a graphic of 75 nations.
You know, did you see?
Did you see the headlines today as well?
I don't want to go too deeply.
this, but you've got Iran actually calling for the assassination and saying, oh, we're not going to miss
this time on President Trump. That's not good, all right? So they're out there trying to flex their muscle,
and he's like, okay, well, fine. We're just not going to bring anybody that could be a threat into this
country. Let's go to his talking about this right now. And if you come to America to rob
Americans, we're throwing you in jail and we're sending you back to the place from where you came.
That would be, if you're a Somalia fraudster, right?
Anyway, again, back to the news that 75 countries, he's ending visas for.
We had just learned yesterday that he was ending all visas that were in process for the country of Somalia
with the idea that Somalia is not in as treacherous space anymore, and thus it would be okay
for people to go back to Somalia, even if you were here seeking some kind of refuge.
Iran, meanwhile, closing airspace, despite Donald Trump steering away from military strikes.
So he's kind of indicated that he would not be looking to strike Iran.
But we have, I can tell you, and report that we have pulled our military out of the surrounding areas.
I believe that we had some people in Qatar.
We've taken them out because we're just doing this as a precautionary note,
given how things are heating up right now, given that you have Iran calling for the
assassination of the president of the United States. So this is certainly an escalation.
Escalation in the situation and the flight radar data has shown that very few aircraft over
Iran are there, right, because now you have this flight barrier in effect. And the order comes
in all this tension, all this tension over the crackdown that we've seen in Iran over the
protesters, because the protesters have been taking to the streets. You're starting to see a
difference in sentiment and sources I've spoke to have said, like for the first time,
they actually feel very encouraged about a potentially different future there in Iran.
So that's encouraging.
But given what's happening with the crackdown against the protesters, there's a chance
that you could see American strikes in response.
And that's, you know, something that I think is on the table.
Like everything, as he says, is always on the table.
Back to what's going on with the visas and what is going on with money.
Donald Trump coming out and saying, you know what, if you're stealing from us, we don't want you
here. We're going to send you back. We're going to denaturalize you. So that's interesting.
And that's going to be met with all kinds of legal mumbo-jumbo. You better be sure. But the fact that
he is being so, he probably has the room to do this on the 75 countries, given what's going on in
Iran. So he's got the cover there. But this is fascinating. Brand new story out today, first reported by
John Solomon and just the news.
Feds are probing hundreds of millions of dollars
in suspected Somali cash
leaving Minneapolis airport.
And we're not talking about just hundreds of millions.
We're talking about 700 million over the span of two years,
which is 99% more than any other airport, okay?
So why is so much cash fleeing Minneapolis?
And this is what they're declaring.
Imagine what's not being declared.
This is like cash going out in suitcases
that they fill out the paperwork for.
Wow.
I mean, you've heard me talk about the Huala Network, right,
and that person-to-person thing,
and they're bringing money back and forth.
You're there and everywhere.
The TSA has flagged nearly $700 million in cash,
detected in passenger's luggage,
leaving the Minneapolis airport in the last two years.
It is a massive cash exodus,
and it is believed to be tied to Somali immigrants
and their money couriers.
Again, the Huala Network.
Remember that.
I've done a lot of terrorist financing,
investigations throughout the course of my career, not here in the U.S., primarily in Latin America,
going back to Hezbollah and Hamas.
But how did they do it?
The whole Walla network.
And that's the money carriers.
Okay.
So this is being reported now to Homeland Security.
They told just the news this.
The officials say the cash movements out of Minnesota's largest airport began about
a decade ago around the time the Democrat Governor Tim Walts took office and have grown substantially,
really substantially, in the last several.
several years. So pretty distressing and disturbing stuff and concerning. They all were legally declared
according to U.S. customs rules. That's kind of fascinating, right? Pretty damn fascinating.
Even though that they were, you know, declared according to U.S. custom rules, it's raising a lot of
suspicion because if that's what they're declaring, what are they not declaring? Again, knowing that
you've got all these fraudsters there, right? I mean, there's a lot of suspicion. We're now talking
about $9 billion that they believe may have been generated out of the state of Minnesota. You're
talking about 600 billion nationwide. That was the number that the GAO has been reporting.
And we're not getting really any answers. I mean, they just want to tell us that we're prejudiced
every time this comes up, right? Which I'm not buying that anymore. Ilhan Omar, Ilhan, who by the way,
is acting really scared. Ilhan Omar is acting like she's got something to hide. I want to share with
you something from Mike Lindell's channel. A reporter asked Ilhan Omar yesterday about the money that is
allegedly gone, $9 billion, and Ilhan challenged her on it. So she went back again today. Listen to
Ilhan's answer. And how nervous Ilhan now seems to be. And she's getting nasty, like the attacks are
getting really visceral and really like almost silly. But we'll react to it together. Here we go.
Congresswoman Omar, yesterday you told me to please read when I asked you about the $9 billion
fraud that you denied is happening. But I have it right here. I read. Look, Chairman Comer opens here
on massive fraud scandal, $9 billion. That's what Comer believes because he's as smart as you are.
It's not just Comer. It's Scott Besson and it's federal prosecutors, its house oversight. And it's
Minnesota State rats. You can have that. Ma'am, I think you need to get examined because your brain
has been fried in some way, and it's not okay. I really hope you get some help. You and the Republicans
here. Take care, okay, ma'am? I'm sorry, I can't go to the learning centers that you're running
over in Minnesota, but I think you should perhaps read what's actually...
I need one of those learning centers. I need one of those learning centers.
Yeah, let's see it.
Like the attack is getting really, really low.
I mean, she's getting nowhere to go, right?
Because what is the truth?
The truth is, yes, they believe it's $9 billion right now,
and that's been reported from every news outlet.
And Ilhan Omar looks back at her and tells her she needs help
when she confronts her with facts.
Ilhan Omar trying to twist it around like, you're the crazy person.
I'm sorry.
You know what?
Ilhan, you guys got a problem there in Minnesota.
A very big problem.
And by the way, you may be connected to it.
I don't think you're out of the woods in any way, shape, or form.
No, Ilhan Omar is going to be investigated.
I don't even think they're fully telling us everything that's going on with her.
They've kind of come out about Keith Allison.
They've come out about Tim Walts.
Tim Walts, who, by the way, is about to be impeached.
Yeah, that news came this afternoon by Republicans.
in the state house, there in Minnesota, because he's done nothing.
And every time everybody says, well, why aren't you do anything?
Somehow they come back with, well, you're a racist because you're suggesting this.
It's like, no, I mean, there's $9 billion missing.
We're going and knocking on daycares and nobody's there.
I mean, Nick Shirley, I'll tell you, Barry Weiss, you want to get with it over at CBS.
Go hire Nick Shirley, okay, for your 60 Minutes team because he knows how to do it.
Like, it's just basic reporting, which you're seeing far more of in citizen journalists
than you are over at those networks because they're all in cahoots, I guess, with Ilhan Omar.
I'm not suggesting that they did anything nefarious from a financial position.
I mean, other than maybe the USAID money, I don't know, going to some of these places.
Politico looking at you with those very expensive subscriptions that nobody actually needs.
USAID was buying.
Ooh, all right.
Yeah, and you just happen to be the outlet of choice that they decide to put Biden's big letter saying,
they, oh, no, no, that Hunter Biden laptop, that was not.
That was not anything but misinformation brought to you by Rudy Giuliani and the Russians.
Yeah, where did they choose to bring that to the outlet that they were paying with USAID money?
I'm just saying that's kind of an interesting coincidence.
Nonetheless, Ilhan Omar, I suspect, is probably in for more trouble than she even understands or even knows at this point.
You've got DHS going in there, getting all of these records going out.
going out there and finding out all kinds of things.
Chris Rufo, who's a good journalist with Manhattan Institute,
was actually on Jesse's show the other night.
I think it was Jesse, maybe it was Hannity,
talking about Ilhan Omar and what she might be up against.
Let's go.
I actually spent last week in Minneapolis,
and there's two parallel stories.
I mean, there is a panic within the Somali community.
They've been found out for these massive fraud schemes,
daycares, transportation, fake autism services,
the whole nine yards.
But the political question is very important.
And my sources in Minneapolis state government say that there are open inquiries into the potential involvement at the highest level of Minnesota politics.
And so I think people will be taking a hard look not only at Governor Tim Walls, but also Congresswoman Ilhan Omar and State Attorney General Keith Ellison.
We know that they have connections with convicted fraudsters.
The question is, were they merely complicit in these schemes?
or were they part of a broader conspiracy?
We don't have strong evidence now,
but I think people are starting to take a look.
Well, what we do know is that Ellison promised these guys
he'd make the investigation go away,
and then he got money as a donation.
We know that whistleblowers alerted the Walls administration,
and he didn't take any action,
and we know a couple of these people like,
Omar got money from these convicted fraudsters
as political donations.
Are you saying that there could have been a conspiracy to move the welfare fraud money into their war chests?
It's certainly possible.
And I think the person, and really I'm grateful for it, Scott Bessent, the Treasury Secretary,
has all the tools at his disposal to actually investigate the money trail,
to figure out how the money flowed between these fake nonprofits and Somali fraudsters and Minnesota politicians.
Yeah.
Okay, and he does have those tools. And part of what they're discovering, right, with the $700 million
going missing over two years from the Minneapolis airport because it's getting carried out in
suitcases back to overseas locations, one of the most prominent being Dubai, that is coming
into question. Meanwhile, Ilhan's having a hard time with this, whether she's trying to insult a reporter
saying, you know, you're not very smart, there's something wrong with your head, you're really
deteriorating. I don't know what's happened to you because you think that there's $9 billion in
fraud there in Minnesota or saying things like this. She's now determined to defund ICE entirely.
Guys, I'm telling you this is why it's really important, really important that her side does
not win come midterms. Let's watch. And so today, I am glad to announce that the Congressional
Progressive Caucus has adopted an official position to hold ICE accountable. Our caucus members
will oppose all funding for immigration enforcement in any appropriation bills until meaningful
reforms are enacted to end militarized policing practices.
We're going to press this to the full extent possible.
And like I said, I think that this may just be, it's a cold day outside, so this could be
the tip of the iceberg here in Minnesota, but it's probably, may not be as present.
but the dollars may be bigger and larger in other states and just to put this in
perspective for for American taxpayers for American families the GAO the General
Accounting Office believes that there is somewhere between three and six hundred
billion of annual fraud roughly 10% of government spending that disappears due to
fraud if we can recapture that that is one to two percent of
to GDP. Amazing, right? So she's scared because it's quite obvious right now that she has,
if nothing else, some association because she was getting money from some of the convicted
fraudsters. On top of which, on top of which the majority of people that were involved in this fraud
were coming from none other than her district, on top of which she suddenly is worth 30 million bucks.
Well, where did that come from? Comer's.
referring her to the ethics committee for an investigation into how she's suddenly worth, you know,
30 million after having been worth nothing, up to 30 million she's now estimating.
I'll tell you, it's very, very weird stuff.
As for the 9 billion, the 9 billion, that was reported by multiple entities.
So she has no right to sit there and say, you're crazy for thinking this and to try and discount
somebody like she does.
You know, let's face it, she just keeps going back to the well of it's somehow racism, racism, racism.
We'll say this. You know what, guys? It's really alarming that quite recently, as recently as last
week, she was trying to get something called Generation Hope, a million bucks. This is another one of
her pet projects. It's like, Ilhan, we've had it. Okay? You can't keep doing this. Like, you can't
keep trying to fool us over and over and over again. This was a restaurant, okay, that was somehow
doubling is a place to provide mental health help to Somalis who need it.
I mean, Joni Earths was all over this. Listen.
Covered the other day and one of our spending bills making its way through Congress was an
$1 million earmark from Representative Ilan Omar of Minnesota, which was an earmark that was
supposedly going to a substance abuse clinic, which actually happened to be housed.
in a restaurant and run by three individuals that share the same residential address
according to their IRS paperwork. Tons of red flags. So this is what we saw with the fraud
involving. So they managed to stamp this one out. The owner of the Seagall restaurant
confirmed to Fox News. This was on Tuesday that Hope Minnesota does operate out of additional
office spaces above the restaurant. Okay, so they got a
second floor there at the restaurant. You know, you go have a little something to eat and then you can go
get some mental health, help or not, right? Because what we're learning over and over again now
is that a lot of these things were like definitely of the or not category because they
don't seem to have any kids, for example, at the daycare. You know, Besson, again, is the man on this,
the man of the hour, he's on the ground in Minnesota, you got treasury officials there,
you get agriculture officials there, you get ICE officials,
PHS officials and you've got IRS officials and they're all over this because again,
they kind of want to know what's going on when $700 million just disappears from one airport,
you kind of got to scratch your head and say, why is this happening so much in Minneapolis and not
anywhere else? I mean, the numbers are staggering. Again, 99% more than anywhere else.
So we're lowering that to 3,000 and we're also targeting the two counties here.
and we're going to do enhanced surveillance.
And from now on, anyone who wires money out
from one of these money service businesses
has to check a box saying whether they are on public assistance.
And if you were on public assistance,
we are going to start pushing
that you cannot wire money out of the country.
Oh, gosh.
What if they lie?
And they don't tell us from public assistance.
Well, then...
That's a crime lying on a federal form.
We're going to follow it up,
and we are going to...
that you can no longer do that.
The American people, our generosity, has been taken advantage of.
Our generosity is funding al-Shabaab in Iranian interest, it could be.
Well, the money...
I think this is really bad.
The money is supposed to go for alleged asylum seekers
and their families and children,
and if you were wiring the money out of the country,
one of two things must be true.
You are getting too much money,
and your benefits should be cut,
or you are part of this conspiracy.
Where did that money take?
Where did that money come from?
We're going to find it out.
That's what Treasury does.
IRS has a group called criminal investigations.
Criminal investigations was the group.
Yeah.
So TPS status for Somalians in the U.S.
Gone.
A whole lot of people losing any kind of TPS status, losing visas, et cetera.
I mean, there's going to be a real change coming in part because of what's going on with Iran right now at this hour.
It's sort of unbelievable.
And for her to have the gall to try and pretend that this is nothing but some kind of media story,
I'm sorry, you get convictions on your hands, all right?
There are convictions that have gone, and they're all from your district.
Thank you very much.
That's pretty darn clear.
I want to go to some more sound from Ilhan Omar, who's very, very worried right now, as she should be.
And she's trying to somehow suggest that, you know, this is all craziness, that I should be defunded,
as you saw, and that they have no justification to even go after the alleged fraudsters.
Watch.
I'm so exhausted in trying to ask what any of this, you know, information has led to you
finding any criminals that you have indicted that explains why you are wasting so much of
our taxpayer resources and also terrorizing our communities in the United States.
the amount of federal law enforcement agents that you have in the streets of our city and our state.
There needs to be some sort of justification.
Okay. Well, I think we have the justification, right?
We get the justification that there's $700 million going out of Minneapolis in cash on
suitcases, going to foreign countries. We get that.
We get the fact that we have multiple convictions, which you were reminded of.
recently on CBS. Of the 87 people charged all but eight are of Somali descent. And that has added
to the spotlight being put specifically on your community. Why do you think this fraud was allowed
to get so widespread? I want to say, you know, this also has an impact on Somalis because we are
also taxpayers in Minnesota. We also could have benefited from the program and the money that
was stolen. And so it's been really frustrating for people to not acknowledge the fact that we're,
you know, we're also, as Minnesota and as taxpayers, really upset and angry.
Enough already. Make sure you subscribe. Hey, remember what I told you about my producer suddenly
seeing that he wasn't subscribed, even though he's watching live show every single day.
Just do me a favor and check and make sure you are subscribed to this show.
It's really important because, you know, algorithms can be kind of tricky.
I just want to look at some of your comments.
We've got some breaking news that just came into us.
A good sort of win for President Trump, a win that he shouldn't have had to have been
fighting for.
But we've just learned that Senate Republicans have defeated Venezuela War Powers resolution
is Trump pressured to GOP senators to kind of
turn around there. Democrats were basically saying that he didn't have the right to do what he did
with Maduro, and they were fighting that. And it was concerning and it wasn't clear whether or not
the president would have to backtrack on any of that. I mean, if you take away that ability, right,
of him to be able to do what he needs to do to ensure the safety of the U.S., that would be indeed
a huge problem, but Republicans did block that effort to Trump, to check Trump's power.
on Venezuela, GOP leaders succeeding and pressuring fellow senators who initially supported the measure
that would have limited President Trump's military authority in Venezuela.
You had Senator Josh Hawley out of Missouri reversing himself on the war powers resolution,
saying that Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that President and President Trump convinced him
that it was not needed.
That's a really important distinction.
It brought the shift to about a 50-50 tie.
there, which was broken just moments ago, just within minutes, in favor of Republican leadership
by Vice President J.D. Vance. Mr. Hawley, as well as Young, Senator Young, were part of a group
of five Republicans who last week had joined all the Democrats and said that they were
supporting the measure aimed at curbing the president's war powers. And that, of course,
prompted a big backlash we saw on social media and elsewhere, because that would have put,
And Randall, I want to get to your comment there in a second.
That would have been, you know, difficult, obviously, for the president to have encountered.
I'm just trying to bring up some of your comments, and we can see them in the live section here.
Randall's saying, Edward R. Murrow, last of the good ones at CBS.
Yeah, and that was a while ago.
Yeah, you got to go back a ways.
And you think about, not to change the conversation too much, but as we started the show
when we were talking about the end of mainstream media and the end of legacy media,
and evening news kind of going out with a bang there.
They were at one particular point in time.
And I always found that interesting when I worked there
because everything was quite antiquated.
You know, like rotary phones still?
This wasn't that long ago.
I mean, this was like 2005.
And, you know, they had rotary phones in some of the offices.
And they had the old speaker phones like you'd see on Charlie's Angels.
like the place had not been updated in forever, probably since Edward Moreau was still there.
And so CBS, it was sad because you thought about what they once were in terms of being very much
on the cutting edge of technology. That's what TV was. Like it was brand new technology.
First you had radio and then you had TV and you think about color TV and all these things
that were happening to give people the news in real time and the news was all about this immediacy.
And even when I started in it, I mean, you know, look, I,
to this day, I have like PTSD, whenever there's a hurricane coming into town or any kind of weather,
because I really want to get to my location beforehand, because I'm very worried about not being able to get out of town.
I mean, I've covered so many hurricanes, right, where I was like, I needed to be in position.
And then you need to have your live truck.
And the live truck would cost a fortune.
Hurricane aside, like suppose I just wanted to do a hit right outside my house, guess what?
It's like 10 grand, 15 grand to get a live truck.
And now look at this.
You don't even need any more live chucks, right?
You just take your phone and go.
It's incredible.
But it used to be that these networks were all over the technology.
And they were the YouTubes of the day, right?
They were all in on what the technology was in the future.
And now they resist it with every fiber of their being.
And they want to cling to the past.
And that is not a way forward.
For CBS, NBC, ABC, any of them.
Like the train has left the station.
things are changing. You're going to make it or break it if you can actually figure out how to be
facile and different and transparent, right? Look at the transparency. First of all, that you get
right here. I mean, we're dealing with breaking news in real time. I'm looking at your comments in real time.
We're sort of a three-way thing. I think we're going to get to the point where you guys are actually
going to be able to come on this show, right? It's not just going to be a comment that I'm going to read,
but we're going to be able to like swipe you in. And there you are as, you know, it's just changing.
And I think being able to adapt to that change is incredibly important.
And I love it, right?
It's exciting.
I encourage you again to make sure that you've subscribed.
It's so important.
You subscribe, check your subscription to make sure that you're still there and you're getting the alerts.
Because like I said, and if you weren't here for earlier when I explained what I was seeing with my producer, actually he told me, it's not the best picture of me.
You know, it's just a screen grab.
But look at this.
I mean, the point being, he sent me this after yesterday's show.
like, Trish, I was never alerted that you were even on. And he watches every day. And he said that
that's happened to him twice. So go back. Make sure that you're subscribed. Don't unsubscribe. Just make
sure you subscribe and make sure you get the alerts because it's obviously an important thing to do.
Who knew? And I'm not blaming YouTube, by the way. Just to be really clear, I mean, I think that
these things sometimes happen on your phone. Like if you switch phones or if you do something or maybe
you've got a VPN, who knows, right? On that affects.
that ability for you to see all the shows and get all of the announcements that were live.
It would also help if I could commit to a scheduled time, so I'm working on that guys.
So they were not, you know, one day three o'clock and one day five o'clock.
You see, I let you in on how the sausage is made.
Do I not?
Every single day here on the Trish Riegan show, the good, bad, and the ugly, hopefully,
mostly good, mostly good indeed.
Thank you for being here.
I love what we've been able to build here.
and I will see you once again here on the Trish Rican show tomorrow on YouTube and Spotify as well.
Go check me out on Spotify tomorrow.
